The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 6, 1984 - Page 5 Harassment reports increase By DAVID VANKER S In October 1982, the University's tenure committee began a series of hearings to determine whether or not a tenured psychology professor who had been at the University since 1954 was guilty of sexually harassing his female students. In October 1983, the professor resigned just a few weeks before University ,prsident Shapiro was to recommend S~the regents that he be fired. TH4E DETAILS of what happened d ing that year - the hours of testimony the professor's former tdents gave before the tenure com- 'Pittee, the anguish of young women ,mho revealed secrets they had con- 46red too disquieting to tell - are osely guarded in most official cir- bles. lthough Virginia Nordby, the U'niversity's affirmative action direc- ftor said she is concerned about this case, she added that sexual harassment is not a problem here. "My feeling is that we do not have a major faculty-student sexual harassment problem on campus," she said. "I think the number of (student- reported incidents of sexual harassment) is not ever going to get much higher." THAT PREDICTION, if correct, will signal the end of a steady increase in the number of complaints of. sexual. harassment made since President, Shapiro issued an official policy: statement in Sept. 1980, outlawing harassment. The statement designated the affir- mative action office as a counseling and. advice for people who suspect they are victims of sexual harassment. * In the last four months of 1980, the office received five complaints; e In 1981 nine complaints of sexual harassment were reported; " In 1982 15 complaints were made; " And in 1983, a total of 30 sexual harassment complaints were reported to the office. Figures for 1984 are not available; THOUGH FOR most people, the notion of sexual harassment on a college campus brings to mind images of an older, male professor pressuring a naive female student for sexual favors. the affirmative action office's figures indicate that the problem exists in many forms at the University: According to Nordby, the problem is not limited to the faculty-student relationship. "When you get down to it, there are a lot of people, young and old, who don't deal with interpersonal problems," she said. "We actually get a lot of com- plaints from students ... some students are not dealing with their peers well." STUDENTS BROUGHT 35 complain- ts between 1980 and 1983 - over half the total number recieved by the affir- mative action office in that period. But another 21 complaints came from staff members who said they had been harassed, and the remaining three came from faculty members. The University's personnel offices took disciplinary action on 14 complain- ts from staff members, and the office of the vice-president for Academic Affairs handled at least three unspecified cases. The subject of the complaints also varies from case to case. 25 of the 59 complaints received by the affirmative action office concerned the behavior of faculty members; students were named in at least nine complaints, two 'U' program helps students and faculty or more of which were filed by faculty; other classes centered on inappropriate sexual behavior by staff members, supervisors, and persons outside the University community. Harassing behavior can be as serious as overt sexual assaults and rape or as subtle as unsolicited contact or offen- sive comments. ACCORDING TO Ken Parsigian, a former University student and friend of one of the women who reported being harassed by the psychology professor, most people neglect reporting incidents of harassment because they just aren't sure if they're being harassed. "If you're going to doubt anyone, you doubt yourself," he said. "You say, 'Maybe this isn't happening.'" Moreover, according to Nordby, misgivings about the ramifications of a complaint haunt many persons who report incidents of sexual harassment. "I THINK uncertainty as to whether they should have done anything dif- ferently plagues most people (who make complaints)," she said. "There's sort of an internalized guilt." Parsigian said the seeming innocence of the former psychology professor's advances toward his female students should serve as a warning to anyone who is unsure about the sexual behavior of a colleague, teacher, or companion. "I hope people don't look at it and say, 'We're talking about one weird professor,"' Parsigian said. "I think it happens a lot, and I think people should realize that. "THE FACT that (the former professor) never threatened her should tell people that it's subtle," he stressed. "It's not always a professor saying, 'Sleep with me or I'll give you a bad grade."' In an attempt to make it easier to report incidents of sexual harassment, the affirmative action office inaugurated the "Tell Someone", education campaign in 1982. Blue posters and brochures emblazoned with red lettering urge persons who suspect they have been harassed to "tell someone" about their experiences, and counselors working within the program are trained to evaluate complaints and to suggest a course of action suitable to the situation. University officials say they believe the program fulfills its purpose. "OFTEN THE problem has been that people didn't know where to go, or whether anyone would listen," said Robert Holbrook, associate vice- president for academic affairs. "I think that -having an open door, open arms policy is about the best thing you can do." While Holbrook said faculty "have a special obligation to avoid putting the student in an ambiguous position," he placed a limit on the University's obligation to police the community for violators of the official harassment policy. "In the end, the individual (who has been harassed) has to act," he said. "The University's responsibility ends with making people aware . . ." JEAN KING, legal advisor to several of the woman whose harrassment com- plaints ultimately forced the psychology professor to resign, argues that the University cannot render an unbiased opinion in a case involving students and faculty.I . "The basic flaw is that the University 'is in a conflict of interest," King said. "It has an obligation to protect its students but it also has to protect its professors." Public Act 202, signed into effect in July 1980, defines sexual harassment as a form of discrimination based on sex. It allows victims to register their com- plaints with the Michigan Civil Rights Commission and receive free legal help. BUT KING said that today, four years after the law was enacted, the commission is still unequipped to deal with the problem. "The Michigan Civil Rights Com- mission is understaffed and can't han- dle all the cases it gets now," she said. At the University, King adds, all of the procedures are cumbersome. "WE WERE LUCKY to find a set of people (in the administration) who were concerned about the problem," she said. King said she and her clients "located" witnesses (to the psychology professor's misconduct) and flew them in (to Ann Arbor). "I got paid $25 for 1,000 hours work," King added. "Where are you going to find that when you're having this problem? Students don't come to school with a bankroll of $10,000 to fend off everyone who comes after them. That's the University's job." KING CITED inconsistency as a major shortcoming of the University's treatment of harassment policy violators. "There are 13 different procedures at the University, all designed by non- lawyers," she explained. "Every group recreates due process.. . It's Alice in Wonderland for a lawyer. You just have to be patient." Behind the criticism, King is guar- dedly optimistic. "I think the situation is improving," she said, "but particularly at Michigan, which is such an enormous university, with a lot of unsophisticated people coming from rural areas, there's just a tremendous opportunity for (sexual harassment)." Nordby notes that sexual harassment is not limited to universities. "I think that individuals interact in- tensely on college campus at an impor- tant point in their lives," Nordby said, "but there's also a problem in industry, so I don't think it's just a campus problem." And while University officials are unwilling at this point to call sexual harassment on campus a crisis, they admit that even one incident represents a serious problem. "I have no evidence that it's-getting any worse or better," Holbrook remarked. "However, any (harassment) is too much." .. a Mass Meeting Open to all students interested in working on any of the staffs- News, Arts, Sports, Opinion, Photography, Business-at the Daily r - - - - m - Clip and save $1.00 m m - SIX WAYS TO ENJOY. THE BEST PIZZA YOU'VE EVERY TASTED 1And save $1 v Now, you can save a buck when you try one of our 5 special pizzas* Deli, Steak'n Cheese,Veggie, Mexican or Pizza Bianco. What's the 6th way? An original. 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