Camp Adventure™ 2003 Learn to swim instructors needed -----1 • 12 Hours University Credit • Living Stipend • Paid Travel • Worthwhile Experience with Youth • Fun • ! Looking for something new to do over Spring Term. Learn to swim instructors needed for teaching children's swim lessons in Japan (April- June). Interested candidates should contact Chris Denison at (319) 273-7263 or denison@uni.edu Visit us at: www.campadventure.com * Unlimited 1 'Mobile to Mobile 1-Now Available - T-Mobile Buddy Time! $10.00 on any Get More Plan -- uaaa 600 NationwideWHENEVER minutes Unlimited Weekends Free Nationwide Long Distance and Roaming $39.99 a month Get a FREE Nokia 3390 TataUu Cellular . T • ‘Mobile* Erb Memorial Union, U of O 541-346-4054 authorized dealer Limited time offer. Coverage not available in all areas. Credit approval, activation fee and one-year service agreement required with $200 early termination fee per number. Applicable taxes, assessments, toll and roaming charges additional. Unused minutes do not carry forward to a subsequent billing cycle. Any fraction of a minute used is rounded up and billed at the full minute rate; calls are measured from the time the Network begins to process the call (before the phone rings or the call is answered) through its termination of the call. Weekends defined as midnight Fri. through midnight Sun. All minutes include free domestic long distance and roaming (but not for credit card or operator-assisted calls) on the national GSM digital network of T-Mobile and its U.S. roaming partners. Your use of the service constitutes acceptance of the T-Mobile terms and conditions including the mandatory arbitration clause. Our PCS system is not compatible with analog TTY, which may prevent or delay emergency calls. Additional restrictions apply; see printed materials for details. Offer valid in o selecl T-Mobile markets only and subject to change without notice. T-Mobile is a registered trademark of cn Deutsche Telekom AG. g Leading history Black History Month person or the day II Bessie Coleman, die first black female aviator, was bom Jan. 26,1892, in Atlanta, Texas. After her fa ther left when she was 7 years old, Coleman, as one of 13 children, pitched in to help their mother make ends meet. I Coleman was an avid reader as a child, and by using the traveling library that came through town several times a week, she managed to graduate from high school. She then left for the University of Langston in Oklahoma, where she completed only one term before running out of money and returning to rural Texas. At the age of 23, Coleman left for Chicago to stay with her brother. After hearing his stories of women in Europe flying planes in World War 1, she knew she had Fashion continued from page 1 traditional African wedding attire and music in “The Wedding March.” Picking up the pace, members of two fraternities and two sororities mixed the clapping and stomping of stepping with a variety of dance styles in the “Steppin’ Out” scene. Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity members gave red roses to audience members and integrated the use of canes into their coordinated routine. The nine members of AKA sorority rounded out the greek performances by step ping in coordinating outfits. Additional entertainment includ ed two vocal performances by junior Olivia Callier and a poetry reading by University student Gory Mainor, who read the poems “The Beauty of My City” and “Smoke Speaks” with pic tures of Harlem on display. The show capped off with the hip hop scene “Bourbon Street Live,” where the performers gathered to gether on stage to create a party at mosphere. With few glitches, AKA president and senior Nicole Johnson said that the show was a success. “It was the 10th anniversary, and it all came together really well,” Johnson said. “The models are won derful — they always do something that just makes it a special event.” Contact the copy chief atjennifersudick@dailyemerald.com. Horowitz continued from page 1 Horowitz seemed to have the harshest words for the University faculty, criticizing what he saw as their effort to indoctrinate students into a “leftist ideology.” He also ac cused faculty of employing a “ruth less blacklist” that stifles conserva tive faculty and viewpoints. “There is a hostile learning envi ronment on this campus for conser vatives,” he said. “It is a disgrace. This campus is a disgrace.” Horowitz also slammed the cur rent resolution that would align the University against a war in Iraq. He said if the University Assembly suc ceeds in passing the resolution, it would be an abuse to all students on the campus who support the war. Following his deep condemnation of the University, Horowitz switched gears and taught a history lesson of anti-war movements during World War II and the Vietnam War. Horowitz said the anti-war move ment in the 1930s was responsible for the 70 million people who died during World War II, and he said the current anti-war movement is mov ing in the same direction. “A genuine peace movement would, of course, be demonstrating at Iraqi embassies” and demanding that Saddam Hussein disarm, he said. “This is not a peace movement; it is a movement to divide this coun try, to sabotage its defense efforts and to help our enemies to win.” "There is a hostile learning environment on this campus for conservatives" David Horowitz Author/commentator The first tense moment of the evening erupted when Horowitz’s critical remarks about the anti-war movement provoked an outburst from the back of the room. Horowitz responded with annoyance to the interruption. Horowitz’s scathing response to the outburst seemed to cool the at mosphere, and he started telling the crowd why he believes leftists are responsible for society’s ills, espe cially in the public school system. He said America’s poorest and most oppressed minorities are in Ameri ca’s inner cities, and the city coun cils and school boards of the inner cities — who he said are all con trolled by leftists — keep minorities illiterate with their policies. Leftists “have their boot heels on the necks of poor black and Hispanic kids all across this country ... be cause they are running the public school systems as a jobs program for adults, and they could care less about what happens to those kids,” he said. Horowitz, a leader in the anti-slav ery reparations movement, also talked about racism. He accused left ists of conjuring up a movement that pits blacks against others in America. “There is a little problem with reparations,” he said. “I am for repa rations for former slaves. The prob lem, of course, is that they’re all dead — it’s 130 years too late.” A question-and-answer period fol lowed the speech, and tensions were high as many audience mem bers argued with Horowitz, throw ing the session into a debate and putting him on the defensive. At one point, Horowitz called for security after a man in the back of the room continually interrupted Horowitz. But others chose to be more civil in their questions. Mike Linman, a stu dent senator and co-chairman of the College Democrats, asked Horowitz whether he would support a Univer sity stance supporting a war in Iraq. Horowitz said he wouldn’t, adding he believed the University should take no political position — whether he supports the position or not. In an interview prior to the speech, Horowitz explained what he hopes to accomplish on the college speech circuit. “I actually think that if I agitate — if I can get conservative students roused up enough in this generation — by the next generation when they’re running institutions, in par ticular the Republican Party, they can affect this horrible situation on college campuses,” he said. “The University, in the liberal arts field, has been destroyed by the left.” Contact the senior news reporter at janmontry@dailyemerald.com. Cor*mu**rty IrrfceVhsKip P\ro^V*am OUTDOOR school Outdoor school is an opportunity for students to earn upper division credit for being a camp counselor for 6th grade during one week of the term. To learn more about how you can earn credit for activities you already | participate in, stop by our office under the EMU Breezeway, or call us at 346-4351. 181 E Broadway Downtown Eugene 342-6107 Mon-Fri, 10-6 & Sun 11-5