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Hook 'Em Voting Rites ... They did seem to be interested in Jennifer Aniston
, though. Maybe if she were running for office, those athletes would pay more attention. Go, Whoever! While reading Steve Rushin
's column about jumping on sports bandwagons (AIR AND SPACE, Dec. 5) a question occurred to me: If pro athletes demand to renegotiate signed contracts, why should fans remain loyal in bad times? I'm a free-agent fan. I cheer for whomever I want, whichever team I want in whatever sport I choose to watch. I've never been so happy as a fan since I released myself from the burden of team loyalty.
Rushin
may defend hopping on bandwagons, but I am a Bengals
fan. I don't welcome any of these so-called new Bengals
fans in Cincinnati
. To them I say, Where were you between 1991 and 1998 (39-89 overall, 27-37 home)? All you do now is make it harder for me to get my ticket. Why don't you and all your bandwagon groupies just go back to loving the Yankees and Duke and leave the real fans a seat at the stadium? If you don't like what you're reading, come tell me about it. I will be under the 2nd Street bridge tailgating. I'll be the one in the tiger costume and the Keiwan Ratliff jersey. As a northeastern Ohioan, I've committed myself to the Cleveland Browns
till death do us part. However, I hopped off the Cleveland Indians
' bandwagon 35 years ago and started to root for the Yankees. Why? Because the Tribe
was making cheap, shortsighted trades that even I, then a 12-year-old girl, knew were stupid. Now the Indians
are on the upswing, but I'm not getting on their bandwagon. I view them as I would nine ex-husbands: I wish them all the best, but I just don't have feelings for them anymore. A Cut Too Deep? The school board of Plainedge, N.Y.--which cut funding for sports programs last June, forcing concerned parents to raise money to keep the teams going--should look hard at the LEADING OFF�picture in your Dec. 5 issue. The photo shows the team from Huntington
(N.Y.) High applauding the young men of Plainedge after a Huntington
football victory. The players from Huntington
demonstrated class and respect beyond their years, and the sight of the Plainedge men walking off hand-in-hand brought a tear to my eye. Cutting funding for school athletics is not just a bottom-line money issue: It cuts into the very heart of what education must be. Mayo Nays
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