A Page 6B - The Michigan Daily-- Thursday, September 4, 1986 Groups try to raise rape awareness P PMI By MELISSA BIRKS When 50 students, alumni, and local residents disrupted a top University administrator's office last year with a sit-in, it marked the first militant ac- tion taken by those concerned with rape on campus. The protests at the University's Vice Piesident for Student Services Henry Jdhnson's office also triggered more visible steps by the University against rape. The sit-in itself was triggered when a Metropolitan Detroit magazine ar- ticle about rape on college campuses enraged many around campus. John- son was quoted in the article saying that rape is a "red flag" word that should be kept quiet. ,The protestors presented Johnson with a list of demands - which he signed at the end of the sit-in - for better lighting on campus, emergency telephones, and most significantly, the creation of a rape counseling and awareness center. -During the sit-in, some women told Johnson that they had been sexually assaulted and had no place to go for help at the University. . Changed tactics There had been concern even before the protest, but no one had actively pursued the issue. "The fact that you can look back in the files ten years ago and see studen- ts working on the same issues with few major achievements shows that a different tactic needed to be used," said LSA senior Jen Faigel, who helped organize the protest and later became chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Women's Issues Commit- tee. "The Metro Detroit article provided the rationale for the new tac- tic," Faigel said. MSA's Women's Issues Committee, for instance, had worked on im- proving the campus' Nite Owl bus service. They made some progress by getting a light put on top of the van to distinguish it from other vans. and by making service more frequent. In addition, a group of faculty members from housing, health ser- vices, and the affirmitive action office held a conference exploring why a high number of students are victims of date or acquaintence rape. They submitted a proposal for a rape crisis center around the same time the sit-in took place. Results The University has also begun in- stalling emergency phones this sum- mer which connect with campus security when the receiver is taken off the hook. The phones were installed arounod campus at the recommen- dation of the Campus Security Com- mittee - a panel of students, faculty members, and administrators formed by the University to find ways to reduce campus crime. The committee has also proposed that an additional Nite Owl van run during peak hours in the fall and win- ter when overcrowding is a problem. It also called for the van services to be continued during the spring and summer terms. The van service currently does not run during those months, even though the number of sexual assaults doubles during that time, according to the Ann Arbor Assault Crisis Center. Leo Heatley, director of campus security and a member of the Campus Security Committee, said he is op- timistic about implementing the im- provements. Expanding Nite Owl service to the spring and summer terms, however, would cost $20,000. Other problems Such improvements as expanding Night Owl, and -improving lighting around campus, however, will not eliminate the rape problem on cam- pus. "Better lighting, emergency phones, and a better Night Owl are not going to stop sexual assaults," Steiner said, "That myth that what we have to do is watch out for the dark stranger is the hardest to break." A problem, she said, is making vic- tims of date rape - or rape when the victim knows the rapist - aware that those are crimes as are rapes that oc- cur in stereotypical darkened streets. A national survey, in fact, found that 60 percent of rape victims knew their assailants, and a campus survey found that figure to be 90 percent at the University. Steiner said that while there have only been four rapes reported this year, she has counseled five sexual assault victims since the rape crisis center opened in February. I I Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Students crowd into the University's Vice President for Student Relations Henry Johnson's (with pen in hand) office in 1985, demanding action against campus rape. 'U' students have long history of campus activism (Continued from Page 3) On April 17, 1965, SDS organized the first of many anti-war rallies in Washington, D.C. The demonstration attracted 25,000 participants, a tur- nout which astonished both SDS and observers nation-wide. SDS also for- med support groups for draft resisters. The University faculty also took a role in the anti-war movement. In March of 1965, 250 faculty members, including current University President Harold Shapiro, sponsored a .teach-in about the war to educate the public about U.S. involvement and pressure the government to end it. Three thousand students crowded the Angell Hall auditoriums for the all- night forum, which featured expert speakers from around the country. The success of the teach-in prompted other universities to hold similar marathon sessions that year. Teach- VAN DYCK DOBOS STUDIOS 663-6966 " Resume - Application * Passport Immigration * Portraits "Reasonable Rotes" 407 E. WILUAM c. Division - Ann Arbor ins were later adopted by many other campus groups to discuss causes such as abortion and ecology. Faculty members continued to sup- port anti-war efforts on campus. In 1970, 80 faculty members threatened to strike if the University expelled SDS from campus or revoked scholar- ships of student protesters. The preoccupation with Vietnam gave an enormous boost in member- ship to SDS. Gitlin said there were twelve chapters in the country in mid 1964, only half of which were active. By December 1966 there were 265 SDS chapters. Students discovered through their own research that the University was contributing to the war effort through weapons research on campus. Op- position to military-related research began in the '60s and has continued until now. In recent years student protestors have held sit-ins at the of- fices of several University faculty members who perform research sup- ported by the Department of Defense.. In the late '60s and early'70s, student demonstrators targeted recruiters from the military and companies who were supporting the war effort. After a lull in SDS ac- tivities in the late '60s, SDS came back into the spotlight in 1970 as the major instigator of a series of brash demon- strations against these recruiters. Protests against recruiters from the CIA and companies which manufac- ture weapons are still common. SDS often blocked recruiters from leaving the Career Planning and Placement Center, where interviews were held. They dumped dead fish on a recruiter from Allied Chemical Co. and sprayed his office with one of his company's products, the chemical DDT. During one protest, a Navy recruiter was drenched with black paint. Environmental concerns Environmental concerns were also a