
News Briefs: Upcoming Eco-Arson
Sentencings | Quakers Arrested | More
Debates on 20-134 | Chub Making a Comeback
| Blundering Toward War with Iran | Integrity
Award | Raptors on Campus | War
Dead |
News:
Election Endorsements
Time to fill out that ballot
News:
Robot Companions
Can reliance on technology make us vulnerable?
Happening People: Wendy
Strgar
UPCOMING
ECO-ARSON SENTENCINGS
Eco-arsonists are returning to Eugene courtrooms
with the sentencing of Jacob Ferguson by federal Judge Anne Aiken
on Oct. 26, and the re-sentencing of activist Jeff "Free" Luers
at a yet unspecified date in Lane County Circuit Court.
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| Jeff
Luers |
On Oct. 26 at 1 pm Ferguson will face charges of
one count of arson and one count of attempted arson. Ferguson participated
in at least 14 of the ecologically motivated arsons dubbed "Operation
Backfire" by the FBI, according to court documents.
Ferguson's charges were unsealed by Aiken last month
after three years of secrecy per the request of federal prosecutors.
According to court documents, Ferguson faces only probation for
his arsons. Other eco-saboteurs received up to 13 years in prison
for their participation in some of the arsons.
Ferguson wore a wire and recorded conversations
with other defendants in the Backfire cases, leading to the label
of "snitch" on Portland.Indymedia.org and other activist websites.
He is expected to get a greatly reduced sentence in exchange for
his cooperation with the government.
Luers was sentenced in June 2001 to 23 years in
prison for a then unrelated action — the burning of three
SUVs at Romania Chevrolet in Eugene. The goal of Luers' and his
accomplice, Craig "Critter" Marshall was to call attention to global
warming. Luers was voted "Best Activist" in the EW's 2005
readers' poll.
Several of the Operation Backfire defendants set
fire to almost 40 SUVs in the same car dealership shortly before
Luers' trial. Many felt this action was a factor in Luers' heavy
sentence. The dealership location is currentlyowned by the UO.
In February 2007, the Court of Appeals unanimously
decided that Luer's case would be reversed and remanded for resentencing.
Luers could get up to 15 years off his original sentence. Luers
has been moved to Lane County Jail in preparation for the hearing,
but a date has not yet been announced. — Camilla Mortensen
QUAKERS
ARRESTED
A small group of local Quakers acting in an unofficial
capacity were arrested Friday, Oct. 12 following a peaceful protest
at congressional offices in Eugene. The group gathered at the U.S.
Courthouse to urge Rep. Peter DeFazio and Sens. Gordon Smith and
Ron Wyden to vote against the 2008 appropriations bill for the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The group of five included physician Paul Qualtere-Burcher,
pediatric nurse practitioner Laurie Knackstadt and retired rural
outreach counselor Peg Morton. An unnamed high school student and
special education teacher were also arrested.
The group read statements at the offices and sang
peace songs before they were arrested in Smith's office for refusing
to leave. Wyden's office was closed. "None of the three have definitely
made up their minds how to vote on this bill, which will come to
the floor of Congress in January or February," reads a statement
from the group.
The action was part of the national Occupation
Project, developed by the organization Voices for Creative Nonviolence
(www.vcnv.org).More than 320 people,
including 11 in Eugene, have been arrested for nonviolently occupying
offices of members of Congress who were unwilling to make a commitment
to vote against the war funding.
MORE
DEBATES ON 20-134
Citizens for Public Accountability (CPA) is hosting
a debate on the city ballot measure that would expand the limit
on urban renewal spending on downtown redevelopment. The debate
between Greg McLauchlan and Bonny Bettman will be at 7 pm Thursday,
Oct. 18 at the EWEB boardroom.
Ballots are going in the mail this week and the
deadline for voting in the special election is Tuesday, Nov. 6.
Debate questions will include: Will this new ordinance
affect the taxes of Eugene residents? If so, how? What is the alternative?
Can we revitalize downtown with currently available resources?
