4 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 25, 2005 OPINION I Ahiiu&zI JASON Z. PESICK Editor in Chief SUHAEL MOMIN SAM SINGER Editorial Page Editors ALISON Go Managing Editor EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com NOTABLE QUOTABLE It's not the opposition that has seized power, it's the people who have taken power. " - Kyrgyzstan opposition activist, Ulan Shambetov, praising the fall of the 15-year Akayev regime in the for- mer Soviet republic, as reported yes- terday by The Associated Press. . r '. 1 .Q .'Y'a A. 0 y; ., YP ry ' :d . ' A . SAM BUTLER THE S APBOX 0 6 p4 k tom'- '," "° 4 . :, : , , , .- T - . Greek 101 JEFF CRAVENS JAY HA\WK BIES f your only exposure to frat guys has been the Daily's coverage of hazing violations, the movie "Animal House," a beer pong game on football Saturday or the womanizing, meat-eat- ing roommate that peed on you freshman year, it's time you heard a new perspective. Chances are you've met a frat guy and didn't even know it. When I worked at Shaman Drum during book rush last fall, my co-workers played a game called "pick out the frat guy." Amused, I asked them what they thought I looked like. They took one look at my shaggy hair and asked, "You smoke a lot of weed?" The truth is, Greeks are everywhere. They're in your band and your a cappella group. They volunteered for both Kerry and Bush last November. They're leaders in Dance Marathon, Detroit Project and K-grams. They represent a variety of ethnic and cultural organizations. They even write for the Daily. When I came to the University freshman year, I didn't know this. I had the same miscon- ceptions that most people have about Greeks. In high school, my friends and I used to talk shit on the guys who had graduated and joined fra- ternities at the college in our town. Then during Rush freshman year, a guy from my dorm asked if I wanted to check out some frats, and I said what the hell. I ended up hitting it off with the guys at Sigma Epsilon, and two and a half years later I'm still active in the house. I think most Greeks would agree that the rea- son they joined a house is less important than the reason they stuck with it. I enjoy partying as much as anyone, but the reasons I give my time to my fraternity have nothing to do with alcohol or girls. More than anything I value the friendships and the support we provide each other, whether that involves intramurals, volunteering, music or studying. At Dance Marathon last weekend, nine other brothers and I danced to support pediat- ric rehabilitation, and almost 30 of our brothers showed up at some point to cheer us on. At ten Sunday morning, when I didn't know if I could stay awake any longer, one of my brothers sug- gested we get some fresh air and then play basket- ball. Afterward, I was fine for the remaining six hours. That is the kind of brotherhood I value the most, the stuff that rarely gets public attention. Unfortunately, if you picked up a Daily last year, you'd find reports of hazing violations. In these situ- ations, the stupid things a few individuals do speak for the whole Greek community. Serious cases of hazing in which people get sick or injured are unacceptable, but standards for hazing have grown too broad. The Greek hazing policy forbids situa- tions which cause "embarrassment," "humiliation" or "ridicule" of an individual or group. Under this definition, nearly every organization on campus is guilty. Under this definition, I was hazed at Dance Marathon last weekend. For dropping my name tag, I had to get on stage and sing the Pepto Bismo song about indigestion, stomach pain and diarrhea. Other people had to sing "I'm a Little Teapot" or dance the "Macarena." I see no problem with this treatment, but hazing should not be viewed as a Greek specific problem. I'm not trying to disregard hazing: Serious cases do occur and should be cracked down on. I commend the Interfraternity Council Hazing Task Force for stepping up their efforts. IFC Vice President of Social Responsibility, Dustin Schmuldt said, "We've expanded our hazing task force, and we've put Greek advisors in Markley and Alice Lloyd ... We'll never total- ly eliminate hazing, but we're doing a lot - as much as we can to combat it." Measures to reduce hazing, along with the new social policy, should be welcome improvements to the Greek community. Whenever someone gets hurt, be it a pledge or someone who got drunk at a party, the liability falls on the fraternity mem- bers' backs. The new bring your own beer rule for parties will now put the legal and financial burden on partygoers. Fraternities have always had sober monitors at parties, but the new rules have solidi- fied this system. Most Greeks have mixed emotions about having closed parties. I'm concerned this change will sharpen the divide between Greeks and the rest of the campus. Schmuldt suggested positive ramifications for Rush: "Not only will our numbers be just as good or better, but we'll be get- ting higher-quality guys because fraternities won't base Rush on parties." Many people think that the Greek system has been getting screwed over with the new social policy, but I think it is going to foster a stronger, more value-based Greek system. Cravens can be reached at jjcrave@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Prox~d 2 deeiwed statesi c him, wit u de To THE DAX: The true implications of last year's Proposal 2 ballet initiative are only starting to become apparent. Last week, Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox issued an opinion on the amendment announcing that state and local agencies can no longer negotiate to provide heath care and other same-sex domestic part- ner benefits to their employees. The American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan announced Monday morning that it had filed a lawsuit on behalf of National Pride at Work and 21 same-sex couples whose health care benefits may be in jeopardy of termination. Several of the plaintiffs are University employees. Before Proposal 2 was passed, many propo- nents insisted that it would only deny same- sex couples the right to marry and would not infringe on their same-sex benefits. In fact, directly after the election, polls