$20 OFF rainbow optics prescription glasses frame & lenses complete See what you’ve been missing ' 4 ' EUGENE LOCATIONS oupon expires Feb 28. 2003 CAMPUS SUN&SPORT WESTSIDE SHELDON 343-3333 343-8318 343-5555 484-9999 766 E. 13th 762 E. 13th 1740 W. 18th 2540 Willakenzie Class starts soon! February 17 Eugene Kaplan Center 720 E 13th Ave, Suite 204 Call us at 1-800-KAP-TEST or visit us online at kaptest.com today to enroll! J •GMAT is the registered trademark of Graduate Management Admissions Council. Assembly continued from page 1 The University Faculty Senate voted against a resolution con demning a war with Iraq in De cember, several days after Frohn mayer sent a letter to every senator asking him or her to rule the resolution unfit business for the senate. However, the group decided in January to call for a non-binding meeting of the Uni versity Assembly, made up of more than 2,000 members, to re open discussion on the resolution. The Friday meeting in 180 PLG was attended by an audience of about 200, which included assem bly members, students and com munity members. Members of the University As sembly were the first to speak on the resolution. Barbara Pope, in terim director for Women’s and Gender Studies, asked Frohnmay er to look at the resolution as an individual decision, not as a precedent for the University in the future. Faculty senates across the coun try have decided against condemn ing the war for fear that it will stifle debate on campus, a sentiment that was repeated by the National Association of Scholars in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Members of NAS said that senates should stick to education and cur riculum, and remain separate from foreign politics. University Professor Emeritus Thomas Givon seemed to agree with NAS. “The question is to me ... just by moving the topic here does it make it University business?” Givon asked. “Bringing political free speech to the University in the way that it is done here is basically hid ing. You don’t want to go out in public, you don’t want to go in per son so you go and hide behind your tax-paying institution. And I think this is not the most coura geous act that I’ve seen.” Michael Stern, professor of Ger manic Languages and member of the University Assembly, argued the other side of the issue. “The opposition to our resolu Jeremy Forrest Emerald Professor Emeritus Frank Stahl speaks in favor of a University resolution on the looming war with I raq at a group assembly Friday. tion has come from people who have said that it would stifle de bate,” said Stern. “I’d like to point out that the resolution is about opening debate. It’s about dis cussing the issue and coming to some kind of statement as a facul ty and as a community.” Concerned Faculty for Peace and Justice, a University group, has been working to gather the sig natures of 508 assembly members for a petition that would summon an official legislative session of the University Assembly. The special session would allow the group to speak for the University, and could not be overruled by the University Senate or by Frohnmayer. Students for Peace has been col lecting its own petition, which it presented at the meeting. Dinae Horne, a junior business major, was part of the congregation of stu dents who gathered on the steps of Johnson Hall last week in protest of a war against Iraq, and was one of many Students for Peace mem bers to speak out Friday. “My more intelligent and com passionate friends, I’ve noticed, are talking more and more about be coming Canadian,” said Horne. "I'd like to point out that the resolution is about opening debate." Michael Stem professor of Germanic Languages “The desire to ditch mycountry is one that I’m not proud of. I can’t help but feel like it’s just cow ardice. I don’t want to be part of it. I want to stand here and say that I am opposed to this, and that I am an American and that’s legitimate.” One of the few students who stood up in support of the war and in opposition to the resolution was Greg McNeill, a senior politi cal science major. “I do support the president and the administration in this war, and I realize that a lot of you don’t,” he said. “And it’s the simple fact that we have differing issues, differing beliefs on this, which is why the University should not take a stand on the issue.” Contact the reporter at aimeerudin@dailyemerald.com. OSAC Scholarship Notice The Oregon Student Assistance Commission (OSAC) is a state agency that awards nearly 10 million dollars in scholarship funding each year. 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