ISA coffee hour offers cup o’ culture ■The International Student Association’s weekly event showcases differing group identities, but welcomes all By Diane Muber Oregon Daily Emerald More new and diverse faces are appearing every week at interna tional coffee hour, and the Interna tional Student Association is changing the theme of the event by encouraging more students to have a cup of coffee and talk with people from all over the world. “We chose coffee because it’s America — people drink it all the time,” ISA co-director Shruti Shah said. Coffee hour, which is held from 4 to 6 p.m. every Friday, has come a long way since it started in the mid 1980s. The event began small with only 10 or 15 people. But in recent years, attendance has been reaching up to 100 people, Shah said. Now, instead of just providing coffee and snacks, ISA has been asking student groups to sponsor coffee hour and present a part of their culture, Shah said. “Our theme.is unity and diversi ty,” she said. “We’re trying to reach out to student organizations that maybe weren’t involved in previ ous years.” This includes student groups that aren’t characterized by a spe cific ethnicity, she said. ASUO sponsored a coffee hour for the first time after Sept. 11. The group used this time as a platform to educate people about the tragedy. Recent sponsor Students of the Indian Subcontinent wore “salwaar kameez”—traditional, colorful out fits that can be dressed up or down depending on the details of the em broidery, Shah said. SIS members encouraged every one to participate in a traditional Hindu dance called Dandya. The dance is performed during the nine-day Navaratri festival, but today younger people tend to per form the dance for fun, Shah said. Each person is given two wooden sticks, and the dancers form two lines. People rotate around the line, hitting their sticks against the sticks of those in the other line. Dancers rotate while traditional music plays in the background. Next term, the Hawaii Club will sponsor coffee hour, and Shah hopes more student groups will sponsor coffee hour during winter term. Tom Mills, director of the Office of International Education and Ex change, said he informs interna tional students about coffee hour at the beginning of the year so they know where they can go to meet other students from their country. “Coffee hour gives a focus to a time each week when students can meet students from their own coun tries and from other countries,” he said. “In terms of adjusting to a new life, it can be a real help to meet other new students and to find out about the international programs available.” Saiyora Ismailova moved from Uzbekistan during fall term. Right away she became involved in ISA and began attending the coffee hour for fun and to socialize. “You don’t have to travel to meet people from different countries,” she said. Contact student activities reporter Diane Huberatdianehuber@dailyemerald.com. News briefs Fishing accident claims University student’s life Junior Ben Eder died when the 1 fishing boat he was working on capsized off the Oregon coast Dec. 11. Eder, 21, was one of four men • aboard the Nesika, a 40 ft. crabbing vessel owned by Eder’s father, Bob Eder, of Newport. The boat over turned a half-mile off Yaquina Head as it lowered crab pots to the ocean floor, and washed ashore on Beverly Beach, just north of New port. Coast Guard crews searched for the missing fishermen without success before calling off rescue ef forts the next day. Coast Guard spokeswoman Aida Cabrera said the cause of the accident is under investigation. Matt Hamer, a 22-year-old New port fisherman, was on a crab boat about a mile-and-a-half away from the Nesika when it went down. He described the weather conditions that day as “pretty rough,” but not out of the ordinary. “It was just random chance,” he said. “No one could have seen it, and no one could have stopped it.” When he heard the Nesika had capsized, Harner said he prayed that Eder, a close friend and high school classmate, was not on the boat. “He was a great guy,” he said. “He had so much potential, so much going for him.” Eder graduated as class salutato rian from Newport High School in 1998. Eder, a biochemistry major, transferred to the University last year from Reed College in Port land. When he had a break from school, he always came back to Newport to work on the fishing boats, Hamer said. “He loved fishing,” he said. “He loved going out on the ocean.” — Kara Cogswell Student energy fee reduced Students will pay a few dollars less in incidental fees when a re duction in the energy fee goes into effect this term. Provost John Moseley agreed to cut the fee, orig inally estimated at $30 per student per term, to $20 for winter term. University Vice President for Administration Dan Williams said the provost made the decision partly because of conservation ef forts led by student government leaders. A lower-than-expected natural gas bill for fall term as well as high enrollment also made low ering the fee possible, he said. ASUO President Nilda Brooklyn said she was pleased with the ad ministration’s willingness to lower the fee. But she said her goal is to eliminate the fee altogether. Brooklyn and other student gov ernment leaders plan to reduce the need for the fee with a campus wide energy conservation cam paign beginning this term, she said. William said administrators will re-evaluate the energy fee at the end of winter term. — Kara Cogswell BERG’S SKI BUS to Willamette Pass, Mt. Bachelor A Hoodoo! 13th & Lawrence • 683-1300 www.bergsskishop.com OFF Any Yogurt* (♦Except small cones and tinies. Expires 1/20/02) Campus SUBSHOP Mon.-Fri. 1 Oam 10pm Sat. 11 am-9pm Sun. 12pm-9pm 1225 Alder 345-2434 Noi valid with any other discounts or coupons. One coupon per cuslomer. 1 HOMEY HILL FARMS, 012461 Sign up for It’s easy... Just go to the UO Health Center at 13th and Agate. But don’t miss the deadline. Sign-up runs now through January 18 th. Review details of the plan on our web page: http://healthcenter.uoregon.edu ♦ Any questions? Call 346-3702 ♦ UNIVERSITY OF OREGON U N I V E R S I T Y HEALTH CENTER .-....■■■ We’re a matter of degrees ^