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A Protest, a Spy Program and a Campus in an Uproar
SARAH KERSHAW, Santa Cruz Journal
January 14, 2006
SANTA
CRUZ, Calif. - The protest was carefully orchestrated, planned for
weeks by Students Against War during Friday evening meetings in a small
classroom on the University of California campus here.
So when the military recruiters arrived for the job fair, held in an
old dining hall last April 5 - a now fateful day for a scandalized
university - the students had their two-way radios in position, their
cyclists checking the traffic as hundreds of demonstrators marched up
the hilly roads of this campus on the Central Coast and a dozen moles
stationed inside the building, reporting by cellphone to the growing
crowd outside.
"Racist, sexist, antigay," the demonstrators recalled shouting. "Hey, recruiters, go away!"
Things got messy. As the building filled, students storming in were
blocked from entering. The recruiters left, some finding that the tires
of their vehicles had been slashed. The protesters then occupied the
recruiters' table and, in what witnesses described as a minor melee, an
intern from the campus career center was injured.
Fast forward: The students had left campus for their winter vacation in
mid-December when a report by MSNBC said the April protest had appeared
on what the network said was a database from a Pentagon surveillance
program. The protest was listed as a "credible threat" - to what is not
clear to people around here - and was the only campus action among
scores of other antimilitary demonstrations to receive the designation.
Over the winter break, Josh Sonnenfeld, 20, a member of Students
Against War, or SAW, put out the alert. "Urgent: Pentagon's been spying
on SAW, and thousands of other groups," said his e-mail message to the
50 or so students in the group.
Several members spent the rest of their break in a swirl of strategy
sessions by telephone and e-mail, and in interviews with the news
media. Since classes began on Jan. 5, they have stepped up their effort
to figure out whether they are being spied on and if so, why.
Students in the group said they were not entirely surprised to learn that the federal government might be spying on them.
"On the one hand, I was surprised that we made the list because
generally we don't get the recognition we deserve," Mr. Sonnenfeld
said. "On the other hand, it doesn't surprise me because our own
university has been spying on us since our group was founded. This
nation has a history of spying on political dissenters."
The April protest, at the sunny campus long known for surfing, mountain
biking and leftist political activity, drew about 300 of the
university's 13,000 students, organizers said. (Students surmise that,
these days, they are out-agitating their famed anti-establishment peers
at the University of California, Berkeley, campus, 65 miles northwest
of here.)
"This is the war at home," said Jennifer Low, 20, a member of the
antiwar group. "So many of us were so discouraged and demoralized by
the war, a lot of us said this is the way we can stop it."
A Department of Defense spokesman said that while the Pentagon
maintained a database of potential threats to military installations,
military personnel and national security, he could not confirm that the
information released by MSNBC was from the database. The spokesman, who
said he was not authorized to be quoted by name, said he could not
answer questions about whether the government was or had been spying on
Santa Cruz students.
California lawmakers have demanded an explanation from the government.
Representative Sam Farr, a Democrat whose district includes Santa Cruz,
was one of several who sent letters to the Bush administration. "This
is a joke," Mr. Farr said in an interview. "There is a protest du jour
at Santa Cruz."
"Santa Cruz is not a terrorist town," he added. "It's an activist town. It's essentially Berkeley on the coast."
The university's chancellor, Denise D. Denton, said, "We would like to
know how this information was gathered and understand better what's
going on here."
"Is this something that happens under the guise of the new Patriot Act?" Ms. Denton asked.
As to the students' insistence that the university is monitoring their
activities, Ms. Denton said that she had checked with campus police and
other university offices and that "there is absolutely no spying going
on."
The antiwar group is working closely with the California chapter of the
American Civil Liberties Union, which plans to file a public records
request with the federal government on the students' behalf, A.C.L.U.
officials said.
Meanwhile, members of the campus's College Republicans, strongly
critical of the protesters' tactics last April, are rolling their eyes
at all the hubbub.
"I think it's worth looking into, but right now I think they are
overblowing it," said Chris Rauer, internal vice president of the
College Republicans. "I think people are taking their anger over the
war out on this."
The Defense Department has issued a statement saying that in October
the Pentagon began a review of its database to ensure that the
reporting system complied with federal laws and to identify information
that might have been improperly entered. All department personnel
involved in gathering intelligence were receiving "refresher" training
on the laws and policies, the statement said.
With this happening in academia, there has been a good deal of
philosophical contemplation and debate over the socioeconomic and
political dynamics underlying the uproar.
"I had multiple reactions," said Faye J. Crosby, a professor of social psychology and chairwoman of the Academic Senate.
"One reaction was, 'Gosh, I wonder if we're doing something right?' "
Professor Crosby said. "Another reaction was it's a waste of taxpayer
money. What are we a threat to?"
"The real sadness," she added, "is the breakdown in discourse of the marketplace of ideas."
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