News brief
Attackers charged with first
degree assault
Eugene Police have charged two
people with first degree assault and
first degree robbery stemming from
the attack with a hatchet of a para
plegic man
After officers responded to a call
in the 800 block of W 4th Alley at
5:03 a.m. May 27, they discovered
the victim with severe cuts to his
face, hands, legs and buttocks, as
well as two amputated fingers, po
lice said.
The victim was treated at Sacred
Heart Medical Center before being
released earlier this week.
Follow up investigations-identi
fied two suspects, one of whom
was reportedly known to the vic
tim.
Robert U. Brown, 22, who was
being held in the Lane County
Adult Correctional Facility on un
related charges, was charged with
both first degree assault and first
degree robbery, EPD spokeswoman
Jan Power said.
According to police reports, the
EPD charged a second suspect,
Jesse L. Rishel, 20, — also being
held in Lane County Adult Cor
rectional Facility on unrelated
charges — with the same charges
as Brown.
Springfield Police Sgt. Dick
Jones said the suspects were appre
hended shortly after 10 a.m. the
same day as the Eugene incident,
when Springfield Police responded
to a report of suspicious subjects in
the 1100 block of R Street in
Springfield.
The pair allegedly claimed to be
police officers to enter a Springfield
apartment, then threatened the res
idents, Jones said. When police ar
rived, Brown attempted to flee and
fought with officers, Jones said.
After apprehending him, Spring
field Police then charged Brown
with criminal impersonation, men
acing, first degree burglary, assault
on a public safety officer and inter
fering with a police officer.
Each suspect is being held in the
Lane County Adult Correctional
Facilities on two charges of assault,
two robbery charges and one count
of burglary, in addition to the
charges from the Springfield inci
dent.
-Aaron K. Breniman
Retirees
continued from page 1
“It’s been a lot of fun working with
the students over the years,” he said.
Heiss said he has enjoyed work
ing in the loans office because he
helps make it possible for students
to attend college.
“I’m one of 13 children,” he said.
“If I hadn’t got a loan, I probably
wouldn’t have gone to school.”
Virginia Sands, nurse-specialist
project coordinator at the Universi
ty Health Center, is also retiring af
ter 25 years at the University. She
said she is looking forward to hav
ing free time, although she will
miss the students.
“My time here has been great,”
she said. “But retiring is something
everyone works for.”
Sands said she plans to spend
her free time with her family,
which includes five grandchildren
and another one on the way.
“It’s going to be a big change in
my life,” she said. “I’ll learn to be a
stay-at-home wife.”
Rodney Jensen, custodial floater
with Facilities Services, is also
looking forward to retiring after 28
years with the University.
“I feel elated,” he said. “I hate to
go, but it’s time.”
McNair
continued from page 1
ing the year, Unruh said. Through
these classes, they can learn about
graduate school and what they
should do to be accepted, he said.
This advice is often helpful to
first-generation college students, he
said, because they may be coming
into the University with less
knowledge of the college system
than some of their peers.
“If students don’t come from
families where one or both parents
attended college, then the student
doesn’t necessarily know the ins
and out’s of what a college experi
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The McNair Scholar program
also offers financial support to par
ticipants, he said, including gradu
ate school application fee waivers,
and research stipends. Some grad
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In addition, each McNair scholar
has the opportunity to participate
in a summer research internship, in
which they conduct original re
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Students are provided with a
stipend to cover their living ex
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For a few graduating this year,
the summer research program was
the highlight of their involvement
with the program.
“I thought the summer experi
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Mathews said.
Mathews, who will graduate this
summer with a general science de
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graduate school.
“It just bolstered them,” he said.
Drew Gorman-Lewis, a senior
graduating this term with a degree
in general science, added that the
summer internship “really gave me
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