Page 4A - Wednesday, September 10, 2014 T h and The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 114 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. A full house The 'U' should plan ahead for student overflow This June, University Housing officials announced that there would be several hundred more freshmen on campus during the Fall 2014 semester than the initial estimate of 6,000. By the beginning of the semester, Housing was able to place the overflow of 423 freshmen into dorms by creating brand new alternative living arrangements. According to Peter Logan, the communications director for University Housing, the University was able to open 337 spots for freshmen by offering a voluntary housing swap to upperclassmen in one of four off- campus apartment complexes. In addition, 86 freshmen were placed into converted overflow lounge spaces. However, the challenges faced during the recent housing dilemma should and could have been avoided by proactive planning. The University can prevent future crises by improving interdepartmental communications and planning contingencies for inevitable errors. The silent battle of women Warm sun, good books, boat rides and leisure lounging cover the painting of an idyllic summer. But a college summer looks a bit different. It's filled with applications, mentorships and internships. For many, relaxed MAJA summers are TOSIC exchanged for the privilege of building reputations and con- nections. This summer, I followed my fellow Wolverines to a place that inflates with interns during the summer - Washington, D.C. Together we exchanged our casual sweats and yoga pants for awk- wardly fitting suits and blistering heels. As we rushed on the metro and interned with various organi- zations, we all gained a taste of the workplace. But the taste Igot turned sour and could not be rinsed out. At first, I barely noticed it. The guidelines that dictated a woman's place at work were silent, but extremely powerful. As I entered my building each day with a swish of my badge and the click of my heels, I also opened the doors to a vacuum. It was a vacuum that sucked out all the air and applied enough pressure to bend objects. It could not be avoided, and soon I was its subject - a young, malleable woman ready to learn. I learned that asuccessfulwoman is never successful in just one thing. She's successful for transforming herself into a superwoman and bal- ancing between the scales weighed down with thinness, beauty, work But our battle was not fair. It was and family. The pressure to abide a delusional search for a prize that by this notion of success consumes was never established. It was fought a cubicle like an ominous cloud of without written rules. There was smoke. It choked me more and more no unbiased, uninvolved and un- until I simply could not inhale with- invested judge. However, the great- out suffocating on the very envi- est disheartening illusion was that ronment that was meant to ignite there was never a winner. I quickly my growth. learned that no woman could ever I learned that the workplace was step onto the first place podium and a battlefield for women. It was a receive her medal, because it implies battle of having less: less food, less that the ideal has been reached. But weight, less fat, less outspokenness. we are told our bodies are always And it was a battle of having more: able to bear the loss of a few more more self-control, more resistance, pounds. We are told that we can more approachability. It was a battle always strive to be more perfect. to reach "the" lucky number on the As a result, our battle was designed scale. It was a battle to fit into the to fight for a goal that is never in unattainable norm of beauty. sight and never achievable. It's Every time food was offered in intended to keep us spinning end- the office, I watched as each woman lessly and to forget the things that gave her excuse truly matter. for eating as if As my it had become a internship came necessary step It was a battle to a close, I in digestion. learned my final The in-sync line to fit into the lesson. I let my of women ogled silence settle in and cautiously unattainable norm the office, and it approached the quickly turned rows of birthday Of beauty. into a nod of cake and cookies affirmation. By as the days spun simply swishing past. Every my badge and conversation lingering in the break silently walking through the room, lunch room, conference room vacuum, I approved of its effects and executive room was about the upon me. It was understood that successes and failures that came I had joined the battle, because I with the latest diets and fitness had never voiced otherwise. The plans. Women slyly interjected the only way to break the competition details of their breakfast and walked was to acknowledge its impending with their small salads held high. presence. I never did. But these These acts were far too common for written words are my first steps them to be considered coincidences. toward finally breaking the silence. We had siphoned ourselves into a battle, and these were our - Maja Tosic can be reached battle tactics. at tosimaj@umich.edu. With only a few months to solve the housing overflow before students returned in the fall, the University quickly developed an innovative alternative living situation. The University contacted and then subsequently signed agreements with three local apartment complexes involved in their Beyond the Diag listing service - The Courtyards, Varsity and University Towers. Later, Sterling 411 Lofts was also included as an off-campus housing option. According to a FAQ sheet about the contract offer obtained from Housing, the alternative living arrangement was then offered to several hundred non-freshmen undergraduates. For the price of a room in University housing, the offer included rent, utilities and furniture with the option of keeping or dropping their meal plan. All provisions of the dormitory contracts remained the same with no change in obligations for students. When considering the agreement, the University commendably cooperated with students and landlords to create an arrangement that comfortably accommodated as many people as possible. While the University was successful in placing the extra students, it also diminished the ability for movement within housing, creating a potential for serious problems this semester and the next. For example, in training, residential advisors were told that the number of emergency spaces would be limited. Emergency spaces are critical as they provide another room for residents to move to when they feel targeted by other hallmates or roommates. Reducing the number of these emergency spaces limits the solution set for situations in which a resident feels uncomfortable within their own room or hall. This is especially concerning for young freshmen discovering their individual identities and are learning to live with one another for the first time. This situation was created by a miscalculation of the incoming freshman class size by the University Office of Undergraduate Admissions, an honest mistake, and some level of variation between the number of students admitted and those expected to actually enroll is part of the system. However, honest mistakes can be prevented with clear and constant communication. Due to the unexpected surplus of students this fall, and the necessity for such