Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, August 24, 1992, Page 36, Image 52

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    Football
11 unit nut'll fimn fMif'r 22)
•ays < >m administration hat made
lilt'll lift imiiii .Hid has lealiiimt-d llicn
< i hi i in 11 iiifii i n> Division I .it hlc I its .it
Rit t- t nivt'isils
Rn r i ,ni it iIik r its it b\ In111*1111v;
,i 111in|>t-1i(i\t- lontli.ill pingiam and
gaming mint l.ms ami I \ unit'. Mas
savs
\ililriit deficits hast" been a
problem loi Iran, and I dunk 11 it- mam
11 - a si lit at It It-1 it depai Imtiils alt hating
Initial I |>11 ililtms is bet allst c\pt list s
an using lavtci than iiltomr is.' Mas
sa\s "We have a job In tin of selling
in il ls anti jiinmnling nut pmdut I. and
1st all (lave In stall dnmg a lieUt l job ol
dial
We have In sl.nl pulling a bellet
(iintliu i out b) s< beduling games dial
,ii tuallv mean soniellnng. and bv
si beduling games dial aie not det idetl
belme lilt- I vs n teams even lake the
held ’
Ki isslev savs it s illljxill.ml Ini i oat lies
and plavcls In Slav nplimistit
"These aie tough limes m mu
et ononiv. anti vse i e |usi going in liave
In \s t at hei the simm and kee p mu
plitgiam and mu t onfeient e inlat l,“ he
s.ivs
In sins iiii,ii I through tough
cionnum limes, though, the programs
mini stas lire i>l N( A A |>cnalties
S\|t l.u nl ,i separate s< i ill lin.iiHi.il
imics fiom .i ~(l< .nil penalty" handed
down li\ die N< \.\ in !‘!S7 lm plasel
|i.immls 1 he |H'li.ills kept die Mustangs
nut nf fniiitial! lm (lie H7 and HH
seasmis and stunted the growth nl a
mu e poweilul team
”I dunk dining nut death penalty
cvciYunc inedii led hi- would swing In
the niliei end when we returned in
liHiihall — and we h.nc lieen. but we \e
gol In gel mil nl dlls pci mil and gel mtn
die dm k n| the Southwest (.nntelem e
i.ue." Kiissles sa\s “We \e got In find
■ mi ini inicntimi
Hul lm die students al I nug Heai h
Him hast- iiu team, tiiidnig the
iiinmeillum lliiniigh niliei atlllelli
pingiaills mas Ik- dillii nil
"Nest tall 1 guess we ll just drill
around aimlessly with tin events," Kemp
sass
“We won’t hase am rallies, and il vs 111
he up In si hno! mgam/.lllnlls In hype
people up — and then money is being
I III. Inn
"We ll just be the bland 'old brown
and yellow Ideis "
Speech
{( unltnurti from fm^r I 4)
ii|) in the .111
( )lln i.iIs is^n kmn mi mi piemen l mg
the U iv niisin |xiIh\ ,ur < .uiglil Irrlwcen
.1 irx k .iliii .1 haid plat c, Whitt sa\-s
" I hfir lias to Ik- some was nut Un lull
In c \|h-i-( It hm still j>i\c |*co|)lc some
iiiuisc nt ai lion.* sax s Wlutl. .t six i
okm.ifoi .it ihr Madison i .imjius
1 lie nets \\ IS( otisni i ontlut I ( ode
addresses mote spit iln instances ol
s|K <-( li harassment llian the old ( ikIc
Whitt sa\s the lieu (ikIc silliph ^iscs
sitidenis let muse against hale spurted
speei h. mi hiding sexual and i at lal
hat assment.
"II I’m walking tot lass and a htg group
ol gins i alls me a lag ugh dike, tltne’s
s< anedmin that I tan do." she sa\s
Mam univeisities. though. mas hast
estaiM-d i.iiiiiIk a I ions ol the Supreme
( aunt ruling lit targeting mole general
at Is m llicii i olldlli I t odes instead ol
lot using on sjiei itn hale spawned
sik-(-( h ai Is
Mu had Sumti. .issisl.iul i ham rlloi
lrg.il attaiis at thr I of ( alitnrnia.
