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Yale Preaches Tolerance, Practices Intolerance
Phyllis Schlafly
Five Yale
University students have had the courage to challenge the rule that requires students to
live in coed dormitories, where many engage in casual sex without shame, and most use coed
showers and toilets. The dormitory environment features the open availability of sex
manuals and condoms, and attendance at safe sex lectures is required of freshmen.
The Yale Five, as the media has labeled them, assert that
this policy infringes on their constitutional right to practice their religion, which
includes an obligation to observe chastity, decency, and modesty. Yale, on the other hand,
contends that dorm living is a central part of Yales education.
The five students, who are Orthodox Jews, tried for more than 18 months
to make a reasonable case to the university, but found officials recalcitrant. Observers
find this curious because the absolutism of the rule is recent. The rule applies only to
freshmen and sophomores, and exempts students who are married or age 21 or over.
The details of Yales residency policy have varied over time, but
until 1996, the rule applied only to freshmen, and Yale also exempted students living at
home with their families in the New Haven area. The university has accommodated religious
objections in other ways, such as by allowing students to use their meal plan in the
kosher cafeteria of the privately funded Jewish center, and by providing traditionally
metal keys to Orthodox students when they enter their dorms so they can avoid electronic
card-keys on the Sabbath.
One of the Yale Five, Batsheva Greer, has older siblings who attended
Yale using the local residence exemption, and she assumed she could follow the same
pattern when she entered the university last year. She and her family were amazed at
having their request rejected.
Negotiations about the dispute with college officials continued for
more than a year. One of the five students, Rachel Wohlgelrenter, went through a civil
wedding ceremony before her planned religious ceremony in order to avoid the rule.
Two others paid the room fee of $6,850 for the 1996-97 school year, but
lived elsewhere. By the time the second year of the dispute rolled around, the students
declined to pay such a large fee for rooms they never entered.
The Yale Five secured the pro bono services of one of the
countrys most prominent attorneys, Nathan Lewin of Washington, D.C., who filed suit
on their behalf, alleging religious discrimination. On July 31, U.S. District Judge Alfred
V. Covelo dismissed the suit saying, "The plaintiffs could have opted to attend a
different college or university if they were not satisfied with Yales housing
policy."
On August 8, the students announced they would appeal.
Mr. Lewin said, "Yale had discriminated against these students and
they will continue to stand up for their rights."
While the Yale Five had made no effort to change university policy or
dorm mores for others, arguing only for their own personal exemption on religious grounds,
Mrs. Wohlgelrenter noted: "This issue is not uniquely Jewish; its a moral
issue." Publicity about the case had turned the spotlight on the immoral environment
in college dormitories, in which Yale is not unique.
The Yale Free Press accused the university of "a new pagan
orthodoxy," stating that, "when Yale was a conservative place and liberals
sought to change it for the better, Yale was willing to accommodate them. But now that
Yale is an overwhelming liberal campus, we find that traditional groups that ask much less
costly accommodations are denied."
A good sense of the dorm atmosphere can be gleaned by reading the
student newspaper, The Yale Daily News, which published "Yalexicon: Your
indispensable guide to understanding Yale Speak." The definitions include:
"Couch duty: Being forced to sleep on a common room couch because your roommate and
his/her significant other want some time alone together."
"Sexile: Banishment from your dorm room because your roommate is
having more fun than you."
"Walk of Shame: When you find yourself in rumpled evening wear,
walking to your dorm room from someone elses room early in the morning."
While some students support the concept of coed living, others admit
that the permissiveness in the dorms "sometimes makes them uncomfortable." One
male student observed: "Im a senior and have my own room, but I have to share a
bathroom with three women. Ill be in there brushing my teeth and theyll come
in and, well, its kind of weird."
Some of the dorms have single-sex floors, but separation is never
enforced, and mixing is expected. As another student put it: "If you dont
participate, youre a weirdo, a sexile."
Another one of the Yale Five, Elisha Hack, said: "We object to the
fact that you have men staying overnight on the womens floors; women staying
overnight on the mens floors; and bathrooms that kind of get wishy-washy as to
whether theyre mens or womens."
The liberals, who are now the ruling class at Yale and on most college campuses, preach
the dogma of tolerance, diversity, and nonjudgmental acceptance of all lifestyles. But, it
seems, the traditional lifestyle of chastity and modesty is not acceptable. Tolerance and
diversity dont extend that far.
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