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Hager speaks on police raid ■ Back from Italy, University student Morgan Hager says police wearing riot gear beat nonviolent protesters By Jeremy Lang Oregon Daily Emerald Morgan Hager, the University stu dent injured and arrested during the G-8 global summit in Genoa, Italy, last month, released a statement al leging that police clad in riot gear stormed the gymnasium where she and other protesters slept, beating them despite their nonresistance. In the statement, which has been delivered to the American Embassy in Milan, Italy, as part of its investi gation of the incident, Hager said she suffered a fractured hand, blows to the head and severe bruises. Hager declined to be interviewed by the Emerald. She said in her statement, howev er, that she and other anti-globaliza tion protesters were sleeping in the gymnasium when Genoa police raided the building and arrested the protesters inside. “The police rushed into the room. They were dressed in dark clothing and may have had protective vests under their clothing because they looked exceedingly bulky,” she said. “They wore helmets with plastic face covers. They wore heavy boots, gloves and carried batons. I am certain no skin was showing on any ofthem.” Hager said the police began beating the protesters despite their attempts to overcome the language barrier by showing the two-finger peace sign. “The first thing I recall the police doing was kicking a chair into the group of people kneeling on the floor,” she said. “One came over to our corner and, as I was kneeling with my hands extended, he kicked me in the side of the head, knocking me to the floor.” She said that, amid numerous trips to the hospital and different prisons and cells, the police took her money and plane ticket home and shaved off most of her hair. She said a judge informed her she had been charged with resisting ar rest, being part of a criminal organi zation, causing bodily harm to the police and possession of weapons. Hager was deported back to Oregon in the custody of her parents, al though she said police, her lawyer in Italy and the judge never men tioned deportation. Hager said her deportation papers said she and the other arrested protest ers had been dropped at the border and told to leave the country immedi ately, but police actually released them at an airport in Milan with no flights going to the United States and without any money. Some people, she added, had their passports taken away during their jail time also. A group that helped organize the protest came to the airport and found houses for them to stay at until they could arrange to leave the country. Hager had planned to spend fall term in Italy studying art, which is her major at the University. She had gone to Italy early to join the protest against the eight industrialized nations that met in Genoa late last month. News briefs State grants music school funds for remodeling Gov. John Kitzhaber on Wednes day signed into law a bill that will give the school of music $7.6 million for a massive remodeling project. The project, which will cost $15.2 million, is aimed at eliminat ing overcrowding in the music school’s building, parts of which were built in 1917 to accommodate 300 students. Today, music school officials say about 2,000 students use the building, and 500 of them are music majors. The school of music has so far raised $700,000 and hopes the state funds will compel private donors to give more to the project. While construction plans are ten tative, current drafts call for provid ing more classrooms, rehearsal rooms, studios, office space and a performance hall designed for modern art performances. McNair Scholars Symposium begins today After a summer or more spent re searching a range of topics varying from mathematics to ethnic studies, a group of University students will soon have the chance to present the results of their research to the public. Thursday kicks off the .McNair Scholars Symposium, to be held in Room 184 of the Knight Law School. The McNair Scholars Program was established to give minority students and first-generation col lege students a head start on preparing for graduate school. During the academic year, stu dents selected for the program attend workshops and classes on how to succeed in graduate school. They are also paired with faculty mentors who work with them throughout their involvement with the program. McNair Scholars also have the op portunity to participate in a paid summer research internship in which they conduct original re search on a topic related to their field of study. The annual symposium is the culmination of that internship. Gail Unruh, the program’s coordi nator, said some of the 17 students presenting began their research dur ing the regular academic year, while others started their studies at the be ginning of the summer. Research projects covered a wide range of academic fields, including biology, mathematics, ethnic stud ies, political science, sociology and anthropology, he said. In keeping with the traditional format for academic conferences, each presentation will last about 20 minutes, Unruh said, and will be followed by a 10-minute question and-answer session. The symposium begins at 9 a.m. Thursday with a keynote speech by Knight Law School Dean Rennard Strickland, with the last scheduled presentation at 4:30 p.m. On Friday, students will present from 9 a.m. un til 2 p.m. Admission is free and stu dents, faculty and community mem bers are invited to attend. —Kara Cogswell 515 HichSt Eugene 4ss-4m NATURAL FIBER CLOTH INC THE FLAXLINE V CUT LOOSE TWO STAR DOG 8 AMANDA GRAY V TIBETAN TRADERS V KASHI S.MORE Locally owned since 1991....We support FAIR TRADE OPEN MON SAT 10 6 & SUN 12 5 X Football continued from page 1 the Rose Bowl this year. The na tion’s most-read sports magazine picked Oregon seventh overall. ESPN Magazine picked the Ducks fifth and the Beavers 12th overall. The magazine rankings came on the heels of the USA Today/ESPN Coaches’ Poll, which ranked Oregon seventh, and the Pac-10 Media Poll, which put the Ducks first in the Pa cific-10 Conference. “It’s a reflection of the quality of the team,” Oregon Athletic Director Bill Moos said. “I’m just tickled and proud.” “It’s nice to be considered one of the better teams in the nation,” Bel lotti said. The Oregon schools will soon re ceive even more hype via television. Harrington and Simonton have been followed by ESPN camera crews re cently, and they will be featured on “The Life,” a show that chronicles the lives of athletes, on Aug. 25. Bellotti has also been occupying the airwaves, as he chatted publicly online with ABC analyst Terry Bowden Wednesday morning. After practice Wednesday, Bellot ti noted that all this attention won’t matter come January. “It’s much more important where we stand later in the season,” Bel lotti said. “It’s the postseason poll that really counts.” But for now, the Ducks will just drink up all the hype and hope it doesn’t stop until February. 492 E 13th 686 24 5 8 ■;~ 8.10-8/16) 6:10 > t:SOm - *m m 3:30pm m 6:16,7:16* 8:16pm-»w»a«t 3:10pm »