| Protests
force Bush to relocate Hoover meeting; three students detained
By Amit Arora
The Stanford Daily
(original
link)
Friday, April 21, 2006
Although President George W. Bush was
scheduled to meet with fellows at the Hoover Institution
on Friday, the presence of more than 1,000 protestors
forced him to change his plans and meet with advisers
and faculty members at the residence of former Secretary
of State and Hoover Fellow George Shultz on the outskirts
of the Stanford campus.
More than 100 armed law enforcement and
Secret Service officers lined the streets outside of Encina
Commons, as students, parents, faculty members and local
residents protested Bush’s anticipated arrival on
east campus. While the protest was peaceful, three Stanford
students—seniors Claire Wagenseil, Diogo Pereira
and Caroline Martin— were arrested as police pushed
the crowd out of Serra Street.
The protest began at approximately 2
p.m. in White Plaza, where 200 students gathered to make
signs and rally against the administration. As they began
marching toward Hoover Tower, others joined their ranks
and began to chant slogans. By the time the rally reached
the Institution at 2:30 p.m., approximately 400 protesters
lined the police barriers set around the building.
People continued to join the movement,
and the slogans for reform grew louder as time passed.
The magnitude of the protest ultimately forced Bush to
conduct the meeting at Shultz’s house located on
Delores Street.
Meanwhile, outside the Hoover Institution,
the crowd chanted, “Hey-Hey-Ho-Ho-Bush is here,
he’s got to go.” Another popular slogan targeted
the conflict in Iraq, as students yelled, “1-2-3-4-We
don’t want your fuckin’ war-5-6-7-8-Stop the
killing, Stop the hate.”
As the protest grew louder, the Sheriff’s
Department attempted to clear the street to provide the
president’s motorcade a safe entrance into the complex.
When the students refused to obey these verbal commands,
more than 50 police officers in full riot gear were called
to the scene. Dressed in protective helmets, the officers
used their batons to push individuals back from the Tower.
In response to the use of physical force,
students directed their chants at the perceived infringement
of their rights.
“Whose campus—Our campus.
Whose streets—our streets,” they yelled. “Tell
me what democracy looks like—this is what democracy
looks like.”
The struggle between the Sheriff’s
Department and protesters reached its climax when a fire
truck attempted to drive down the street and was blocked
by the crowd. Security personnel were attempting to move
those blocking the truck when three Stanford students
sat down and refused to move.
Officers dragged them out of the road
and bound their hands with plastic ties. Though others
demanded that their peers be released, after 15 minutes,
the three students were placed into a Sheriff’s
Department vehicle and taken away. The fire truck then
reversed and did not proceed down the street.
Sophomore Nicole Wires described the
fire truck as a ploy used by the police.
“They brought a fire truck here
because they wanted to move us out of the streets, and
they knew that they could arrest us if we didn’t
move,” she said. “We didn’t hear any
sirens anywhere after the truck reversed. It didn’t
take another route. It’s absurd.”
Mocking the administration, about an
hour later, members of the San Francisco-based Global
Exchange Group drove a Hummer toward the police barrier
closing off Serra from Galvez. Using a speakerphone and
donning masks of Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, they parodied Bush’s foreign policy and the
level of security on campus.
In its own investigation, The Daily discovered
that the Hoover fellows, along with University President
John Hennessy, who had planned to meet with Bush, were
driven from the complex to Shultz’s private residence.
At approximately 4:30 p.m., Bush arrived at the house
on Delores. He departed campus at around 7:20 p.m. bound
for St. Helena, north of the Bay Area.
Before the fellows and Hennessy were
driven to the meeting, they gathered in front of the complex,
seemingly to greet the President’s motorcade. With
this delegation in plain view, several protestors began
shouting obscenities at the small group and criticizing
them for their support of Bush’s platform.
Based on this, it appears that even the
Hoover fellows invited to the meeting were not aware that
the location of the president’s visit had been changed.
A number of protesters cited specific
complaints with the current administration, calling attention
to these issues with colorful signs and popular slogans.
Some wore stickers with the message “We all deserve
the freedom to marry,” while others held signs stating
“No one died when Clinton lied,” “Show
me freedom! Protect my rights to my body” and “Save
Darfur.”
With hundreds of prospective freshmen
and their families on campus for the weekend, the movement
seemed to draw support from onlookers. Several of these
prospective freshmen participated in the movement. Parents
took photos and applauded the protestors as they proceeded
down Lasuen Mall.
Some students, like incoming freshman
Alejandra Aponte, said they were surprised by the protest’s
high turnout.
“I thought Stanford was really
a bubble, but seeing all the people that are out here
has shown me that people really are concerned,”
she said. “I’m Latina; I’m from Guatemala.
Right now President Bush is doing some very interesting
things in Latin America. We have a phrase ‘For every
pig, there will be a Saturday.’ Basically, his game
is over.”
Though the protest was not formally organized
by any one group, residents of Columbae and members of
Students Taking Action Now: Darfur (STAND), the Student
Labor Action Coalition (SLAC) and Amnesty International
were active in the demonstration. The Stanford Marching
Band also performed in front of the Hoover Institution
and entertained protestors with music and antics.
Co-terminal student and Columbae resident
Tim Telleen-Lawton described his efforts to organize the
event.
“A group of us sat down together
last night at Columbae and we just started dealing with
the details,” he said. “We organized a time,
and Columbae funds helped pay for some of our supplies.
There are approximately 1,000 people around and more than
half of them are protesting. This is a great success.”
In addition to students on campus, adults
from Palo Alto participated in the movement outside the
Hoover complex. Bernice Fischer, a member of the Raging
Grannies, a group of senior citizens that regularly protest
political issues in the local area, described her excitement.
“I’m glad to see all the
students out here,” she said. “I’m in
the Peace and Justice League and the Women’s International
League for Peace and Freedom, and we haven’t had
very many students work with us before. We’ve been
protesting even before Bush entered Iraq.”
Carol Brouillet, a Green
Party candidate for Congress, even brought a 15-foot-tall
cardboard cutout of the Statue of Liberty with a sack
over its head. In imitation of the famous photograph of
human rights violations at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq,
the sign symbolized the atrocities perpetrated by the
United States overseas.
“Today shows there is a groundswell
of opposition to Bush, the regime and its policies,”
Brouillet said.
Several Stanford faculty members observed
the action from afar. Director of the Institute for International
Studies and Political Science Prof. Coit Blacker, who
was not invited to meet with Bush, said, “I love
America, and I love protests.”
The repercussions of the protest are
already being felt statewide. A number of news organization
were present to report on the issue, and State Controller
Steve Westly, the front-running Democratic candidate in
the 2006 California gubernatorial race, remarked on the
controversial nature of issues involving immigration,
energy and Iraq.
“I think there’s going to
be a new wave of student activism around the country,”
he said. “I’m glad to see some of that’s
happening at Stanford. I found the protest peaceful and
well-organized.”
— Additional reporting by James
Hohmann |