>rofessor says alcohol part of 'worrisome' riots * VOLVO Owners Spring Maintenance Special Maine Import .0 Alpine Import / /ServiceV Yp \0 cr Offers a FREE Safety Inspection Springfield • 12th & Mam • 7?6 1808 Call lor appointment • ALL WORK GUARANTEED c ffi* VOL VOc^ypecuUisf i i 'MORE' fllUK^ The Saga Continues WEDNESDAY NIGHT at TRACK TOWN PIZZA (jet a medium (12") One-Ingredient Pl*i* lor ONI Y (Just atk for the HpetUl) S595 (AHill Inrfifdtrnt .701 Why settle for less... than the BEST!?! FREE DELIVERY (Limited delivery Area) 484-2799 1809 Franklin Blvd. b> lurrHI |wUi By Christopher Blair Emerald Reporter U it something in the air? In the water? In the beer? Whatever the cause, fights or riots on or near campus are Ire coining more and mure fre quent Officials at the Eugene Police Department and the Office of Public Safety say the past few years on campus have been rel atively quiet This year, however, has seen three "ugly" incidents where groups of people become vio lent toward each other, their surroundings or even the po lice. Oases in point: • a riot resulting from almost tot) people attempting to crash a collection of parties near 14th Avenue and Kerry Street the night of May El’D officers Open 24 Hours kinko's Grr.ii tocri Great prooir 860 E 15th taa ?89« * MJNOCRUND * GREAT f OH PARTIES AND BIRTHDAYS 50 VIDEO GAMES ALL GAMES WORK WITH NICKELS ADMISSION'1 40 STM STRUT RUROC MARKET EURIHE • U3-R4M BUSY? GET TAN QUICK!!! we ve goi your tan when you want it1 SunShowcr >o campus m 1131 • •>« i im tp0tm* >y »HU I were called in to control the crowd, which grew to between 4(H) and r>()() people, most of them high school and Universi ty students When the officers arrived, some of the rioters at the scene threw bottles and cans at the of ficers and their cars Windows were smashed and the street was littered with broken bottles and cans One University student was sent to the hospital and re ceived 15 stitches to her fore head Two full shifts of Ki’D of ficers were at the scene wearing helmets by the riot's end: two students were arrested and charged with rioting and anoth er for disorderly conduct. • a snowball fight the night of Feb 2 between dorm residents on the "Uumpv Lumpy" field near Bean Complex that turned into a chaotic melee ns 200 stu dents lined Agate Street and started pelting passing cars, pe destrians and bicyclists with snow One car slid into a power pule as a result, and hundreds of dollars in additional damage was done to a dorm window and car windshields. When Kl’f) officers attempted to re route traffic, they were forced to leave as the snowballs were turned on them • a tight between members of the beta Theta l‘i and Chi f'si fraternities the night of Jan. 14 that resulted in the arrest of one fraternity member for lining a minor in possession of alcohol. both houses sustained bro ken windows and other minor damage Incidentally, the Uni versity placed both houses on "social probation." limiting their social function and rush privileges. It probably would lie easy to label the incidents as "crowd mentality” gone awry. However, a University soci ology professor said the ten dency to label the actions of a group as "mob" behavior is not an accurate way to view the group's actions if it turns vio lent "I really hesitate to use words like 'crowd psychology' and 'mob mentality.' " said lack Whalen, an assistant soci ology professor. "There's a ten dency when people do things to label them as crazy or im moral, and that's not really ac curate." "If we want to figure out how to stop these tilings, we should stop thinking of them as crowd psychology.” Whalen said. "That doesn't give you a good way to stop. Whatever they did. it seemed to he the right thing to do." Whalen said sociologists pre tor the term "collective ac tion." which means that mem bers of a group will tend to fol low the actions of others around them. This behavior is normal enough. Whalen said Sometimes, however, the be havior can lie violent Whalen cited an incident from the "free speech" riots at Berkley in the late 1 otitis as one example of collective at lion When a student was arrested for distributing civil rights lit erature, a group of students peacefully sal around the po lice car he was held in for -4 hours until he was set free "But the people who w'ere ar rested for throwing bottles are probably asking themselves 'What in the hell did 1 get my self into?' he said "The people who sat around the po lice car knew quite well what they were doing "The people at Berkeley were guided by deeply felt moral principles." Whalen said. “If there was any code guiding the people on May 5 it was an alcohol-assisted anger they felt in having their party interrupted." Whalen used recent demon strations over U S. policy in Central America and animal re search as collective action on campus guided by moral feel ln« The situations were similar to the May 5 riot and the snow hall fight because police showed up to block the "goal” of the group. Both the partiers and snowball throwers were "having a good time.” But certain factors in tin? May 5 riot and the earlier fraternity fight, most notably alcohol, made the two incidents, and perhaps the snowball fight, go awry. "At the same time there is an increasing concern for alcohol abuse, there is more abuse, at least displayed in public,” Whalen said. "I'm not quite sure why that is. "Why people feel that they have to drink themselves into oblivion, that's disturbing to me." he said. "Two of these student collective actions have been concentrated around de fending alcohol abuse, and at tacking other students in the case of those two fraternities.” Elaine Green, acting dean of students, said a variety of things are being looked into concerning the incidents, spe cifically the recent riot inci dent. One of the factors under investigation is the banning of kegs from Greek houses earlier this year, which may have con tributed to parties being moved off campus in settings with less supervision. "Bart of the question would lie were there these types of in cidents before the keg deci sion." Green said. "That kind of behavior, being unrespon sive to reasonable requests from police, is inexcusable wherever it takes place.” "What has happened in re cent years is perhaps an in creasing enthusiasm for this kind of self-destructive behav ior.” Whalen said. ”1 know people want to see some master trend here I'm not sure I see one yet. 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