Archive for September, 2005

Update – Charles Peterson banned from campus with no due process

Friday, September 30th, 2005

From Phil Gasper
Notre Dame de Namur University

FORWARD WIDELY…

To Friends and Supporters,

We have just learned that Charles Peterson, the student who was maced and assaulted by police at yesterday’s counter recruitment protest at Holyoke Community College, has received a letter from the HCC campus police, informing him that due to “his conduct” he is indefinitely banned from campus. If he steps foot on the property he will be arrested for trespassing.

In other words, without any due process, or the opportunity to even speak to administrators, Charles has been banned from campus for the “crime” of being maced in the face by police officers.

It is important to say that Charles Peterson, who witnesses described as playing a moderating role at yesterday’s protest, is an upstanding member of the HCC community. He is the recipient of the David James Taylor Excellence in Philosophy Award. He is Vice President for Academic Affairs on the Student Senate. He is a member of the College’s Learning Communities Committee, and is a frequent contributor to the student newspaper.

Furthermore, Officer Scott Landry, the officer who sprayed mace in Charles’s face yesterday, is also an advisor to the College Republican Club. The College Republicans were present during the protest yesterday, cheering on the police as they attacked students.

Where is due process for Charles Peterson?

PLEASE CALL (AGAIN IF YOU”VE CALLED ALREADY) AND REGISTER YOUR PROTEST AT THIS OUTRAGEOUS TREATMENT!

HCC Main Number 1-413-552-2600

President Messner 1-413-552-2222

HCC Anti-War Coalition Letter to College President

Friday, September 30th, 2005

[ Please note: the student contact at the HCC Anti-War Coalition is Charles Peterson, charlest.peterson@gmail.com ]

September 29, 2005

To Dr. William Messner, President of Holyoke Community College:

We are writing to express our deep outrage at the events of September 29, when campus police assaulted peaceful student protesters and sprayed one student with mace.

Approximately thirty activists, many of them members of Holyoke Community College’s Anti War Coalition, exercising their First Amendment rights to “assemble and petition government for redress of grievances,” participated in a planned, peaceful picket of Army National Guard recruiters in the lobby of the college cafeteria. This was a diverse group of students, black, white, latino, gay, straight, men and women, united in peaceful and vocal opposition to US policy in Iraq, the spending priorities of the US political system, and the college’s hypocrisy in giving preferential, and we believe illegal, access to military recruiters whose enlistment policies bar gays and lesbians– in violation of the college’s own anti-discrimination policies. Furthermore, we believe that the college’s policies violate Massachusetts laws that prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

Students at HCC are encouraged to voice their opinions, and yet in this case, when students did exactly that, they became the victims of police brutality. Students who had passed through the cafeteria at 7:30AM noted then that the police were already present —even though recruiters were not scheduled to begin tabling until 10AM.

The police assault on the students began when one student standing in front of Officer Landry held aloft with both hands a hand-lettered, poster board sign reading “Cops are hypocrites.” The sign had no stick attached to it. At that point, Peter Mascaro, head of Campus Security, reached over Officer Landry’s head, snatched the sign from the student’s hands, saying “That is inappropriate!” In surprise the student tried to reach for his sign. At this point the campus police, led by Officer Landry, assaulted the student. Mr. Mascaro ordered Officer Landry, “Let him go.” Officer Landry heatedly replied “Are you serious?” The police officer’s inappropriate grabbing of the sign constituted the battery.

Three other officers joined Officer Landry in grabbing each of the student’s limbs and hoisted him off the ground. Other students instinctively tried to protect the student being assaulted. When the officers lost their grip on the student, he backed away and raised his hands in the air indicating his non-violent posture. At approximately that moment, Officer Landry maced a different student, one who was not doing anything or making any gestures to do anything at the time.

Both of the students who were battered by campus police are upstanding members of the HCC community. One is a tutor in the CAPS Center. The other received the David James Taylor Excellence in Philosophy Award, is Vice President for Academic Affairs on the Student Senate, is a member of the College’s Learning Communities Committee, and is a frequent contributor to the student newspaper. Several of the activists involved observed that the student who was maced had consistently played a moderating role in the protest.

As the assault was taking place, approximately a dozen College Republicans were moving forward, pumping their fists in the air, shouting and encouraging the Officers on. Throughout the morning, the campus police force ignored the activities of the College Republicans and were only deployed against the protesters.

