4A - Wednesday, February 12, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Strengthening LGBTQ support The 'U' should fortify and increase advocacy programs on campus ast Saturday, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced the federal government would mandate that additional marriage benefits be accessible to same-sex couples who are legally married, regardless of whether their marriage is recognized in their home state. Granting new legal protections to same-sex couples is a profound and commendable development in the gay rights movement. However, LGBTQ citizens face many other serious obstacles that don't garner nearly as much attention as marriage equality. Many LBGTQ youths and adults alike are faced with serious issues such as bullying, inclusion and depression on a daily basis. In order to fully support its LGBTQ students and faculty, the University must promote awareness and take concrete action from relief of these inequalities. KARA ARGUE E-MAtL KAItAsA KAIIGUCE( UMICH.EDlU - w5Ae A'ea +ceeDo -vti e- ha4,re ye.. 3 esv n ar e-Y1O 50v54 . a"y '-re " 1! Still so.O s '1~ V- ca a e Sbos iY1 , -w 0 (S5wal~ Love thy community The new policy - revealed during a Human Rights Campaign event in New York - ensures that same-sex couples will be allowed equal rights concerning legal matters such as filing for bankruptcy, prisoner visitation and federal benefit programs. These programs will include death and educational benefits to the spouses of police officers and firefighters killed in action. Holder's announcement mirrors a growing trend in the United States in support of marriage equality. Same-sex marriage is now legal in 17 states and just last year the Defense of Marriage Act was deemed unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court. These actions taken by the Obama adtninistrations and states throughout the country are highly admirable. Ironically, the Department of Justice's extension of benefits to same-sex couples is technically illegal in the 31 states that constitutionally prohibit gay marriage, including Michigan. However, in the 2012 State of the State survey, 56 percent of respondents indicated that they supported same-sex marriage. Since the majority of Michiganders are in favor, and the Obama administration is mandating that federal benefits be given to married same-sex couples, it's illogical for Michigan to continue opposing gay marriage. The ban needs to be overturned and same-sex marriage legalized in the state. The University has done much to support its LGBTQ community,butcould improve itsefforts. Organizations, like the office of Institutional Equity, were created in order to protect students and faculty from discrimination. Family housing is available to married same-sex couples and domestic partnerships. The University also offers gender-neutral housing in its undergraduate dormitories through the Gender Inclusive Living Experience learning-community, created for students who do not identify with restrictive gender roles. But gender-neutral housing is only available to those in GILE, and should be further expanded.Onlyhaving2spots is notenough, and not only should the number of spots increase, but their location as well. tntegratinggender-neutral housing in other dormitories would provide more opportunities for students to join the many other learning communities housing offers. To address serious issues that LGBTQ individuals face, more programs should be offered through CAPS and the Spectrum center. Currently, there are relatively few psychological help services for LGBTQ members, and those that do exist are not advertised well. The University needs to raise further awareness of the inequalities that affect LGBTQ students and faculty, and fortify the advocacy programs that already exist. his past week was arguably one of the worst of this winter so far. It seemed like the sky gods had an infinite amount of snow to throw down at us, the air was so cold it sometimes hurt to breathe, and it probably would have been more effective HARLEEN to ice skate to KAUR class rather than walk. However, there was still a small group of people outside. They were bearing the cold and snow to interact with passersby and bring awareness to an issue that is rarely spoken of ia Ann Arbor: homelessness. The International Network of Street Papers organizes an annual "Vendor Appreciation Week," which took place from Feb. 3 to Feb. 7 this year. Street papers are newspapers that are sold by individuals who iden- tify as homeless to benefit that same community. These papers are active around the country, and even out- side the United States. INSP reaches out each year to all of its affiliates to participate in this week of activities, which includes GroUndcover News, the local street paper in Ann Arbor. In April 2010, Groundcover News founder Susan Beckett started the paper after seeing a successful street paper in Seattle. She recognized the need for a similar organization in Ann Arbor, and started the iscred- ibly successful group. Groundcover News provides a transition for those who are homeless or situations by creating to help one move fros lifestyle to providingI finding a permanent, Groundcover News active vendors andr registered and trained There were many dents who chose to sI including Michigan b: Jordan Morgan. The Groundcover News stu had some of its memb Nursing junior Jenny the group this past fall students involved in a wherethey cantruly ma Another member of sophomore Ian Mark experience was incre' because it allowed hi the shoes of a vendor, what they go through( "It made me stop an what it would be like only source of income, especially since a lot of times you might only get a few bucks an hour," he said. Ideally we would be compassionate about this all the time, but Mark said "it's easy for students to forget about the desperate st income and homeless the city," Mark said. " essential because it gii individuals a voice not otherwise have in low-incomne