Monday, November 2,1998 Weather forecast Today Tliesday Mostly cloudy Showers High 54, Low 39 High 55, Low 42 Pap smears detect cancer early The health center recommends that women with any risk, factors not delay in getting this essential tes//PAGE 8 Arizona takes Ducks down Arizona takes advantage of Oregon's injuries and steps up its defense to hand Oregon an embarrassing defeat/PAGE 9 An independent newspaper Volume 100, Issue 45 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Riots on Alder Street repeated Between 80 and 100people gather at a disturbance that results in 12 arrests By Felicity Ayles and Michael Burnham Oregon Daily Emerald During the University’s third riot in just more than a year, Eugene police ar rested 12 people, fourofwhom indicated they are University students. Around 11:35 p.m.,acrowd composed of mostly student-age people gathered be tween the 1600 and 1700 blocks of Alder Street. As police officers looked on, riot ers lined both sides of Alder Street and started yelling, throwing bottles and pulling street signs from the ground. “The first sign came down about 15 minutes ago,” University junior Jon Rossitto said. “[The crowd] has been try ing to get riots happening here all night.” Rossitto was one of quite a few crowd members leaving the scene before the riot erupted. “It’s just like last year. Everyone wants to get it on again,” University senior Ron Weaver said. Everybody converged at the comer of 17th Avenue and Alder Street be cause of the riots from last year, he added. There were an estimated 80 to 100 peo ple on the 1700 block of Alder Street, EPD Turn to RIOT, Page 7 Police mobilize at the comer of 18th Avenue and Alder Street. Moments later, two cans of tear gas were deployed in order to disperse the crowd. Scott Ikinwtt/Ememki Fire, fraternity incident spark riot Several occurrences Saturday night lead to unruly crowds gathering on Alder Street By Michael Burnham Oregon Daily Emald Two late-night Halloween incidents con tributed to rioting along four blocks of Alder Street and portions of adjacent roads. Rioting continued until early Sunday morning. Police initially responded to an incident at a fraternity house, followed by a fire at a quad complex. Both incidents indirectly contributed to a series of altercations be tween the Eugene Police Department and disorderly crowds on Alder Street, EPD agent Rob Olsen said Sunday. “The fraternity and the fire were only contributors in increasing the number of people in the area,” he said. The Eugene Fire Department received a call at 11:09 p.m. reporting a fire at Cam pus Quads at 751 E. 16th Avenue. Five fire engines, one medic unit and two EFD chief officers arrived at the scene of the one alarm blaze in room 104 at approximately 11:15 p.m. Fire-fighters put tile flames out at 11:17 p.m., said EFD District Chief Dan Wirth, who was at the scene. He added that the resident of room was not present when the blaze was contained. The room’s owner could not be contacted as of Sunday evening. According to EFD Capt. Ken Hem, who was the first of the fire-fighters at the scene, Turn to FIRE, Page 6 Scott tkmiett/V.merald A rioter brandishes a broken stop sign moments before police move in. Higher ed act requires more thorough reporting of campus crime By Teri Meeuwsen Oregon Daily Emerald Anyone interested in campus crime sta tistics will soon see a more comprehensive list of crimes and a crime log at the Office of Public Safety in response to the Higher Edu cation Act’s passage earlier this month. The act requires colleges that have a secu rity office to keep daily logs of crimes re ported and to make these logs available to the public within two business days, except where prohibited by law. The act also requires universities to ex pand their list of crimes that they must re port each year to include manslaughter and arson. Other provisions include: expanding the reporting requirements to include informa tion about crimes that occur near campus; keeping statistics on violent crimes direct ed at individuals because of race, gender, re ligion, ethnicity, sexual orientation or dis ability; and allows the Secretary of Education to impose a fine on colleges that deliberately misrepresent their crime statis tics. “We’re happy to see the need of reporting crimes prioritized,” said C.J. Gabbe, ASUO federal affairs coordinator. “In the long run, students will feel safer (by seeing these logs and more statistics), but now it’s good to know how safe we are, and how we can work to make students even safer.” The Higher Education Act revises the campus crime bill that had been effective since 1992. The previous bill was spurred by the murder of Jeanne Clery, a student at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania in April 1986. The parents of Clery wanted universi ties to report campus crimes in a compre hensive way. The revised bill was tacked onto the Higher Education Act and renamed the “Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Se curity Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act.” As a result, the Higher Education Act creates a more detailed look at reporting crime. “The parents were not fully satisfied with how things were going, so they wanted to improve and enhance and expand it,” said Tom Hicks, Office of Public Safety associate director. While the idea behind the changes are commendable, actually implementing them will be difficult, he said. “It will take a lot of work with the nuts and bolts of it,’’ Hicks said. “At the same time, the spirit of law is good and not some thing to be argued with." Creating an easy way for students and community members to see reported crimes in a crime log will be difficult to create, he said. Currently, to find a day’s worth of re portable crimes, students or community members have to search through police re ports and dispatch logs. However, the issues Turn to CRIME ACT, Page 3