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ASUO Elections Coordinator Ken Best said he thinks voter ap athy is deeply ingrained in the minds of students and young people across the nation. “Apathy is a big problem. Peo ple don’t think that what hap pens in the voting process affects them,” he said. Best, however, said he does not think it is an issue of stu dents not caring, but it has more to do with poor communication in the media and the political level. Apathy “comes from a wide spread misunderstanding of what programs and student fees do,” Best said. At the University level, stu dents have complained about ac cessibility and poor publicity when it comes to elections. Ben nett Lacy, Elections Board pub licity co-coordinator, is trying to address the issue for this year’s elections. “In the past it has been a hassle to vote,” Lacy said. “This year it will be a lot easier. With Duck Web, you don’t have to go any where to vote,” DuckWeb has been the major change made by the elections board in an attempt to increase interest in the elections. The board has also been busy making the system dependable and in forming students about their new voting options. “We’ve still had some prob lems getting the word out, but voting this year will be better,” he said. According to Lacy, secu rity at the voting booths “will be tight. Voting is restricted to fee paying students with their stu dent ID numbers.” Using technology to appeal to the voting population is nothing new. In recent years, Oregon vot ers have been given the option of mailing in absentee ballots. In 1998, Hillary Clinton used a sys tem called “Robo-Call” to in crease voter turnout. Robo-Call left prerecorded messages at the homes of registered Democratic voters, urging them to participate in the elections, according to Na tional Voter Services. The Elections Board hopes that innovations such as DuckWeb will not only increase voter turnout this year but will form a solid foundation of active stu dents for years to come. “We want to reach the younger students and develop a founda tion of voters for the future,” Best said. “Look over the voter’s guide. Students need to be ready to decide who will be distribut ing their fee dollars, and if they want to support ballot measures that will increase the fee.” Atteridge continued from page 1A Hawthorne, Calif., pronounced him dead at 2:34 p.m. The hockey team flew to Los Angeles late Thursday night for the Pacific-8 Conference hockey finals at UCLA. Detective Carlos Mendoza of the El Segundo Po lice Department said the team reached the hotel at about 11:30 p.m. Thursday, and many play ers started drinking until 5 or 6 a.m. Friday morning. Mendoza said he believes the death was accidental and not a suicide. The exact amount of al cohol and drugs in Atteridge’s body will not be known until an autopsy is performed, which may happen as soon as today. More details will also be known once the police can interview the other players who were with At teridge that night. “It looks like just some bad choices, a bad combination,” Mendoza said. Hockey team members and Club Sports officials declined to comment on Atteridge’s death. Atteridge’s father, Timothy, said he has no doubt his son died of an alcohol and drug overdose and said he didn’t think the painkillers belonged to his son. “If he did [have an injury], he didn’t tell us about it,” he said. The Ducks did not play in the tournament due to Atteridge’s unexpected death. Atteridge was from Amherst, Mass., and is survived by his fa ther, mother, older brother and sister and a younger sister. His fa ther said he was interested in hockey since the age of 4 and captained his high school’s hock ey and lacrosse team for two years. “When he was 4, he made me take him to the local instruction al league,” Atteridge’s father said. “His love for hockey increased every year.” Even though Atteridge came from a town with two major schools nearby, the University of Massachusetts and Amherst Col lege, he became interested in the west coast when he visited fami ly in Washington. “His heart was set on the west coast,” Atteridge’s father said. “We looked at [other schools in Oregon and Washington] but he said Eugene just felt right.” Atteridge will be cremated af ter the autopsy, and his ashes will be shipped back to Amherst. Afterwards, the family will fly out to Eugene to finalize his af fairs and speak with his room mates and teammates. A memo { { When he was 4, he made me take him to the local instructional league: His love for hock ey increased every year Timothy Atteridge father Jj rial will be held sometime after that, although the family is not sure when. But for now, the family is stay ing in Amherst to be with each other. “I don’t want my memories tainted by what I would see there,” his father said. “I don’t want to remember what I’m learning about after his passing.” He said he would remember how Atteridge was able to touch so many other student’s lives just with his personality. “I always considered him to be your normal, average high school kid with a talent for hockey. But he did excel in making people happy,” his father said. “He nev er had a down moment and had the ability to lift everyone else’s spirits.” Emerald reporter Simone Ripke con tributed to this article.