4 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 9, 1996 aI E wticbtgttn ]4)Zfl 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan RONNIE GLASSBERG Editor in Chief ADRIENNE JANNEY ZACHARY M. RAIMI Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Out -spoken Cain must resign as director of SAPAC NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'Government censorship is something we need to be concerned about.' - U.S. Rep. Dale Kildee (D-Flint) explains his trepidation over the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which includes a section on Internet censorship. Jim LASSER SHARPAs TOAST BILLIONAIRE INSANE WHAT ARE YvOU A LU \ 1N FOR? * FOR .9 ESIDENT' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR MCINTOSH CLASSICS What'syour concentration? Then again, who cares? i i . I d t Ii I4 9. B ang! That's the sound of one of the University's most important organiza- tions shooting itself in the foot. Sexual Assault Prevention and Aware- ness Center leadership blundered - and its volunteers called it. Now it's time to amputate. Accusations Seven volunteers recently accused SAPAC Director Debi Cain of breaching client confidentialities. They claim the orga- nization has a problem with racism and that Peer Education co-coordinator Janelle White's termination was inappropriate. In protest, the volunteers organized a work stop- page. Members said SAPAC fails to address concerns of people of color and lacks the knowledge to handle concerns ofthe lesbian/ gay/bisexual community. SAPAC's prob- lems are common - organizations geared mostly toward women often encoun- ter these barriers. SAPAC's leader- ship has to begin with acknowledgment of its problems, but it does not stop there. Leaders have to equip the center to handle unfamiliar crisis situ- ations. They must educate the members so that SAPAC can educate the commu- nity. But the circumstances surrounding the volunteers' protest indicate that SAPAC has a lot of work to do. Misbehavior To some members, White's position of- fered hope that SAPAC would work to ad- dress these concerns; her termination signals that Cain and others are not ready for im- provement. As an African American, a mem- ber of the lesbian/gay/bisexual community and a SAPAC leader, she was in a position to push for change. Did her superiors fire her to rid themselves of the dissenter? Cain's reasons for firing White were pa- per-thin. White allegedly complained about staff meetings. Many employees at many jobs dislike tedious meetings. According to protesting volunteers, White made a sugges- tion at one staff meeting. Afterwards she asked her supervisor, Emi Nakatazato, if she had mispoken. White was concerned about a look from Nakatazato's supervisor, Joyce Wright. Later, White was told that she vio- lated protocol by going to Nakatazato instead of Wright. If a SAPAC employee can't talk to her supervisor about a minor problem, the organization is unusual in its lack of a hierar- Chical open-door policy. In addition, White accepted an offer to be a keynote speaker at a national conference before consulting SAPAC. SAPAC's explanation does little to jus- iify White's termination - and smacks of ego problems among the leadership. Carmen Crosby, a protesting PE, warned that criti- cism of White's "behavior" was a code word for controlling women of color. SAPAC leaders' action toward White indicate a de- sire to control. Moreover, if anyone's behav- ior should be criticized, it is Cain's. Exposure In at least one instance, five SAPAC members allegedly witnessed Cain breach a former client's confidentiality. When mem- bers questioned Cain's willingness to reveal the information, witnesses reported Cain's surprise that not everyone knew the person was a sexual assault survivor. By exposing this unknown fact, Cainjeop- ardized the future of the organization she heads. The survivor Cain "outed" could have legal ground as a former client in a lawsuit for breach of confidentiality. If the survivor sues, Cain will have cost SAPAC money and caused the organization great embarrassment. Whether the issue becomes a legal one, the damage to SAPAC -and the "outed" survivors - is done. No p counselor should drop confidential facts. SAPAC, with its promises ofano- nymity, is in no po- sition to carelessly flaunt its own rulebook. SAPAC can JOSH WHITE/Daily work to incorporate more diversity into its program. But what SAPAC did well - provide confidential help to survivors in crisis and educate the public on such matters - Cain tarnished. SAPAC's credibility is damaged. Irreparable damage? Where can SAPAC go from here? The organization has lost its public credibility, as well as the support of its volunteers. Without support from either direction, the organiza- tion is headed for disaster. The University depends on SAPAC's ser- vices. If students cannot trust SAPAC, they will have nowhere to turn in crisis. But if no organization like SAPAC exists on campus, students will be the ones hurt most. SAPAC must make major changes so that it can serve University again. Resignation To start anew, SAPAC must restore cred- ibility - but with Cain at the forefront, this is impossible. She sets the tone for the public and private SAPAC. Cain must step aside and allow new leadership to repair the dam- ages. Although Cain will not comment on the specifics ofthe incident, the fact that she may have revealed the survivors' names proves troubling. Whether this was intentional or not, she leads an organization that has the potential to repeat this mistake. Debi Cain has no choice but to resign as director of SAPAC - it's the only way to ensure that this will not happen again. 