it empowers these individuals a community by providing them with valuable m a less secure opportunities to break out of the for oneself and brutal cycle of poverty." job. Currently, As students at the University, has about 23 we have a certain responsibility to more than 170 remain attentive to issues that affect 1. our local community. There may Michigan stu- be a barrier or separation between hadow vendors, students and the "Ann Arborites," asketball player but it leaves me with a bad taste in my newly founded mouth knowingthat the non-student dest group also population often considers us self- ters participate. centered or uppity. We certainly Crorey started have a responsibility to do well in I as a way to get our classes and remain attentive to local nonprofit our extra-curricular activities, but ske a difference. it is just as important to understand the group, LSA the broader Ann Arbor community in k, felt that the which we reside. dibly beneficial It's understandable that each indi- m to step into vidual will care more about certain and experience issues, but as a resident of an area, I on a daily basis. think it is a fair expectation that we id think about should at least be knowledgeable of if that was my the issues that influence our neigh- bors. with- out this basic It's important to understanding, we can allow understand the ourselves to fall broader Ann Arbor into traps like believing that community in which we are "help- ing" the home- we reside. less, or doing them a favor. We are all sim- Truggles of low- ply sharing our perspectives and sto- populations in ries with each other, to create a larger Groundcover is community for us all. ves low-income they might Additionally, - Harleen Kaur can be reached at harleenpumich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Barry Belmont, Jacob Karafa, Nivedita Karki, Jordyn Kay, Kellie Halushka, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe BLAIR SUCHER Gaining a new perspective Toning down the passion Living in a Detroit suburb my entire life has given me a bit of an outsider's view of the city. I grew up knowing about the problems of the city, the hidden danger that the city harbored and the major events the city had to offer. The media has always negatively portrayed Detroit. Consequently, my knowledge of and exposure to the city as a child was limited to the few excursions my family made into the city, primarily for sportingevents, the Thanksgiving Day Parade and the obligatory Lafayette Coney Island hot dog. Though situated a mere 25 minutes from the city my entire life, I didn't know much more about it than what I saw on the news. Upon joining the student body at the University, Detroit seemed "trendy." Everyone was doing service-learning work in Detroit, and I didn't get it. Why Detroit? Why now? I was extremely skeptical of the entire ordeal as I felt it perpetuated this idea of the white-savior complex, and I didn't know if I would ever want to be involved in something like that. During January of my freshman year, I was coaxed into being a site leader for Detroit Partnership Day. I had absolutely no clue what I was getting into, with the exception of the fact that I'd be joined by about 1,400 of my peers in Detroit. I wasn't sure what difference I could make in one day. I was a bit reluctant to be involved in something I wasn't sure I supported, but decided to give it a chance.' Two months later, DP Day finally rolled around, and at 6:30 a.m., I rose with the sun. I spitefully piled on layers upon layers of clothing, grabbed a cup of coffee in the eerily quiet Michigan Union and walked to meet the rest of my peers who were volunteering with me. I volunteered at Neighbors Building Brightmoor that day, and was pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed my experience. Five other students and I worked with a man who told us all about his journey to Detroit 30 years ago and how he fell in love with the city. His dedication and his care really inspired me. The work I did was tiring and tedious, but the impact that man made on me that day has stayed with me ever since. What I realized during that tine was that it's not about the amount of siding I moved or how clean the alley looked after we finished our work for the day, but the relationships I was able to forge during the experience that made DP Day a highlight of my freshman year. I realized that I was looking at DP Day from the wrong angle. DP Day is about more than just spending your Saturday volunteering in Detroit; it's about taking active steps and taking into account that service-learning is as much about receiving as it is giving. Though I was the one volunteering, I felt a bit guilty about how good I felt after doing so. Was that supposed to happen? Was I doing something wrong? One year later, I am now on the Major Events Team of the Detroit Partnership and have a new perspective, which enables me to see an entirely differentsideofwhatDPDaylookslike.WhatI've cometoappreciateisthatthe DetroitPartnership truly is about building mutually beneficial partnerships. If this happened to me, I have no doubt it is also happeningto many others. What ostensiblybeganas a "chore" hasmorphed intoa labor of love. The approach the Detroit Partnership takes toward creating these relationships is intentional. The group researches potential sites first and foremost. After that, applications are sentto Detroit-based organizations seeking their participation. If the organizations are interested, they decide whether they'd like volunteers to work with them to achieve some of their goals. The Detroit Partnership works carefully to let these organizations articulate specifically what help they need and to match that need with available resources. If we can't accommodate their needs for the specific event, we work to find other ways, such as one-time programs or weekly programs to involve these organizations. Doing this really enforces the sustainability of these relationships. with