4 4A - Thursday, March 20,2008 Opinion The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 741id6iPan 3aihJ Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tathedaily@umich.edu ANDREW GROSSMAN EDITOR IN CHIEF GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR GABE NELSON MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorialsareflect the official position othe Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views otheirauthors. The Daily's public editor, Paul H. Johnson, actsaas the readers'representative and takes a critical look at coverage and content in every sectionofthe paper. Readers are encouraged to contact the public editor with questions and comments. He can be reached at publiceditor@umich.edu. FROM THE DAILY System breakdown Academic problems a product of big-business mentality he University's Athletic Department is known for running an upstanding program. It's no wonder then that The Ann Arbor News's four-part series this week on academics and athletes at the University hit a raw nerve. While the reports raise immediate questions about whether the University pushes its stu- dent athletes into easier classes and specific majors, underscoring the articles is a more important point - college athletics have grown into something they were never supposed to be. On Sunday, the News kicked off a four- at the Terrelle Pryor fiasco. Many schools part series on student-athletes with sala- are willing to overlook academic deficien- cious allegations about independent study cies (orhaveto overlookthem) inthe pursuit courses taught by Prof. John Hagen. In that of securing commitments from top athletes. installment, the News claimed that many Frequently, this results in two sets of aca- athletes are shepherded into Hagen's inde- demic rules: one for athletes and one for pendent stud courses to receive credit and non-athletes. And this benefits no one. For high grades or meager coursework. Hagen non-athletes, this double standard under- and his courses had been reviewed twice by mines the credibility of the University's aca- the University's College of Literature, Sci- demic programs. These degrees, no matter ence and the Arts without concern. how they are obtained, have the same uni- The next three parts of the series went versity on them. For athletes, the University on to detail or imply many other problems. is doing these students a disservice when if These included how athletes dispropor- it sets less-demandingstandards. When col- tionately graduate with majors in general leges allow athletes to forgo a meaningful studies, previously migrated to the sports education, athletes often suffer a loss of edu- management major in the School of Kine- cational opportunities and graduate with siology until the degree requirements were poor career prospects. tightened and how advisors questionably Granted, student athletes have time con- hel push students into programs and class- straintsathat many other students don't have. esaat are more beneficial or students' ath- It would be unfair to characterize all stu- letic dligibilit-Kth eiriciademicfntiiires dent athletes as peolewho squeak by with a For some people, these storiesawere damn- degree. Being an athlete and a good student ing accounts that uncovered secret abuses at does not need to be mutually exclusive - and the yi~siF hsjtesewer.Wvsb- tnwstdesa jvl$jtpi anstudh enn a r n it nel stantktt{lgdtittsthat used qustin- 'd coee a n o re anrn des. able reporting tactics like printing students' The University is a school and its primary GPAs to make obvious points, or just imply mission should be to educate. That mis- them. Both sides have good arguments, and sion is undermined if students are allowed thankfully this series has brought this topic - or even worse, encouraged - to put sports back into discussions, before schoolwork. That's the real culprit Settingaside whether these allegations are here, and the University has an obligation to true, they are nothing new in college sports. be doing more to make sure that academics Disparate treatment of student atetes is all come first. too common at large Division I universities. Athletics should complement educa- Big-time college sportsahave turned into abig tion, not substitute for it. A degree from the business. There are strong economic pres- University should be more than a rubber- sures for colleges to recruit and retain key stamped document: it should signify educa- players for revenue sports - just take a look tional achievement. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Emad Ansari, Harun Bujina, Anindy Bhadra, Kevin Bunkley, Ben Caleca, Satyajeet Deshmukh, Milly Dick, Mike Eber, Emmarie Huetteman, Theresa Kennelly, Emily Michels, Arikia Millikan, Kate Peabody, Robert Soave, lmran Syed, Neil Tambe, Matt Trecha, Kate Truesdell, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Van Gilder, Rachel Wagner, Patrick Zabawa. ORDER OF ANGELL I VIEWPOINT A call for neutrality NOTABE QUTABLE For people to claim that because the delegates weren't seated you can't count the popular vote seems somewhat goofy.' - Harold Ickes, a senior adviser for Hillary Clinton, on why the Democratic National Committee should seat Michigan's delegates based on Clinton's win in the state's January primary, as reported yesterday by The New York Times. CHRIS KOSLOWSKI I OUT TO PAST URE E-MAIL KOSLOWSKI ATCSKOSLOW@UMICH.EDU Ann Arbor city conil DIdn't you hear? The Vote for me for MSApromises trolleys. I promise Neighborhood is already on an entire Neighborhood the drawing board. 