4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 6, 2003 OP/ED - 4 £4 D 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 letters@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 LOUIE MEIZLISH Editor in Chief AUBREY HENRETTY ZAC PESKOWITZ Editorial Page Editors NOTABLE QUOTABLE Sacramento is simply the biggest Hummer he can buy." i I Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. SAM BUTLER TEiw. SOAPBOX 0PeWho.+ Pr~C" y r 1Inc? C r r ~V Vu oJ u .U l i.1U 4 - New Republic literary editor Leon Wieseltier on Arnold Schwarzenegger, as quoted in Maureen Dowd's New York Times column yesterday. Here's a 'meaningful relationship' for you it's an interesting and lucky phenome- non when two apparently unrelated news stories have the power to illuminate each other. When this happens, it's the combi- nation of two reports that can educe the more inscrutable below-sur- face happenings, tendencies and attitudes of an institution, group or administration - underground insight that might otherwise have escaped our notice. One year ago, I wrote a column about a peculiar front page of The New York Times, on which one article weighed the arguments for war in Iraq and another directly below it celebrated the merry beard shaving and TV- watching in the aftermath of the "liberation of Kabul." Last week, two stories came out of the University which have arguably less consequence for the peace of the world, but which similarly seem to show us that some- thing is awry - this time, in our own Uni- versity community. By way of these two stories' invitation to contrast and compari- son, last Friday I drew the easy conclusion that there are some deep problems at this University with the way that it, as an institu- tion, views and treats women. On Friday, the Daily reported ('U' boasts rise in female faculty, enrollment, 10/03/03) on the progress that the University has made since 1990 in increasing the female presence on this campus - in administrative posi- tions, as department heads and tenure-track faculty. The data show that while female hires have increased, they are not commen- surate with the number of doctorates granted to female students nationwide. Since 1980, the fraction of female assistant professors has languished at about one-third, and, "among staff ranks, females generally clus- ter in lower pay grades than men." To be honest, reading this article on its own didn't get me too worked up; I'm sure that it did, however, rile many of women on this campus. I tend to think of these things as processes that inherently prohibit instant results, and try to see the University as a col- laboration of individuals who are all doing the best they can against difficult circum- stances. But another interesting article ran in the Daily last Friday, an article which I believe is revelatory of some of the obstacles that women are up against here. Wasted again? 'U' students find alcohol ads offensive (10/03/03) reported on the placard-advertisements that have lately been gracing the residence-hall dining tables. One of these ads reads, "Wasted again? It doesn't take a lot of brains or therapy to figure out why your love life sucks." Above is a picture of a woman from below the waist; she is wearing a very short dark skirt and high heels. In large let- ters across the top, the woman asks, "Why can't I have a meaningful relationship?" Another ad shows a woman in heels and a short glittery dress throwing up violently into a toilet. "Guilty of dumping toxic waste?" asks the placard. These ads stereotype those female stu- dents on this campus who enjoy going out on the weekends as out-of-control, pathetic relationship dependents. I found the "Why can't I have a meaningful relationship" tagline particularly outrageous - is that the objective of being at the University? The proverbial "M.R.S." degree? If we female students don't have a meaningful relationship, are we failing - is there something wrong with us? There are no "male" analogues to these "public-service" advertisements. The Alcohol and Other Drugs Prevention Program explained that there is a male-oriented line to be released next year, but that the program lacked the funds this year to launch both simultane- ously. Apparently we girls are the bigger problem. The University, as an institution, employs so many people and ideas that it must be difficult to show a consistent face to the students and faculty. However, with- out blaming any one person, it seems clear that there is a disparity in how the Universi- ty talks about hiring female faculty mem- bers and how it actually views its female students - many of whom could represent future faculty hires. If the University is institutionally perpetuating exactly the same stereotypes - of women not being serious intellectually or being too focused on their lovelives - that it claims to be trying to fight by increasing the percentage of female members of the faculty, it's shooting itself in the foot without even knowing. Female students and female faculty mem- bers are not different species. One becomes and one once was the other. Is it a stretch to venture that someone who sees this kind of ad at lunch will be less likely to take a female professor less seriously at his (or her!) 1:00 class? The University needs to seriously examine this most obvious of competing sig- nals, and seek out places in which there might be others. Before we worry so much about changing the numbers on the books, we need to think about changing the attitudes in our heads. Hanink can be reached atjhanink@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, 4 LSA Honors Program attempting to rectify shortages of enrolled minorities TO THE DAILY: