Oregon Daily WEDNESDAY. JUNE 2. 1993 EUGENE. OREGON VOLUME 94. ISSUE 169 Volunteers want items donated, not dumped j Organization will send unwanted items to Tijuana By Tammy Batey OtKjon Da*?y fmerata Flail on chucking that shirt in that interesting shade of orange you bought on a whim? What about that oh-so-foshion able hat your aunt bought you tor Christ mas? And don't forget those lamps you couldn’t stop yourself from buying because they were a dollar apiece at a garage sale. The end of the school year means Uni versity students will he cleaning then dorm rooms, houses and apartments and finding stuff they don't want —- and can't believe they bought. But University junior Suzanne O'Shea encourages students to give her their old junk, instead of throw ing it away. O'Shea is helping collect items for the Mission of |oe Brown, an organization that collects and donates items to home less people in Tijuana. Mexico. Items that Brown, a reverend who began his service in 1960. can't ship to Tijuana will bo dis tributed to the working poor and home less in Lane County. "For a long time I've wanted a place where stuff is tor free," O'Shea said "Even if a pair of blue jeans costs Sr>, if you’re trying to pay your rent. S5 can be too much." In past years, O'Shea has been amazed at what students throw out She said she has found sheets still in their packaging and sweaters that look brand new outside of greek houses and dorms "There's this market out there in the dumpsters.” she said "They throw all that stuff away. The main thing is i ati fl ing them before they leave anil letting them know there's a need At 19. Brown first visited Tijuana with a church group. He started up his organi zation bu(.ause of an an ident The church memljurs were returning to the United States when their Inis broke down. Brown went to get gas and soon found himself in n garbage dump He almost stepped on a bain girl c overed with dirt and maggots Besides the abandoned girl. Brown saw other people living in cardboard shacks and wearing paper sacks. He look the girl hack to the bus. and a few weeks later she was adopted. The experience changed Ins life. Brown began collecting furniture, clothes and food to take the homeless in Tijuana. He now returns every six months. "It's a great feeling." he said. "I've made friends who are like my own fami ly. They treat me like I'm their brother. You reach out to help them and they reai h out and love you." O'Shea is one of about 350 volunteers who help roller t items to send to Tijuana To donate items to be picked up. cal! O'Shea at OH I 9185 For more information on the Mission of foe Brown, call Brown at 206-4333 in Mapleton or write to P C). Box 537, Mapleton. OK 97453 Buckle up t*y MR N»wr Ram leaked into the EMU floor from the building ’s roof and other water was swept m from the side After the floor dried, the blocks buckled and formed mounds EMU Director Dusty Miller said the the door would be torn apart and put back together cither Tuesday night or tonight F#*p*ok> Much A TM fraud can be avoided by keeping PINs personal. ATM fraud can take many forms j Recent robbery cases raise concerns NEW YORK (AP) — M's like a script from an underworld mas termind's Mission Impossible Hifth-tec:h thieves install a phony automated teller machine at a suburban Connecticut mall, steal data from user cards and bilk bunk accounts nationwide Or how about this: Crooks in New York furtively videotape ATM users as they punch in their secret access codes The videotapers use the information to make t.ash withdrawals Then there's thu con artist in Fairfax County, Va.. who posed as a hank manager, duped bank card theft victims into revealing confidential information about their codes and used it to steal even more of their money. These are some recent exam ples of headline-grabbing cases that have focused attention on the safety and security of the nation's 87,000 ATMs, one of the most popular ways to get cash. ATMs have been on attractive target for robbers ever since they were introduced two decades ago Hut I be threat of physical assault on users bus been over shadowed by nonviolent, more sophisticated thievery, hatched in some extremely clever crimi nal brains. "Bankers are naturally con cernud," said lions I Meluikolf, tin Atlanta hank executive who advises the American Bankers Association on sri ority issues "It's been an eye opener to the industry, to say the least." Yet industry experts insist that AIM fraud still is relatively rare — with losses minuscule com pared with those of the < red it card industry They say average hank cus tomers, especially those gearing up for some heavy ATM use this summer, have little to worry about as long as they guard their (xtrsonal identification numbers, or PINs, and take proper precau tions when using a hank Turn to ATMs. Page 4 WEATHER There may be a break, in the stormy weather today Forecast calls for partial clearing after some scattered morning show ers Today in History In 1851. Maine became the first state to enact a law pro hibiting alcohol. RACE, GENDER CONTINUES The University Assembly will continue discussion of a revised race. Render and non-European requirement today at 3 30 p m in the EMU Ballroom Several amendments to the revision are up (or consideration One would change the proposed requirement's first course hack to addressing African Americans. Asian-Americans. Native Americans and Latinos/Chtcanos instead of ‘minority groups in the U SA." which the assembly changed it to at its May meeting The assembly may extend study of the issues surrounding the revision and vote on the requirement in the fall _SPORTS DETROIT (AP) - The American League is investigating the conduct ol Seattle's Ken Grilles |r. who swore and made obscene gestures at Detroit manager Sparky Anderson while rounding the bases after hitting a three-run homer in a Tigers Mariners game Griffey nad been angry about Tiger pitchers' efforts to keep him from batting in a weekend series in Seattle Griffey is batting 285 with 10 home runs and JO KBIs this season. The homer was his only hit of the three-game series in which the Tigers mostly pitched around him Griffey said Monday night that he planned to apologize to Anderson