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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1995)
Oregon Daily MONDAY, MAY 1.1995 EUGENE, OREGON VOLUME 96, ISSUE 143 Lawrence Getubig and Beulah Bernardo (left and right), playing Christina Nazareth's grandchildren, listen to a love story from the Philippines, as part of Xultura Pilipinas Cultural Night The night s theme wa*. Grandma s Stones Philippine culture, a la ‘Grandma’ Performance: Filipino students act out stories from their homeland Abe Estimada f or the Oregon £ Wy i f’wjit In a skit that could'vt* Ihh*ii taktm straight out of the play Cyrano dr lirrymn . University student Man nv Boniago puts one hand to lus heart and I logins swaying side to side as he tip syties a liltpino tune to his amorous interest. Lisa Ramirez "Dahan-dahan rnulv.i ' huksan mo ang bintan. / Tanakwm mo'i kahabagan / .mg aking pagltngap I’akiusap ko sa vu. kaawan mo ,iko Kahit mamutav ang pagibig ko’ / minsan lamang ” In hnglish. the* song savs "Slowly my lady, opart your win dow I in i look m.I have pity on the on*; who loves you In i .tse you do not havi* any dreams /1 promise you mv love is everlasting / I implore you, have pity on me ' And following the storyline of the famous play, Ramirez discovers Haniago's s11!v yet heartfelt frit k to win her love. Student Christina Nnjarrth said this ••kit, one of Ihtw acts put on bv Kultura Pilipinas .is pari of its cultural night, reveals now in traditional Filipino culture, dating is almost non existent Instead, a Filipino suitor wauti ng to nuirrv Ins sweetheart must earn the respect anti honor of the woman's parents through working on their farm. Na/areth said About tail people gat he rwl in the Turn tr CULTURE, Pa«j<* t Race, media will be focus of annual Ruhl Symposium Speaker Air t: ■ ,r •„%* •. • £: C is a oontributinq editor for Newsweek Jamie Pope The S« hool of Journalism and t’oimiiunieations' JOlh annual Kuhl Symposium will lake plai t1 today at I .10 p m in the Mmiiin I -t1111 i i.1«■ at (ie: liugei II it! f iii-. I I'm- au!hot .uni avt oil wminin’ lournahst. will give this year's lei turc I hf NfWs Mftlia amt Kart1 (,«t ting Hfvoiul Obvious I nitio. Cost’ has written several hooks and is a < ontribuiing editor for .VeosweeA maga/me Ho has Imh*u thf i hair snan of the fditorial board of thf Vow 5'ori l>tiil\ ,Veils, a columnist for the I 7ii< iiisi Sun Tunes. a tueinlier of the editorial hoard >d the Ik-lroit I'rre Press and i hie! w riter on management and the workplace for l S t T<nla\ He has also served as a contributor and press i ritli for 77me magazine and as chief e\et iitive offit er ol The Institute for Journalism f.duialioii • se's list of iHMiks include The Rage of u Privileged Class. . t \ntion of Strangers t History of /mmign/fion to America'. Foergv it rut I Slum Crisis. Saint' S aerial Cam emir, and The Press ( use has ret eived fellowships from the Kurd Kotin datum, the \mlrevv Mellow I ouiulaOon, the Kim hester Touiidainm and the \spen Institute for Humane Stud ies A native of ( hli ago, (lose is a graduate of the Univef ■ -a!1, of Illinois at ( hl< ago and (teoige Washington t'm versify in Washington !)( The Kuhl Symposium on Ktlm s m Journalism brings prominent professionals and media s< holnrs to the I hii versitv mu h year todisi uss responsibility in iournalism and the houndaries of ethics m iibws Hie annual h* ture was established th'OUgh a y'ift from the late Maliel Kuhl of Medford ill memory ol tier bus hand. Robert W Kuhl. who died in ton? He was the Pulitzer Prize winning editor and puhhshef of the Met! n>n! M uI Tribune. The lecture will he followed hv a reception ill the Adeiade Ontri h Memorial Reading Room university s dorm rooms small, compared to others Conditions: 3 y rooms weren't designed to fit needs of today’s students Regina Brown Imagine being in a box that * lust big enough to hold you and a few of your most prized pos sessions. Perhaps it could fit a computer or a bicycle, or maybe a Q3 player, too Now imagine that your entire life revolves around that little box You sleep there, you study there, and when your friends visit you. you hang out there. Now add a complete stranger to this picture, and you have life in the dorms. University residence halls have tiny rooms when com pared to the rooms in other Pacific-10 Conference schools. even though I 'niversily students pay just as. much or mono. Uni versity residence hails also pro vide fewer meal plans and extracurricular options than other f*#c-10 schools. The dorms here are like shoe boxes com pa red to Berkeley's," said Sarah k-shier. a University student who has several friends going to school at the University of C alifornia at Berkeley t biiversity students have - om plained for years about living in cramped conditions, but Univer sity housing administrators say nothing t an be done about it rhe rooms were not designed to fit the nerds of today 's stIi dents, said University housing administrator Uu k Romm Tiie biggest residence halls, Bean. Karl and Hamilton, were ’ DOHMS, • ■ GOOD MORNING ► SPOKANE (AP) rhey called themselves April's Angels Two hundred v jiun teers from Gon/aya University arrived at Trinity Catholic School with cleaning rags, paint brushes find shovels They spent Saturday sprucing up the elementary school, inside and out "it's in such need of the work." said sophomore Kristin Wh.tene.id. who organized the project at the school in the west-central neighborhood Dozens of students from Gon/aga donated their t>me to community service Saturday, helping out such prop* ts r Special Olympics, Cancer Patient Care and community oriented policing The campus wide volunteer day is called Gonzaga Universi ty in Service to Others GUSTO Organizers hope to make it annual event April’s Angels, for example. ramed about $2 000 from the university's residence hall asso ciation and from area business es Sponsors helped pay lor cleaning and painting supplies, plants lor landscaping and bus ketbail hoops lor the elemen tary scbool playground ► LAKt: RONKONKOMA, N Y iAPi — An empty beer keg thrown into a bonfire at a party exploded early Sunday, killing a man with pieces q! Hying metal Chester Vesioski, 21. was standing ai>ou! 3b feet from the fire when the keg exploded. One ol the pieces of metal sev ered his arm a! the elbow. »,ud Suffolk County Detective Sgt Kevin Cronin Vesioski died later at a hospital About 10 people were at the outdoor keg party near woods in this Long Island town No one else was injured Most ol the keg was found about 250 feet from the lire ► CAIRO. Egypt (AP) Libyan leader Muamrnar Gil hali says the Oklahoma bomb mf) signaled the start of a mas-, revolt against the American government, and he offered President Clinton refuge in Libya Gadhali mad*- !h*> remarks in a speech late Saturday marking a battle between Libyans and an Italian military force 80 years ago. the state-run JANA news agency r«*ported Sunday “Oklahoma was the begin nmg of the reaction of the masses living m America," Gadhali was quoted as saying "It was a reaction against the nightmare and tyranny," Saying “thousands ot militias were currently waging armed popular revolution in America," Gadhali invited Clinton and his wife. Hillary, to flee to Libya, "the only safe country in the work!"