4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 31, 1997 aIIe t'I 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the Usniversity of Mtichiogan JOSH WHITE Editor in Chief ERIN MARSH Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. A ll other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Opening the floodgates Admissions creates difficulties for housing " NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'It is pretty hard to override physical space limitations. Being off by 100 people Is not a big deal for the University, but It could be a big deal for housing.' -- Director of University Housing Alan Levy, responding to predictions that the University's Class of 2001 could be one of the largest in the schools histQry JiM LASSER SHARP AsTo AST We'll Never Forget... ... a first kiss... 1 ... graduation ... ~LEGG "o N K HNM N ' . leaving home.. ...and nine seniors. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Feminists lose their strength by fighting the wrong battle When the University finds higher num- bers of incoming students than expected, admissions officers and most other University administrators see dollar signs. However, administrators in the University Housing Office see first-year students living in residence hall lounges. By admitting a large number of students and being surprised with the number of tak- ers, the admissions office is selling space it simply does not have. While high enrollment generates more tuition dollars, it creates a difficult situation for housing administrators who are left with the task of finding nooks and crannies in which to place the overflow. In response to last year's University housing shortage, the office created "over- flow triples," which place three residents in double-occupancy residence hall rooms. The understanding is that one resident will move out partway through the semester when the University is able to uncover addi- tional housing space. The arrangement, however temporary, leaves all three room- mates with insufficient living space and the tense decision of who will stay and who will move. The student who leaves - at some undetermined point during the semester - must relive the inconvenience of moving day, this time in the midst of papers, tests and classes. However, a shoebox-sized room is better than no room at all. When first-year stu- dents arrived at North Campus' Bursley Hall last fall, some were greeted not with room. keys and new roommates, but with a spot on the nearest lounge sofa. Due to a University housing shortage, 10 new stu- dents lived in residence hall lounges until the housing division was legally free to reassign unclaimed leases. The students , moved into the first available rooms after a two-week freeze on housing vacancies; some later moved into more permanent res- idence hall rooms. The fees students pay for University housing are high by any stan- dard; paying so much to live in lounge space or closet-sized rooms is unacceptable. University housing shortages usually stem from three problems: large first-year student enrollment; an unexpectedly high response from current University housing residents to the housing office's annual reapplication campaign; and University housing space that is converted to office space. The housing office's "Reapp" pro- gram is often too successful; efforts to tone down the drive for a higher return rate might curb some of the problem. Additionally, the University housing office has been working over the past two years to recover office space in West Hall and con- vert it back to student rooms, but it cannot combat the University's mission to boost enrollment to all-time highs. Next year's incoming first-year students must not experience the trials of last year's temporarily homeless students. The University Undergraduate Admissions Office must include the University's other important factions when deciding class size. By leaving the University Housing Office in the dark, the admissions office creates a difficult situation for housing administrators and a worse situation for stu- dents. If the admissions office continues to operate autonomously from the the housing office, incoming students will receive their first University lessons upon move-rn -- and they'll find that the admissions office has something to learn about communica- tions and simple mathematics. Level playing field Title IX does not achieve gender equality I t may have taken 25 years, but the University has 12 official women's ath- letic teams that make up about 40 percent of the total number of student athletes. According to the U.S. Department of Education's Civil Rights office, that means the University is squarely within the limits of a 25-year-old law. However, collegiate athletic departments should not reflect on the anniversary of the federal law known as Title IX with com- plete satisfaction. The nationwide colle- giate community has made many inroads to gender equality in women's athletics at the university level, but the journey is by no means complete. When Title IX passed in 1972, it promised to give across the board, equal opportunities for women in higher educa- tion. At its heart, the law addressed every- thing from tenure reform to admissions, but its greatest impact has been on college sports. Without Title IX, most athletic directors might not have sponsored women's teams. Even today, some schools readily admit that they wouldn't have women's sports teams if they didn't have to. Under Title IX, the U.S. Department of Education can withhold all federal dollars from institutions that do not achieve total gender equity in sports programs. That includes entirely equal budgets for men's and women's programs: equal recruiting funds, equal player scholarships and equal average salaries for coaches. However, that degree of financial gender equality has rarely evolved. Nationally, on the