Editor in chief: Laura Cadiz Editorial Editors: Bret Jacobson, Laura Lucas Newsroom: (541)346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: ode@oregon.uoregon.edu On-line edition: www.dailyemerald.com recent changes such as Saferide have attempted to improve the sit uation. One of the first and, I think, most strongly symbolic things I noticed is the contrast between the way the statues of the Pioneer Father and Mother are treated. The father is located midway be tween the front doors of Fenton and Friendly Halls and directly on axis with the front door of Johnson Hall, giving him what is arguably the position of greatest architec tural impact of any sculpture on the University. He is highly visi ble from 13th Avenue, which is probably the busiest street on campus and is certainly the Uni versity’s main street. He stands on a rock among well-tended land scaping, and the weapons he car ries, along with his confident de meanor, illustrate that he is in control. In contrast, the Pioneer Mother is relegated to sitting on a pedestal tucked in a backwater of the cam pus, on axis with Johnson Hall’s back door and Gerlinger Hall’s locker room door. She sits in the mud not far from an alley, a few bushes carelessly planted near by. Even the plaques on the side of her pedestal depict her standing passively by as men and circum stances control the events of her life. Her head is bowed in defeat. The plaque on the back of the pedestal, describing the sculptor’s intent, implies that her presence needs explanation. The relationship of these stat ues is mirrored in the entire infra structure, layout and construction of the University. The same green ery that makes the Oregon campus so beautiful provides a myriad of places for an attacker to lurk. The most effective method of provid ing safety in an urban or universi ty setting is to have lots of people on the street; yet, most of the class room buildings lack any support for after-hours activities other than night classes, and are well separated from the resident halls. Consequently the campus is very lonely after dark when night classes end. In many places there is a lack of street level lighting, which is another big safety factor. The emergency call boxes do nothing to reduce the perception of danger. Women are not safe crossing the cam pus on foot after dark. For an example, let's say a sin gle woman who lives in Carson Hall wants to take a night class at Villard Hall or enjoy a play at the Robinson Theatre. When she leaves she has about three choic es. She can dodge past the bushes around Deady on the way to 13th Avenue. Or she can go down to Franklin Boulevard and walk the long way around and down Agate Street, but even there she faces some quiet dark places. Or she can call Saferide. I’ve walked the campus at any time of night with literally no fear, but I’ve sensed the fear in single women I’ve encountered in lonely stairways at midnight in Lawrence Hall. While a few guys might fear a personal attack, men do not have to deal with the uni versal female fear of male sexual assault. A guy may not feel com fortable walking home from a night class, but he generally will not change his life or refuse to take a required class to avoid the situa tion. Many women do. All of this ultimately results in reducing choices for women. Ac cording to the Office of Public Safety, nine out of 10 forcible sex ual assaults are not reported, the campus logged two in 1998, indi cating that about 20 rapes were ac tually committed. Many women will not take night classes even if they are part of their degree requirements for fear of assault after leaving class, and I’d have to say they’re justi fied. In effect this means that, in tentional or not, the entire Univer sity-built infrastructure discriminates against women. I don’t know what the value of that infrastructure is, but it must be at least in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Obviously, that can’t be changed all at once, but maybe we can start soon. Yes, sexism is still a problem at the University. But $40,000 for Saferide to mitigate the problem seems like a very small token in deed. Fred M. Collier is a columnist for the Oregon Daily Emerald His views do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. He can be reached viale mailat fmcollier@aol.com According to the 1999-00 ASUO Budget Book, Saferide gets $40,713 in student fees for its op erations. That sounds like a lot of money for a group that excludes the participation of one half of the student body, delineated specifi cally by sex. Can this support by the students for such an exclusive group be justified? I suppose there are a number of ways to approach the question. But as a student of architecture, I chose to simply look around the University campus to see if I could decode the meanings and impli cations inherent in the way the buildings and grounds are de signed, constructed and arranged. My observations led me to be lieve that the campus was de signed without consideration for the safety of women, even though