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OR 343-1288 _EUGENE DOWNTOWN_ IBM Compatible Computers V*^*995, }nc|uc|ing College WORD PERFECT fXt** Sharp. Atari, and Amiga PCs and a lull line of computer accessories. UQ •ddMlOM *M4 Cemete ry Continued from Page 1 Department. While Tilby did not have any details about the encounter, he did say that the officers just checked with An chor to find out if he had heard anything. According to Ruth Holmes. Anchor's supervisor and chair woman of the Plot Owner's Association, this last episode is a clear case of police harassment. "It was quiet," she said. "They came in and woke Victor up and insisted on searching the building. He cooperated with them completely. They just want htm out." she con tinued. "I'm glad we're getting him out of there." The controversy surrounding Anchor's presence in the cemetery has nothing to do with his having to leave. After con suiting with the Eugene Building and Permits office, Molmes determined that the toolshed doesn't have enough room to qualify as a dwelling unit under the city's building code. "There are dorm rooms smaller than that." Holmes said with an ironic laugh. She added that Anchor was an effective deterrent to vandalism. "It is a shame he has to leave. It was working out for everybody. Vic-' tor and us." she continued. "He wasn't hurting anybody, but somebody always has to make waves." Anchor is still an employee of the Plot Owners Association. Instead of being there 24 hours a day, he now will be there only when them is maintenance work to be done. hmerald III* photo Victor Anchor is still an employee of the Plot Owners Associa tion, but left bis residence in the cemetery Monday. Feminism Continued from Page t that the ERA would legalize homosexual marriages, require women to serve in combat and make gender a prohibited con sideration under the law rather than its current status as a suspect classification, she said. A less radical interpretation Repairs • Buy and Sell STEREO WORKSHOP 1409 Main SpangtMM 741*1597 * COPIES* Krazy Kats Try Um! M4 East 1 Jlh st. STUFF IT \.\ EATER V lloim-m.iJi I ih*J • Reasonable I’ruo | SrrvKc • Oinmg 1219 Alder St 343-3062 could have been emphasized and would have garnered more support, Mansbridge said. For instance, the War Powers Act gives the military final authori ty on who serves in combat, and would have superseded the ERA. she said. Supporters didn’t take the more moderate approach because of the radicalism. Mansbridge said. The radicalism was strengthened by something Mansbridge calls "cognitive dissonance,” mak ing an issue seem more impor tant than it is to justify one's involvement. "Social movements, which require people to spend lots of time for very little personal reward, will produce among their members a conviction that the thing they're doing will have major affect.” Mansbridge said. Initiations work the same way in fraternities and sororities — you've given so much out for this it must be pretty good,” she said. "This will create institutional deafness. People just don’t listen to what others are saying." Taking a less radical ap proach is not selling out. Manshridge said. Instead, in corporating the concerns of less radical women may be the best approach in passing the amend ment as well as putting "sisterhood into effect in the most meaningful way." Mary Prances Berry, professor of law and history at Howard University and author of "Why KKA Failed: Politics, Women's Rights, and the Amending Pro cess of the Constitution” (In diana University Press), also believes the radical approach was the wrong strategy, she said. "They did not understand that issues of the role of women, the draft, or the nature of the family went to the heart of what many people believed." she said in a Dec. 3 Chronicle of Higher Kducation article. Mimi Johnson, director of the Center for the Study of Women in Society, agreed with Mansbridge and Berry "The radical approach to fighting people who were worried about family issues frightened a lot of people away from the ERA.” she said. "It also leads to a total non recognition of gender dif ferences.” something not in the best interests of women, she said. "1 don't like to put it that we've gone too far. but a single tack is not effective. One has to balance.” "I'm one of those who see the ERA as an important symbol. It strikes me as a relatively empty symbol.” said Barbara Pope, director of the Women's Studies Progam. "I’m not happy to hear they'll do it." NOW’s celebrity-studded an niversary celebration typifies some of the discontent with NOW and its renewed drive to ratify the ERA. "In form and structure, the three-hour-long performance was sort of an Academy Awards of feminism," according to a Dec. 3 New York Times article. More than 100 film and televi sion stars entertained an au dience of 2.800 guests who paid from $25 to $500 for tickets. This exhibition of privilege and showiness alienates those who view NOW and the ERA as disconnected from the op pressive daily reality of many women. "There’s a lot of poor women and lesbians and women of col or who don't feel NOW really addresses thoir concerns,” said Harb Ryan, volunteer coor dinator with the Rape Crisis Network. Kylene Folsom, director of Women in Transition, believes the older women that she serves who are re-entering school "fit into the feminist movement." but don't necessarily have the same objectives as NOW feminists, she said. "Some of them wouldn’t look the people of NOW up because they would see them as too radical and not addressing cen tral issues," she said. Personally, “I didn't feel like I would fit into the organiza tion. 1 did feel it was very mid dle class and white," Folsom said. Folsom calls herself a “strong feminist” but said she doesn't push her politics on others, something other feminists have been accused of. "If 1 put that on to them they wouldn't be able to say what they choose and need to say about their lives,” she said. Ryan also believes feminism has a negative connotation, she said. "There’s women and men who say. 'I don’t want anything to do with it.' But when you talk about specific issues which are considered feminist issues, they agree with them,” she said. Additionally, some militant feminists within NOW have threatened many of both sexes who consider them man-hating lesbians. "That's used against feminists and it puts the perspective on men instead of women," Ryan countered. "It can be used to divide us against ourselves. The focus isn't that women are man hating. but they’re trying to point out all the woman hating.” she said. "For every woman, no matter what her sexual preference, if you step out of line too much they’re going to call you a les bian. That's a pretty powerful tool." said Betsy Brown, a jour nalist with the Feminist Press, a bi-monthly newspaper publish ed in Eugene. One mistake that is often made is that NOW is not the same as the women’s move ment. Brown said. "The women's movement is incredibly diverse and there is no organization that can speak for all women." she said. "Because the women's move ment is so diverse, there are problems with racism, with elitism, with selling out. But what movement doesn't?” ONLY s4.75 ANY 12” 1 ITEM PIZZA Extra llam Only $1.00 687-8600 1432 Orchard Eugene ARCADIAN FARMS N.W Hone Riding Ijnutons "An Allen»*l»ve Emdw" W* MtiuMM mw l oil) rider Mnrv Kurliiuki ***>' IU.tr, Hill 4114-5360