Laid-back backup Reserve quarterback Jason Fife is footloose and down-to-earth as he waits his turn, www.dailyemerald.com Battle for supremacy Oregon’s top-ranked offense heads to L.A. to take on the Pac-10’s best defense. Inside Section UNDER THE HELMET An independent newspaper http://www.dailyemeraId.coin Friday, November 9,2001 Since 1 900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 103,Issue 54 Homemade for the Holidays *r ■The annual Holiday Market k returns with its ‘exciting’, ‘unique’ and ‘charming’ atmosphere By Lindsay Buchele Oregon Daily Emerald Market. Nearly 300 vendors will be selling handmade goods in the Lane County Fairgrounds Exhibition Center beginning Nov. 23. The business owners, most of whom sell at both the Saturday Market and the Holiday Market, will display their best products and focus on selling to the expanded holiday crowd, Saturday Market spokeswoman Kim Still said. “It’s exciting,” Still said, “The weather becomes challenging, and this is like New Year’s Eve. It’s marking a new thing.” Unlike the outdoor market, which is only held on Saturdays, the Holiday Market is held Saturday and Sunday from Nov. 23 to Christmas Eve. The holiday event is also open Dec. 21-24 to accommodate last-minute Christmas shoppers, Still said. Dana and Colleen Bauman make their living off of selling cheesecake and other baked goods at both the Sat urday Market and Holiday Market. Opening Dana’s Cheesecake Bakery at - the markets 20 years ago has enabled both Dana and Colleen to quit their other jobs and concentrate solely on % running their family business, Colleen Bamnan said. “Businesses that start out in the Sat urday Market are usually bootstrap businesses,” she said. “There’s very lit tle capital and a lot of hope.” She said the business is famous for its vanilla cheesecake, which is the biggest seller during the Holiday Market. The pumpkin cheesecake is also a seasonal favorite. Dana makes all of the baked goods sold at the market, she said. aturday Market vendors are about to pack up their booths and move inside for the 15th annual Holiday Turn to Saturday Market, page 3A Thomas Patterson Emerald Julia Waschow makes a purchase at Saturday Market’s Ritta’s Burritos booth last April. The days of the outdoor market are numbered, as the Holiday Market in the Lane County Fairgrounds Exhibition Center will begin Nov. 23. Symposium connects creative and legal fields ■ Planners of the two-day art and law event hope to educate artists about their rights and obligations By Helen Schumacher and Kara Westervelt for the Emerald For many people, the worlds of art and law may appear to have nothing in common. However, there is an often-overlooked con nection between these two fields, said Christy Cox, a planner for this weekend’s art and law sym posium, called “Outside the Lines: Community, Creativity, and the Law.” It is because the connection is so often overlooked that Cox and others created Outside the Lines, a two-day event designed to edu cate students and community members about the importance of artists understanding the legal is sues, such as copyright laws and contracts, surrounding their work. The symposium is a collab orative effort on the part of stu dent organizations and the com munity, said Sarah Bailen, a symposium planner and repre sentative from the Art and Ad ministration Student Forum. Cox said the goal of the sympo sium is for students to walk away with an idea of what their rights and responsibilities are. The symposium, which is new this year, starts today at 6 p.m. with ArtWalk, a free walk ing tour of public art at the Uni versity School of Law. Several local artists will answer ques tions and discuss the pieces. Af ter the walk, the Law School class of 2002 will sell selected pieces of art, the proceeds from which will go to the Wayne T. Westling Memorial Fund, said DeAnna Horne, a representative of the Class of ’02. Saturday’s events begin at 9 a.m. with a presentation on the state of the arts and continue with a keynote lecture by Juana Alicia and Brooke Oliver at 9:30 a.m. Alicia is a San Francisco Bay area mural artist and activist, and Oliver is an arts lawyer. In the lec ture, called “Public Spaces and Cases: Creating and Defending Murals in California’s Bay Area,” the speakers will explore the con nection between community mu rals and the law. Two sets of workshops and a panel discussion will follow the lecture. The workshops will ad dress contracts and the concept of intellectual property and copyrights for visual and per forming artists, as well as for writers. Cox said the symposium is a “place to start a dialogue about copyrighting (of artistic materi al).” She said not all artists are aware of how copyright law works for or against them. Turn to ArtWalk, page 3A Students discuss Islamic religion ■The speakers at Thursday’s panel discussion attempt to dispel some myths about their religion By Anna Seeley Oregon Daily Emerald On Sept. 11, terrorists committed sui cide in the act of killing thousands of others. Redha Mohammad explained Thursday night that this is a sin. “They killed innocent people and said they did it in the name of Islam,” Mohammad said. “This is a major vio lation of Islamic law." Mohammad was one of three speak ers at a Muslim Student Association panel discussion, held in an effort to ed ucate about Islam and erase the miscon ceptions about the religion that have arisen since Sept. 11. Students Lidia Karmadjieva and Ali na Tureeva also spoke to an audience of more than 60 people about human rights, jihad and the Taliban in respect to the Islamic religion. The overall mes sage of the event was that Islam does not support violations of human rights, suicide or the killing of innocent peo ple, despite what terrorists or Taliban leaders may claim. MSA member Nadia Hasan opened the program by explaining the basics of Islam. She said the literal meaning of Is lam is “surrender to the will of God.” She added that Islamic religion is prac ticed in many countries outside the Middle East. Karmadjieva, a student from Bulgar ia, said the faith of Islam is not discrimi natory and welcomes different people and different perspectives. She said Is lamic beliefs include tolerance of other faiths, and Muslims encourage people to explore those faiths. “Education in the Islamic world is highly encouraged,” she said. “’Educate yourselves, and enlighten the world.’ This is what Islam is about and what I’m about.” Karmadjieva said Islam encourages women to be educated, and Muslims don’t see women as inferior. She said in Muslim society, women can use their education however they want. It’s im portant for women to be educated, she said, because otherwise they can’t raise educated children. “Illiterate mothers raise illiterate chil dren — who grow up to be suicide bombers,” she said. She added that she sees the United States as a big part of the prophecy of Is lam because of America’s principles of freedom and respect of different com munities. She said the only way to fight terrorists is to fight with the principles Turn to MSA, page 3A