The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition -Thursday, September 6, 1990_- Page 13 Uie Eidigud &iil New Student Edition 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 764-0552 Greek System offers more than is apparent Opinion Page Editor Stephen Henderson Editor in Chief Noelle Vance Managing Editor Diane Cook Unsigned editorials represent the majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other items are not necessarily the opinion of the Daily. Regents Decision of MSA funding should be students' THE REJECTION OF THE REQUESTED 6.5% FEE IN- crease for the Michigan Student Assembly raises serious issues concerning decisions made about student government. The rejection came at the July 20 meeting of the Board of Regents, when the rest of the University's budget was decided. Regents Thomas Roach, Deane Baker, Veronica Smith and Neal Nielsen all voted against a funding increase for MSA. While there are legitimate reasons for not supporting the requested budget increase, like the history of MSA budget mismanagement and cost overruns, the motives behind the regents' rejection are disturbing. . V The discussion preceding the vote on the issue revealed a conflict of political interests between those regents voting against a-funding increase and MSA President, Jennifer Van Valey. Instead of the discussion the real issues at hand - whether or not MSA has been fiscally responsible in working with its current budget - it focused on political differences the regents have with Van Valey. The fact that she has "opposed (the regents) at every turn," as Regent Roach put it, seems to be the primary factor in the decision not to increase funding. However, it is part of Van Valey's job as MSA President to oppose policies employed by the regents that could be detrimental to student life at the University. MSA should protect student interests concerning such things as deputized security, the possible policy on anti-discrimination and harassment and the possible code of non-academic conduct. However, the regents have chosen to hold these matters against the assembly when it comes to issues of funding. This action brings to light a very serious problem inherent in the system that decides MSA's budgetary matters. Although there is good reason to deny MSA the 6.5% increase it requested - the body has demonstrated a certain degree of fiscal irresponsibility with current funding - it should not have been the regents that made this decision. The fact is, the money that would have been allocated to MSA by approval of the increase would have come from student fees included in the tuition bills. Therefore, the decision as to whether or not the increase was granted should not have been the regents' to make. The issue should have been put to a student vote. During my past three years at the University, I have heard or read very1 few positive things about the Greek1 System. Many on this campus would have us believe thata "Greeks"- members of fraternities+ and sororities - do not care about anyone but themselves and foster a "rape culture" and an alcoholic lifestyle with their mindless party- ing. Despite these stereotypes, I joined the Greek System in the win- ter of 1989. I have learned that the Greek Sys- tem is quite different from the image that people commonly hold. Many members of the system do care about the problems within it and the ef- fects that those problems have on the rest of the University commu- nity. These people have actively ad- dressed issues from sexual assault to racism to substance abuse to home- lessness. Many problems that are perceived to exist only within the system are actually societal prob- lems that are more easily identified among Greeks because they live in an institutionalized setting. I first discovered that leaders in the Greek community were dealing with these problems during last year's Sexual Assault Awareness Week. Eric Reicin, vice president of the Interfraternity Council (IFC} and a member of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fra- ternity, worked with the Sexual As- sault Prevention and Awareness Cen- ter {SAPAC to organize a work- shop on date-rape. At this session representatives from all the fraterni- ties and sororities on campus talked about the prevelence of sexual as- sault and the climates that could fos- tor it. I did not attend the session be- cause I was skeptical about what could be accomplished. Contrary to my expectations, however, people left the day with a better understand- ing of how the Greek System's gen- der exclusivity propogates situations where sexual assault is likely to oc- cour. As Reicin said, "The problem is not the fact that men and women have separate living conditions be- cause the institutional structure of the system enables younger adults to develop a stronger sense of their own identities as men and women. The issue is how to address the problems that can arise when people live in these situa- tions." We knew that we couldn't change the world with this first workshop, but we wanted to begin focusing people's attention the problems that we're going to have to deal with if the Greek System is to remain rep- utable." Throughout last fall, I began to see that an individual could be in the Greek System and not advocate a life of all-out hedonism. It was for this reason that I ran for the position of Public Relations Chair on Inter- Fraternity Council (IFC) and joined University President