Oregon Daily MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1993 Human rights speakers call for solidarity at rally J Attention given to more than gay, lesbian rights By Daralyn Trappc On»0c>n Daily l.merakl SPRINGFIKLD — Thu message hun dreds of thousands of gays and lesbians took to Washington. D C, tins post week end was a demand for equal rights and freedom from discrimination. A local rally echoed that call, but added another dimension. At a rally on a rainy, cold Sunday after noon, a large variety ol people from the mayor of Junction City to the loader of the local National Association for the Advancement of Colored People spoke ol the need for solidarity While the D C march foe used exclu sively on gav and lesbian rights, the two days' worth of events in Springfield also included attention to human rights in gen eral for not only gays and lesbians, but women and minorities, too. State Rep. Cynthia Wooten. D-Kugene. summed tip the rallying cry ol nearly Jt) speakers when she said, "Until there art equal rights for every man and woman in this country, the rights of everyone are diminished, and they vs ill be until we know our civil liberties are real Also at tin- rallv were a lew members of the Oregon (atizens Alliance, a group that stnunchlv opposes gay rights and has sponsored statewide and city wide anti gav rights initiatives. An OCA-sponsored Turn to RALLY. Page 3A Rarely Despite rainy conditions, about 1,000 people marched and rallied in Springfield Sunday afternoon for equal rights Thieves take bike... and banana □ Looting from campus-area garage hits seven vehicles By Matt Bender Oegwi Pin/y ErrmraU Seven residents of a campus-area quad com plex became the latest victims Friday of a recent rash of Eugene car thefts. University student Jennifer Broadhent und six other people who live in Woodside Manor, 1810 Harris St., had their vehicles broken into sometime between 12:10 and fi a.m, Friday Diana Robson, the complex manager, said four stereos, a pair of speakers, a bitfe and a tool box were taken from the seven vehicles The thieves also broke into one truck and stole a single banana. Robson said. "They broke in and todV a bunano from some groceries and left everything else." she said. “They nte the banana and threw the peel under another car." Robson said the thieves appeared to bo inex perienced and did a lot of damage to the vehi cles they broke into. “They were prulwbly just some kids putting on o crime wave to show how tough they were.'' she said. "It was random and wusn't very well planned.” Robson said the complex has never experi enced this level of crime in the past. She said usually the quad complex only has onu or two thefts from tars a year Broadhent's Volkswagen fetta. parked in the manor's parking garage, showed no signs of forced entry. The car's driver-side door lock was somehow defeated and her $300 stereo and five tapes were taken. The thieves also took the tune to open a box of Broadhent's laundry detergent and spill it all over the inside of the car. The thieves used a blunt object to break out the locks of two of the vehicles in the garage Hroadhent said the entire door lock was missing from a Ford Aerostar parked under the quad complex, it is unknown how the thieves broke into the other five vehicles. Hroadhent is just one of the many University students who have recently been victimized by car thieves In the past two weeks, the Univer sity Office of Public Safety has taken more than a dozen reports on thefts from student vehicles. Turn to THEFTS. Page 4A Two rootoaii players cited in pair of fires J The redshirt freshmen are charged with reckless burning in the University Inn fires By Matt Bender Otiyol DiP'r I "Wfakt Two University football players have iieen t ited lor rei kless burn ing in i onnet.turn with u pair ol small fires set at the University Inn April IK Authorities have i barged Michael David Myers and Reginald Jor dan with setting lires in u third-floor trash i an anti in a dumpster lot aied outside of the inn. lot nit.nl at 1000 Patterson St Very little damage was done by either til the (ires I lie third-floor trasli can fins was Startl’d In mi elevator lobby and was easily extin guished The dumpster fire was started when some homing moteri at was sent down a garbage t hute. A sprinkler in the gartiage t.hule was set off on the set olid floor as the horning material made its way down to the dumpster I he only damage from the fire was $500 In water damage to the first floor that tat: or red when the sprinkler was set off. Kugeiie police Detective Kit k Raynor i itetl Iordan, a t> foot :t, 220 pound redshirt freshman, and Myers, ati-foot-1. 2 la-pound redshirt freshman. April 22. after conducting nn arson investigation. According to Raynor's report. Jordan. Myers and two other men Tum to FIRE. Page 3A Election Results ASUO EXECUTIVE winners Eric M. Bowen Diana Collins Puente EMU BOARD (1-year seat) winners Mathew Hasek S.W. Conser (2-year seat) winners Stephanie Dixon Margaret Chattield Deirdre Johnson ASPAC Todd Newman Barnhart Chris Glasgow IFC (1 -year seat) ballot Esther Wong Jack Orozco Jian Liu David Swartley Christopher Alexander Tonija Edwards (2-year seat): ballot Julia Wallace Joey Lyons David Kuhn Carrissa J Callison AAA/ JOURNALISM (2-year seat) winners Katherine M Waters Joshua Thomas (1-year seat) winners Jennifer Bohm© Dennis Bolt LANGUAGE ARTS/ ARTS AND LETTERS/ INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES (2-year seal) winners Hillary Aitken David A M WaJlerstein (1 -year seat) winner Chris Fox SOCIAL SCIENCE/ SCIENCES (2-year seat) ballot Sarah Johnson Spencer Lugash (1-year seat) ballot Jennifer A. Williamson Ginger Gord UNDECLARED/ MUSIC (2-year seat) winners Zachary James Kelton Jesse Bohrer Clancy BUSINESS (2-year seat) winner Cole Chase (1 -year seat) winner Scott Carver GRADUATES/ LAW (1 -year seat) winner Carl Brody (2-year seat) ballot Brad Anderson Oscar Garcia