A later debate on Measure 20-134 is being organized
by the Lane County Bus Project and Eugene Weekly and
is set for 6 pm Tuesday, Oct. 30 at Davis' restaurant on West Broadway.
The debate is the first in a series called "Brewhaha," and is inspired
by the successful "Debate Club" events held in Portland bars and
organized by the Portland Bus Project and the Portland Mercury.
CHUB
MAKING A COMEBACK
While Oregon's mighty salmon are still in trouble
thanks to dammed rivers, logging and pesticides, a tiny local fish
is trying to make a comeback, according to the McKenzie River Trust.
The Oregon chub is a small species of minnow. It's
a little speckled fish that reaches a maximum of about three inches
in length. It was added to the endangered species list in 1993,
where it joins its larger federally listed brethren like spring
Chinook salmon and bull trout.
Twenty adult chub were trapped by researchers on
Green Island, the property owned by the McKenzie River Trust at
the confluence of the McKenzie and Willamette Rivers near Coburg.
This raises hopes a healthy population of chub may exist on the
island. Green Island is also home to a "long list of both federal
and state listed species," says the Trust, ranging from red-legged
frogs to bald eagles.
Green Island is named for the family that owned
and farmed the land, which the Trust purchased in 2003. The Trust
is working to restore the 1,400 acre island complex for wildlife
habitat.
Oregon chub are found only in the Willamette Basin,
according to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. Their habitat
is in side channels and backwaters of the river, many of which have
been destroyed thanks to dike construction, channelization of streams
and draining and filling of wetlands. The chub are hunted or pushed
out of their habitat by human introduced non-native species like
large and smallmouth bass, bluegill, and western mosquito-fish.
The Oregon chub is one of many chub species in Oregon
that are federally listed, some, like the Oregon chub and the Borax
Lake chub, which exists only in one hot springs in Eastern Oregon,
exist only in very limited areas. At one point the Oregon chub could
only be found in four spots on the Willamette. It can now be found
in 35 areas.
These species are related to, but distinct from
the illegally introduced tui chub that were eradicated from Diamond
Lake last year after causing the release of an algae-released neurotoxin.
— Camilla Mortensen
BLUNDERING
TOWARD WAR WITH IRAN
Can President Bush be thwarted in his reported obsession
with attacking Iran? Dr. Catherine Thomasson of Portland, national
president of Physicians for Social Responsibility, visited Iran
in early March as part of a peace delegation sponsored by the Fellowship
of Reconciliation. She attended meetings with Iranian religious,
education and political leaders. She will speak about her trip at
7 pm Wednesday, Oct. 24, at the First United Methodist Church, 1376
Olive St. in Eugene.
Thomasson's presentation discusses common misconceptions
people in the U.S. hold about Iran and what missteps the U.S. has
taken in our relationship with Iran. She'll also discuss Iranian
history and political structure. She will also review what peaceful
solutions lie ahead for our two countries.
Her visit coincides with efforts by Congressman
Peter DeFazio calling for congressional hearings regarding Iran
and increased congressional oversight of White House plans for war.
In a recent letter sent to House Democrats, DeFazio said, "In the
run-up to the war with Iraq, Congress as an institution, through
its committees, failed the American people by failing to ask tough
questions, challenge the administration's assumptions, and force
a public debate. Yet, we're now witnessing a similar rush to judgment
regarding Iran. This Congress must not make the same grave mistake."
INTEGRITY
AWARD
This year's Wayne Morse Integrity in Politics Award
will go to Oakland, Calif., mayor Ronald Dellums for his Morse-like
qualities. The award will be presented at a banquet at the Valley
River Inn on Oct. 26.
Prior to his position as mayor, Dellums, a Democrat,
was the first openly socialist politician to be elected to Congress
since World War II when he took office in the House of Representatives
in 1971. He is a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus.
According to Jayne Mickles, president of the board
of the Wayne Morse Historical Park Corporation (WMHPC), which sponsors
the award, Dellums was selected based on his outspoken opposition
to the Vietnam War, his work on civil rights issues, his antiapartheid
South Africa stance and, as chairman of the House Armed Services
Committee, his work to reform U.S. military policy.
