Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 29, 1993, Image 1

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    Oregon Daily
THURSDAY, APRIL 29. 1993
EUGENE. OREGON
VOLUME 94. ISSUE 146
ASUO ELECTION RESULTS
Incidental Fee Committee
One-year soar*
lack Orosco, 298
Tonija Edward*. 297
lian Liu, 231.
Two-year seuts
Julia Wallace. 260
(oey Lyon*. 215.
Student Senate
Social Science, seal No. 8
Sarah Johnson, 152.
Cruduate/Law. seat No 17
Oscar Garcia. 84. (Pending con
firmation.)
Ballot Measures
No 1 (Multicultural Center)
Yes. 403. No, 434
No. 2 (Sexual Awault Exam)
Yea. 836 No. 210.
No. 3 (Family Center)
Yea. 530 No. 285
No. 4 (LTD)
Yea. 810 No. 215
No 5 (Non-traditional Office)
Yes. 258 No. M2
No 6 (Meeting* requirement)
Ye*. 584 No. 123
No 7 (Constitutional review)
Yea. 533 No. 158.
No. 8 (Fat kwood)
Yen, 380 No. 404
No 9 ((X1A)
Ye*. 291. No. 474
Multicultural center rejected
j Five percent turn
out to vote on
$479,490 in fees
By Tammy Batey
Owflon IrtvraM
About 945 student!i voted to
approve $114,465, about SlH
per student per year, in student
fees, while rejecting another
$105,025 in Tuesday's and
Wednesday's general elections
Students nixed ballot mea
sures that would have paid for a
multicultural (.enter, a non tra
ditional student office and
would have sent messages to
Sen Boh Park wood and the
Oregon Citizens Allinnc e
However, students passed
measures to fund a pilot Sexual
Assault 1.vaiuilliltion Fund, the
Family Center and unlimited
Inis service within the lane
Transit District service
They also approved measures
that would add regulations go\
ernmg how often the IFC and
Student Senate must meet and
require the Constitution Court
to review the groups' rules.
Students voted down Mini
sun' 1. which asked students to
i house to pav a fee of $2 45 per
term per veer to i rente n multi
culttirnl i enter
Measure 5 asked students to
pay SI 2t> per term to generate
a total $5fi,000 to fund a non
traditional student offu e
I'lie office would have served
students age 25 and older and
student parents
Measure H asked students
whether they wanted the ASUO
Turn to VOTE, Pago 8
KAVE’s owner to transfer
CD music library to KRVM
j Fans must give up plans
to put station back on the air
By Rebecca Merritt
Of&QOn Daily Enwakf
|Kl) Broadcasting, owner of the KAVK.
Inis offered program consulting and the
use of its 2,500 compact tlisi music
library to KRVM, the 4-) School District's
public radio station
Although this school-business partner
ship will put tile much-missed, eclectic
KAVli iiiusii but k on Eugene s airwaves,
it stops the 12week effort by Friends ol
the KAVK to purchase the i:omui«n nil
station. I he group was attempting lo put
KAVK music back on the 05 i KM dial
while also putting back lo work 11 former
KAVK employees
An organization comprised of the for
mer KAVK stuff members. Friends td the
KAVI said it had fount! a prospective
buyer lor the station and that Jordan Sea
man of JED Broadcasting told the group
he would sell the station if they found an
interested buyer.
Although f riends of the KAVK knew
that JED Broadcasting was negotiating
with the school district, they were
unaware that Seaman and David Miller
entered the partnership with KKVM until
Tuesday's news i onference
"We just want people to know the
truth," a Friends of the KAVF spokes
woman said "We tried our darnedest to
make this happen.”
Since the station's demise Feb 12.
Friends of the KAVK had gained support
from about 3.000 former KAVK listeners,
as well as from former advertisers, in its
attempt to buy the station. They said JED
Broadcasting had not provided the group
with the complete financial information
needed to commit a buyer to the station
before the KRVM deal was made.
JED Broadcasting had originally given
Friends of the KAVE one week to raise
Student DJs
getting help
from KAVE
j KAVE owners offer
library, training to help
school-run radio station
By Rebecca Merritt
Oregon tin, .. .»
kvle Clark is one of the few radio
programmers in Oregon who do not
have a high school degree
Thanks to the opportunity pro
vided hy KKVM, the 4-J St hool fits
trict's public radio station, Clark. .1
junior at Sheldon High School,
spends about 20 hours of fits free
time eat h week coordinating stu
dent programs for the B,000-watt
FM station
Although tie s still |ust a high
school student. Clark said he has
received enough vocational training
from the station to doe jay any
small, i omittercial radio station.
Turn to KRVM. Page 3
$100,000 to buy the station The group
found the task unreachable without the
proper financial information, and after
talking to attorneys and JED Broadcasting,
it received an extended deadline.
'Hie group presented the KAVE owners
with the prospective buyer at the end of
March but say they have not heard from
)K1) Broadcasting since then.
Turn to KAVE, Page 3
Music man
fwrll
Pfeoto by Tot" ti,
Jeremy Wegner, ol the group Bmdaas. sits in the EMU Courtyard
playing his sitar Wednesday afternoon He's been playing the sitar for
four years
WEATHER
Cloudy skies today with areas
of partial clearing Highs 60-65
degrees and a .10 percent chance
of rain
Todjy in Htslory
One year ago. LA saw the start
of rioting that claimed 54 lives
and caused $1 billion in damage
after four LA police officers
w ere acquitted of state charges
in the beating of Rodney King
IFC, ATHLETICS AT ODDS
The Incidental Fee Commute* Wednesday night (ailed to approve the
Athletic Department's goal statement, the first step toward approving its bud
get When approving a group s goal statement, members agree the group adds
to "the cultural and physical development" of the University
Sandv Walton, senior associate athletic director, ra ted the IFCs inability to •
approve the AO's goal statement a "political ploy.”
IFC Chairman Steve Masat said the goal statement should tie about the
benefit students receive from paying tor basketball and football game tu kets
and not about the department's contribution to the University as a w hole
The IFC w ill meet on Saturday to discuss the Athletic Department's goal
statement and to decide if students should decide in a spec ial ele< lion
whether to fund the department
SPORTS
RALEIGH, N.C (AP) - Jim Valvano died Wednesday, after a
year-long battle with bone cancer finally stilled the flash and
sass of a gifted college haskrthall coach who led his team to a
miracle championship and left it after a messy scandal
Valvano. 47, pulled off one of the great upsets in college bas
ketball history io 1981 when the Wolfpai k. with 1U regular
season tosses, beat favored Houston in the NCAA tournament
final on lorenao Diaries' buzzer beating dunk Seven years
later. Valvano was forced out after an NCAA investigation
determined that his players violated rules bv selling their
sneakers and complimentary game tickets