Speaker pushes for education on Sudan conflict I 4 Oregon Daily Emerald An independent newspaper at the University of Oregon www. dailyemerald. com Since 1900 | Volume 107, Issue 70 | Friday, December2, 2005 DeFazio opposes federal aid cuts The congressman asks how a $14.3 billion national budget reduction affects student finances BY JOE BAILEY NEWS REPORTER Several weeks after the U.S. House of Representatives passed a spending reduction package that included $14.3 billion in cuts to federal financial aid, Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore, visited campus Thursday to voice his opposition to the spending cuts. At a forum hosted by the ASUO in the Lillis Business Complex, De Fazio listened to students talk about how further financial aid cuts would impact their lives and said that Re publicans in Congress have their priorities wrong. The House passed a bill on Nov. 18 that cut about $50 billion from the budget; the largest cuts were directed at Medicaid benefits, food stamps and student loan subsidies. The cuts to student loan subsidies would raise the interest for students borrowing money to pay for college, DeFazio said. University student Tony McCown told DeFazio that debt from student loans could have a crippling impact on his career. McCown, who is married and has a four-month old son, said that after he and his wife trans ferred to the University from Lane Community College, they had ac cumulated about $40,000 of debt between them. After they graduate from the University, the McCowns expect to have more than $100,000 of U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Springfield, talks with Tony McCown, chief justice of the ASUO Constitution Court, about cuts to student financial aid. combined debt. McCown said that he would like to attend law school and work in public interest law, but he’s afraid he will have to find higher paying work to pay off his debts. DEFAZIO, page 6 ^ 1 / "Jf § Kate Horton | Photographer Thursday was the 50th anniversary of Rosa Parks' refusal to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Ala., bus. The anniversary gained even more significance this October, when Parks died at age 92. The Lane Transit District remembered her life and contributions by taking part in “A National Transit Tribute to Rosa Parks.” LTD, in conjunc tion with the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Eugene Human Rights Commission, reserved a seat on each bus for Parks. The seats were marked by a laminated sheet with a picture of Parks and the words “On December 1,1955, she changed the course of history and inspired us all.” LTD also gave free day passes to anyone who donated a canned food item to FOOD for Lane County. Before the event, LTD gave presentations at local elementary and middle schools and encouraged the children to draw pictures about what Parks meant to them. The pictures were compiled into a quilt, which LTD hung at its Eugene Station Customer Service Center at 11th Avenue and Willamette Street. Student architects redraft downtown Eugene Graduate student Jesse Schwartzberg presents his plans for the Riverfront District to a review panel of University professors and Eugene officials. The presentation was the final product of the class Going Downtown: Eugene Remapped. Zane Rrrr | Photographer A studio class combining ideas of Landscape and city planning redeveloped the Riverfront District BY CHRIS HAGAN NEWS REPORTER Imagine 25 years from now, coming off what is now the Fer ry Street Bridge into downtown Eugene on a tree-lined, median divided road. Travelers looking to their left will see the complet ed Wayne L. Morse Federal Courthouse. Straight ahead would be the University’s new basketball arena. That would be the plan if it were up to the students in Ar chitecture 4/585 and Landscape Architecture 4/589, Going Downtown: Eugene Remapped. ARCHITECTS, page 7 UO Senate passes three motions Wednesday University government decisions addressed Westmoreland and Department of Defense funding BY MEGHANN M. CUNIFF NEWS EDITOR The new draft of the diversity plan and a public hearing regarding U.S. Department of Defense funding on campus will be part of the University Senate’s agenda sometime next term. At its meeting Wednesday, the senate watched a presentation about the diversity plan, heard an update on the state of the Uni versity by President Dave Frohnmayer and passed three motions. One motion calls for pub lic hearings about DoD funding — at least one to be held in front of the senate — and the oth ers call for the University to close the school for University Assembly meetings and waive the fees for a records request by the Westmoreland Tenants Council. The diversity plan The Diversity Executive Working Group sub mitted a draft of the Five-Year Diversity Plan to Frohnmayer on Nov. 22, Interim Vice Provost for Institutional Equity and Diversity Charles Martinez said, and copies of the draft should be available next term after all revisions are made. Martinez discussed the reasons for the diver sity plan and presented statistics detailing in equalities between minority groups and white people at the University level. The original draft of the plan was released last spring and caused a great deal of contro versy. A group of professors sent a letter to Frohnmayer denouncing the plan as “Orwellian” and “frightening.” Frohnmayer SENATE, page 3 Students host winter Kwanzaa celebration The Black Student Union will provide dinner and perform skits to share in the cultural holiday BY EMILY SMITH NEWS REPORTER The Black Student Union will be serving up free fried chicken, sweet potato pie, collard greens, macaroni and cheese, mashed pota toes and cornbread for all who attend its an nual Kwanzaa Celebration on Saturday night in the EMU Ballroom. BSU Programs Coordinator Assistant Abri na Wheatfall expects about 150 people to show up, and she said she’s hoping a wide range of students will be interested. The traditional soul-food dinner and live KWANZAA page 5