At approximately this time college officials appear to have called local and State Police, and at least twenty state police arrived in riot gear and gas masks. Officer Landry looked at one of the protesters and, observing that he was wearing a button reading “Lesbian and Gay Liberation,” loudly uttered an obviously homophobic taunt: “He’ll have fun in jail.” As Officer Landry is an employee of the college, we believe that his taunt constituted illegal and actionable discrimination under Massachusetts laws.

By this time, the protesting students were trying to peacefully disperse and attend to the traumatized students who had been battered by campus police. Riot police amassed in the cafeteria with boxes labeled “gas masks.”

We want to know the if the police were preparing to deploy gas in the cafeteria—a place where there were many students, cafeteria workers, and some children present.

With riot police threateningly lined up in the stairwell, groups of students hostile to the protesters surrounded and came close to rioting against the small crowd who had left the building and were trapped in the courtyard outside.

During this time, one student reports that he went to get a drink of water in the student lounge and ten to fifteen police in full riot gear pointed their guns at the student and said “we’re not letting anyone in or out of here.”

We demand 1) an immediate, unconditional public apology from the college; 2) a pledge of non-retaliation against the activists involved; 3) a thorough and impartial investigation into these incidents; and finally, 4) that the military recruiters not be allowed back to our college, as their actions and those of the military discriminate against people based on their sexual orientation, in violation of Massachusetts law and college policy. Furthermore, the military is engaging in an economic draft against working class and poor people in an attempt to buttress this nation’s illegal war against Iraq.

Thank You,

Members of the Anti War Coalition at Holyoke Community College

Please call Holyoke Community College to register your concerns.

President Messner 1-413-552-2222 or 2223

The college issued a statement, one that the students find full of factual errors.
Here is the link to the college statement.

Update – 1:33 PM

Thursday, September 29th, 2005

From James York:

I was at protest that kicked the recruiters off HCC,
here is my quick summary of events:

About 50 or so activist organized by the AWC (anti-war
coalition; CAN chapter on HCC) gathered to protest
militarty recruiters. Chants money for jobs and
education/not for war and occcupation, Relief not War,
college not combat attracked many people passing by.

As the group grew, HCC called in 5-6 Holyoke PD, they
started pushing the group back, but because the
Anti-war crowd had grown there was nowhere to go.
Cops then got voilent grabbing and pushing protesters.
One protester was muckled others came to his aid and
the Cops started a may-lay. They pepper-sprayed
protesters and started swinging theirarms, and billy
clubs, they pushed and through protesters to the
ground. Several people were hit by the cops.

Protesters regrouped and backed the cops down to where
they gave us enough space to protest with the larger
numbers that were joining us.

Shortly after as the crowd continued to grow, the
National Guard Recruiters packed up and left, and a
few college republicans looked devastated, As the
crowd chanted don’t come back.

CALL HCC AT 538-7000

TELL THEM STUDENTS HAVE THE RIGHT TO FREE SPEACH
WITHOUT BEING PEPPER-SPRAYED AND BEATEN!

more info: charlest.peterson@gmail.com
http://www.campusantiwar.net

Police Attack Peaceful Student Protesters at Holyoke Community College

Thursday, September 29th, 2005

As of 11:30am, there was a protest at Holyoke Community College, MA against
military recruiters. The protesters were not blocking the recruiters, but
were just trying to counter protest and provide real information about what
the military does.

The police arrived and started knocking people to the ground and
macing them. The College Republicans were there encouraging the
police to attack the protesters. Reportedly, the College Administration
called the police.

Please immediately call 413-538-7000 and register your outrage with the
President’s office at the College’s attack on peaceful protest on a public
campus.

Thank you!

For more information, please contact Charles Peterson of the HCC Anti-War
Coalition charlest.peterson@gmail.com

More news on this situation will follow.

Forwarded by Charles Jenks, Traprock Peace Center after a phone update
from a witness.

On The Frontlines – a national counter-recruitment conference co-sponsored by the Campus Antiwar Network (CAN) and Military Out of Our Schools – Bay Area (MOOS)

Monday, September 26th, 2005

(please forward widely)

ON THE FRONTLINES
A national counter-recruitment conference co-sponsored by the Campus Antiwar Network (CAN) and Military Out of Our Schools – Bay Area (MOOS)
October 22-23, 2005
University of California, Berkeley

The protests on September 24, 2005 were a fantastic indication that the antiwar movement is a force to be reckoned with. Hundreds of thousands of people marched and rallied all over the US, reflecting that the antiwar movement represents a growing majority in this country.

