The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 13, 1989 - Page 5 Pesticide critic warns Ann Arbor BY AMY KOCH Lawrie Mott, senior scientist of the Natural Resources Defense Council and leading critic of current pesticide laws, warned Ann Arbor residents last night of the dangers embedded in what we, the FDA, and the EPA deem "safe" food products. Apples, cucumbers, peppers, and bananas abound with pesticides, she said. These pesticides are, contrary to popular thought, not easily cleansed with tap water. Chemical use is so extensive that Mott suggests dishwashing soap be used to clean them-. Co-sponsored by the Ecology Center, People's Food Co-op, the School of Natural Resources, the Environmental Law Society and the Interfaith Council for Peace, Mott stopped in Ann Arbor as part of her statewide tour advising farmers, agricultural producers, consumers, and retailers of pesticidal toxins. Mott introduced the complex scientific subject in terms that were easy for the average consumer to grasp, as well as offering safety tips. The thrust of her argument was intricately linked to common experience. "In the summer of 1985, nearly 1000 people in several Western states and Canada were poisoned by Temik in watermelons," she said. "Within 12 hours of eating them, people experienced nausea, vomiting, blurred vision. Reports included grand mal seizures, cardiac irregularities, and at least two stillbirths following maternal illness." Mott also expressed concern over the chemical Alar used on apple crops. As children consume ten times more apple sauce and juice than adults, this toxin leaves them at the greatest risk, she said. "This outcry led many supermarkets and food manufacturers to announce that they would not accept Alar-treated apples," she said. The pro-pesticide spokespeople assert that "food supply would dwindle and be more expensive if pesticides were not used," she said. A major problem for Mott's organization and other environmental agencies, she said, is that the United States cannot control the pesticidal methods of produce imports. In an analytical study by the FDA, only 28 percent of domestic tomatoes contained pesticidal residue, while 70 percent of imports were contaminated. Also, though outlawed in the United States in 1972, DDT is still commonly used in India, the UK, and the Phillipines. And though the FDA and EPA have established guidelines for a "maximum level" or "safe usage" for pesticides, these tolerances still permit unsafe levels due to outdated facts, she asserted. For example, the EPA assumed that the average diet consisted of eating no more than 7.5 ounces per year of avocado, artichokes, melon, mushrooms, or eggplant when setting tolerance levels, she said. Reports advise on *date rape TOWSON, Md. (AP) - Many college women raped by their dates or acquaintances don't report the at- tacks because they blame themselves for losing control, a conference studying violence on the nation's campuses was told. In addition, many women fail to realize they have become victims of rape or attempted rape, and seldom report the attacks even to their friends,' experts said. "What happens is that a guy pays for dinner, the movies, and he thinks you get what you get in marriage. They see it as a mini, quasi-mar- riage," said Laura X, director of the National Clearinghouse on Marital and Date Rape. "I don't think we're * getting rid of date rape until we get rid of that concept." In such cases, women, because of their upbringing, often blame them- selves for being unable to control the situation, said Ms. X, who said she uses the X to protest the lack of attention given to women's histori- cal role. About 250 psychologists, coun- selors, law enforcement officers,! students and others attended this week's Third National Conference on Campus Violence here. The confer- ence began Tuesday and ended yesterday. Several reports discussed at the conference indicated that from 13 percent to 25 percent of college women become victims of rape or attempted rape. As many as one in four female college students have been raped or have been victims of attempted rape by the time they reach the age of 21, according to a survey conducted on 32 campuses by Ms. Magazine, the National Institute for Mental Health and psychologist Mary P. Koss. The survey of 3,187 female and 3,000 male college students ran- domly selected in the 1985-86 school year found only 27 percent of the women deemed to have been victims of rape or attempted rape considered themselves crime victims. The study found 84 percent of the rape victims knew their assailants, but only 5 percent told police they had been attacked. Experts blamed the non-reporting on a "rape culture" that holds women primarily responsible for the out- come of relationships with men, even when they're overpowered. Warden loses jail key