average, women's sports programs receive 25 per- schools, women make up 52 percent of the student population. Due to observable stag- nancy, universities seem to be generally content with those numbers. The federal government cannot allow college athletics to lag in terms of gender equality. No one can expect woman's programs to have the economic strength and popular support of men's programs overnight, but a quarter of a century was not an unreason- able amount of time in which to make a showing. Individual women athletes who have sued college universities under Title IX for cases of inequality have consistently won and received monetary compensation. While the threat of litigation has scared some programs into increasing support for women's sports, many still lag behind, dragged back by the outdated dogma that women belong on the sidelines and not on the field. The U.S. Department of Education should take an opportunity on Title IX's sil- ver anniversary to reconsider the law and how it relates to college sports. There seem to be just as many deserving female athletes who might not be able to attend college without a scholarship as there were 25 years ago. They deserve their share. Just as the federal government was able to encourage universities to support fledg- ling athletic programs for women, so should they enforce equality in funding. As University Senior Associate Athletic Director Peg Bradley-Doppes said, "It's not enough to show good faith effort in the right direction." Numbers, not loosely held intentions, ,_- _- _ T _ a. - . . . r.. ,-- Anti-Playboy letters make questionable assumptions To THE DAILY: Lara Hamza ("Playboy objectifies women," 3/27/97) writes about Playboy: "The message to anyone who opens it is clear: women are nothing more than sex objects for men to masturbate over." Melanie Nelson ("Protest story ignored other side of porn," 3/27/97) writes: "Every day women at this university show their real stuff-- their intellect, cre- ativity and social activism - without putting their bod- ies on display.' Some of the assumptions underlying these statements include: that being looked at sexually automatically turns one into an 'object'; that being viewed as an object can only possibly be a bad thing; that no one wants to be viewed as an object; that being viewed as a sexual object is worse than being viewed as an intellectual object or a social object that being viewed as a sexual object precludes also being viewed as an intellectual object or a social object; that being viewed as an intellectu- al object or a social object is somehow "less objectifying" than being viewed as a sexual object; that putting your body on display is worse than putting your intellect or cre- ativity on display; and that your body is somehow less "real" than your intellect, creativity, or activism. All of these assumptions are questionable, and some of them I believe to be plainly false. GREG STEVENS RACKHAM 'U' needs Latino/a center now To THE DAILY: I have made a visit to almost every residence hall and have noticed that in every dorm, there is an African American theme lounge. I also noticed that there is only one Latino/a lounge on campus and it is in Mosher Jordan. The Latino/a community is growing here and there needs to be cultural center on campus that will serve the needs of the Latino/as here at the University. A cultural center here would serve as a focus point and help all the members of low defense of the death penalty ("Mumia guilty and should be executed," 3/21/97). Among his collec- tion of unsupported asser- tions, he acknowledges the possibility that innocent peo- ple will be executed, however "the number of would-be convicts that are deterred eas- ily dwarf those who are inno- cently put to death.' Apparently, executing innocent people disturbs me a lot more than it does Taub. Perhaps he and others who share his politics can only think of innocents being exe- cuted in the abstract sense. To make this horror real to him, he should investigate the case of Mumia-Abu Jamal, a man he so easily dismisses as a "convicted cop killer" and therefore deserving of capital punishment. He would find out that the case against Mumia has a number of extreme irregularities, including several instances of false testimony. He may also discover that the Philadelphia Police Department, which handled Mumia's case, has a history of falsifying evi- dence, and that hundreds of criminal cases over the last decade have needed review. Many who have been previ- ously convicted have been released. Perhaps Taub's faith in the criminal justice system is a little too solid. Has he con- sidered the possibility that being an African-American activist was a factor in the case against Mumia? The "wrong" race, class, and poli- tics can often determine the outcome of a case and whether or not the death penalty is imposed. The American Bar Association (certainly not a collection of left-wing "bleeding hearts") recently announced that it cannot support the death penalty, as it is clear that the present criminal justice sys- tem is unable to apply it fair- ly. Call it racism, incompe- tence,'or corruption, but Mumia and many others sit on death row for crimes they may not have committed. Mumia's case needs an immediate review, but there wouldn't be the chance if he had been executed. Educate yourself, Taub, before you callously con- demn Mumia and others to an undeserved death. ERIC DIRNBACH RACKHAM Do not 'vilify' candidates who oppose spending cap instead of having the Students Rights Commission Chair imposing a "voluntary" cap upon campaign spending and then publicly humiliating those who have not signed up for it by date X,' it would be far more effective for the candidates simply to make an accounting of monies spent by their party and by each candidate for the Rules and Elections Committee to make public. If this system was placed into