The Michigan Daily- Friday, October 4, 1991 - Page 5 by Lynne Cohn w ily Staff Reporter When the editor first approached me with the idea to write a story about physically disabled students, he suggested riding around in a wheelchair for a day, just to see what it's like. It was a great sugges- tion - the perfect way to write a story like this. But I didn't do it. At first, I thought it wouldn't lly matter. But deep down, I ew the real reason why I wouldn't: It scared me. Walking around campus, I thought about the technical limita- tions - I couldn't live in my apartment because there are six steep steps leading up to the door, and I couldn't work at the Daily. But I never thought about the emo- tional limitations until I inter- awed someone who has to deal with a physical disability every day of his life. While conducting the interview in the basement of the Union, all I could focus on was the fact that the person sitting beside me was in a wheelchair. I had a problem with the thought of calling attention to myself by using a wheelchair for a day. But I had a choice. The reality of a physical disabil- ity is the lack of a choice. Eric Silberberg, the LSA student I inter- viewed, said he really doesn't mind the wheelchair. It's the baggage that goes along with his disability that makes it hard. Dealing with people who react like I did probably makes it harder. * "The cliche, 'you find out who your friends are,' is definitely true," said Eric, a 22-year-old English and computer science concentrator from Birmingham, Mich. "Certain people stick around, but you can separate the friends from the acquaintances. It's not determined by who comes to visit you in the hospital." Though he now sits in a wheel- chair four feet from the ground, Eric es not always been handicapped. On a family vacation aboard a cruise ship, the not-quite 15-year-old Eric flipped over a railing and fell 30 feet, fracturing two vertebrae. When asked how the accident af- fected his life, Eric joked, "I haven't quite figured it out yet. "It changed my family relation- ships," he said. "I wouldn't say it ought us closer together, but I ould say it brought them closer to me." Eric's mother, Rachelle Silber- berg, said her son's accident pro- vided him with a "humongous chal- lenge. He's met that challenge." Eric and his parents are disap- pointed with the University's lack of wheelchair accessibility, though Rachelle admits to pushing her son * attend Michigan. "I said, 'I think you've got the ability to do it,' and I was right," she said. "It's never been the goal to make things easy." Eric said Michigan State Univer- sity is "10 times better than here" as far as accessibility, but "they turned me down. My grades were not great. I'm not a particularly motivated student." Access Ascendin*.g to Physically disabled students try to cope on campus going until I have to find another entrance to a building or it takes me twice as long to go to the bathroom." Eric recently paired off with Wager, a service dog from Paws With A Cause in Grand Rapids. Wager is trained to reach light switches or open doors. "Some serious quads (quadri- plegics) need the dog to pick things up for them," Eric said. Eric called himself a "super- quad;" though four limbs are im- paired, he is able to use his hands almost completely. He can write, though somewhat shaky, and he can drive by using hand controls on the steering wheel. Equal access on a Daily basis that I could not reach. I tried mov- ing the wheels, as Eric instructed, but I couldn't get myself very far. "The technical things (like not walking) are really kind of minor," Rachelle said. "The biggest thing is the emotional impact - you may not be able to get to the bathroom in time." The exact number of physically disabled students on campus is un- known. Elizabeth Maasen, of the Services for Students with Disabil- ities (SSD) office, estimated that there are less than 20. "Overall, the University is in pretty good shape for accommodat- ing students with physical disabili- ties," said Brian Clapham, the cam- pus Affirmative Action representa- tive. "It's not barrier-free, but there has been an effort over the last five or six years to build under barrier- free codes." One of the functions of the cam- body has some sort of story - you can't dwell on it. "Every football game I get up- set. I used to be on the field, which is exciting, but you can't see over the photographers and you can't sit with your friends. I end up walking home alone because it's impossible to find.them after. It's an emotional high and low." It's hard enough walking down Hoover in the congested aftermath of a football game, but Eric rolls himself to and from every game. "The most annoying thing about big crowds is you say 'excuse me' and nobody hears you," he said. "So the third time, you just say, 'Move!' and invariably I clip a heel or toe and then they're pissed at you be- cause it looks like you ignored them completely." Eric recalled the