■ onate Food, Dunk a Dude! Come to the Dunk Tank during Street Faire, Friday 4/26. Bring a can of food to participate. Sponsored by UO fraternities and sororities. WXvMva-.v.v.v. Fares are round-trip from Eugene. Restrictions may apply. Tax not included. jn TRAVEL .0112 www.statravel.com London.$647 Paris.$745 Brussels_$784 Rio de Janiero..$874 San Jose C.R...$566 BUDGET HOTELS for as little as $18 ANIGHT!!! Advertise. Get Hesults. 346-3712 Oregon Daily Emerald Pope condemns sex abuse in U.S. Catholic churches By Patricia Montemurri Knight Ridder Newspapers VATICAN CITY—Pope John Paul II sent a message Tuesday to U.S. Catholics disheartened and disgust ed by reports of priests who molest ed minors and superiors who pro tected them. Such abuse "is rightly consid ered a crime by society ... an ap palling sin in the eyes of God," the pontiff told 12 American cardi nals. "The abuse which has caused this crisis is by every standard wrong," the pope said in his 30 minute meeting with the prelates. “To the victims and their families, wherever they may be, I express my profound sense of solidarity and concern,” the pope said, according to the official English text of the speech released by the Vatican. The urgently assembled summit, called by the pope just eight days ago, brought together the leaders of major U.S. dioceses with top Vatican offi cials to chart a course for dealing with the exploding sex-abuse scandal. “People need to know that there is no place in the priesthood and reli gious life for those who would harm the young,” said the pope at the start of two days of talks. Meeting participants interviewed Tuesday did not share summaries of what each U.S. cardinal contributed to the discussion, but top church of ficials said the pope pledged support for swiftly removing priests accused of abuse from ministry. Church officials said discussions touched on strengthening celibacy in the priesthood, rather than allowing priests to marry. And concerns ap parently were raised about the num ber of homosexual priests. Detroit Cardinal Adam Maida would not give details about his presentation at the meeting, citing the confidential nature of the talks. “I'm not privy to mention what I said and what others said,” he said. “We all talked from our experience, and the way I saw the crisis from Detroit is what I could share. And, of course, my experience goes beyond Detroit. ’ ’ Maida, who is both a civil lawyer and church lawyer, has worked with other U.S. dioceses on issues such as due process for priests accused of wrongdoing. Part of his mission at the Vatican, he has said, is to work on resolving disputes between how church law treats clergy and how civil law treats lawbreakers. “The canons I worked on for 20 years are in question now,” said Mai da, adding that it would take time to make changes and refinements. Asked whether the subject of ho mosexual priests was discussed, Mai da avoided a direct answer. He said the meeting focused on priests who sexually abuse children and youth, and he reiterated that homosexuality is not exclusively linked to pedophil ia, the sexual abuse of children. At a briefing for hundreds of jour nalists, Bishop Wilton Gregory of Belleville, 111., who leads the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, made a startling statement, consider ing the church's perceived intoler ance of homosexuals and its teach ing that gay sex is a sin. “There does exist within Ameri can seminaries a homosexual atmos phere or dynamic that makes hetero sexuals think twice about entering the priesthood,” Gregory said. “It is an ongoing struggle to make sure the Catholic priesthood is not dominat ed by homosexual men.” © 2002, Detroit Free Press. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. The Oregon Humanities Center in Collaboration with The Orion Society PRESENTS Literary and Artistic Responses to Wrfarism win jam Kittredge Annick Smith Barry Lopez Terry Tempest Williams Scott Russell Sanders Ann Zwinger Sunday, April 28, 2002 3:00-5:00 p.m. 180 PLC This event is free and open to the public, and will be followed by a book sale and signing. For more information, or for disability accommodations, please contact the Oregon Humanities Center at (541) 346-3934. jyithout leaving campus! ents line up on-campus interviews with high-profile employers... and ft’s easy! All you have to do to get started is to register with the Career Center at http://uocareer.uoregon.edu. Then, check out organizations participating in today's Spring 220^<^s^ Career Fair to see if they are conducting campus interviews, http://uocareer.uoregon.edu