Rec
Center Reaction: Let the Circuses Begin!
By
Jason McGill
Senior,
Mass Media major
It
wasn’t until I went to the groundbreaking ceremony on April 16 for the
University Recreation Center that I finally understood what it was all about.
The
ceremony took place on a breezy, cloudy afternoon capping nearly two weeks of
the best weather spring had to offer.
A long line of luminaries ascended to the stage to laud the project and
thank those who needed thanks. Student
Government Association thanked the administration, the administration thanked
the students, and everyone thanked the donors. President Nietzel took some time to recognize the close,
“special” relationship between SGA and the administration. They are close. Very close. Very very close.
And I
felt like a killjoy. There were
actual storm clouds looming over the stage, rushing toward us on ever stronger
gusts of wind. Seeing the storm on
the horizon, I couldn’t help but think of the budget cuts and tuition hikes
afflicting many other state schools, cuts we’ve been asked to prepare for, cuts
that must inevitably come. Why
doesn’t preparedness extend to making some sober decisions about how our
economic outlook has changed since 2006, when the Rec Center project got
underway?
Many
justifications were given at the groundbreaking for the Rec Center. These arguments centered on the three
main points President Nietzel described in his time at the podium. The first was promotion of
wellness. Andrew Garton, Student
Co-chair of the Rec Center task force, observed MSU had been named fourteenth
fattest campus in the nation in 2005.
I
wonder what criteria were used to compile the study, and whether “lack of giant
new recreation center” was the primary reason for our low score. I suspect the study looked at a whole
host of factors, diet and exercise habits of students probably being chief
among them.
Wellness
depends on the many choices each individual makes every day. All the Rec Centers in the world won’t help
people who are already finding ways to avoid exercise. Fancy machines or new facilities aren’t
necessary to improve health. Since
when does cardio require more than a sidewalk? Since when does strength training require more than
gravity? The key element in
physical fitness is the will to work on it.
President
Nietzel and others also were proud to tout the building’s “green”
certification. I, for one, am
skeptical of any building on campus certified “green” when they can’t even
certify Craig Hall as “leak free.”
This
“green” certification is part of this myth that we need to buy our way into
environmental responsibility. It’s
often more efficient to repurpose or refurbish old buildings rather than
consume resources to construct, maintain, and run utilities in a new “green”
building. Remember the old slogan,
“reduce, reuse, recycle”?
Finally,
President Nietzel said the Rec Center represents the University’s fulfillment
of its commitment to students.
Many speakers emphasized the Rec Center providing much needed space for
socializing. Really? SGA and the administration looked
around and said, “There aren’t enough places for students to hang out”?
I’m
the first one to admit, while students are spirited in their own activities and
interests, campus spirit is lacking in general. Witness the low attendance at sports games, or the low
attendance, not only at the rally against the Rec Center, but also the
groundbreaking for the Rec Center.
But is lack of structures really the issue? Somehow, I don’t think so.
So I’m
thinking all this during these speeches, looking at the artist’s rendering of
the Rec Center above the stage, and it occurs to me the thing looks sort of like
an amusement park. Then it all
started falling into place. The
Rec Center’s basically a playground, a waterslide, a new toy. Ironically, the Rec Center’s a bit like
picking up that chocolate bar in the grocery checkout line. You know you shouldn’t, but it’s fun. What’s so bad about feeling good?
What
is thirty million dollars, anyway?
Students would never vote for a fee for boring things like hiring
teachers or creating scholarships.
Did you know the Rec Center will have a zip line? Hooray! Donors can’t brag about fixing leaky pipes or ridding
buildings of mold. They want to
put plaques in the Rec Center lounge.
Did you know the lounge will be decked out with dozens of flat panel televisions? Now that’s green!
People
criticize the Romans because, at the height of the empire, they spent almost
half the year celebrating holidays.
As the shovels hit the dirt for the Rec Center groundbreaking, and the
band played our fight song, I shrugged and thought, “When in Rome, do as the
Roman’s do.” Life is too short to
always be prudently planning for the future.
To end
the groundbreaking ceremony, they released hundreds of maroon and white
balloons. The wind picked up and tipped
over the American flag on the stage, knocking it into the podium. The gusts pushed the balloons away from
the stage and hard into Freddy.
Several balloons were caught in the tree out front. I turned my back on the stage and its canopy
of storm clouds to watch the balloons sail off into a bright blue patch of
sky. That’s when I realized the
lesson in all this; maybe the best way to deal with an impending storm is to just
look the other way. Let the
circuses begin!