Housekeepers argue break policy at forum
The Employee Forum on Wednesday was characterized by an uneasy settling and clarification of disputes.
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The Employee Forum on Wednesday was characterized by an uneasy settling and clarification of disputes.
One thing was clear at Phyllis Schlafly’s speech Monday night: She is no feminist. Throughout her speech, titled “Feminism vs. Conservatism,” Schlafly, a renowned conservative activist and attorney, talked about her lifelong opposition to feminism and her prominent fight against the Equal Rights Amendment.“I have a view of feminism that I’m sure you will not get at the women’s studies department,” Schlafly said jokingly.“You can define feminism any way you want, but I use it the way leading spokesmen and writers like Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem and Robin Morgan do, as anti-marriage, anti-full time homemaker, anti-motherhood and anti-man.” Fifteen minutes into her lecture, when discussing her numerous attendances to Republican National Conventions, a group of about 15 audience members stood up for several seconds and silently walked out. As they stood, Schlafly responded with sarcasm.“Oh, so you’re standing up for the RNC?” she said. “That’s great!”Schlafly then continued her attack. “Feminism does not liberate women from anything,” she said. “It teaches them how to nurse old wounds and feel sorry for themselves by identifying grievances and disadvantages. Feminism is a sour-grape ideology that is not compatible with happiness.” Schlafly also said she believes women have a wonderful place in society and argued that they are not mistreated. “If women are oppressed, how come they live eight years longer than men?” she asked. “Or why are 98 percent of work-related deaths men? And why were 94 percent of women on the Titanic saved?”With regard to the Equal Rights Amendment, Schlafly said it was a fraud that would prevent discrimination against sex, not women. “Men are not in the Constitution, so why do we need women in it?” she asked. “There are no sex-discriminatory words in the Constitution, and it does not need any.”Schlafly also recalled a famous debate she had with Friedan, who suggested they “burn her at the stake.”The key word for feminism in the 1960s and 1970s was liberation, she said.Schlafly added that feminists currently suffer from an identity crisis.“They are angry whiners. They have no role models,” she said. “You never hear them talking about successful women like Margaret Thatcher or Condoleezza Rice. And it’s so funny how threatened they feel by Sarah Palin. Regardless what you think of her, Palin is a successful woman. She has been re-elected, she ran on a big ticket, has a good husband and has raised a family.”Sophomore Andrew Votipka said Schlafly’s perspective is often misinterpreted.“I enjoyed the lecture. She has an interesting take on the feminist movement,” he said. “I agree with most of what she says, but most people misunderstand her.” Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu.
UNC administrators and members of student government are collaborating to create a centralized database that would keep track of students, staff and faculty travelling abroad.Former Student Body President Jasmin Jones plans to propose the system to Chancellor Holden Thorp in May.This centralized database is intended to help UNC and the Study Abroad Office “do a better job of keeping track of everyone traveling abroad at all times so that we are able to locate them in case of emergency,” Jones said.“It would contain basic information such as the traveler’s address, location, contact information and emergency contacts.”The problem the database should solve, Jones added, is that currently there is no single place to see where everyone from UNC is traveling abroad.Her goal is to have the database ready and implemented by the 2010-11 school year.A task force composed of the Study Abroad Office, University Counsel and student government’s global university committee was recently set up to blueprint the details of how this database would be implemented and what it would entail.Although the department has been using a similar database for the last seven years, it only includes students through the Study Abroad Office and a few other professional schools, such as the Kenan-Flagler Business School and the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, said Mark Nielsen, information systems manager for the Study Abroad Office.But students also participate in independent programs, travel sponsored by other schools and other avenues not monitored by the Study Abroad Office.“After the earthquake in Haiti, the Study Abroad Office had no record of any UNC students in Haiti when in fact there were several students there through departments or organizations unaffiliated with the current Study Abroad Office database,” Nielsen said.“There are a lot of programs with people abroad that could be doing research, volunteer work or independent exchanges that (the Study Abroad Office) does not know about. “In the event that there is a natural disaster, political upheaval or any other sort of emergency, then there could potentially be one mutual, organized place to know where everyone at UNC is.” The plans for setting up such a centralized database are still in development, Nielsen said, but this “global travel database,” as the task force has been calling it, should be proposed to the chancellor by the end of May.Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu.