Rally for homeless draws ‘Queen of Hobos* See Page 3 Oregon Daily Emerald Tuesday, December 9. 1986 Eugene. Oregon Volume 88, Number 69 Council adopts report on library By Jolayne Houtz CM the Kmerald Members of the Eugene City Council's library committee will start considering a new location for the Eugene Public Library after the council unanimously adopted a preliminary report on the library’s future Monday. The report calls for the expan sion of the library to a two- to four-story building with 90,000 to 120,000 square feet, about tri ple the size of the existing building. Council members initially disagreed over whether to adopt the report or to just accept it. Two councilors expressed con cern that adopting the plan could commit the council to too much too soon. Councilor freeman llolmer said adopting the plan would be going too far by forcing the council to act on the report's specific recommendations, such as establishing branch libraries within five years of building a new central library and tripling the size of the new facility. "There's lots of unknowns that we want to work on.” said councilor Dick Hansen, who also initially opposed adoption of the report. But councilor Emily Schue said the report would be a basis for the second phase of the com mittee's work, not a final recommendation. Councilor Cynthia Wooten said adopting the report would be an incentive to the 13-member committee to con tinue its analysis. By just accep ting the report. Wooten said, the council would be sending mixed signals to the committee and to the public about whether Photo by loiavM limit* Richard Gold, left, and Nan Cohen were pari of a group who picketed Monday in front of the library. The group supports the new report, but opposes reduced library funding that has forced the library to cut hours. council members actually in tended to support the project. A survey sent to 800 people regarding the report netted 189 responses. Of those. 155 mostly agreed with the report. 22 somewhat agreed, five somewhat disagreed and seven mostly disagreed. The current library, built in 1959, is inadequate to serve the needs of Eugene's population, which has more than doubled since the library opened, said Jim Saul, vice chairman of the Future of Our Library commit tee. The building is the second most heavily used public facili ty in Eugene aside from Mahlon Sweet Airport, he added. While some consideration has been given to remodeling the existing building, staff members discovered this fall that asbestos was used as a fire retardant in all the library ceilings. The Future of Our Library committee now will come up with a final recommendation, possibly as early as next fall, in cluding a specific site proposal and a cost estimate. Feminists say new ERA drive wrong direction for NOW By Shawn Wirtz Of the Kmvraid Editor's note: This is the first of two articles on feminism. To day’s article looks into the feminist reaction to the ERA. Tomorrow's article will explore the direction the women's movement is taking. The National Organization for Women celebrated its 20th an niversary last week and vowed to renew the drive to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment in January, but some claim the fire has died out of feminism and women will have to broaden their base of support to pull off a victory. Congress passed the ERA in 1972, but the amendment failed when only 35 of the required 38 states had ratified the ERA by the deadline of June 30. 1982. Some feminists, while they support the ERA. believe another effort would be unsuc cessful and may hurt the feminist movement. "It’s a tactical mistake. We made no progress on the KRA from 1976 to 1982,” said fane Mansbridge, an associate pro fessor of political science and sociology at Northwestern University. Her book. "Why We Lost the ERA" was recently released by the University of Chicago Press. Mansbridge believes there is less support now for the ERA than before. "In the unratified states, the ERA seemed actually to decline. In the ratified states, several legislatures tried to res cind.” she said. While there are more women in state legislatures, women "will never again have that honeymoon period (they) had in 1972 when 20 states ratified,” Mansbridge said “In that early flurry, often legislatures didn't even hold hearings. When they did often only the proponents testified. That’s never going to happen again," she said. While the first ERA struggle turned NOW into the strongest non-governmental women's organization, it will face an even better-organized opposing coalition of conservatives and religious groups this time around. Mansbridge said. The only chance at success is if the drive were to generate an official report from one of the houses of Congress, enumerating a point-by-point interpretation of the ERA “to reassure conservatives and the mainstream legislators that the sponsors of the ERA did not in tend to mandate funding for abortion, drafting women into combat, etcetera,” Mansbridge said. "The grass roots supporters accepted a radical interpreta tion." Mansbridge added. As a result, supporters did not dispute opponents' claims Turn to Feminism, Page 4 Caretaker leaves toolshed after letter controversy calls attention to dwelling By Ted Fuller Of Ihr fmtrald Victor Anchor moved out of the Eugene Pioneer Cemetery toolshed Mon day after it was determin ed that the building could not meet Eugene building code requirements for a dwelling unit. Anchor, an employee of the Pioneer Cemetery Plot Owner’s Association, took up residence in the toolshed last summer in an effort to prevent van dalism in the historic cemetery on the southwest side of campus. Hugene police officer. The incident occurred when Anchor, a Vietnam vet. was unexpectedly awakened in the middle of the night by a Fugene police officer. After the of ficer ordered him to leave the premises. Anchor threatened to douse the officer with gasoline and bum him. Anchor realiz ed later that he had over reacted and apologized to the officer. Anchor had another en counter with police on Thanksgiving Day. He told an Oregon Daily ‘It is a shame he has to leave. It was working out for everybody, Victor and us. He wasn’t hurting anybody, but somebody always has to make waves. ’ — Ruth Holmes He is caught in the middle of a controversy that erupted after a female stu - dent wrote a letter to the editor (ODE 11686) describing how she felt uneasy when Anchor wat ched her walk by. The let ter also warned students to avoid the area. The student wrote the letter after discussing the incident with campus security personnel and finding out about a run-in Anchor had wit h a Km i! raid photographer that he was rousted out of bed at two in the morning by officers responding to a report of a woman scream ing. He also said the police officers accused him of having the woman in the toolshed. Kugene police officers did make contact with the caretaker concerning the report, said Sgt. Chuck Tilby of the Eugene Police Turn to Cemetery, Page 4 (.raphn by Lorraine *alh