0 Page 4 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 26, 1990 EIbr Midiigau iaiO EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 V yp'1 ' ,*-4, NOAH FINKEL Editor in Chief DAVID SCHWARTZ Opinion Editor Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Broken Record U' propaganda distorts minority enrollment data... IT'S NO SECRET THAT THE UNI- sus Bureau, compared to 7.2 percent of versity administration established the the student body. University Record to put a positive The University also congratulates it- spin on the University and the bureau- self for increases in Hispanic and crats who run it. So it should come as Asian-American enrollment, which cur- no surprise that its recent coverage of rently stand at 3.2 and 7.5 percent re- University minority enrollment - spectively, the highest figures since the which consists of the verbatim reprint- University began compiling statistics. ing of the administration's press release However, the University doesn't break on the topic - doesn't tell the whole these umbrella categories down, a story. practice which hides the under-repre- The.University boasts that minority sentation of Chicanos and many Asians enrOllment has increased for the tenth from countries in Southeast Asia. consecutive year and has reached its The University's record on Native highest level in 16 years. However, fo- American enrollment is particularly cusing on minority enrollment as a deplorable. The enrollment total of 157 whole, without breaking it down into is only one more student than in 1985. its component parts, results in a very Native Americans make up only .47 incomplete image. Similarly, the Uni- percent of the University student popu- versity's policy of stressing rates of in- lation, as compared to 2 percent of the crease distorts the extraordinary degree U.S. population of student age. to which students of color continue to The University conspicuously fails be under-represented at the University. to mention these facts while it high- lights the enrollment increases of the African-American enrollment, in last 10 years. That such "dramatic" both raw numbers and as a percentage gains could be experienced and such of the student body, is lower today enormous under-representation should than it was in 1976. Twenty years after continue only demonstrates the woeful the University promised Black Action condition of minority enrollment 10 Viovement (BAM) protestors that it years ago. would achieve 12 percent Black en- The University has repeatedly en- rollment, the figure stands at 7.2 per- gaged in nickel and dime efforts to in- cent. But in the Record, the University crease student of color enrollment. As uses current African-American enroll- Charles Moody, vice provost for mi- ment figures and statistical manipula- nority affairs, said, "It's worth remem- ®.tion to laud its efforts at promoting di- bering that in the mid- to late-'70s, mi- versity by only highlighting the 10.2 nority enrollment had increased to percent improvement in the last year. around 10 percent... Then the numbers African-Americans now represent ap- started going down until they reached a proximately 12 percent of the U.S. low of 4.9 percent Black enrollment in .population, according to the U.S. Cen- 1983." .. and the University avoids making real change - _ ! -- -.r . . -- r~ .- : ,i, L ~ /fit _ i i .._ L- ti f APIA~I T PSTA(9f- AE ONETWqS.TE E cJ ATh CAMKS&T NEAT}I J A Jb D -~~, D &~ ~m ~U4TpR ~ "~ WM~T HL WEN4'? AN 4M L) DoC M~oD -=-- -- 0 Chait should learn to be more sensitive To the Daily: I must express my extreme discomfort and anger about Jonathan Chait's column, "Celebrate 'Daily Editorialist Appreciation Week"'(10/23/90). As a resident director, I am constantly on the front lines of many issues that con- front our campus. I have had many won- derful experiences as I, along with the res- idents and other staff members, grow in our understanding and appreciation of the many concerns that our student body and our world face. But never have I had such a negative reaction as I did when I read Chait's.arti- cle. It saddens me that even someone with the attitudes of a Cro-Magnon man can find his racist, sexist, homophobic, and generally unfeeling words in print in a pa- per that has taken pride in some of its progressive positions. Before losing focus, let me deal with each issue in its own light. Should Chait choose not to challenge the prejudices and insensitivities that were so apparent in his column, that is his choice, and millions of others have made the same one. But to let them go unchallenged is to harm every man, woman, and child on this planet in both big and small ways. I will take the issues in the order they appeared in the article: My sister suffers from bulemia. I know the pain that it causes her and has caused our family. Eating disorders can be very frightening things, and many who suffer from them are completely unaware that they have them. People die from such things, and I ap- plaud all those involved with Eating Dis- order Awareness Week. And I hope that their efforts will not go unrewarded - even if by only touching one life. Sexual assault plagues our campus and our nation. Understanding the depth of the pain that a survivor of sexual assault goes through is beyond me. The fact that one in three women is sexually assaulted at some time confuses me and angers me at the same time. Perhaps bringing it closer to home may make the weight of this issue a little out the violence that lesbians and gay men face due to the ignorance of so many. Blue Jeans Day has been used as some- thing to make people think about these is- sues rather than a chance to "vote" for which side you are on. It sounds as if the fact that there was a Blue Jeans Day dis turbed Chait, and I think that was parto the purpose. The next step is to deal with that discomfort. And last, but by no means least, is Chait's comments regarding the shanties. The shanties are not meant to be beautiful - they express the ugliness of racism. Intoleration is intolerable. There is room to grow for all of us. IF THE ADMINISTRATION IS AS committed to diversity as it claims to be, it must cease its efforts to hide the University's institutional racism with smoke screens like the Record's recent article. Instead, it must commit itself to fundamental institutional changes in its retention efforts, the curriculum, and the atmosphere of thetUniversity, which remains hostile to people of color and other subordinated groups. Lack of adequate financial aid and outrageous tuition continue to be the major obstacles to minority recruitment and retention. More than 10 percent of the minority students enrolled for Winter term have not returned the fol- lowing fall in every year since 1980. i A 1987 University