Oregon DAILY EMERALD Friday. October 26, IWO Hugcnc. Oregon Volume l>2, Issue 44 Members of Students for (he Ethical Treatment of Animals are not pleased that they are un able to view animal hold ing facilities in Streisinger Hall. See story, Page 3 With just 12 days left until the Nov. f> election, and with the fate of the Trojan nuclear power plant hanging in the bal ance. two nationally known experts warned students Thursday of the dangers surrounding the plant's continued opera tion. See story. Page 4 Entertainment Avalon is a first rat** him that r.aptimrs the lii uls ami triumphs of an Eastern European immi grant family in Baltimore in the 1940s and Mis. See review. Page ft Sports The Stanford Cardinal. 2-5. invades Autzen Sta dium Saturday to take on the 5-2 Ducks, hoping to improve ori an inconsis tent season. See Oregon Football Roster. Section B Almanac Today is the last dav to change grade options or to change credits in vari able-credit courses with out a $10 fee It is also the last day to submit do< tnr al oral defense applic a tions (Graduate School. Room 125 Chapman). Parents speak out against measures Bells say daughter died because of Indiana law By Daralyn Trappe Emerald Reporter The parents of an Indiana teen-ager who died in 1*188 after obtaining an illegal abortion urged students on Thursday to vote against Oregon slate ballot measures 8 and to William and Karen Boll, appearing at a Stu dents for Choice Rally in the KMU Courtvard. said their daughter Her ky was a victim of an Indi ana law that requires parental notification before an abortion can be performed on a woman under the age of 18 On Nov t>. Oregonians will vote on Ballot Measure 10 whii h. if passed, would put a similar law into place. Measure H would make all alror lions illegal, except in cases of reported rape or incest or to save the life of a pregnant woman Proponents of Measure 10 sa\ it would improve communication between a daughter and hei par ents William and Karen Bell disagree ''Becky Bell is proof th.it these laws don't work." William Bell said. Proponents of the measure "think this will make our daughter come to us.' but they re wrong.'' he said "We would have voted for it two years ago Karen Bell said "But we know it didn't force her to tell us "I wish I didn’t have to be here today to tell you this. Iiul I don't want this to happen to any one else. Karen Bell said Becky became pregnant at 17 When she went to a women's olinit for an ahor tion. she was told that tier parents would have to lie notified Because Becky didn't want to disap point tier parents she did not tell them but in stead had an illegal abortion. Karen Bell said Within a few days of the illegal operation, she became ill Six days after the abortion. William and Karen Bell took their daughter to a hospital She still refused to tell them what had happened She died later that night A coroner i ailed to tell them the cause of Becky's death "We couldn't believe this happened to us, Karen Bell said " We're a good family We com municate '' Turn to ABORTION. Page 6 I’HoIm bt Sfgn PimIiiii K.irvn Hell and her husband William spoke on campus Thursday, urging stu lents to vote against ballot measures 8 and 10. South African urges support for sanctions Phulit b\ Sr tin I'irtliiii fatinui Meer. a visiting South African st.hol ar. said the world should maintain its pres sure against apartheid. Says apartheid, racial injustice are weakening By Cathy Peterson Emerald Reporter With the entire non-white South Afri i .in population inhabiting It percent of the c ountry 's hall a million square miles land redistribution is potentially one of the biggest issues fai ing South Africans, an internationally regarded human rights authority said Thursday South Afric an l atima Meer told a Wil lamette Hall audience that Westerners might v iew black South Africans as ' c al Ions" for wanting a share of the country's land, but to bear in mind the inequalities in c urrent land distribution The average black peasant has three ac res, while the average white farmer has more than 1.000, she said "We have a rac nil structure in terms of vvhic h every amenity exists in .1 state of gross and intolerable imbalance." Meer said. Meer. vs bo is of Indian descent, is the t'mversitv's fifth Carlton and Wilberta Kiplev Savage Visiting Professor in the International Relations and Peace Depart men! She is teac long two courses at the University this tall "Women in South Africa" and "Current Issues in Peace in,iking I in us tin (-onfli< t and (change in Southern Afru a the Middle, lntliti and Trinidati University President Myles Brand. who introduced Mctir called her t omhinution ul academics and activism "a model ttir us at llif 1 'niversitv Meer tlcsi ribetl a history ut rat ism anti separation in Smitli Afrit.i tfating to coloniali/ation She said European mis sinnaries in Afrit a draint'd the iimtinriit til culture. and were tile lirst III believe that "tlie heathens could not be raised They also introduced violence anti prop ert\ rights, neither ul whit li the < ultiire had seen Indore Meer saitl The African philosophy ol Ubuntu. whit h weaves together humans anti the natural environment in a halani e, t lashetl with ndigious Calvinism, t apitalism and inilivitliialism, all |)hilosophies hrtnighl to Africa by European colonists “Survival of the fittest bet amt* the real itv ol the Afrit an continent." she saitl "Prom that bat kground we approat h rat ism in South Afrit a today." Turn to MEER. Page 11