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- <text id=90TT1166>
- <title>
- May 07, 1990: Bigots In The Ivory Tower
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 07, 1990 Dirty Words
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 104
- Bigots in the Ivory Tower
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An alarming rise in hatred roils U.S. campuses
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Naushad S. Mehta and Susan
- Tifft/New York and Richard Woodbury/Austin
- </p>
- <p> Whoever haunted Sabrina Collins' room in Longstreet Hall had
- a knack for terror. The black Emory University freshman came
- home one evening last month to find her teddy bear slashed, her
- clothes soaked with bleach and NIGGER HANG written in lipstick
- on the wall. When death threats began arriving in the mail,
- college officials supplied extra locks and an alarm system. This
- month, as she got ready to move out, she lifted the rug to find
- DIE NIGGER DIE written in nail polish on the floor. Sabrina
- collapsed and was hospitalized for "emotional traumatization."
- </p>
- <p> This naked display of racism is only one example of a
- general "breakdown in civility" on U.S. campuses. Such is the
- theme of a report that will be issued this week by the Carnegie
- Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, which surveyed
- American colleges for a year before compiling Campus Life: In
- Search of Community. Though the report's language is muted and
- scholarly, its message is loud and clear: the "idyllic vision"
- of college life "often masks disturbing realities," including
- racism, sexism, homophobia and anti-Semitism.
- </p>
- <p> Fractured civility, in fact, seems a tepid description of
- campus behavior that sometimes borders on the barbarous. This
- past fall, frat members at the University of Mississippi
- scrawled KKK and WE HATE NIGGERS on the naked bodies of two
- white pledges and dumped them on the campus of Rust College, a
- mostly black school nearby. At Bryn Mawr, freshman Christine
- Rivera found an anonymous note slipped under her door. "Hey
- Spic," it said, "if you and your kind can't handle the work
- here, don't blame it on the racial thing...why don't you
- just get out. We'd all be a lot happier." Members of the Hillel
- Foundation at the University of Kansas found a letter taped to
- the door. "Jew-Boy get out," it said. "I'm going to burn your
- Torah."
- </p>
- <p> In the heat of such boiling hatreds, it is hard to sustain
- any notion of the university as a protected enclave devoted to
- opening minds and nurturing tolerance. Instead, many campuses
- seem to distill the free-floating bigotries of American society
- into a lethal brew. Since 1986, according to the Baltimore-based
- National Institute Against Prejudice and Violence, more than 250
- colleges and universities, including top schools such as Brown,
- Smith and Stanford, have reported racist incidents ranging from
- swastikas painted on the walls to violent attacks and death
- threats.
- </p>
- <p> Virtually every minority group finds itself under fire. For
- blacks, the trigger is often affirmative action: whatever their
- backgrounds or abilities, black students may find themselves
- viewed as beneficiaries of lowered standards. Last fall the
- University of Virginia accepted more than half the blacks who
- applied but only one-third of the whites, even though the
- blacks' average Scholastic Aptitude Test scores were 194 points
- below the whites'. At a time of rising competition, and with no
- sense of the past injustice that affirmative action seeks to
- redress, white students use such statistics as battering rams.
- "Affirmative action is organized governmental racism against
- white people," charges Temple University student Michael
- Spletzer, co-founder of the White Student Union. "Individual
- merit should be the only criterion."
- </p>
- <p> Asian students are attacked for the opposite reason--for
- "curve busting" on grade scales and raising the level of
- competition for jobs in such fields as math, science and
- engineering. "I hear Asian jokes a lot," says a junior at the
- University of Illinois. "You're going to get out of the
- university and make $80,000, so people can make fun of you while
- you're here." In the case of gays and lesbians, fear of AIDS has
- brought homophobia out of the closet: of 1,411 reports of "gay
- bashing" on college campuses in 1988, 227 were classified as
- AIDS related. At Penn State, for example, a group calling
- itself the Committee for an AIDS-Free America tacked up posters
- with skulls and crossbones around campus and the message:
- HOMICIDE HAS A DEFINITE PLACE AT PENN STATE.
- </p>
- <p> Jews too have found that in a climate that seems to tolerate
- intolerance, incidents of harassment are on the rise. A Trinity
- University fraternity in San Antonio was placed on probation
- after requiring a Jewish pledge to dress in a Nazi uniform and
- parade through the campus cafeteria. Jewish women are derided
- as "Jewish-American princesses." At Cornell and elsewhere,
- students wear T-shirts reading SLAP-A-JAP! and BACK OFF BITCH,
- I'M A JAP-BUSTER! "Anti-Semitism masked as sexism is more
- socially acceptable," says Rabbi Laura Geller, director of the
- Hillel Jewish Center at the University of Southern California,
- "because, unfortunately, sexism is still an accepted form of
- bigotry."
- </p>
- <p> It is not only fellow undergraduates who harass and
- intimidate. Many students charge universities with
- "institutional racism" for failing to recruit more minority
- faculty members, broaden the curriculum and show more
- sensitivity on race issues. At Trinity College last May, a
- campus guard entered the university's computer room. Of the 40
- students in the room, just one was black. For no apparent
- reason, the guard singled out the black student and asked for
- his ID card. "For blacks, it's an alien environment," says Eric
- Dixon, a broadcasting student at the University of Texas. "The
- school incubates segregation. It can't control students, but it
- can change attitudes. It isn't fulfilling that aspect."
