Oregon DAILY EMERALD Monday. December V I WO feugcnc. Oregon Volume Y2. Usuc h7 335S^^^~ The pattern used to be standard. College-bound students would put in their four years and then join the work force. However, attaining a bachelors degree in four years has bec.oine much less common than it used be Out of the University 's freshman class of 1984-85, somewhere be tween 16 and 19 percent of students completed un dergraduate work in 1988. according to the University registrar of fice. See story. Page 4 A visiting Spanish Civil War veteran on Thursday brought home the reality of war during his lecture to a freshman seminar class. Bob Reed, now 75, fought in the war from 1937 to '38 when he was only 22. He said he was inspired to help slop the spread of fascism over Europe. Sec story. Page 5 Thu old adage you live by the jumper and die by the jumper was never more evident than Satur dav'.s Oregon-Missouri game The Ducks managed to hit only four of lf> three point bombs, tailing to the Tigers 65-58 before 13.330 fans in one of the nation's toughest places Missouri's Hearnes Ten ter See story. Page 9 Oregon’s women's basketball team won its first games of the season, halting a seven-game road losing streak with a 62-60 win over Weber State Friday, and a 74-60 triumph at Gon/.aga on Sunday. The victory evened the Ducks’ record at 2-2. Riv ing them their first wins away from McArthur Court since a Feb. 3 road win last season. See story. Page 9 Regionally SEATTLE (AH) - United States Ambassa dor to China lames Lilley called demonstrators against Chinese human rights abuses "cowards’’ and suggested that one man. a Tibetan, "go back to China and serve Chi na.” See story. Page 7 Rallying against racism * * i i r'rst i 1 nis ISNJT 1 Xv\L I i Paul Dinberg (left) and Karen Seybold ivert' two of about 40 University students and community members who showed their opposition to racism Friday by rallying out side the Howdy Pardner tavern in Eugene. The protest was sparked by an incident that occurred one \ ear ago. w hen lour Spanish speaking w omen w ere told by a tavern em ployee that they would have to leave if they did not speak English The four women re cently filed a law suit against the tavern Photo by Andre Kanieri Professor works on transition By Joe Kidd t me mid Politics t ditor For must Oregonians. Klee tion Day brought a sigh of re lief No more campaign slash •ids on TV during thr evening news Loss political junk mail to sort through Hot for l'diversity economics professor F.d Whitelaw Klei lion l)av was his last r hence to breathe before taking the plunge Democrat Barbara Roberts' rise to the governorship on Nov t> brought Whitelaw a place on the governor elect's transition team And with the appointment came ‘10-hour workweeks lull of never ending meetings, studies, analyses, and attempts at poln v formula lion Onlv hours after Roberts' vic tory the governor elect called on Whitelaw. -t't. and a handful of others to make up the leader ship of her transition team, a group that gives "advice and Turn to WHITELAW, Page 8 Dean expresses regret over apology request Chapin says Holland not to blame By Bob Waite Emerald Reporter l.iin school .Vssch date I lean (ihapin ( lark said Friday he regretted requesting an in structor to apologize abmi! referring to bis homosexuality anil gay .mil lesbian acth ism in his class lectures Instructor Greg lohnson ret entlv read a statement i lea red by ( dark to bis class a! ter students from the class complained about Johnson's dis< ussion of homosexual its in class last month Clerk said he did not blame lair school Dean Maurice Holland lor the conlroversx "Dean Holland has been a scapegoat." (.'lark said, referring to the tails made by several protesters for Holland's resign.i turn "I feel it has been important for me to step forward." Some of fohnson’s students complained privately to professor Mary Lawrence. Johnson's supervisor, that tJie poem he read. "The Fairies are Dancing all Over the World," and a statement from The Radical Fairies, a gay activist group, were not ap propriate to his Oct 11 lecture. The lecture was coincident with National Coming Out Day. Johnson read the poem and the statement after discussing flowers v. Ilartlwick. a ll.S. Supreme Court i ase regarding the au thority of a state to impose criminal penal ties on gay and lesbian sexual acts. He sub sequently told the class he is gay Johnson was notified tliat some of his students had complained about that part of the lecture He then road a statement he wrote to the class after it was cleared by I .aw re nee and Clark University President Myles brand recent ly asked the Office of Affirmative Action and F.qual Opportunity to review the inci IIIMH Kesults of ttio review will not In* com plate until holiday break hut Holland said si hunt administrators wanted to discuss the matter in puhlii l-'riday. and had Brand's tnnsciit Johnson and Law rence sat quietly in dll ferent parts ot the law si liool auditorium as Clark read a prepared statement and dis i ussed the i ase w ith members ol the audi ence Clark said the students who complained about Johnson s lecture would be granted anonymity Clark, Holland and Liwrenee agreed that Johnson should have disc ussed their com erits. however Lawrence said she believed Johnson's use of class time was inappropriate The Hardwick case was an appropriate case, but out ol sequent e. and Johnson had not cleared any of the spei 1 fit s relating to his lecture w ith her. she said Sharing the fact that he is gay with his chiss was not the problem. Clark and Liw reme agreed, however, they also agreed with the complaining students th.it some ot the material was not relevant to the planned class lectures Clark said he and I .aw rente approved Johnson’s subsequent statement before In read it to the class, and did not view it as an apology Johnson did not apologize for his "com ing out." only for the issue that some stu dents "felt intimidated by the course or tenor of the disi ussion '' "If I had it to do over again." Clark told law professor Dominick Vetri. "I would not have had him address the class (with an apology)." Clark said lohnson could have accom plished enough by privately reading his statement to the handful of complaining Chapin Clark students Cheyney Ryan. philosophy professor and cochair of the President's Task force on Cay and Lesbian Concerns, said homophobia is .ill-pervasive in American culture. We will be making some recommenda tions very soon to the law school about ad dressing (be problem of homophobia." she said "I think it would be encouraging if the administration of the law school com mitted itself to saying exactly what thev're going to do on the basis of those ret ommendations "I do not wish to imply that I have come to anv i oik lusions about the propriety of the ini idents as they took place." Brand wrote in a Nov l'l letter to law si hool stu dents and f.u ultv While awaiting the findings of the Af firmative Action Office investigation. Brand wrote, "Mv purpose is to ask you to use the example of this controversy as a starting point in examining the application ol equal opportunity and academii free dom principles at this t 'niversitv