24 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 19, 1994 Malamuth says article contained errors To the Daily: Your April 15th issue contains a letter from Edie Goldenberg, dean of ISA, regarding the "numerous factual errors and misleading assertions" that your editorials have contained in discussions of the Department of Communication. The same issue also includes an article about me written by Karen Talaski. Although I believe that in some respects Ms. Talaski indeed attempted to write a fair article, there are unfortunately also various errors in her article. Here are some of them: 1) The photograph appearing on the page incorrectly states in the accompanying caption that it is a picture of my fourth floor laboratory. This photograph is actually of the wall further dawn the hall from the lab. It is of an office belonging to some department faculty. The rooms are clearly marked, so it is difficult to understand how such an error could have been made by your photographer. Perhaps the picture of a broken wall served the purposes of your article, even if it did not present the truth. 2) In regards to the reaction of faculty members in the department, I told Ms. Talaski the exact opposite of what she wrote. I told her that the majority of the faculty members have been friendly to me and only a small minority have been less than completely friendly. 3) Our research on the causes and prevention of violence against women uses many different methods. Your article implies that we essentially study it by using penile cuffs. This is absurd! The continued fascination of the media with writing about this assessment technique is somewhat perplexing. 4) Ms. Talaski never asked me what research has been done in the laboratory. It is incorrectly stated in the article that I admitted not using the lab. In fact, two important studies were completed there this year. Their focus, however, was not on a "sensational" subject and that is perhaps the reason there hasn't been much media interest about their methodology or content. I decided not to teach a course this Spring partially because of misrepresentations of my research and lies about me in the media and by some people. These distortions may have created a hostile climate that could stifle intellectual discussions about the focus of the course. If I looked "weary" to Ms. Talaski, it is partly because I have become tired of misrepresentations of the issues and facts. When she approached me for an interview, I was somewhat reluctant to speak to yet another reporter. While I must commend her for accurately presenting quotes from me (and for taking the time to verify them), some of the other content of the article could have been more accurate. NEIL M. MALAMUTH Former Chair, Department of Communication Decision was serious To The Daily: I am wondering what the point of the article about Aaron Ward and Cam Stewart was. It appeared to be an Aaron bashing article and nothing more. I expected a higher quality of journalism from The Michigan Daily. I know both Aaron and Cam. I am sure that for both of them the decision to turn professional was a serious one that was not made without consulting others. I know for Aaron, it was not a decision made because he thought he would play in Detroit his first season, or that he would have a large income immediately. It was a stepping stone that he took to further his career. As a result, he is now playing in a professional league, earning enough to return to college whenever he desires. Why isn't the criticism as wide- spread for the basketball players that leave early? Is it not as important to the University for them to complete their education as Michigan and he wanted a professional hockey career, why should he have spent another year in a program that was not helping him achieve his goal? The Red Wings are a professional hockey team. They are in the business to make money. Wouldn't it be rather pointless of them to invest time and resources in a player that wasn't capable or had the talent to compete in a professional league? It appears that the Dekers have forgotten their purpose as an organization. They are there to support the University of Michigan Hockey Program. They are not there to live their lives vicariously through the players. If a player signs with a professional team, it means the program has succeeded. They have trained and educated that person to be able to compete at a professional level. The ability of a player is what coaches are hired for, and what professional scouts ate paid to find out. How a player's personal and professional life is run is what parents, counselors and individuals are for. If personal problems interfere with the player's performance, then the coach should do what he can to help. But above all, everyone should support the players as much as possible, especially The Dekers, and not make a concerted effort to control and undermine their personal lives. If anything contributes to the death of an athletic program, it is lack of support. The Dekers have not been supportive of Aaron Ward. They have not been in his corner, not wanted him to succeed. Many have openly expressed their pleasure that he is playing in Adirondak and not Detroit. Many associated with the hockey program would go down to Joe Louis to watch David Roberts or Cam Stewart play and then leave before Aaron came out of the dressing room, but made sure that Aaron knew they were there and left. I've seen them smile when they learn that Aaron has suffered an injury. And yet they feel he owes the