The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 1, 1994 - 3 Faculty women's club offers support, friends By BARBARA McKELVEY For the Daily For nearly 75 years, the wives of University faculty have had a club of their own. In October 1921, Nina Burton, the wife of then-University President Marion Burton, or- ganized a Faculty Women's Club to provide 50 professors' and administrators' spouses with peer support and recreation. The most important function of the club has ventured beyond fun, reported long-time mem- ber Ruth Whitaker. Historically, the group has helped faculty spouses find a life apart from their husbands' careers. "It helps you get acquainted with the com- munity," said Whitaker, whose husband Gilbert is the provost and executive vice president for academic affairs. "Often, faculty wives get iden- tified with what their husband does. This helps them establish their own identity." The group attracts many devoted, long- term members; several members reported that they found their closest friends through its net- work. The club's brochure contains several pages filled with women who have been a part of the group for more than 50 years (along with their husbands' names in parentheses). The organization held its annual welcoming tea last week and plans three more group-wide events - a holiday reception, dinner dance and spring luncheon - throughout the year. The group also has a "Hospitality for World Visitors" group that aids international women faculty as they navigate through a strange new land. "'I taught a Japanese bride how to cook," said former hospitality committee member Patricia Sonntag. "And I showed her what to shop for." Over the years, the club's ranks have ex- panded to include more than 700 women, as well as a few honorary men. The number of women faculty members has also increased, but Sonntag estimated that 85 percent of the group is still comprised of wives. "Usually, women faculty have other things they are involved in," said Sonntag, "but they're beginning to be included more and more. Fe- male professors usually come for social rea- sons. Being on faculty is usually seen as busi- ness. There may be no female network, so it works for them." Sonntag stressed that the group has a diverse membership, filled with career women as well as traditional homemakers. "It's not for everyone," Sonntag reported. "But there are an awful lot of intelligent and interesting people here who have degrees in their own right - doctors, lawyers, business- women, and the former mayor of Ann Arbor." Whitaker said that the club has increased respect for women's role as the backbone of their husbands' careers. She added that this function became increasingly important as femi- nism took hold in Ann Arbor in the 1970s. "For a while, if you didn't have a PhD of your own, it was easy to feel like less of a person. (The group) provided what family spirit was really here, and it certainly helped women have a high opinion of who they are." Oakland County woman found safe in Kentucky y >i books still inside, was found along- side a highway the next day in Washtenaw County. Earlier in the week, police said they had received at least eight solid reports that McGowan was seen walking in the area where her car was. Some of those people told police she appeared confused. Washtenaw County Sheriff Ron Schebil said McGowan told authori- ties she had been walking because her car broke down and somehow walked more than 200 miles to Ken- tucky. He said she had a jar of pea- nut butter, which she ate along the way. McGowan's mother, Carol, had said her daughter has a heart condi- tion that can bring on panic attacks. She recently quit her job at a depart- ment store and had moved back to her parents' home. It doesn't appear that any crimes were committed and no further in- vestigation is planned, said Washtenaw County Sheriff's Lt. R.J. Smith. ! McGowan Hotline counsels troubled students Peer counselors at 76-GUIDE can help students through a variety of problems By RACHEL LASKY For the Daily What is 76-GUIDE? Although many students are un- aware of it, this phone number con- nects students to the peer-counseling hotline on campus. Students call with questions about relationships, sexual identity, insom- nia and anxiety (especially around midterms and finals). 76-GUIDE also receives calls dealing with suicide and anorexia. The peer counselors say they are mainly there to listen, rather than give advice. By talking through their prob- lems, students will be able to generate their own solutions, counselors say. David Callin, an LSA sophomore and new volunteer, said after three nights of work he "hasn't received many phone calls" and is "disap- pointed that it isn't that busy." Callin said he became very close with his co-workers after attending orientation for peer counselors. "We're a big team and we all work together. There is a great group of people gathered to help the Univer- sity community," Callin said. These counselors also refer stu- dents to services including Ozone House, SOS-line and lesbian-gay male counseling. All peer counselors at 76-GUIDE are volunteers. They go through ex- tensive training in order to deal with the crises they will encounter. This training includes the "lethality scale" --the way they classify degrees of a crisis's lethality. The scale would involve a counselor asking questions such as those for a suicide call: Does the caller have a set plan? Ifthe caller's plan is to take pills, do they have the pills accessible? The peer counselors take their jobs very seriously. When someone calls, their call is documented. When the next shift of counselors comes in, they are required to read all the write ups written during the previous shifts. Organizers say confidentiality is maintained although all 15 or 16 vol- unteers will know about a particular crisis. Any call made is confidential within the program. Jill Kiersky, an LSA senior, is currently working her second year at 76-GUIDE. "Every call is unique and important. The callers realize that they are dealing with peers and not profes- sionals. The callers are usually very appreciative," Kiersky said. This hotline can be of great ser- vice to students who are having prob- lems and feel they can't turn to their friends for help. 76-GUIDE is open seven days a week from 7 p.m.-8 a.m. Perot attacks Clinton's foreign policy Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Calling Presi- dent Clinton "a draft dodger," a com- bative and prickly Ross Perot accused the White House yesterday of spring- ing news of ominous Iraqi troop move- ments as a ploy to bolster Democratic popularity as the elections approach. "It's the most cynical thing in the world," the 1992 presidential candi- date said. "It is rotten. It is wrong." Referring to the U.S. intervention in Haiti, Perot, playing the role of a fictitious Clinton adviser, said: "The first war didn't get him a bump in the polls, now let's try a second one." Interviewed on CBS-TV's "Face the Nation," Perot also offered his prescription for defusing the tensions along the Iraq-Kuwait border: "Just tap him(Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein) on the shoulder quietly and say: "Don't do anything tricky - because we've got unlimited un- manned missiles, unmanned drones. We will wipe your country out. We did it once, we'll do it again.' " If that tactic were to fail, Perot has an alternative: assassinate Hussein. "Saddam Hussein is the problem. Eliminate the problem, and your prob- lem goes away," he said. Perot did not address the morality of political assassinations. But he left little doubt that he believed in the efficacy of such action. -------' Thn 1F'mniInw~ro Alternafivw" nhcn Tninn '. 7iZ2 TNtIC. ri I