I Get the hip hop groove University and Lane Community College stu dents have formed a Hip-Hip Student Union, and they want more venues in which to groove. PULSE The Flash ASUO General Elections continue The ASUO general elections continue today at 9 a.m. through 5 p.m. This year’s elections will be conducted entirely on Duck Web. Students can submit their votes through any com puter with Internet access. Several voting booths with computers will be stationed on campus for added con venience. Law conference begins Thursday At the Public Interest Envi ronmental law Conference more than 3,000 environ mental leaders and social ac tivists will hear keynote speakers David Brower, founder of Earth Island Insti tute; forest activist Julia But terfly Hill; animal rights ac tivist Rod Coronado; Carrie Dan, executive director of the Western Shoshone De fense Project; and Bill Mead ows, president of The Wilder ness Society. More than 100 panels and workshops are set from Thursday to Sunday. For schedule, locationsand costs, call 346-3828. Gunman kills two, wounds three WILKINSBURG, Pa. (AP)—A gunman who reportedly flew into a rage over a bro ken door went on a rampage Wednesday, shooting a maintenance worker at his apartment and customers at two fast-food restaurants be fore surrendering to police during a hostage standoff. Two people were killed and three critically wounded. Ronald Taylor, 39, of Wilkins burg, was arrested in an office building after he kept police at bay for about two hours, holding four or five people in wheelchairs hostage at a senior hospice center. Weather Today Friday RAIN POSSIBLE RAIN high 51, low 41 high 41, low 35 Thursday March 2,2000 Volume 101, Issue 109 n n_t h ft_w fi h www.dailyemerald.com University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon An independent newspaper The new Defazio Bike Bridge creates a new path for bikers and pedestrians to cross the river By Brian Goodell Oregon Daily Emerald Pedestrians and bicyclists got a preview of the new $2.8 million DeFazio Bike Bridge Friday before the official dedi cation takes place in April. Located just east of the newly remodeled Ferry Street Bridge, the DeFazio Bike Bridge re mained open for the weekend but will close occasionally for touch up and repairs prior to the dedication. In 1997 the Eugene City Council voted unanimously to approve former Mayor Ruth Bascom’s recommendation to have the bridge named after DeFazio. The three-year-old project comes from the same $23.7 million in federal money that Rep. Peter DeFazio, D Springfield, helped acquire to improve transportation in Eu gene, which is why the new structure now bears his name. The bridge got mixed re views Friday. Cyclists and pedestrians marveled at the unique design, but some won dered why it was built so close to an existing bridge. Although a trek across the Ferry Street Turn to Bridge, page 4A Bike bridge The newly buift DeFazio Bike Bridge is now open for public use, but its grand opening isn’t until April. Mexican strikers determined to prevail Mexican protester Margarita Diaz Lara spoke to the University and Lane Community College last week regarding labor in Mexico By Serena Markstrom Oregon Daily Emerald It has been 224 days since workers at the Congeladora del Rio (CRISA) frozen fruit plant in Irapuato, Mexico, went on strike. On that hot July day 200 workers were fired. Now those workers are trying to form an independent labor union. This issue has risen to com plicated legal levels at the cost of more than 150 jobs filled by workers from another town. The legal complication lies in Mexican labor laws and the laws governing the right to form a union. Margarita Diaz Lara is one of those workers who has been in limbo since the strike began — five days before her 21st birth day. Tuesday she returned to Mexico after touring the North west to raise awareness of the struggle.* Lara’s visit was spon sored by the Mexican Solidari ty Network in conjunction with the Committee in Solidarity with the Central American Peo ple. Lara visited the University and Lane Community College last week. The workers’ demands are threefold: They want the fired workers reinstated, they want the right to freely associate with the union of their choice and they want better working conditions. Lara had worked at the Turn to Strike, page 6A 44 If I have to die for it, I will die. Margarita Diaz Lara worker on strike _n Support services available for assault victims Sexual Assault Support Services and the EPD are working to combat problems of sexual violence IS By Darren Freeman Oregon Daily Emerald Sexual violence is one of the state’s most punishable offens es, but it’s also one of the most commonly unreported crimes. Measure 11, passed in 1994, intended to crack down on sexually motivated crimes by requiring minimum sentences ranging from 75 to 100 months imprisonment. Most sex crimes, however, go unreport ed to the police. “Out of any ten women we work with, probably only two or three report to the police,” Teri Gutierrez, advocacy serv ices coordinator for Sexual As sault Support Services, said. While 3,439 people, some repeat callers, contacted SASS in 1998, the Eugene Police De partment charged only 286 people that year with sex of ing only 32 people vPith com mitting sexually motivated crimes in the University area. SASS community education coordinator Elizabeth Mc Cravy said victims of sexual assault often refuse to file re ports because they fear public scorn, are wary of the criminal justice system and sometimes blame themselves. “When someone comes for fenses. A concerned motherspeaks out for support for rape victims. PAGE8A Inside Almost 700 of S A S S ’ s callers were University students, but the EPD re ports charg ward to say they’ve been abused as an adult or a child, a lot of the focus and blame falls on the victim,” McCravy said. SASS strives to ensure vic tims that attackers are to blame for the assault, no matter where victims were, what they wore or who they were with. “We try to convince victims that there’s no such thing as a rape-able offense,” McCravy said. Many crime victims, howev er, refuse to press charges be cause they’re apprehensive about the justice system and public criticism on the witness stand, SASS spokeswoman Janet Fiskio said. “The whole reporting process can be very Turn to Services, page 7A This is the second installment of a three-part series about sexual as sault. Today: Avdvocacy efforts for victims and presecution of offenders Friday: Women empowering them selves through pre vention and coun seling.