Oregon Daily WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 29. 1993 EUGENE, OREGON VOLUME 95. ISSUE 21 Students give leaflets to professor’s class j Pamphlets inform students of charges against instructor By Edward Klopfensteln Oregon Daily Emerald Two University students distributed leaflets outside of a philosophy professor's classroom Tuesday morning, informing stu dents of sexual harassment charges brought against him. The students were outside of Professor Arnulf Zweig's classroom at Room 112 Willamette "There has been a finding of sexual harassment against the professor in this class." said one of the women to a student entering the classroom. She advised the stu dent that a different professor would be teaching the same class during winter term Zweig. a former chairman of the depart ment, would not comment on the students or the leaflet. "1 don’t want to talk about this with the Emerald," he said by phone after the 8 a m. Kant class. "I'm sorrs This is not a matter for the newspaper." Students handing out the leaflets did not want to disclose their names or anything concerning the case, referring questions instead to their attorney, Suzanne Bradley Chanti. of Walters. Romm and Chanti in Eugene. Chanti said by phone Tuesday that she is representing five students who filet! a griev ance against Zweig She said the issue isn t fully resolved, so she could not (list uss the case. But, "the case exists," she said Lorraine Davis, the vice provost lor acad emic personnel and academic affairs, also verified the caste "(The charge against Zweig) was investi gated, the investigation was completed and action is being taken.” the offu lal said She would not say whether the finding was for or against the professor, classifying it as a personnel issue that is not public. Chanti said that distributing leaflets to Zweig's students might not have Imsui direct ed just at the professor. Chanti said the experience her clients have had during this process has been that many students complain informally, setting no history when someone wants to file a for mal grievance. What happens at the University is that a collective know ledge is created that doesn't have any formal recourse, she said. "What they were trying to advise students Turn to LEAFLET, Page 1 1 Historic prison crumbles beneath wrecking ball j Charles Manson was former inmate at cellhouse MCNEIL ISLAND, Wash. (AP) — Charles Manson lived here, and so did the gangsters Alvin Karpis and Mickey Cohen. Hut nobody was shedding tears of nos talgia Monday as this 70-year-old cell house straight out of a Jimmy Cagney prison movie began crumbling beneath the cutting torch and wrecking ball The state, which took over this island prison from the federal government in 1981. is razing the aircraft-hangar-sized oellhonso to make room for construction of a clinic: and other support facilities. The 575 state prisoners who occupied the five-tiered cellhouse until May have been moved to now quarters that look like college dormitories compared to the old building of steel and stone. The inmates, who now number 750. room in pairs rattier than eight or 10 to a cell. They have a huge common area, rather than catwalks, in which to con Turn to PRISON, Page 7 Fancy flagging ANTHONY IOHNIY I"-***! Ahce Yoo (with (lag), a junior in music education, and Wendy Domenigom, a junior in sociology, practice routines for the Jazz Line, which is part of the Oregon Marching Band ASUO hopes registering voters will affect sales tax □ Student leaders hope passage of tax could free up money for higher ed By Edward Klopfanstain Oregon Daily Emerald In the face of possible school funding with a state sales tax. ASUO officials said they are actively trying to reg ister 4.000 students to vote before the Oct. 19 voter reg istration deadline. Philip Bentley, state affairs coordinator for the student organization, said ASUO representatives would be set ting up booths and working through several other forums through the next few weeks to get students to register. The organization successfully registered an equal num ber of students last year when passionate issues like Bal lot Measure 9 and other state fiscal responsibilities rallied students to the polls, Bentley said. This year it may prove more difficult to register stu dents because there is only one major issue, the state v;ilus tax. But this election should he no different than last year's, Bentley said, because the tax issue affects each student even more directly than any of last year’s issues. "This could provide funding for schools," he said. Ballot Measure 1 is designed to place an across-the board 5 percent tax on all consumer goods, with some exclusions, generating about $2.6 billion. Bentley said with the costs to maintain the tax and money added to 1990's Measure 5 property tax reductions deducted, state education could receive about S2 billion. Currently, state government budgets about $500 mil lion for education, an amount greatly reduced from its pre-Measure 5 funding levels. Bentley said. State residents have voted down a soles tax eight times in the state's history, said Bentley, who downplayed that figure because several of those votes were in the 1920s and 1930s. Money generated by the tax will go only to public schools covering kindergarten through grade 12 and to community colleges tnrougn me state, ino money is uur rnarked for any of the state's universities, Bentley said. But the official said the tax will most likely free up money for higher eduction that is currently being divert ed to the public schools. Bentley said the ASUO does not officially take a stand on the tax issue. Because of the direct nature of the tax to student tuition, though, he said the organization is com mitted to reaching its 4,000-student registration goal. To pass the tax, legislators added several clauses to appease voters who fear the regressive nature of any sales tax. Bentley said. The maximum limit for the sales tax is 5 percent, a limit that cannot be changed except by a vote of the peo ple. according to state information on the Measure 1 pro vided by Bentley. Money will go to speeding up the tax reductions implemented by Measure 5. Low-income residents also Turn to TAX. Page 4