Oregon DAILY EMERALD Monday, December 10, 1*W0 _Eugene. OregonVolume *>?. Issue 72 Almanac Today's Emerald is the last of the term. Publica tion will resume )«n. 7. At its Thursday meet ing, the Incidental Fee Committee voted to re consider a budget request from Students for the Eth ical Treatment of Ani mals. SETA had been grant ed $002 for 1991-92 at its Nov. 30 budget hearing, but suggestions from the EMU program consul tant's office were not tak en into consideration at the time the budget was approved. 1FC Chairman Mike Colson said. See story. Page 3 WARSAW; Poland (API — Inch Walesa, the shipyard worker who helped lead his country out of Communism, swept to a landslide vic tory In Poland's first pop ular presidential vote Sunday, according to par tial returns See story. Page 7 Sports Dabble Sporrich The Oregon women's basketball team evened iiferecoid to 2-2. alter beefing Portland State Friday and New Mexico State Saturday in McAr thur Court. Jennifer Bourn came off the bench to score 26 points — including six throe-point baskets — as the Ducks beat NMS 114-92. Freshman for ward Debbie Sporcich pulled down 12 rebounds and hit an Oregon single game record 15 of 17 free throws in the same game. See story, Page ■ Photo lit \ndrc Riinlrn Several hundred University students, faculty and stall collet ted in the EMU Courtvard Friday afternoon to demonstrate against U S. involvement in the Persian Uulf. Students protest gulf intervention By Brenna Hansen and Kim Ralston t metaid Ccmifibuiors Outrage anil concern over the Persian (lull crisis drew several hundred students, faculty and communi ty members Friday to one of the largest protest gather ings on the University campus in years A symposium that followed the rally drew a stand ing mom only crowd of more than .100 on the last weekday before final examinations Kep Peter DeFazio, D-Fugene. and other speakers denounced President Hush's military buildup in the Middle Fast to a large crowd in tin1 FMU Courtyard “Ex-secretaries of defense and ex-joint i hiefs ot stuff, many of whom were appointed by and worked for Reagan, have come before the United States Con gress anil have urged the United Stales to observe < an Hon. withhold from entering into a war. and give the economic and political sanctions time to work. " I)«■ Fazio said The crowd loudly cheered after DeFazio stated th.it the president apparently had a copy of the Constitu tion with a page missing because his top advisers be lieve Bush needs no authority to launch a first strike DeFazio has drafted legislation requiring President Bush to come before Congress to "make his case and get a majority vote" before engaging in any offensive military action The bill will lx- introduced when Con gress reconvenes Jan. In a vote last week. DeFazio said the House Demo cratic Caucus supported such an action by a 7 to 1 margin Ellen Furstner, coordinator for the lame Counts Chapter of the National Organization for Women, fol lowed DeFa/.io's speech with a woman's pcrspei live on the gulf crisis Furstner said women have been < onditioned not to speak out. but the “so-called experts are sending us over the brink of disaster.'" “It's hard for me to speak here today." Furstner said, “but it would lie a lot harder to start watt lung the body bags come home, and it would be impossible for me to send my own sons to the Middle Fast “I have three sons and in a few years, two oi them will lie old enough to go to war Well. I'll tie damned if I II send my sons to die so some fat cat in I..A. can ride around in his limousine." Furstner said, with her arm around her youngest son. Turn lo GULF. Page 14 Picketers gather to protest war toys sales Shoppers reactions mixed By June Russell Emerald Reporter War toys teach violence and hatred. PeaceWorks protester* told shoppers during their an nual demonstration Saturday afternoon outside the Toys K Us store on Valley River Drive. Waving signs and passing out fliers, about 15 demonstra tors fielded remarks from pass ing toy shoppers and explained their arguments against toys promoting violence. Toy hand grenades. Ul Joe dolls, water pistols, army fa tigues, toy airplanes and video games are among the toys being protested '“If we believe that children are our future, why are we em ulating war with war toys?" asked Lora Dolan. Eugene PeaceWorks volunteer. “War teaches us to hate It teaches us racism, sexism and that killing is OK. “Why encourage violence by buying war toys? Pacifist par ents don’t raise (ds and Ma rines Peace begins with our children." PeaceWorks represents the local i hapter of the War Resis ters League and has held its anti-war toy demonstrations for about the last 10 years. Dolan said The demonstration is to re mind people about the effects of war toys and to make them think before they buy a violent toy What the demonstators are hoping for is a decrease in sales of war toys. Dolan said. "You never know exactly what the effect is, but the major toy manufacturers have had de creases in sales of war toys." she said. Shoppers’ response to the protesters varied, ranging from hand signals both for and against their message to honk ing and comments from drivers and shoppers. Mo Adan. gradu ate teaching fellow in the Eng Photo bv Altdrv Kamrn About 15 people /fathered outside the Toys K I Is store to dem onstrate a/tainst war toys and their influence on children. lish department and Peace Works activist, said llie re sponse they receive is often ironic. "It's ironic that we're not out here protesting consumerism. Toys K Us or even capitalism." Adan said "We're simply here protesting the sale of war toys And yet we get so much nega* live reaction when people drive by Some of the comments from shoppers questioned the dem onstrators' support for tti«■ troops overseas. The individual soldiers. Dolan said, are simply a c t i n k on orders. What Turn to TOYS, Page 13