major focus. A student group called Environmental Action for Survival (ENACT), held a five-day environ- mental teach-in in 1970, featuring several well known ecologists and national leaders. ENACT members sentenced a 1959 Ford to death for air pollution, and held a public execution by hacking it to death on the Diag. They also littered the lawn of a local Coca Cola bottler with empty pop cans to support efforts for a returnable bot- tle law. Students of the '60s also sought reforms in University policies, and rejected the University's pater- nalistic role. By 1967, rules restricting dormitory residents from allowing vistors of the opposite sex, and nighttime curfews for women were abolished. After three years of battling with the regents, students also won the right to form a University-run bookstore, now called the University Cellarm in 1969. That same year, students took con- trol of their off-campus housing situation. More than 1000 students formed a tenant's union and held a rent strike to pressure landlords to lower rents. Since then, the Ann Arbor Tenant's Union has been helping students cope with off-campus housing problems by providing legal advice and pressuring the city to provide thorough housing inspection. BAM strike One of the most remarkable in- cidents in campus history was the Black Action Movement (BAM) strike in March 1970. For ten days black University students and many white students and faculty members boycotted classes to pressure the ad- ministration to increase black enrollment to ten percent. The administration agreed to in- crease black enrollemnt from less than four percent in 1970 to ten per- cent by 1973. But the goal was never reached, and minority enrollment is still a concern. Activism declines Campus activism waned in the mid and late '70s but certain issues, such as apartheid and the U.S. support for the Shah of Iran, did stir student op- position. Sociology Prof. Aldon Morris said the '70s brought "low-keyed ac- tivism." "The creation of the women's studies and black studies (depar- tments) - that was all part of the ac- tivism itself. It's not as pronounced as. taking over a building. But getting more women in faculty positions and so on is all part of the women's movement," he said. Morris said today's demonstrations reflect both stylistical and philosophical roots in the '60s protests, particularly objections to U.S. interventions -in third world naitons. Morris said the '60s radicals "raised objections about the role of the U.S. in Southeast Asia. The same' thing is being raised about the role of the U.S. in Nicaragua, and in South Africa." Morris said he sees in the current anti-apartheid crusade the bond bet- ween while students and the civil rights movement that was evident during the BAM strike. Last spring many University students and faculty members attet- ded an alternativercommencement ceremony to * honor jailed South African dissident Nelson Mandela, whom the regents refused to grant an honorary degree. About half the par- ticipants were white. Morris said the administration has learned to be more diplomatic with protestors since the '66s. Now ad- ministrators often delay issues rather than confront student opposition directly he said. "Take a look at the Mandela degree issue. They didn't say, 'We don't want to give him a degree'. They probably would have said that in the '60s. In- stead they said 'Let's study the issue'." The University is still considered a center for activism, but it has not gone untouched by the conservative tide of the nation. Many students today fear campus protestsbmay make the University look bad to potential employers, particularly those who recruit on campus. "Morris said, "Activism is nothing that takes place outside of a larger political context." c First order of checks FREE for new student accounts opened at our two campus locations. Checking and savings; NBD 24-hour banker; overdraft protection. We look forward to serving you! 1ANN ARBOR SUBSIDIARY OF NBD BANCORP, INC /MEMBER FDIC Michigan Union, Lower Level 0 995-8037 Campus Office - E. William at Thompson " 995-8080 Ten Other Convenient Locations Survey says protests may return' REQUIRED COURSE A /I / ' O..lll j r H By PHILIP LEVY The student activism that raged through the 1960s is not dead, it is merely lying in wait for the right conditions to return, according to a political science class' survey of University students last winter. In apparent contradiction to the media's recent lament that college students are politically apathetic, political science Prof. Samual Eldersveld said, "There is more than meets the eye. There is a lot of potential." However, Eldersveld said that at the moment, "there is no evidence that this is an explosive campus. There are sparks, but no conflagration yet." Code could spark action One spark is the proposed code of non-academic con- duct, especially if the University passes a code without student approval, the study said. "On the code, (students) would really get out to protest," Eldersveld said, "or at least they say they would get out." One question on the survey, in fact, asked, "Suppose the Read and Use Daily Classifieds Rhtentlufm X 4 x 6 INCH COLOR GLOSSY PRINTS AND REPRINTS AT THE PRICE OF 3 x 5 INCH. SK FOR 'EM TODAY! University imposed a new set of rules governing the con- duct of students, and students did not haveta role in draf- ting these rules, would you be inclined to be involved then?" Between 85 to 88 percent of students surveyed said they would. Getting involved, however, could mean anything from writing a letter to getting arrested in a sit-in. Military research and the low black student enrollment rate are other issues that could activate students, Elder-. sveld said. Issues must affect students John McNabb, an LSA senior and a student in Elder- sveld's American Political Parties Class that conducted the survey, added that University students care about national issues and issues that directly affect them. He said that in the event of "war with Nicaragua or reinstitution of the draft, you would see an increase in ac- tivism." These issues, like the code, meet the first criteria for ac tivating students, the study said. An issue must rouse strong emotions among a variety of students. A large number of students could become politically ac- tive, the study added, if students are confident they can accomplish something, and if a students' friends are also involved. "Students socialize each other into involvement. They learn from each other, take cues from each other," Elder- sveld said. 4 I -'4 .---.---~-- 77 r Domino's Pizza Delivers0 the tastiest, most nutritious 'course' on your busy schedule. We make great custom-made pizza and deliver - steamy hot - in less than 30 minutes! So take a break from studying and have a tasty treat. One call does it ails North Campus 769-5511 Central Campus 761-1111 South Campus 761-9393 Hours.: :.m."1 a :m."Sun.-Thurs. 11I a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sot. AV .I A SL i