FRIDAYFocus IiiEM Page 3 IC 9*1 trail po U" One hundred three years of editorial freedom Community unites to help women to 'Take Back the Night' By JUDITH KAFKA DAILY STAFF REPORTER For women who never leave their Iomes past dark without clutching a can of mace, for women who stay in at night rather than risk being at- tacked on the streets, for women who feel dependent because they always have someone walk them home, Take Back the Night will be an act of empowerment. For women tired of being objecti- fied, for men and women concerned about gender equality and for people supporting sexual-assault survivors and their rights, tomorrow night's events will be a political statement. For some, this year's 15th annual Take Back the Nightwill be both. Take Back the Night - sponsored by the Ann Arbor Coalition Against Rape (AACAR) - is dedicated to women's struggle for safety on the streets at night. Just as in the past, the events will entail a public rally, followed by a women's march through the streets of Ann Arbor, while men hold their own rally. This year, however, men will join women in the last blocks of the march, a change made after much debate. "There's definitely been more controversy around this Take Back the Night," said LSA junior Preeti Garg, one of the rally's organizers. "It will be interesting to see what it will be like." The main rally will take place in front of City Hall, and features an invo- cation, speeches and music. Prof. Sally Haslanger will speak to the crowd, as well as a sexual-assault survivor, and then a group of women will read the list of AACAR's demands. "We, as AACAR and as represen- tatives of the Ann Arbor community, say what we hope to achieve - what we demand," Garg explained. After the rally, women will march through Ann Arbor, "taking back the night." While the women march, men will hold their own rally to discuss rape. Rackham student Sam Ruhmkorff, an AACAR member, explained that the rally will be a low-key discussion about men's role in stopping rape. "There's so few spaces and time for men to open up to each other," he said. "It's important for men to see that it's not just, 'Oh I don't rape so there's no problem.' It's about more than that," Ruhmkorff added. After the rally, for the first time in AACAR's history, men will meet the women in the march and follow them back to City Hall. AACAR decided to allow men to join in the end of the march last month, as a compromise between those who wanted to maintain a "women only" policy and those who thought it was time for a change. The decision has sparked much controversy on campus and within the Ann Arbor community. Some See MARCH, Page 2 Violence grips 2 Afncan nations after leaders' deaths NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - Rampaging troops report- edly killed Rwanda's acting premier and three U.N. sol- diers yesterday during fighting touched off by the deaths of the presidents of Rwanda and Burundi in a suspicious plane crash. Reports from Rwanda's capital, Kigali, were sketchy and it was not clear who was involved in the fighting. The pital in neighboring Burundi was reported quiet. i The violence in Rwanda broke out after President Juvenal Habyarimana of Rwanda and President Cyprian Ntaryamira of Burundi died late Wednesday when their plane crashedwhile landing at Kigali's airport. The Rwandan government said the plane was shot down, but U.N. moni- tors said they could not confirm that. A missionary reached by telephone in Burundi's capi- tal, Bujumbura, said that city was quiet and the president's death was being reported as an accident. There has been widespread ethnic fighting in Burundi since the nation's rst Hutu president was killed during a failed coup last fall. Bitter rivalries between majority Hutu and minority Tutsi groups have made both central African nations into ethnic battlegrounds for decades. Rwanda also has been divided among Hutus over a peace accord that Habyarimana's government signed with Tutsi rebels last year. In Washington, President Clinton said Rwanda's acting prime minister, Agathe Uwilingiyamana, "was sought out and murdered" by Rwandan security forces. L U.N. spokesperson Joe Sills said in New York that ee Belgian U.N. soldiers were reported slain in Kigali. They were apparently abducted by members of Rwanda's See PRESIDENTS, Page 2 FIRST STEP TO A ROSE BOWL? Report finds 1 in 7 female faculty face sexual harassment By SCOT WOODS DAILY STAFF REPORTER "Come into my office for a little more sexual harassment," the professor says to his teaching assistant. It is a poor joke, however it is an extreme example that actually occurred at the Univer- sity. It is a survey response documented in a 1990 report on sexual harassment by the Women's Caucus of the Department of Politi- cal Science. A study by Education Prof. Eric Dey says one in seven (15 percent) female faculty mem- bers of colleges and universities report having been the victim of sexual harassment on the job. Dey's study, which he will present in New Orleans today to the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, also found full professors had higher rates of reporting harassment (24 percent) than assis- tant professors (13 percent) or instructors (9 percent). Even after figures were adjuested for full professors' longer years of service, they still reported more harassment. "It can be interpreted that harassment was much more prevalent 15 or 20 years ago, that significant progress has been made," Dey said. Political Science Assistant Prof. Jill Crystal said, "Our department has had sexual harass- ment problems so bad, it had to have its own sexual harassment policy." "But the department's de facto policy has been to do as little as possible concerning sexual harassment," she added. Crystal is suing