2021 man. Why' of Make Believe For a better tomorrow 1W 101 .W 00 * Community coping ust days before I graduated from vent suicide. Community efforts can solution to stopping people from kill- high school, one of my teach- involve educational forums and focus ingothers or themselves and certainly ers passed out copies of a Time groups, fostering connections and aren't going to cure mental illness in magazine article relationships, a greater transparency our society. But there are administra- profiling one of her of psychological services and better tive steps that can be taken to control former students. financial services. the proliferation of mental illness. The student gradu- While suicides are by no means That day in high school was a pro- ated from our high "common" occurrences on college found moment in my education. It school not too long campuses, the number of students wasn't simply because I saw a teacher before and went on suffering from depression has dou- break down either. It was first time I to aprestigious East bled since the late 1980s, and 24,000 heard a teacher talk about suicide and Coast school with a suicide attempts occur on college tell me that receiving psychological bright future ahead campuses every year. At the Univer- care shouldn't be outside the realm of him. He never THERESA sity alone, more than two-thirds of of possibility in my future. It was the finished college, KENNELLY the student population has reported first time a teacher had shed light on though. Just weeks feeling isolated or alone, a major this stigmatized and avoided issue. into his third year symptom of depression. And unfortu- Most importantly, she explained that and a day after his 20th birthday, he nately, most remain untreated. mental illness can be conquered, a jumped to his death from a 10-story Mental illness is undeniably at the message that should be a lot more balcony at his campus library. In level of being a community problem. widespread. between deep breaths and controlled Yet mental health is rarely spoken The only thing worse than secretly tears, my teacher said that none of us about as such. Depression and sui- suffering from a mental illness is should ever let ourselves get to the cide are often taught about - if at all being unaware of the resources that point that he had. Seek help. Besides, - as personal problems that people nothing is so bad that you can't live need to seek independent help for, through it. individually take responsibility for No one would seem to know this and take medications to fix. These All of us have a message better than the psychology are personal conditions and often go professors, counselors and students underreported out of fear that too stake in te tin uni esuntrywgth- nuch exposure will only get peopler eri t tee 's Depesson on o0 n gatively think about their own mental illness College Campus Conference hosted at mental conditions. This could poten- Rackham Graduate School. Amid the tially spark more suicide attempts. wide variety of models and philoso- This completely ignores the idea, phies presented at the sixth annual though, that intervention and com- are available to help you and lacking conference, there was a theme of sur- munal attention is key to mental the courage to pursue them. vival. Improving the health of more health. As one speaker at the confer- With a mre community-oriented students during the often psychologi- ence noted, college students commit approach to mental illness - which cally stressful and emotionally trying suicide at half the rate of their peers of includes better education about the college years is critical to a success- the same age because of the commu- issues and administrative initiatives ful.educational environment. Accom- nity fostered by colleges. Thus, pro- - and reducing the stigma about plishing this requires looking beyond moting the public health approach to seeking treatment for depression, a the individual, though. mental illness and creating more soci- brighter future could be in store for Mental illness is a communi- etal involvement at colleges and other those hiding in the dark. Perhaps if ty problem that requires a com- communities only stands to improve my teachers opened a dialogue about munity response. There was no the mental health of people every- depression three or four years earlier, question about this stance at the where. If the shootings at Virginia my class would not have had to read conference presentations on Tuesday Tech and Northern Illinois University the article about the student who lost and Wednesday, which emphasized are any indication, policy changes are his life. the ways campus communities can needed too, like limiting access to gun create educational and public efforts ownership - something one speaker Theresa Kemnelly is a former to detect and treat mental illnesses, at the conference suggested. associate editorial page editor. She can particularly depression, and pre- of course policy changes aren't the be reached at thenelly@umich.edu. ARIA EVERTS I VIEWPOINT Saying no to Order of Angell 0 When Paul Johnson was asked to be the Daily's first-ever public editor this fall, he was charged with "helping the Daily improve accuracy, fairness and the relation- ship between the newspaper and its read- ers," as the news story about his appointment explained (Daily appoints paper's first public editor, 10/02/2007). Unfortunately, this week he failed to achieve thisgoal, apparentlyrely- ing on a quick Google search for the content of his column Tuesday (To join or not to join?, 03/18/2008).By failing to offer accurate facts, counter-claims and balanced rhetoric in his article, Johnson perpetuated an uninformed and prejudiced view of the Order of Angell and its past. This faulty journalism continues to misinform students today and forces us to be defensive. First of all, there were blatant factual errors in his reporting. While the group did have all-male status for decades alongside the all-female society Adara - which togeth- er formed the Tower Society - the group was integrated with minorities in the 1930s and was the University's first true diverse non- athletic organization. The "raid" in 2000 that Johnson mentioned never proved that "several Indian artifacts" were being used. Instead this was an allegation propagated by those who broke in. Moreover, the organiza- tion voluntarily left the space in the Union; it was not forced out or, to use Johnson's unnecessarily colorful language, "booted." Additional insinuations, like the need for Order members to "clean up their act" are misleading and further distort the organi- zational development that has transpired for over of a century. While Johnson chooses inflammatory quotes from current Daily staff of the "many" concerns over contro- versy and secrecy, he chooses not to back these claims up. Not only was current Edi- tor in Chief Andrew Grossman's "invitation" mischaracterized, but Johnson didn't quote former Daily Editor in Chief Donn Fresard who joined the group or any current order members in order to present their viewpoints or clarify Johnson's facts. The egative and Sone-sided