Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 26, 1994, Page 4, Image 4

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SCHOLARSHIPS
FUNDING FOR COUJECE
IS AVAILABLE
CA1X l-MJ-415-0*77
INFORMATIVE RECORDING
WUNDERLAND .
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Cash
For Textbooks
Mon Sat
Smith Family
Bookstore
768 E. 13th
1 Block From Campus
345-1651
Elgin
Kpoirtt
Her flamber 13
Jan. 27th $3
iinvnrauvBvi nnutni
State
fa. -jsth $4
Tm Hlnatsi Hots
finiio Bridgehead
Dalch Doy Finger
Must be 21 or oner
1311 Hill
342 33S0
its uni
IkOIH^I
Court** y pfKrto
The winners ol an international ballet competition perform at Saturday's Chinese Cultural Night, an
event sponsored by the Chinese Student Association.
SCHEDULE
Continued from Page 1
!ik<* the University of Washing
ton and Penn Stain have already
committed to advertising in their
class schedules
The registrar s office normally
prints 20,000 to 22,000 copies of
the ( lass si hrnJule each term at a
price ofS» .000 to $8,000 a print
ing.
Exact figures on how imich the
advertising will yield for the
office are not known, hut Cherwc.k
said he does not believe the
advertising money will make up
the shortfall in printing the class
M hedtiles
Class schedules were free for
students until the University
liegnn using Duck Call. When the
schedules wen; given out to stu
dents in the spring of 1002. many
students lost their copies over the
summer. C.hereck had to order
another printing for students the
following fall.
•When I had to order 30,000
schedules for 16,000 students. I
decided to start charging for the
schedules simply to stop the
waste.” Chereck said.
Spring term class schedules
will he on sale Feb. 7 in the Uni
versity Bookstore and the EMU.
JACKSON
Continued from Page 1
Angelos defense attorney "What it moans
is the person who buys off a minor gets away
with it It turns these sex cases into a pri
vate dispute."
Feldman and |a< kson attorneys Johnnie
Cochran and Howard Weitzunan met privately
in the ( handlers of Superior Court Judge
David Kothman before the announcement
"We signed off on the deal I hat was it,
Feldman said
Jackson didn't issue am statement but
insists he didn't do anything wrong. He will
speak out about the (ase at an undetermined
tune, Ins attorneys said
"Michael Jackson has maintained Ins inno
cence since the beginning of this matter and
now , since this matter will soon he conclud
ed, he still maintains that innocence." Jar k
son's attorneys said in a statement
"The resolution of this case is in no way an
admission of guilt bv Michael Jai kson In
short, he is an innocent man who does not
intend to have his career and his life
destroyed by rumors and innuendo."
Thu lawsuit fih-d in September alleged that
Jai kson. 35. committed sexual battery setlui
lion, willful misconduct, intentional inflic
tion of emotional distress, fraud and
negligent e in a t ampaign to entice the hoy
last year
based on the ho\ s allegations, authorities
in l.os Angeles and Santa Barbara counties
began a < riminal probe that lias continued for
five months No charges have been filed
An out-of-court settlement in the civil case
could severely diminish the slate's criminal
probe because, in Californio. victims of sex
ual abuse ( an't be forced to testify against
their will
"There's little reason the hoy's parents
would want to see their child exposed to put>
lii scmtinv and media scrutiny in a criminal
trial,’’ UCLA law professor Peter Arenolla
said "It's very likely the hov won’t want to
cooperate, and the state lacks the authority
to fort e him to cooperate bv threatening him
with contempt."
Los Angeles Distrii t Attorney Gil Garnetti
said the settlement won't affect his criminal
investigation
" The I iistru t Attorney s Office is taking Mr
Feldman at his word that the alleged victim
will lmi allowed to testify and that there has
been no agreement in the civil matter that will
nffis t cooperation in the criminal investiga
tion," Garcetli said.
Santa Barbara County Ihstrii t Attorney
Thomas W. Sneddon |r said he had no com
ment on Monday s events Me refused to dis
i uss the county s criminal investigation of
Jet kson
Jackson abandoned Ins "Dangerous" world
concert tour in the midst of the media frenzy
over the allegations, saying he was forced
to retreat to a drug rehabilitation i enter in
F.urnpe to kti k painkilling pn-si ription drugs
Promoters sued Jar kson for more than $J(i
million, claiming an addiction to morphine
and other drugs dost roved his ability to per
form. That lawsuit is pending
Also pending is a lawsuit by five former
security guards They claim they were fired
by the singer, whose net worth was estunat
(><1 by Forties magazine at more than SI 50 mil
lion. because they know too much about his
alleged activities with young boys
There is also n stigma that settlements
imply guilt and Arenolla said it could encour
age other alleged victims to file lawsuits.
Throughout Jackson's ordeal, he and his
lawyers denied the molestation allegations,
saying they were the result of a failed $20 mil
lion extortion attempt by the lioy's father and
lawyer.
Hut on Monday, prosecutors announced a
criminal investigation into the extortion
claims was complete and no charges would
be filed against the father or his lawyer.
In their statement, Jackson's lawyers crit
icized news coverage of the case, saying the
singer was "subjected to an unprecedented
media feeding frenzy."
"The tabloid press has shown an insatiable
thirst for anything negative and has paid huge
sums of money to people who have little no
information and who barely knew Michael
Jackson." they said.
"So toil ay ttie time has come for Michael
Jac kson to move on to new business, to get
on with his life, to start the healing process
and to move his career forward to even greater
heights "
Feldman also said the settlement was a first
step to allow the bov to put the affair behind
him.
This young boy has lieen seen by the most
prominent psvi hiatristsand psychologists in
America from one side of the coast to the oth
er side ol the coast," Feldman said
"I le cannot heal, he cannot get I letter unless
this matter is put behind him."
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