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Additional toppings extra. expires 3/31/qT| UHI ARPIIIVIC ,P|nc* stories since 1994 UUL ft II If 111 V LU @ www.dailyemerald.com WRC continued from page 1 companies that can prove they can do the job and aren’t doing anything illegal. All other factors that could include the condition of the compa ny’s factories can no longer be a fac tor for a university to chose a busi ness partner. The University is the only insti tution in the OUS that is a member of the WRC. University General Counsel Melin da Grier said she has been reviewing the policy since the middle of last week, and while she said she will not totally understand its impact until the end of the week, she did confirm it essentially means the University can not be a member of the WRC. “I don’t see how we can join [the WRC] and comply with the board’s policy,” she said. She added the University’s code of conduct may also be in conflict with the new guidelines. Despite the policy’s dramatic ef fect on the labor issue, Grier said she has heard the decision was not prompted by the WRC dispute. She said the policy is the board’s at tempt to keep state schools from us ing their political weight as leverage in business deals, which she said is in conflict with the public nature of universities. “As public entities, [universities] should be impartial,” she said. OUS board member and Universi ty student Tim Young said he was the lone dissenting vote on the policy, and expressed his frustration at the way the board handled the issue. “It was such a broad issue, the way that it was treated ... it was a lit tle misleading,” he said. Young said the board should have offered more opportunities for stu dents and other university members to join in on the debate over the pol icy, rather than simply making the decision at the meeting. OUS Chancellor Joe Cox could not be reached for comment on the policy. Young said the decision was in direct response to the WRC issue and is a means for the OUS to avoid having to make a decision on the la bor issue. “It’s a way for the OUS to not an swer the question,” he said. Young said he was also against the policy because it denies univer sities the chance to use their influ ence in political causes. He said is sues will continually arise where universities can provide a strong voice, and now that voice has been muzzled. “It’s unfortunate that we can’t be in that capacity,” he said. The University has been involved with the WRC since last April when student protests helped prompt the University to join the group. The University joined the FLA at the be ginning of this academic year. While the University is a member of both groups, a faculty committee has been studying the issues associ ated with labor monitoring, which has remained a key campus issue even though some of the activist fer vor of last year has abated. Part of the reason why the Univer sity’s involvement in the WRC has been so controversial is because one of the University’s largest donors, Nike co-founder Phil Knight, severed all his ties with the University be cause it joined the WRC. That action left many supporters convinced that the University would never make it through the first year of its membership in the WRC. Associate professor and director of the Honors College David Frank has been leading the committee studying the issues surrounding la bor monitoring and said he is not sure what the committee will do in light of the board’s new policy. “I am still thinking about what the committee ought to do,” he said. “The next question should be, what should the University do?” He said the response to the policy has been mixed among faculty members, some were pleased by the decision and others frustrated. Some faculty members were “quite concerned” about what the policy may mean for the University’s code of conduct, he said. Even though the decision has ended the labor debate, Frank said he was not discouraged by the poli cy. He said the decision changed the issue from simply involving the University and the WRC to some thing all the state’s universities could have a voice in. “I think it moves it to a different plane, the state board plane,” he said. Reaction continued from page 1 and Vice President Holly Magner, took positions in student govern ment after the protest, trying to fight for the WRC on a different scale. Breslow and Magner could not be reached for comment. But as University members and lawyers decipher whether this rule marks the true end for labor moni toring groups such as the WRC and FLA on campus, next year’s ASUO Executive will have to deal with the workers’ rights issues. Executive candidates Bret Jacob son and Matt Cook, who are run ning on a platform of removing the University’s ties with the WRC, said the board’s decision is a step in the right direction. But, if elected, Jacobson said he will continue the work to mend re lations between the University and the alumni, which were hurt when Nike CEO and alumnus Phil Knight angrily pulled his personal donations to the school, in wake of the decision to join the WRC. “We feel completely vindicated by the decision,” Jacobson said. “This is one more symbolic mes sage.” But candidate Nilda Brooklyn disagreed and said the University must enlist the help of labor moni toring groups. As a member of Breslow’s executive staff this year, Brooklyn has worked on the issue and Breslow’s adamant stance of remaining in the WRC. She said that, if elected, her ad ministration would examine the University’s original code of con duct and see how it could be al tered to include the involvement of groups like the WRC. Sullivan added that he’s not sure how the student activist com munity will react to the news, but he hopes it will be stronger than the mild student response after previous decisions. “I hope it will cause some up roar,” he said. “This should make people very angry.” Pat waters. Michael Martin and Bert Djekso Experienced Mechanics Pauls Bicycle Way or Life VISIT; BIC YCLEWA Y .COM Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is pri vate property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. 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