S 9 0 0 0 WedesayDeembr , 013//Th taemn The least reported crime by Rachel Premack 4~ight after his girlfriend raped him, she apologized. "She had a boyfriend who told er that girls shouldn't make noise while they were having sex," Rackham student Ben Alterman said, twisting his pinky over his ring finger as he discussed his second sexual abuser. His memory of that day is foggy. He can't exactly remember how he went from her living room to her bedroom. He was 16 years old. "There was no conversation," Alterman said. "There was no, 'Is this okay?' I felt trapped, I didn't have an option. I didn't feel safe." ,Now an on-campus activist for male survivors of sexual assault, Alterman realized in recent weeks the likelihood that his high school girlfriend was abused herself - possibly by that ex-boyfriend who insisted she stayed silent during sex. That could explain why she thought this sort of coercion during sex was normal. Alterman thinks consent is excluded from the cultural conversation. Grabbing a woman's hips from behind is the requisite way to ask for a dance -d movies show guys endlessly pursuing a girl until she "gives in." Many balk at the idea that men, who are supposedly constantly sex-starved and domineering, can be victims of sexual assault too. "As a survivor, I feel regularly confronted with the question of, 'What is masculinity and what is masculinity in my life?' "Alterman said. One in six Rape of males is the least reported crime, according to MaleSurvivor Vice President Chris Anderson. This organization was the first in the country dedicated to helping men and boys heal from sexual victimization. Many of the statistics, for this reason, are not definite. It's estimated that one in 10 sexual assault survivors are men. One in six men experience sexual abuse before the age of 18. In the case rape, 1 in 33 men are , compared to 1 in 6 women. 4j\ost issues that male and female sexual assault survivors face - such as guilt, shame or anger - after an incident are similar, said Rackham student Jamie Little. Little studies the intersection between law and male sex crimes in the Department of 'iociology. Statistics reflect one difference between the genders: the age in which the crime occurs. Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center Director Holly Rider-Milkovich explained that male survivors at the University and at college campuses nationwide are usually abused before their college years. The most common age for sexual assault for men is 8-18, Rider-Milkovich said, compared to 16-24 for women. Before being raped as a teenager, Alterman was repeatedly abused as an 8-year-old by an older neighbor. The neighbor would force him and another boy to rub their genitals together in Alterman's bedroom. But for many boys, a close adult - a. family member, coach, religious official - is the common perpetrator the funds - or do not recognize ma rape or partner abuse as possible -, give male survivors proper resource Anderson said. Stigmas shroud the true number male survivors. However, Anders said abuse does not discriminate. "Sexual abuse affects people fro every gender, age, race, religion ar socioeconomic class," Anderson sai "You will find them in all walks life." Internal struggles Despite its pervasiveness, ma rape is not commonly discusse In fact, many male survivors fa great difficulty in talking about the experiences. "You feel like sexual abuse ... it's almost like this disease you have and you tell people. and you can infect people.lt's like you're like a leper" - D. Lyons, LSA sophomore le masculinity: power. In a traditional to view, he explained, the most venerated es, men dominate athletically, are flush in cash, and attract women. Men are of valued for their ability to control or on best others. "The history that I feel as a man m that I carry is one of power," Alterman nd said. "I am taught to be powerful, to be d. authoritative, to be controlling, to be of aggressive." Sexual assault takes that power away. This can make some people question if they are truly male when they link power and masculinity so le closely. d. "You are subjugated by someone else ce and done so in a way that is shameful ir and creates a lot of self-loathing and guilt," Alterman said. Other effects of rape mirror women's trauma: disruption of eating or sleeping patterns, anxiety, low self- esteem, depersonalization and a host of other symptoms. Lyons said the abuse, followed by the death of his parents in his adolescence, spawned certain personality traits that seem almost impossible in the gregarious Residential College student. "The big thing is being distrustful of people, feeling like I've always had to look out for myself, always being a distrustful person," Lyons said. "There've been a lot of times where I've just been an asshole and it's not okay. But it's also like at least three different big fuckin' events in my life that made me have to forge for myself." The question of sexual pleasure can compound