Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 19, 1992, Image 1

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    Oregon Daily
MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1992
Crushkies
Pr«*o* t>jt Me run* Sf**nJ*r jj*3 J#M P«*‘J|
The Huskies had Sean Burwell and the
rest ol the Ducks in a stranglehold m
Saturday's ?4-3 Washington victory
(above) But that didn’t stop Duck Ians
Morgan Natl (right to left). Will Cr.tes. Brian
R’ppel and Amy Hope from en/oymg sunny
fall weather and watching the No 1 team m
the nation (right) Crites and Fhppet painted
themselves green for the occasion
Jesse Jackson
to speak today
jThe reverend's tour visits the Univer
sity in an effort to encourage voting
The Kev Jesse Jai kson will Speak today on campus .is
piirt of a national tour to encourii)*c people to vote
unit to vote Democrat ii
Jackson is scheduled to arrive nliout 1 - -»0 p in on
the IAU' hast l.avvn lie will tie there whether it rains or
shines, said ASUO President Bobby bee
Ja< kson is scheduled to lie in hupene lor ahoul an
hour .liter leaving South*
urn Oregon Stair- dollego.
where hi: will talk to stu
dents .it It) ii in
Other Oemot r.itu; candi
dates, mi lulling Rep Peter
Dei-.1/10. D-Spring l mid.
ami Disl 11 candidate
Cynthia Woolen will join
Jut kson In his .iiitiress
|u< kson's visit to Lugiine
is part of u iiiilion.il tour
that lieg.m Sept \2 to en
courage people to vote in
the Nov I election
Lee siiiii he vv.is notified
Jesse Jackson
lulu lust wivk ol |ui kson's i ommg, whit li c.umu .is .1 sur
prise lu him
"Iliwli ally. they till 111. We're < timing.' l.ee said, .iiltl
ing that he believes Oregon is .1 poliin.il hoi spot now
because of Bullol Meusure ll " I I1.1l s no ur t itlenl
■We re on nulicmiil television Iscimse ol Measure
l.ee said " This is .1 serious issue
"Whiit .1 lot of these promoters do is go .1 round and
conduct .1 survey to find out vvlmt the competition is
like between Republicans und Uemoi ruts." Lee said,
"They want to tip the scales, so to speak Hut the Imnc
fit of all this. Is that we gel to see people like Jesse jui k
son and Hollywood stars to motivate people and tell
students what's going on in our society
Jm ksoo was on < ampus the last time in May ol
while seeking the Dcmot rutic nomination for president
Tifleen-lfimisand people Hocked to McArthur (.ourt to
hear Jackson About fl.OOU people were turned avvav it
the door Jai kson's campaign workers al the time said it
was the largest 1 ampus turnout ol |u< kson's IMHO lour
President Brand to undergo leadership evaluation
j University head will have
his three-year perlormance
assessment this week
By Don Peters
Erroraid freelance Editor
Not even University President Myles
Brand ruin escape armchair quarterbacks.
Peter Magralh, president of the Nation
al Association of State Universities and
Land-Grant Colleges, will bo on campus
Tuesday and Wednesday to conduct
Biund's first three-year performance
evaluation.
The routine assessment of Brand’s aca
iemic leadership and management ts in
ine wilh a policy adopted in l‘JH2 by the
state Hoard of Higher Education
As part of his evaluation. Magrath will
necl with selected staff, faculty, student,
ilumni and local government represen la
ivos.
In addition. Magrath will have a
'drop-in” meeting on a first-come, first
served basis Wednesday, Oct- 21 in
Koom 240 Willamette
Written confidential comments will
ilso be accepted but must lie received by
[he close of business Tuesday, Oct. 27.
Letters must be marked "Confidential
Presidential Evaluation ' and mailod to
Magrath at P.O. Box 3175. Eugene. Ore..
97403 I
The 10-year-old higher education ,
board policy evaluates Oregon university |
and college presidents ovory three years,
[trend was hired as the 14th University
president in July of 1989.
As part of tho process, Brand will
write u "statement of stewardship." or
self-evaluation, and undergo a physical
examination.
"This is a very routine process." said
Larry Large, vice chancellor of the Ore
gon State System of Higher Education.
"The evaluation is just good manage
ment."
Large, who implements the pottery lor
presidential evaluations, said OSSHE
uokcd for "silting presidents" to con
lucl the process, r.itfier than go to a pro
ossional consulting firm
"We try and get MMiparublo to do the
IVuluations," Large said
After his meetings at the University,
vlugruth will summuri/.n his information
mil meet with Brand and Oregon Chan
:ellor of Higher Education Thomas Bart
elt to discuss the results.
Mngrath will then prepare a written re
lorl for Bartlett, who will add his own
;otnmtints and put the report in Brand's
lersonal file.
The chancellor will present a summu
i/.ed evaluation to the higher education
jonrd Nov 20 in Eugene.
WEATHER
Today the Eugene-Spnngfield
area will experience clouoy
periods with a slight chance of
rain late in the afternoon, Highs
will be between 65-70 Lows
near 50
Tuesday there is a great
chance of rain Highs are
expected in the upper 60s.
HERE KITTY, KITTY
WILDEKVILLE (APJ - A 250-pound runaway Bengal tiger that prowled
the Oregon woods for eight days tame hack to its owner's home Saturday
‘ morning, raeeldy following a plate of chicken thighs back into its pen
‘1 sail!'Come on Babe, let's go home, and she followed me up the hill,’
said Dee Arlen, a former actress who keeps the two-year-old tiger as a [iet
Arlen went to meet the tiger after a neighbor said she'd heard something
outside.
’She's no different than a small house at, except that she's huge,’ Arlen
said ’She ate out of my hand the first year of her life ’
After a plate of chicken thighs and a pound of 100 food, the tiger,
unharmed and a bit thinner after its week in the wild, basked on its back.
SPORTS
AMES. Iowa - With his team losing bv 26 points ami only
20 minutes left to play, Kansas quarterback Chip Hilleary had
it all figured out
'Right before you roll the dice, vouve got to know whether
you can win or not,' Hilleary sain
'And I think we believe ’
His team believed enough to stage the biggest comeback in
school history for a 50-47 victory over Iowa Stale on
Saturday.
Kansas rallied after trailing 47-21 with five minutes left in
the third quarter to spoil Iowa Slate s most productive outing