football game against Notre Dame in 1989. The pouring rain diminished many stu- try. "I can deal with not walking. The biggest problems are dexterity and having to go to the bathroom all the time." There is a University policy for moving classes if a student is unable to physically attend on account of inaccessibility or an elevator that 'I think the access on this campus sucks though it has gotten better...' - Eric Silberberg LSA senior frequently breaks down. "I really think that because there are a lot of older buildings, a lot of changes have to be made," SSD's Maasen said. "They've made signifi- cant progress. If it were a whole new campus... then bathroom doors would not swing the wrong way and you wouldn't have stalls that are not the right size." Although he has taken the University bus for students with disabilities, Eric mostly relies on himself. Students have the option to use University Special Transportation (UST) with a doctor's note stating why they qualify for special bus service. The service is free, and the buses run on weekdays from 7:15 a.m. to 10 p.m. Maasen, the SSD liaison with UST, said students with "any sig- nificant physical impairment" may use the bus, but it is "up to the per- son whether they want to ask us." Dan Speiharr, a Paratransit Yel- low Cab employee who dispatches the UST buses, said, "Sometimes there are problems with a lot of rides at one particular time, but it has been resolved - the University recently hired a new bus." Speiharr said between 25 and 30 students use UST at any given time. "We get a lot of knee injuries and sprained ankles," he said, "but we also get wheelchairs and persons who are blind." Bus rides aside, it is hard to mea- sure whether the University climate is sensitive to students with disabilities. ."The degree of sensitivity varies depending on what department you're in," Clapham said. "Some- times people don't think about the physical limitations - it just doesn't enter their mind. It's not deliberate or malicious.'" Clapham said the key is educat- ing students about disabilities. He said people "are much more under- standing" once made aware of the needs of students with disabilities. Educating others about such needs may create greater sensitivity or awareness. But eventually, the others can walk away. Christine Fenno, a junior in the School of Music, watched a handi- capped student wheel himself down the street outside her State Street home. She described his journey, mentioning her surprise that he was able to wheel himself around. He looked both ways and began to cross an intersection. As he ap- proached the curb, he realized that there was no ramp. He stopped and considered his options. Then, he backed up into the middle of the street and propelled himself toward the curb at full speed. The curb was still too high. He sighed, turning his wheel- chair away from the sidewalk. He continued wheeling himself down the middle of the street. The curb was just too high. On Sunday, the Daily cel- ebrated a birthday - its 101st. It went by without much notice, either from the paper's staff or from the University community. Stephen I've always He rd thought of birthdays as a time to think back on where we've been, and look ahead to where we're going. And as positive as I think the paper's past century and 12 months have been, there are still some things that bother me about it. One of those things is the Daily's responsibility to accom- modate every student interested in working for the paper. The problem is with the Student Publications Building. The Daily has been the building's primary tenant for almost 60 years. And though the structure has adequately suited the paper's needs over that period of time, it has never been equipped to provide complete access for the physically disabled. The building does have a ramp at the rear entrance to permit access to the first floor, but the only routes to the second floor are two extremely steep stairways. And although most of the Daily's activities - both adver- tising and editorial - take place on the second floor, the paper's production facilities are on the first floor. A big part of working for the Daily, therefore, is going up and down the stairs - a lot. Obviously, anyone with a physical disability would be at a distinct disadvantage. In fact, disabled students have simply not been able to work at the Daily. The problem, however, hasn't gone unnoticed. Daily editors approached the University a few years ago in the hopes of convinc- ing it to install an elevator in the building. But the estimated cost - about $250,000 - is, to say the least, prohibitive. And because the University isn't under any legal obligation to make such an expensive structural change to the building, it has shelved the idea. Last year, the newly-formed Daily Alumni Club established a fund for the elevator in the name of Jim Neubacher, a former Daily editor. Neubacher was stricken with multiple sclerosis soon after he left the Daily in 