Oregon Daily TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1993 EUGENE. OREGON VOLUME 94. ISSUE 93 Window pain <*w(o 6y MK f>mu, Rain Sussman, a aophomora anthropology major, sattlas Into a comtortabta study spot In tha EMU art gallary Monday night Police arrest student on intimidation charge □A group of men confront and beat a student they believe to be gay By Matt Bender Emerald Reporter An 18-year-old University student was arrested and charged w ith intimidation after a group of men allegedly assaulted two men Friday because they believed the victims were homosexuals Tudd Unwood Pendexter is suspect ed of assaulting Steve Laliberty, 2 1. and a 19-year-old student, who asked not to be identified, as the two were walking on the 1300 block of Mill Street. laliberty. who is bisexual, said he and his friend were walking borne when a group of about eight men started to yell obscenities at them. He said one of the memlieni of the group yelled, "Hey you hippie faggots “ l-alihertv said the student he was with, who is heterosexual, said, “I'm a hip pie.” and the group ran up to the two victims. According to police reports, members of the group said they hated “fags” and repeatedly cursed the vic - tims. "They got into our face and were real ly foul," he said. “They were incredibly intoxicated and started to push us " One of the members of the group took out Ills peiltS 1111(1 told tllll victims. Sill k on this." (.aliborty suit) The victims said they tried to talk to the group, but could not reason with them. "I take a lot of stock in Tantric Bud dhism. so I told them to respect our spin e and that I loved them." t.aliherty said. At that point, one of the assailants knot ked t.aliberty s glasses off and crushed them with his foot Then Lalib erty was pushed over a picket fence and kit ked in the head, ribs and groin The man with Lalibertv was also thrown to the ground in the confrontation. The police arrived and the crowd of about 20 people dispersed, l.aliberty said. Pendexter was arrested after police found him in the area shortly after the incident occurred. According to polii e reports, Pendexter admitted to the assault and was taken to jail Ijililierty said Pendexter was one of the main participants in the beating. However, ho said two or three other members of the group also participated in the assault. Tim Birr, KPD spokesman, said Pen dexter was charged with intimidation because the assailant perceived that the victims wore homosexuals "If you threaten someone on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin or sexual orientation, you have committed the crime of intimidation." Birr said. Computer crunches for physics students □New software makes graphs allowing students more time for analyzing By Demian McLean Emerald Reporter FIRST OF THREE PARTS In the same way that the hand held calculator replaced the slide rule in calculus, computers may lie replacing the traditional physics experiment. For the past three years, physics Professor David Sokoloff has been working on an innovative method to teach the principles of physics without burying students in statisti cs (calculation. The project uses computer soft ware that can be run on a Macin tosh computer. In one lab period, students can run several experi munis Instead of spending the whole lab computing the data for one experiment. Sokoloff said. Sokoloff said he got the idea for the software while attending a 1988 physics conference where Tufts University professors used Turn to COMPUTERS. Page 3 Cat’s curiosity results in 911 call By Martin Fisher Emerald Editorial Editor Larry Tomlinson lives in a high-c.rime Eugene neighbor hood, so when he called home to check his messages Satur day night, he was immediate ly suspicious when someone answered his phone. Instead of hearing his own voice issue a friendly, answer ing-machine greeting, he heard what he described as "rustling" on the other end of the line. Certain his apartment was being burglarized, Tomlinson immediately hung up and di aled 911. Tomlinson, who sells men's suits at a Valley River Center department store, does not own a car, but was able to get a ride to his apart ment with a store customer. When he arrived at his apartment, he was met by four Eugene police officers who found no sign of forced entry. The only other person with a key to the apartment was the manager Tomlinson and the police were growing more perplexed by the minute. After entering his apart ment, Tomlinson discovered Karts of his apartment had Ben ransacked by a real-life cal burglar — Buster. Buster is Tomlinson's cat, a white, American long-hair. Apparently, Buster heard the phone ringing end decid ed to investigate the source of the noise. "I didn't think he could get up there,'' Tomlin son said, referring to the coun tertop where the phone was sitting. Buster apparently knocked the receiver off the phone before the answering machine could kick in. The receiver fell to the floor near a pile of newspapers. Tomlinson sold he believes th»» rustling sound ho hoard was his cat playing in tho pa pors. "Ho must havti hoard my voico at tho other end saying. Hollo. Hollo,' and got ox cited," Tomlinson said "I felt pretty stupid," ho said. "The police had a good laugh." Tomlinson was sufficiently embarrassed by the incident to stay home, rather than return to work. "I just stayed there feeling like an idiot," he said. Tomlinson said Buster got his name for a reason. "When ho was young, he used to tear my house apart," Tomlinson said. “He would actually bust things, so I named him 'Bust er.'" Tomlinson said he does not expect to have similar prob lems in the future. "The phone's on the wall now," he said. g WEATHER l Mostly cloudy skies with temperatures in the lower 50s Today in History In 1987. the White House announced the resignation of CIA director William Casey, who was hospitalized and underwent brain surgery. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE (API - Over the weekend, along with making football picks and stocking up on snacks, many people wen debating whether violence against women is at its worst on Super Bowl Sunday. A spot check of hot lines, police departments and shelters indicated that most had received no more or less than the usual number of complaints. "Whether there s a correlation between violent sports and domestic vio lence. 1 don't know," said Sue Osthoff. director of the National Clearing house for the defense of Battered Women in Philadelphia. "But that's the wrong focus. It turns it into a sport like event It's very discouraging." SPORTS BUFFALO. N Y. (AP) - It * appropriate that Buffalo rest dents woke up to winter's wont chill the morning after their football team lost a record third straight Super Bowl - and lost it big time. The city cancelled a welcome-home rally for the Bills in front of dty hail because the team didn't want to face the humiliation after the Bills 52-17 loss to Dallas. "Everyone s just doing work.' said lack Martin, spokesman for toymaker Fisher-Price in suburban East Aurora. ‘Nobody's really mentioning the game it's like it never happened. I think they're just wishing the last three yean were all a figment of our imagination.'