'U' should push for health care reform TO THE DAILY: The need for campus- based health care reform just intensified. With the surprising announcement by the Republican leadership in Congress that the bipartisan Kassebaum-Kennedy bill will be brought to the floor in late April or early May' students have a more urgent need than ever before to push the Michigan Student Assembly to exchange its expensive (and optional) individual health policy for a standard, more comprehen- sive policy that would be purchased by all uninsured and under-insured students. Kassebaum-Kennedy would, among other things. restrict the ability of insurance companies to offer policies that don't cover pre- existing conditions, such as asthma and diabetes. However, the government would not substantially limit the ability of insurance companies totraise premi- ums. Thus, although the insurance companies offer different estimates than governmental actuarial groups it is clear that group insurance premiums would go up. Typically, in large risk pools, the increase would be no more than 2 or 3 percent. But the insurance companytthat MSA contracts with has made it very clear that coverage for pre- existing conditions would lead to a doubling of the current premium rate. At that price, one would be foolish to pick up MSA's policy - essentially hospitalization insurance. The thousands of students that currently receive this coverage may very well be priced right out of the insurance market. j sWe don't have all the answers to the health care conundrum that leaves so many of our students uninsured and under-insured. We do know, however, that we simply cannot afford to spend our time conducting survey after bloody survey. We need to act now. FLINT J. WAINESS MSA PRESIDENT SAM GOODSTEIN MSA VICE PRESIDENT Photograph encourages racist stereotypes of African Americans in the United States. The photo perpetuates the stereotype of African American individu- als (especially males) as those most likely to grace the media in this fashion. It also gives credence to those who say that African Americans are a threat to campus safety. ELZORA A. HOLLAND CSP ACADEMIC COUNSELOR Basketball arena not conducive to fan enthusiasm TO THE DAILY: Anyone who watched Xavier's near upset of top ranked and undefeated UMass recently knows that the environment the Musketeers were playing in gave them a distinct advantage. Their home court advantage is one reason Xavier is a perennial small school that always seems to show up in the tournament (i.e. East Tennessee State, Western Kentucky, Richmond). The support that teams like Indiana, Duke, Minnesota and Kentucky enjoy is simply nonexistent in Crisler Arena. I suppose it would be very sweet and heartfelt if the Athletic Department said they were going to build a new stadium to reward the fans and the players. Unfortunately that costs money and as long as Crisler sells out every game it is still helping to pay the bills. So instead of applying to the administration's sentimental side I'd like them to consider it an investment in the future of the program. A new arena would not only give a home-court advantage but also help maintain the status of the program. It would be tempting to outfit any new facility with dozens of luxury boxes that could be sold off to the alumni with the biggest wallets. Instead I would suggest a compromise. Take care of the alumni with some extra comfort- able seats, wide aisles, maybe a few luxury boxes, but make sure the bowl surrounding the court is all students, Most alumni don't care to stand at games or make much noise, so put them up top, give them a nice view, maybe even heat their seats. The arena should be limited to 12 or 13 thousand GEO directly impacts u ndergrads, quality of education TO THE DAILY: As a member of the Student Labor Action Coalition and a staffer at the Graduate Employees Organization, I have been a part of the effort to reach out to undergraduates at the University. I finished my undergrad education here just two months ago. Thus, I know that it is standard to go through the University knowing little about GEO or its purpose. I also know that as an undergrad, I had little say in the structure or the functioning of this univer- sity. As I learnedabout CEO's contract proposals, I saw that they were fighting for changes I had long felt necessary. And while my voice as an undergrad seemed to accomplish little, I realized GEO's contract would force the administra- tion to address shared concerns for quality educa- tion. CEO's fight to improve the working conditions of Graduate Student Instructors directly affects the quality of undergraduate education. And because GSIs are primarily concerned with the quality of education at the University and are deeply committed to teaching, undergrads are the beneficia- ries of all GEO victories. Thus, were GEO to win its fight for improved GSI