Report: Department allows harassment REPORT from page 1 A specially formed group of the Academic Rights and Responsibilities Committee heard testimony from Schwebach and others involved in each side of the dispute. The report on the department’s cli mate originated from that committee, a branch of UNCs Academic Senate. The report was delivered to Chancellor James Moeser late last week. It calls for the political science department to be placed in “receiver ship” for a minimum of three years. During this probation-like time, fac ulty members and graduate students must take sensitivity training, the com mittee recommended, For students or faculty members with harassment complaints, uniform procedures for dealing with them also should be adopted, the committee said. Finally, die committee of five facul ty members, who are not associated with the political science department, recommended annual assessments of the department’s progress toward “pro viding its faculty and students a safe cli mate in which to work and study.” Other parts of the complaint, in which the names were removed, allege that the handling of an incident involv ing racial slurs and plagiarism received more attention than sexual harassment complaints that had been filed with the department “When female students alleged a hostile climate and sexual harassment,” the report said, “it was alleged that (Forsythe’s) response was minimal.” The committee found that the polit ical science department’s response to sexual harassment complaints histori cally has been inadequate. Ignorance, insensitivity or the unwillingness to address the complaints has reflected poorly on die department and die university, the committee said. It said when female students repeat edly complained about a specific facul ty member’s conduct: no records were kept to establish a pattern of miscon duct, the faculty member in question received no written warnings about his reported behavior, and students were not informed of any action that was taken in response to their complaints. The committee also said faculty members acted irresponsibly in response to harassing behavior. It said faculty members voted to award emeritus status to a professor who was known to sexually harass women in the department, and also failed to bring an official complaint against this faculty member. The committee did not let students off the hook, either, saying they also par ticipated in unprofessional behavior. An untenured, female faculty mem ber, the report said, was the target of cat calls and kissing sounds during a class, and a male student submitted a class term paper containing possible pubic hair to a female faculty member. A sole member of the committee wrote a dissenting opinion, implicating Forsythe for violating UNL’s Professional Code of Ethics, die univer sity’s equal opportunity and affirmative action guidelines and its policies regard ing unlawful discrimination. “I find that die preponderance of the evidence shows that (Forsythe), in his role as department chair, did act in vio lation ...” the dissenting member wrote. But administrators painted a differ ent picture of the department in official assessments, die committee charged. Brian Foster, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, contributed to the uncomfortable environment when he based his assessment of die climate for women solely on the people he inter viewed, the report said. In a personal interview, Foster repeatedly refused to comment on the report, the possible three-year proba tionary period or the climate in the department Forsythe, former chairman of the department, resigned in February and is now in Europe. His replacement John Comer, is in Chicago for a political sci ence conference. Attempts to reach him were unsuccessful. Brian Humes, associate political science professor, said he thought sexu al harassment in the department was an ongoing problem that needed to be solved. “Any time one group is adversely affected within any work unit it affects the whole work unit” he said. Evelyn Fink, assistant political sci ence professor, is one faculty member 11. 11 ..==^= who said she’s been adversely affected by the department’s climate. She has filed a complaint “Many people, for a number of years,” Fink said, “have been well-aware of die harassment in die department.” The committee’s report, though, gives Fink hope dial the climate in the department could improve, she said. “I’m really pleased that a special committee, after careful review, is will ing to document what they’ve found,” she said. “There is harassment in the depart ment,” Fink said, “and die department’s response has been less than helpful.” Fink said she hopes Moeser will adopt the committee’s recommenda tions. Moeser has 30 days from the time he received the report last week, per Academic Senate policy, to decide what to do about the committee’s recommen dations. Schwebach’s attorney said he hopes the university