the hope of creating your own connections, I encourage you to join me - and the rest of the Detroit Partnership - in volunteering on DP Day. Be one of the 1,400 University students who join forces to serve the community, learn from one another and create meaningful relationships along the way. Don't think of it as one day, but rather a step toward familiarizing yourself with the city beyond what you see in the news. Sign up to volunteer at thedetroitpartnership.org. Blair Sucher is an LESA sophomore. O Sunday, the Big 12 suspended Oklahoma State sophomore star basketball player Marcus Smart for three games due to an altercation with a Texas Tech fan named Jeff Orr on Feb. 8. Toward the end of the game, after Smart came tumbling into Orr after attempting DEREK to block a slhot, Orr WOLFE reportedly called Smart "a piece of crap," to which Smart responded by shoving hin - think a toned-down Ben Wallace during the infamous "Malice at the Palace." While this is, thankfully, the first time we've seen Smart actually lay hands on someone else, his frustrations have been expressed publicly in recent weeks - he was caught kicking a chair during a win against West Virginia last month. Smart obviously made a mistake. His emotions got the best of him amid the difficult stretch of games his team has gone through - Okla- homa State has a disappointing 4-6 conference record. And I tlhiak it can be universally agreed upon that there is no circumstance where shov- ing someone - whether it be another player, a coach or a fan - is appropri- ate. Smart, at age 19, is a public figure and an all but guaranteed top-10 pick in the upcoming NBA draft thisJune. He has to hold himself to a high stan- dard. End of story. But we also shouldn't let Orr's role go unnoticed. Sure, he apologized, saying, "My actions last night were inappropriate and do not reflect myself or Texas Tech - a university Ilove dearly." However his original action - to call Smart a "piece of crap" in that setting - was pure coward- ice. There's an uneven playing field between players and fans in sports, the producer and the consumer - especially in college athletics. And that holds even truer atnbig Division I schools, such as Oklahoma State and the University of Michigan, which generates more than $100 million in revenue each year. American cl what it means to competitive atmos in. We constantly of the winning sit by association. Ya at its worst. Orr a a fan and the factt ticket doesn't give to do what he morally, of course But why should himself to the sam does? That gam broadcasted on WatchESPN, afte reality is that the Orraresmall,yett Smart are massivs his job as an air but it's very p. incident lowered S potentially costin dollars. I'm sure "c now written otte report of Smart. We also often fact that college a between 18 and 23 kids, just as I an are entire TV net' (read: obsessed with) constantly picking apart their skills. Just imagine being in the public spot- light for how you perform academically. Terrifying, I know. The pres- sure is undoubt- edly immense and likely over- whelming. And yes, I scouting needs to are millions of dol don't pity profe because sports, career paths and t with the territory find it relevantt much being under every second of th and not all athlet handle it. I also find it "what is this doing calling a 1S ulture glorifies of crap?"' And for what reason? It's be a fan with the pathetic. College athletics are one sphere that we live of the great American traditions, strive to be a part but the obsession of fans - in many de, even if it's just cases older alumni - getting so et, this is fandom excited over the success and failures bused his right as of young adults is rather off-putting. that he paid for his Yet, this is the target audience of him the go-ahead media networks. And itseems to have did (I'm talking caused schools' reputations to be defined by their athletic programs' n't he have to hold win-loss record. But, should that se standard Smart really bethe caseTFor example, I find e was nationally the Athletic Department's appalling ESPNU and handling of the Brendan Gibbons r all. Because the expulsion much more telling. consequences for I'm not here suggesting drastic he implications for changes to college athletics, rather e. Orr gets to keep changes in the way we approach traffic controller, them. Go to games. Have fun. Cheer ossible that this on the winged helmets. I'm still mart's draft stock, going to because college athletics g him millions of do matter. But maybe, just maybe, haracter issues" is they shouldn't matter as much very single scout's when it comes to affecting our overall well-being. lose track of the University president-elect Mark athletes are young, Schlissel summed up best what years old. They're perhaps should be the role of ath- a. However, there letics during the announcement of works dedicated to his appointment: "We've got to find ways to lever- age that level of public atten- Maybe, just maybe, tion onto the other wonderful games shouldn't things that are matter as much when happening on campus as well." it comes to affecting It's clear that this leveraging our overall well-being. isn't happen- ing right now, but it should be. Because what is happening right now, is young men understand that and women being forced to excite occur since there millions of staring eyes with their lars at stake. I also play, all the while maintaining a posi- ssional prospects, tiveattitude, with little returnforthe are their chosen vast majority of them - fewer than he attention comes 2 percent go pro. So if there's any- as it stands. I just thingthatthis situation with Marcus to point out how Smart has shown and confirmed, it's a magnifying glass that athletics have gone beyond just e day takes its toll, trying to create school spirit. es are prepared to it's bigbusiness. And nobody likes bigbusiness. prudent to ask, middle-aged man 9-year-old 'a piece - Derek Wolfe can be reached at dewolfe@umich.edu. I b