Senate applies DDS payroll to pay bills, repair shuttle ■The senators stay snagged on the summer session situation but fix funding for a few functions By Jeremy Lang Oregon Daily Emerald The summer senate issue re mains unresolved for the second straight week. The Senate Rules Committee, which met briefly during a re cess Wednesday night, could not resolve a variety of concerns about how the senate functions during the summer, including the number of people on the smaller summer body, quorum and stipend payment. The rules committee has to present a draft to the senate for a vote before summer senate can even exist. The ASUO Constitu tion Court ruled the summer senate unconstitutional earlier this year. On the financial side, despite its momentary controversy, the senate approved to the Designat ed Driver Shuttle an $11,000 transfer from the payroll part of a ■ ♦ its budget to fix a van and recov er debts in the gas and telephone bill parts of its budget. In last year’s election, students approved a DDS budget increase. The lump sum was split into specific areas, including payroll. But with the specific guide Student Senate lines for spending voted by students, senators and court Chief Jus tice Robert R a s h i o , who was at the meeting represent ing the court for its own special request, weren’t sure if the allocation would break any ASUO rules. After approving the first part of the transfer, $1,000 from pay roll to gas, Sen. Peter Watts ques tioned whether to postpone a vote until next week’s meeting so the senate could be sure they were moving funds legally. “It will impair us a lot more if we set a dangerous precedent ...” he said. “This is something we really need to investigate.” But the other senators felt cer tain enough that they were not breaking the rules to continue with a $547 transfer to phone bills and $9,453 to van repair. “We’re not touching the spirit of the student vote. We’re just hammering out the details,” Sen. Jereme Grzybowski said. “We can do this tonight. It’s com pletely legal. If not, impeach me.” Senate President Jessica Tim pany agreed and the money passed with Watts dissenting on the other two transfers. “We’re doing a greater disserv ice if we don’t transfer this mon ey ... and they can’t drive our drunk butts home,” Watts said. The senate also approved a to tal of $968 to the court to help it start its new office in room 20 in the EMU and $1,047 for the Na tional Conference on Race and Ethnicity, which 11 students from a variety of multicultural student groups will attend. Rally 8r March 8:00 pm Thursday, May l£tb U of 0 Amphitheater Come early to see the Clothesline Project and make yooj_own sign! Music begins at 7:00 pm. This event wB be ASL interpreted and child care scholarships » hoursinadvance346-409S. OrganaedlbytheASUO PLEASE RECYCLE inaias population now 1 billion strong By Ramola Talwar Badam The Associated Press BOMBAY, India — Meena Pawar spends all day in crowd ed shanties cajoling women not to have more children. But In dia marks a milestone Thursday that shows just how strong the tide is against her: The popula tion officially reaches 1 billion people. Pawar, a municipal nurse, works in the slums of Bombay, on the front line of efforts to re duce population growth, but she faces deeply entrenched at titudes against birth control. If India doesn’t curtail population growth, experts say that in 50 years it will overtake China and end up with 1.5 billion people. Deciding when India reaches the 1 billion mark is tricky in a nation where 42,000 children are born every day and medical records are scanty. The United Nations Development Program said India joined China in the exclusive club on Aug. 15 last year. The government’s Census Board projected it for May 1 of this year. In a program to promote awareness of population growth, the government decid ed to mark the milestone May 11, calling it “a moment of cel ebration, a moment to ponder.” At New Delhi’s Safdarjung Hospital, doctors are zealously watching over several dozen pregnant mothers. The first girl delivered after noon Thursday will be designated the one bil lionth baby. The spiraling population has swamped every measure of progress India has made since independence 53 years ago. Food production has tripled, yet many people go hungry; lit eracy has increased, but so has the sheer number of illiterate people. Nowhere is this problem more clear than in Bombay, a city where more than half of the 15 million people sleep on side walks or live in mud-and-tin huts. For many of its poor peo ple, every child is a potential wage earner: a servant in a house, an understudy in a mo tor garage, someone to do odd jobs. Health workers try to explain the harsh realities. “We tell them how expenses will increase and detail health complications due to so many deliveries,” said nurse Vimal Bhagwat. Half a million women die each year in South Asia from complications arising from childbirth. Pawar said men must be bet ter educated on family plan ning. “We must motivate the fami ly members, especially men. Women don’t have the guts on their own to say that they want to be sterilized,” Pawar said. But family planning has nev er recovered from the stain it re ceived from a 1975 mass sterili zation campaign launched by the government. Police, teach ers and government officials were ordered to round up peo ple for vasectomy and tubecto my operations. Many illiterate people were sterilized without their knowledge. Nurses such as Pawar now approach the topic of birth con trol cautiously, talking first about general health and hy giene. Critics want a more as sertive approach, promoting the benefits of smaller families and offering people incentives, such as cash, for limiting births. Others say birth control proj ects will succeed if more women get jobs, low-cost hous es and better education. “If I had been working before my third pregnancy, I wouldn’t have had a third child. I would have realized two children are enough,” Pawar said. Join the campus award-winning newspaper The Oregon Daily Emerald is now accepting applications for the following positions on next year’s news staff: APPLICATION DEADLINE: MAY 12th t IN-DEPTH DESK New Reporter Position } COPY EDITING Night Editor/Copy Chief Copy Editors Sports Copy Editor } STUDENT ACTIVITIES DESK Editor Reporters ^ COMMUNITY DESK Editor Reporters t HIGHER EDUCATION DESK Editor Reporters t SPORTS Editor Reporters t EDITORIAL/PERSPECTIVES Editor Columnists | FREELANCE/SUPPLEMENTS Editor Features Reporters t PULSE Editor Reporters t GRAPHICS AND DESIGN Design Director Graphic Artist/Page Designers Editorial Illuslrator/Cartoonist ) PHOTOGRAPHY Photo Editor Photographers Darkroom Techs } ON-LINE EDITION Editor Webmaster Applications are due 5:00 p.m., Friday, May 12, 2000. All positions are paid. Applications can be picked up at the ODE office (Suite 300, EMU) or visit our website at www.dailyemerald.com (click on “Employment”). 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