Ho hr lex . saxs t lit- IV i hrlt-x |n ilu \ ax outs
tin* undrrising ptoblrms mentione d t>\
dir Suptrmc (loin t
"So I don't think tlir dri ision xxiII
irnuttr am ■ hangr in pirsent i ani|>us
[XMIIV," Sill It) I sals
'l iiilol, a i onstitntlon.il lavs si holai
xxlio wiote tin' hair s|»rri li polii x loi
l I. \ustin. savs universities that c rcalr
sjx i ilii categoric-sot hale s|x ri h have
eiratrd problems lot tlirmsrlxrs in
trulls ot ihi‘ 11 mi t s do isii ill
I lie < i mi Itixion I xvi mill i r.u h ti mu
thr o|>inion is that it sou take an
appi'nac h to limiting speec li and sou
i rratr c alegortes. that amounts to a
lonlrnl discrimination and that's
uni onstitution.il." Yudof saxs
\l thr l ot < .coigia, Athens, of lie i.ilx
avotdrd tfirsr suer if it categories in
thru conduit i odr |Hitrntiallx it hex
ing thrm liotn a dutx to make c hangrx
“We’re not looking at a pat tic ul ai
i.ilrgoix and saxing this is more
hatrtul." s.ixs attoinrx Mix Iced “We
haven't seen a big push mound hoe lot
a separate police that would lit the
i atrgots ot hair 11 lines
Suggs, who transfened from a
piedoiiiinantlx white campus at the l
ot Wisconsin. Milxvaukee. s.ixs
unis et si ties should have sul t h lent
means ot lialting hatassnient ot
minoiitx groups xvithout targeting
sjx-i itii liate ielated ai lions
" I hr univcpvitv in (amgrcss may pass
laws ag.ulist tel tain .11 lions. but there
should be enough room that will
punish these prisons wiihout getting
sjH*< if 11 10 a 'let 1 igatotv wi 11 (i written oil
.1 lii k 11Suggs says
I’uiii irs ai the l of Horula anil S'! I
reflet 1 this I lie'll (odes take a more
moderate toad, ■ inumvenliug the tree
stiret li issue with othci efforts to halt
hateful altitudes
"I don't knots if regulating language
is anybody's goal,” savs Steven
l’olnias/ek, asv« late dim tot of student
Ideal SN l “You t an 1 emulate harass
ment. vandalism, trespassing — vou
name 11
I hats g i m m I 1 levs s lot 111 ilhe Kite, a
juntiit at lovsvin State 1 in Maryland,
whose flout vstlh hate speei h ended
vsitfi plivsu al assault
( )n ,i Weill irsdav afteiuoon 111 Mait h.
Kui stood in the student union with a
ft ie nil ill si ussing 1 lasses — modern
lit tush |m ictiv, eihu alioiial psvi linlogv .
sociology. hi 1 toll hlei a 1 me — a killet
w hedtile with 1811 edits, she savs
Hut when Rue liegan talking almut a
gav Jewish pmtessoi at (he universitv, an
unwelcome eavesdioppei toiinenled
hei with anti Semitic taunts and sluis
against the professor I he man, who
lieu 1 was appiehended. i ailed Kit e “a
fui king dv kc" and hat khanded hei
ai 1 oss th< fat e. having hei eve and
1 heeklione swollen and hnnsed
"I |t 1st laughed Ixt ause I didn't know
what to do." R11 e vns
In I hr r ml. phs su al vmlr in r and
trtiotisni <am giratri Mrtght than thr
spin li that ai i nuipanirs ihrm. sas
mrnilK'iMil thr Nalumal \sv« taiion lm
ihr Vdsani rinmt nt ( uliitrd Pcoplr
I hr \ \A< I’ sass n will invrsligalr
|kissihlr i aniilit atmns < >1 thr <ir< isi<m
"Ka< im sjirri h n ahhotirtil. as arc*
mii li smiiImiIs as ihi' swastika. llowrsrt,
ugh mi it its air lai ltss troubling than is
I hr nh\ mush mtrnilril trmihsni ul thr
hui ning i mss." \ A \< P Kxn ini\r
Durum Benjamin Monks saul in a
stairnimi.
Mulligan Stair l iiiiuitial |uslur
Plnlrssni llainlil Spaeth, wlm
s|h-i lali/rs ni lonslittitioiial issues, suss
llir Su|iirnir ( nun’s dei ismn i an hr
i nnsillrird a srthai k de|Miidillg nil the
extent people air Milling In ihsirganl
thr lust Allirililnirnt Ihr mint ihaMs
a dillrlrtlte IwlMmi "lighting wolds’
and griiri al sjM ri h, Spaeth suss
" I ln-\ in.idr a tin ismn that i ritanih
i nmpm ts mith thr ( niistitutmii." hr
viss "\nthlllg in thr St Paul niiluiani r
mm n nrd pel sonal epithets
Ru hard I.obenlhal. dim lot nl thr
\ litt-l ietuinutmn league nt IVnat Hi ith
m Southfield, Mieh., savs the St. Paul
ordinance c rossed the line !>v infringing
on Iree sjreec h while trying to protec t
vie inns of hale < rimes.
Hut fed Alvarez, president of
Mic Itigan Slate's Coalition ol Hispanic
Students lot Progressive Ac lion, sacs
the c min s decision mac proside a
iormidahle ohstac l<-- lo ellorts lo pi<uec l
oppressed [rcople.
