Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 22, 1998, Page 6, Image 6

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    “34 years of Quality Service”
Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi
Berman Auto Service
• MERCEDES • BMW • VOLKSWAGEN •
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Eugene, Oregon, 97402
^NIKE ^
Student light
Come Support
OREGON VOLLEYBALL
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use
Thursday, October 22nd
7 pm at Mac Court
The first 500 students with valid ID. will
receive FREE Nike T-shirts.
I For more information please call 346-5417
' In one of our Waterproof Breathable Jackets
you can scale the highest peaks and even
make you way safely to Mr. Peabody’s
8:00 A.M. Econ Class.
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EMU committees plan for the year
By Peter Breaden
Oregon Daily Emerald
The EMU Board’s house and
budget committees convened
Wednesday to discuss goals for
the upcoming year.
The house committee outlined
its plans for upcoming discussion
about office space with several
building tenants. The student-run
campus radio station, KWVA, and
the Indonesian Student Associa
tion have entered applications for
office space.
KWVA currently occupies
room 112 on the EMU mezzanine.
Bryan Myss, chairman of the EMU
House committee, postponed dis
cussion of space allocation until
he meets personally with the ap
plicants to evaluate each group’s
needs.
"If we’re not in contact person
ally, we're not doing our job,”
Myss said.
He added that being in contact
EMU
BOARD
means evaluat
ing a group's
current space.
Long-term
goals for the
house commit
tee also were
brought to the
meeting. The
house’s vision
for the EMU focused on increasing
visibility and making the building
a “place of student pride.”
The EMU Board budget com
mittee was introduced to its up
coming budget, which will in
elude increased revenue from
food service.
“With the new rec center, coffee
house and food court, we will be
generating more revenue for the
EMU to utilize in our budget,”
said finance senator Wylie Chen.
“We are aiming for a low bench
mark for the upcoming year, but
with mandated increases, it’s go
ing to be difficult.”
The EMU Board will send 14
delegates from ASUO programs to
a leadership conference today in
Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. The meet
ing should help build spirit, said
Dori Pearson, an EMU Board pro
gram representative.
“It deals with issues of student
unions,” Pearson said. “There’s a
lot of school spirit there. ”
Cultural Forum gets $700 for film scores
By Kristina Rudinskas
Oregon Daily Emerald
The Student Senate allocated
$700 to the Cultural Forum to
help fund the production of a
winter silent film score by a stu
dent composer.
The original special request
asked for $2,000 to pay for two
silent film scores, $1,000 allocat
ed to each composer. One com
poser is already scheduled for the
fall.
Last spring the Cultural Forum
sponsored a score for the silent
film Metropolis and the recorded
score later became part of a tour
ing production including an ex
hibit at the Seattle Art Museum.
“I think that beyond merely
providing an opportunity for stu
dents to see a silent film with a
live score, something they very
rarely get to see, it also gives stu
dent composers an opportunity to
produce an original score,” said
Cultural Forum representative
Vladimir Solmon.
Several senators requested the
Student
Senate
Commentator i
its June 5 issue,
staff paid the p
this year’s fisce
1997-98 year’s
issue had rollec
plus fund.
The senate c
quest by the Ai
a mysterious hi
House by the p
ministration. /
dent Morgan
Cultural Forum
raise more mon
ey and return to
the senate later
with another re
quest.
The senate
also approved a
request for $621
from the Oregon
or the printing of
The Commentator
•inting cost out of
I budget after the
allocation for the
over into the sur
lenied a $150 re
ilJO Executive for
II from the Collier
evious ASUO ad
lSUO Vice Presi
Howling did not
know what the bill was for and
promised to return to the senate
with more answers next week.
“Tell me what 1 need answered
and I can get answers,” Cowling
said.
The Black Student Union was
allocated $273 to fund a work
study internal outreach director.
The director, Kim Jones, would
work with students on campus to
introduce the BSU and promote
involvement.
“I was co-director [of the BSU)
a couple of years ago and there
were so many problems” said
Senator Taryn Tarver. “They’re
already doing programming and I
don’t think $273 is a lot of money
to spend.”
The senate was surprised with
a visit from Corey Rasmussem, a
representative from the Delta Chi
Fraternity. He introduced the
newest fraternity chapter forming
on campus.
What Is It?
An interactive discussion of health issues
confronting women, question/answer session
with national and community experts and
presentation of an award-winning video.
What’s the Point?
To provide women with information they need to
make informed health decisions.
How Can I learn More?
Please contact the UO Health Center's Health Education
Program at 346-2728 or by email to
heaheed@oregon.uoregon.edu
for more information.
http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~uoshc/roundtable.html
Sponsored by the Public Health Service's Office on Women's Health
(Within the U.S. Dept, of Health and Human Services)
Presented by the UO Health Center’s Health Education Program, the Center
for the Study of Women in Society, University Housing and the ASUO
U •* I V E 1 S I 1 V
HEALTH CENTER
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