Students have a tremendous role to play in this movement. Just as it is our generation that is on the frontlines of the war — targeted by military recruiters to kill and die in Iraq — so will our generation be on the frontlines of the movement that grinds this war to a halt. This process is already beginning. The Campus Antiwar Network’s “College Not Combat, Relief Not War” contingents on September 24 drew hundreds of students on both coasts, and our chapters have been at the front of a wave of demonstrations this past year to get military recruiters out of high school and college campuses.

Now it is time to take the student movement to the next step — to take the power of September 24 and bring it to every college campus and high school in the United States.

That’s why all student antiwar activists should come to the ON THE FRONTLINES national counter-recruitment conference at Berkeley (October 22-23). With Bush at the weakest point of his presidency and supporters of the war on the defensive for the first time, our side needs to come together to determine where the student movement will go from here. Activists from around the country — students, educators, veterans and more –will participate in and present workshops ranging from first-person stories from Iraq, to debates on whether military recruiters have a right to free speech, to practical discussions on how to start an antiwar chapter at your school. And democratic student organizing sessions will let us turn the opposition at all of our schools into a dynamic, grassroots, national force to stop military recruitment and the war.

We expect this conference to mark the beginning of a serious change in the contours of student politics in the US. Four decades ago, it was out of conferences like this that the Port Huron Statement was written and the Students for a Democratic Society was formed. Our generation’s Port Huron Statement remains to be written. We invite all of you to Berkeley in October to participate in the development of a movement which will not only write that statement, but ultimately will transform its demands into a reality.

For more information on the ON THE FRONTLINES conference, or to register or suggest a workshop, email frontlines.conference@gmail.com or visit Campus Antiwar Network

Updated – COLLEGE NOT COMBAT, RELIEF NOT WAR contingent, Sept 24 protest in DC

Tuesday, September 13th, 2005

***Please Forward Widely***

* COLLEGE NOT COMBAT, RELIEF NOT WAR
contingent in the Sept 24 protest in Washington D.C.
* Meeting point in DC: Corner of 15th and Constitution NW
If you have trouble finding us in DC, call 646-320-6880

Please meet at Constitution Ave. and 15th St. NW when you arrive in Washington. Following the peace and justice festival and rally, please meet back at that location by 12:15 so we will step off at 12:30.

Across the country a new movement has sprung up of students, parents,
teachers and community members opposing military recruiters in their
schools and neighborhoods. From students kicking recruiters off campus,
from Seattle to the Bay Area to New Haven to New York; to parents and
teachers’ unions opposing the military targeting their children; to the
growing unwillingness of young people to kill and die in an an unjust
war, our message is simple:

Military recruiters out of our schools,
U.S. troops out of Iraq!

Additionally, the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina has exposed the racism
of a system that prioritizes a war based on lies over the safety of
ordinary people at home. The reports of New Orleans residents being
terrorized by the police and national guard while aid remains all but
unavailable has angered a large section of this country. The
connections between the war and the hurrican are exemplified by
military recruiters in the Astrodome. A Peace Train sponsored by the
Lousisiana Activist Network will join us in demanding money for
hurricane relief, not for war

On September 24, join us in D.C. to say:
COLLEGE, NOT COMBAT! RELIEF NOT WAR!

SPONSORED BY: Brooklyn Parents for Peace, Campus Antiwar Network,
College Not Combat, Coney Island Avenue Project, Educators to Stop the
War, Fuerza de la Revolución, Fuerza Juvenil, Left Hook, Louisiana
Activist Network, Prospect-Lefferts Voices for Peace, Rochester Against
War, Traprock Peace Center, United Federation of Teachers to Stop the
War, Voices in the Wilderness and Women’s International League for
Peace and Freedom – Monterey Branch, Youth Leadership Support Network,
Washington, D.C.

ENDORSED BY: ORGANIZATIONS: 100 Year March; ANSWER – New Hampshire;
Albuquerque Center for Peace and Justice; Bay Area United Against War;
Bronx Greens; Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors; Chapter 60
Veterans for Peace; Chapter 93 Veterans For Peace (Washtenaw County
Michigan), Citizens for Legitimate Government; Coalition Against War &
Injustice of Baton Rouge; DC Anti-War Network; International Socialist
Organization; March for Justice; Mid-South Peace & Justice Center
(Memphis); Middle East Children’s Alliance; National Lawyers Guild -
San Francisco/Bay Area; Oregon PeaceWorks, Peaceful Vocations; People
Against the Draft; Political Action Committee for Peace and Justice at
Pace University; Radio Free Eirean; San Juan Peace Net; Santa Cruz
Peace Coalition; Suffolk Peace Network’s Counter Military Recruiting
Committee; Texans for Peace (Austin); Vets Speak Out NYC;