1971, and later wrote a column about the disabled in the Detroit Free Press. He died last year. The alumni mean well, and have worked hard to raise money for the fund. But $250,000 is an exorbitant amount of money, and the alumni's fund - quite frankly - isn't even close to that amount. So the elevator proposal has hit an impasse. The University won't pay; the alumni can't. Even the Daily's financial parent, the Board for Student Publications, has responded to the idea timidly. But this is just too important to abandon at that. The fact that physically disabled students can't get around the Student Publications Building is a blemish on all our faces. A community that touts itself as an "open and accessible environ- ment" shouldn't be making excuses for such a restrictive obstacle; it should be making amends. The University spends millions each year on campus renovation and maintenance. And the Board for Student Publica- tions is sitting on an endowment worth well more than $1 million. Neither has a credible~excuse to ignore this problem. And this isn't just about being able to work for the Daily. Hell, it's not even about the law, or it shouldn't have to be. This is about ensuring that everyone on KRISTOFFER GILLEITE/Daily Assistance dog Wager helps out LSA senior Eric Silberberg by handing him his car keys. pus Affirmative Action Office is to insure that the University does not discriminate against people with disabilities, Clapham said. Rhonda Gilmore, the senior counselor in the Office of Under- graduate Admissions, said she never sees prospective students who are physically disabled. "There really is not much of a 'Sometimes people don't think about the physical limitations. It's not deliberate' -Brian Clapham Affirmative Action Representative dents' urges to get to the game, but Eric was there. He said jeans weren't the best to wear because they got cold and heavy from the rain. But he was de- termined, He cheered for the Wol- verines from his seat on the field and wheeled himself home af- terward, only to jump in a hot shower with his clothes still on. The University is increasing its effort to help disabled students. A priority registration program began in December 1989, allowing stu- dents who qualify to CRISP at the front of their group. If it is diffi- cult for a student to register amidst the congestion of CRISP, the pro- gram also allows students to select classes at the Registrar's Office. Affirmative Action's Clapham said he works with departmental construction to make campus build- ings more barrier-free. There is also an Accessibility Task Force, of which Clapham is a member, that looks at ways to improve the physi- cal accessibility of the University. Eric said, "The inaccessibility does affect my grades - when I can't get out of my house because I'm snowed in. I'll never make it be- tween classes in 10 minutes, but I'll University buildings, however, do not present the only problems of accessibility on campus. Eric said the Greek system at the University is "completely inacces- sible. I thought about it like all other freshmen, but I lived in 38 Hall (in South Quad) and we bonded." Eric's disability has not impaired his ability to have a good time. "Sometimes I forget about the wheelchair. But I've been carried in and out of every bar in Ann Arbor and in and out of every frat house," Eric said. "It takes time to deal with certain parts of it. I'm very ac- tive and very little stops me. They might not notice because I'm so out- I think the access on this cam- pus sucks," Eric said, "though it has gotten better over the last five years." A man who frequently jokes ound - he describes himself as "six feet and four foot four - take the average" - Eric does not let his disability get in his way. He offered to let me "try out" his wheelchair in the MUG, lifting himself out of it and into another chair. . I climbed into the chair. The world became bigger. Light switches, doorways and even the Wendy's counter grew to mountains reason to come in because their phys- ical disability does not impair their ability to learn," she said. "I'd as- sume they apply normally and seek out the services once they get here." While University personnel try to help disabled students get into buildings more easily, they spend less time advising them about pos- sible emotional difficulties. From where he sits, Eric encoun- ters problems more complicated 'than an inadequate curb ramp or a tricky building entrance. "You have to be on an emotional middle ground," he said. "Every- 'U stresses student potential in Investing in Abilities Week Investing in Ability Week IWi$ndW ~~ Ioyii 1 n- Equal employment opportunities and arketing abilities. Next week, deemed Investing in Ability Week by Gov. John Engler, various University programs will emphasize that although there are Clapham, the campus Affirmative Action representative. The Career Planning & Place- ment Office is sponsoring a program nn Mnnav As.c an oP- 1ate, . , 7~ 4