Executive Offi- cers' discussion paper reported that the University's formula for determining financial aid was negatively biased against minorities. The University has yet to implement the report's recom- mendations to correct this problem. Rising tuition contributes to re- stricted University access for people of color, who are disproportionately from lower-income families. And the ex- pected tuition hike of 6.5 percent for instate students and 9.1 percent for out- of-state students will only exacerbate the problem. Other institutional changes must in- clude broadening the University's cur- riculum to reflect the experiences of people of color. The Center for African-American studies and programs in Latino studies should be upgraded to full departmental status. Departments in Chicano, Native American, and Asian- American studies must also be established. The administration must also commit itself to changing the University's atmosphere, which is often hostile to people of color. The regent's estab- lishment of a campus police force - when people of color are dispropor- tionately targets of police brutality - will do nothing to address this prob- lem. Also, the administration's refusal to investigate the recent distribution of racist flyers in the Law School is a par- ticularly galling example of administra- tive contributions to campus climate hostile to people of color. .N. The administration must follow the lead of students and faculty of color, who are best prepared to recommend. effective and meaningful institutional changes. It should be noted that both periods of increased minority enroll- ment in the last two decades followed student anti-racist efforts led by BAM I (1970) and BAM III(1987). Until students push the University to eliminate financial barriers that limit its accessibility to people of color, and until the curriculum and character of the University are changed to reflect our society's multi-culturalism, the enroll- ment of students of color will continue to be unrepresentative. easier for Chait to understand. Out of your mother, your sister, and your girlfriend, one of them will be sexually assaulted dur- ing her lifetime. Discounting Pride, Awareness, and Commitment Week shows an insensitiv- ity to the plight of lesbians and gay men in our community. Regardless of your feelings on the issue, those involved in organizing the activities of the week showed bravery in confronting a topic that few choose to face. The hatred that is expressed by so many individuals on a daily basis towards those whose sexual orientation is either homosexual or bisexual is not a trivial matter. All persons deserve the right to live peacefully and comfortably here with- Impersonal lawyers may side with rapists To the Daily: "Stop rape on campus," the man read aloud from the message on the Sexual As- sault Awareness Week balloon. "Does that mean we can rape everywhere else?" The group of men broke into laughter as they continued on their way Wednesday afternoon. The man's comment would be disturbing in any context, but these well- dressed men were descending from the towers of the Law School. These are the people who shape our legal system; the last recourse for justice available to rape victims and the final arbiter of right and wrong in our society. In the last issue of The Res Gestae, John Ogilvie wrote of his criminal law course: "In our discussions of rape, the victim was depersonalized." He suggested this- results from the necessity of emo- tional distance in legal practice. Perhaps it isn't the efficient practice of law which makes Ogilvie's colleagues and professors so unfeeling in their discus- sions of rape victims. Perhaps it is their underlying sympathy with the perpetrators of rape which makes empathy for the vic- tims so difficult and which would lead this man to use the first person plural, "...we can rpe.. Karen Akerlof LSA senior 'E. Detroit' doesn't mean 'East Detroit' To the Daily: I would like to point out a correction side of Detroit" as if they were inter- changeable - they are not. The first and third are not the same, as I already pointed out, and the second does not exist, at least in common "Detroit terminology." Michael Kamprath Where is Meiland? To the Daily: It is admirable that cities in Michigan are now trying to do their part to save the environment. Everyone should work to save the Earth, and Meiland, Michigan ought to be proud to be leading the way. One point, though: where is Meiland? Maybe you mean Milan, Michigan? They have stood for years, and I suspect will continue to stand for many years to come, because racism is not only in South Africa, it is right here in the good old US of A, and believe it or not, on this "liberal" campus. To demean the shanties, to deny that we all share in the burden of confrontin racism of all forms is to justify the exit tence of racism. Intoleration is intolerable. There is room to grow for all of us. It is Chait's first year here, and I hope he takes advan- tage t the opportunities here to challenge himself. Whit Shiller Rackham graduate student South Quad resident director Cartoons are deplorable To the Daily: Exactly what barrel does the Daily scrape to find its cartoonists? Day after day, the cartoons (Nuts and Bolts, espe- cially) are packed with spelling errors a dyslexic toad would be ashamed to let by. Neither Nuts and Bolts nor Russell Baltimore's refrigerator-magnet-caliber p4 scratchings have even threatened to evoke the slightest hint of mirth or enlighten- ment from myself or anyone I know. . What would be the-feasibility of per- haps printing empty space, another edito- rial, or even (god forbid) a legitimately humorous national cartoon in place of Bal- timore's embarrassing tripe? Stephen Sheridan Douglas Whittington High Steppin' Don' t compromise Michigan Band tradition Students' Rights Week Sponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly TO ,DAY'S EVENTS :... Rally forStudents' Rghs : 1:00. PM-On the Drag....: Party for Students' Rights Featuri ng the msic of Rtythm McFeud 8:0P -..Quad Half Way Inn...::. _:>.::< THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Marching Band is not what it used to ,be. Recently, a most egregious policy -has been implemented by new band ~Director Gary Lewis, which will go a long way toward erasing decades of half-time tradition. Lewis, who took over this year for interim band director Jerry Luckhardt, has introduced several innovative rou- this move has been overshadowed by newer, corps-like revues such as the Miami Sound Machine performed at the Michigan State game... no wonder we lost! This move away from tradition is alienating the legacies left by former band directors such as Dr. William Revelli and Dr. George Cavender. These men are responsible for the high