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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 2000)
f880/00 TRJ NGLE 1 G R A PHI C S SCREEN PRINTING EMBROIDERY 344-7286 tr\ang\e@>pond net Not all t-shirts are created equal. 009969 Puma ovaedrioo+ Simple*, Kfg Siyl^ AIR WALK \ZjSi 957 Willamette • 687-0898 aadas www.Lazar’s.com r ONE MODEM NUMBER! TWICE as many modems NO separate modem account required Over the summer, the UO s modem pool doubled in size, to a total of 576. Dial 225-2200 and use your UO Computing Center email username address (for example, jersmith@gladstone.uoregon.edu, jersmith@darkwing.uoregon.edu, or jersmith@oregon.uoregon.edu) and your email account password to log in. Questions? Contact Microcomputer Services •htip://micro.uoregori.edu/modeminfo •microheip@oregon.uoregon.edu *346-4412 Selection of student associations as mixed as individuals involved ■ Student unions provide enriching opportunities and offer the chance to work with like-minded students By Tonya Alanez Oregon Daily Emerald With more than 100 student groups on campus, most Universi ty students should be able to find a campus niche and a community of fellow students with whom they can share their college experience. The range of groups is extensive, from the International Student As sociation. to the Muslim Student Association, to the Women’s Center and with variations between and beyond. Although concerns, goals and membership vary, most of the stu dent groups seem to share a pri mary purpose: Providing students with a sense of community through involvement and shared interests. “We try to provide an under standing of our culture both for [Jewish students] and anyone on campus,” Troy Grudin, assistant di Tom Patterson for the Emerald Troy Grudin, assistant director of the Jewish Student Union, said that sometimes the purpose of student groups is to just ‘have a place to hang out.’ rector of the Jewish Student Union, said. “The JSU is open to all stu dents. Everyone is welcome here. Everyone who goes to school here has as much right to be here and do stuff with us as anyone. “One of the purposes of these student groups sometimes is to have a place to hang out.” Traditionally, the JSU presents an annual film festival focusing on films of Jewish content, as well as a cultural night event. There is also a reading of the names of victims of the Holocaust during Holocaust Re membrance Week, along with sev eral smaller events throughout the year, Grudin said. The Black Student Union, which is an umbrella organization for var ious campus associations, shares similar intentions. “We try to provide resources to students of color on campus, not just African-American students, but anyone interested,” Do minique Beaurnonte, co-director of the BSU, said. “Our main goal is to provide resources, programs and opportunities that students need.” In the past the BSU has not been politically oriented, Beaurnonte said. However, he said he hopes to see that change this year as the group joins forces with the Oregon Student Association on the newly formed Student? of Color Coali tion. The group also will begin to fo cus on networking opportunities, not only within the immediate community but within Oregon and the United States, as well. “We want to use the resources that are everywhere,” Beaurnonte said. On a personal note, Beaurnonte said he feels that the BSU has pro vided an enriching resource con ducive to his success at the Univer sity. “Personally, I think that if the BSU has done anything, it has giv en me an outlet and made me feel at home,” he said. “It has been like a second family. “It has been really comforting and fun to get to know the people here.” Upcoming BSU events include a fall reception, Kwaanza celebra tion, Black History Month celebra tion and Ebony Men Showcase, among others. Campus student groups fall within two categories, explained ASUO President Jay Breslow. Those registered with the Associat ed Students of the University of Oregon that do not receive funding, such as the College Democrats or College Republicans, and the groups that are both registered and recognized bv the ASUO, which do receive funding. For a complete listing of the stu dent groups which actually have a room listing located on campus, see page 17. For further information - -eoftteet-the-A-SUO -at- T2A .