WET WEDNESDAY Beef or ChicKe* If)IX BORRVTO $ K COi(l 0.2? rwina1 tne^'n" f\ afoooy Campus Location - 510 E. Broadway 1TTTI Come Meet mm Tuom Coordinator of Non-Traditional Student Programs A New Faculty Member Who Represents the Voice of Non-Trads on Campus Tuesday, March 5 9-10 A.M. Wednesday, March 6 12-1 P.M. At Returning Students Association Office (room #20A, ground floor in the EMU, across from the Copy Center) Patti Hachten 346-4305 Returning Students Association For more information: Sayaka Mimura 346-4095 Women's Center Becky Dusseau 346-3232 Academic Learning Services All the weight you want to lose in 2002 for "^49. Plus cost of food. ___ For a limited time. JJHI 35^s s IS.. Wm s. 8 013481 390 Coburg Road, phone: 541-485-3669 Suite A, Eugene, OR 97401 fax: 541-485-1737 www.jennycraig.com 1 .800.JENNY20 jennycaiR.com Adam Amato Emerald Dr. Sol Gordon speaks to roughly 100 students and faculty about love, sex and masturbation Monday afternoon in the EMU. Advice continued from page 1 person; 60 to 70 percent,” he said, “but you don’t have to.” Finding potential mates isn’t simply a mat ter of sex, love or the stars being in your favor, he said. It’s also more than just biology working its magic. So what is it? “The best indication is friend ship and a respect for each other,” he said. Gordon said many people’s prob lems may be that they’re just not looking in the right places for love and are surprised when they don’t find a perfect mate at the local bar, on the Internet, or even in the bedroom. He advised what he likes to call the “Mitzvah” therapy. “Mitzvah” is the Hebrew word for doing good. “Meet out of interests, in commu nity service, doing mitzvahs,” he said. “Meet people who are also doing good deeds and something useful.” Furthermore, he said physical as pects should not be the primary focus in what determines hein;, in love. “You could have great sex and no relationship,” he said. Gordon also spoke about the role sex plays in a relationship and what to do if one partner craves physical attention more than the other. “Sex is not the answer,” he said. The commitment that accompanies a solid relationship cannot be based on sex, and if that is a point of con flict, the individual wanting more sex than available may have to take matters into his or her own hands. “I’ll tell you what to do — mas turbate,” he said. “At least then you’re having sex with somebody who won’t reject you.” He challenged the audience to examine reality and not always look for completion in another per son, but rather to look within, defining their own role in the rela tionship, and finding their voice. Several students said they valued Gordon’s input and his advice. “Love is important to every rela tionship. I learned everyone’s (defi nition of) love is different and no one has a right to say it’s just infatu ation,” student Rick Reed said. Others who attended the seminar are planning to apply the “friends first” approach to current relation ships. “I learned not to marry for love — friendship is more important,” said Katie Mahaffey. E-mail reporter Robin Weber at robinweber@dailyemerald.com. Survey continued from page 1 but “middle of the road.” Frequent protests and student ac tivism over the years have given the University a reputation of campus liberalism. One well-known campus demonstration occurred in 1970, when students protested the Univer sity Senate’s decision to retain the ROTC program on campus. About 400 protesters sat-in at Johnson Hall and rallied against ROTC facilities on campus by throwing fire crackers and torches as well as apples with ra zor blades through windows. The police used tear gas and pepper spray to disperse the crowd. Large-scale campus demonstra tions returned to the University in spring 2000, when students camped out for 10 days on Johnson Hall’s lawn in an anti-sweatshop-labor campaign urging the University to join the Worker Rights Consortium. Survival Center co-director Randy Newnham said he does not believe that campus protests define student’s political ideologies as lib eral. He said he also thinks the sur vey inaccurately defines liberalism and conservatism because they base it solely on human rights and drugs. “When they measure liberalism based on these terms, it’s ludi crous,” he said. “I think the defini tion of liberalism and conservatism is stereotypical and outdated.” Newnham said he believes more students on campus have been demonstrating awareness and show ing interest in becoming involved, but he would define their political beliefs as radical, not liberal. “I would describe more students as being radical because many of the students that I work with are anti-capitalism, pro-labor equality, pro-liberation and think critically about world events,” he said. “They question the basic conformity that only gives us two choices between liberalism and conservatism.” Campus Republicans treasurer Jarrett White said he believes the majority of students at the Univer sity do hold liberal views. “There is a bias against conser vatives here at the University,” he said. “If you look at the protests, most are for liberal causes, and I think that just by listening to the majority of professors’ lectures, you will hear liberal viewpoints.” White attributes many students’ liberal tendencies at the Universi ty to professors expressing their political views in classes. Campus Democrats secretary Lauren Manes said she believes University stu dents demonstrate more liberal at titudes because political activism on campus usually represents lib eral views, and the majority of stu dents vote for the Democratic Par ty or the Green Party. “I think that a lot of students at the University do not become as involved or as active in the Cam pus Democrats because they do feel as if their liberal views are threatened,” she said. However, Manes said she did think liberalism has been growing in popularity. She has been in volved with the Campus Democ rats for three years and said the group is becoming more diverse each year. This year, more women and people of color have been in terested in attending meetings and getting involved, she said. E-mail reporter Danielle Gillespie at daniellegillespie@dailyemerald.com. Veto continued from page 1 Kitzhaber may line-item veto por tions of up to 13 bills passed by the Legislature, including HB 4028, which allows for Sunday liquor sales. No changes are planned for Ore gon’s higher education budget, al ready slated to lose 5.2 percent of its funding with the Legislature’s cut of $43.3 million. This is the first time in Oregon history that a governor has decided to modify a Legislature’s budget proposal without its subsequent ap proval, but Kitzhaber said he was ready and able to make his changes. His actions may temporarily solve the budget crisis, but Kitzhaber said he plans to call the Legislature back in June after an quarterly economic forecast is issued. The governor had indicated he would support any bills passed by the Legislature as long as they did not rely on one-time funding sources. The Legislature’s second budget attempt used almost $500 million in one-time funds to fill the state’s $846 million budget hole. “This budget is an embarrassment, and it should be vetoed,” Kitzhaber said. It “creates a huge fiscal cliff for the 2003 to 2005 fiscal year.” Kitzhaber said stopping legisla tors from using tobacco settlement money was the least he could do. “The issue isn’t about taxes. It’s about a sustainable budget,” he said. “We have $500 million in one-time revenue sources in this budget because this Legislature wasn’t responsible.” On Saturday, the Legislature vot ed on the budget by party lines, and reaction to Kitzhaber’s veto state ment ran the same partisan way. State Sen. Tony Corcoran, D-Cot tage Grove, praised the governor’s stance on the budget issue. “The governor is the only person in the building with vision,” he said. State Board of Higher Educa tion Student Representative Tim Young also lauded Kitzhaber’s an nouncement. - “I applaud the governor’s veto,” Young said. “I don’t think the Band Aid approach is appropriate for our state or for higher education.” E-mail reporter Brook Reinhard atbrookreinhard@dailyemerald.com.