Duderstadt's task force on alcoholism and other drugs. I began to encounter people who wanted to encounter problems such as racism and substance abuse on a grass roots level. By Jon W. Fink In a number of fraternities, I have encountered students of almost every race and creed with a variety of social views. Ed Waffle, a member of Theta Delta Chi Fraternity, once told me while we were playing tennis, "When I first joined, I felt uncom- fortable about being a minority in the system but I soon found it made little difference. My social life has thrived since I joined the house and I wouldn't have done things any other way." Mary Beth Seiler, the Panhellenic (Sorority) Association advisor confirmed that this has also been the case for minority members of the sorority system saying, "We do not actively go out and recruit minority students to rush sororities. However, the women who have rushed have had almost'no problem joining and found the social and philanthropic opportunities they have had to par- ticipate in very rewarding." From my position as Public Re- lations Chair, I also became a mem- ber of President Duderstadt's Task Force on Alcoholism and Other Drugs. As a member of this committee I have learned that Greeks have been actively addressing the issue of sub- stance abuse for several years. is the dry rush that the IFC imposed on itself last semester. This was the first widespread ef- fort by all fraternities to curb alcohol abuse and tell the University and the city of Ann Arbor that the Greek System did not need alcohol to sus- tain itself. Although a variety of fac- tors went into the decision for dry rush, including pressure from insur- ance companies, members of the system ratified the prooposal because they realized that alcohol use had to be addressed to give credibility to the entire system. In the past year it has also be- come clear to me that members of the Greek system can remain active members in the general community. No issue has helped to fix this view in my mind more than the Greek Week Steering Committees recent projects with the homeless during the annual Greek Week Charity. Graduated senior Amy Davies, co-Chair of the Steering Committtee and a member of Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority, set up an event where representatives from every fra- ternity and sorority in the system helped to repair the Women in Tran- sition Shelter in downtown Ann Ar- bor. I spent the afternoon of that event sanding, cleaning, and painting the shelter. I left with a feeeling of ap- preciation for the enthusiasm the people at this event brought with them for the process of grass roots organization and the desire to create social change on a local scale. For me, Davie's actions and. those of the other people mentioned in this article help to illustrate an important choice. That is the free- dom to select a life where we benefit only ourselves or one where we choose to make a change in our The MSA is a student-elected body that should work to protect and serve student interests on campus. The amount of money that it receives in order to fulfill this, therefore, should be decided upon by its constitutents, the students. If students feel that MSA is not efficiently or responsibly handling its money, then it should be their decision to cut that money, not the regents. What the system now allows is for the regents to control the political nature of MSA. According to what Regent Roach said, they will not fund an administration that does not support what the Board of Regents decides to do. However, this contradicts the very nature of the assmembly. If MSA does not speak out in favor of student interests for fear of losing its funding, then those interests are in danger of not being represented. The regents have decided this year that MSA will not be granted a budgetary increase. But this decision was not made for the right reasons and was not made by the right people. Students and MSA should work together to make sure this is the last year this occurs. Let MSA be financially accountable to its electorate, the students. Three years ago Greeks began to participate in the National Collegiate Alcohol Awareness Week. Programs have included an alternative beverage day, a non-alcohol party on the diag, and speakers who have addressed the detrimental effects that substance abuse can have on people's lives. The week's activities have been administered by a representitive from the Panhellenic Association, the IFC, a representitive from Univer- sity Health Services, and a member of the Michigan Student Assembly - the University Student Govern- ment. The best evidence I have found of students in the Greek System's will- ingness to combat substance abuse community that will benifit every- one in it. The Greek system provides the opportunity to act on both these possibilities, so people can enjoy themselves and help others. So the next time you pass by a fraternity or sorority house, remem- ber that there is more going on in- side than mindless drinking and par- tying. Remember that the Greek sys- tem produces responsible members of the community. Fink is a member of Theta Delta Chi Fraternity and is the Public Relations Chair for the Inter- Fraternity Council. MSA Student Group funding process THE MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY'S RECENT AL- location of $1,000 to the Palestine Solidarity Commit- tee to partially fund a two-week trip to the West