Conference addresses sex, violence, military and peace Mayor Kitty Piercy read a speech by Barbara Lee, and author Guryn Kirk was among the panelists BY NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER The University hosted prominent authors, professors and community activists from across the country at “Gender, Race and Militarization,” an all-day conference Friday. The speakers discussed sexual violence in wartime, what they called deceit ful military recruiting tactics and the peaceful efforts from international communities to change in political priorities worldwide. In the keynote address Master of Ceremonies Sandra Morgen, director of the Center for the Study of Women in Society, said gender, race and mili tarization are terms combined to help build power against the various kinds of fundamentalism. “We were asking questions (about) how these dynamics produce ill results,” Morgen said. “But you can also put the antitheses together. It is only when we put all of this to gether that we don’t have one group over here and one group over there.” Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., was called back to Washington, D.C., and was unable to personally deliv er her speech, but the event spon sors asked Eugene Mayor Kitty Pier cy to read the speech to the crowd of nearly 200 people. Lee is the only U.S. House of Rep resentatives member to vote against President Bush’s Sept. 15, 2001 war resolution authorizing the use of “all necessary and appropriate force” in preventing terrorist attacks against the United States. She intro duced House Resolution 82, which would renounce the Bush adminis tration’s doctrine of pre-emptive war. She recently joined Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and other Con gress members to reintroduce legis lation to create a United States Department of Peace. “From the war in Iraq to the genocide in Sudan, there is a clear need for a government body that will create and implement policies that support peaceful resolution,” Lee said in September. In her speech, Lee wrote that America is the richest country in the world, “yet we spend less on inter national aid per capita than virtual ly any other country,” an amount equal to two months’ expenses for the military operation in Iraq. “We would get a lot more security out of increasing foreign aid and ad dressing the root causing of terror ism than by fanning the flames of anti-Americanism in Iraq,” her speech said. She also said the racism that exist ed during World War II still exists in the war in Iraq. Just as Japanese citi zens were portrayed as militarized enemies in posters, racism in Iraq, al though more subtle, portrays Iraqis as a more primitive, violent people. “It serves to justify the detentions of Guantanamo and the atrocities of Abu Ghraib and reinforces the no tion that some lives are more ex pendable and that some deaths are just inevitable,” she added. Lee’s address emphasized the his tory of sexual violence in wartime. In 1937, more than 20,000 women were raped and killed during Japan’s assault on the Chinese city of Nanking. In 1994, as many as 500,000 women and girls were vic tims of sexual assault in the Rwandan genocide. A panel followed the reading of Lee’s speech. Panelist Gwyn Kirk, co-author of “Greenham Women Everywhere: Dreams, Ideas, and Actions from the Women’s Peace Movement,” com pared the United States government to a massive vacuum, sucking up justice, creativity, imagination and physical resources. She encouraged people to get in volved in local peace efforts and to think about what it means to be pa triotic “when the government is committing such atrocities. “The community has bought the idea of the military,” she said. “We need to put out there what we envision.” Citing the fiscal year 2006 mili tary budget of $419 billion, Kirk, in closing, asked the crowd: “How would we spend more than a billion dollars a day?” Contact the campus and federal politics reporter at nwilbur@dailyemerald.com EMU Board of Directors Special Budget Committee meeting. Immediately following will be a Full Board meeting. 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Fares are subject to availability; change without notice Btackout dates ft other restrictions may apply Visit StubentUmverse com for complete rules For contest rules visit www studentuniverse com/contest Standard messaging rates apply according to your mobile plan , 1 University Health Center Flu shots now available Who: Everyone should get a flu shot, but especially those at high risk for complications with the flu (e.g. those with asthma, diabetes, kidney disease or immuno-suppression, pregnancy, over age 65) When: for students: 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Monday-Friday for staff: 8:00 - 9:00 a.m. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 10:00 a.m. -2:00 p.m., Saturday Nov. 12 Cost: for students $ 13 (can be charged to UO account) for staff $28 (bring BCBS insurance card <5 UO ID) Where: Area C in the University Health Center, no appointment necessary More information: Contact the flu line 346-4444 http://healthcenter.uoregon.edu appointments: 346-2770 o UNIVERSITY OF OREGON