emasculation. Anderson said men are biologically driven to become erect with genital stimulation, regardless of mental state. Shock and terror can sometimes te even lead to an erection. ns Male ejaculation is also a physiological is response that does not signify he enjoyment or consent, similar to females he who orgasm during rape. Alterman of explained that he ejaculated as a 16 year old simply to make the experience nd end. Still, this visible response can be e. manipulated by rapists of men. ke "It becomes a hook that perpetrators se can use against a survivor to say, 'See, su you enjoy this. This is something that 's you really wanted. This is natural, this p, is what happens when people who like each other touch each other in these es ways,' "Anderson said. es CONTINUED ON PAGE8B FROM PAGE 28 band, the song, the children's choir, the sunset. I've loved music for as long as I can remember, writing my own songs a la Taylor Swift in high school documenting my (lack of) romantic endeavors. And in college, I turned to my guitar as I finally explored what it means to fall in and out of love. Music became my release. But I learned it truly loved me back that moment in the audience, dancing and singing not with a boyfriend, a best friend or even an acquaintance, but a mass of peo- ple I'd never met from all walks of life. "Love" was something I never thought I could feel alone in a crowd, yet I loved each and every stranger surrounding me for losing that term "stranger" the moment the band played their first chords. The mud took shoes, iPhones, half-eaten fish tacos and joints that weren't quite finished and dropped with an, "Oh, shit." But the mud also took away my fears about music festivals. Maybe being ILLUSTRATION BY MEGAN MULHOLLAND in a crowd alone can be lonely, night or dealing with life's chal- but when a band is playing a song lenges - and everyone around that defined a moment in your life you sings it with the same convic- - whether studying late into the tion, it's impossible to feel alone. on the record "I don't think there was much arm-bending to get people in ... people just wanted to be part of the silliness." - STEVE CARELL, "Anchorman 2" actor, about getting original cast members to sign on to the sequel. "Phil is possibly her most badass character yet: a forgiving woman with dignity and grace, one who doesn't pretend to be someone she is not." - NATALIE GADBOIS, Daily Arts Writer, aboutDame Judy Dench's portrayal of Philomena Lee in her newestfilm "Philomena." "There's no point of saving your best for the last game of the season when every foreseeable goal is out of reach." - EVERETT COOK, Daily SportsEditor, after the Michigan Football team's one-point loss to Ohio State on Saturday. After 123,000 votes were cast from around the world, the panda cub born at the National Zoo has a name - Bao Bao - meaning "precious" or "treasure," according to the Washington Post. Following tradition, the name was announced on the 100th day of the panda's life. Here's to you, Bao Bao! T Always forgetting to order your textbooks untilthe last minute? Fear no more, Amazon is working to get you your order in 30 minutes or less with the help of drones. Orders could be landing on your doorstep as soon as 2015. 1' Mai a I of sexual assault. There's a "grooming" process where the perpetrator attempts to build trust with his or her target. This better allows the abuser to manipulate the child into not reporting the abuse. Rider-Milkovich said this type of abuse is disconcerting for children who have likely never had a sexual experience before. Rider-Milkovich added that SAPAC has seen, in recent years, a "number of male students" who have been abused on the University campus by men and women. She. emphasized the importance of resources for all survivors regardless of gender. Some cities and communities do not have A mentally challenged classma abused LSA sophomore D. Lyo when he was in first grade. After h principal punished him for saying tI word "hump" to describe the abuse, k told his mother after two months repeated experiences. Lyons never saw the boy again, at no one ever asked him about the abus "You feel like sexual abuse, it's li this thing, it's almost like this disea: you have and you tell people and yt can infect people," Lyons said. "It like you're like a leper. It's messed u man." Alterman said sexual assault depriv men of what typically characteriz -In The D is bankrupt. A federal judge ruled Tuesday the bankruptcy claims were filed correctly, givingthe city the'go-ahead to not pay back billions of dollars owed, according to CNN. This bankruptcy makes it the largest city bankruptcy in history. The city can now create a plan to cut their debt, which needs to be approved bythejudge. II Bad news for celeb chef Mario Batali: Crocs is discontinuing his signature bright orange pair of rubbery shoes. What's a celeb chef to do when his iconic foot ware is about to go extinct? Buy 200 pairs of course! And that's just what he did. 1=