Unfinished business It has been nearly eight months since an anonymous cabal of students tried to railroad Professor David Goldberg out of the Department of Sociology by slandering him with trumped up charges of sexual and racial harassment. The chair of the sociology department who bowed to the inquisition has since resigned; the charges have been dropped, and Goldberg has been allowed to teach his course, Sociology 510 -although he has been demoted to teaching only elective, and not required courses. Nevertheless, the wound the Goldberg affair has inflicted on the University community continues to Fester. It will continue to do so until he University apologizes to Goldberg and takes a strong stand in defense of academic freedom. The facts of the incident were con- tained in a December article for Rea- son Magazine by Jonathan Chait. In his class, Goldberg challenged vari- ous statistical claims, such as the as- sertion that women make 59 cents to every dollar men make, and statistics laiming race is a decisive factor be- tween Blacks and whites concerning SAT scores and who gets mortgage loans. Goldberg found the 59 cent figure to be inaccurate, and concluded other factors like income and educa- ton were decisive in the other claims. The students charged that Goldberg conducted these and other statistical analyses "to vent his own iolitical, ideological and personal frustrations on students in the class- room" and that "the obvious target for these attacks were students of color and women." After hearing these complaints, and before even considering Goldberg's defense, Sociology Chair Howard Schuman barred Goldberg from teaching his required graduate course. Later, Schuman split the 35- erson class into two sections (with qne taught by another professor) while giving hardly a thought to academic freedom. The arrangement seems to have worked, other than the fact that a tenured professor was stripped of his class because of the content of his ideas. This point has catalyzed some members of a normally lethargic fac- *lty. In "Muggings," the most recent outraged faculty article to appear in the University Record, Professors George J. Brewer and Thomas E. Moore lamented the poor handling of the case and sought apologies to Goldberg from the dean of LSA, the provost and the president. Asked about the .criticism, Uni- versity President James J. Duderstadt responded, "Over the course of the past year we have indeed responded to this incident in a variety of ways. Professors Moore and Brewer are quite wrong." If the University has responded, it has been in one way: very quietly, or very privately. Brewer said in an interview that the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), which *epresents the faculty, had also failed to take a necessary tough stand on the Goldberg affair. "SACUA has stalled on it," he said. "It hasn't done any- thing so far." Henry Griffin, who chairs SACUA, said he would like to see the issue addressed through "normal channels" at the dean or department level. The professors are not likely to be pleased with Dean Goldenberg's re- sponse. While Goldenberg firmly de- fended the concept of academic free- dom, at a Feb. 7 faculty meeting she warned that "faculty as well as stu- dents should be more tolerant of hear- ing views expressed or having issues Ushenng theater into the 2 1st century By MELISSA ROSE BERNARDO and JASON CARROLL Artists on their craft T he self-professed goal of The Colored Museum Project (CMP) is to generate and further the discussion of "Multi- Ethnic theater in the 21st Century." While an honorable goal, some participants of the CMP are skeptical about its ramifica- tions. Participants like Muriel Miguel and OyamO are optimistic about the discussions but less optimistic about the anticipated solu- tions. The catch phrase "multi-ethnic theater" leaves a bad taste in the mouth of Muriel Miguel, a Native American actor-producer-play- wright-director. "Every time I hear it, it scares me, and it's been scaring me for a number of years now," she said. Past experience has made her wary of that idea, because she knows that Native Americans have been burnt, and will always be burnt. "So far this 'multicultural' - this buzzword - has not worked for me," she stated emphatically. "It usually means that there are expectations of what you're going to do and what you should be doing, and if you don't meet those expectations ... or if you do it you're own way, then people get upset with you." But to achieve multiculturalism in theater, Miguel thinks, we need more than just rhetoric - more than labels like "multi- trasmission" or "ethnic transmission" or "cultural transmission," a phrase she heard the other day. "I don't know if these things have words," Miguel speculated. "I think that true sharing is true sharing, which means that you listen to and support other cultures and other types of theater, that you read up and that you find out. That you work as an audience just as hard in theater, or you work just as hard if you're a critic, as the people that are showing you something." Accomplished African-American playwright and University pro- fessor OyamO suggested examining our American history for a springboard for this discussion of multi-ethnic theater. "We've always had the problem of a multi-ethnic country. Before the other people came, there were various nations of indigenous people, plenty of different cultures. They didn't do all the same thing or act the same way ... so we had a multi-ethnic society. "But somewhere along the way, someone attempted to impose one culture, and that's been a source of contention ever since then. That's why we end up having conferences like this - to rediscover the multi-ethnicity that this land has always had," OyamO explained. Rediscovering our multi-ethnicity for the 21st century is not only restricted to the performing arts. However, OyamO pointed out, the theater seems to be a natural venue through which we can explore multi-ethnicity. "Especially in America where we have so many different people and cultures, and they're all coming together to work in a common theater, it naturally lends itself to a kind of multi-ethnicity," OyamO said. Miguel, however, sees in the theater what she calls "the white mainstream," and claims that Native Americans (as she cannot speak for other groups) must make a place for themselves, without the help of other groups. "I felt that there really was no place for a Native theater that did not have beautiful costumes with lots of See MIGUEL, Page 7 Project fosters multiculturalism kay, theater connoisseurs, let's take a little quiz. Questions:0 1. Can you name one African- American play/musical that appeared on Broadway within the last 10.years? 2. How about one Asian-Ameri- can play/musical? (Note: "Miss Saigon" does not count.) 3. One Latino play/musical? ("West Side Story" is not an option.) 4. Or a Native American play/ musical? (No points for "Annie Get Your Gun.) Answers: 1. Possible answers could include: "Jelly's Last Jam," "Five Guys Named Moe," or "Dreamgirls." Any others? Write us. We'd like to know. 2. Possible answer: David Henry- Hwang's "M. Butterfly." We can't think of any others. 3. You've got us on this one. We don't know either. 4. Beats us! The point of this little exercise is to illustrate the point that minorities are underrepresented in the home of America's most lucrative commer- cial theater, Broadway - also known as "The Great White Way." (Go fig- ure.) In effort to ameliorate this situa- tion, this week Ann Arbor's theater community will unite to discuss is- sues surrounding the future of theater in the next century. It is dubbed "The Colored Museum Project" (CMP), a week-long series of dialogues and workshops at the heart of which is a production of George C. Wolfe's play "The Colored Museum." In a recent interview, University faculty mem- ber Julie Nessen, CMP l producer and director, described the various goals of the CMP. "One is to start a scholar chin rmaramfor dlldpntc of ater. "(Since) 'Jelly's Last Jam' closed on Broadway ... there are no other Black plays. In my mind, that isn't right. We have no Latino plays, no Native American plays - the list goes on and on. We make the state- ment 'This is America' and it's just not." "The Colored Museum" has a his- tory of its own at the University. Last year, the show was presented in the Arena Theatre for six performances. "I've always felt that it was an important piece of theater to do here," Nessen said. "By the end of the run, we were pushing people into the Arena. There was nowhere to stand, sit, anything. And these were people that didn't normally go to the the- ater." Although it sold out numerous performances, the producers felt the show "was seen by relatively few people." Therefore, the show is being remounted this year in the larger Trueblood Theatre. "We thought we obviously have a good show, and we have a show that people need to see," Nessen remarked. The idea for the project's expan- sion came to Nessen while working See CMP, Page 7 h-u 0.1