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Please recycle
this paper*
City Council to vote on fee
■A proposed ordinance
would establish fines for
citizens whom police must
visit repeatedly :
By Lindsay Buchele
Oregon Daily Emerald
The Eugene City Council will
vote tonight on a proposed ordi
nance that would fine Eugene citi
||K||S||9 to their homes.
volving criminal violations with
out burdening taxpayers.
The meeting starts at 7:30 p.m.
zens for repeat
ed police visits
City
Council
The Special
Response Fee
Ordinance
would recover
costs associated
with gatherings
and parties in
at City Hall.
The ASUO Executive wrote a
new draft of the ordinance and
presented it at an October council
meeting, and a few amendments
might make it into the draft before
a vote.
ASUO "changes included an
amendment stating that 30 people
constitute a gathering instead of
10, the number the ordinance cur
rently specifies.
“We felt the draft that is to be
presented to the city council has
too vague of language, and stu
dents could see it as very threaten
ing,” said Christa Shively, ASUO
community outreach director.
The ordinance includes varying
consequences for the number of
visits made to a residence:
— For the first response: A
warning will be issued if there are
10 or more people present, and
there are two or more citations giv
en out or arrests made.
— For the second response: If
the previous conditions apply, a
fee will be determined if the sec
ond response occurs within 90
days of the first response.
The fee does not include any
other citations that are issued, offi
cer pay or the cost of equipment,
all of which must be paid separate
ly.
Eugene City Councilman Gary
Rayor said the ASUO did a good
job of critiquing the ordinance. He
agreed that 10 people is too small a
number but thinks the ordinance
itself is a good idea.
“We’ll look at the entire ordi
nance and then move to amend
certain clauses,” Rayor said. “It’s
going to end up with the students
not being off that badly.”
Re-count
continued from page 1
the 14th Amendment.
“It’s all subjective, and therefore
it presents terrible problems of hu
man error and potential for mis
chief,” Baker said. A statewide ma
chine-operated re-count has
already narrowed Bush’s lead.
Baker’s rival, Gore consigliere
Warren Christopher, portrayed
vote re-counts as a routine necessi
ty of democracy. “If at the end of
the day, George Bush has more
votes in Florida than we do, cer
tainly the vice president will con
cede,” Christopher said, even
while leaving open the prospect of
court action if re-counting ends
with Bush still ahead.
Democrats filed court papers
Sunday night arguing that Flori
da's manual ballot law is constitu
tional. Party lawyers also said
Bush’s complaints threaten Flori
da’s right to run its own elections.
The stage is set for one of the
most dramatic periods in Ameri
can political history. A climax
could come at the end of this week
when final overseas mail-in ballots
will be counted and the trailing
candidate will be forced to con
cede or push deeper into unchart
ed waters. Their public financing
drying up, both camps are raising
money to pay rafts of lawyers and
political operatives sent to every
corner of Florida to examine coun
ty voting records and wage a cam
paign-style, poll-tested public rela
tions battle.
Among the weekend develop
ments:
—Palm Beach County, Fla., elec
tion officials added three dozen
additional votes to Gore early Sun
day in a mechanical re-count.
Leaders of the Democratic strong
hold then decided to manually
check each of the 425,000 votes
cast. One top county official said
he will try to block the move.
—In Deland, Fla., Volusia Coun
ty officials began a marathon man
ual re-count of all 184,018 ballots,
despite Bush’s pending request to
stop it.
—Democrats added Osceola
County to their list of hand re
count requests. Gore had a small
lead against Bush in the 54,000
plus votes cast in the county just
south of Orlando. Hispanic voters
alleged they were required to pro
duce two forms of identification
when only one was required.
— Florida secretary of state
Katherine Harris, a Republican
who has campaigned for Bush,
scheduled a meeting Monday with
Christopher and Gore campaign
chairman William Daley as De
mocrats expressed concern that
she might refuse to certify ballots
uncovered in the manual count.
—Bush had a 17-vote lead in
New Mexico, where state police
have begun impounding ballots
from Tuesday’s election.
A Gore-requested manual re
count in Broward County, Fla., an
other Democratic bastion with Fort
Lauderdale as its hub, was to begin
today. A hearing is scheduled for
Tuesday in Miami-Dade County,
site of what Gore hopes will be a
fourth manual re-count.
Law donation
continued from page 1
jurisprudence. Three years later, he
joined the law school faculty and
pursued multiple teaching ven
tures.
“Most people remembered him
as a teacher instead of a dean,” rem
inisced Ted Goodwin, a former stu
dent of Hollis’. “Students seldom
forgot a lesson that he taught.”
Lowry found a vast collection of
notebooks that Hollis kept on each
graduating student.
“He helped each one find a job
for over 20 years,” he said.
In Hollis’ first years as a profes
sor, the law school consisted of two
small classrooms, faculty offices
and a library, all on the second floor
of Oregon Hall. Hollis was instru
mental in the school’s relocation to
Fenton Hall, a lengthy project that
was completed in 1953.
During this time, Hollis was in
volved with many community
service efforts, holding such offices
as president of the Chamber of
Commerce, chairman of the Lane
County Selective Service Board,
University Athletic Representative
and acting president of the State
Service Board of Higher Education.
He taught at least one class a term
throughout World War II, some
with an enrollment as low as three
or four students.
In a 1944 interview, Hollis was
asked if he would act as president
of the State Service Board. Hollis
responded, “I’m willing to do this
only if I can look forward to having
the institution, whatever may come
up, make progress.” During 1944
and 1945, the years in which Hollis
served in this position and World
War II was in full swing, the Uni
versity was one of a select group of
schools that continued to thrive
during the war. Hollis continued in
an advisory role to other presidents
until his retirement in 1967.
President Dave Frohnmayer,
whose father, brother and sister-in
law are all former students of Hol
lis, said $1 million of Hollis’ dona
tion will go toward professorships,
and the rest will be used for student
scholarships.
“The students are immensely
grateful to Dean Hollis for this won
derful donation,” scholarship re
cipient Sylvia Cramond said dur
ing the Friday reception. “We were
all surprised that this would come
from someone who has [already]
been so generous to this school in
years past.”
The bell that Hollis rang in the
halls to signal the end of every
exam period was also among the
memorabilia he left to the school.
“I keep expecting someone to
confiscate this bell from me,”
Strickland said, laughing, after
ringing in the dedication cere
monies. “I don’t think the Dean
would have let anyone take his
bell.”
Smoking ban
continued from page 1
But Torrev said there is a strong
possibility the council will delete
the option from the ordinance.
“All of this has to do with sec
ond-hand smoke and worker pro
tection,” Councilman Gary Rayor
said. “Things like smoking rooms
and clean-air technology should
have been done a long time ago.”
If the ordinance is passed, it is
unlikely the ban will go into effect
on July 31 without a fight. The Bin
gomania bingo parlor and several
local bars have been vocal in their
opposition to the ban.
“We have formed the Eugene
Freedom Choice Committee and
have been working on [collecting
signatures to put the smoking ban
to vote],” Bingomania employee
Cory Fisher said.
Torrey said it is possible for citi
zens to collect about 4,000 signa
tures and put the ordinance on the
ballot.
“If they get 10 percent of voters,
then it will be on the March ballot,”
Torrey said. “The council could opt
to refer it to the voters, but I will
urge them to make a decision.”
Torrey said if the ordinance is
put to the voters, the results will
depend on the strength of the argu
ments, and those promoting
smoke-free businesses have already
made a vocal push for the ban.
“In my opinion, it will be awful
ly hard to overturn this ordinance,”
Torrey said.