Oregon Daily THURSDAY. JULY 1, 1993 Vice president to repay fall stipends □ Collins Puente was ineligible for stipends because she was not enrolled By S.A. Clemens Oregon Qii/fy £mer,ik1 ASUO Vice President Diana Collins Puente will begin repay ing the student government for Stipends she received while working ns multicultural advo cate last fall Ixtcause she was not registered ns a student. ASUO employees must lie ro istered for at least six credits to fie eligible for stipends. Collins Puente said she will petition a second time to receive six credits for two practicums lor fall term, but she and ASlfO Pres ident Kris Bowen decided that in the meantime the nv^ev should lie paid back. "I was no longer comfortable with her receiving this stipend while the issues were unre solved." Bowen said. Her first petition to the Acad emic Requirements Committee was turned down with little explanation, said Collins Puente, who added that she believed such petitions generally were approved. "There are not a lot of these petitions." said Registrar Herb Chereck. "Students most often have very extraneous situations " He could not say why Collins Puente's request was not approved because lows regarding student privacy do not allow such information to lie released to the public . Collins Puente is petitioning on the grounds that she was emo tionally overwhelmed by a sexu al assault last Summer and did not register because she was unsure whether she was going to stuy at die University. Although she did not attend any classes, she did have two practicums that could yield the six credits needed to rei eive a stipend as an ASUO employee Collins Puente will in' rvtjuirml to pay $50 out of her $270-a month stipend beginning in July The [mvinents will continue until the full $600 is relumed to stu dent government. If her second request is accept ed, the ASUO will repay the money to Collins Puente, who will then have to pay the Uni Turn to STIPEND. Page 3 Bank on it H*Hj»o by Antfwy > o#n#y Thirteen ycar olci Doug Hurst fly-fishes in the Willamette River near Alton Baker Park Wednesday Hurst, who is on vacation from Monroe Middle School, says he catches mostly trout and blue gill, but"anything will do “ University’s rose is thorn in AP’s side □ Press agency’s story says University’s fundraising flower was named after Barbara Bush By Ed Carson Of&gort Oaity It rrvrjkJ Tlie Associated Press got stung when it tried to sniff out a story on the University’s new namesake rose. The AP mistakenly reported the University named a rose after former first lady Barbara Bush. "Barbara Bush now has a rose to call her own," according to the AP story. Actually, it's the University that now has a rose to call its own. a hybrid tea rose displaying the University colors in yellow flowers and dark green foliage. "The idea was to have a beautiful, quality rose as a living namesake of the University." said feanie McCabe. University rose project coordinator. The rose was developed by Jackson & Perkins, a Medford-based rose breeding firm. The firm also produced a Barbara Bush pink ptnao t* vine Tim ‘Unlvonity of Ongon Horn" mm tlm topic ot contusion wtmn the Asaocltmd Promt rmportmd It hmd boon ttmmmd afler Barton Bush. rose in 1991, which may have been the reason for the AP’s mix-up. However, the University June 28 new* release did not mention this, say Turn to ROSE, Page 3 OCA says new success may bolster state effort □ Measures similar to Springfield’s anti-gay rights amendment pass in six cities, counties SAI.F.M (At’) — I'lii* group leading tin* i rus.ide against homosex uality in Oregon sa vs tin* voters who passed anti-gay rights measures in two cities and four i ounlies may help turn around u statewide defeat last year. "These sis voles show that a vast majority of people do not want homosexuality presented as good and normal to their children." said lam Mahon, chairman of the Oregon Citizens Alliance. The measures approved Tuesday marked the latest chapter in Ore gon's continuing debate over the rule of homosexuals in society and whether they should Ik* afforded protection from discrimination. The alliance drew up the six local measures after the defeat of the group's statewide anti-gay rights measure following a highly publi cized campaign last fall. Mahon said that the six local measures approved Tuesday will help the alliance build momentum for a new statewide measure next year. '"We have gained substantially." he said. "We think this gives us just what we need to build toward 1994." The closest vote Tuedsay was in Junction City, population 3.670. The measure passed 631-1*28. Voters in C!anby. population 8,980. approved the measure 56 per T urn to OCA, Page 3 WEATHER Skies will be mostly cloudy today with i slight chance of showers. Highs will be in the mid-70s. Cloudy skies should continue Friday and Saturday with an increasing chance of showers Mostly sunny skies should return to Eugene for Sunday's Fourth of July celebrations. ANOTHER BOSS NEW YORK (AP) - Glory days! Patti Scialfa and husband Bruce Springsteen are having another one born in the U SA The rock n roll couple ate expecting their third child, a statement from Scialfa's publicist said Tuesday. They already have a 3-year-old son. Evan lames, and an lb-month-old daughter, (eaaica Rae. Springsteen. 43. married Scialfa. 36. in June 1991. when she was his backup singer and a member of the now-defunct E Street Band. Springsteen left his first wife, actress lulianne Phillips, in 1988. The pregnancy won t delay release of Scialfa's first solo album. Rumble Doll, due out July 13 from Columbia Records, publicist Michele Schweitzer said SPORTS i PORTLAND (AP) - Portland Beavers tali her Mike Maksudian is not like most hasehall players When he catches a fly. he eats it. And not just flies. Maksudian. 27, also has a taste for grasshoppers, beetles, cockroaches, worms, aquarium fish and small lizards His greatest conquest, however, was the locust That came during his brief stay with the Toronto Blue (ays last year Center fielder Devon White dared him with a buzzing 4- to 5-inch locust. "He dared me. and the other players put up $1,200." Maksudian said.