Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 12, 1987 I HOUSING DIVISION -We are asked to love or to hate such and such a country and such and such a people. But some of us feel too strongly our common humanity to make such a choice. -Albert Camus This month as we begin our selection process for 1987-88 resident staff, we want to take an opportunity to reaffirm our professional and personal committment to a sensitive, tolerant, and humane community in our residence halls. We desire to build residence hall communities in which individuals are not harassed, excluded, or made to feel uncomfortable because of color, religion, unconventional lifestyles, or political beliefs. Many students use their college years to explore and develop their personal identity and values, and we ardently believe that this exploration can best take place in an atmosphere of mutual respect and understanding. As important as it is to state one's goals, it is equally important to recognize when we fall short of meeting them. Several weeks ago, 25,000 people, including some U-M staff and students, marched in Forsythe County, Georgia, to remind all of us how much progress has not been made in overcoming racial prejudice since the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. Two weeks ago an act of racial bigotry occurred in a U of M 4 residence hall that served as a more local reminder that our community, too, has its share of intolerance. A threatening, demeaning, and derogatory flier was put under the door of a lounge in which a group of Black students was meeting. Sadly, although this example is particularly repugnant, there have been other similar and troubling instances, both subtle and overt, in recent months. What can be done?- 4 It is essential that human rights be a cornerstone of our enterprise, and we will continue to articulate it as such. As educators and counselors, we are committed to work with students to help them look at themselves, to examine their values and conduct, and to keep questioning those values when they reflect an origin of fear, or anger, or ignorance. We will continue to convey to our residents that acts of racial hatred are acts of hatred against us all, and that they will not be condoned or tolerated. Individuals, both on-campus and off, must share in the personal responsibility of confronting racist behavior and comments. The University is a special place. It is a community designed to foster freedom of thought and unconventional, even uncomfortable opinions. It attempts to provide an environment for inquiry in which innovation and creativity are nurtured. And we aspire as well to an ideal of openness - an allowance not only for people to be different, but a recognition that diversity is the virtual core of University life. We have a unique opportunity at the University of Michigan to celebrate diversity to its fullest - to visit the world through the eyes of our students who are here from almost every country, and to learn more about our own country through their insights. As an institution, we all must continue to strive to fulfill our ideals, and to do better than we are doing. Please join us in a reaffirmation of our common humanity. THE HOUSING DIVISION OFFICE OF STUDENT SERVICES An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer