■ m ■ IWEEKLY H«NQU1 PRESENTS & The Coast to Coast Blues Band Booker T. Jones (a/ lUmli r 7 mid tin \t(js) & Kelly Joe Phelps Friday April 2 Hult Center Reserved Seating Tickets at the Hull Centei & EMU Ticket Oil ice Charge by Phone <>82-500G MMRV sesz Learn How To Save A Life American Red Crass training in First Aid and Adult CPR $15 Fee Includes 4 Hour Class • Instruction Booklet • Certificate of Instruction March 2 Tue 9 Tue 5:00-9:00 5:00-9:00 Child/lnfant First Aid • Health Center Cafeteria • $15.00 • Current CPR card needed for American Red Cross First Aid Class Register Early 346-2770 sponsored by the Health Center Health Education Program SportHill Factory Clearance Sale Running, fitness, ski and outdoor apparel Three Days Only Save up to 80% on SportHill and Koch XC factory seconds, discontinued colors and styles, sales samples, overstocked items and prototypes. 005791 • SporlHill Pants and Tops • Invasion Pants and Tops • Wind Jackets, Vests and Pants • Rain Jackets and Pants • Fleece Jackets and Vests • Mitts, Hats, and Headbands • Running Shorts and Singlets • Coolmax T-shirts • Koch XC Pants, Tops, & Jackets • And more Thursday February 25 8am - 6pm Friday February 26 9am - 6pm Saturday February 27 10am - 4pm Where: 725 McKinley St., Eugene, OR. Our new warehouse is located at the comer of 7th & McKinley St. Don't miss the factory direct sale of 1999! West on W. 11th right on McKinley St. for the Emerald For more information about freelancing for the Oregon Daily Emerald call 346-5511. OSPIRG Continued from Page 1 the Rounds case: “OSPIRG is wholly unique in its legal situa tion. OSPIRG focuses on ideologi cal/political advocacy; this advo cacy occurs primarily off-campus in the community at large and does not benefit the collective in terests of students.” The brief stated that funding OSPIRG through student inciden tal fees conflicted with the stu dents’ First Amendment rights. “Ideologically, I would like to see incidental fees completely voluntary,” Rounds said. “People who have a passion for groups will not only give their time, but money.” On Oct. 7,1996, U.S. Magistrate Thomas M. Coffin ruled in favor of the University and the ASUO and retained the right for student fees to fund OSPIRG. But Tuesday’s ruling stated that OSPIRG offered students educa tional opportunities on campus through research and internships and advanced the student body through educational cam paigns.“This is the second strong ly worded victory in a row,” said Shaun Sieren, Oregon Student Association Organizing director. According to an Oregon Re vised Statute, incidental fees must be used to enrich the educational, cultural and physical lives of stu dents. The Oregon University System has final control over the use of the fee, but a system has been in place since 1984 to ensure students have a democratic voice in die allocation of student funds. Student fees are considered state money because the Univer sity is a state institution and the money cannot go toward political activity such as lobbying or to support or oppose ballot mea sures. In 1985, Attorney General Dave Frohnmayer issued a response to questions presented by the vice chancellor of the State Board of Higher Education and a state rep resentative concerning the stu dent fee process. His response said funding was legal: “If the program is under the supervision or control of the board, if the board determines the activity to be advantageous to the cultural and physical develop ment of students and if the activi ty is one that directly will benefit the collective interests of the stu dents who must pay the fee.” The response stated public funds and incidental fee money are restricted from supporting or opposing measures before the vot ers. The OSA report said the loca tion of the organization does not matter because OUS has the final authority over incidental fees and can determine if the group is cul turally and physically advanta geous to students whether or not it’s located on campus. The debate continues Critics of the incidental fee process on campus believe the fee is unconstitutional because all students must pay it and the fee goes toward political and ideolog ical issues they disagree with. “Student incidental fees — money coerced from students’ tu ition bills — should not fund po litical causes,” said Jonathan Col legio. Collegio spearheaded the Hon esty Campaign during last spring’s ASUO election. The cam paign sought to hold OSPIRG ac countable for a line-item budget and wanted student money to stay on campus. The OSPIRG budget, which pools funding from campus chap ters, is available to students. Last spring, students voted down a ballot measure to fund the campus OSPIRG chapter for $147,390. The campus