Oregon Daily THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13.1994 EUGENE, OREGON VOLUME 96. ISSUE 33 Iraqi crisis cools off; U.S. looks to future Relations: Secretary of state Warren Christopher proposes buffer zone near Kuwaiti border KUWAIT (AP) — As Iraqi troops retreated from the Kuwait border, the United States and its allies turned their focus Wednesday to heading off future crises that might tie provoked by Saddam Hussein Thousands of U.S troops con tinued to stream into the region as insur anew. Meanwhile. sis Persian Gulf countries committed their own troop* to the allied effort after a meeting in Kuwait with S*-* rotary of Statu Warren Christopher One option that Christopher pursued with the Gulf ministers and with British Foreign Secretary Douglas lluril involved establishing through the U N Set urity Council a /.one near the Kuwaiti border that would tie off-limits to Iraqi tanks and other heavy military equipment. Iraqi The Hustler . * ' MCtuUU SumtXtHtrrmrakl Matt Zanger, a senior In Architecture, lines up a behlnd-the-back shot while shooting pool Wednesday night In the EMU Rec Center. The Center Is open Sunday-Thursday until 1 tp.m and Friday and Saturday until 12:30 p.m ■ GOOD MORNING ». WOLFEBORO. N H (AP) — That bottle ol Mountain Dew that cooled you oft in the summer may keep you warm si* months later Wickers Sportswear Inc is working to lessen both winter's cold and America's landlills by making thermal underwear and other products from recycled plastic. Wickers is among a growing number ol U S. companies turn ing recycled plastic into under wear, T-shirts, backpacks and other products. Navy blue and Mountain Dew green are the only colors avail able lor its thermals — green because ol the bottles' color and blue because that is the only environmentally sale dye the company has lound, said quality control manager Carol Metivier In November, the mail-order company Land's End will begin selling 100 percent recycled underwear made by Wickers. The laboc Wickers uses lor its thermals comes from the liber Fortrel EcoSpun, made by Well just a Reminder Streets around campus wiM be dosed 5 a m. Fnday through 3 a m Saturday to accommodate guests at The Oregon Campaign Streets affected by the closure: ■ University Street, from East 15th to 18th Avenues ■ Lot 30. behind McArthur Court ■ Lot 29A, south of the EMU I Ml RAID man Inc., a plastic recycler and polyester producer The gar ments are as warm as thermal underwear made from virgin material, Mazzenga said Wellman has been malting its recycled product out of used soda bottles since 1979, but it wasn't until two years ago that it produced a fiber soft enough for clothing. flights already ar»* banned in the area Defense Secretary William Parry was expected to continue lho*n discussions when Im arrived in the region Thursday. However, fat mg resistance front some allies, the White House was not publit ly pushing the idea on Wednesday Although U N. Amhassador Madeleine Albright said she had raised the idea at the United Nations. White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers told reporters. "That is not a proposal that we have ah op pod around.” The Freni h. m particular, urged cau tion Two French Cabinet ministers said that Iraq had not violated any agreements and that the West should not overreact Whatever the details of the allied response, Christopher said, "we are resolved and committed that Saddam should not he permitted to pro jin I the world into t rists at his own whim." Turn lo IRAQ, Patjo -t Director wants Women’s Center full of students Services: Organization seeks greater student involvement with open environment Amy Columbo . *&gon 0~»>-y l rw'iikt If Kdwilia Watch had her wish, the two i mu ho in the AS!I() Women's ( enter would never he empty Welch, the new dins tor of the Women s < enter, hopes women on i ampus will come into . .— the center, have .1 cup of coffee ■ An overview <>' find out about the serve es it offers SafotidC HOfViCt'iS and become involved with the Page 4 programs. - Because more than half of the t adversity student body is female, Welch has taken on quite a challenge According to Welch, the Women's ( enter had 1 tl drop-in visits and 40 phone calls from people interest ed in finding out more about the center during the first week of classes Welch lias been pleased with the stu dent response. The Women's ('enter, in EMU Suite t. has been on 1 ampus for seven years The 1 enter tiegan the 1004 05 year with major structural changes 1 jist year a restructuring committee met to redesign the Women's ( enter They lobbied to rei eive an increase of student fees, and the center is currently working with a budget of $97,000 Tito committee surveyed women's centers nationwide and set up a new structure, includ ing a director, an office manager, support group faedita Turn to CENTER, Pago 4 False alarms create safety problems Prevention: Sophisticated fire safety equipment is not always an accurate detector Tiffany Smith Opgon Dotty l From discarded < igaretles tossed carelessly in the fire wood to abandoned candles left in dorm rooms, fire safety and response has always been a big concern for campus safety officials. According to Keith Richard, University archivist, the first fire on campus was starter! in the basement of Deady Mall when someone was sneaking cigarettes next to the woodpile in the 1870s. Back then, water was stored in copper-lined towers in Vfi 1 - lard and Deady Malls so that the gravitational force would pump water for efficient fire fighting, ho said. Today's fire prevention and safety has become very sophis tii ati'd according to Kay Cools of iho University Office of Pub lic Safety. Hut with the increased sophistication, there also has been an increase in false alarms Willamette Hall has experienced a lot of false alarms in the past four years said Sandy Ryan, office manag er. The problem with the false alarms. Ryan said, is that most of the faculty and staff have learned to ignore them. “The whole building feels this way." she said, “the facul ty and everybody. They don't know to leave the building Kvery time it's happened in the last four years, it's been a false alarm.” However Ryan said that, in the last six months, the situa tion has improved. When an alarm is triggered, the dispatcher* at OPS locate the source and pick up the red phone. Turn to ALARMS. Page 4 I.ast in a three-part writ's TUESDAY: Eugene City Council discusses budget cuts to provide more money lor lire protection WEDNESDAY: A profile ol the Agate Street (ire station and the budget problems that keep it understaffed TODAY: An explanation of administrative policy about lire safety on campus