Last chance for soccer to find Pac-10 win I 5A Oregon Daily Emerald An independent newspaper wurw. dailyenierald. com Since 1900 \ Volume 106, Issue 51 | Friday, November 5, 2004 Friday night cites The Eugene Police Department's party patrol sweeps the city weekend nights, focusing on alcohol and drug violations BY KARA HANSEN NEWS REPORTER Sounds from parties echoed in the distance, but a two-story house deep in the West University neighborhood was quiet on a Saturday night two weeks ago. From the yard of the house, near the corner of East 14th Avenue and Ferry Street, everything looked relatively still. No one loitered on the porch. Shortly before midnight a couple par tygoers exited the house carrying open cans of beer. It was enough to prompt a visit from the Eugene Police Department Party Patrol. Students, especially those who fre quent parties in the West University neighborhood, are likely to encounter the party patrol, which circulates the area on Friday and Saturday nights. However, many may not know how to respond when they come in contact with these officers. On that particular Saturday, Oct. 23, several students cited for drinking viola tions voiced concern about whether their rights were being violated. Some wanted to know whether police officers could enter their houses. Others were curious about whether offi cers could deny them a breath analysis, relying instead on a field sobriety test to determine who had been drinking. On slow nights, EPD officers are more likely to cite every minor drinking at a party, said Sgt. Scott Fellman, one of the party patrol’s supervisors. On busier nights, the officers may just dis perse partygoers, then head out to respond to other noisecomplaints. For every five students cited to appear in court for violations, such as underage drinking and DUI, at least one may have been in the wrong place at the wrong time, “erroneously charged or grossly overcharged for deminimis conduct,” attor ney Laura Fine said in a guest commentary for the Emerald (“How to deal with cops at UO,” ODE, Sept. 20,2004). Fellman said breaking up parties and citing under age drinkers are necessary to prevent more serious problems. “The point is to break up disorderly parties before they become riotous,” Fellman said. “The cost for letting parties get out of hand and turn into riots is serious.” The six- to eight-person team typically focuses on alcohol and drug violations, issuing citations for underage drinking Lauren Wimer | Senior photographer Cooking food for several students, Deena Wanstall prepares lunch in Hamilton at the Fire 'n Spice Grill Wednesday afternoon. Dining hall's plastic plates save money, cut garbage Although many plates have been stolen, Hamilton's dinning hall keeps them for ecological bonuses BY ANTHONY LUCERO NEWS REPORTER The University’s Food Services department has saved $2,000 in the last year through the introduction of reusable plastic plates at Hamilton’s dining hall in an effort to conserve materials and cut waste costs. Although students have been taking many of the new plates, the University still saved money by reducing waste, Food Services Di rector Tom Driscoll said. He said the Univer sity has conserved 198 dumpster loads of waste that would otherwise go to a landfill. By eliminating paper plates and using other conservation methods, Driscoll said dumpster waste is reduced by one-third six days per week for nine months. Before the introduction of the plastic plates, the dining hall had three dumpsters to manage its daily waste, but now it only has two. However, Driscoll said the University could save more money through cooperation with students who take the plates to their room, FOOD, page 4A Study prompts radal profiling concerns in EPD Officials say the study's 'statistically significant' results merit further examination of racial issues BY MORIAH BALINGIT NEWS REPORTER Results of a study conducted on Eugene Police Department vehicle stops show evidence that Latino, black and Asian drivers are treated differently than white drivers. However, the results remained inconclu sive on whether racial profiling is occurring in EPD traffic stops. Vikas Kumar Gumbhir, a Uni versity graduate student in soci ology, was commissioned by EPD through the University’s Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics to conduct the study. He presented his findings to community members on Wednesday at the Eugene Pub lic Library. “This (study) is one step the department is using to better understand how to best provide policing services in the commu nity,” EPD spokeswoman Pam Olshanski said. Gumbhir collected data through survey cards filled out by officers after vehicle stops. Among the information collect ed was the race, sex and age of the civilian stopped, the reason for the vehicle stop, the time and place the stop occurred, whether a search was conduct ed, and whether contraband was found in the search. While officers were instructed to fill out survey cards after every stop, an audit conducted by EPD on vehicle stops re vealed that officers only filled out cards in about 70 percent of stops, limiting the study’s findings. Additionally, many of the cards were incomplete. “I think this research gives us a lot of answers and it gives us a lot of clues as to where to go from here,” Gumbhir said. “But it’s definitely not final.” Gumbhir’s study concluded that black drivers were stopped more frequently than white drivers. In 2002, the stop rate, or PROFILING, page 4A Mobile mapping teaches students social planning Using GIS technology, students create maps to analyze the residential quality of neighborhoods BY ANTHONY LUCERO NEWS REPORTER Students in the Planning, Pub lic Policy and Management de partment are working with the West University neighborhood to compile demographics and other information to improve the neighborhood. Professor Marc Schlossberg said the program, in said. It s social planning and participation that are the main ideas of the class. How you work with communities is important, not just pointing and clicking on a screen.” Students in the Social Planning with Geographic Information Systems class combine social and technological elements, using GIS programs to map out Eugene its first year using mobile mapping technology, is unique in the nation. “The class doesn’t focus just on (Geographic In formation Systems) technology or field skills,” Schlossberg through aerial photographs. They then use those maps to analyze the residential quality of a neigh borhood — such as street lights, dumpsters and recycle bins — with detail down to a single street or a specific street light on that block. It may not sound ab solutely essential, but neighbor hoods can understand how a WHAT IS GIS? GIS stands for Geographic In formation Systems. GIS is an integrated package for the in put, storage, analysis and out put of spatial information - analysis being the most signifi cant, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. lacK oi street lignts may lead to less safety for drivers on a street or make women more vulnerable to attack, Schlossberg said. When they are out in the neighbor hoods, students use a PocketPC with ArcPad GIS/GPS mapping software. An attachable camera hooks up to the PocketPC so they can take pictures of the landmarks they survey. Students can use software on the Pocket PC to evaluate many aspects of the condition of a house, for ex ample, and then mark that house on the map. Photos can be GIS, page 3A