will take action this time. “Any time there’s gender-based dis crimination that’s rampant in the depart ment, the university ought to know about it,” Cope said. “They ought to take care of it and move on. “If you sweep the discussion under the rug,” he said, “it will never get resolved - somebody has to have the courage to step up and be counted” Political science majors said they’ve been unaware of a possibly hostile cli mate in the department Junior Anne Ford said she has never experienced any uncomfortable experi ences in any of her seven political sci ence classes. Though four of Ford’s classes were taught by women, she said she was treat ed well fay the male professors. Jamie Peterson, senior political sci ence major, said she is “totally comfort able” talking to any of her political sci ence professors and had never heard of any allegations of sexual harassment in the department “The department is dominated by men, but I wouldn’t say that it is intimi dating to women,” she said. Of the 21 professors in the depart ment, only three are women. Schwebach insists she was treated unfairly, and said she will fight for her civil rights. Cope said if the university responds inadequately to the committee’s recom mendations, he and Schwebach will consider their options - including a pos sible lawsuit Though she loves teaching and researching, she will not remain in an environment where she doesn’t feel her rights are protected, she said. Schwebach said the reason she’s an academic and the reason she’s fighting the sexual harassment so hard stems from an experience she had in Iran dur ing the late 1970s. “I know what it’s like to live under martial law in a nondemocratic state. “And because I know what that’s like, I will not allow my civil rights to be denied me in the United States.” ========--=-=..—.-..II Member arrested after Cornell fraternity fire Cornell Daily Sun Cornell University Ithaca, N.Yi (U*Wire). - A fra ternity ritual involving fire caused heavy smoke that set off the fire alarm and led to the arrest of one member of Phi Delta Gamma Fraternity Thursday. The Cornell Police Department arrested Dave Dolpe, president of Phi Delta Gamma, for reckless endangerment, according to Cornell Police Department Captain Randy Hausner. •. The 911 Dispatch Center received notification of the fire through a fire alarm activation around 1:30 a.m. CU Environmental Health and Safety Units and CUPD arrived on the scene moments before the Ithaca Fire Department and reported heavy smoke in the base ment of the house. IF# Lieutenant Midtael , Schnurle said the firefighters found the source of the smoke and smelled an odor of “dense flam mable liquids,” which they believed to be lighter fluid. The IFD evacuated the building for more than an hour and used fans to push air into it for ventilation. No one was injured. Following ventilation, CU Environmental Health and Safety found evidence of four to five small fires placed around the basement. According to Schnurle, they had been put out by members of the fraternity using dry chemi cal extinguishers. Schnurle said CUPD officials informed him that Dolpe told them that the fires were part of a ritual. According to Randy Stevens, associate dean of students and fra ternity and sorority affairs, he will be meeting with Phi Gamma Delta alumni officers, undergraduate officers and officers from the IFD and Cornell Environmental Health and Safety this week. Stevens said, “Following that conversation, we will figure out what the next steps are.” Members of the fraternity declined to com ment. The IFD Cause and Origin Team and CUPD are investigating the nature of the incident. “I don’t think (the members) are thinking clearly about what the consequences could be,” Schnurle said. “This could have ended up as a very tragic event,” he added. A fatal fire at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill chapter of the same fraternity killed five students in May 1996. According to an article in the Daily Tarheel, an accidental fire broke out after a pre-graduation party had ended. The chief med ical examiner said four of the five victims - all of whom died of car bon monoxide poisoning - had blood-alcohol levels significantly above .08 percent. The pre-dawn blaze started in the basement and the actual cause of ignition could not be deter mined. I-1 Lowest Rates I_I In Town! SELF-STORAGE 609 Van Dorn (402) 477-7900 Cars • Pickups • Vans • Trucks Recycle Your Textbooks at Nebraska Bookstore. _Lk_._•_ •- .. _ ;A -:■ I " -1 Today is Earth Day, and Nebraska Bookstore wants to help you help yourself. By recycling your used textbooks for cash, we can work together to help save the environment. End of term textbook buyback Degms Apm z / and runs through May 10,1998. No matter where you bought your books, we'll buy them back. You can always count on more cash for your books when you sell your textbooks to Nebraska Bookstore. 1300 Q street, upper level.