Oregon Daily TUESDAY. JANUARY 4, 1994 EUGENE, OREGON VOLUME 95. ISSUE 69 Long lines await in Oregon Hall Lines: Ordeal leads graduate student to faint during wait A long wail while standing in line led to the fainting of a preg nant student who was waiting for her financial aid check at Oregon Hall. Crystal Dehle. a 25-year-old graduate student in psychology, lost consciousness at about 8:30 a m., according to Sgt. Dennis Baker, the University liaison for the Kugene Police Department. Police Officer loin Kichhorn and Baker were already at Oregon Hall for crowd < ontrol when Dehle fainted Kichhorn monitored the woman's vital signs while Baker (ailed for an ambulance Dehle regained consciousness before the ambulance arrived. Baker said A medical unit and one fire engine responded to the call, and Dehle was transported to Sacred Heart General Hospital. Officials at the hospital said she was admitted and released the same day. No further information was available on her condition, the officials said. enter HERE M ~R NOW SERVING I J wn ".Ofj CHAH1.J urn tmHMU Jill Wlnans directs students Into the proper lines tor financial aid. Students waited at Oregon Hall In long lines Inside and outside that began forming Monday morning at about 8 a m. UNIVERSITY University sued over contract decision Lawsuit: Former employee alleges discrimination By Julie Swensen Oegee Oafy < trwiHkl A former University assistant pro fessor ami librarian whose i ontrm t was not renewed hits sued the llni varsity and four of its emplovees lor alleged disc rimination on the basis of disability Pamela I White, who was employed from September 1990 to August 1992, has filed n lawsuit against Lorraine Davis, vice provost for academic personnel, and library employees Deborah Carver, Isabel Stirling and George Shipman. She also has sued the Oregon State Hoard of Higher Education, at i ord iug to documents obtained from the Line County Circuit Court According to the complaint w rit Turn to LAWSUIT, Pane 3 GOOD MORNING ► LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ Booming overseas returns and record domestic box-office grosses made 1993 one of Hol lywood's best years. Some moviegoers groused about high ticket prices, but megahits like Jurassic Park and The Fugitive drew them into the theaters anyway. Year-end ticket receipts from North American theaters will break the 1989 mark of $5 03 billion, industry analysts predict ed Monday The final year-end figure, tallied by the Motion Pic ture Association of America, won't be announced until March But the largest gams came on foreign soil, where returns exceeded domestic grosses 52 percent to 48 percent Aladdin made $200 million overseas, and Jurassic Park col lected a jaw-dropping $530 4 million (and counting) in foreign places. In the United States, the record annual gross was led by Jurassic Park. The Fugitive, The Firm, Sleepless in Seattle, Inde cent Proposal and In the Line ol Fire All grossed more than $100 million. ► SALEM (AP) — Citing cus tomer convenience, the Oregon Liquor Control Commission is recommending that people be allowed to use credit cards to buy booze at state-run liquor stores. The idea will face scrutiny from state lawmakers, however, when the Legislative Emergency Board meets in February. H O w o And already the director of the state's Office of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Programs is saying he sees no compelling reason to make it easier for people to pur chase alcoholic beverages At the direction of the 1993 Legislature, the OLCC ran a three-month test program in which customers were allowed to use credit cards at selected stores m Aloha, Coos Bay, Grants Pass. McMinnville, Port land and Springfield OLCC spokeswoman Danielle Cowan says the program was well-received by customers and didn't cause any problems Based on that experience, she says, the commission is recom mending legislative approval of the idea, ► SPOKANE (AP) — Support ers and opponents of planned initiatives in Washington and Idaho are closely watching whether a Colorado measure to ban civil-rights protections for gays will survive court scrutiny. Many observers believe the U S. Supreme Court will have the final say on whether Col orado's Amendment 2 is consti tutional. The measure, which passed by popular vole in November 1992, was struck down Dec. 14 by Colorado District Court Judge Jeffrey Bayless. 55 i o 45 Museum displays, preserves culture Reservation: Artifacts explain history of three Native American tribes By Rebecca Merritt Oepon Putty hneuUd For yours, the town of Warm Springs was just a convenient rest stop People traveling from Port land to Central Oregon recre ational areas would take advantage of the local gas sta tion, cafe and mini mart No one seemed to notice — or core — that the purpose of this small desert town is to pre serve the culture of three Native American tribes — to give its residents a chance to adapt to modern-day lifestyles while still clinging to their traditional beliefs. More than 25 years ago, members of the Confederated Trifles of Warm Springs decid ed they wanted lo work at edu cating the public about their people and history. They no longer wanted to fie known as "drunken Indians." People needed to learn about the posi tive aspects of Nutive American culture. The result of their efforts is a 25,000-square-foot museum that houses thousands of arti facts and photographs from Warm Springs, Wasco and Northern Paiute Indians — the three tribes that make up the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Located 170 miles northeast of Eugene on Highway 26. the ANTHONY H*4NtY*marak) Microfiche enables visitors of ths Museum st Warm Springs to road the actual treaty that established the reservation. Museum at Warm Springs has welcomed more than 85,000 visitors since its grand opening last spring, said Olney Patt Jr., communications coordinator for the museum. “The public needs to learn everything about these tribes," Patt said. "A lot of people are only aware of the negative parts of our culture. There are a lot of positive things." Halt said plans for the muse um began in 1968 when the tribes decided to allocate $50,000 each year to purchase artifacts from tribe members and families in Warm Springs. Turn to MUSEUM, Page 3