chapter of OSPIRG was the original environ mental, consumer and social ad vocacy group started 27 years ago by Ralph Nader. “PIRGs, no matter what any of their spokespeople say, are arche typal political interest groups,” Collegio said. “Students should not be required to fund organiza tions as such.” Rounds adamantly agrees with Collegio. “You can’t take student money and lobby Salem on behalf of rent control, clean water and Super fund,” Rounds said. For Merriah Fairchild, state board chair of OSPIRG, the court ruling was good news even if the campus chapter is no longer fund ed. “They have continually upheld the University's ability to fund student organizations,” Fairchild said, referring to the courts. “It doesn’t really change anything.” The controversy over the stu dent PIRGs and student funding has been a national issue for quite sometime. The Wisconsin case At the University of Wisconsin at Madison, a decision in October by the 7th Circuit Court of Ap peals absolved the university’s student fee process for funding student organizations. In the case of Southworth vs. Grebe, several Madison students objected to funding the UW 005391 We bring the storage unit to you. • You pack it, we pick it up and store it. • Business and personal storage units. • Heated storage available. 485-2115 Greens and the International So cialist Organization. The court ruling is forcing the board of regents to change its stu dent fee process. The process will allow one of two things. Students could opt out of funding groups with which they disagree. Or stu dents would be required to fill out which organizations they are will ing to fund on a tuition bill. “It is absurd, not to mention legally suspect, to decide a group’s funding on some vague definition of‘political and ideo logical,’” said Eric Brakken, chair of the Associated Students of Madison, in a response to the 1998 court decision. “Students should not be penal ized for being politically active or having ideologies.” The Wisconsin case was argued differently from the Oregon case, Sieren explained. The judges in the Oregon case were better informed about the student fee process, Sieren said. The attorney general’s office al lowed OSPIRG and ASUO to file “friend of the court” briefs to ex plain their positions and purpose. “The fundamental difference was a misunderstanding by the [Wisconsin] judges of the student fee process,” Sieren said. The Wisconsin Board of Re gents has decided to appeal the decision and it might take the case to the Supreme Court. “With all of the conflicting precedents nationwide, I am con fident that the issue will eventu ally be resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court,” Collegio said. Hollingsworth vs. Lane Com munity College, another OSPIRG suit, is still pending in the 9th Cir cuit Court. The Future Sieren and Wortman both be lieve the state Legislature may at tack the incidental fee process in the next session. A House bill to ban the use of student fees was defeated last ses sion with a narrow margin of 26 31, but the OSA believes another attack on the fee is imminent. “I think they can and probably will,” Sieren said. “But for the student fee process in the political realm, this gives us a stronger moral background because we have withstood the test of fire. “The courts looked at every sin gle thing the fees go to and they found it appropriate and germane to the process of the university.” Felicity Ayles contributed to this re port Is this a good day for romance? find out in the ODE Classifieds, every day! Oregon.^Sft£meraU} The Oreoon Daily Emerald is published daily Mon day through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon. Eugene. Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald operates in dependently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. NEWSROOM — ^46-SSll Editor in chief: Ryan Frank Managing Editor Kristina Rudinskas Community: Mike Hines, editor. Felicity Ayles, Amy Jennaro Entertainment Nicole Garton, editor. Freelance: Ashley Bach, editor. Higher Education: Ten Meeuwsen, editor. G. Jaros, Tricia Schwennesen In-depth: Nicole Garton, David Ryan Perspective: Kameron Cole, Stefanie Knowlton, editors. Aaron Artman, Amy Goldhammer, Vince Medeiros, Ashley Bach, columnists Brian Dixon, Giovanni Salimena, illustrators Student Activities: Sarah Skidmore, editor Jason George, James Scripps, Erin Snelgrove Sports: Joel Hood, editor, Rob Moseley, asst, editor. Tim Pyle, Scott Pesznecker, Allison Ross Copy Desk: Jennifer Shinen, Rich Dirks, copy chiefs. Emily Aanderud, Monica Hande, Amy Horton, Stephen Palermini, Tom Patterson. News Ait: Matt Garton. editor. Katie Nesse, graphic designer. 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