Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 02, 1993, Page 3, Image 3

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    DEMANDS
Continued from Page 1
affairs director's position up to a national search.
Moseley instead promoted Sauceda. who was
already working in the office as the acting director.
"We used a process we use for all such hires and
that process really did work." he said.
ASUO Multicultural Advocate Diana Collins
Puente said the group doesn't mean to target the
multicultural affairs office.
“Every single department in this University has
a problem." she said. "We don't want to shovel all
ol the responsibility off on someone else."
Group members won't be satisfied if the admin
istration meets their demands and then forgets the
needs of minority students. Collins Puente said.
Despite the budget cutbacks caused by 1990's
Measure 5. the University can find money to pay
for the new faculty positions and multicultural
center the group is demanding. Collins Puente
said.
"There are only so many times we can take it.”
she said. “There are only so many times you can
be slapped down. We are serious about our
demands, and we're serious about the conse
quences. We're done playing."
Moseley said the administration won't be able to
meet the demands of all minority students, but
administrators will work with members of Stu
dents of Color Building Bridges.
"I think the students and the administration are
sitting on the same side of the church." he said.
"I expect the administration will do all we can in
every earnest sense.”
Students of Color
Building Bridges
DEMANDS
IFACULTYl
•List new hires in eech department since first
Measure Five budget outs.
•List each department's hiring efforts tor minority
faculty.
• President Mytea Brand ahouid convene a forum
wfwi oaana ana oapanmant naaot 10 caacusa
mmomy wnno anona.
•HrebainguMadmiaaiona oounaalors and
academic advisors.
[ENVIRONMENT]
jWopen the OWcs ot MuMouWutal Affairs’
Dtracfor poaitton in orbar to parforrn a
nafon-*ida aanrah for a raw dir actor.
*w^w^^r saws we v^ew^w a^^e •
• ina unaanv v*vaaKjani ano via rrovoav
should writs a letter k> aff faculty members
mvomung mam mai ravamng via* auoanv to
afcidant uniona for raanamfi numoaaa ia not
appreciated by student union members.
■Open hily operational rnuMcullural osntsr.
•me Asaislant Director tor ffie ONloe at
ewtare^w^m^a sa^s ss^^v aiwse^e^^w aas
ICURRICULUMl
•inoanttvaa ahouid ba oonaidavad to promota ta
davatoomant of atronoar oouraaa to aatiafv lha
race, gander, non-European rsQubemant In
general education.
RANCH
Continued from Page 1
wildlife such as deer, possums
and coyotes, as well as a large
variety of wildflowers. Visitors
may also participate in bird and
plant identification walks.
"People have a chance to
experience history and the beau
ty of this incredible environ
ment,'' said Casey Bcmis, volun
teer programmer for the ranch.
"Two-hundred-and-fiftv acres of
beautiful land just a mile from
town. That's a real jewel."
Dorris Ranch was originally
purchased in 1H92 by George
and Lulu Dorris. Berms said.
Dorris planted his first 50 filbert
trees in 1903. By the 1920*. Dor
ris had developed a method of
propagating filiterts. and Dorris
Ranch became the first commer
cial filbert orchard in the United
States, producing an average of
70,000 filbert tress annually
Willamalane acquired the
ranch in 1972 through a dona
tion by the Dorris family and
state and federal money, Bernis
.said. Since 1984, Willamalane
has been developing plans for
the living history farm
Today. Dorris Ranch boasts
nearly 10.000 trees and still
operates as a commercial filbert
farm Horvat said Willamalane
contracts a local farm to harvest
the fillierts, and volunteers work
to hag the nuts.
The ranch operates on funds
received from grants, program
fees and filbert profits, Heims
said. A membership organiza
tion. Friends of Dorris Ranch,
has also been established to con
tribute funds.
Because the Dorris filbert
farm mainly operated in the
1920s. Betnis said the ranch
specifically focuses on that time
period. However, the ranch still
pays attention to Oregon histo
ry dating back os for as 7,000
years, particularly the last 100
years.