INDIVIDUALS*: · Kevin and Monica Benderman – Kevin is a conscientious
objector who refused re- deployment to Iraq and was sentenced to 15
months for missing movement; Natylie Baldwin, organizer and writer for
Mt. Diablo Peace Center, associate editor for Newtopia Magazine; Amy
Hagopian, parent and co-chair of Garfield High School PTSA that voted
to ban recruiters from their school; Kathy Kelly, Voices in the
Wilderness; Dennis Kyne, Gulf War veteran and activist; Michael Letwin,
Co- Convener, New York City Labor Against the War; Former President,
UAW Local 2325; Rania Masri, writer and researcher; Gloria Mattera,
Green Party candidate for Brooklyn Borough President; Camilo Mejía, the
first soldier to go public with his refusal to redeploy. He spent seven
months in military confinement for his decision, and was released in
mid-February, 2005; Sunny Miller and Charles Jenks, Executive Director
and President of Advisory Boards, respectively, Traprock Peace Center;
David Mitchell, Vietnam draft resister active in Rockland Coalition for
Peace and Justice; Wafaa’ Al-Natheema, writer, editor & translator;
Victor Paredes, brother of war resister Pablo Paredes; Ward Reilly,
Louisiana Activist Network and South East Contact for Vietnam Veterans
Against the War and Veterans For Peace; Justino Rodriguez, Hadas Thier
and Nick Bergreen of the City College 4 – who were arrested for
opposing the military at their school; David Rovics, singer/songwriter;
Cindy Sheehan , founding member of Gold Star Families for Peace; Norman
Solomon, author of “War Made Easy”; Annie and Buddy Spell, activists;
Carl Webb, war resister; Brian Willson , Vietnam Veterans Against the
War, Veterans For Peace; Katrina Yeaw, Michael Hoffman, and Pardis
Esmaeili- the SFSU 3, who were targeted by their school administration
for opposing recruiters; Howard Zinn and Anthony Arnove, co-editors
of “Voices of a People’s History of the United States.”

*Organizational affiliations for identification purposes only.
(ALL sponsors/endorsers welcome; email recruitersout@yahoo.com )

* For information on the PEACE TRAIN to D.C. from across the South,
contact the Louisiana Activist Network

Contact recruitersout@yahoo.com for more info.

Campus Antiwar Network

College Not Combat

[Editor's Note: CAN issued this call in mid-June; it's been building ever since then with new co-sponsors and many endorsing organizations and individuals giving their support.]

College Not Combat

Monday, September 12th, 2005

By Elizabeth Wrigley-Field
Republished with permission of the International Socialist Review
Issue 43, September-October, 2005

WITH SUPPORT for Bush’s occupation of Iraq at an all-time low, reflected in plummeting rates of military enlistment, the antiwar movement has begun to reemerge. At the head of this revival has been a counter-recruitment movement that rapidly developed nationwide last year, particularly in schools, where young people resent being targeted to carry out an occupation they oppose. College students have kicked military recruiters off campuses around the country, while high school students, parents, and teachers’ unions are leading campaigns against recruiters in their schools.

This fall, the movement that began to take shape over the last year is taking steps to cohere itself into a more effective force to challenge military recruitment and the war. Two grassroots initiatives in particular show the potential for building a powerful movement organized around the theme College Not Combat. photo © 2005 Charles Jenks

San Francisco takes on recruiters

On November 9, voters in San Francisco will have the opportunity to vote for the following resolution against military recruitment in the city’s schools:

Resolved, that the people of San Francisco oppose U.S. military recruiters using public school, college and university facilities to recruit young people into the armed forces. Furthermore, San Francisco should oppose the military’s “economic draft” by investigating means by which to fund and grant scholarships for college and job training to low-income students so they are not economically compelled to join the military.

The resolution, known as the College Not Combat (CNC) initiative, was placed on the November election ballot in San Francisco after activists collected over 15,000 petition signatures—5,000 more than the legal requirement—in an effort to put the city on record calling for military recruiters out of our schools. Alongside teachers and veterans, parents petitioned with their children. This all-volunteer force was able to exceed its petitioning goals and secure ballot access in part because, according to activists’ estimates, about 80 percent of those approached signed the petition. In the words of CNC organizer Ragina Johnson, “It gives us the power to say the city of San Francisco is in favor of students and teachers and parents kicking recruiters off campus.”

