Theatre to tickle your funnybone See Pages 6 & 7 Oregon Daily Emerald Friday. November 7, 1986 Eugene. Oregon Volume 88, Number 47 Pay equity law expected to pass under Goldschmidt governorship By Chris Norred Of th« Emerald Betsy Boykin is a part-time student. Like most students, she doesn't have a lot of money to spare. But unlike most students. Boykin is a 35-year-old single mother of two teen-agers. Boykin works full time at the University as a clerical assistant in the Office of Business Affairs in Oregon Hall, but her paycheck barely covers the living expenses of one person, much less three. Boykin is far from the typical student, but she thinks of herself in another context in which she believes she represents the norm. Boykin is a "typical" clerical worker in many ways: She is a woman, she is a mother, she is single, she is intelligent — and she is under paid. She has worked at the University for the last two years, and she takes home about $800 a month. "Most of the time I've berm single, we’ve had to live in subsidized housing because I can't af ford the standard rental rates," Boykin said. The money is so tight that budgeting is almost impossible, she added. "Invariably something unexpected comes up.” Boykin said. "My son needs a new pair of shoes, or my daughter has strep throat and needs to go to the doctor, and 1 have to pay for that. We're literally living from paycheck to paycheck." Boykin's case is typical among clerical workers, not only at the University but at all state agencies in Oregon, said Margarette Mullock, the Oregon Public Employees Union research direc tor and former chairperson of the state Com parable Worth Task Force But with the new administration headed by newly elected Gov. Neil Goldschmidt, Hallock sees hope for real improvement in the pay situa tion of undervalued clerical workers in the state. "There will be a pay equity initiative in the 1987 Legislature.” Hallock said. The proposal will include an upgrade in pay for most of the undervalued state employees and the establish ment of a separate fund solely for the purpose of making those pay raises. Hallock said. If the new comparable worth proposal is ap proved. it will signal the culmination of what Hallock calls a ‘three-year poker game.” The fight for comparable worth has con tinued since 1983. but the terms of the battle have changed somewhat. The term “comparable worth” was a euphemism meaning that female-dominated jobs and male-dominated jobs should be valued equal ly. The term now used, “pay equity," is not ex actly the same thing. Hallock said. "Comparable worth took on some unfor tunate baggage, namely the notion that all wages should be determined by a point factor system." Hallock said. "We only want to use the point fac tor system to find the undervalued jobs and raise their wages." The pay equity "poker game" began in 1983 when the Comparable Worth Task Force com pleted a study of all jobs in state agencies and found that systematic discrimination caused large differences between the pay for jobs filled mostly by men and those jobs filled mostly by Women, although the complexity and responsibility of the jobs were fairly equal, Hallock said. "There is a 20 percent to 30 percent dif ference in pay between an entry-level clerical worker and an entry-level groundskeeper or maintenance worker, for example," Hallock said. Beyond the entry level, as the study examin ed higher-status jobs, it found the differences in pay began to disappear "At the management levels, the study showed no systematic dif ferences." Hallock said. "That’s because there are relatively no women in those positions." The 1983 Task Force recommended the state Continued on Page 3 Recount may take House away from Democrats By Shawn Wirt/. I IN (W Willi the l.isl absentee ballots counted I Venn rats took cnnlnd (it the Oregon IliitiM' of Representatives In ,11-2‘t. Iml losing Repuhlii .in Rolxirt Mi Daniel w ill ask fur .1 rei mini hi* said, If <• lix.mili! finds his :i5-vote loss ns actually 11 win. ihi* House may lx* tied, Mi Daniel lost lln* Dislrii I ‘>1 llimsi* mmI in klamath Kails In Dciuin r.il Iternil* Aumns Tin* fin.il vote was 7.7M5 lo 7.7*»*i Stall* law n*i|tiin*s n Iris* ns mini it lln* margin is within uni'-fiflli of I percent. nr .12 votes fur the District 5.1 seal,ac 1 nrding tu the klamath (am lit v 1 Irrk Mi l).inn*l will hnvi< In )mv $15 |H*r pnx mi l (nr a recount. nr n tot.il nl Sl.OHO lm tin* 72 precinct* in his district Democrat \am \ Wrnmn nf Ashland destroyed any hopes nt 11 Republican m.ipirit\ Shi*, iv.is finally dix Uirsnl tin* winner in tin* Dislrii I 52 IIiiiim* run* Thursihv evening .i(li*r ImniIkik Repuhlii an Kiwi Oltn In 7.172 Tin* “si en.trio nf a stalemate ixitween lln* purlins" 1 until result in i.n-.s|X!rtki*rs said Phil koisliiiK. press sis.Hilary In I It him* Speaker Vbw katz At press time T1iur.sil.iv night. a 1 aui us nl ill nt-wly elected Democrats 1 hose hat* as i Inn sc Speaker. but one. Jeff Cilmour. frnm Dislrii I ,'ltl in Salem. held nut. Tu become speaker. kal/. has In havn all 11 voles heisling said Cilmour wauled tu become 1 hairman nl the House Ways and Means < jnmmittoe, currently held by Wayne i awbush from District .Mi in Hood River. Democrat John Hagnariol and Republican Duane Herenslun shared the speakership in the session of the Washington state legislature when the House was divid ed -t‘l-40. An equal partisan split could also result in conservative Democrats or liberal Republicans switching sides lo form a majority keisling said, lie couldn't speculate on who would have the advantage in that situation, he said. "There’s actual ly only a few of either (who would switch) " “There will lx? a recount," said House Minority leader l-arrv Campbell The recount may be paid for by the Republican party, he said * Continued on Page 3 Atiyeh, Hatfield to attend ground-breaking ceremony By Stan Nelson Of thr Kimrrald Sen. Mark Hatfield. R-Ore.. and Gov. Vic Atiyeh are among the dignitaries at the University today for the official ground-breaking ceremony of the University's new $45.3-million science complex. The ceremony, which is from 2:30 to 4 p.m.. will be held at the science court yard on Hast 13th Ave., one-half block east of University Street. In the event of rain, the ceremony will be held in the EMU Ballroom. The groundbreaking caps a nearly two-year wait since the Department of Energy first granted the University $3.3 million in November 1984 to assist in the planning of the complex, said David Rowe. University Planning director. The DOE granted the University an ad ditional $8 179 million in July 1985, but the funding was temporarily held up because of the Gramm-Rudman amendment. However, Hatfield and Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore.. were able to win the release of the money for the complex, said John Moseley. University vice presi dent for research. "Both Hatfield and Packwood were essential" in the advancement of the complex. Rowe said. "Without them, it would not have happened." It was not until May 27 that a final agreement was signed on behalf of the federal government, and the University accepted the balance of the KEY Propoxd Landtcapc Element* E titling Building* New Building* Science Walk (irapkk mutiny of Unlvcnity Planning OffRca $33.3-million granl on June 5. Rowe said. The funding should arrive at the University in mid-November, he added. The funding will finance the construe tion of Science V, a physics building, and Science VI, a geology building. The funding also will pay for the extensive renovation of existing science buildings, including construction of a new. more prominent entry for the science library. Fine arts and architec tural studios and the Museum of Natural History facility displaced by the science construction will be replaced with the funding. The Oregon legislature also allocated $12 million for the complex from state lottery proceeds • designated for ■MMHBi 1 economic development. The money will pay for the construction of Science IV-A, a computer science building, and Science IV-B, a biotechnica! building. Kowe called the new science buildings "one of the most exciting things that's happened at the University in a long time. Since the buildings are being built .Continued on Page 9 ; i.v.rr fctvu#