The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition -Thursday, September 7,1989 - Page 13 In this section: Campus map U Ann Arbor restaurants Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom * ttz i Volume C, No.1 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, September 7, 1989 Page 13 Some frats drop pledging to end hazing By Noelle Vance * Daily Staff Writer Three fraternities with chapters at the University will eliminate or shorten their "pledge periods" in re- sponse to a national concern that pledging leads to hazing. Zeta Beta Tau and Tau Kappa Epsilon will be the first fraternities to eliminate their pledge programs beginning this fall and in Sept. 1991, respectively. The third, Alpha Epsilon Pi, will shorten its pledge period from 12 weeks to eight weeks. According to a TKE International Fraternity press release, hazing has led to the deaths of about 55 frater- nity pledges in the past decade and has prompted several fraternities to implement "no hazing" policies. Many activities are technically considered hazing because they do not involve education about the house, but are generally accepted be- cause they are also designed to "unify the brotherhood." On campus these activities have included cleaning or building onto the fraternity house and carrying or wearing weird objects and clothes. "It was the best semester of my life," said AEI Vice President Brian Robbins of the semester he pledged. The danger of hazing comes when members do not realize the limits of their pledges, for instance by making them drink too much. It is these in- stances that the fraternities say they are trying to combat. ZBT, TKE, and AErI have had anti-hazing policies for several years, but, said University ZBT Chapter President Adam Dishell, "A no haz- ing policy just won't do it any- more." Any "two-tiered" pledging system that allows some members to feel superior can lead to hazing, he said. Under ZBT's "new brotherhood" program, rushees who are given bids will be known as "neophites," or new brothers. They will immediately become members of the fraternity and have the same rights and privi- leges - such as attending chapter meetings - of older members. The new programs may cause a letdown for new rushees who look forward to pledging, Dishell said. "I loved pledging... I learned from ex- periencing... and after my first chap- ter meeting I was on a high." ZBT's program is similar to TKE's "associative member" pro- gram, which will be implemented by Sept. 1991. Unlike ZBT, TKE will not consider those who accept bids to be members of the fraternity dur- ing the two weeks before initiation. "They will be in limbo," said University TKE Chapter President Bill Chalmers, an LSA junior. During the two-week waiting period, new members will participate in ac- tivities like the big brother, little brother program. But the TKE's have not yet planned any other pro- grams. "That's one of the problems," Chalmers said. "There's got to be more (activities), but it won't be pledging." Another problem without pledg- ing, Chalmers said, will be speeding up the get-to-know-you process dur- ing rush. "If this guy is going to be your brother in two weeks, you'd better take it seriously," he said. Some have suggested lengthening the rush period or making it more formal. TKE, for example, will have prospective members interview with a panel of active members. The new programs have drawn mixed reviews, Dishell said. "A lot of us were upset when this hap- pened, but we realize it's time to quired to shorten their pledge periods on a trial basis to periods less than the traditional 12 weeks. So far, members of the University's AEI chapter seem dis- satisfied with the change to an eight- week pledge period. "There is no way 300 guys can meet 100 guys any quicker," said University AEFI Chapter President Adam Goodrich. 'A lot of us were upset when this happened, but we realize it's time to grow up.' - ZBT Chapter President Adam Dishell TKE's Chalmers said. "(Pledges) won't be scrubbing floors." ZBT's Dishell said, "(In the past), activities have always been done by pledge class. Now it will be done by year." Some say more fraternities will be -moving in the same direction in the future. Both ZBT and TKE have been developing their programs for several years. A few others, such as Kappa Sigma and Theta Delta Chi, are just beginning to look into eliminating pledging. "I don't know how well it will go over," said TKE Pledge Trainer Glen Silas, an LSA junior. "It should be more up to the chapter... If that's the policy (no pledging) on that campus, it will go over well. If no one else adopts this policy, we'll get nine million people because they know they don't have to pledge or hardly any because that's not what they're looking for." So far, said Chalmers, the dissen- sion from the new policies has come from people who don't know about the program. grow up." Immediately accepting new members seems formidable to some. "You don't really know who they are," said Matt Brown, AEII social chair. "It's like subletting an apart- ment for these guys." AETI will not eliminate pledging this year, because a motion to do so failed this summer at the fraternity's national convention in Scottsdale, Ariz. Instead, all chapters will be re- AEII's Robbins agreed, saying, "It's the difference between cram- ming for an exam and studying for a semester." The National Council will vote on whether