That’s a message that organizers hope to send very powerfully in the November election, where they believe the resolution will pass by a wide margin. Last year 63 percent of San Francisco voters approved Proposition N, which called on the federal government to “bring the troops safely home now.”

The CNC resolution is symbolic: It expresses public opposition to recruitment without forcing San Francisco’s government to take action to ban recruiters, which would result in a loss of federal education funding under the No Child Left Behind Act and Solomon Amendment. But it has already galvanized opponents of the war by providing a way they can express their opposition.

The campaign has received significant media attention, including an Associated Press article picked up by newspapers around the country. It earned the endorsement of the San Francisco Bay Guardian, whose editorial argued, “activists are rightly moving to target military recruitment as a way not only to save the lives of potential recruits but to push for an end to the war.”
In addition to bringing a counter-recruitment message to people across California and beyond, the CNC campaign has brought together a number of activists and organizations. The campaign is endorsed by more than forty organizations and individuals, ranging from the Free Palestine Alliance to the San Francisco Labor Council. The CNC’s eleven-member steering committee reflects the wide range of groups campaigning for the resolution, including the International Socialist Organization, National Lawyers Guild, Oakland Green Party (represented on the steering committee by Aimee Allison, herself a conscientious objector from the first Gulf War), United Educators of San Francisco, and Cindy Sheehan, the Gold Star Families for Peace co-founder who spent August camped outside Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas.

The next step is to build a public campaign leading up to the election to secure as many votes for the College Not Combat resolution as possible, beginning on the first day of classes at San Francisco high schools. Two big opportunities at the end of September will help to consolidate the campaign and bring in newer activists, who may become involved in organizing support for the resolution in the critical weeks before the election. On September 21, CNC will co-sponsor a San Francisco stop of the national speaking tour of the antiwar British Member of Parliament George Galloway, hosted by ISR, the Center for Economic Research and Social Change, and the New Press. And campaigners will also help to organize the San Francisco version of a College Not Combat contingent on September 24. Events like these can help bring others disgusted by recruitment for this occupation into a movement against it, while the ballot resolution offers a chance for a concrete victory that can raise the antiwar movement’s confidence about what we can achieve.

A national mobilization for College Not Combat

On September 24, in the first national antiwar demonstration in over a year in Washington, D.C., students, teachers, parents, and community members will march alongside one another in a College Not Combat contingent.

The Campus Antiwar Network initiated the contingent to bring together everyone opposing military recruitment—most of whom are organizing in small groups in relative isolation from one another—and to help bring new activists to the September 24 demonstration by connecting it to widespread anger at recruitment. The contingent has garnered over fifty endorsements. The nearly twenty sponsors planning to mobilize for the contingent now include Educators to Stop the War, which organized an 850-person antiwar conference in March; Coney Island Avenue Project, a South Asian immigrant rights group challenging detentions and deportations; and the Louisiana Activist Network, sponsors of a Peace Train that will begin in New Orleans and pick up activists across the South before ending at the march in Washington.

By giving a national voice to the fight against recruitment, the College Not Combat contingent is also helping to build the antiwar movement locally. In New York, activists with the New York City Counter-Recruitment Campaign are launching a campaign against military recruiters in the City University New York (CUNY) system this fall. This campaign, which is being spearheaded by CUNY students in the Campus Antiwar Network and professors in Educators to Stop the War, hopes to use the College Not Combat contingent and a CUNY petition campaign to bring together activists from a wide range of CUNY schools, creating opportunities for new campus antiwar coalitions to form and schools to unite in bigger actions.

Initiatives like these will be able to take on national scope at the On the Frontlines conference at the University of California-Berkeley on October 22–23, jointly sponsored by the Campus Antiwar Network and Military Out of Our Schools–Bay Area. Coming out of the September 24 protest and a new wave of antiwar organizing this fall, the conference presents an opportunity for these experiences to be generalized into a more coherent national College Not Combat movement, with those targeted by recruiters at its forefront.

Elizabeth Wrigley-Field is a counter-recruitment activist with the Campus Antiwar Network and helped stop a CIA recruiting event at her school, New York University. She has written about counter-recruitment for Left Hook and Znet. For more information on the College Not Combat contingents in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., on September 24, visit CAN’s website

See more information on the College Not Combat ballot initiative in San Francisco

Link to original article

See seven page photo index to CAN’s history