The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 15, 1993 - 3 Bosnian editor hopes for peace in Sarajevo SCOT WOODS UAILY STAFF REPORTER Saying his city is "condemned to die," Kemal Kurspahic left his duties last week as editor in chief of Oslobodenje - Sarajevo's daily newspaper -- to visit the United States. He will return soon to the war in Sarajevo, Bosnia, where Bosnian Serb forces have surrounded the city. Aut while he is here, Kurspahic will ake a plea for help. Speaking today in the Ostearman Common Room in the Rackham Building at 5 p.m., Kurspahic will explain the forces behind the tragedy in Bosnia and share his opinion about whatcan still be done torestore peace. In an interview with the Daily, Kurspahic said he has not given up ~lope for his city, but is brutally real- c concerning its future. "I'm not sure if there will be a Sarajevo in two or three years," he said. "This city atpresent, without any- one being ready to intervene to stop the terror, this city is condemned to die,"hesaid. "Idon'tknowhow much people can endure." The country has been torn apart by nearly two years of ethnic fighting. Kurspahic called on the United ations to lift its arms embargo on Bosnia-Hercegovina and bring war criminals to trial. "(The United Nations) has an ill- defined mission. You can't have a peace-keeping mission, in a place where there is no peace." He also said the United States should bomb Serbian artillery posi- tions around Sarajevo to send a mes- sage to Serbian leaders, adding that the only thing armed Serbs under- stand "is the language of force." Kurspahic calls the violence in Bosnia "imported terror" brought by fascists. In Sarajevo, buildings that stood through two world wars have fallen to Serbian shells. Kurspahic described religious and publicbuildings as reduced to rubble. Oslobodenje's modern structure was also destroyed. "I was in the building when they brought the tanks 1504meters from the building," Kurspahic said. "They fired seven tank missiles on that occasion, and this building used to be a glass and aluminum structure. "Hit by tank missiles, it behaves like a living being," he said. "It's something like the scream of an ani- mal being kicked by someone. It's a few seconds of painful screaming. Despite the loss of its building and the deaths of three staffers, Kurspahic's paper has not missed an issue during 19 months of conflict. Staffers take seven-day shifts in the underground shelter, where the paper is printed everyday. Reporters have moved to other offices to avoid sniper fire near the main building. Kurspahic and his staff have over- come shortages of paper and supplies to keep the citizens of Sarajevo in- formed about military and diplomatic developments. Circulation has fallen from 60,000 to between 3,500 and 12,000, depend- ing on paper reserves. On days when circulation is low, fights break out over single copies of the paper. There is no other news source in Sarajevo. The paper continues to print with the aid of international organizations, especially news services. Kurspahic has also made sacri- fices. He is among the walking wounded in Bosnia, his leg shattered in a collision with another driver flee- ing sniper's bullets. Kurspahic was unable to get proper treatment in time for his leg to heal correctly. But Kurspahic said he thinks Bosnia's wounds can be healed. He opposes any division of Bosnia and said most of the population is willing to live peacefully in a multi-ethnic state. "The whole concept of division is disputed in the minds of many Bosnians." The Bosnian Serb forces are con- trolled by the Serbian Democratic Party, which Kurspahic said "never belonged to that culture of living to- gether in a multi-ethnic Bosnian en- vironment." Kurspahic said the editorial board ofOslobodenje-withSerbs,Croats, and Bosnians -- serves as proof that citizens can still live in peace, despite rifts caused by the violence. JONATHAN LURiE Daity Kemal Kurspahic, editor in chief of Oslobodenje, talks about his hopes for saving Bosnia before it is destroyed by war. "We have a mutual encourage- ment, the paper and its readership. Oslobodenje symbolizes the hope." That hope extends to Kurspahic, who believes a peaceful, multi-ethnic nation in Bosnia is still possible. "Within the city, there is still a huge sense of community, of surviv- ing. And I believe these people, under siege for more than 19 months, are even closer together than they used to be before the war." Activist to discuss marital as sault By COURTNEY WEINER FOR THE DAILY Thirty states, including Michigan, still maintain rape statutes that permit a man to rape his wife. So claimed Laura X, founder and directorof the National Clearinghouse on Marital and Date rape in Berkeley, Calif., who will speak in the Law school today at 3 p.m. In an interview with the Daily, X argued laws are supposed to protect women who are raped