Marathoner has made a living running 5 An independent newspaper unvw.dailyemerald.com Since 1900 \ Volume 106, Issue 112 \ Wednesday, March 2, 2005 University ID change approaches completion The Card Office conducted the exchange to protect cardholders from potential identity theft BY ADAM CHERRY NEWS REPORTER The University's conversion to new identifi cation numbers and identification cards for all students, faculty and staff members is nearly complete. The University Card Office reported Monday that all registered students, faculty and staff have changed their ID number from their Social Security number to a randomly generated number. The conversion means students will no longer be forced carry their Social Security number with them, nor will they need to write it on tests or class assignments. The original timeline for the replacement of student identification numbers comprised four years beginning in July 2002. However, the Card Office reported the process was completed Feb. 15, more than a year ahead of schedule. At the start of the program, the University changed the style of identification cards to incor porate the University's new “O” logo and allowed ID holders to voluntarily switch ID numbers to a randomly generated series of digits beginning with “950.” The Card Office is phasing out the old ID card, which featured a photo of Deady Hall. The University decided to use random num bers after it received a number of complaints about identity theft, Joel Woodruff, manager of the Card Office, said. Confidentiality of personal information was also a concern. “All the universities are doing it now,” Woodruff said of the randomly generated ID numbers. The bulk of individuals who still have a So cial Security number on file are “inactive records,” and don’t currently attend school, Woodruff said. By the end of the year, however, those records should be converted as well. Woodruff added that Lane Transit District has been told to stop accepting the old generation CARDS, page 3 Lauren Wimer | Senior photographer Eugene Police Department officer Ben Hall measures the distance between where Hatoon Victoria Adkins was struck on her bicycle and where the car stopped. Danielle Hickey | Photo editor Some students know Hatoon as a woman they pass on the street; others know her as a friend. She will be remembered by many with a smile. A memorial has been set up in front of the University Bookstore, where she used to live. She was 67 years old. Police officer,; professor and bookstore employees fondly remember their friend who lived on campus BY STEVEN R. NEUMAN MANAGING EDITOR Eugene police officer Randy Ellis was visibly upset as he stood next to a barren tree on the comer of East 13th Avenue and Kincaid Street on Monday. He twice choked back tears as he recounted the few details he knew about Hatoon Victoria Adkins, known to most only by her first name. Volunteers helped move her belongings to a temporary storage facility while Ellis and other community members stood around the bench and small patch of earth outside the University Bookstore, staring blankly at the former site of Hatoon’s makeshift shelter in the gray light. “I went to the hospital when they brought her in; the prognosis was not good when they brought her in. I left when they took her up to surgery,” Ellis said with tears welling in his eyes. 1 ve Known Hatoon tor 2u years, it s a sad day m for the University neighborhood when Hatoon’s I not going to be here.” Ellis heard she had died at 3:25 p.m. Around K the same time the University Bookstore an- p nounced her death in the store. News of her I death spread rapidly across campus. 7 Chris Boyd, who has known Hatoon for the nine [ years he has worked at the bookstore, said shop- M pers and employees became emotional when the announcement was made. HATOON VICTORIA “I don’t think she understood how big a part she ADKINS played in people’s lives,” said University student ACCIDENT VICTIM and bookstore employee Emily Rogers. “Every time I walked past the corner there she was talking to somebody ; she had some one over there, and they were just listening intently. It seems like she’s talked to almost everyone on this campus at one point or another.” Several community members held similar sentiments. Recounting memories of Hatoon, they noted her as “a fixture” of the community. Ellis said little about Hatoon’s life was known to be fact. Over the course OBITUARY, page 4 A well-known campus figure died after an accident at the crossing of Onyx Street and Franklin Boulevard BY JARED PABEN NEWS EDITOR A well-known campus-area resident died Tuesday afternoon after she was struck by a car while trying to cross Franklin Boulevard on her bicycle. Hatoon Victoria Adkins, 67, died at Sacred Heart Medical Center from in juries sustained when she was struck at about 1 p.m. by a motorist traveling east on Franklin Boulevard near the intersection of Onyx Street. Eugene Police Department officer Randy Ellis, who is stationed at EPD’s University substation, confirmed that the deceased woman was ACCIDENT, page 8 Lauren Wimer | Senior photographer Yolanda Moses, the special assistant to the chancellor for excellence and diversity at the University of California, Riverside, speaks at The Intersection of Race, Gender and Ethnicity in Higher Education at the Knight Law Center on Tuesday. Gender, race issues explored Three women who work closely with multicultural and diversity matters in higher education spoke at the forum BY AMANDA BOLSINGER NEWS REPORTER Race, gender and ethnicity are often the center of controversy on campus. Tuesday night, three prominent women from around the country were part of a University forum titled The Intersection of Race, Gender and Ethnicity in Higher Education to explore those issues. The forum, which was held in 175 Knight Law Center, drew about 80 peo ple and was presented by The Center for the Study of Women in Society and the Office of the Vice Provost for Insti tutional Equity and Diversity. The three panelists were Norma Can tu, Gertrude Fraser and Yolanda Moses. At the age of 19, Cantu was the first U.S.-born Latina to be admitted to Harvard Law School. She was regional counsel and education director of the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund and assistant secretary of education for civil rights for Presi dent Clinton’s administration. Fraser, who was the program direc tor specializing in education and schol arship with the Ford Foundation in New York, has been part of interdisci plinary research on gender, ethnicity and raceand helped create an intercul tural global curriculum. She is current ly vice provost for faculty advancement at the University of Virginia. Moses is former president of the City University of New York and the Ameri can Anthropological Association, where she spearheaded efforts to promote multicultural curricula. She is currently special assistant to the chan cellor for excellence and diversity at the University of California, Riverside. The three women made up what Vice Provost for Institutional Equity and Diversity Greg Vincent called “a dream realized” and “a dream team” for the discussion. Each woman spoke about her vari ous fields of expertise and her visions of and solutions to the issues of race and gender in higher education. Moses started the forum by dis cussing models of exclusiveness and the way institutions respond to chang ing student demographics. “There are changing models of insti tutions,” Moses said. “Current models are a thousand years old, and we are in the 21st century.” Moses discussed statistics that show GENDER, page 3