Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 05, 2002, Image 1

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    Commentary
Columnist Pat Payne ‘partly’ argues
for the moral necessity of cloning.
Pap 2
Sports
Despite fighting hard, Oregon wrestling
gets pinned twice over the weekend.
Tuesday, February 5,2002
Since 1900
University of Oregon
Eugene, Oregon
Volume 103, Issue 89
■ This year, University officials are cracking
down on the misuse of campus identification
Turn to Identification, page 3
By Robin Weber
Oregon Daily Emerald
Many college students know the consequences of using a
fake driver’s license to get into bars and clubs, but conse
quences also exist for people using another individual’s Uni
versity identification card around campus.
University students — and faculty — are being monitored
on campus to ensure the safety of school facilities.
To get a card, all students must do is present a driver’s li
cense, or another photo ID, and provide in
formation that confirms they are enrolled
in classes at the University. Students can
be issued one of two kinds of cards, UO
Card Office spokeswoman Kimberley
Parzuchowski said.
“Students enrolled in classes but
not receiving credit for those classes
get a program card that has no bus
privileges,” she said. “Others get
the University ID card that in
cludes all privileges.”
Faculty, on the other hand, must
get paperwork from payroll with
their classification. Staff must
also show a drivers’ license. But
once students and faculty re
ceive their cards, it is at their
discretion how the cards are
used in school facilities.
“We simply check in the sys
tem if they have valid identifica
tion and are registered in classes,”
said University Ticket Office man
ager Mary Barrios of the policy to
ward students.
“Students always try to use other
people’s IDs or old IDs,” she said.
For anyone caught doing this, no
valid identification means no ticket for
University events. If the person does
get into the event — such as a foot
ball game — and is caught using
Assumed
ID"ENTITY
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Woman
fights off
attacker
■ Police have too little information
to determine if this was the same
man who targeted women last year
By Marty Toohey
Oregon Daily Emerald
A woman fought off an attempted rape
behind the Knight Library on Wednes
day night, and Department of Public
Safety officials
said the attacker,
might be the same
man they believe
responsible for six
attacks last year.
DPS couldn’t be
sure that it was
the same attacker,
however, because the victim couldn’t
give a clear description of the attacker.
“It certainly was our first thought, but
unfortunately we need more informa
tion,” DPS Assistant Director Tom
Hicks said.
The attack occurred at 8:15 p.m. near Pi
oneer Cemetery. The victim struggled free
and called a friend, who then called DPS.
“We don’t have any suspect info,”
Hicks said. “The victim was unable to
give us much of a description.”
The victim suffered no physical in
juries, according to Hicks.
May 21 was the last reported siting of
the man believed responsible for six at
tacks last year, including an attempt to
grab a woman. He was spotted in the
cemetery, the Knickerbocker Bike Bridge
in Alton Baker Park and the Autzen
Footbridge, and all the attacks were on
women in their late teens and early 20s.
Inside
An expanded list
of crimes on
campus is available
in Crime Watch
PAGE4
E-mail reporter Marty Toohey
at martytoohey@dailyemerald.com.
Theater troupe aims to raise consciousness about addictions
■ PERFORMANCES: Actors from New York
University will stage performances this week
that reflect experiences of students and faculty
By Jen West
Oregon Daily Emerald
Whether it’s a pitcher of beer, smoking a bowl or
compulsively shopping, many people have felt the
effects of unbreakable habits. One New York Uni
versity theater group travels the country provoking
discussions about addictive behaviors.
Quick Fix, a reality-based theater group, will
hold performances at 7 p.m. Wednesday and Thurs
day in the EMU Ballroom. Free tickets for students
are available at the EMU Ticket Office.
During the 1999-00 school year, Quick Fix began
as a project at the New York University Tisch
School of the Arts, said Josh Koenig, an actor with
the group. He said the year-long project started
when a theater class at the New York University
conducted more than 100 interviews with stu
dents, faculty, lawyers, advertising executives, to
bacco executives and people on the street. Then,
Turn to Performances, page 3
Courtesy photo
■ A NEW TAKE: The group will refrain from
passing judgment on behavior, instead
interviewing and giving a voice to students
By Danielle Gillespie
Oregon Daily Emerald
On Monday, students, faculty and administra
tors started to consider what their “quick fixes”
are as the Quick Fix team began its four-day in
vasion of campus to provoke discussion about
addictive behaviors.
The Quick Fix team is a group of five cast mem
bers, a director and a stage manager from New York
University’s Tisch School of the Arts who stage in
teractive theatrical performances to encourage stu
dents to vocalize their concerns about alcohol and
drug use, eating disorders and other behaviors that
can interfere with students’ lives.
“They do not come in and say this is right or this
is wrong,” EMU marketing coordinator Lee Latour
said. “This is not a cookie-cutter approach to these
issues. They are trying to help give a voice to those
who do not usually get it.”
Turn to Quick Fix, page 3