Cash For Textbooks Mon -S.it Smith I ;miil\ Bookstore 768 E. 13th 1 U'ocW from C.impus 345-1651 »m21 J FAMOUS I STAR* IHAMBURCFR Prr*rt* th*% Ittatpun t* m«vr 4 Fjmuu* NUf k* orviv **< IUfortr rtira) I *mil S w»»h (oupnn N.iH v«i»d with ofhrf I u((m bpifp*ft/W/?3 ^ Bmadwi^ind Mdyird Jj Storage Convenient jPersonal or Commercial i rr Mini ^ Storage Jn 5x8 units Across from U of 0 "It's to your advantage to call" Advantage Storage 933 Franklin* 344 3009 Discounts for multiple months honoring diversity £ r • • d o m a a £ a t y 1 o ▼ • £ o r all t h • u o £ o bookatora owned by all students, faculty, staff A Professor calls for fair legal standards By Edward Klopfenstein For rue 0*00° 0*V Fmorahl The 1931 Clarence Thomas nomination uproar was all Ani ta Hill's fault, according to one Harvard sociologist Hill should have recognized Thomas' "down-home style of courting " University Law Professor Car oline Forell said the above quote by Orlando Patterson represents the view of a male-centered legal system, a system that views jus tice in sexual harassment cases through the eyes of a mytholog ical middle-class man. Forell spoke on women and justice Saturday, ending a three day University Humanities Ou ter sponsored symposium titled "Justice Race. Class, and Gen der." The professor advocated changing the legal "reasonable person" and reasonable man” standards presently used in many sexual harassment and ra|>e cas «s to "reasonable woman." Judges and juries use "reasonable" stan dards to judge what is and isn't rational behavior when deciding a court case. To Forell. and many "reason able woman" advocates, the old standards have never lost their male point of view. "{The) reasonableness standard has never been neutntgtnd that the norm represented by the 'rea sonable person' against which all conduct is measured continues to lie male." said the professor. History proves Forell's case, she said. The "we" in the Declaration of Independence offers a prime example of the male endorsement of law. Forell said, quoting law Professor Angela Harris, as the "we" in "We the People" was intended to represent inale, white and propertied In the history of the U.S. Supreme Court only one sexual harassment case has been heard Truii iasv was tried 12 years alter the 1984 Civil Rights Act that barred sox discrimination in the workplace The plaintiff, having been raped and thus obviously in an "abusive working environ ment." won the case. Proving more subtle harass ment appears more difficult under the reasonable man or per son standards. In a 1986 lower court decision, the female plaintiff pleaded that she faced daily assault from sex ual slurs and pornographic mate rial. She lost the case "It cannot seriously be disput ed that in some work environ ments. humor and language are rough, hewn and vulgar," said the court in its decision, adding that "(The Civil Rights Act) was not meant to ... change this.” When applied, the "reasonable woman” standard has helped female plaintiffs present their ras es. Forell cites the case of a female welder working among 846 male shipyard workers as a good example. The judge said the intimidating amount of pornog raphy and sexual slurs, when seen from a woman's perspective, made the workplace an abusive environment. Critics say creating a "woman" standard might draw stereotypes and hurt women's groups trying to fight for equal rights. "They fear that the decision makers will apply their precon ceived notions of women as inherently unreliable, hysterical and supersensitive and as a result will hinder women's quest for equality." Forell said. Forell herself has reservations on the standard, saying it must be carefully defined so it won't invite the stereotypes. She has studied the issue for more than three years, she said. She also said the "reasonable woman" should apply only where gender is part of the case. 9t\ to H&jtileA,.., Beyond AIDS 101 NOT JUST ANOTHER WORKSHOP What can you do to make a difference? TOPICS: • Navigating Your Way to a Healthy Relationship • Living with HIVIAJDS • Safer Sex: What's Practical, What’s Not • Grief and Loss • and more! Friday, Nov. 19,1993 6:00 - 9:00 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 20,1992 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Gerlinger Lounge EDPM 407 and EDPM 507 CRN 15906 and 15997 1 credit P/NPonly * LIMITED ENROLLMENT Conference fee • S30.00 pas able the das of workshop Catered lunch presided on Saturday l O Siudcni Health C enlcr Health t.Ju, a lion Program >• n 0 iimtm Hm-i* Un*r* T