Bank * has once again raised important issues concerning MSA funding of student groups. One of the most important things MSA does is to allocate money to student groups. In the past, there has been much controversy over the way this has been done. Many groups have gotten a disproportionately large amount of funding from the assembly while other groups have gotten little to no funding at all. This specific allocation is an example of a dispropor- tionately large sum of money going to funda small mi- nority. The money is being spent on two people - one a non-student - to travel abroad. However, this incident is a symptom of a larger problem inherent in the funding system of the assem- bly. needs reform aims instead of paying for programs that will benefit the student body at large. Already the University administration spends stu- dents' tuition dollars according to its own value judg- ments, but should the student-elected government partic- ipate in the same type of misappropriation? Ideally, if MSA is to fund any political groups, it should fund all political student groups represented at the University proportionately. Therefore, all students' interests would be served through the assembly. As it stands currently, MSA is taking all students' money to fund one political end, which is inadequate. What should be done to improve the system of stu- dent group funding within the assembly would be to set up some sort of guidelines concerning the funding of student groups with political intents. With sexual activity comes responsibility Dear U-M College Women: As a physician caring for college students, I have thought long and hard how I could impact the rising incidence and prevalence of sexually transmitted infections on campus. I want so much to reach all of you that I decided to write an open letter to the widely read the Daily. Where do I begin? This letter is addressed primarily to women be- cause sexually transmitted diseases have a far greater impact on women than on men, although the responsi- bility for spreading them falls upon both. The majority of these infections cause more subtle symptoms in women, leading to delays in seeking medical attention. They are harder to diganose in women than in men. Women are more likely to suffer se- rious consequences such as infertil- ity, tubal pregnancies, and cervical cancer. As I write this letter, I remember vividly patients I've cared for this past year. The 19-year old woman with herpes who had a condom in her purse that went unused because her boyfriend swore he'd never had any sexually transmitted diseases. I remember the 21-year old woman diagnosed with gonorrhea, chlamydia and herpes transmitted during a single episode of casual sex when she became intoxicated at a party. Unfortunately, you cannot count on your partner to protect you from sexually transmitted diseases. You need to protect yourself. There are ways to be sexually active - kiss- ing, massage, mutual masturbation - without sexual intercourse. In fact, abstinence is the only sure guarantee against contracting a sexu- ally transmitted disease. If abstinence is not possible for you, the use of latex rubber condoms with the spermicide containing nonoxynol nine is the most effec- tively known method to minimize your chance of contracting a sexu- ally transmitted disease, with the co- incidental benefit of contraception. Find out about your partner's health and sexual history. Talk about previous partners and previous sexu- ally transmitted infections. Be pre- pared to postpone or not have sexual intercourse if your partner is not re- sponsive to your concerns or is not taking you seriously. I am not trying to unduly scare you. Sexual activity is normal and pleasurable, but in today's times can be a hazard to your health and well being, carrying the risk of Tong term consequences. There is a good deal you can do to minimize the risk to you and your partner. Please take the responsibility for preventing sexu- ally transmitted diseases. And if pre- vention should fail, please seek care as soon as possible. Toby Jacobowitz, M.D. What has traditionally taken place within MSA has been a... system of funding that has to do more with the pursuance of specific political agendas than the welfare of all students. What has traditionally taken place within MSA has been an inconsistent and disproportionate system of funding that has to do more with the pursuance of spe- cific political agendas than the welfare of all students. The fact that the current assembly is allocating such a large amount of money to the PSC for two people is only one example of this. Because the political agendas of MSA and the PSC happen to coincide, the assembly saw fit to give a larger allocation to this student group than is typical. The problem with the funding of a certain political agenda is not unique to this administration. Most past Currently, Budget Priotrities Committee (BPC) guidelines apply to all student groups requesting MSA funding. However, once the questions of funding reach the floor of the general assembly, the decision seems to become one that employs a personal value judgment as opposed to a judgment based on uniform guidelines. What MSA needs is a set system of regulations for funding of political student groups, whether their fund- ing is decided in the BPC or on the general floor. For too long now, students have had their money taken advantage of bv itso wn nvernment. The nast ==