slant by Johnson $"mnonstrates either sloppy reporting or his distinct bias - and either is a clear failure of his role. Johnson also made a feeble attempt to fully disclose his membership in Cornell's Quill and Dagger Society. He slyly referred to his organization as "semi-secret" and comprised of "student leaders," but choose more loaded language about the Order of Angell, rather than citing its 100-year public mission to improve the University. He skipped over the fact that our group had public membership for 85 percent of its history (as Order ofAngell does today), and boasts how his own society "doesn't have the same controversial past." Yet doing a quick search on Quill and Dag- ger brings a plethora of potential transgres- sions, including elite tower space, minority membership discrimination, administration stacking and much more. But I digress. While Johnson disparages the Order's past with the phrase "very little of it good," the public record shows that the organiza- tion played a consistently positive role at the University over its century-long existence. Nowhere in his article did Johnson refer to how the organization conceived and raised money for the Michigan Union, fought for integration on campus in the 1950's or any of its many present-day movements. We invite dialogue with anyone interested in learn- ing more. Rather than promote an old, tired agenda, perhaps it's time to start listening to each other first. For a campus that strives for high academic rigor and critical thinking, it's disappointing that so little of it has been applied to this debate. order of Angell is not asking the Daily or its public editor to ignore this group's past, but the least it can do is provide a balanced description of the organization's affairs the next time it attempts to characterize the group. Fair and accurate reporting should be the least that we - or anyone else in the cam- pus community - should need to ask of our campus newspaper. Sarah Banco is an LSA senior and a mnernber of Order of Angell. She is writing on behalf of the group's 2008 class. I was recently invited to join Order of Angell. This came as a shock, because the organization traditionally includes athletic lead- ers and those in charge of large organizations like Dance Mara- thon, The Michigan Daily and the Michigan Student Assembly. I have not felt that my influence or skills as a student leader surpass those of others. However, this offer was extended nonetheless. Faced with this decision, I have chosen not to be a part of Order of Angell. Order of Angell, formerly known as Michigamua, has a history of exclusivity, racist rituals and sex- ist policies, among other things. Recently, structural changes - including disclosure of its members after they are initiated and a name change - have addressed some ele- ments of the group's contentious past. Further, out of a class of 23, there are currently women, some members of color, some members of the LGBT community and others who bring perspectives from other underrepresented populations. Supported by an influential alumni base, these students "make posi- tive change" through undisclosed activities and "without the need for recognition," as the order's consti- tution explains. Why then would I refuse the potential influence I could have on other leaders, the administration and University policy, especially now that the organization has a less homogeneous membership? I fundamentally disagree with the idea of secretly selecting stu- dents who will decide the agenda for the campus. An unknown process decides the new members without input from the student body. Yet, initiation to the Orde guarantees access to a plethora of resources, University officials and an alumni network that can .help members accomplish goals they think are important. This elevation of private goals above other common ones is contrary to the University spirit in which we are all the "Leaders and Best." Through this selection and oper- ation process, the Order becomes a dominating elitist voice influencing the direction of campus initiatives. one of the troubling results of this is how these intentions can never be part of the campus dialogue before they are enacted. The structure of this organization mirrors larger structures in our society that keep power from being equally distrib- uted. Empowering communities who face inequality is only possible when elite organizations - like our own order of Angell - are under- stood to be part of this problem. We should not have to join orga- nizations like the order to be able to shape the direction of the Univer- sity. I envision a University where evenly distributed power ensures more democratic processes forevery student's opinions. Acceptance of a position in the Order would legiti- mize an organization that creates a campus agenda through secret and non-democratic processes without the consent or input of students. If the order truly wishes to act in the "best interest of Michigan" it should include all of us, not just a few of the students who make up our University. This brings us to the Daily's Edi- tor in Chief Andrew Grossman's possible decision to join Order of Angell, as Public Editor Paul Johnson explained in his column Tuesday (To join or not to join?, 03/18/2008). Of all the organizq- tions t ,t have a responsibilf to resist elitism, be impartial and accurately convey information to the student body, the Daily has the most serious burden. Anyone from the Daily joining Order of Angell undermines the efficacy of the paper. It is in the best interest of the University for the Daily's staff to at least pursue a vote regarding his continued involvement. I aspire to share power through community involvement rather than consolidate it through exclu- sion. While Order of Angell does 4 4 claim to want to create "campus synergy" by including approxi- mately 25 organization representa- tives, we must question institutions that fail to make space for everyone affected by their activities, espe- cially when those activities are secret. Rather, let us defy the status quo in which very few have power in the world and misuse of that power is rampant. As students, we could be forming alternative systems, not just giving tradition a facelift. Aria Everts is an LSA junior and the president of Stu nts Organizing for Labor and E nomic Equality. 0 I