Oregon DAIIY EMERALD Monday. January 7, IW| Eugene. Oregon Volume l>2, Issue 73 Ducks come up short in Freedom Bowl Color,ulo Slate players celebrate alter ,m official ruled that Oregon’s Michael McClellan didn't make it into the end /.one on a two-point conversion try that would have given the Docks a win in the Free dom Howl Dei 29 instead of a 22-.ll loss. Photo by Sean Poston Report clears law school By Peter Cogswell tmeiald Associate Editor_ An investigation into fall term incident at the University law school has found no evidence of mistreatment of .1 guv professor As a result of the report, University President My les Miami has asked the provost and other I 'to versilv oil 11 lals to establish programs w inter term to raise awareness of two issues academic tree dom and gay and lesbian t out erns In out homosexuality in relation to a court case discussed that day in his 1 lasses. After disc ussing the court cast? Mowers vs /lardwii k. lohnson read a statement from a gay rights group known as the Radical I*aeries, at knowledged he was guy and then introduced .1 third-year law student not enrolled in the 1 lass who told the c lass she was a lesbian After some students in los c lasses t ontplained to lavs sc bool off ic ials about the 1 lass admiuistra tors met with lohnson and it was agreed he would read .1 prepared statement to his c lasses explaining his actions Brand said he will not take any disc iplinarv a* lion against the parties involved and he said lie lieves nothing would he gained bv dwelling on the incident any longer Turn to BRAND Page 7 New contraceptive available soon By Layne Laketish tme*aW A mm. ale t j •. • 11 s been near I \ to years sun e w omen in the l' nited States have had a ii«-\s birth control option, but the wait is over On Dei 10 the i S Iood and Drug Administration approved a contraceptive implant railed Norplant, which consists ol si\ matrhstiek sized capsules that are surgically plat ed under the skin of the upper arm And in lehruary the new alternative will be available locally The new i ontrareptive will be obtainable at the Stu dent Health t enter in mid -February when Norplant’s marketing i ompanv w ill begin distributing it national ly The ( line is currently gearing up to train and edu c .ite nurse prai tilioners and doctors on the surgit al prot edure said Pam IWisser. family nurse prat tilion ei in the women's t.Unit at the health i enter "We’re going to get into it as soon as we tail." OeVisser said "And it will cost significantly less to i time to the Student I lea It h ( enter '' The health tenter will charge $5 for the visit ami $-00-$.tot) lor the Norplant implants Students who go to the health center lor the implants will avoid surge i al fees charged by private t linics in Eugene. The procedure, which would cost between $300 and $500 at >i private clinic, takes about 1 Ti minutes anil is Turn to NORPLANT Page 6 In Mike Kuw|l .•I new contraceptive. Xurplant. will ilive women Cue years ol birth control protection from just six surfeit ally-implanted tubes the si/e of matt bsticks. Inside lack Sampson. 51, ot Ku* gene, has I teen missing since Dim 25. and Ins family and h lends have hexun a slate iv ide search lor the mentally retarded man Sampson had just visited his family in Portland for the holiday's w hen his brother saw him board the Eugene* bound (aevhound Express bus e fut (•(! with increased tuition to offset higher education budget cuts See stories. Pages 9 & 10 Sports To the people in the vid eo tape business. Oregon's Pacific-10 basketball game with Stanford Sunday after noon must have! looked like a combination of "basket ball Bloopers" and “Pantas tii Finishes.” While the Ducks fumbled and bumbled their wav to a 33 23 halftime deficit, they managed to dig themselves Richard Lucas out of