I appreciated the Daily's article on underrepresented minorities and the LSA Honors Program (Honors Program criticized for shortage of diversity, 10/03/03). I write to emphasize two points, which may have been lost on readers who did not read all the way to the end. The first is that this year we are changing our process of invit- ing students to Honors to take advantage of the new University application materials (with increased applicant writing and teacher evaluations). These will enable us to go beyond quan- titative measures and better gauge appli- cants' aptitude and desire for academic challenge and intellectual exchange. The second is that we are especially interested in attracting talented students of color, and we are hopeful that this process will help us to identify and recruit them more effec- tively. Finally, I would like to counter the impression that the University is unable to compete with selective private institutions in the area of financial aid. It is true that this is a particular challenge for students who are not Michigan residents. For in-state students, however, the Uni- versity has substantial financial-aid resources. And even with out-of-state stu- dents, the University is prepared to do every- thing it can. STEPHEN DARWALL Professor, Department of Philosophy Director, LSA Honors Program Despite faults, Mother Teresa deserving of praise for humanitarian work TO THE DAILY: Sravya Chirumamilla's insulting col- umn on Mother Teresa (Mother Teresa and the Devils, 10/03/03), humanitarian nun and 1979 Nobel Peace Prize winner, echoes journalist Christopher Hitchens' 1997 expose "The Missionary Position," and the film it insniredI "Hell's Angel " in degor2,1- ing and unwise, so Chirumamilla should criticize him too for his mistakes, not just Mother Teresa. Finally, in the Catholic Church, saints may be venerated or prayed to, but they are not worshiped per se; that honor is reserved for God alone, I believe. And, despite her possible errors or excesses, the awards and veneration she received from the Indian government, the people themselves, and the Nobel committee demonstrate that she does indeed deserve some sort of veneration, religious or otherwise, despite Hitchens' and Chirumamilla's attempts at "deviliza- tion" or "demonization." DAVID BOYLE Alum Chirumamiila demonstrates 'total lack of knowledge' of Catholicism TO THE DAILY: The opinion section is a valuable com- ponent of the Daily, but a commitment to good journalism should also include a com- mitment to well-informed opinion articles. In "Mother Teresa and the Devils," Sravya Chirumamilla shows a total lack of knowl- edge about Catholic beliefs. If she had looked up the official church doctrine on the matter, she would have found that Catholics do not worship human beings, as she claims. Church doctrine is clear: God alone is deserving of worship. People who we think lead exceptionally holy lives we can- onize as saints. We look to them as exam- ples of how to live out the Christian life. We also believe saints are in heaven with God. Because they are close to God, we might ask them to pray for us. It's the same rationale behind asking a friend of mine who has a close relationship with Jesus to pray for me. I am not worshipping my friend by doing this. Not only does Chirumamilla fail to rep- resent our beliefs accurately, she proceeds to show a total lack of respect for Catholics. The disparaging tone of the arti- cle was out of line. According to her, our religious practices "do not make sense." They are even "repulsive." These state- ments show no traice of tihe svmnsthv or Chirumamilla's column, Mother Teresa and the Devils (10/03/03). Now the entire read- ership of the Daily has seen the idiocy that accompanies the exercise of the last accept- able form of bigotry, anti-Catholicism. Thanks for exposing the worship of human beings by the brainless papists. Hopefully none of your readers are thickheaded enough to believe that Mother Teresa was being deceptive when she cre- ated homes for orphaned children in Cal- cutta, or that she was being selfish when she brought dying people off the streets and into the comfort of hospice. Spitting on the grave of an enormously generous and intellectual woman just because she was devoted to the Catholic faith says far more about the writer of the column than about Mother Teresa. I have to wonder whether next week's edition of Chirumamilla's column will fea- ture similar screeds about peacemakers whose Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist or atheist beliefs spur them to dedicate half a century to serving those that Indian society deemed "untouchable." I guess not, since' the only religious institution that an unedu- cated, prejudiced person can attack without being called out by those who embrace diversity is the Roman Catholic Church. ROBERT SHEREDA Alum Daily editors need better understanding of science, information technology TO THE DAILY: While I applaud the Daily for writing about a change affecting many students liv- ing on and off campus, the Daily needs to get its facts straight. In New service to speed up Comcast Internet (10/03/03), Adam Rosen states that the previous speed was 1.5 megabytes per second. This is incor- rect. The speed was previously 1.5Mbps - 1.5 megabits per second, not megabytes per second. The new speed is 3.0Mbps (megabits per second). That's about .37 megabytes/second. Likewise, the upload speed is capped at 256Kbps (kilobits / sec- ond). This is 32 kilobytes/ second. As for the download time of a 15-track CDT - it micght be~ three minuites if vou're 4 I E-. ..atiw. x.i+>n 'fT 4 'P r / yy..w:: sn " nx. ri3ycne+i "::... ... ..... ... ' hl