JACKSON, Mich. (AP) - The suspension of a prison warden for losing the master key to the facility is just the latest in a bizarre string of events involving the warden and a female guard. Travis Jones, 49, warden of the Huron Valley Men's Facility in Yp- silanti, was placed on indefinite sus- pension without pay on January 3, the same day he was stabbed in the back by Sgt. Olivia Pitts, officials said. He faces a corrections Department hearing Jan. 30, spokesperson Gail Light said yesterday. The stabbing took place at a ser- vice station in Jackson, where Pitts, 42, is a guard at the Cotton Re- gional Facility. Jones was treated and released from Foote Memorial Hospital in Jackson. Corrections officials believe the key was lost during an argument be- tween the two that took place Dec.17 in Pitt's apartment. Jones was found naked and strug- gling with the knife-wielding Pitts, according to police reports. She had called police. He left the woman's apartment after receiving a change of clothing. Corrections officials believe the key to the 470-bed maximum-security prison was lost in his original clothing. Speaker to address violence against gay men and lesbians JOHN MUNSON Daily Palestinian resistance leader Mubarak Awad speaks on non- violence last night at Hutchins Hall. Speaker promotes Arab non-violence BY KRISTIN HOFFMAN Violence against gay men and lesbians may be seen as isolated incidents of ignorance and hatred, but Richard Cleaver sees them as part of a violent, militarized Amercan cul- ture. Cleaver will speak on the con- nections between homophobia, mili- tarism, and violence in society at noon today at the Guild House, on 802 Monroe St. Cleaver has written that our so- ciety relies upon violence to solve problems. He said this creates "a cult of toughness" with the military as the institution that promotes vio- lence and the place where "real men" can go and demonstrate their support for the patriarchy. Cleaver said he believes that homophobia results partly because gay men and lesbians do not fit into the patriarchal scheme of militarism upon which he feels our country is structured. Cleaver, in his article "Militar- ism and Manhood" claimed that men are required to prove their manhood in society through a willingness to use violence, which can manifest it- self through participation in sports like football or hockey. Beyond that, he said, the inse- cure prove their manhood through rape and gay-basning - the clearest way for a man to prove his mascu- line and privileged status within the patriarchy. Cleaver also discussed the way in which both rape and violence against gay men and lesbians are un- der-reported and unsubstantially pun- ished crimes. Part of his arguments refer to the fact that gay men view other men as potential lovers, not rivals, and this leads to violence against gay men. Gay men do not participate in the cult of violence as readily as other men, and therefore are a threat to the patriarchy, according to Cleaver's ar- guments. Cleaver works for the American Friends Service Committee, a group founded by Quakers in 1917. The AFSC began as an alternative to military service, and has evolved into a group that works for peace, peace education, and community relations, and carries out international relief work. BY LAURA COHN Palestinians who oppose Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip should protest by boy- cotting non-violently and packing Israeli prisons, rather than using guns and bombs, Palestinian resis- tance leader Mubarak Awad said last night. "Opposing the Israeli army with no guns is the best thing. It shows that we are able to face the Israelis without weapons, and without vio- lence" Awad told a crowd of about 100 people at Hutchins Hall. "For those of you who do not know Islam, you think it is a violent religion," he said. "The Arabs never even invented a weapon. They came from the U.S." "We want our freedom," he added. "We don't want anyone to dictate to us." Awad, who has been called the "Palestinian Gandhi," said probably 75 percent of Palestinians boycott Israeli products and taxes, and destroy Israeli fences and power lines built across Arab land. Awad also encour- ages a boycott of Hebrew, the lan- guage of Israel. "We should not support the Israeli economy by eating or drinking any Israeli product. We should produce our own food. If the Israeli gov- ernment sends a Palestinian a letter in Hebrew, he should not respond to it. Arabic is the language of the Palestinians," Awad said. Like one of his role models, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Awad said he has a dream - the formation of a Palestinian state by 1995. The gov- ernment would be elected, probably led by Yasser Arafat, "since he has put so much into the negotiations with the U.S," he said. Awad's dream state would consist of the West Bank and would