Expert looks at Palestine's options after Gaza Dr. Mitchell Bard, author of 18 books on the conflict in the Middle East, speaks about democratic policies BY EMILY SMITH NEWS REPORTER Dr. Mitchell G. Bard said when he was in Israel in August he didn’t walk into the civil war that the media had been portraying. Bard, author and leading authority on U.S.-Middle East policy, gave a lecture on campus Hiesday evening to more than 70 people about the facts and myths surrounding the dis sonance between Palestine and Is rael. His most recent book, “1001 Facts Everyone Should Know About Israel,” came out last week. There was no civil war, he said, referring to the disengagement of Gaza as a triumph in democracy. He said he saw the results of democrat ically elected leaders in Israel mak ing the decision to disengage from the Gaza Strip, a decision that was supported by the majority of the population. He spoke about what the next step might be to bring peace between the two countries. Now that Israel no longer occu pies the Gaza Strip, there is nothing stopping the Palestinians from mov ing in and creating a state in that area where they could control their own affairs and institute democratic policies, but “all they’ve been able to produce is chaos,” Bard said. The level of corruption in the Palestinian government has been a problem, Bard said, especially in the last 10 years. The International Mon etary Fund discovered that out of the $5.5 billion in foreign aid given to Palestine, Yasser Arafat stole $1 bil lion, Bard said. Palestinians can no longer work in Israel because Israel no longer al lows them in the country because of concerns about possible terrorist at tacks, he said. Bard continued by saying that women don’t have rights in Palestine like they do in Israel, and citizens don’t have the same freedoms of speech or assembly. According to a number of polls taken in Palestine, when asked what country Palestinians admire most, they answer “Israel,” Bard said. “And what can they do?” he asked. Bard said one option is to destroy Israel, and some Palestinians have made it no secret that that is their goal, but they have recognized that they can’t accomplish it. They have tried to get other Arab leaders to do it for them, but they refuse, he said. Another option is to do nothing, he said. If Palestinians wait instead of compromising and settling “for a crummy piece of land that the Israelis want to offer them in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip” they will get “the whole thing,” Bard said. From Israel’s perspective, he said, Palestine is made up of radical Islam ic groups that want to destroy Israel. The Jewish Student Union in conjunction with Oregon Hillel brought Bard to University as the first part of a series of events fo cused on ending the conflict plagu ing the Middle East. JSU Director Jonathan Rosenberg said his union is honoring Israel’s former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin during the month of November. The Nobel Peace Prize winner was assassinat ed 10 years ago this Friday by a right-wing Israeli. “We don’t want to focus on who’s right and who’s wrong,” Rosenberg said. “We want to bring peace to the Middle East.” esmith@dailyemerald. com ASUO creates model for student group stipends The plan aims to regulate monetary compensation for directors and coordinators of campus programs BY NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER The ASUO has created a new stipend model that provides incen tive for service in student groups by making higher-paid leadership posi tions available, but uncertainty ex pressed by the program leaders themselves may table the vote in tonight’s Senate meeting. The ASUO Executive’s attempt to prevent program leaders from working significantly more hours than they’re paid for has received criticism from the leaders who are supposed to benefit from the change. The current stipend model is not meant to be an hourly wage, but is instead intended to reim burse the costs of supplies and other expenses incurred by group leaders. ASUO Finance Coordinator Nick Hudson said the ASUO Executive, when creating the new model, looked at the hours leaders have to put in to make a program or govern ing body successful. “The ASUO Executive values what program directors do on an everyday basis ... so we felt it was necessary to solidify that belief that program direc tors are important,” Hudson said. He also said the Executive realized that it would be “almost impossible” for program leaders to find the time to work other jobs while holding their current positions. The new model would not in crease membership, but it would in crease incentives for students to take on leadership positions, Hudson said. Programs Finance Committee members said the group leaders themselves hold mixed opinions about the proposed stipend model. Scott Lu, a member of the PFC, which allocates student fees to pro grams, said none of the current pro gram leaders he has met with was satisfied with the model. The PFC as a whole remains un certain regarding whether it should