Weather forecast Today Saturday Partly cloudy Mostly cloudy High 60, Low 38 High 62, Low 38 Spike and Mike return ^ The duo Is Sick and Twisted’cartoon festival, which spawned South Park,' begins today/P AGE 7A 1 Ducks take on Bruins 4 No. 11 Oregon is in the national spotlight against No. 2 UC1A at 12:30 p.m. on Sat a relay/ SECTION B An independent newspaper Volume 100, Issue 34 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Right-wing tactics vital, speaker says Morse Chair lecturer Richard Delgado explains how funding of right-wing think tanks helped form public opinion and law By Tricia Schwennesen Oregon Daily Emerald Left-wing politicians are effectively usi ng right-wing tactics to further their agenda, Richard Delgado said. “Folks on the left are looking at an extraor dinary campaign through the right,” said Del - gado, the 18th occupant of the Wayne Morse Chair of Law and Politics. “They are rolling back programs from the ’60s and the '70s." Delgado said he and his wife, Jean Stefan cic, uncovered an amazing network of connec tions between conservatives and funding of social programs. Their research is the topic for the annual Morse Chair lecture on Wednesday where Delgado said he will make suggestions for how liberals can utilize conservative think ingto promote a political agenda. Delgado said he and his wife were aston ished to find conservative money backing right-wing think tanks that create campaigns on multiculturalism, medical and tort reform, immigration reform and English-only laws. Delgado is the current Jean Lindsley Pro fessor of Law at the University of Colorado and the author of 11 books. He teaches class es in civil procedure, civil rights and law and medicine.“He is one of the founders of new and significant ways of thinking of legal problems called critical race theory," said Julie Novkov, an assistant political science professor at the University. The Morse Chair is a commemorative seat to honor the late Wayne Morse, aU.S. sena tor and former dean of the University School of Law. Appointees represent the qualities associated with Morse — statesmanship, in tegrity, foresight, independence and fearless championing of the public interest. Delgado was chosen for the Morse Chair “because he exemplifies exactly what the chair was set up to do,” Novkov said. The free Morse lecture is open to the pub lic and will be at 7:30 p.m. at the Eugene Hilton, 66 E. 6th Ave. Delgado will also par ticipate in a Colloquium on Affirmative Ac tion today. It is open to the public at 2:30 p.m. in 129Grayson Hall. Courtesy f)hoto Jane Goodall, who has studied chimpanzees since 1960 and has become a champion of wildlife conservation, spoke at the Hult Center Thursday evening. Goodall shares monkey business The world-renowned primatologist is in her 3Stb year of studying apes and monkeys By Felicity Ayles Oregon Daily Emerald A chimpanzee wake-up call greeted the crowd at the Hult Center Thursday night, but it wasn’t a monkey. Impersonating one of her closest living relatives, as she calls them, Jane Goodall, at the Eugene stop ofhernationwide speaking tour, began a lecture to a half-full Silva Hall after a standing ovation from an en thusiastic crowd of about 1,000. In 1900, Goodall began a 38 year study of chimpanzees while living with them in their home, Tanzania, East Africa. That beginning sparked world wide interest in the conserva tion of the chimpanzee species and prompted Goodall in 1977 to open tlie Jane Goodall Insti tute, an institution committed to research, education and con servation of wi I d 1 i fe. The event brought many en vironmental groups to the Unit Center to support Goodall’s mission. “She was doing original re search before it was recog nized, and she's got a special place in my heart because of it,” said Sue Mandeville, a member of Willamette Wildlife Rehabilitation, an or ganization devoted to saving wildlife through rehabilita tion and public education. Rick Gorman, a staff member of the Native Forests Council, said he was at the event be cause the people there were in favor of protecting the environ ment. “It’ssort of like preaching to the choir,” he said. Goodall began her study with funding for only four months and said in the begin ning of the study, the chimps were terrified of her. "But soon they came to real ize that I wasn't so frightening after all,” she said. The first exciting observa tion came when she found that chimpanzees can make and Turn to GOODALL, Page 5A Constitution Court reviews DDS case, rules withASUO Executive The Designated Driver Shuttle should lose its allocation, the court’s chief justice said By Kristina Rudinskas Oregon Daily Emerald The ASUO Constitutional Court found the ASUO Executive did not abuse its power when it dealt with the Designated Driver Shuttle this past summer, according to the court’s unofficial decision released Thursday. The summary opinion overruled the court's previous interpretation of an executive rule that gives the president and vice president their powers. The court had determined in a 1997 case that the ASUO Executive was re striated from freezing a program’s funding. The ASUO programs coordinator had the au thority to freeze funding in the ASUO. The court found that the executive had ailed reasonably to DDS’s attempts to try and pur chase a new printer and a van with bal lot mea sure money. DDS was allocated $50,000 to op erate seven days a week when a ballot measure passed in last spring’s ASUO Elections. Chief Justice Joel Corcoran wrote a con curring opinion that said students were pre sented with incomplete information on the ballot measure last spring when DDS failed to mention its Programs Finance Committee budget of about $26,000. Corcoran said the court should strip the program of the allocation. The court refused to discuss issues of fund ing, Oregon Minimum Wage Law, wages and its own jurisdiction over the Clark Docu ment, which determines how to allocate stu dent fees. It also denied the request to inter pret the Student Senate's actions until the Senate is the respondent. DDS was required to go before the senate and get approval of the $50,000 allocation. Ballot measure lump sums are not required to have a budget. “Hopefully we can start moving forward and DDS can get up and running,” ASUO Vice President Morgan Cowling said. DDS Executive Director Brandon Smith said he will take this petition to the Uni ver sity President for review. Smith also said he would take the issue of paying ASUO work ers minimum wage to the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Management. Currently, many ASUO employees are paid on a stipend. He said he just wants DDS to be treated like any other ASUO program. “The system is corrupt as hell,” Smith said. “I’ve been in student government for four years now and I know all about the bu reaucracy and red tape and petty [B.S.] that runs rampant through the entire system.” Smith also invited "anybody and every body" to the DDS office in EMU Room 35 Wednesday, Oct. 21, at 10 p.m. for coffee and donuts.