Morse, a U.S. senator from Oregon from 1944-1968
epitomized an "extraordinary level of integrity and independence,
a commitment to justice and a willingness to take a principled stand
even at great political cost." Dellums' career has those exemplified
attributes too, according to the WMHPC.
Dellums held office in the House for 27 years, until
he retired in 1998 and became mayor of Oakland in 2006.
The goal of the Morse Award is to bring attention
to political integrity in hopes "it will foster that same kind of
public service among other elected officials," said Mickles in a
press release announcing the award.
The awards banquet is cosponsored with the Cow Creek
Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians. For banquet information, contact
integrity.award@gmail.com or 682-5380. — Camilla Mortensen
RAPTORS
ON CAMPUS
 |
| PHOTO:
JOHN HENDRICKSON |
Birds of prey will be featured at the UO's Agate
Hall this Friday. Nationally recognized, award-winning nature photographer
John Hendrickson is giving a benefit presentation for the Cascade
Raptor Center (CRC). "A Celebration of Raptors" is part of Hendrickson's
and the CRC's ongoing effort to educate the public on raptors and
the growing threats to their environment. Hendrickson believes educating
the public is essential to saving the future of the raptors.
A graduate of California State University with a
master's degree in field biology and environmental education, Hendrickson's
knowledge and appreciation of raptors is extensive. He has been
in the photography business for more than 30 years, but says he
has been dedicated to the preservation of nature and birds all his
life.
"I am known mostly as a photographer, but I like
to think of myself as an educator who uses photography as a tool,"
says Hendrickson.
His work can be seen on display at museum exhibits
and in a multitude of publications including National Geographic.
His book Raptors: Birds of Prey is a compilation of data
collected by Hendrickson during more than 30 years of researching,
tracking, photographing and writing about birds of prey. The event
will feature a discussion on raptor adaptations and ecology, a display
of Hendrickson's work and some of the CRC raptors will stop by to
greet the public.
"A Celebration of Raptors: an Evening with John
Hendrickson" is at 7:30 pm on Friday, Oct. 19 at Agate Hall Auditorium.
$10 general public, $8 for students and CRC members. For more information
call 485-4320. All proceeds for the event go towards the Cascade
Raptor Center. — Deanna Uutela
WAR DEAD
Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq began on March 20,
2003 (last week's numbers in parentheses):•
3,829 U.S. troops killed* (3,815)
• 28,171 U.S. troops injured* (27,767)
• 128 U.S. military suicides* (122)
• 302 coalition troops killed** (301)
• 933 contractors killed (accurate
updates NA)
• 81,887 Iraqi civilians killed*** (81,405)
• $460.2 billion cost of war ($458.2
billion)
• $130.9 million cost to Eugene taxpayers
($130.3 million)
*
through Oct. 15, 2007; source: icasualties.org; some figures only
updated monthly
**
estimate; source: icasualties.org
***
highest estimate; source: iraqbodycount.org; based on confirmed
media reports; other groups calculate civilian deaths as high as
655,000 to one million

WENDY
STRGAR
 |
"I call myself a loveologist," says Wendy Strgar,
a full-time mother of four who uses her kids' school hours to write
a bi-weekly column on sustainable love. "We need to know how to
love one another to survive." Strgar worked as a career counselor
for people with disabilities and mental illness in rural Washington
before she and her psychiatrist husband, Franc Strgar, moved to
Eugene in 1997. "I got into education reform," says Strgar, who
was among the founders of the Village School. She was ultimately
discouraged when her pet project, the Eugene Peace Academy, was
denied a charter in 2003. "We need to teach kids conflict resolution
so they can bring it home," she says. Since then, she has redirected
her energy into a new business, Good Clean Love, making and selling
all-natural products for love and intimacy. "The goal is to raise
money for peace education," she says. On Oct. 21, Strgar will speak
on healthy intimacy and the relationship between sexuality and health
at the Bioneers Conference in San Rafael, Calif. Learn more at goodcleanlove.com.
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