endorse the model or create an alter native one, said Jared Axelrod, PFC Chairman and Student Senate ombudsman. Axelrod said he will take the con cerns expressed during the PFC meet ing Tuesday night and advise Sena tors tonight to allow more time for program leaders’ feedback, await ma jority approval from group leaders, and consider a different model. “I think that most people want something different; I think that’s what most of the programs want and I have a feeling that’s what most (PFC members) want,” Axelrod said at Tuesday night’s PFC meeting. “We could recommend that the IN BRIEF Hospital settles class-action claim by uninsured PORTLAND — A settlement consid ered the first of its kind nationally was reached Thesday in a class-action law suit against a major nonprofit hospital by uninsured patients who say they were overcharged. The agreement with Providence Hospital System will affect tens of thousands of low-income Oregonians, attorneys say. “This is a historic agreement and it will stick,” said Brian Campf, an attor ney representing uninsured patients. Greg Van Pelt, senior vice president for Providence Health System, said the hospital disagrees with many of the al legations while sharing the concerns of low-income patients. But it was cheaper to settle for all concerned, he said. “Quite frankly the cost of litigation is so great it was in the patients’ best interest and the hospital’s to get this re solved, and this seemed the best way to do that,” Van Pelt said. The lawsuit is part of a national campaign headed by Richard Scrug gs, a Mississippi attorney who helped win multibillion-dollar settlements with the tobacco industry in the 1990s to pay states for smoking-relat ed health care costs. Similar lawsuits have been filed against hundreds of hospitals in at least 27 states, alleging that tax-exempt nonprofit hospitals charge higher prices to uninsured patients than the discounts given to insured patients. “Other hospitals around the country should take a hard look at this” settle ment, said Sid Backstrom, spokesman for the Scruggs law firm. Van Pelt said it would help Provi dence patients but the larger national problem of caring for the poor still must be addressed. The complaint filed in Oregon al leges that Providence contradicted its stated mission of providing universal access to health care, especially the poor, by charging uninsured patients much higher rates for the same servic es than other patients. —The Associated Press Senate not approve the stipend mod el... because a lot of programs have problems with it,” Axelrod said. PFC has until Nov. 9 to submit its annual percent increase over last year’s budget, so there is still time to reconfigure the numbers and classes before submitting a different proposal to the Senate for approval, he said. Hudson said certain groups that provide vital services need these new stipends “in order to fully function and in order to provide the service that they do to students.” ASUO President Adam Walsh added that “the reason we have student groups is to enhance the physical and cultural development of students. “A lack of student groups is detri mental to that cause,” he said. The Executive took suggestions and concerns expressed during two stipend working groups and imple mented changes to the model based on those concerns, Hudson said. The new model, Walsh said, also takes into account University Presi dent Dave Frohnmayer’s concern last year that incidental fee-funded pro grams have no regulated funding pat tern for paid positions. “Currently there is no rhyme or reason why some groups get one di rector and others get more,” Walsh said. The new model will fix that problem, he said. The new model gives groups that receive $15,000 or more in student money funding for one director and three program coordinators. Groups that receive between $7,500 and $14,999 get one director and two co ordinators. Those that receive be tween $1,000 and $7,499 get one director and one coordinator. Those that get $999 or less receive no fund ed positions. Walsh said the original PFC budget increase was estimated at $60,000, $500 less than last year’s benchmark. With the new model, the bench mark increase over last year’s PFC budget would be either $34,725 or $29,625, depending on whether the EMU Board of Directors and Student Senate decide to make KWVA, the University’s student-run radio station, an EMU-funded program in stead of a PFC program. Senate will vote to approve or deny the Executive’s proposed stipend model tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the EMU Board Room. Contact the campus and federal politics reporter at nwilbur@dailyemerald. com 609620 University Health Center Unraveling from stress? Join the circle for November ms Thursdays, November 3, 10 and 17 3:00-4:30pm Health Resource Center in the EMU (across from the Fir Room) Knit for relaxation, for creativity, for camradeship, or to learn a new skill. ia i/ i/ Knitting instruction and supplies available. Brought to you by Health Education \ at the Health Center. \ 346-2843 for information