News Oregon’s $830 million budget shortfall could mean fewer need-based grants for students. Page 4 Features Rap legend Slick Rick brings his ’80s -style rhymes to WOW Hall on Thursday. Pap 5 Sports Sloppy Ducks still stomp Willamette in 75th anniversary of McArthur Court. Pap 13 Wednesday, January 16,2002 Since 1 900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 103, Issue 76 Students Athena Sappe, Cori Galloway, Earl Logan, Jaime Grimaldo and Tyler Winn pack Room 106 of Bean Complex’s Caswell Hall. Thomas Patterson Emerald Hoping to build more than just a ‘residence’ University Housing has proposed building a bigger and better residence hall By Diane Huber Oregon Daily Emerald University residence halls are bursting at the seams — or, rather, at the cement walls — that define each 147 square foot cu bicle in the Bean complex. With the number of incoming freshmen higher than ever this winter term, University Housing Director Mike Eyster said the residence halls can barely hold any more students. But he said the University is also los ing prospective students to schools with more spacious accommodations, and older students are moving to off campus housing. Overcrowded and unappealing rooms prompted University Housing and the Honors College to submit a pro posal to construct a new residence hall. Construction would begin no earlier than 2005 and would cost approxi mately $27 million, Eyster said. Kashe Brooks, a sophomore theater design major, is one of about 17 percent of Uni versity students who return to the resi dence halls for a second year, a number Eyster said is low compared to other universities. Brooks said she thinks of her residence hall room as separate from her school life. “The first impression I got is that the dorms are on this side, and the campus Turn to Residence, page 4 Airport to screen checked baggage ■ Eugene Airport officials have questions about new security rules thattake effect Friday By Brook Reinhard Oregon Daily Emerald Federal aviation officials have yet to contact the Eugene Airport regarding new baggage screening that goes into effect Friday. Starting in just two days, security of ficials must screen every checked bag before it’s placed on a plane, and the process must be overseen by federal officials. But airport operations director Mike Coontz said that the Transportation Security Administration hasn’t contacted anyone at the airport to discuss procedures. “Until we see this federal oversight, we’ll have a lot ef questions that remain unanswered,” Coontz said. Officials have questioned whether the 450 U.S. airports can have the system in place by Friday. Almost two months ago, Secretary of Transportation Nor man Mineta asked if the Jan. 18 deadline was premature. However, transporta tion officials now say they are on track to meet the Friday requirement. “We fully intend to meet the dead line,” said Hank Price, spokesman for Turn to Security, page 3 King celebration should focus on civil rights history, panelists say Leon Tovey Emerald Panel member Henry Alley (center) fields a question from the audience at Tuesday night’s “What Would MLK Say” event. The event, which also included panelists Jayna Brown (right) and Tim ,,. McMahon, drewiacrQwdi)f nearly SO peopleto the InternationalStudentLpunge,_ ■ ‘What Would MLK Say?’ speakers criticize attention given to ‘great men and wars’ ByLeonTovey Oregon Daily Emerald While Tuesday night’s “What Would MLK Say?” event was billed as a discussion of Martin Luther King Jr.’s impact on the civil rights movement, the five-person panel quickly shifted the focus from the late civil rights leader to the need for a more complete understanding of the history behind the movement. “History gets boiled down,” Assistant English Professor Jayna Brown said. “The story comes to us that one day there was a woman named Rosa Parks on a bus and she was too tired to give up her seat, and then all of a sudden things started happening and Martin Luther King came and helped. ” Brown, who works in the Ethnic Studies Pro gram, told the nearly 50 people in attendance that the reality of the civil rights movement has been condensed by mainstream historians who have canonized King. “We have to rethink history” she said. “Not of great men and wars, but of collective movements. ” Brown’s statement was echoed by the panel’s moderator, Assistant History Professor Martin Summers, who said the civil rights movement was “a movement of grassroots activism. ” . .Thq reasoA the movement was successful, Brown said, was because it had been built up over a period of years by a variety of groups, ranging from chinch congregations to tenants’ leagues with ties to the Communist Party. Henry Alley, a professor in the Robert Donald Clark Honors College, drew parallels between the black civil rights movement and the gay rights movement — both of which are ongoing. Alley re called seeing King give a speech in Seattle when he was in high school and being impressed by the non violent, but direct, action that was King’s trade mark. “Like Martin Luther King, I have a dream,” Alley said. “That anyone could walk down the street and not feel threatened.” Audience members responded positively to the panel. Haden Woldu, co-director of the Black Stu dent Union, addressed the issue of the ongoing struggle for equality and ended by asking “As a stu dent of color, what can I do?” Rebecca Roebig, a former University student and member of the group Justice Network Coalition, said that while she enjoyed the event, she thought the panel was mostly “preaching to the choir. “I liked it, but I would’ve liked to see more dia logue,” she said. “The panel was agreeing about everything.” E-mail higher education editor Leon Tovey at leontovey@dailye merald.cprp.