Oregon Daily TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1993 EUGENE, OREGON VOLUME 95, ISSUE 5 Video project is hands-on history □ Middle schoolers educate University class on local racism By Lia Salciccla fo' ttx> OrfQa” Pj’iy CmoinU) Students from Jefferson Middle School who spout spent their school year learn ing what life was like for African-Amer ican women in the Eugene of the past came to the University Thursday to talk about what they had learned. Aided by their Afrituin-Ainerican His tory teacher, some faculty, parents and a South Eugene High School student, the five 7th- and 8th-graders documented interviews with the first four black women to come to Eugene. Their efforts have resulted in a video project that will soon join the collections of local libraries. The school will also celebrate a permanent school holiday commemorating the dav the project — o tape of the young hoys Interviewing the women — was unveiled. Corey Mainor. lit. and Marcus Nettles. 12. discussed their project with a Uni versity ethnic studies class Thursday Mainor and Nettles told the class of about 25 students that interviewing Feurlie Washington. Mattie Reynolds. Annie Minima and Her!ha Johnson taught them what it was like "to live in a society that was open I v racist." Mainor and Netties said the women they interviewed came mostly from the South to a white town to work tirelessly while their husbands labored on the rail roads and in the mills. The women and their families settled in the swampland that is now the Ferry Street Bridge area Despite hard times. Washington found ed St. Mark's Church and a boarding house that host ad tho lata singer Saminv Davis |r in days whan his rai •• exclud ed him front tho hotels in town Reynolds, who. along with her hus band. owned a local saw mill, will see her daughter graduate from law school despite the fact th.lt she was once told by a guidance counselor at her school that it was impossible for a black woman to go to law- school. lefferson Middle School has plans to continue its one elective class tu African American History, which in the 1092-t(.1 school year consisted of tho five students who completed the project Two of the students will Is* leaving Jef ferson for South Eugene High School next year hut plan to lie lan k to help with the next video-project interviews with the next generation in the families of the four women. Off to the races Hannah Schneider-Lynch, 4, (left) and her brother Zachary, 3, prepare for Sun day's Butte to Butte run The 20th running of the 10k race marked Hannah s fifth Butte to Butte powered by her father Mike Lynch Former Ducks Matt McGuirk and Nicole Woodward won the men s and women's classes S•• photon, pagan 4 A 5. WEATHER Skies should be sunny today with highs near 75 The rest of the week should bring in vari able clouds with a few showers at times Temperatures will remain in the mid-70s. ■ROGER AND ME' GET SUED FLINT. Mil h. (AP) - Filmmaker Michael Moore must pay a lawyer $6,250 for portraying the attorney in false light in the movie Huger and Ate, a jury decided. But Moore claimed Thursday's ruling in Genesee County Circuit Court was a victory because the jury said he did not commit fraud in the way the movie was filmed and edited and because the $6,250 award is significantly less than the $50,000 Warner Bros, offered in an out-of-court settlement "The fraud count was the crushing one for us." Moore said “The fraud count pul the film on trial and the jury found the film told the truth We are elated." Attorney 1-arrv Stereo sued Moore, his production company and Warner Bros., the films distributor. by Tom#o*« Marcus Nettles (left) and Corey Malnor of Jefferson Middle School spoke to a Uni versity class Thursday about their research Into the first black women to live In Eugene. House votes to send tax measure to polls j Bill, which now goes to the Senate, would let November voters decide fate of sales tax SALEM (API The Oregon Ieasily passed .i sales tax bul lot measure Friday, standing it lo the Senate on a to 21 vole I hi- proposal is expei iwl to got a friendly greeting in the Senate, where ninny nmntliers want lo raise more money with tin* t.tx than dials llm Ilouse •"What needs lo be i hangfid is our lax strut turn lo assurti our ehil dnin and their future." said Hup l)elun (ones. K Aloha, i hairwoman of the House Revenue Committee. All sains tax revenue would hr earmarked lor si hools undur llm mrusurr, ll|Klt) Opponents said llm solos tax is donumt! at tin- polls "Apparently this has nine liirs. said Hop Michael Payne. I) Baker (at\ "Oregonians vwll dr foal this rogrnssiyr lax Oregon voters eight times have re|e< ted sales tax measures, most ret unity in l'IHI> (fregol) is one of pist five slates witltoul a sales tax I don't get it. said Hop floh Tiornan. K Lake (Kwego, ''We are doing something here, i mating something that nobodv will buy." Hut Hep Tom Hrinn. K Tigard, criticized lawmakers who predii I failure. I think vvm havo »» shut til tins. h« said. "It if fails in November with your help, you hod lieller lie back with a liettor ideu or wo will !m< ho< k i tilting billions from edm ution ” The proposed constitutional amendment sots tho frotuowork for the sales tax It sets a ’> pen out maximum rate, for example, but does not s|mm ify what the actual rate would In Those details are in a companion bill that would implement the tax if passed by voters. Provisions in the ballot measure, if passed, would bet ome a con stitutional amendment arid could not be i bunged without voter approval. The House i oinmittee most recently has discussed raising about $1 billion a year from the sales tax. Tite main reason for the sales tax plan is the Measure fi property tax limit passed by voters in That measure requires the state to replace money that schools lose because of the lax lid anti is costing the state billions of dollars SPORTS LONDON (AP) - ll was a painful Wimbledon lor women's champion Steffi Graf. Grai s father. Peter, says her foot injury was so serious that he urged her to pull out of the tournament But she played through the pam. flew borne to Germany for treatment and received an infection just before beating |ana Novotna in the final. In addition. Garf s fortnight was disturbed by intruders who repeatedlv trespassed on her family's property in Bruhl, Germany, prompting her father to pull a gun on the invaders "In two weeks, IB people have com# over the wall of our house " peter Graf said