training, undergrads would reap the benefits. Or in the case of the fight for affirma- tive action, undergraduate education would improve if the University agreed to CEO's demand for increases in the number of GSs of color. And finally, the quality of GSI teaching would only improveawere they paid a wage that equalled the cost-of-living numbers published by the the University's Office of Financial Aid. The fight for improved GSI training, enforceable class size limits, a diverse GSI body, and the payment of a living-wage is the fight of undergrads as much as that of GEO. The purpose of our outreach efforts is not to demand things from undergrads. Rather, by discussing GEO's contract proposals, we are showing why undergrads and GEO are allies in the effort to make the administration live up to its voiced commitment to quality education. It is the responsibility of undergrads to tell the administration that it is in undergrads' interest T he liberal arts are called "liberal" for a reason: Once we, the 1iberal arts majors of the world, are unem- ployed graduates, we will immedi- ately become very much in favor of liberal welfare policies. The only ques- tion, really, is why engineering in' t ~ c called "the conser- vative arts. " kF u . The atoughest4 .. test we liberal arts majors face--the engineers con- BRENT stantlysassure us MCINTOSH that this is true - is which major to choose. Forme, several concentrationsboth liberal arts and hard sciences, dis- qualified themselves immediately. Chemistry, for example, was not an option: Any major that requires safety glasses is out of the question. Physics 1 also ruled out, perhaps wrongly: I thought it was concerned with those high school sports "physicals," and that "Drop your drawers and cough" routine just doesn't do anything for me. There was a possibility that I would become an art history major, but any thought of that was quashed when my father sat me down and issued this stern warning: "This is a truth of near Biblical proportions, Brent: 'Once thou art a student of the his- tory of art, thine hopes of contract- ing gainful employment surely art history."' Art history, it seems, is perfectly named. Psychology was a possible major until I took an introductory class and began diagnosing myself with vari- ous incurable mental illnesses. Had I chosen psych, I'm fairly sure I would have felt the obligation to check my- self into an institution by midway through my junior year. I thought briefly about majoring in women's studies, but ... (Please fill in your own punchline here). Speaking of punchlines, being quite sure that I lived on Earth, I decided to take a geological sci- ences minicourse as a freshman. This particular one was titled "The His- tory of the Ocean." During the en tire course, the professor smiled only once: Late in the term, I suddenly awoke to hear him finish off a joke with the line "... and the farmer says to the geologist, 'You mean the weather over the Pacific caused that rattlesnake to bite me?"' This brought uproarious laughter to my classmates -even the football play- ers - and a smile to my dear instructor's face; sadly, my sleep habits forced me to miss the humor. Please ... I implore you: If you know the setup for that joke, call me. E-mail me. Get in contact somehow. Soon. Now. I refuse to believe there is a joke that can make that particular punchline funny. Until you tell me the joke, I will continue to be haunted by the image of people laughing at weather and rattle- snakes. I may have to check myself into that institution yet. Needless to say, geology did not become my choice of major. Neither did math. I took a math class, but all those symbols over- whelmed my meager brain ... it was all Greek to me. Any thought of ma- joring in Greek rather obviously fell prey to the same drawback. I considered other languages also,' in some cases accidentally. Italianwas an option, until a friend kindly pointed out that the major was Italian, the language, not Italian, the food. eIthen proceeded to make the same exact. mistake with Chinese, Japanese, Ko rean and French; that error did not plague me, however, with English or German, which you will easily under- - stand if you've ever eaten in England or Germany. At one point I had settled on major- ing in Polish, thinking I could make a nice living shining shoes in airports. Unfortunately, my instructors' lack of English proficiency meant I had to take five terms of the language before one could explain to me, in Polish of course, that the Polish I was studying had nothing to do with shoe polish. What a waste of 19 credits that was. I finally settled on double-majoring in political science and economics. "How exciting!" you say. Not re- ally, I assure you. Political science is better known as "Are you sure I can'tjust be a pre-law major?" Economics, on the other hand, is subtitled "Mastering the ability to i 1= 1- 11-1 How TO CONTACT THEm MAUREEN HARTFORD VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS 6015 FLEMING BUILDING ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 764-5132 ROYSTER HARPER DEAN OF STUDENTS 3000 MICHIGAN UNION ANN ARBOR, M1 48104 7A 7A')l DELORIES SLOAN ASSOCIATE DEAN OF STUDENTS 3000 MICHIGAN UNION ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 7F7..1 'q I E