Dekers, the hockey program, and even the University of Michigan something. From the outside watching these things happen, I feel Aaron owes them NOTHING. They at least owe him the courtesy of leaving him alone. He made his decision, he is no longer playing for Michigan. Whether his decision was good or bad, only Aaron needs to worry about it. It is his life, and it only affects him. LINDA MCCROSKEY Ann Arbor Racist comments hypocritical To the Daily: To the 'M' athletes in the blue Suburban, Sunday morning in front of the Union: This past weekend there was a large number of Asians here on campus. Was it the Asian invasion? What it actually was the Midwest Asian American Student Union (MAASU). MAASU is a conference by Asian American students to learn, promote and share ideas to improve life for ALL minorities. I would like to personally thank these athletes for greeting them with an attempt at their language. The comments made while driving by the Union at 2:00 a.m., "Su Kee Ya!! A-soo!! Chink!!!" was more than any person on the MAASU committee could have hoped for. Their timely comments are indeed an achievement for us all to ponder upon. For with these words, they have separated themselves from all those who have struggled for equality. Never will they have to pay attention to the historical words of Malcolm or King. If one ever complains about being the victim of racism he is a hypocrite ... a liar. By their comments, they are no longer oppressed, but oppressors. I sincerely hope all of them reach athletic stardom and never have to face the real world. If they don't, they will experience that all people of color face discrimination and racism. For them to discriminate against any minority group, is to discriminate against all ...ritAe another passenger bus, this time in Hadera, which killed nine persons. Hamas has promised at least four more similar acts of murder. Second, following the Hadera bombing, Yasser Arafat issued a statement "regretting" and "rejecting" the violence "on both sides." Unlike Israeli reactions to the Hebron massacre, which explicitly condemned the actions of Baruch Goldstein, Arafat still has not "condemned" the murderous actions of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. The distinctions between the terms "regret" and "reject" and the term "condemn" are significant in the parlance of international relations. While "regretting" and "rejecting" indicate opposition to an action, a "condemnation" is the clearest statement of both the wrongness of terrorism and the wrongness of the responsible party. In the present context, as Israelis ponder tangible territorial sacrifices in return for an end to the violence and suffering, they look to the Palestinian leadership for a decisive reaction to Palestinian terror. In the absence of explicit condemnation, Arafat's "regrets" and "rejections" are not sufficient to reassure them that such sacrifices will not be worthwhile. J. MICHAEL JAFFE Ph.D. student Department of Communications Baker's comments off-base 4 To the Daily: I must respond to the article quoting Regent Deane Baker's outlandish remarks at the most recent Regent's meeting and the class paper which appeared as an article written by J.B. Akins in last week's Daily. First, Regent Baker suggests that the University initiate prosecutions of people under Michigan's felony law involving gross indecency. He implies that the state law applies to just homosexual activity. That is not the case. The gross indecency statutes in Michigan apply equally to heterosexual and homosexual conduct, committed in public or in private. The Michigan Courts of Appeals have interpreted "gross indecency" to be oral-genital sexuai activity. The laws apply, on their face, equally to married and unmarried heterosexual couples engaging in oral sex. I would suggest to Regent Baker that the majority of illegal sexual acts under the statutes he suggest be used are being committed not by gay men, but by their heterosexual counterparts at the University. Moreover, the statues that Regent Baker suggests the University use for prosecution have been declared unconstitutional in a case in Wayne County Circuit Court (MOHR v. Kelley) in which the Attorney General elected not to file an appeal. His failure to do so has been interpreted by some as an indication that the statute should be considered unenforceable in Michigan. Second, the original article and Regent Baker imply that the activity occurring is homosexual in nature. A letter in yesterday's Daily written by Lee Sussman suggests that the photograph which accompanied the article was also indicative of illegal sexual acts. (The photograph purported to show semen on the walls of a stall in a men's room on campus.) In fact, the photograph may be good documentation of the complaint of custodial staff that people are dirty, but it does not imply illegal activity. There is no illegality to masturbation not in the presence of others who might be offended. I am not suggesting that such a practice is a good idea, but just pointing out that the photograph does not tell us if the person leaving the evidence was alone at the time. Nor does it tell us whether the person was gay or straight. As a recent Daily columnist suggested, masturbation is pervasive at the university. I would suggest that many people are affected by sexual activity of others which prohibit them from using private spaces at the University, but that most of ' them are heterosexual and that they are much more inconvenienced than neonle who might see evidence os I 4 ^ 1 I