- </p>
- <p> The need for a change of attitudes arises from some
- experiences common to the current generation, the first to come
- of age after the civil rights battles of the '60s and '70s. Most
- parents of today's undergraduates remember Freedom Summer and
- the Selma march, but somehow they have failed to impart the
- lessons to their children. When confronted with the name of
- Malcolm X, the Black Muslim leader, for example, one white
- student at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst
- innocently asked her professor, "Who is this Malcolm the Tenth?"
- Says Daniel Levitas, executive director of the Atlanta-based
- Center for Democratic Renewal: "We have today a whole young
- society that has not been called to conscience."
- </p>
- <p> Many students have had no firsthand experience with
- different cultures until they arrive on campus and walk squarely
- into the middle of a grand social experiment. In the past two
- decades, college after college opened its doors at last to
- women, minorities, the poor, the disabled. Not only are most
- campuses far more diverse than they were 20 years ago, they are
- also vastly more heterogeneous than most high schools or
- neighborhoods. Under such hermetic conditions, the chemistry has
- proved volatile and relations explosive.
- </p>
- <p> The impact of constant racial friction on student life is
- profound. Nonwhite students suffer tremendous pressure to
- outperform their classmates just to beat the stereotype. Some
- drop out rather than battle on; others move to schools they
- consider more supportive. Those who decide to remain often
- segregate themselves at single-race cafeteria tables or cultural
- centers, fueling complaints of cliquishness and militancy. "I
- can't believe they would accuse us of being reverse racists,"
- says Brown undergraduate Martina Johnson. "For 45 minutes out
- of the day I want to be comfortable. I want to not need to have
- my guard up."
- </p>
- <p> University officials, and many students as well, are
- fighting to reverse the trend by cracking down on bigots and
- joining in consciousness-raising efforts. Many
- freshmen-orientation programs now include seminars and workshops
- on race relations, ethnic diversity and homophobia. This school
- year Columbia University organized a mandatory "multicultural
- sensitivity-training" session for 1,800 new students. "These
- things may seem kind of Mickey Mouse," says William Damon,
- chairman of the education department at Brown. "But I'm in favor
- even of symbolic gestures because it does communicate to young
- people what the priorities are."
- </p>
- <p> Elsewhere there have been some unlikely victories for
- old-fashioned activism. Few could have imagined that Toni
- Luckett, a lesbian and an Afro-American studies major with
- spiked hair and a flair for quoting Malcolm X, could build a
- minority coalition and get elected student-body president at the
- University of Texas. Long a stronghold of white frat men, the
- university had no experience with firebrands. Luckett is
- changing all that. Preaching confrontation, Luckett has staged
- rallies that have put the university on notice that recent
- racial incidents cannot go unpunished. "The issues have been
- burning for years," she says. "We'll take to the streets, do
- whatever it takes, any means it takes." For her efforts, she has
- found threats in the mail and MANDELA-LUCKETT, RIP scrawled on
- the walls.
- </p>
- <p> The best place to battle willful ignorance and bigotry, of
- course, is in the classroom. Teaching that strengthens reason
- over reflex, curiosity over insularity may help improve
- students' behavior outside the classroom as well. Though the
- changes are often controversial, many colleges have revised
- their curricula to include courses in non-Western cultures and
- values. Fewer and fewer of the history and literature surveys
- focus exclusively on the West European heritage. "The curriculum
- has been radically realigned," says Carnegie Foundation
- president Ernest Boyer. "Minorities have insisted on it, women
- have insisted on it, and frankly it's made universities
- dramatically better places."
- </p>
- <p> But some other antidotes, however well intentioned, may
- prove more toxic than the racial poisons they are meant to cure.
- Nowhere is the First Amendment more imperiled than on college
- campuses. In the past two years nearly a dozen schools have
- cobbled together policies outlawing insulting and demeaning
- speech. At the University of Connecticut students may be
- expelled if they use "derogatory references" or "fighting words"
- to harass anyone face to face. Yet if such bans succeed in
- suppressing obnoxious impulses, they merely drive them
- underground--along with many ideas that deserve to be aired,
- if only to kindle a more heated debate.
- </p>
- <p> Faculty members vehemently denounce what they call the
- Thought Police for muzzling the free exchange of ideas, however
- provocative or unfashionable. Many professors charge that the
- bans invite misinterpretation and self-censorship. Last May, for
- example, a Brown art professor canceled a screening of The Birth
- of a Nation, the D.W. Griffith classic about the Ku Klux Klan,
- because the local chapter of the N.A.A.C.P. opposed it.
- </p>
- <p> The Carnegie Report and others like it are searching hard
- for ways to rebuild the sense of community that should
- characterize the campus--and society at large. The report
- prescribes a "Campus Compact" that universities must adopt if
- they are to restore peace to the ivory tower. The compact
- embraces principles of justice, openness and discipline that are
- meant to form the foundation of a "community of learning." But
- no seminar or speech or required reading will change overnight
- the attitudes embedded in a culture that children absorb while
- growing up. Nor will they easily break the cycle of hate. "If
- you can't have a university that lives together with some
- degree of civility and integrity amidst the diversity," asks
- Boyer, "how can we expect our cities and towns to do the same?"
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-