Commit to the Environment the Fun Way! Union generator sets $29~ Fall bicycle tune up $^9~ 407 West 11th • Eugene • 431-7300 E-Bike (free fenders with purchase) an $80 value TEhe Wcft-p Njoi-xxly’s BaW 365 E.i3tk Street • 343-6842 • M-Sat 11-6 • Sun 12-4 * Custom Tattoos Stare Licensed Student Discount Call For Appointment Exotic Body Piercing Hospital Sterilization Walk Ins Welcome 143© PEARL ST. EUGENE. OR. (1541)434-5611 isi VISA ODE ttoriei ore archived on-line at www.dailyemerald.com Emerald Peg Morton, standing before the Federal Building in downtown Eugene in January, holds a cross bearing the name of of a slain Latin American who protesters claim was killed by soldiers trained at WHISC, formerly called the School of the Americas. Eugene activist group travels to Georgia for protest, vigil ■ Local participants will join a national rally against WHISC, a military training facility By Anna Seeley Oregon Daily Emerald Armed with community support, self-determination and an orange van, four Oregon residents left on a journey Friday to participate in the national annual rally and vigil to close the Western Hemisphere In stitute for Security Cooperation. WHISC, formerly known as School of the Americas, is a Georgia-based Spanish-language training facility for military and law enforcement. Peg Morton, Nick Routledge, Bonnie Tout and a woman identi fied only as “Bethany” began their trip, sponsored by the Committee in Solidarity with the Central American People, Eugene Friends Meeting, Oregon Peace Works and others, with a send-off from the First United Methodist Church on Oct. 26. The group will travel for three weeks across the country on their way to Fort Benning, Ga., to take part in the national rally against WHISC. They will be hosted in 15 cities along their way to the Nov. 17-18 event to educate people about the school and why they want it closed down. “It will be an adventure, I’m sure,” Bethany said. WHISC was established in 1946 in Panama to promote stability and combat communism in the region. It moved to Fort Benning in 1984 and then changed its name in 2000. WHISC critics claim the school is the training ground for dictators and other military personnel in volved in genocidal policies in Latin America. “In the 1980s, I found my coun try was committing a holocaust in Guatemala, and I’ve been moved ever since,” Morton said. “I discov ered that the Army School of the Americas was the main training grounds for people involved in these atrocities.” On campus, the Survival Center will be holding its own vigil to raise awareness about WHISC the week preceding the national event, Sur vival Center co-coordinator Randy Newnham said. The event will take place Nov. 15 in the EMU Am phitheater. According to a U.S. Department of Defense news release in Novem ber of 2000, the institute “fosters mutual respect and confidence” and promotes “democratic values and respect for human rights.” It also states that the school’s curricu lum includes “offerings in the areas of peace support operations” and “a program of human rights in struction.” But critics claim graduates of the school have been involved in vari ous massacres and murders, in cluding the 1980 murder of Arch bishop Oscar Romero. The group compared people involved in the school to terrorists, saying “we must stop the terrorist in our own government.” “Our government commits their own ways of terrorism on people who don’t deserve it,” said Donna Frazier, director of Oregon Fellow ship of Reconciliation. Morton said the protest in Fort Benning is deeply spiritual, with roots in the nonviolent philoso phies of Gandhi, Martin Luther King and Dorothy Day. “It is spirit-based,” she said. “It grows out of the Catholic church because so many sisters and priests were killed while helping in Guatemala.” For more information, students can contact CISCAP at 485-8633 or the Survival Center at 346-4356. Anna Seeley is a student activities reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald. She can be reached at annaseeley@dailyemerald.com. Oregon Daily Emerald n 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 University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. 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