to keep the changes in August 1990. Though some critics have said the new programs are nothing more than renaming the traditional pledge programs, those involved disagree. "There's no subordination." -Court injunction sends University Hospital nurses back to work * by Michelle Rabidoux Daily Staff Writer The University of Michigan Hospital has won round- one of the labor dispute with, the striking members of the University of Michigan Professional Nurse Council (UMPNC). The hospital was awarded a court injunction July 31, forcing the nurses to return to work on a temporary basis. The injunction, filed with Judge Melinda Morris at the Washtenaw County Circuit Court, included a court order which forces union and management negotiators to meet and bargain August 1 and 2. The action by the University of Michigan Hospitals came on the thirteenth day of the nurses strike. The University Hospital claimed in the injunction that the strike was en- dangering the safety of patients. "The strike has rendered us unable to provide care for those patients awaiting surgery and treatments which cannot readily be provided for at other institutions," said Toni Shears, information officer at the hospital. She added that "the strike is ad- versely affecting training programs for interns and residents as well as research activities." Diane Waller, chief negotiator for the Michigan Nurses Association (UMPNC is a bargaining unit of MNA), said the restraining order re- quires the nurses to return to work when they are notified of the court order by their employer. With a bargaining date set by the court, Waller feels that the University may be more willing to discuss points of labor that they have been reluctant to discuss before. "I think now that the supervisors have been working long hours (described as 12 hours a day), they will be more sympathetic to our feelings about working long hours," she said. The supervisors, composed of head and assistant head nurses, do not belong to the union and did not strike. Registered Nurse Deborah Stoll, spokesperson for the UMPNC, said' "I believe most of our members are going back to work as ordered." However, some striking RNs are re- porting to work and then being sent home with vacation pay as the num- ber of patients at the hospital is much lower than normal. "The OR (operating room) and the ICU (intensive care unit) are gearing up. They are planning 100 admissions today alone," said Stoll. Michael Harrison, hospital spokesperson from the Office of Planning and Marketing, reported that the nurses were "coming in in big numbers" today. "We had 88.64 percent of the nurses on the day shift report to work." This figure compares with hospital reports of 40 percent to 50 percent reporting to work during the strike. "The emergency room is taking a full patient load," Harrison said. 100 percent of the nurses scheduled for the day shift in the ER reported for work today, according to Harrison. As of August 1, 35 percent of the hospital's beds were occupied. Members of the UMPNC have been on strike since July 19. Their contract with the University expired on May 30, but it was renewed on a week to week basis until July 7 when negotiations broke down. The 1,700-member UMPNC voted down the latest contract offer from the University on July 27, by a margin of 3 to 1. One of the Council's strongest objections to the contract involved the issue of possible bonuses for mandatory overtime. The nurses union would like to gain a system of voluntary overtime, along with more control over staffing and scheduling, and greater recruitment and retention efforts from the university. The nurses gave strike notifica- tion July 7. Most patients were then discharged or transferred to other hospitals. The hospital did take some emergency cases and surgeries during the strike, Shears said. "We are also continuing to accept some patients through labor and de- livery," Shears said July 31. She noted that 11 babies were born July 27 and 28. Other area hospitals received an increase in patients since the strike began. 'U' hires new Hispanic rep. by Kathryn DeMott Daily Staff Writer The year-long search for a Hispanic Represen- tative in the Minority Student Services office ended in mid-July with the appointment of Katalin Berdy. Berdy had worked for four and a half years as a counselor and a supervisor at Latinos for Social and Economic Development, an organization which works with Detroit schools to promote higher education for Latino students. As Latino representative in the MSS office, the counseling office which provides minority students with information about University re- sources, Berdy will work with students to plan * events uniting the Hispanic student body. Berdy to take charge in new MSS position tended the University of Detroit, where she earned a bachelor of arts degree and a master's degree in criminal justice. To make tuition payments, she worked at the Saint Francis Home for Boys in Detroit, where she grew fond of working with young people. Berdy said coming to the United States by. herself has helped her understand the pains asso- ciated with assimilating into a different culture. She feels confident in her ability to counsel new students because "I know what (new Latino stu- dents') needs are and understand the fears of tran- sition." While minority innort efforts have imnronved I want to go out there with a megaphone.' -nIIA NAinnrit+ i irlot~r