while they are "drunk or drugged" or who have a mentaldefect. Butin states like Michi- gan, when a woman is raped by her husband while under these conditions, she is not protected. The Michigan criminal sexual con- duct statute 750.5201, under Legal Spouse as Victim, states a spouse cannotbe charged or convicted solely because his or her husband or wife is mentally incapable or mentally inca- pacitated. "Ifahusband has sex with another woman in that condition it is auto- matically rape. That is therefore an exemption from prosecution," X said. In her talk, X, who changed her name in 1969 to "symbolize the ano- nymity of women's history and the legal ownership of women," will fo- cuson the 13th and 14th amendments, which outlaw slavery and promise equal protection respectively. X con- tended these rights are not granted to survivors of marital rape. In many states, the highest courts have struck down the exemption of husbands from rape prosecution. For example, X said, in 1984 the New York State Court of Appeals decided there is "no rational basis for any distinction between the protection for wives versus other women under the rape statutes." In these states, there is an 85 per- cent conviction rate on completed cases of marital rape. X said one woman out of seven is raped by her marital partner. X will also discuss popular cases such as last week's acquittal of a man who was accused of raping his wife, who retaliated by severing his penis. "I understand her despair and rage because I have been listening to women for 20 to 25 years, document- ing their story," X commented. "What I am uncomfortable about is people's callous reactions to what happened to him. It bothers me because I want understanding for women who have experienced the trauma of having a hysterectomy, mastectomy or genital sexual mutilation.... It's about losing a part of your body." Nine members of the jury in the John Bobbit case were women. Lorena Bobbit will be tried for malicious wounding with a possible sentence of up to 20 years. JOurnalist tells investigative stories eliCits laughs By ANDREA MacADAM "At first I said (to my husband), Mitford added that the book also intothe childbirth"business"afterhear- plantowriteanotherbook,sayinglight- FOR THE DAILY 'Why pick the wretched undertakers? led to a backlash against her credibil- ing midwives' accounts of harassment heartedly, "I've had it. I'm retiring." Journalist Jessica Mitford dis- They're only doing their job,"' she ity when her subversive background by the medical community. Audience members reacted favor- played her trademark sense of humor said. was revealed. She said one congres- "I wondered why the doctors are so ably, praising the journalist's presenta- while delivering the First Annual Butafurther investigation into the sional representative proclaimed the opposed to midwives and I soon dis- tion. Honors Lecture Friday night. The small group of attendees that gathered at the Modern Languages ilding auditorium heard stories in- 4lving everything from corrupt fu- neral directors to persecuted midwives as therenowned"muckraker"recalled career experiences. Mitford's first investigative work, "The American Way of Death," was published in 1963 after she and her husband discovered racketeering practices within many funeral busi- &esses. industry revealed unnecessarily high costs for services, swindling and a disregard for the law which, Mitford said, compelled her to write the ground-breaking book. The work created a stir, eventu- ally prompting the government to in- stitute laws regulating the practices of the funeral business. "The whole point of writing this sort of work is to get results and (the book) got into the public's awareness about being fleeced by funeral direc- tors," she said. book to be a "pro-Communist work" and a Californian funeral business threatened to file a lawsuit against the journalist because it viewed the book to be "part of Communist plot." But none of it fazed Mitford. "I was thrilled. I was sitting there like a cat in creme waiting for them to come around but they never did," she laughed. Mitford also briefly discussed her most recent book, "The American Way of Birth," published last year. She said she began her research covered thatmidwives charge one-tenth of what doctors charge," she said. The book deals with the high hospi- tal costs associated with childbirth and after its publication, she said, the certi- fication of midwives became protected under the law. One attendee inquired abouther start in the field of writing. Mitford, who has no formal background in writing, ex- plained, "I thought the only thing that requires no education or training was writing." She also divulged that she did not Physician Raymond Mercier said he enjoyed Mitford's speech. "I think she's certainly humorous and she wants to make people think about things rather than to just