"I lecdom ol speech is something
cvcrvbodc — me lulling minorities —
should have," Alvarez sacs.
And that's prec iselc cvhc Amy Jo
Maiiheis finds the Supreme C.oun's
i uling detr imenlal lo c ampus race
relations.
Nlallheis sacs die ruling may hampet
ellorts at Pacific Lutheran l'. lo
sirengthen student rac e relations.
" \i this |xiint, cse are not in an open
envii eminent," vies Matlheis, w ho works
evilh sludenLs at PI .I in l ac oma. Wash.
"Then when you add racial situs,
people are |tisi going to leave. You are
going to have a totally homogenous
sot ieic, and nohodc s going lo leat n
anything dilleient.”
Whitt, who works in student govern
ment at Wise iincin, sacs students should
not have lo tolei ale harassing street h.
"rree sptrch is great — it s
wonderful,*' Whitt says “Hut you also
have to look at an educational
environment. Hots am I going to learn
anything it every time 1 walk to < lass
|K-o|ile ate throwing ta< ul sluts at me.•"
Hut /niton Ferentv, a civil lights
at tot ne\. savs the i out t tnerelv followed
traditional law in det idmg against the
St Haul ordiname and toi protecting
the lice exert tse ol s|x-ec h
" I he only time the government can
ilitei lei e is when a pel son's uimllii I,
either 01 il oi symbolic, becomes
lighting words," Fciencv says “There’s
a line where it goes beyond hurling
invective and it becomes assault. And
we've always had laws to protec t that."
Hut that doesn’t make Doug
St heidemalltel feel any Irettei
“II a person c an t go to college and
not yyoiiy about haying that hatred
directed toward them, it's unfor
tunate," S< heidemantel says “It
bee nines ditlic ult to reac h voiti main
ob(ec live at c oliege, whu b is to leal n
Hut Mattheis. a HI 1' graduate, says
the Supreme (ourl iiiling has stolen
student ability to iciunler lacisin,
t sjx c ialh at HI .1 ’, where only t»-l ol the
,ticH1 students are lilac k
“I Iielieve that the Supreme (anut is
indie alive ol the- vsav out nation Iccls
about lace lelaliolis,” she says “It's
primitive \nd I hojx- it doesn't trickle
etc wMi to out c .imposes."
Volunteerism
i( 'mill tint'd from ftn^r I ft)
"I (ion'I think aiivnnr would do
\ |S I V d it was |iist loi the inumr
lie* a use il \ a lot ol hai d woi k, ‘ \a\ s
lleathei Hi.um. who rc< rived a
hai heloi s degice in women's studies
fioin Wheaton ( ollege in Norton.
Mass
()li\e Wagnci. campus i haplam at
VikansasC ollegein llatesville. agrees
W agnci accompanies students who
'|>cnd ihrii spiutg break winking with
11.11 hi.ii tin liuinanitv. .1 ( hnsu.in non
profit group lli.n Inuld' houses Im ilie
In illicit'' I-.u Ii spring break, mcmlicls
ill the ( .1 inpiin Mini'll! Hoard, .in
interfaith group til students, fat ultv
and stall, i In it isc a plai t- to work with
11.ihilat
1 he hard work involved in
tiiii'iiiu non prompts those who .tie in
H lot then own gain to m\ lemming.
Wagner savs Bui several students
repeal the spimg break work nips
throughout their college t arcers.
“ I hev’re icalls willing to get their
hands ■ In tv." he saw
I honias k Musu il .it <>t \n/nna
I n >liik al s< iciu e vc-iiu>t awaiting .t I’eat r
( Hi ps assignment in 1 .him \metit .1.
t.us tus selfish antt benevolent
motivations I01 jtlining .tic ft|u.i!
“You're doing something that's
helping other people and also
something that's icalh going to help
soil in the future,* he said I lusted also
sais he ho|)es Ills wot k in the Corps w ill
help him get a job w hen he returns.
(nit s ma\ denigtate motives ot
todas s student vtiiunieeis. but thev
t annul dispute the fact that students
are working haul lor little 01 no nionev.
Kamo S.HS,
'll almost doesn't matter what then
motives ate," she sass
\tul while idealism mas have lieen at
an all-time high among college
students in the 1960s, student
solunteers see the newest wave ol
sets n e as a mote genuine gesture.
" \ lot ol (the mi lease in l’eat e (an ps
enlistment) ssas so sou didn't go to
Vietnam,” dusted sass
In (at t, Kamo s.iss nun h ol the tills
volunteeristn mas have I seen more talk
than at Iron, something Irottt whit h this
generation ol volunteers is staving awas
"Now I see people more suhtls giving
back."