The Oberlin Review
<< Front page News December 2, 2005

Oberlin in History

This week’s issue should indicate that Oberlin students are, if anything, a coalition of activists. This week’s Oberlin History shows how Obies will be Obies, be it in 1996 or 2005. Relive the drama of the Oberlin Animal Rights protest that was a drama in and of itself. Relive the magic that is Oberlin.
     — The News Team

Oberlin in History
Dec. 6, 1996

Members of Oberlin Animal Rights are protesting introductory neuroscience labs in which holes are drilled in the skulls of anesthisized rats. Protests began before Thanksgiving and will continue as long as labs of this type are held.

At a protest Nov. 19, the group of protestors, numbering just over a dozen people, plastered the door to the lab with anti-vivisection posters and anti-animal experimentation slogans such as “kill vivisection” and “rats have rights.”

Vivisection is experimentation on live animals. A protester dressed as a scientist holding a bloody syringe stood above another protestor pretending to be a rat.

Junior Aaron Simmons, OAR liaison, said that although the protests take place at vivisection labs, the group is against animal experimentation in general at Oberlin College.

The labs are taught by Professor of Neuroscience Dennison Smith and Visiting Assistant Professor of Neuroscience Albert Borroni.

Borroni agreed to let Simmons read [their] statement, saying, “[The neuroscience students] have to decide for themselves and be able to justify their own actions.”

The statement, while stating that the protestors “understand the importance of scientific research and endeavors,” also states that “no end can ever justify the abuse and nonconcensual termination of a living being.”

According to sophomore Josh Raisler Cohn, no attempt was made to enter the laboratory because “there was a good chance we’d be suspended.”

Smith, who refused entrance to protestors during last Tuesday’s lab, said, “Last year you [animal rights protestors] came in here and disrupted my class. Initiate a dialogue in another context and we’ll talk.”

“It’s not a place for a discussion,” Borroni agreed, “although discussion is a good thing to happen. I think if you have something to say you should get a forum to address it.”

“They all come for the rats,” [Randy] Bartlett [a first-year enrolled in the lab] said. “Nobody protests cockroaches. They don’t care about the cockroaches.”

A protestor who overheard Bartlett’s assesment disagreed. “I care about cockroaches,” she said. “I can’t kill a mosquito.”


 
 
   

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