the University, alleging that sexual discrimination was the basis for the de- nial of her tenure. She said she has not herself been the victim of sexual harassment at the University. The Women's Caucus' report seems to sup- port Crystal's assessment of the situation in the political science department. Ten of 41 female graduate assistants who responded to the cau- cus' survey reported experiencing sexual ha- rassment within the scope of their academic work. But sexual harassment, which grabbed the nation's attention during the Clarence Thomas- Anita Hill hearings in 1991, has again become an issue in other departments as well. Sociology Graduate Students co-chair Janelle White, a Rackham student, said the topic dormi- nated discussion at the group's last meeting. She said the atmosphere was "pretty tense" in her department as a result of two recent allega- tions of sexual harassment by a male professor. "The department does not want to take any See REPORT, Page 2 MICHELLE GUY/Daily The Michigan football team concludes its spring practice session with the annual Blue-White intrasquad game tomorrow at Michigan Stadium at 1 p.m. Beforehand, the Athletic Department will be conducting a sale of used team clothing and equipment on the concourse of Crisler Arena starting at 10 a.m. Despite unrest, Israeli peace talks to continue Diag candlelight vigil to draw attention to Bosnian bloodshed Palestinians' rights suspended as violence continues in Israel AFULA, Israel (AP) - As thou- sands of angry Israelis gathered yester- day to bury the victims of a car bomb- g, the army barred 1.8 million Pales- nans from entering Israel for a week in one of its strictest closures ever. The orderfollows two more attacks by Islamic fundamentalists yesterday, including one in which an Israeli was killed and four were wounded when a Palestinian opened fire at a bus stop in southern Israel. "We plan for Israel to be empty of abs from the territories until Inde- endence Day," Police Commissioner Rafi Peled announced on Israel radio. "I hope it will calm the situation and contribute to the security." Israeli Inde- pendence Day is April 14. The attacks spurred calls for a sus- pension of negotiations with the PLO have brought in hundreds of Palestin- ian academics from the occupied lands. The violence came as Israelis ob- served Holocaust Day in memory of the 6 million Jews slaughtered by the Nazis during World War II. In Afula, police fought running battles with about 300 Israeli youths who burned tires after the funerals for the victims of the suicide car-bombing. The bus stop where the attack occurred was covered in wreaths. Settlers passed out literature con- demning the peace talks. Banners at- tacked Israel's peacemaking with the PLO. About 5,000 Israelis gathered in the cemetery as four of the victims were laid to rest in a service broadcast nationally. Three other Israelis and the attacker were killed in the bombing. The government representative was booed, cursed as "trash" and forced to leave under police escort. Much of the anger focused on PLO leader Yasser Arafat's failure to condemn the at- tacks. One banner read: "Arafat does not condemn the murders because they By ROBIN BARRY , DAILY STAFF REPORTER To LSA junior Denis Butkovic, what's going on in Bosnia really hits home. "I'm Croatian, my father was born there, so my motive is more personal because I've been there," he said. Butkovic founded an organization - the Bosnia Relief Effort - that is sponsoring a number of events over the next week to educate the commu- nity about the Bosnian war. "We want to inform people about the attrocities that are going on over there," he said. "With the concentration camps and the rapes, it's the Holocaust all over again," Butkovic added. Butkovic said he also hopes to raise money for wounded refugees staying in the Detroit area. He said a candelight vigil will be held tomorrow at 9 p.m. on the Diag to commemorate the two-year anni- versary of the conflict's start. Aside from the vigil, the group has brought in a survivor of a Bosnian concentration camp and a couple whose family just left Sarajevo to speak on campus next week. Butkovic's efforts complement a series of events being held across the world. Student and community orga- nizations have joined together to pro- test and commemorate the war. Simon Saks, a law student at the City University of New York and an organizer for the Students Against Genocide Association, described the similarity between the Holocaust and the "ethnic cleansing" going on in Bosnia. "Genocide isn't just something that happened a long time ago, it's happening today," he said. Glenn Ruga, an organizer with the Friends of Bosnia in Massachusetts, explained the reason these events co- incide with Holocaust memorial week. "Fifty years ago the whole world swore that what happened during the Holocaust would never happen again," he said. "And yet, today it is happen- ing in the heart of Europe." These local and international events include a petition that is circu- lating in an effort to elicit action from the United States government. "We need to put pressure on poli- ticians and we need the support of the community," said Butkovic. "Something's got to be done." m1 A Palestinian opened lire with a submachine gun at abus stop near the port city of Ashdod today, killing one Israeli and wounding four others before being shot to death by bystanders. The Islamic Jihad Groups want neXt justice to 'look like America' WASHINGTON (AP) - Justice Harry A. Blackmun's retirement will give America the youngest Supreme a letter to the president. Clarke Forsythe of Americans United for Life said Clinton should "What it should look like is the very best talent that is available in the legal community," said Lee, who served