Des Moines Register 12/07/06 ISU study-abroad program at risk after report of assault By LISA ROSSI An Iowa State University study-abroad program is at risk of being discontinued after an ISU student returned early after reports of repeated harassment and one assault during her experience abroad. Trevor Nelson, director of the ISU study- abroad center, said he has plans to meet with students who participated in the LAS Semester in Florence, Italy, operated in conjunction with the British Institute in Florence, to solicit their views on the experience. "We're concerned about students who go on our programs (and if they) are fully informed on the conditions they experience when they go there," he said. "We look very carefully if it would be in the best interest of the university and students to continue or discontinue the program." Amber Troxell, 22, returned to her home in Williamsport, Pa., Saturday after she said she was harassed and assaulted in Florence to the point she was scared to leave her apartment. She left for the semester-long trip Sept. 1. "I don't think we had much warning," said Troxell, an ISU senior, explaining that once in Florence, she was told "all American women are dirty. They think American women are like prostitutes." Nelson confirmed that ISU paid $500 to cover the cost of Troxell's early plane ticket home, but said it was in the best interest of Troxell, and not because of the assault. He said he has not heard a lot of complaints from students in the Florence program about safety, and said confrontation abroad is as likely as it is in the United States. "We're sending 1,100 students overseas each year," he said. "If you send 1,100 students to Des Moines each year, there would be incidents of harassment. ... In the 10 years we've operated this program, we have not had a situation like this happen before." Troxell said she filed a police complaint with officials in Florence after a vendor in a well-lit area of the city made sexual advances toward her before he grabbed her and wrestled her for the items she said she purchased. "What was most disturbing to me - there were people standing around. They just looked and watched," Troxell said. The issue of the treatment of American women abroad has gained the attention of study- abroad officials and women's studies programs nationwide. Several programs offer explicit advice to women traveling abroad on their Web site. Roblyn Rawlins, an assistant professor of sociology at the College of New Rochelle, in New York state, has advocated study-abroad programs work harder to provide opportunities for American women and women from host countries to interact. Those relationships can help U.S. women interpret messages they receive from men in foreign countries, in addition to helping them address stereotypes host countries may have about them, she said. "You don't want to dissuade young women from going abroad, because it is useful for them," Rawlins said. "On the other hand, if they are completely unprepared for the possibility of public harassment ... then they lose some of the opportunity they might have to really experience the culture when they are abroad because they are trying so hard to protect themselves." Troxell said ISU did not take adequate measures to prepare her for perceptions of U.S. women abroad, an issue that has attracted the attention of ACCESS, an Ames organization that stands for Assault Care Center Extending Shelter and Support. Members of that organization said Tuesday they were planning to meet with ISU study-abroad officials to discuss ways to prepare students for their trips. In addition to some sort of pre-departure orientation, Nelson said ISU currently provides a handbook to all study-abroad students that covers "the whole gamut" of safety issues and includes content on sexual harassment. Reporter Lisa Rossi can be reached at (515) 232-2383 or lrossi@dmreg.com