Oregon Daily THURSDAY. DECEMBER 2. 1993 EUGENE. OREGON VOLUME 95. ISSUE 65 Scholar reminisces on past, present j Professor, author John Hope Franklin says color line is alive and well DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — More than half of a century into u distinguished writing and teaching career, lohn Hope Franklin has lived African-American history while toiling to illuminate it. There have been high points — these days, he is at work in his Duke Universi ty office, finishing a seventh edition of his classic book. From Slavery to Freedom But there also have been low points in his "strange career" as a blai k si holar of U S and particularly Southern history. In the 1940s. his insistence on con dinting research at state archive* in the segregated South led to alternately sad and "farcical” scenes In Louisiana, lie could use the archives only when they were closed for a holiday, in North Carolina, he received his own vault key so that white clerks would not have to serve him, "With that experience, what do you think I expected when I got to Alabama, with the Confederate flag flying (over the archives building)? 1 hesitated even to go in.” Franklin said. Nonetheless, in he went. There, he studied the papers of Alaba ma's secession-era governor Eventually, he even had civil conversations with the Turn to SCHOLAR. Page 6 Center sponsors World AIDS day to help students j Peer advisers promote AIDS aware ness and other health issues By Daniel West Oregon Onuty Emerald The University Student Health ('.enter participated in the annual World AIDS day Wednesday, handing out disease awareness pamphlets and flyers at an information table staffed by peer advisers in the KM1 "AIDS is something so common that people need to take action or it's going to increase." uni Krista Hoist, a senior peer adviser at the University "You have to understand AIDS in order to fight it." During the es ent, the peer adv isers are actively involved in promoting AIDS awareness and other health-related issues. They serve as a support and referral group on the issues of AIDS "We have information about where to get tested lor AIDS, but we aren't trained counselors, we re here to talk for moral support." Holst said "It's very important to get this information across to the students The peer advisers are a part ol the Peer Health Program, which is sponsored In the health center and gives students the opportunity to gain experience in different areas The program is a two-term class that educates the student body on various issues pertaining to health I here are even class os on low-fat cooking, weight control and exercise, includ ing a walking workshop "I'm going into counseling and wanted to learn more about how to present material and group speaking," said Britta Davis, a first-year graduate student. "I can combine this with my interest in women's health, spec ificallv eating disorders, which are a complex issue. It's a good time to reach people." The health educators and peer advisers hope students on campus will learn more about AIDS and not treat it as just another lecture on the disease. The health center has come up with a theme this year that advocates taking action in Turn to AIDS. Page 6 Candlelight stroll MOHOAM ‘,A* I tn« tmnj Eugene resident Janet Winter walks with Sam Baratta, also of Eugene, to Valley River Center for last night's AIDS Candlelight Vigil Assault fund not yet used by survivors of abuse □ Fund was set up for assault survivors who don't report the crime By River* Janssen Ot0QOn Daily Frmraki The Sexual Assault Fund that was voted in by students in last spring's ASUO elections has not Ixwto used this fail, and officials at the Student Health Center ure at a loss to explain why. The fund was set up for survivors of sexual assault who don't report the crime, and covers the cost of STD test ing and treatment University students voted to pay 17 cents apiece to the incidental Fee Committee for the fund, for a total of $7,250. Gerald Fleischli. director of the health center, said he can draw stiver at conclusions from the program's underuse: Either students want to pay for testing themselves, no students are testing after they are assaulted, no one knows about it, or sexual assaults have stopped altogether The numltcrs indicate unreported sexual assaults still occur on campus, so it must he one of the other three, Fleischli said. A study of sexual abuse reports compiled from July 31. 1092 to June II, 1903 by the Unwanted Sexual Behavior Task Force fount! that 11 acquaintance and date rapes were unofficially reported (i.e. they were reported in anonymous surveys) as well as two sexual assaults. Only three assaults were actually reported to the University Office of Public Safety. Since July 1993, four unofficial reports of sexual abuse have arisen, said Joiene Siemsen, a nurse practi tioner at the health center. TJte fund was voted in as a pilot pro gram for the 1993-94 school year. Fleischli said statistics will he kept on the number of people who take advan tage of tho program this year, and next year's proposal will he modified according to that information. Funding for next year's program could come from another student vole, the health Turn to FUND, Page 5 University Assembly reduces required credits from 186 to 180 □ The policy will help streamline the graduation process for students By Eric Buckhalter For me Oregon Daily £ met aid The University knocked off six credits from the non professional bachelor’s degree graduation requirements during Wednesday's University Assembly meeting. The total number of credits needed for graduation fell from 186 to 180 after the motion passed The amendment, which takes effect immediately, will not apply to the Uni versity's professional schools that require more than 180 credits. Assembly member Jack Bennet, a counselor for Acad emic Advising and Student Services, offered a voice of dissension, asking that the University postpone the requirement until winter term of 1994. "It seems to me that students who have spent a good dual of time on this campus studying for 186 credits are going to be understandably upset when they read about this in tho Emerald." Bennet said. "I'd rather see this motion put into effect through a pol icy that begins next term," he said The Undergraduate Education and Policy Coordinat ing Council wrote the proposal to decrease the gradua tion requirements. James Boren, chair of the council, said he sees no real harm in immediately implementing the change "There is minimal harm in this policy's immediate implementation." Boren said "Perhaps there will be some emotional harm, but the policy will do good to many.” Boren said that a significant numlter of students fall short of the 186 credits and have to return for a term to complete the few credits they have left in order to grad uate. "This is a positive benefit for these students, and I think it will also prove to Int a positive benefit for all.” he said. Thu amendment was approved by the University Sen ate Nov. 10. Boren said the policy eliminates the six cred its left over from previous years when huolth and physical education were still port of the general education require ments. The change comes a month after the University Assem bly voted to throw out the cluster system in favor of a 16 credit requirement that covers science, soc ial science and humanities. Tile amendment is another stop in the University's goal to move students through college more quickly and effec tively. University officials are seeking ways to quicken the time a student spends at the University while still pro viding an affordable, productive education. "We need to take a number of small steps, that if prop erly adjudicated will add up to total change,” Boren said at the Nov. 11 University Senate meeting.