Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 01, 1993, Page 7, Image 19

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    5
Brandon Showers won’t stop thinking about
tomorrow until he's away from Bill Clinton.
► Can’t take Clinton
— we’re outta here!
1 wo <oJIege students air v> unhappy with
\ met it a s elec lion ol Pits idem Bill ( ltnion
that one is t boosing to break the lavs while die
«itbei is leaving the tountrv in protest
Kevin Blatsdell. a sophomore at the l o|
Wyoming, is refusing to registei lor the dial!
bet ause he believes ( Hinton dodged the drait
\nd Brandon Showeis, a seiuot at louisiana
State 1 savs he plans tt» move to Australia
this summer.
Both pi onuses started during pie ele< tit in
dot ussions about the I Viiummiu candidate
BLusdell sa\s Ins det isioti not to trgistet lor
the draft developed at the lunt h table when
he was "sh< >wmg lu »vs int«insistent ( lint on was
in skipping ‘Hit on the draft and then sending
people to w~ai
1 he ! K-vrai-old Blaiviell savs he is not plan
ning to registei despite lines and a possible
pt iv»n term il he gets t aught
“I don’t think the government has a right to
line me when ( linton wasn t lined, he- savs
\o one has appioached Blaisdell vet. either
of l it tails ot unoiiit rails, abnil basing to tegiv
tei.
While Blaisdeli waits for the Selei me
Sen ii <• ii > mine kin m king. Shower s is par king
Ins bags lot \ustralia in hi* own form of
antM hnlon protest
li started as a joke Iasi spring "hen ( hnlon
'veined lo hast- i Inn hell (tie Demur ialii
nominee, then briame more serious .n
< Imtons Iraif in ihe [mils • onlinued to ev a
late
"HopelulK 1 "ill giaduate this spring and
then go dm summerShoweis suv "I dun l
agree will) Bill Clinton or tiis polii les, and I
think lie i oulil really destnn tins country
from an economic standpoint
So lie’s not going to sta\ around to vsati h —
even though Showers, like Blaisdell. is taking
a hit of heat lot hisdei ision. "M\ mom dunks
I'm ita/s and tin dad sas-s it's fine as long as
lie can come wsit," Showers sa\s ■Aaron
Derr, Daily Knrtllr, Uiuiium State L'.
► ‘Quotas’a dirty
word at law schools
Law school officials around the counuy watched 4nd
wailed for the imjiac i of a L: .S. education department
ruling to tom h their school*
'Hie decision. alter all, wa* supposed to be a prree
dent-setting case The Department of Education ruled
last tail that an admission* policy at the l*. of
California, Berkeley, violated a federal law In group
ing minority landidate* to lie considered only against
other minorities for admission
I hose who expected sweeping change* from the
Berkeley decision are still waiting ’Almost no other
law school* — if there are any I’m not aware of them —
had such a detailed system of racial identification and
goals,* sa\s John DiPippa, associate dean of the law
si (tool ai the U, of Arkansas, little Rock,
DiPippa, like many of his colleagues around the
country, believes the affirmative action policy at hi*
law school will escape ramifications of the Berkeley
deeisic >n.
Unlike the Berkeley policy, admissions at the I.’, of
Arkansas are not based on any set of goals or quotas
that single out minorities. Applicants are put into two
groups one based on lest score* and grade point aver
ages, the other on score* that fall below those num
hers.
Dil’ippa point* to the far-rearhing nature of
Berkeley’* admissions policy, which tome *av broke
the boundaries of traditional affirmative action prrv
grams - no quotas and no muioniy tracts.
Mai k Ftnkclstein. a student at the Stanford U. law
school, say* law school* stav away from minority track
ing for good reason.
*ln general, minority Harking is demeaning and
stigmituiiig." he says. "Everyone views minorities as
‘You wouldn't have gotten in here if it weren't for thr
admissions.
Berkeley traditionally has accepted afMiut 2.H to 27
percent of each class horn these minority tract*
"The impression I iiad there was come hell or high
water tficv had to have 'X' number of minority stu
dents,’ savs Thomas Arthur, associate dean of the
Emory U. law school.
It is normal prac tier at law schools to take race into
consideration hut not to maintain it as an overriding
factor, he savs.
So what the Berkeley dec ision will do is force law
sc hoots to take a look at these affirmative action poli
tics. even if it means stopping short of changing them.
"There should be some (leicibility, but there is a
line." says Doug Fleming, president of the Student Bar
Association at thr Northwestern U. law school. “1
don't know what that line is. Everyone struggles with
that issue." ■ Amy Johnston, H aleru Herald, Western
Michigan U.
M \\v \ Mills
.. ■ _ _ _m~. ---SL-iiSi.
New NCAA guidelines may force bleeding players to the sidelines.
