Calendar Friday, May 12 The international Coffee Hour will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Interna tional Lounge. This week there will be election platforms for Internation al Student Association co-directors. Sociology Colloquium: Robert O’Brien discusses “A Critical Realist Approach to Crime Rates.” 3 p.m. Room 225, Chiles Business Center. Free. For information, call 346-5002. Performance/Lecture: Shoshone Bannock playwright and storyteller Ed Edmo presents “Celilo Falls: A Place, A Memory.” Then, Eugene filmmakers Ian McCiuskeyand Steve Mital premiere their new documen tary video, “Echo of Water Against Rocks: Remembering the Last Days of Celilo Falls.” 7 p.m. Museum of Natural History. Free. For informa tion, browse natural-history.uore gon.edu or call 346-3024. Reception follows. Saturday, May 13 Stop-in Studio: Barbara Dibs from Mrs. Gossman’s Sticker Co. demon strates how to make any occasion special with personalized sticker cards. 2 to4 p.m. Downstairs, Univer sity Bookstore. Free. For information, call 346-4331. Police continued from page 1 terim tools to help deal with this rapidly escalating situation.” Rikhoff specified that he want ed two representatives from the commission to meet with- two members of the Human Rights Commission on a weekly basis to work with community leaders in devising a strategy to involve all the members of the controversy. Commissioner Carla Newbre said that in her work as a crisis counselor, she could identify crisis situations and that this issue was in need of a “crisis intervention.” “I want [the commission] to look at this as a sacred duty, be cause the future of our city is at stake,” Newbre said. Commissioner Maurice Denner called for the members of the Eu gene Police Employees Union to be included in any discussion, saying that officers’ safety when respond ing to protests was a critical issue. The commission did not address the issue of direct activist involve ment until the end, when Commis sioner Tim Laue said that “we need to include those who are protesting ... everyone should be represented in a real discussion.” Tapes of protesters and police clashing at a recent march cele brating the birthday of Mumia Abu-Jamal, a Pennsylvania death row inmate convicted of killing a police officer, were distributed to commission members with the warning that the footage was evi dence in the criminal trial of eight protesters arrested at the march. Activists at the University of Oregon Survival Center expressed disbelief that the commission would accomplish any of their goals. “Obviously, this meeting is only for the part of the public that buys [the police department’s] line,” Randy Newnham said. “I don’t trust police to do any thing but public relations,” Madi son LeBlanc said. “They’re just a bunch of thugs. They literally tack led people just for jaywalking. There was no order to disperse un til the police started shooting rub ber bullets and beating people.” LeBlanc cited the Mumia march as one of the bigger examples of why protesters eye police with dis trust, calling the officers’ reaction one of “unprovoked violence.” Newnham said that “if we had been out there talking about Mu mia frying, we would have been paraded through town.” The commission voted to hold future meetings on May 22 and June 1 in order to meet its July 1 City Council deadline to draft a working proposal to deal with the issue. Commission targets prostitution ■The Eugene Police Commission meets to confront complaints regarding sex solicitors By josh Ryneal Oregon Daily Emerald Responding to complaints from Eugene residents, the Eugene Po lice Commission drafted an ordi nance and modified another Thursday night to create a prosti tution-free zone between Fifth and Eighth avenues and Washing ton and Chambers streets. The commission had received several complaints from neighbor hood residents that “johns” regu larly cruised the area, soliciting them and their children for sex. A commission subcommittee recom mended that prostitutes should be cited in state rather than municipal courts because of the former’s abili ty to send offenders to local drug treatment programs. The city already has a prostitu tion-free zone in the area of 29th Avenue and Willamette Street. The subcommittee also recom mended that prostitutes and those soliciting sex would receive equal sanctions, and that those convict ed of prostitution-related crimes would be excluded from the pros titution-free zones for the period of one year. Plans to publish photos of those convicted of prostitution-related crimes were initially added to the draft but were struck from the fi nal version after commissioners expressed concerns about the plan’s constitutionality. Similar measures enacted in Portland were struck down as un constitutional by the Oregon Supreme Court. Another ordinance — already on the books and intended to stop motorists “cruising” down main thoroughfares — was modified to specifically target “johns” who typically drive through an area two orthree times looking for prostitutes. The ordinances will be referred to the Eugene City Council for re view and decision. Virtual Office Systems Inc. In Partnership with The University of Oregon Bookstore 3131 West 11th Ph. 343-8633 Open Mon-Sat 10-6 The AMD K7 Athlon 600 $1169.99 • Microstar MS 6195 Board • 8 MB ATI AGP Video • 13 GB ATA 66Drive • 64 MB 100 MHz SDRAM • 17”.27SVGA Monitor W/Athlon 650 $1189.99 W/Athlon 700 $1229.99 Add a 100 MB Zip Drive for $90 Discover Why an AMD Based System is the Best Value! 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