the MSA compiled code, each candidate would have theircampaign funding scrutinized by not only MSA but the students voting for them. It would be far more helpful for the students to know just how much candi- dates spent than for a select few to subscribe to a cap. Knowing just how much was spent, students could then publicly humiliate candi- dates for spending such large sums of money on MSA elections. I find it pathetic that EAlison would resort to whin- ing to the student body that candidates refused to sign up for a voluntary spending cap, and that this represented some kind of breach of mis- trust. It's a voluntary spend- ing cap. If people are going to be dumb enough to spend more than $500 for an office, let them. Students who are informed are not going to be swayed by any amount of spending. I find Ellison's letter irre- sponsible as well. As one who should be impartial dur- ing the election season, for her to directly attack two of the parties running simply because they have ideological differences with her plan is petty. In fact, after reading the letters by members of the Liberty Party and the United Rebels Front in the Daily and on Ellison's own home page, it appears the only thing that they have done wrong is to openly point out the flaws in such a system. To dismiss these parties out of hand with a "whatever" is simply juve- nile. Finally, I must question Ellison's claim that those candidates not signing were "unresponsive to constituent inquiry." They were instead unresponsive to hers. Let the candidates waste their money on the elections process. If students knew instead how much is spent by every candidate, it will inform them with the knowl- edge that certain candidates are crazy enough to spend vast sums of money on a campaign or crazy enough to go out of their way to gain votes, such as dressing up in a beer can costume. It will help them make an informed decision about who to vote for. But to "voluntarily" ca T he word "women" does not con- tain a 'y.' While I risk losing membership priv- ileges in the sorority of womanhool for the following statement, I am not a feminist. I have no desire to be a feminist. Somewhere in E the midst of theĀ° struggle for equality, femi- nism lost sight of the goal. Instead of work- ing with men, these women MEGAN began working SCHIMPF against men.st sT r w And so femi- nism has become a label associated with bitter, angry women who have nothing better to do than sit around together and complain about what they have been denied, how they havebeen slighted and why PMS.is a curse. This is only one example of how feminism has lost its luster for a grow- ing number of women today. Feminism has failed to attract a new generation of women who will some- day be the leaders of the country and the world. Perhaps this is because of the ground that feminism has already covered, the battles it has already won. Maybe this new generation is taking what it ha been handed for granted. But even feminism made this optimism and action possible, it has failed to evolve with women. Without this next gener- ation, feminism can gain no more ground, win no more battles. Where these women are most strik- ingly different is in their direction. Instead of looking inward, womenare now looking outward for what they can accomplish, instead of what thea can be worried about. Strength is n longer measured by how many com- plaints and injustices one can register it is based on how many results one can account for. This is how it should be. Before fem- inism derided into support-group ther- apy, it was a way for women to think they could be as successful as men and set the same goals. This is what women today are looking for. An action group instead of a suppo group. A schedule instead of an agenda. So strength is not the problem. Strength is the solution. The problem is that feminism's strength is inwardly directed. Being a foot soldier for all woman- hood is no longer the-first thought in the mind of a woman who is promoted or acclaimed. No one wants to contin- ually think of herself as "the woman" against "the man The time for being a token has past. The time for being made to feel guilty for not being the woman instead of being the person has also past. Success is more personal than that. Time can be used to accomplish some- thing. This is not to say that women should return to being barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen. Women bring very valid1 complaints every year about equ~ rights, sexual harassment and equal opportunity, and these issues should be regarded with the utmost respect and fairness. This is to take issue with the politi- cally correct, borderline radical femi- nism that has taken over the image of equality and refocused on separatism. These organizations focus on setting women apart as different, enlightene!d beings relative to men. In doing s they perpetuate an, image of women needing strength from a group, not from herself as an individual. Instead of reinforcing the images of years ago, feminism should move ahead and look to the future. The intel- ligent, motivated women who are coming out of colleges across the country today are ready to champion women's abilities on a new level. They are ready to be successful based oA brilliance and creativity, not simp - because they are women. What they are ready to leave behind is a dated, stifling model of feminism that encouragesacomplaintscin private rather than action in public. Much more could be accomplished by working together. By not concen- trating on the differences and the dis- tinctions, men and women could con- centrate on the task at hand. The pla ing field has changed since the femi- nist movement launched in the 1960s - it has slanted in different directions, and the sun is shining in- other eyes now. Women have accomplished more, and men have gradually become more --~a .t tha h:lita o -wm I J