Unisex bathrooms in 13th Street businesses debated After a small protest, students and business owners weigh the pros and cons of having unisex facilities NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER Following the City of Eugene Hu man Rights Commission hearing to add transgender identity to the city’s anti-discrimination code, a small protest took place on 13th Av enue to pressure the surrounding businesses to convert their male and female bathroom facilities to unisex. Shanti Indian Restaurant co-own er Yakir Tharlev said that he did not have a problem with changing the bathroom signs to unisex, but he thought some people might feel un comfortable. “The only thing that might be an noying is men keeping the seat up,” he said. Under the current city discrimina tion code, anyone has the right to confront a transgender person who looks to be walking into a bathroom of the opposite sex. Shanti employee Rebecca Palak thinks it is “totally discriminatory” to be able to stop someone who does not look like they belong in a particular bathroom. For single stalled bathrooms, she said, it is a good idea to change them into uni sex facilities, “but if they’re multi stalled I can see pros and cons.” An employee of the University bookstore, Jim Riley, voiced similar concerns. “I wouldn’t mind but I think peo ple would be uncomfortable. There’s always people who get up tight about things like that,” Riley said. Of five males polled on 13th Av enue, all said that they had no prob lem sharing a bathroom with a fe male or a transgender person, but women might feel uncomfortable sharing facilities with men. Swjin Ha, a senior in the Ameri can English Institute, said she did not care about sharing facilities, “because at home we use them with our father or brother.” Nessi McNar, a junior in pre-med at the University who visits Espres so Roma Cafe several times weekly, said “It’s recockulous ... and it’s more effort than store owners should have to put out for cus tomers.” Current Oregon law does not pro hibit men or women from using bathrooms designated for the oppo site sex, according to the HRC Transgender Issues Packet. “If it’s several stalls with men and women involved, I could see it be ing a problem,” said Sarah O’Berry, a sophomore studying linguistics and computer science. At a public hearing last Tuesday the HRC heard from several people, both in support and in opposition to the discrimination code amend ment. Some people expressed con cerns about increased violence against transgender people, discon tent for women and children, non transgender people having to share facilities, and increases in bathroom rape cases. In general, those polled on 13th Avenue voiced concern for multi stalled facilities being converted to unisex, but thought that making al ready single-stalled bathrooms uni sex would be a fair action. nwilbur@dailyemerald. com SHOULD BUSINESSES CONVERT BATHROOMS TO UNISEX? Swjin Ha | Senior “I don’t care about sharing toilets because at home we use them with our father or brother.” Jim Riley | Graduate “I wouldn't mind, but I think people would be uncomfortable. There’s always people who get uptight about these things." Jakir Tharlev | Restaraunt co-owner “I don’t have a problem with it; it’s the same system for everybody. I think some people would feel uncomfortable, but the only thing that can be annoying is men keeping the seat up." Deb Cole | Ithaca, NY "I don’t feel uncomfortable sharing, if the women’s bathroom is full I’ll go into the men's, even with large bathrooms; it really doesn't matter to me.” 022570 ★Any Two-Topping 12” Pizza Ubif«fJ'3fl6 Specials AFTER 10 PM SPECIALS FREE DELIVERY 1809 Franklin Blvd. 284-8484 • Sun-Thu. Ham-Midnight • Fri.-Sat. 11am-1am Self-proclaimed unlikely marine recounts war tales Lance Cpl. John Fischer tells a story about being in Iraq that contradicts many of the media images NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER Lance Cpl. John Fischer re turned home from his 16 month deployment in Iraq to face what came to be a most dreaded ques tion: “What was it like?” Fischer, a 23-year-old Eugene resident, enlisted in the U.S. Ma rine Corps expecting war to be as intense as it is portrayed in media, but instead he found working as a soldier in Iraq to be a monotonous undertaking. On average, Fischer said, there is about five to 10 min utes of intense combat or fire two or three times a month. “I thought it would be like on television,” Fischer said, but the majority of his time was spent guarding the base or pa trolling al-Qaim, a city 380 kilome ters northwest of Baghdad on the Syrian border. When Fischer returned home after completing one-third of his four-year contract, he found it dif ficult to match the glorified war stories disseminated by the media with his own experiences. Fischer said he found himself glorifying his own stories, “(because) I wanted my friends to respect what I did.” “I had thought that war meant killing people,” he said. This was the way his friends and family seemed to think as well. But Fischer saw that there was a difference between the stereotype of killing presented in the media and his personal experi ences in Iraq. “War is not the face-to-face, fight-to-the-death battle that peo ple think it is,” he said. Fischer’s friends and family at home were so used to hearing me dia report death and seeing news of insurgent attacks that not to have killed someone was like not having really experienced war, Fis cher said. But the majority of deaths in Iraq were not a result of the type of battle that most people seemed to imagine during a war. While he admitted that he has seen his share of carnage, Fischer also said that the war in Iraq is less confrontational than it is portrayed. “Most fire was taken and re turned from five football fields away,” Fischer said. “It’s not like Vietnam.” For Fischer, explaining the Iraq war boiled down to a series of generic responses. In his experi ence, there was no constant face to-face battles, sleeping in trench es or sacking villages. For Fischer, the most difficult part of being a soldier was not battle, but rather the patience it took to do a job well while in constant fear for his life. The first three months were ex citing and surreal for Fischer. Asked if he often thought about death during that time, Fischer said, “I didn’t know why, but I wasn’t afraid.” His attitude changed one night when Fischer heard the high-pitched whistling of a finned rocket — a sound that was not uncommon by then — but this time louder than he had ever heard before. “I was filled with this helpless fear for my life,” Fischer said, FISHER, page 6 Events: Cottage Grove hosts a destruction derby Continued from page 1 at 8 p.m. For more information, vis it www.buttetobutte.org. Springfield Utility Board will host a Fourth of July concert and fire works display at 5 p.m. in Island Park. Cost is $5 at the gate with free admission for children under 5. At the Cottage Grove speedway, there will be a destruction derby and fireworks starting at 4 p.m. Tickets range from $7-$15. For more informa tion, see cottagegrovespeedway.org. There will be several events in r Florence, including fireworks over Siuslaw Bay. For more information on celebrations in Florence, contact the Chamber of Commerce at (541) 997-3128. In Creswell, there will be events from 7:30 a.m. until 11 p.m. There will be a parade at 11 a.m. and fire works in the evening. These events are free with donations accepted. For more information on celebra tions in Creswell, call 895-5161. gabebradley@ daily emerald, com pu. i -r-JMllamette V Family Treatment Services for the Chemically Dependent 541-343-2993 687 Cheshire Ave. Eugene OR 97402 Strengthening Our Community One Family at a Time • Men and Women • Teen Start (Girls 12—18 years) • Child Development Center • Alcohol and Drug Treatment Call for an Assessritent