Ducks lose to Cal by one point I 7 Oregon Daily Emerald An independent newspaper www. dailyemerald. com Since 1900 \ Volume 106, Issue 52 j Monday, November 8,2004 Nicole Barker | photographer Construction on the Many Nations Longhouse, behind the Knight Law Center, is set to be completed on Dec. 5. The grand opening will be Jan. 11. Longhouse to bring ‘Many Nations’together After a 20-year wait, construction on the Many Nations Longhouse will be completed in December BY CANEIA WOOD NEWS REPORTER It’s been a decade in the mak ing, but the University is just a month away from having a new and improved Many Nations Longhouse. The building, which is four times larger than its prede cessor and is located behind the Knight Law Center, is a place for students and community mem bers to socialize and work on American Indian crafts, including bead work and drum making. “It’s a place where different Na tive American student groups have held regular meetings, but it can be reserved and used by all non tribe groups as well,” Gordon Bet ties, the steward for the Many Na tions Longhouse, said. Construction began on the building in March and is set to be completed by Dec. 5. The previous longhouse had been donated to the American In dian students in the 1970s, accord ing to Betties. The building was a World War II army barracks. “The old longhouse windows were drafty, it was hard to warm in the winter and it was losing practi cability,” Betties said. “President Myles Brand made a commitment to rebuild the longhouse.” Betties said that when Universi ty President Dave Frohnmayer took over he followed through with the commitment, which be gan fundraising 11 years ago. It was under Frohnmayer’s Na tive American Initiative that the University began working with nine American Indian tribes in Oregon and developed a commit tee to raise funds, according to Betties. Executive Assistant President Dave Hubin said fundraising was done by groups of American Indians and University leaders. “The process of fundraising LONGHOUSE, page 5 IN BRIEF State Board of Higher Education puzzles over enrollment decline Enrollment increased 0.6 percent this year across the Oregon University System, indicating slowing growth for the second year in a row, according to an OUS press release. The State Board of Higher Educa tion met in Beaverton on Thursday, and Fri day to discuss enrollment numbers and ed ucational costs at Oregon’s seven public universities, among other things. Based on fourth-week enrollment num bers from the schools, there are now 80,066 students in the system compared to 79,558 in 2003, Director of OUS Institution al Research Bob Kieran said in the release. The increase is lower compared to gains seen between 1999 and 2002 — while en rollment increased by 6.3 percent and 5.7 percent in 2001 and 2002, respectively, campuses saw only a 1.9 percent increase in 2003. The University reported an enrollment of 20,339 students in the fourth week of fall term, a 1.5 percent increase. While there were small increases in undergraduate, doctoral and professional students at the universities, there was a decrease in stu dents enrolling for masters degrees. Also, the University’s international-student pop ulation decreased from 1,273 last year to 1,170 this fall, according to the Office of In ternational Programs. Kieran said reasons behind the inhibited growth are still under review. In the last two years, tuition increased an average of 21 percent across the university system, ac cording to the release. And while campus es could depend on the state to cover 51 percent of educational costs in the 1999 2001 biennium, state support has dropped to just 36 percent for the 2003-2005 bienni um, putting a greater burden on students. — Ayisha Yahya VEHICLE CATCHES FIRE ON CAMPUS, TOTALS CAR A University employee’s vehicle caught fire outside the Knight Law Center around 3 p.m. Friday, totaling one car and causing minor dam age to another vehicle, but inflicting no injuries. The fire was likely the result of a ruptured fuel line, according to the Eugene Fire and Emer gency Medical Services Department. University International Programs employee Eileen Cole had just wrapped up her workday and started her car to head home when she paused to plan the remainder of her day, she said. She sat in the car, parked on Agate Street, with the engine running for two minutes or less when she began to smell gas, she said. “I opened the door to get out and see what was going on, and suddenly I heard a pop and felt a flash of heat on my feet,” Cole said. She turned off the vehicle to stop the flow of gas, then ran to safety when she saw flames spitting from beneath her car, she said. Firefighters spent about 20 minutes hosing down flames, prying open the hood, smashing Courtesy the windshield and chopping through the inner compartment of Cole’s 1993 Chrysler LeBaron to contain the majority of the fire. A few stub born smoldering spots took longer to control, but were mostly contained within the hour. Colleen Jones, a nurse practitioner at the Uni versity Health Center, came upon the fire while taking a walk. Her Subaru Forrester was parked behind Cole’s vehicle. She said her only reac tion at that moment was “surprise,” and her car was not badly damaged. The fire left a long black line on the rear bumper. Ernie Connelly, a Eugene fire captain at a sta tion about a block away, said the fire was fueled by gas pumping through a ruptured line, which could have resulted from normal wear and tear or from product defects. Such fires are fairly com mon, he said, but the risk of explosion is low. “These fires can cause several explosions, in the tires or in the shock absorbers,” Connelly said, “but nothing like the Hollywood stuff. ” — Kara Hansen Measure 36 protesters march to courthouse Community members trek from the LGBTQA office to apply for marriage licenses BY MORIAH BAUNGIT NEWS REPORTER Community members and University stu dents gathered at the Lane County Court house on Friday to fill out marriage licenses for same-sex couples in protest of the passage of Measure 36. The recently voter-approved constitutional amendment defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman. Many of the protesters were members and supporters of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisex ual, Ttansgender and Queer Alliance. The LGBTQA tried to take a political stand on Measure 36, but could not because Uni versity rules prohibit incidental-fee-fund ed student groups from taking stances on political issues. LGBTQA Co-director Crystal Cathcart, who participated in the protest, emphasized several times that although the group of pro testers was largely composed of University students, many who were LGBTQA mem bers, and the march began at the group’s EMU office, she said Queer Sitters, a com munity activist group, officially sponsored the protest. The mood in the LGBTQA office appeared light as University students assembled to march to the courthouse. Students joked and laughed as one student went down on one knee and delivered a fake marriage pro posal. But while the mood was light, the is sue is far from laughable for the protesters “I want to get married someday,” senior Ryan Minor, who self-identifies as gay, said. "(Measure 36) was kind of a slap in the face. ” The march took several detours along the way, as participants debated the exact loca tion of the courthouse, which is on 125 E. 8th Ave. The geographical setbacks didn’t put a damper on protest morale, as students sang, yelled and chanted along the way. “One, two, three, four, don’t let the city shut the door!” protesters yelled. As the participants arrived at the court house, they faced an entirely new predica ment. “Do you want to be the bride or the groom?” students asked each other. The forms are designed exclusively for hetero sexual couples, and in the end, the group decided to cross out “bride” and “groom” and put sex-appropriate terms. In the end, freshmen Amanda Koplin, who self-identifies as straight, and her pseu do-fiancee, University student Alec Zimmer man, faced off with Supervisor of Deeds and Records Marie Hoehne as she tried to turn in her application. Koplin spun an interesting, but untrue, story about having a baby with Zimmerman and being in love with her. “We feel that we should be able to have the same rights as other people,” she plead ed to Hoehne. “We don’t understand why you’re helping them set us apart. ” Hoehne said his first duty is to follow he law. “I can’t (process your application),” he said to Koplin. “Our mandate is to follow state law. ” MARRIAGE LICENSES, page 5