"While we focus on the '20s.
we go back in time when Native
Americans and Hudson Bay
trappers inhabited the land."
Bemis said.
Dorris Ranch is becoming a
popular Held trip stop for Lane
County schools. The ranch
offers school tours and programs
from April to June and Septem
ber through November.
“When school opens, basical
ly all of our spaces are filled."
Heims slid We really do serve
o need as a destination for field
trips in the Willamette Valley."
General public tours are
offered on the weekends. The
ranch is open for the public
from 9 a m. to -t p m. Saturday
and from 1 to 4 p m Sunday.
"The thing that makes ine the
happiest is to see repeat visi
tors." Horvat said, "it's really
fun to see kids bring their fami
lies back."
Within 10 years. Horvat. who
is responsible for long-range
development and fund raising
for the ranch, hopes Dorris
Ranch will look like it originally
did in 1H92 Wtlllamalane is
attempting to restore the Dorris
house as well as the filliert nurs
ery so it can sell filbert trees A
visitor's center and parking lot
are also included in future plans
for the ranch.
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AMP FOUND IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION,
CLINTON
Continued from Page 1
billion over the next four years, building from 25,000 service
slot* in 1994 to more than 100.000 in 1007. Funding would
then increase in the following >ears boxed on demand and the
program's performance.
One year of service would qualify students for two years
of college loan*. Eli Segal, the Clinton adviser drafting the
program, said the administration had yet to decide on a bor
rowing cap.
Students could borrow first and enter service efter graduat
ing. or enter service after high school and accrue credits for
loans. Segal said stipends likely would be paid at or near the
minimum wage, but that no final decision tied been made.
Students who chose not to enter public service could pey
beck loans based on a percentage of their income — not the
amount borrowed — which Clinton said would encourage
graduates to enter lower-paying but critical professions such
as teaching and working in community health cllnica.
"National service can make America new again," Clinton
said. "The American dream will be kept alive if you today
will answer the call to asrve."
Clinton unveiled the program at Rutgers University after
visiting a nearby adult learning center staffed by Rutgers com
munity Mrvice volunteers and members of a local youth
corpa. Clinton Mid critics of his program did not believe
young Americans would embrace community Mrvice.
"They believe this call to service will go unanswered but I
believe they are dead wrong," Clinton Mid to thunderous
applause from students at the Rutgers athletic center.
Clinton Mid polite and teatiling were two areas the nation
al measure would urge states to incorporate Into their Mr
vice programs. Otherwise, he Mid stales would have broad
discretion in shaping the programs.
”We don’t want to set up a big new national bureaucracy to
tell every state and every community what they should teach
and what they should do," Clinton said.
His visit had several subplots: lobbying for his overall eco
nomic package, visiting a slate and constituency — young vot
ers — critical to bis 1992 victory, and shoring a stage with a
friend facing a tough re-election race. New jersey Gov. Jim
Florio.
Clinton wasn’t alone in trying to still the national service
plan.
Vim President Al Cora. Tipper Coro and three memtmrs of
the Clinton Cabinet — Health and Human Services Secretary
Donna Shalala. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt and Labor
Secretary Robert Reich fanned out to five states to visit
community service programs
On hand for Clinton's event were many of Congress' biggest
proponents of national service, including a handful of Demo
cratic senators and the chairmen of the House and Senate
committees that will consider the program. Former New Jer
sey Gov. Thomas Kean, a Republican, also attended to offer
his support.
Some union leaders have expressed concern that the pro
gram would take jobs away from adults ami give them to com
munity service workers at lower pay.
But Clinton, in an interview for broadcast Monday night on
MTV, said that would not happen For example, he suid, a
city hiring community service workers a* polit e would have
to show they were not displacing "anybody from existing
jobs.”
Bankers, who would be bypassed by the program, also
oppose the idea and are to begin n lobbying campaign on
Capitol Hill on Tuesday.
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