ii|silay, June 14, 2001 Opinion Page 5 THE BATTALION This tate t additional 5 J end to qualify IR mH Hni ■ nI m m H m nI ETS Kittens, Cats, 1 Occasional thers. Brazos certification proj ited in greater i 'n Academy is p -aining and her the world. 0 counseling, placement prosecute sexual harassment equally, regardless of the victim's gender hen one thinks of ainers.com or graduates lr^® sexua 1 na- he industry. Bnent, a male female, needs jBrior victimi/,- kyard. Very if. ■ 1 r , 395-8261. g a female em- ppies. akc, iF* ee is usually ed masked e .fiat comes to Id. However, JESSICA CRUTCHER old, S75/each ■■ t ■ ■ r-1 one black mate men are beginning to hle^exu- hirassment charges as well — ESTATE ' a *f ls,: ot bur men. IBhese claims now account for f 2 BRAND r ,, , , ; left at thep! --’ percent or all sexual harassment eidents in ctitarges, which is nearly double the diversity Pu® unt i() years at T 0 according to has only 2 Coras®, . • i b b . ow interest ratK e Equal Employment Opportunity e best deal ni ommission (EEOC). Some of the A&M students' i • • i ^ i i basketball a :o ■P* aints involve unwanted sexual ^rth over 300ott Ivances; however, most of them re- 41 : " n 4tr C1 -)rfl being harassed in a lewd and -nished Model - : : ,, ° rr h v Anywhere e xually otrensive manner. i sw Parkway,nr For examjyle, one lawsuit involved a ^979-683-5758or sf a jj ^ t] . cct . nl . 1 ]y St whose supervisor ■ngly” demanded sexual favors in ■ange for a larger bonus — possi- se. remodeled, y 3s ;in insult rather than a proposal !bills. Rick 218-8i: 7 r 71MATES — and told the analyst he would be better off as a “homosexual prosti tute,” according to The New York Times. Another case involved a Dil lard’s shoe salesman who complained that his male supervisor frequently touched his groin and buttocks. Much of this behavior ultimately goes unpunished because of how current federal laws are being inter preted by lower courts. Currently, sexual harassment is only considered “discrimination because of sex” un der the Supreme Court’s interpreta tion of Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Many homosexual employees have little recourse because of the way this law is written and because many states do not have laws prohibiting harassment because of sexual orien tation. Adjustments to the current laws are needed. It should not matter whether the harassment occurs be cause of the victim’s sex or because of his or her sexual orientation. If the improper conduct is sexual in na ture, it should fall under the umbrel la of sexual harassment, and the vic tim should be provided with a legal recourse. A hotel employee who is openly gay, Medina Rene, lost his case against the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas at the U. S. Court of Ap peals for the 9th Circuit last March. it The degrading and humiliating treatment Rene contends that he received is appalling. ,, — The U.S. Court of Appeals 9th Circuit Rene said he was constantly harassed by other employees, who would try to pinch his buttocks and engage in other unacceptable conduct. The court’s ruling was disturbing, to say the least: Any harassment was based on his sexual orientation, not his sex. According to The Times, the court stated “The degrading and humiliat ing treatment Rene contends that he received from his fellow workers is appalling. However, this type of dis crimination, based on sexual orienta tion, does not fall within the prohibi tions of Title VII.” It does not matter whether the ha rassment was based on sexual orien tation or gender — common sense tells us since it was sexual and physi cal in nature, it was sexual harass ment. T here is a line between inno cent teasing and making a co-worker miserable. Rene’s fellow workers crossed that line. A defense lawyer for another case, this time involving two supervisors harassing 10 male salesmen, argued his clients’ behavior was “nothing more than what goes on in a typical high-school locker room,” according to The Times. According to the EEOC, the incidents had been pre viously dismissed by the company’s management as horseplay. Physically harassing someone, whether horseplay in a high-school locker room or a more targeted at tack in the workplace, is inexcusable. Unfortunately, one’s supervisors cannot always be trusted to keep em ployees in check — often, the super visors are the perpetrators. There fore, effective national laws are needed to protect all victims of sexu al harassment, not a select few. Sexual orientation should not matter when filing a suit, because it makes one no more or less likely to be the brunt of cruel sexual jokes. The lack of laws protecting people on the basis of sexual orientation, combined with a narrowly written definition of sexual harassment, cre ates a gray zone that must be effec tively eliminated. Jessica Crutcher is a junior journalism major. 3d, 3bdrm/2bth di $300 month 680-8952. seded, non-sn 3lex with baity jst move-ln. 774' aeded for 5- : | i/mo. -(-utilities. CHAD MALLAM/ThE BATTALION V is not a substitute -based shows lack substance min. to main of r « i-smoker, $$' 255-8938 WICES \NTED HT LOSS merica is ruled by television. No ther country nsive Driving. W#e sacrificed their 5- |ot!| ves to wa teh the lives of ie discount. M-i . ... ipm-9pm), FitWrs on television. &Sat(ioam-2:3t (;ps’ s IQ-eroding Inside BankolAn* urt ,, F „ e . sas/cash, urogram, Big Brother, i law. m-univ ill return this summer. bh0W ’ UF dozen people will live in a house with ameras following their every move, hen, one person will be voted out of the to sell lawn businf 0 | S g eac j 1 wee F with the last person care. Call J.O. wfl . ’ r . \ inning a sum of money for imitating lomer Simpson; that is, sitting around oing nothing. rweight? inc Flave people forgotten what it was like Call Mary 978-) nave lives? Judging from what some eople are watching on television, Heurism is currently in fashion. We not |jv have “Big Brother,” but “Survivor,” ■mptation Island,” “Cops,” “The Real forld” and “The World’s Scariest Police bases.” These show regular people do- ig abnormally stupid things. Some do it >r money and some because they have othing better to do. And people watch. What is so interesting about seeing peo- le live their lives? “Survivor” — unlike the :st of the shows —- has potential to enter- dn, simply because of the exotic locations. BS is now considering a celebrity version 1 “Survivor,” which sounds like a great lea. They could take people like Alec aldiwin, Roseanne, Rosie O’Donnell, Ben ffleck, Gilbert Gottfried, Leonardo De- laprio and Bill Maher off to some deserted land — and leave them. It would have rear ratings. After all, Baldwin said was ^SIFIEDS avm g America anyway. jgfhere maybe hope for “Survivor,” but iete is no hope for the others. What is L n 845 Q 5 p 9 £P lepdea behind “Temptation Island?” 