BY GABE NELSON
Daily Staff Reporter
Published January 25, 2006
Three members of this year's Michigamua class have been ousted from progressive campus groups after their membership in the society was made public last year.

- Sarah Royce
- An artist hangs a Michigamua artifact at an exhibit last month that displayed the racist and divisive past of the society. (MIKE HULSEBUS/Daily)
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The three members - Business senior Neal Pancholi, RC senior Sam Woll and LSA senior Brian Hull - were forced to quit the student organizations they were involved in.
The society, which for years used Native American artifacts, names and rituals, carries a stigma. Many tapped students turn Michigamua down because of its controversial history.
But the society, which only began admitting women to the class of 2000, has recently tapped an increasingly diverse membership. The society's newfound diversity is reflected in its members' races, genders and political viewpoints, current members said.
"Michigamua aspires to be every bit as progressive and innovative as the world-class university it serves," said member Dennis Lee, an Engineering senior and drum major of the Michigan Marching Band.
When Pancholi's membership became public last April, the South Asian Awareness Network decided he should no longer be affiliated with the group. Up until then, Pancholi had served as co-chair.
"Officially, I resigned, but it was more like a forced resignation," Pancholi said.
SAAN refused comment, but according to Pancholi, the group thought it would be hypocritical to have one of its chairs in the divisive society.
In a statement to the Daily, Pancholi wrote he does not think Michigamua and SAAN have irreconcilable differences.
"Our biggest goals, as members of an organization and of our communities, are to introduce ideas to each other, to engage in dialogue, to challenge each other, to question each other, and ultimately, to grow," Pancholi wrote.
Two campus groups forced out Woll, who describes herself as a social justice activist. When the Coalition to Cut the Contract With Coca-Cola discovered her membership in early December, it barred her from helping with fundraising or networking.
"We came to a consensus that we no longer want her to be involved in the coalition and we do not want anything to do with leaders that view Michigamua as a legitimate organization," LSA senior Jayanthi Reddy wrote in an internal e-mail to the coalition. "We condemn Michigamua's racist history and their lack of transparency."
Both Hull and Woll were asked by Students Supporting Affirmative Action to stop attending its meetings shortly after their membership in Michigamua was made public last December.
Hull is an advocate for the LGBT campus community and last year was secretary of the Michigan Student Assembly.
"Michigamua has a documented history of discrimination, sexism, racism, and cultural appropriation," SSAA said in a written statement to the Daily. "Michigamua has also been repeatedly deceitful and noncompliant in both inter-community dialogues and official University contracts to cease and desist this behavior. Accepting the organization in any form actively negates a commitment to a safe, respectful campus community and cannot be tolerated, especially by organizations touting themselves as progressive."
Hull said he joined Michigamua in an effort to bring diversity to an important campus institution.
"The further you get into the institution, the more influence you have," Hull said in a written response to SSAA dated Dec. 7. "Michigamua is not leaving, so why shouldn't we get involved . and make this long-standing organization into what it ought to be?"
Woll said her Michigamua membership hasn't ruined her friendships.
"There are some that may disagree with my decision to join but still support me as a friend and leader on campus," Woll wrote in a statement to the Daily. "Anyone who knows me and my passionate commitment to working for social justice knows that I would never be a part of organization that would betray these principles."
But RC senior Clara Hardie, a friend of Woll's and a member of the Coke Coalition, disagreed.
"She's alienated herself from her old friends and the social activist community," Hardie said. "Because she probably foresaw these consequences, I'm angry at her choice. But I still feel bad for her."
The three students' names were released by University alum Rob Goodspeed on his blog Goodspeedupdate.com last month.
Goodspeed, who has posted lists of Michigamua members for years, said he continues to expose the society's members because Michigamua's century-old relationship with the University makes it a significant piece of campus history.
Based on Michigamua's history of using Native American culture as its own, many campus groups, notably the Native American Student Association, continue to oppose it.