accept them,"he said. Clinical Social Worker Susan Sefansky agreed, "She's got a wonder- ful eye for recognizing life's absurdi- ties." Mitford, currently a visiting profes- sor in the University's College Honors department, teaches an investigative reporting course. Project SERVE vigil to increase awareness of homeless By WILL MATTHEWS DAILY STAFF REPORTER "There are as many causes of homelessness as there are homeless people," saidBrian Dunn, hunger and melessness coordinator for Project 'RVE. Dunn called homelessness an enor- mously complex problem, with origins that arise from all facets of society. Project SERVE, a campus organi- zation that emphasizes involvement in social issues, is sponsoring and coordi- nating a vigil on the Diag tonight to heighten awareness of, provide infor- on about, and inspire involvement Mt the problem of homelessness. "We're attempting to use aware- ness as alinktoaction and interaction of people that are often living in two sepa- rate worlds because of certain reali- ties," said Dunn. "(The vigil's goals are) raising the level ofawareness about the issues, leveling some stereotypes, introducing new information and facts about what is going on presently in the homeless population." With events like the vigil, Project SERVE aims to help motivated stu- dents find means by which they can take action. Dunn said Project SERVE hopes to show students the "intercon- nections of so many different problems in our society thatcause these injustices ... getting to therootsof a problem and attacking them on a advocacy level in addition to a direct service level." The vigil, which begins at 5 p.m., will feature speakers and activities that aim at advocacy and action. The Homeless Action Committee will conduct a walking tour of the im- mediate campus area. "The tour is going to illustrate the idea of how definitive decisions made by the business community and made by the local government lead to the causes of homelessness as well as per- petuate it," Dunn explained. A variety of speakers will address homelessness, followed by a perfor- mance by student vocal group the Harmonettes. Project SERVE will also introduce several new programs. "Interactive Art" will utilize the talents of those attending the vigil to spread information abouthomelessness. The vigil will come to a close with a candle lighting accompanied by music. "We're attempting to bring together students, faculty, community members - which includes members of the homeless community - and to get a community voice," explained Dunn. "It's hard to smash apathy, and that's what we're trying to do. I think a lot of the apathy and indifference is rooted in the belief that there's nothing we can do about it.," C ohrrection The driver of the Maize and Blue is Deanna Winton. This was incorrectly reported in Friday's Michigan Daily. IN THE ARMY, NURSES AE'T JUST IN DEMAND. THEY'RE IN COMMAND. Any nurse who just wants a job can with your level of experience. As find one. But if you're a nurs- an Army officer, you'll command the ing student who wants to be in respect you deserve. And with the added command of your own career, consider benefits only the Army can offer-a $5000 the Army Nurse Corps. You'll be treated as signing bonus, housing allowances and 4 a competent professional, given your own weeks paid vacation-you'll be well in com- natients and responsibilities commensurate mand of your life. Call 1-800-USA ARMY Student groups U Asian Pacific Lesbian-Gay-Bi- sexual Support Group, weekly meeting, Michigan Union, Room 3116, noon U Association for Computing Machinery, general meeting, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Building, Room 1500,7 p.m. )U Comedy Company Writer's Meeting, sponsored by UAC, Michigan Union, Room 2105, 7 p.m. U ENACT-UM, meeting, Dana Building, Room 1046,7 p.m. U Homeless Vigil, sponsored by DrnnntCTVT.nn#hs .. .... Boat House, Men 3, 4, and 5 p.m., Women 3:30, 4:30, and 5:30 p.m. D Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, beginners welcome, CCRB, Room 2275, 8:30 p.m. U Tae Kwon Do Club, training session, CCRB, Room 2275, 7 p.m. U Women and Judaism, panel dis- cussion with representatives from Reform, Conservative, Or- thodox, and Humanistic Juda- ism, Hillel, 7:30 p.m. Events U Blood Battle, sponsored by Al- Commons Room, 4 p.m. U Opiate Receptors and Behav- ior, presentation, 1057 MHRI, Waggoner Room, 4 p.m. U Science and Tradition in An- cient Mesopotamia, lecture by Francesca Rochberg, Frieze Building, Room 3050, noon Student services U Career Planning and Place- ment, Preparing for the Second Interview, CP&P, Student Ac- tivities Building, Room 3200, 4:10p.m.;Georgetown, Colum- bia, Johns Hopkins, Princeton, and Tufts universities, Michi- vnT Tnrn PnndPRnntv 61 ii t, .,.... ........,k,.,.. ,.r........., ,... ................. .. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE. I i m