Oregon Daily WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1991 V« 1. i -Kf Courtyard musician Bartholomew Sacremvnto. a roving Eugene flutist performs outside the EMU Tuesday afternoon Photo by Jett Paslay Council votes to keep Commission Ry Gem! Koeppmg Emerald Reportoc Springfield Mayor Hill Monrsette had ,i busy das Tuesday At .1 in . .liter six hours of public testimony, he broke ,i .1 i lie and saved the i itv s Human Kights ( tommission Light hours later, lie again demanded the resignation el le'iucil meinhers Kail Wallers. Larry Si ban/ and Bruce Berg because of vvbal be said was a plan by the three members to pre arrange a vote against the ap pomtriient of a lilieral atfmnative ai lion specialist to the commission The three < mini il members bad sent eai b other mev sages via computer that discussed their votes and la men ted the l.u k of < bristian ethics in government S. ■. ai a Hit Walters, Schanz and < ieorge Wi.ju k out voted two other members and disbanded the Human K gtit- i ommisston Both W,liter-, and Si ban/ saul the commission vvas disbanded because of its Insistence mi adding gays and lesbians to the list ol minorities protec led by the c ity anti-disc rimination ordinaiic e Monday night, the issue was voted on again and ibis time the Human Kighls ('.mum ission vvas voted hac k m But it was ,i hollow vii lory for the gav and lesbian mmunity Both Moirisetle and Berg, who voted tor the c uimnisston. said they would not vote lor an ordi nance protecting gay and lesbian rights Morriselte said now is not the right time for suc h protection Berg's objection was tlint to ensure the libertv of e.ivs and lesbians the city bad to violate the rights of those w ho found their lifestyle morally wrong lii government to sav to you that you can't have certain religious he I lets is violating to that persons roll glous freedom,'' he said All this is a disappointment to Sue Doc kstader, cn direc tor of the I Jmversity's Lesbian, (lay and Hi sexual Alliance, who hoped the controversy would lead to pinlec lion lor gavs and lesbians She ubjec ted to those who c lainicd the Human Kighls Commission was ask Turn to VOTE Page 6 Soviet students see coup as turning point Country moving forward, they say By Daralyn 1 rappe Emerald Associate Editor When Mashn Shulnlina went home for u month this summer, she expected to spend time vis iting friends and family, doing the usual things that University students do on vat ration She was more than a little surprised when it was a!! inlet rupted Aug HI by an unexpect od call from a family friend See related stories, Page 3 Home is Moscow and Shatalina, a graduate student in economics, was there for the first time in a year "We were sleeping at 7 in the morning and a friend of my fa ther's called and ho said 'tanks are in the city.' " Shatalina said. "! couldn't follow what tie was saying 1 thought it was a big joke or something, so then 1 said thank you and just contin ued sleeping. "Then my friends started calling and they said. Sorry, Masha. 1 don't think you're go ing back (to Eugene)' and at tins point I realized that maybe I'm not." Shatalina. who came to the University last hill, spunt thf next thriMi days watching the beginning and end of the mili tary coup against President Mikhail Corbachev and hearing her friends talk .liter protesting in the streets But she didn't get too close to the action V1y lather didn't let me go the first day t" the barricades because he said he wasn't sure what's going to happen, and he didn't want me to lose the opportunity to come here, lie cause what if we were caught or something," she said "Some friends of mine went there and they came home and told me what was going on I went there immediately after the victory Shatalina and her family were more concerned about dif ficulties obtaining a new visa than aliout possible violence at the rallies The feeling among the people who did protest, she said, was that there would be n o r e peat of t he 198 9 Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing, when people rallying for democracy were gunned down by the Chinese military "They were excited, not afraid of a military attack." Graduate students Philippe Kouzmme and Masha Shatalina came to the University from the Soviet Union. Shatalina was home in Moscow during the August coup attempt, while Kouzmme had /ust arrived in the U S. Shatnlina said "Common sol diers wore in those tanks and (the soldiers) knew that among tills (rowd there might he their own relatives, so it was hard for them." On Aug. 21. with Corbachev hack m Moscow and the coup attempt over, the celebration began. "There were fireworks and it was like a real holiday." Sh.it.ilma said "I think from next your, they will st.irl cele brating it as a holiday. I think maybe the seventh of Novem her. the day of the October Rev olution, will not !»• a holiday anymore and this will become .1 holiday." During those same three Turn to STUDENTS. Page 3 INDEX Deadlines_ Today In the Iasi day to pay your tuition without a Sr,() late fire. Weaseling_ IV'ease/'s World, a now i omic strip hy l )n i versity student kraig Norris, starts today in the i.'miTiild on Page 27 Frohnmayer_ Although Oregon Attorney Oeneial Dave Irohnmuver has been given the green light hy a University search committee to succeed Man rice Holland as law school dean, his attention is on oth er concerns, mainly the health of his critically ill daughter Soe story, Page 4 Seeking input__ The ASUO Women s Center is seeking input from stu dents on the center s direc tion for this si hool year. See story, Page 5