Oregon Daily TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22,1991 EUGENE, OREGON VOLUME 93, ISSUE 39 Berkeley, Eugene students affected by fire By Daralyn Trappe Emerald Ate ocinto Editor The tragody of the San Francisco Day area lire hit close to homo, not just for the thousands of students at the Univer sity of California .it Berkeley who saw it firsthand, but for University students with friends and family in the area Alexei Barrionouvo, a UC Berkeley student and an editor for the Daily Cali fornian. reported on events the entire country was watching. The fire that has scorched 17,000 acres and killed 10 people is now under control and the skies have cleared, hut i .. 1 .. California reporter defends student reactions Sunday was chaos for Barrionuevo Not only was lie working a! tho paper, hut as a resident of Oakland, he had to leave home when the area was evacuated The campus at Ud Berkutov was shut down Monday and classes were cancel ed The blaze came to within a mile of campus and one of the dorms was evai uated Sunday night. Students from that dorm moved to another, with some sleeping in the lounge, Barrionuevo said "Hut no one was real I v worried etxcit the campus,” he said "It looked too lar away.” I hi' Asmh tutcil 1'ri'ss reported that the lift’ has caused SI 5 billion in damage .mil has loft ill loast 400 hillside- houses in smoldering ruins The massive lire one of (he worst m IJ S history also injured nearly ISO and chased 5,000 out of their homes, city and state officials said Ten people were reported missing, and at least 200 non residential build mgs were destroyed California Urn Pole Wilson on Sun day declared an emergency and said he is asking President Hush to maku tins declaration on a national level An eilitori.il that ran in the Las /\rr ge/es limes tiMlav c ntu i/oil some of ihe Berkeley students lor tfieir Indifferent behavior Sunday night Darriouneuvo said the min ism was unwarranted “A lot of students were just sort of watching." he said " They went to dif ferent places to get a (Hitter of view ol what was happening and the I. ,A /Vines compared it to people in fraternities, sit ting on ihe root and drinking beer There were also students who volun teered to work at relict agencies like Ihe Turn to FIRE, Pago 4 Tuba or not tuba The Tubershop Four, a quartet of (left to right) faculty member Richard Frazier, GTF Eric Hammer, and students Todd Nix and Alika Borstmg, prepare for the second annual Octubalest The concert will feature classical and popular selections by various combinations of low brass instruments Oct 28 at the Beall Concert Hall. Photo by Jane Ballm HDP college professor dead at 56 Broekhoff earned reputation for studies of children By Tammy Batey Emerald Reporter Jan Brookhoff, a University professor and for tner acting dean of the College of Human Devel opment and Performance, died Monday morning after a four-year battle with cancer He was Me A funeral service is scheduled for Friday at .1 UO p m in the First Congregational Church. 1050 !•:. 23rd Ave itroekhoff, a professor in the physical educe lion and human movement studies department, joined the University in 1073 He earned his mas ter's from the University in 1003 and his doctor ate in 1900 Norval Ritchey, assistant dean of the College ol Human Development and Performance, said Broekholf will hi? inisscil "it's ,i tremendous loss ol .1 man of grout (our ago in terms of fighting the earner battle,'' Ritchey said " The University and all of our stuff feel the loss and extend our wishes and sympathies to his family." Broekholf. who originally was from the Nether lands, taught at four different universities in three different countries: Germany, Belgium and the United States Ho was fluent in Dutch, Knglish, French and German. He earned an international reputation for his studies of child growth and development, said Lou Osternig, professor in the department of exer else and movement science Broekhoff hud a numlrer of articles published in the United States Turn to LOSS, Pago 3 El Salvadoran speaks of fear, hope By Lisa Millegan Emerald Reporior Despite years of brutal civil war in El Salvador, a recent agreement between government and rebel leaders means peace may still bo possible for the country, a speaker at the Uni voraily said Monday night Using a translator, Salvado ran teacher and activist Mario Medrano said the accord should mean a return to civil lan authority and meaningful elections in the country Parts of the Sept 25 agree ment also include reforms to the judicial system and protec tion of human rights. “This accord is a triumph for international solidarity that has brought about the possibility of change," Medrano said "We nccil to see this accord as a pos sihln light that exists in this darkness.” Hut Medrano said that tor the accord to work, the United States must stop funding the Salvadoran military. "It must he seen that the United States of America sends not one dollar of aid to tiie mil itary,” tie said All money tiuit is sent must he used for eco nomic aid instead, he said A founding member of El Salvador's national teachers' union, Medrano spoke at the University as a stop on a lour across din United States to talk about his country’s problems. Medrano's speech was spon sored by tiie University of Ore gon-University of El Salvador Jew, Palestinian unlearn one-sided histories By Daralyn Trappe Emerald Associate Editor Shimona Sharoni was ruurtxl In Isruol by u father who was a Holocaust survivor and who hail witnessed the death of his own la ther in a concentration camp before taking refuge in Israel. Once there, he adopted the slogan "Never Again" and taught his daughter to be wary of anyone who wasn't Jewish. Mohammad Abu-Nimer was also raised in Israel, but as part of the Arab minority in that country, Ins experiences were very «11 • - forent from Sharoni's As .1 child, his grandfather would relate un analogy about the lsruuli-Palestinian con flict A man who owned a throe-story building had a neighbor who was stronger and one day took over the first floor and eventually the second, leaving the man with only the third floor The man represents the Palestin ians, his grandfather said, “and now there is no other option fight or jump." Sharoni and Abu-Nlmer, who spoke at the University on Monday night. said they did something they hope others will try to do learn and respect each other's history Both are now working on doctoral degrees in peace resolution at George Mason Univer sity in Washington. D C Prior to coming to the United States, they were actively in volved in educating Jews and Arabs about the other's perspective Sharoni was a Founding member of a women's group within Israel that protests Torn tc UNLEARN Pago 4 Sister IJnivursity Project and by ttii! Eugene Education Associa tion. Medrano has personal oxperi encu with hi Salvador's long history of military oppression In 19H2, fie and 22 oilier teach ers were imprisoned by soldiers for their political beliefs During tfie two weeks of Ills incarceration, he spent much of his time blindfolded and was tortured with electric shocks One day the entire group of teachers was led blindfolded into a room and pushed against a wall as if they were going to face a firing squad But the sol diers only fired into the air in a "mock execution." Medrano said one of his fug Turn to MEDRANO Page 3 Mohammad Abu-Nimer