Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Nass rips UW masculinit­y program

Lawmaker calls for punishment

- TODD RICHMOND

Madison — A University of Wisconsin-Madison program that explores masculinit­y amounts to a declaratio­n of war on men and the university should be punished in upcoming budget deliberati­ons, a Republican legislator said Wednesday.

UW-Madison offers a six-week program for undergradu­ate and graduate students called the Men’s Project. It’s open only to students who identify as male. Participan­ts examine their masculinit­y and how it plays into pop culture, sexuality and “hook up culture,” according to the program website.

Sen. Steve Nass (RWhitewate­r), a frequent UW System critic, sent an email to his fellow lawmakers on Wednesday titled “UW-Madison Declares War on Men and their Masculinit­y — Not a Joke.” The email accuses UW-Madison of being part of a national liberal effort to rid male students of their “toxic masculinit­y.”

The email comes less than three weeks after Nass and Republican Rep. Dave Murphy (R-Greenville) ripped the school for offering a course titled “The Problem of Whiteness.” They demanded legislator­s cut the UW System budget if UW-Madison didn’t drop the class.

“Our friends at UW-Madison, not happy enough with labeling ‘whiteness’ as a societal problem, now are attacking another social ill … Men and their masculinit­y,” the email says.

“The supposedly underfunde­d and overworked administra­tors at our flagship campus have scrapped (sic) together enough dollars to offer a six-week program open only to ‘men-identified students,’ ” the email goes on. “In short, the highly paid leaders at UW-Madison now believe that Wisconsin mothers and fathers have done a poor job of raising their boys by trying to instill in them the values and characteri­stics necessary in becoming a Man.”

The release concludes by encouragin­g legislator­s to reform the UW System in the next state budget.

UW-Madison spokesman John Lucas declined to address Nass’ criticisms. He said the Men’s Project is a small, voluntary, not-for-credit program that serves only about 30 students and consists of a retreat and six discussion­s over six weeks. The program is designed to address common issues of college life, he said, adding that a number of schools across the country offer similar programs, including Arizona, North Carolina, Duke and Washington University in St. Louis.

A spokesman for Gov. Scott Walker, who is in the midst of drawing up the executive version of the state budget, didn’t respond to a message.

Caroline Krause, a spokeswoma­n for Rep. John Nygren, co-chair of the Legislatur­e’s finance committee, declined to comment. A spokesman for the other co-chair, Sen. Alberta Darling, didn’t immediatel­y respond to a message.

After Nass and Murphy criticized UW-Madison’s “The Problem of Whiteness” course in December, Provost Sarah Mangelsdor­f issued a statement defending the free speech rights of students, faculty and staff. Walker refused to endorse Nass and Murphy’s call to cut system funding.

Republican­s cut $250 million out of the system in the last state budget and extended a tuition freeze for another two years. System officials have asked the governor to give them $42 million more in the 2017-’19 state budget; Walker has said additional state aid probably will be linked to performanc­e benchmarks.

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