U.S. to require noncitizens to report addresses
By Frank Davies and Cassio Furtado
Knight Ridder Newspapers
(KRT)
WASHINGTON — The Justice
Department announced Monday it
intends to use criminal penalties
against immigrants and foreign vis
itors who fail to notify the govern
ment of a change of address within
10 days.
Attorney General John Ashcroft
said the move would help secure
U.S. borders by making it easier to
track noncitizens. The 10-day no
tice requirement has long been on
the books but is widely ignored
and rarely enforced.
“By clarifying the existing re
quirement that noncitizens report
their address to the Immigration
and Naturalization Service, we are
able to increase our ability to lo
cate quickly an alien if removal
proceedings must be initiated,”
said Ashcroft.
The INS plans to enforce the
regulation after a 60-day com
ment period. The action affects
all legal permanent residents —
at least 11 million people, accord
ing to an INS spokeswoman —
and visitors and students who
stay in the United States more
than 30 days.
It’s unclear how many of them
are untraceable now, but the INS
clearly perceives a problem.
“The INS does not have current
address information for many
noncitizens who have entered the
United States, whether as tempo
rary visitors, applicants for asylum
or for other purposes,” said a Jus
tice Department statement.
Immigration advocates de
nounced the plan as heavy-handed
and unworkable.
“It’s sheer fantasy to think the
INS can handle the avalanche of
information under this mandate,”
said Angela Kelley, deputy direc
tor of the Washington-based Na
tional Immigration Forum. “This
initiative is going to leave a per
vasive feeling in immigrant com
nfunities that they’re all under
suspicion.”
Because the regulation will af
fect all noncitizens, some advoca
cy groups worried the INS might
use it to deport law-abiding immi
grants merely suspected of terror
ist connections.
“The people who are going to
be caught up in (the regulation)
are people who haven’t done any
thing wrong,” said Cecilia
Munoz, a spokeswoman for the
National Council of La Raza, a
Hispanic advocacy group in
Washington.
© 2002, Knight Ridder/Tribune
Information Services.
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Autzen
continued from page 5
— April 26,1967
Oregon’s new football arena,
Autzen Stadium, will be an asset to
more than the University itself, ac
cording to Athletic Director Len
Casanova.
“This is a venture for the entire
community,” he said.
He said he had compared the $2.3
million figure to what some other
companies are paying for new stadi
ums and (said) that he had found
those to be substantially costlier.
— Aug. 3, 1967
What a steel
Autzen Stadium wouldn’t be
Autzen Stadium if it hadn’t been
for the Korean War.
Back about 1949, just after the
University football teams had two
very successful seasons and some
extra money from the gate receipts
of a Cotton Bowl game, an idea came
about to enlarge Hayward Field.
The plan was to increase the
seating capacity with metal
bleachers. But, as luck would have
it, the war broke out and soon all
the nation’s steel had been used for
ammunition.
So the idea died, but interest in
football at the University didn’t.
Thus, Autzen Stadium opens its
doors this Saturday as the home of
the “Fighting Ducks.”
— Sept. 19, 1967
Tuition
continued from page 1
“You always try to figure out the
way to change the least amount and
make it work while still maintain
ing access to high-quality, not
mediocre, education,” Davis said.
Every student, no matter what
major, will pay the technology, reg
istration, College of Arts and Sci
ences, incidental and health fees,
according to a registrar employee.
Together, the fees will cost an addi
tional $53 per term for each stu
dent. That represents an increase of
more than $1.17 million to the Uni
versity’s budget.
For new students, add the one
time matriculation fee for another
$244,850 in revenue for the Univer
sity. If a student takes classes in the
school of music, education, busi
ness, architecture, journalism or
law, expect another fee from each of
those departments as well.
The increase in enrollment “does
present a considerable strain on re
sources,” Associate Vice President
Jim Buch said. Enrollment for fall
2001 was 19,091, while projected
enrollment for fall 2002 is 20,300.
In addition to the fee increases,
there will be an average tuition in
crease of 3 percent, but each stu
dent’s tuition may range from a 6
percent decrease to as high as a 15
percent increase.
Under the University’s new tu
ition schedule, classes that begin at
3 p.m. or later are offered at a dis
count from the rate for the 2001-02
school year. Students taking class
es before 3 p.m. will pay a variable
premium depending on the num
ber of credit hours.
These changes place the Univer
sity as the most expensive public
university in the state. For resident
undergraduates, attending the Uni
versity in 2003-03 will cost $390
more than enrolling at Oregon State
University. Non-resident Universi
ty undergraduates will pay $1,035
more than Beavers. Compared to
Portland State University, the Uni
versity is $519 more expensive for
resident undergraduates, and
$2,667 more for non-resident un
dergraduates.
Contact the managing editor
at jennischultz@dailyemerald.com.
Fee changes per term:
Fee Increases:
♦Technology $15
♦Architecture and
landscape architecture $20
•Resource for Justness
undergraduates , $25
•Resource tor business
graduates $50
• College of Arts
and Sciences $25
• Undergraduate
sctei $to
• Journalism majors
and pre-majors
• Law resources
•Undergraduate
matriculation fee
• Health services
Fee Decreases:
•incidental
New Fees:
• Registration
•School of music
•School of educations
*per semester
$25
$350*
$3
$15
$60
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