Wednesday, October 8,2003 Since 1900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 105, Issue 29 Schwarzenegger projected to win California recall After beingthe nation’s second-ever winner of a gubernatorial recall, Arnold Schwarzenegger stands poised to take Gov. Gray Davis' place By John Simerman Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) WALNUT CREEK, Calif. — California voters hoisted Republi can Arnold Schwarzenegger to the state's highest political office Tuesday, trampling Gov. Gray Davis underfoot in a historic recall election that wasn't close. Schwarzenegger, the action movie star who turned a stunning recall campaign into a wild frenzy watched across the globe, is expected to take office within weeks. He far outpaced Lt. Gov. Cruz Busta mante, the Democratic fallback candidate in case voters yanked Davis from office. They yanked hard. The recall is expected to pass by a dou ble-digit margin, as voters chose to pull Davis from office less than a year after his re-election. Secretary of State Kevin Shelley said he must first certify the re sults before Schwarzenegger can take office. He said that would be done by Nov. 15. Legal challenges are expected. Schwarzenegger, making his virgin bid for public office, led a field of 135 replacement candidates that added equal parts con fusion and comic relief to the unprecedented recall process. Hours before the polls closed at 8 p.m., Davis backers were re signed to defeat. The mood was subdued at a downtown Los Angeles hotel, where Democratic Party officials and labor leaders held an elec tion-night wake. Davis kept to a suite upstairs with family mem bers and advisors. Bob Mulholland, a top Democratic bulldog, blamed a national economic malaise for the recall's success. - "Anger by voters, anger," he said in summing up the result." But 1 say that's across the country." At the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles, Republican leaders celebrated. Jim Brulte, the state Senate Republican leader, said Schwarzenegger's campaign has had a transition team in place for 10 days. "This is a huge wake-up call," Brulte said. '"Ibis is the voters of California saying to Sacramento, TVe don't like what you guys have been doing.'" INSIDE Page 4: Analysis of California’s economic troubles Turn to ELECTION, page 12 KRT Schwarzenegger campaigns in San Jose, Calif, on Tuesday. Adam Amato Photo Editor Gerald Berk, head of the political science department, speaks to his PS 201 class about U.S. government on Tuesday in Fenton Hall. As no official University code exists, debate about faculty political opinion in the classroom continues By Ayisha Yahya News Editor Pro-Bush or anti-Bush, pro-global ization or anti-capitalism, conserva tive or liberal, there are opinions ga lore voiced in the University's classrooms. And while the University has set guidelines for the faculty's po litical expression, it does not have offi cial rules that curtail what professors can or cannot say. With staggering global challenges — including the war in Iraq, terror ism, economic crises, social inequali ties and environmental degradation — people have various convictions they want to share in and outside the classroom. Some professors are partic ularly vocal about their political ide ologies, and whether their values may be different or even offensive to some students, they do have the academic freedom to voice them. Vice President of Academic Affairs Lorraine Davis said the University can't restrict professors because free exchange of ideas is vital to the goals of the school. "As an institution, one of our pur poses is to be able to discuss all sides of an issue and represent all compo nents," Davis said. "Universities need to be places where different ideas can be expressed and explained." Still, the University does have some expectations of teachers. Ac cording to the faculty handbook, teachers "are entitled to freedom in the classroom in discussing subjects, but they should be careful not to in troduce into their teaching contro versial matter that has no relation to the subject." The handbook also states that "(i)n the exercise of this freedom of expression, faculty mem bers should manifest appropriate re straint, should show respect for the opinions of others and should make every effort to indicate that they are not institutional spokesmen.” Associate English Professor Shari Huhndorf, who also teaches Native American Studies, said having hard and fast rules that restrict political speech would be dangerous. In her teaching, her political opinions do find their way into class discussion. Turn to POLITICS, page 6 Study: Female smokers face greater risks A recent study finds that the number of 18 to 24-year-oid female smokers in Oregon exceeds the national average By Ali Shaughnessy Senior News Reporter To University junior Chelsea Williams, smoking a cigarette comes just as natural ly as breathing. She isn't alone. Out of more than 10,000 females attending the University, 20 percent of them smoke, according to a University Health Center survey. But female smokers, including young women at the University, may be at greater risk than previously thought. A recent report found that smoking is the leading cause of preventable death among women. The study — co-sponsored by the Center for Women's Health at Oregon Health and Science University and the Na tional Women's Law Center — found that nearly 2,000 women die of smoking-related causes, including lung cancer and cardio vascular disease, each year in Oregon. The national number reaches 178,000. The study also found that in the 18-to 24-year-old range, 26 percent of women smoke in Oregon, which is a higher per centage than the national average. Michelle Berlin, an associate professor of obstetrics, gynecology, public health and preventative medicine, was one of the primary authors of the report. She said the study's results deliver deplorable news for Oregon women. "A lot of women are dying, and we can and should be doing more to Turn to SMOKERS, page 10 WEATHER LOW 46 HIGH 64 INSIDE Campus buzz.6 Classifieds.10-11 Commentary..2-3 Crossword.11 Nation & World.4 Sports.7 NEXT ISSUE I Look for David Jagernauth’s column Thursday in Commentary