Oregon Daily FRIDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1993 EUGENE. OREGON VOLUME 95. ISSUE 23 Registration campaign signs up new voters j Students can now register at booths set up across campus By Edward Klopfenstein Oretjcn Dtviy Emerald ill tilt; first week of classes, the ASUO voter registration drive has nearly reached its first milestone of 1,000 registered stu dents. said an ASUO official. The student government set a goal of registering 4.000 students by Oct 19. the registration deadline. "The first couple thousand are easy." said Philip Bentley, the ASUO state affairs coordinator and the offic ial in charge of the registration drive, adding that he expects fewer students to register ns the October deadline approat lies ‘The first couple thousand are easy. Hopefully, there should be no people wanting to vote but not registered — Philip Bentley, ASUO '' Hopeful I y. there should be no people wanting to vote but not regis tered," he said. The AM'() cur rently has reg istration booths open all day at the Street Faire, which ends today. A booth also will be set up at tbe intra mural fields during the Ore gon Grind today from noun iu uit? (inti of the concert. Another booth will be in front of the University Bookstore from 10 u.m. to 5 p.m. next Wednesday. Students should be receiving a mailer during the week of Oct. 11 that includes a registration card, said Bentley ■ The cards can be mailed directly to the nearest voting precinct or placed in one of the ASUO drop boxes. Drop boxes are expected to be out by today at Oregon flail, Knight Library. Hamilton Dining Hall, in front of the ASUO office in thu EMU and in Prince Lucien Campbell Hall. Bentley said the ASUO will be contact ing precincts surrounding the University and the precinct that covers Westmore land Family Housing on West 18th Avenue and Arthur Street to find out how many University students registered through those precincts. That figure will be added to its final total, he said. Bentley said the ASUO needs volunteer help to organize its registration campaign. Interested students should call the ASUO at 346-3724. The registration campaign was orga nized because of possible funding from Ballot Measure 1. If passed, the measure would establish Oregon's first sales tax. Funds from the tax would be earmarked solely for funding public education. Public education has been cut by about $500 million from the previous budget, Bentley said. Super slide IfcSAlf GAlUANO't r"*'#*! Dan Ness, an undeclared freshman, takes advantage of another warm, sunny day as he practices a rail slide on his skateboard Budget cuts up number of out-of-staters j More non-Oregon residents recruited to counter effects of Measure 5’s second phase By Rivers Janssen In an attempt to < ounterai I the second phase of budget ruts i aused b\ 1 *1*10 s Ballot Measure S. the University is rot miting more out-of-state students than ever before At cording to the l utversiU s ( llfii e of Admissions, for the first time in the st hoofs history mils hull of incoming freshmen out of high st huol are from Oregon further, 2') port ent of the fresh man class is from (i.ilifornia Last war. -lt> pert out of the incoming students were non residents That was the pres ions ret ortl Weldon Ihrig, vice chancellor of Imam e and administration lor the Ore goo State System of Higher I dm alum, saui the emphasis on out-of-stntu ret mu mg is intended to help maintain some of the programs and fat tills 1 fi.it are at risk during phase two of the Measure > cuts To sweeten the pot for the University, and also for Southern Oregon State Col lege. University budget duet tor Trent Spradling said OS.SIIK is allowing those two st hunts to keep till but 4 4 percent of the tuition money they ret oive from out - o! state students Typically, slate schools must give tuition money to the state, whit li then distributes it proportionally back to the sellouts. However, Ihrig said, OSSHK was let ting the two st hoots keep the money as an experiment He said OSSHL would not rule out giving other state schools the same option were they to prioritize non residents. Non-resident tuition and fees for the 1993-94 school year is $9,030. compared with $2,910 for In state students. Spradling didn't have the finui num bers on liovv much the University would gain from OSSHK's experiment. hut he Turn to STUDENTS,Page 4 Earthquakes jolt safety officials into action □ Safety of campus buildings in question, though no structures damaged in quakes By Arik Hesseldahl Oregon OtHty fmeraiO By the morning of Sep. II most University students had heard about the two earthquakes that rocked the Klamath Falls area, and many were disappointed they didn't notice the ground shaking in Eugene. But newly moved-in residents at the University Inn dormi tory crowded the ground-floor lobby, frightened after the two sister shocks that measured a magnitude 5.9 and fi on the Richter scale and an aftershock rattled the upper floors of the building. University Inn Resident Director (’.ossa Heard-Johnson said there was no damage to the building, and that she took steps the following morning to reassure residents that the building was only vibrating with the earth movement as it was designed to do. "1 told them it was like shaking a ruler at one end, all the vibrations are at the other end," she said Several University officials agreed that the quakes under scored a need to upgrade University buildings to withstand a potentially devastating quake that geologists are now saying is possible in the region Nancy Wright University Housing facilities uiructor. said that since early 1992 all now construction projects on campus have boon required to meet tougher structural standards, but that building improvements are needed to bring older buildings up to meet the new codes Wright said that this has ho< omu a problem statewide following recent discoveries that Oregon is in a /one where severe earthquakes strike every 500 years or so. Wright said University Housing has requested money to study ways to make dormitory buildings earthquake-resistant, and that those improvements will be completed alongside changes required bv the Americans with Disabilities Act "The redundant inner structure of the dorms makes them pretty safe on the inside," Wright said. "What wo re worried about is breaking glass and falling bricks and concrete.” Wright said the Bean Complex dormitories would probably lie the first in line to receive the improvements and that other dorm complexes would follow on a yearly basis. Wright said that University Housing is ahead of the University and the state in general when it comes to addressing earthquake needs. "The problem is that you don't design buildings to withstand something that occurs every 500 years,” she said. "You plan for earthquakes if they tend to happen in the area every 100 years or so. In our case, we have to plan to spend our dollars wisely and efficiently.” Torn to EARTHQUAKES, Page 6