have no military. Jerusalem would serve as both the capital of Israel and Palestine, and there would be open borders, he said. "Having no army would continue the policy of nonviolence we've been following. If we were invaded, we would ask Israel to help us out," he said, smiling.t If his dream is not realized, Awad1 said the Palestinians would disobey1 the Israeli laws for three to four years. Then they would resort to violence. Awad, who created the Jerusalem-; based Center for the Study of Nonviolence, has been an irritant toi the Israeli government for years, and his deportation from Israel last June has been the subject of U.S. criticism.' Awad's trouble with Israeli offi- cials began in spring, 1987, when he sought to renew the residency permit he had been issued in 1967. The Is- raeli authorities rejected his applica- tion and ordered him to leave the country when his tourist visa expired in November. He refused to go, arguing, with strong support from. the U.S. ambassador to Israel, that under international conventions Israel had no right to expel him from the place of his birth. Schools give shelter to homeless HOUSTON (AP) - Public school officials, concerned that students may be living on the streets, opened homeless shelters in two Houston schools yesterday so needy pupils can get beds, showers and a meal. A twelve-year-old girl who had been sleeping under an abandoned house was the first of six children to enter the shelters, officials said. "We didn't discuss anything with the child when she came in," said school board President Melody Ellis. "Right now she's playing checkers with one of the administrators. We just tried to give her encouragement and let her play." Another young boy showed up at one of the campuses, but left before entering, apparently because of tele- vision cameras nearby, said Ellis. "It is drizzling outside and it is ex- CLASSIFIED ADSI Call 764-0557 tremely cold, and I would really like for these children to come in," Ellis said when asking reporters to leave the area. , Temperatures in Houston were in the low 40s last night. The shelters will remain open nightly until at least Jan. 20, when the superintendent of the Houston Independent School District will rec- ommend to the school board that the program be continued or modified. I 1989 ..1 Musicians * Performers * Technicians Interviews for technical positions and Berenstain Bears T will begin when registration opens. Auditions for singers, musicians and emcees will begin as soon as these interviews are completed. SITY O x Join us for ... BEREA, OHIO: Tuesday, Jan. 10 Baldwin-Wallace College Kulas Musical Arts Building Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. COLUMBUS, OHIO: Wednesday, Jan. 11 Ohio State University Hughes Hall Registration: 5:30 - 8:30 p.m. DAYTON, OHIO: Thursday, Jan. 12 Ramada Inn Airport (North) 4079 Little York Road Registration: 2:30 - 5:30 p.m. BOWLING GREEN, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 13 Bowling Green State University University Union - Ohio Suite Registration: 11:30 a.m. - 3 p.m. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN: Monday, Jan. 16 University of Michigan Michigan Union - Anderson Rm. Registration: 2:30 - 5:30 p.m. MT. PLEASANT, MICHIGAN: Tuesday, Jan. 17 Central Michigan University Norvall C. Bovee Univ. Center Registration: 2:30 - 5:30 p.m. YPSILANTI, MICHIGAN: Wednesday, Jan. 18 Eastern Michigan University McKenny Union Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN: Thursday, Jan. 19 Western Michigan University Dalton Center, School of Music (Parkr at Miller Auditnriuml MUNCIE, INDIANA: Tuesday, Jan.24 Signature Inn Corner of McGalliard and Bethel Roads Registration: 1:30 - 4:30 p.m. BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA: Wednesday, Jan. 25 Indiana University Indiana Memorial Union - Alumni Hall Registration: 2:30 -4:30 p.m. URBANA, ILLINOIS: Thursday, Jan. 26 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Krannert Center for the Performing Arts Registration: 6-8 p.m. KENT, OHIO: Monday, Jan. 30 Kent State University Student Center - Third Floor Registration: 2:30 - 5:30 p.m. PITTSBURGH, PA.: Tuesday, Jan. 31 University Inn Forbes at McKee Place Registration: 2:30 - 5:30 p.m. AKRON, OHIO: Wednesday, Feb. 1 University of Akron Gardner Student Center Registration: 2-5p.m. SANDUSKY, OHIO: Thursday, Feb. 2 Cedar Point Park Attractions Office Rehearsal Studios Registration: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. "Life on the Stock Exchange" with John Fox '"r- r.. ~ k}:14:, {:.":":{"vr h".,.. J" :".":f:. : J:J}:'?r:".. r:: w" vr %f' i:a iv %{ The Advertising Departments (Classified and Display) of ~Ih+ £+hrrnDit .;r:.ti"::;:" l. : ::' ' J " :2Y: :"'{ '"i,: { :.r .N %.:r:$ Vice-President, Fox Deluxe Floor Trader/Broker Chicago Merchantile Exchange Ti ~iarinu lae lr17 i m