ON I 988 The Michigan Daily - Page 7 blocks peace -_---- garbage truck to :k and would have en stopped, it was y high profile and . The significance ty with the people by U.S. veterans, tration. The par- s, for it calls into e wars of the past, of State Schultz's refusal to visit Nicaragua on his re- cent trip to Central America, the expected July 26 vote on contra aid, and the involvement of the U.S. ambas- ' sador in anti-Sandinista demonstrations are all part of the same pattern. However, the Veterans Peace Con- voy and other concerned U.S. citizens should not be prevented from trying to alleviate the suffering of Nicaraguan civilians simply because the Reagan ad- ministration decides to escalate its unpopular war against Nicaragua. Despite the administration's attempts to avoid a ju- dicial evaluation of its interpretation of the embargo, the veterans have filed a civil suit reasonably demand- ing that vehicles be classified as humanitarian aid and exempt from the embargo. A ruling in favor of the veterans would be a move toward justice for both Nicaraguan and U.S. citizens. However, until Congress or Reagan rescinds the 2INt_ embargo itself, the United States remains responsible for causing the human suffering which the veterans and others are trying to relieve. The embargo is an execu- a r c u se i tive order issued by Reagan under the authority granted him in the International Emergency Powers Act. This THIS TIME IT SEEMS THE UNIVERSITY has kicked act stipulates that an embargo can be imposed on any the wrong student. country that poses an unusual and extraordinary threat A to the national security of the United States. A new chapter of the David and Goliath saga of The notion that Nicaragua fulfills these qualifica- graduate student Harold Marcuse vs. the City of Ann tions is farcical. That the embargo is part and parcel of Arbor and the University Regents unfolded last Friday tios i frcial.Tht te mbago s artandpacelofwhen Marcuse's attorneys filed a civil suit against Reagan's larger agenda for U.S. control of Nicaragua is wn au ' a tt ' abundantly clear. Groups like the Veteran's Peace those two monolithic institutions. Convoy will continue to challenge the administration Marcuse's struggle dates back to a CIA recruitment and emerge as powerful symbols of resistance. Hope- protest last November at the Student Activities fully, the courts will underscore the legitimacy of their Building. Marcuse claims he was beaten without mission. provocation by Ann Arbor police and University NOT ights back P e t t1, 1 i 1 iO= , -._.. 'est a reace I the border. /ar as well. In the ice Convoy must n carrying out its is part of a larger on the Nicaraguan sic war. Secretary nderstands racism: kate approach RS recently created is teaching diversity. Unfortunately, most students buy >f Diversity. This the argument that in this manner they are also truly rsity's reliance on learning about racism. ss the problem of The realities of racism, both at this institution and r, is not adequately in society at large, lie far- beyond the notion of ing multicultural- "diversity." This is a society in which the infant t acts. In order to mortality rate of the city of Detroit is comparable to this campus, the that of many Third World countries; more black males willing to accept go to prison than go to college in the state of Michi- ge its own role in gan; and minorities are the main constituents of the and in society at country's permanent economic underclass. These are true manifestations of racism in the United States. h to appease anti- eda attentonas The mission of an institution such as the University cist incidents and should be to challenge the societal structures which usual, administra- reinforce racism. What the University refuses to ac- Jniversity's public knowledge is that through its own practices it is rein- challenge racism; forcing racism. hat with his now- If this University is truly interested in fighting ire the University racism, it would examine who it educates and what it "minorities would teaches them. The University, using culturally biased admission tests, such as the SAT and ACT have been a strategy which proven to be, eliminates many students who are quite activists, appear to eager and able to learn. Additionally, the University's dress racism, and largely Eurocentric curriculum only reinforces elitist dize the white, eli- ideologies. st strategy is, in a The manifestations of racism run far deeper than in- rs to be acceptable; dividual cases of harassment or a lack of multicultural ld all learn to get appreciation. Racism is tied up in a complex political, ine another's cul- socioeconomic system through which one group of n with all the other people is consistently oppressed by another. The es children like to problem deserves a much more serious response from erd," "fatso"), and the University administration than educational pro- harmful, and that gramming around the concept of "diversity." security officers. This claim has been supported by several eyewitnesses. The alleged assailants include University Director of Public Safety Leo Heatley and his assistant, Robert Patrick, who kicked Marcuse in the groin. Predictably, Marcuse was arrested on trumped up charges of assault, which were later dropped, while Patrick, Heatley, and the rest of the gang went unpunished. This scenario follows the usual pattern of mental and physical intimidation that campus security and police employ in response to peaceful student protest. A few dissenting students are singled out, beaten and arrested with the effect of throwing everyone into a state of fear and confusion and diverting the protest away from its original intent. Then, months later, the charges are quietly dropped. The whole incident, or so the image-conscious University administration hopes, is then eventually forgotten after a brief spate of out- raged letters to the editor. Marcuse's case is a gutsy departure from this tire- some story. By pressing his suit, Marcuse has not only challenged a University administration that al- lows campus recruiting by terrorist organizations, but also has begun a process that will try to uncover the ways in which the CIA, campus security and the Ann Arbor police coordinate the suppression of student dis- sent. The suit's allegations serve as strong arguments against deputization of campus security officers - a move being strongly pushed by Heatley and, more importantly, by Interim President Robben Fleming. Arming security officers only invites more police vio- lence and intimidation at student protests. Since incoming University President James Duder- stadt salivates at the prospect of increased campus military research, increasingly more vehement protests against the University's support of the institutions of oppression and death are inevitable. It will take the kind of persistent moral courage exhibited by Marcuse to change the priorities of the University. Anyone opposed to the University's increasing sup- port for the institutions such as the CIA and the Pen- tagon, should support Marcuse's stance of principled opposition in every way possible. Victimspeaks out BY KATHERINE MCCALLUM On Tuesday, June 28, 1988, I was the victim of fourth degree criminal sexual conduct at East Quad, at the hands of someone who was most likely a high- school football player staying on campus in connec- tion with the Camps of Champions. As rude and humiliating an experience that was to endure and to deal with, the events which followed in connection with the assault have been immeasurably more har- rowing. I decided to report the attack (to "Tell Someone," as the posters that I see around campus exhort me to do) to Housing Security and to the administration of the Camps; and the response I have received has revealed a disgusting level of ignorance and sexism in those organizations. Attempting to have my experience taken seriously has proved a more sickening outrage than an assault by an unknown attacker could ever be, for it has shown me that my attacker was not just an isolated pervert who saw an opportunity to take advantage the bustle of the Quad and of his relative anonymity there, but that he is a product of the socialized misogyny which is commonplace in our society as well as he is a product of the institutionalized bigotry which is commonplace at this university. One may find it hard to believe that anything could be more disempowering, more humiliating, more outrage-inspiring than being sexually assaulted. In my case, reporting the attack certainly has been. Yes, my attacker disempowered me, grabbing me with no invitation and treating me as nothing more than an object. But the Housing Security Officers who first brushed off my complaint with a casual "Hey, just tell them not to touch you," and then took a See ASSAULT, page 8 i