creative solutions, it's clear that there was a breakdown in communication between University departments. It's problematic if University Admissions solely provides an incoming class size estimate for University: Housing to accommodate. University Housing should also provide the Admissions Officewith an estimate of the number of beds available in a given year so that Admissions can plan accordingly. If University Admissions knows that the University will have diminished dorm space due to extensive renovations, the Admissions office must keep this in mind when offering acceptances to potential students so as not to matriculate many more students than available housing spaces. Even though the predicament was caused by anhonestmistake,thecomplexityoftheproblem doesn't fit the scale of the miscalculation. An additional 400 students to a 6,000 student estimation is a 6 percent difference. It's concerning thatthe University has such a small margin for error, and that a seemingly small difference in estimation can create a situation that requires never-before-used innovations. If these dormitory renovations are planned years in advance, the number of beds should also be known years in advance. Though this situation isn't likely to repeat itself next year - with the reopening of West Quad and Cambridge House - it's important that the University install a contingency plan that will hedge against a margin of error larger than 6 percent. INTERESTED IN CAMPUS ISSUES? . POLITICS? SEX, DRUGS AND ROCK'N'ROLL? Check out The Michigan Daily's editorial board meetings. Every Sunday and Wednesday at 6 p.m., the Daily's opinionstaff meets to discuss both University and national affairs and write e ditorials. E-mail opinioneditors@michigandaily.com to join in the debate. Servants and critics 0 EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Jaekwan An, Barry Belmont, Edvinas Berzanskis, David Harris, Rachel John, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Allison Raeck, Linh Vu, Meher Walia, Mary Kate Winn, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe At his inauguration, newly installed University Presi- dent Mark Schlissel spoke highly of the need for tolerating the ideas we hate, criti- cizing recent trends of controver- sial speak- ers being disinvited JAMES from college BRENNAN campuses. Michael Bloomberg, former mayor of New York City, touched on the same sub- ject at his commencement speech at Harvard University this year, call- ing student and faculty pushback against figures like Condoleezza Rice manifestations of "tyrannical tendencies" that shut down dissent. Bloomberg and Schlissel both men- tioned the shouting down of Ray Kelly, former New York City police commissioner, at Brown University, whose controversial affiliation with racial profiling and stop-and-frisk led to widespread protest. Bloomberg and Schlissel - Brown's provost at the time - derided the behavior of students in failing to let Kelly speak, describ- ing these and other actions as det- rimental to the free marketplace of ideas on college campuses. Without having our favored ideas challenged, Schlissel argued, we become intellectually stunted, uncritical and a failure as students and educators. President Schlissel demanded that students be exposed to differing ideas to see the other side of any argument, even if the other side is horrendous and despi- cable. To illustrate, he described an event in the '60s at which Ross Barnett, segregationist and white supremacist Mississippi governor, came to Hill Auditorium. He was booed and challenged by students, but the man was allowed to speak. In 2007, Columbia University President Lee Bollinger - formerly of the University of Michigan - invited then-Irania Mahmoud Ahmadine Columbia's World Le Bollinger was chast Senators Barack Obat Clinton for inviting. and massive protests campus and through City opposing the bru But the man to speak. Ahmadinejad belit uality, questioned the Holocaust and attac Israeli foreign polic dinejad, I pause to p believes that Israel sh off the face of the ear Bollinger, a First scholar, called the e Columbia's tradition debate" and invoked1 free speech and criti explaining his decis through with the s are ideas directly in our fundamental va are ideas nonethele to Schlissel's logic, even this genocidal des- pot should get a chance to speak if invited. (It should be noted that Bloomberg didn't attend the speech but refused to criti- cize Columbia for inviting Ahmadinejad). This is a commen to take, showingatru to free speech and I despise the ideast Ahmadinejad and B feel similarly about of Ray Kelly and Rice, but they are ju to their right to spe I agree with. To Schlissel, if ideas go education fails. On that logic, Presi I'm compelled to as freedom of expression During last year's in President debate over divestment from jad to speak at Israel, pro-Israel student groups eaders Forum. took to the pages of the Daily and ised by then- widespread e-mail lists to work on ma and Hillary shutting down the debate. Students Ahmadinejad, wrote under the veil of "safe spaces" were held on and "meaningful dialogue" in an out New York attempt to silence pro-Palestinian tal dictator. groups. At the same time, student was allowed government sidestepped the issue entirely by calling student tled homosex- activists threatening. history of the This is the exact behavior that ked U.S. and Schlissel condemned in his speech, y. Mr. Ahma- calling student self-censorship point out, also one of the major challenges in ould be wiped addressing open and free debates. th. Dozens of students across campus Amendment were targeted for their involvement vent a part of in pro-Palestinian activism and had for "robust their voices unfairly stifled under principles like labels like anti-semitic and violent. cal thought in Dean of Students Laura Blake ion to follow Jones and E. Royster Harper, vice peech. These president for student life, didn't opposition to take campus-wide action to protect lues, yet they these voices until the debate itself ss. According was nearly over, doing so only by sending out a short e-mail. Down the road, President Butthe m an c Schlissel will be asked to stand was allowed for student free speech in protest to speak. of any number of controversies, Israel sure to be among them. If the man is to be taken at his word, he must dable position proactively stand for students to e commitment speakfreelyandopenlyinthefaceof open debate. intimidation and bullying. A nicely of people like worded e-mail about tolerance will arnett, and I not suffice. t the policies Schlissel cannot just advocate Condoleezza for free speech for war criminals tst as entitled and racists while surrounded ak as anyone by applauding luminaries. He paraphrase must be an advocate for each and unchallenged, every student to express their voice, especially in the face of dent Schlissel, overwhelming criticism. U I I Our map shows the likely reservoir' of Ebola virus in animal populations, and this is larger than has been previously appreciated:' - Oxford University Department of Zoology researcher Dr. Nick Golding said when discussing the University's new study on the regions where animals are likely infected with the Ebola virus, increasing the size of potential infections. 0 k: what about n for students? controversial - James Brennan can be reached at jmbthree@umich.edu A I rt 4 I & &