Friday, November 22,2002 Since 1900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 104, Issue 61 UO makes ‘O’ optional for student groups Administrators say the policy was changed in response to comments from students Jan Montry Campus/Federal Politics Reporter University administration officials, in a sudden reversal of stated policy, announced they will no longer re quire student groups to put the ‘O’ logo on publications. The decision came amid protests from student groups that the policy would be complicated, costly and confusing. “We heard some of the student comments and decided to go in a different direction,” said Harry Battson, associate vice president for strategic communications. “We want students to be part of the organization and show their support if they want to.” Although University departments are still required to follow the ‘O’ pol icy, student groups now have the op tion to leave the logo off their publi cations. Contract nonprofit groups aren’t allowed to carry the logo un less University officials decide the nonprofit’s message is consistent with the University’s. Battson said student groups can still use the logo if they agree to com ply with the University’s graphic style guides specifying how the logo can be used. University Publications Direc tor George Beltran said 1,500 copies of the guide were printed by the Uni versity at a cost of $20,000, and the materials can also be found on Uni versity Publications Web site. Battson said the new, revised poli cy is unlikely to change again. “This is kind of the optimum poli cy in the sense that student organi zations can make a choice in the way they want to use it,” he said. The policy first came to light at an Turn to Logo, page 8A Finishing the field I...'. . A worker from NexTurf pressure washes the newturf field by the Student Recreation Center. Jeremy Forrest Emerald Turfs almost up Depending on weather conditions, the installation of the new turf field next to the recreation center may be finished by the beginning of December Brook Reinhard News Editor The new artificial turf field being installed next to the Stu dent Recreation Center is finally near completion after two months of delays. Officials said it may be accessible to stu dents as early as Dec. 1 if the weather continues to hold. The $1.3 million project, which was originally scheduled to be completed in time for use at the start of fall term, is al most entirely funded by the University Athletic Department as a gift to students and a practice center for the Oregon Marching Band. The turf timeline was hindered by a lighting problem, im proper materials, bad weather and heavy student traffic. Various contractors, under the supervision of engineering firm Balzhiser & Hubbard, absorbed the cost of delays and eliminated extra University spending. Workers for NexTurf are now pressure-washing the old paint off the turf surface, trimming and pasting the material down and putting final touches on the project. The field would have been ready for use as soon as October if not for a number of delays that forced back the Turn to Turf, page 4A Mediator calls two-day recess in labor talks Representatives for the grocery stores and the UFCW 555 will meet Sunday to vote whether to strike or to accept the employers’ two-tier plan Roman Gokhman Freelance Reporter A federal mediator called a 48-hour recess in the labor negotia tions between Safeway, Albertsons and Fred Meyer and the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 555, after the Joint Labor Man agement committee intervened at the last minute on Wednesday. JLM, which represents senior executives and CEOs of all ma jor U.S. food corporations and all food industry union presidents, is trying to aid the two sides in reaching an agreement. Both sides agreed to the recess, which will run today through Sunday. Union spokesman Rick Sawyer said representatives will meet on Sunday at the Double Tree hotel in Springfield to vote whether to Turn to Strike, page 8A Councilors sign letter against war Eugene city councilors who drafted the letter say it, along with letters from other U.S. cities, can have an effect on U.S. foreign policy Ken Paulman City/State Politics Reporter Six of the eight Eugene city councilors signed a letter Wednesday opposing U.S. military action in Iraq, joining Madison, Wis., Santa Fe, N.M., Seatde and other cities nationwide in making a statement against the prospect of war. Ward 6 Councilor Pat Farr, who was ab sent from Wednesday’s meeting, and Ward 5 Councilor Gary Pape, who drafted his own letter, were the only two who did not sign. The letter will be sent to President Bush, Oregon’s two U.S. senators and Rep. Peter DeFazio. Apparently, the councilors were unable to agree on the wording of the letter, so two versions were drafted. Pape’s version—which Turn to Council, page 8A Weather Today: High 53, Low 38, cloudy, foggy turning sunny Saturday: High 53, Low 38, foggy, chance of late showers iv,*', ", - Looking ahead Monday Event will aim to get students to leave their wallets at home Tuesday Enrollment figures are in showing diversity on campus EPD issues fewer citations, lessens patrol Since the Sept, riot, police have concluded their focused patrol of the West University area Danielle Gillespie Safety/Crime/Transportation Reporter The number of students cited for alco hol-related offenses in the West Universi ty neighborhood has dramatically de creased over the past two weekends, ending the trend of out-of-control parties that led the Eugene Police Department to cite more than 500 people in the area since the Sept. 27 riot. The reasons for the decrease are un known, but some point to inclement weather while others believe students are partying more responsibly. Mean while, EPD was forced to cut its West University Focused Patrol — which wrote a majority of the citations — in part because of costs. After the riots, EPD increased its presence in the neighborhood, giving eight officers and one sergeant over time pay to patrol during the five week ends before Halloween. But over the past two weekends, EPD spokeswoman Pam Olshanski said the department has decided there is no rea son to have additional officers patrol the neighborhood. EPD could not esti mate how many officers will patrol the area in the future, but Olshanski said the department will continue to have a police presence. “Essentially, the activity has de creased,” she said. “If (students are) still partying, then it’s not requiring a phone Turn to Police, page 4A 130 120 no 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Weekend citation 9/28 10/4 10/11 10/18 10/25 10/31 11/1 -10/5 -10/12 -10/19 -10/26 -11/2 Dates of citations