► Cleaning up the game
\thlrlrs alwavs have m ogni/ed bl«H»d as a s\ml»oI of thr inn
p I a sr i a prison wh<» will not <jmt despite mjiiis llut the
National ( ollrgiatr \ I lilt* t «* Assotiation is imnn to keep this
linage- from f>ct«lining a mrdu al ha/anl
\( \ \ of tic tab an tugmg all spoils lo adopt a }h»Iu\ to pull
hl<mkIu-iI plavns hum a game toi tiraiinrn! S|x*its an the oiih
pla* vs whet* bleeding is at» rpted. savs Rands I h< k \( \ \ ass»>
taut dim tor ol sj« u ts m tent rs
fhoiwh thrrr air no dot umrntrd « a vs ol a plasn < ontiat ting
I hr 11IV suns oi othri bit m wl Ih»i nr ihsravs thtmigh < lose » onta< i
spoi is. lhr N( \ \ is not faking an\ « ham rs I hr inommrinli d
guideline s irijuur pla\ris to be healed dining a game if lhr\
irinsr am injurs v.hi< h causes bleeding It blood gets on then
\ lotlnng. the of fit lals must defeiitnne whrthn a new jrisrs is
irtpiiied Ik*Ioi<* pias tan rrsiunr
( hi is I si is, gnai d toi < )hio ( . was taken out ot a game toi a < ul
on his knee I didn’t r\rn notitr it. hut fhr it t saw it and said I
nrrtietf It» gel it bandaged up." he sas s
\s a plasti. I slis saw he dorsn t lealh think atx »ut the new it g
illation "It thr Magu Johnson thing would have nrsri liappened
it nrsri would hast-1 rusted ms mind," hr sass
1 hr mrn and womrn s haskrthal! i ulrs 11 >mmliters det idrtl l«»
establish ihr new jmlirv tight awas. soitmuld Ik- implementrti
this haskrthal! season I hr other simm Is < ummittres madeupol
t oat lies and athletu duet tots — will make then own dr« ismns
I hr turn's baske tball frainrt at the- l ol Krnttii k\ JoAnii
I lauvi. sass thr ne w guidelines air a definite iinpiosriiirnl ftom
past |><do trs hut don t go loo lai ovetlwiatd grtling III thr ssas of
thr gamr "If offit ials hrgan to t all rsristhmg tilt hiding little
st rate lies, thru that takes a was from the game and fiotit the plas
et s "■ Ann Gynn, The Tint, < )hio l .
Auburn hunts down students in violation of sodomy law
(.ax .iiut lesbian students .11 Auburn
t 11.unit'd .< mu.ill vie Ion last bill whrn
untveism ullii ials agleed to Mop lore mg
\uburn student group* n> sign a lorm
pledging their compliance with »lalc
sodoun and sexual liust undue I laws
But it was a shallow Melon
1 he \uburn <>as and lesbian
\\so< i.iiion is still undei investigation.
\nd ( aropus administrator* < ontinue
using to Ion e students to otiev a law that
prohibits public lurid* or lac ihties Irom
ix-mg used to promote hirsutes <u at lt*>
ties outlawed bv sodom* and sexual rtuv
i undue t statutes
lac.stve.il it was die lorm I hi* year ucs
a itiirMiirinlx'i cointniltrr set up In- the
IV >.ti tl nl 11 listers In investigate the (i u>
dm t ol student groups "This < oniniittrr
it the administration's wax nl Inrnidh/
ing .1 li.it Vit.iicK .mil Infilled dale law
ihai unfmninatrlv happens in lx- mi dir
luniks," (.in Sieve Nligalski. .1 graduate
Miidciu mrinlx-r ol At >1A at Auhtirn
I lie (ommittrr lias inn twice *0 fat
and will present ils findings to the
Auburn president. II, bavrd on the
ir|Hiii ol the (ommillrr, the president 1
find* the Aid A iv in violation ol state
sodium and sexual mtvonduel laws, die
gt 1 nip will lose its 1 harlei
1 he Auburn legal touttiel refused 111 1
ominnii on ili<- j><>!i< \
Iwnlu.ilK , Imwru-i. admiliixtiatnix at
Vlahama iiimnvine s will have lo amwri
o! thru |>oh< ie\ (ifoigr line Wdxon.
trxhman and president «>( ihr I <»l
ioiith Alabama <»a\ lesbian Bise xual
Viliam r. %a\% student pinups will
rcpiest binding dux veai in xpilc ol tin
aw II then are denied, tlicv will dial
rngr tin- law \ t omtittiiionulm
" I 1m* A( I I ix just waiting in (hr wings
oi a university in Alabama b» denv a
rouest loi binding xo dun (an take dux
o < ourt and overturn the law . x*% s
A ilxon ■ Amy Lyn Mauldin, Rrd &
Hark, U. of (Georgia