showed that the majority of Michigan citizens supported some form of recognition for same-sex cou- ples. However, it is now obvious that Proposal 2's intent was much more far reaching than the voters were led to believe. If the attorney general's stance prevails, not only will members of the University's faculty and staff be harmed, but so will the students of this institution. Public agencies will no longer have the advantage of negotiat- ing with individuals to provide equally com- petitive incentives as private industries will. Some of the most accomplished and talented persons will be drawn away from the public sector because the private industry will have the upper hand in compensation. In addition, several of the plaintiffs in this lawsuit rely upon same-sex benefits in order to provide adequate care for their children or foster children. Without same-sex health part- ner benefits, these children, some of whom need 24-hour assistance, would be thrown back into the family services program with both parents being forced to work full time. The citizens of the state of Michigan have been deceived and lied to with regard to the true impact of Proposal 2. It is now out of our hands - we can only hope that our courts uphold the rights and liberties afforded to us under our constitution. Peter A. Dietrich Alum than any other kind of instructor. If these posi- tions were meant to provide graduate students with experience at teaching, it's not clear why people who have no wish to teach in the future are compelled to do so in some departments. For example, psychology graduate students are required to teach for a minimum of four semesters during their graduate career. Why would departments require its graduate students to teach, whether or not they want to? Because if graduate students were not teach- ing, the University would have to hire other people to do their jobs, and would anyone from outside the University agree to teach for eight months for under $14,000? In response to other aspects of Nolan's rheto- ric, let me briefly discuss differences between graduate programs and undergraduate educa- tion. Departments with graduate programs spend money to recruit applicants to come to the University. Why? Not because they want more tuition money or cheap labor, but because they want the best scholars in their respective disciplines to help maintain the reputation of this great university. Graduate students in many departments are funded through fellowships, teaching, grants or by other means in order to make it possible for them to remain here and contribute to the intellectual milieu. Nolan may just as easily have chosen to complain that pro- fessors shouldn't be paid salaries, because fac- ulty are allowed the privilege of offices, research funds, Gold parking tags and free tuition for family members, while Law students and under- graduates continue to pay to study here. Another difference between undergraduate and graduate education is that graduate students do not take classes throughout their graduate careers. Most take courses for only the first two years of their program, but continue to pay tuition for the privilege of being allowed to associate with the University's best scholars. Many graduate students have their tuition "paid for," some through teaching, as Nolan pointed out, and others by the means I mentioned above. "Paid for" is in quotation marks because the process is actually called a "tuition waver," a paper transfer of fictive "dollars." Professional programs differ from other grad- uate programs in that there is rarely funding in the ways I've described. Students in professional programs take courses throughout their time here and can expect to earn large salaries in return for their education (Well, except for social workers!). Graduate students from academic programs are not guaranteed the kind of income that dentists, Ar-nrcn nei .vac. innarc tvniollntl akeNolan reading the letters to the editor, I came across one that stood out drastically - "Nadine Naber called the Israeli people 'systematic killers of children'. " Let me first state that Naber, a professor, critiqued Israeli "state policies" as opposed to the "Israeli people." She said that a great deal of evidence exists on the ways that the Israeli military has systematically killed Palestinian children, demolished Palestinian homes and targeted pregnant women at checkpoints. She made this point as part of a larger point that if we have reason to question whether the Israeli military upholds international human rights principles, then we should support a resolution that calls for an investigation of funds the University invests in the Israeli military. Her message was that the resolution was about academic freedom and the right to know whether the corporations in which our university invests its money uphold interna- tional human rights principals. This attack on Naber shows clear disregard for academic honesty. Or Shotan vilifies her by misquoting her and taking her words out of context as a strategy for silencing her call for human rights and academic freedom (Campus climate troubling accepts ignorance, prejudice, 03/21/2005). By vilifying Naber, he erased the highly inflammatory and racist words of anoth- er professor who spoke against the resolution. We do not have to look far to find reports put out by Israeli and international human rights organization for evidence on the fact that 25 percent of all Palestinians killed by the Israeli military are children, most of them by a shot to the head or neck - shots clearly aiming to kill. The claims against the resolution were centered around the idea that it was aim- ing only to vilify Israel, a country that is in violation of more than 70 U.N. resolu- tions and countless human rights laws. We scrutinize and criticize the American gov- ernment, the Saudi government, the Cuban government and the government of virtually every other country in the world. Why, then, can we not scrutinize in any way the Israeli government - a recipient of billions of dol- lars in U.S. aid per year - without being accused of spreading propaganda or being anti-Semitic? Rama A. Sahi LSA junior OPINIONAIID? k wrxu r u dw uz ; < I