1 hatching a bunch of models, actors and ie fine print. actresses try to seduce people should not be’prime-time viewing. Depending on one’s vantage point, it can be considered either a soap opera or low-quality porn. People that watched the program should stop kidding themselves and watch the real thing. T here are also those who seem to get their enjoyment from watching brazen acts of stupidity. No, not on C-SPAN, but usually someplace like MTV. “The Real World” supposedly follows the lives of a bunch of strangers living together. Soon, scientists will find that enough exposure to that program causes viewers to curl up into the fetal position and shiver, bemoan ing their now missing intelligence. € As bad as “The Real World” is, shows like “Cops” and “Jackass” are worse. These shows prove that humans have not evolved much, if at all, from the times of the gladia tors. Some people still seem to derive pleasure from watching others do stuff most people would never fathom doing. T he only difference is now people are not doing battle with each other, they are usu ally endangering themselves on their own. WTiere is the excitement in watching a toothless mother of six who lives in a trail er park be sprayed with mace because she is drunk and disorderly? How can people derive any enjoyment from watching some guy set himself on fire? This is not enter tainment; this is pathetic. But people watch. Americans must be really bored. That is the only explanation for such garbage on television and for it being watched. Maybe seeing other people live their lives re minds folks of something they no longer have: a life. Mark Passwaters is a senior electrical engineering major Mars, a real possibility? (U-Wire) — On July 20, 1969, an American walked down a short ladder and set foot on the moon. It was heralded as the greatest ac complishment in history and was the farthest any human had ever traveled from home. Today, more than 30 years later, it is still the farthest any human has traveled. Clearly the next goal in human exploration is a longer hop out ward to Mars. WTiat is not as clear is when we will take this next step. Granted, a journey to the red planet is no easy task. Mars is roughly 200 times as far away as the moon. However, our com puters today are more than a million times more powerful than they were in 1969 and our Gross Domestic Product is nearly triple what it was at the time of Apollo 11. Still, we are, by most estimates, 20 years away from a manned (or wommaned) mission to mars. This 20-year goal is consistent with past estimates since, 10 years ago, most estimates put us 20 years away. NASA’s time frame for a manned mars mission seems to be governed by the following simple formula: mission date = current date + 20 years. The typi cal response is to blame one pres ident or the other for budget cuts and failure to support the space program, but there are more deeply rooted problems. Consider the space shuttle. It was supposed to be the next big step in space exploration when it was designed in the late ’70s. Rather than disposable rockets, the shuttle was NASAs reusable spacecraft to conserve resources and save money. Unfortunately, the space shut tle did not save money, but rather, costs 10 times as much per launch and 20 times as much per pound of cargo as the mod ern Russian rockets. This seems to be a chronic problem for most government agencies — trying to make something simpler and cheaper resvdted in a solution that was more expensive and complex. This overblown complexity has become so bad that some even doubt that NASA could put a man on the moon today. NASA’s scientists have been re placed by bureaucrats. In the last 30 years, NASA has increased not its capabilities, but its layers of redundancy. The problem is that there is an expectation to be perfect today. We frown on solutions that are. low-tech, ugly or just un-cool. Remember the true story of Apollo 13, where astronauts were able to fix a system with rubber hoses and duct tape. That’s sim ply not possible today. More complex systems are not less sus ceptible to failure; they are more difficult to repair. Trying to make something perfect will often make it worse. Here is a way you can test this simple premise. Take an ordinary sheet of paper and a pair of scis sors. Now, try to cut a circle out of the piece of paper and you will find that it is not perfect. So try to fix it. You will find that each time you try to make the circle more round it ends up smaller and no more round than it was before. If you keep going you eventu ally run out of paper. NASA spent 30 years trimming off its rough edges until there was noth ing left. We have become a society of worrywarts, a nation of sissies. At some point between the late ’60s and the present, the American people decided to stop taking risks. People died to make the Apol lo program a success and people will probably die trying to achieve a Martian landing. Reck lessness or a degradation of the value of human life is not needed, but courage and the acceptance that progress must come with risks, which seems to have disap peared from modem America. Environmental groups have sued NASA to bar the space agency from using nuclear power plants on Mars probes. One group of scientists sug gested that NASA must spend seven years building a quarantine facility to house anything we bring back from mars in case it has Martian bacteria on it. Sounds kind of like the “moon germs” people were afraid of with Apollo. There is caution and then there is insanity. Many have let prudence give way to paranoia and it is holding us back. The real reason we were able to reach the moon in the ’60s is that President John E Kennedy com mitted us to that goal as a country. Meanwhile NASA was scratching its head wondering if it was possi ble. If President George W. Bush were to commit America to put ting a man on Mars in this decade, we could. That is, we could if we could accept that there will be risks and again muster the same nation al commitment we once had. Brian London Columbia Daily Spectator Columbia University