War-time women take the stage I 5 Oregon Daily Emerald An independent newspaper at the University of Oregon www. dailyemerald. com Since 1900 \ Volume 107, Issue 46 j Thursday, October27, 2005 FCC expands Net spy rule to UO The University has 18 months to comply with the requirement, which may give the FBI and homeland security access to student e-mail BY EVA SYLWESTER SENIOR NEWS REPORTER The University has less than 18 months to re vamp its telecommunications systems so law en forcement agencies will have easier access to in formation if given a court order to investigate, according to a new order from the Federal Com munications Commission. The FCC announced on Sept. 23 that the Com munications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act now applies to facilities-based broadband Inter net access providers, including higher education institutions, K-12 schools and libraries. The act was first implemented in 1994 to re quire telephone carriers to make their systems open to federal surveillance with the permission of a court order. It was expanded to account for the increase in broadband Internet usage. “Presumably, this is related to homeland secu rity,” University Director of Telecommunications Services Dave Barta said. Barta said it is unclear how much it will cost the University to comply with the order. “The main thing is that we’re still a ways from really understanding what this would mean to us and being sure we’re required to comply with it,” Barta said. Terry Hartle, a senior vice president of the American Council on Education, told The New York Times that the legislation would increase tu ition at United States universities by at least $450 per student on average. The needed changes could take numerous pos sible forms, Barta said, and some would be less costly and invasive than others. For example, simply having the capability to monitor commu nications entering and exiting campus networks would not require a significant investment. Another possibility is the FBI having remote access to University systems, Barta said. This would require substantial hardware, soft ware and security changes, in addition to im mense amounts of time training employees to op erate the new equipment, Barta said. “It’s easy to tell everyone to do this and not give money to do it,” Barta said. Mark Luker, vice president of EDUCAUSE, a nonprofit organization that deals with the use of information technology in higher education, said in a letter to EDUCAUSE members and partners that the new legislation places unreasonable fi nancial demands on universities. “It is not cost effective, nor in the public inter est, to overhaul the networks of all institutions just in case a lawful surveillance may be required in the future at one of them. And, there are effec tive alternative solutions to the problem that do FCC, page 4 zane Krrr | photographer Residents of Westmoreland Apartments and other community members question Director of University Housing Mike Eyster and Vice President of Finance and Administration Frances Dyke about the University’s desire to sell the apartment complex. The 37-building complex has 404 units, 360 of which are currently occupied. Westmoreland tenants oppose sale At Wednesday night's meeting, University officials defended their decision and heard complaints from tenants who may he displaced BY Mix;HANN M. CUNIFF NEWS EDITOR The sale of the Westmoreland Apartments is an ill-conceived idea that will cause hundreds of people to scramble for housing they may not be able to afford, current tenants told University offi cials at a meeting Wednesday evening. More than 50 men, women and children packed the Westmoreland Community Room to air their concerns to Vice President for Finance and Administration Frances Dyke and Interim Vice President for Student Affairs and Director of University Housing Mike Eyster. The University announced last week that it will be asking the State Board of Higher Education permission to sell the property, which is consid ered family housing, at the board’s Nov. 3-4 meeting at Portland State University. The property has been valued at $15-$ 18 million, money Eyster and Dyke said will ultimately go toward improving University owned housing closer to campus and could be immediately used to purchase property as the opportunities arise. Tenant James Butcher said after the meeting that he would like to know what exactly will be bought with the money. “What is unsaid is what we really want to know,” Butcher said. Comments from attendees during the meeting focused on the reasoning behind the sale and the lack of affordable housing alternatives in Eugene. Eyster and Dyke defended the decision to ask WESTMORELAND, page 4 Disorderly fans might lose ticket privileges The Senate may recommend to president Frohnmayer that students' tickets he revoked BY NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER Next week, student government may recommend that the University president revoke a season’s worth of football and men’s basketball ticket privileges for stu dents caught committing “major and egre gious” offenses at games. All enrolled students already pay for tickets to football and men’s basketball games through incidental fees, which to tal $191 per student per term. On Wednesday night, the Student Sen ate decided to postpone an already hour long debate about revoking ticket privi leges. The Senate will revisit the issue at next Wednesday’s Athletic Department Fi nance Committee meeting. University President Dave Frohnmayer asked student government to consider the issue at a meeting last week because it “has become serious enough in recent years to warrant some sort of action,” ac cording to a press release from Student Senate Vice President Sara Hamilton. The ADFC, which acts on matters relat ed to incidental fees allocation for the Athletics Department, asked the Senate for permission to write a formal recom mendation to Frohnmayer. The ADFC pro posal “strongly recommended” imple menting a policy to punish one-time offenders at games. A split vote was broken by Senate Pres ident Stephanie Erickson, who voted not to allow the ADFC to write a proposal un til further negotiation because she felt the Senate should be in agreement before vot ing on a draft. Senators spoke out of turn and verbally sparred with each other in attempt to nail down a course of action. Other recom mendations included publicizing un sportsmanlike conduct and increasing se curity at gates and the student section. “I don’t support this decision at all,” Senator:Mike Filippelli said. “(Students) SENATE, page 16 Former tribal lawyer speaks on Native American land laws University of Montana School of Law professor and author Raymond Cross' talk is titled 'Law, Progress, and the American Indian' BY EMILY SMITH NEWS REPORTER Raymond Cross, a University of Montana School of Law professor and former tribal attor ney for the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation, will deliver a speech tonight about Native Americans and land laws. Cross will give the speech, entitled “Law, Progress, and the American Indian,” which will also cover Native American religion, in 182 Lillis Business Complex at 7:30 p.m. Cross is the great-great-grandson of a Man dan/Hidatsa chief who sheltered explorers Lewis and Clark during the winter of 1805. He has rep resented Native Americans in some landmark tri als, including the compensation claim against the U.S. government for destroying 156,000 acres of reservation land in North Dakota in 1949. The tribe was eventually awarded $149.2 million in 1992 for its loss, according to Cross’s biogra phy page on the UM Web site. His legal career is chronicled in a recent book entitled “Coyote War rior: One Man, Three Tribes and the Thai That Forged a Nation. ” Cross said in a phone interview that he wants to lay out concepts of law and progress that altered ecological realities in the West, including how non-Native Americans dammed the Missouri, Columbia and Snake rivers, and other land developing projects that destroyed grass prairies while also harming other environments. “It will focus on how a new view of law and a new concept of what America could and should RAYMOND CROSS TRIBAL LAWYER AND AUTHOR oe in ngnt or tne iaea oi progress, Cross said. He explained that when pilgrims came to the North American conti nent, they threw out old European laws and rules about developing and preserving resources because Ameri ca’s resources seemed inexhaustible. The new settlers, however, did not respect that the billions of acres of land before them belonged to the Native American inhabitants, he said. John Marshal, former chief justice ot the U.S. Supreme court, changed tana laws and altered the property rights of Native Ameri cans, giving the federal government control over the entire continent, Cross said. Cross represented Oregon’s Klamath tribe from 1976-1980 and helped secure the tribe’s water rights in the Klamath Marsh region, which, he said, the tribe uses for fishing and trapping and is important for migratory birds. Experts from the University testified on behalf of the tribe. Professor Mark Unno invited Cross to the University to speak about Native American reli gion in conjunction with an innovative class he’s teaching, Dark Self East and West, which explores and compares Eastern and Western re ligions. Unno said that while he knows a lot about Eastern religions, he knows very little about some Western religions, so he is trying to bring in speakers who do. esmith@dailyememld.com