http://www.dailyemerald.com Thursday, March 13,2003 Since 1900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume loljllssue 118 With the program V ' s&ttsZ '' Buffleheads members James Marr (left) and Dan Stutzbach prepare for the five-hour test of the ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest, which begins March 22 AN Shaughnessy Emerald Coding for success The Buffleheads, a three-student computer programming team, placed first at a regional contest Ali Shaughnessy Environment/Science/Technology Reporter On Monday nights, Deschutes Hall is nearly deserted, with only the click clack sounds of a keyboard emitting from a small room and filling the emp ty hallways. Inside that room, three University students sit in silence. Two stare at a packet of problems that lay before them; the third types at a rapid speed, stopping only to turn the pieces of paper in front of him. After 20 minutes, the silence is interrupted. “This is a good problem set,” University senior James Marr says. Marr is one of three members of Buf fleheads, which also includes Dan Stutzbach and Carl Howells. The three computer-sawy students formed the team last year, intent on competing in a regional computer programming contest sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery. The top two teams from each region are invited to the international finals, which includes students from Africa, Europe and the South Pacific. After placing 13th in last year’s re gional contest, the members of the Buffleheads worked together and swept this year’s competition, taking first place. Only 70 out of 3,850 com peting teams will attend the interna tional competition. “It was something of an accom plishment,” Marr said. “I’m rather proud of it.” The international competition, offi cially titled the ACM International Col legiate Programming Contest, pits each team against a grueling five-hour dead line as they work to solve eight com plex problems. Members of each team must work together to write a comput er program that implements the solu tion. According to ACM officials, tack ling the problems is equivalent to completing a semester’s worth of com puter programming in one afternoon. After a team believes it has a work ing version of the program, they sub mit it to the judges, who run the pro gram with sample data to test its accuracy. The team’s score is based on how many problems are completed, Turn to ACM, page 8 Forum looks at health care possibilities A community forum held on Wednesday explored solutions to several Oregon health care coverage pitfalls including high costs in private insurance Lindsay Sauve Family/Health/Education Reporter Money — or a lack of it — was a prominent theme at a com munity forum on health care coverage at First United Methodist Church on Wednesday night. Officials, activists and communi ty members met to discuss the condition of health care in Ore gon in the wake of massive budget cuts and the failure of uni versal health-care initiative Measure 23 in November. State Sen. Bill Morrisette, D-Springfield, who is chairman of the senate’s Health Policy Committee, was the event’s featured speaker. Morrisette lamented what he said was the desperate situation of the state budget, and the subsequent effects on all government programs, especially state health programs. “Oregon Health Plan is dead,” Morrisette said in a somber note. Budget cuts for assistance programs such as the Oregon Turn to Health, page 4 ASUO election Two candidates drop from ASUO elections After the first full day of the 2003 ASUO election sea son, another position will go unfilled and one senate race will be slightly less competitive. Mindi Rice announced Wednesday morning that she has withdrawn her candidacy for a two-year term on the Stu dent Recreation Center Advisory Board, and Steven Lockfield an- INSIDE A full list of ASUO election candidates race for Pro gramsFinana Jonah Lee and Courtney Warn er are still running unopposed for PAGE 3 the other two seats on the rec cen ter board, and Seat 1 still has a crowded field of sev en contenders. Wednesday evening’s mandatory candidate meetings, covering elections rules and procedures, were heavily at tended. Candidates who didn’t show up could be dropped from the race, but the ASUO Elections Board on Wednes day night could confirm no other immediate changes. The ASUO primary election runs April 9-11, and the gen eral election — if it is needed—runs April 21-23. A debate for ASUO Executive candidates is tentatively scheduled for April 7, and a full candidate’s fair is scheduled for April 9. —Michael J. Kleckner Weather Today: High 55, Low 48, wind with heavy rain, Friday: High 55, Low 47, light rain and wind Looking ahead Friday EPD searches for a 25-year-oid , man in connection with the beating of a University student Monday The Emerald suggests you whizzle your shnizzle as we presents the last winter issue Faith inspires football players, others Student-athletes from many different sports call on religious values to provide strength on and off the field Faith on the field Peter Hockaday Sports Editor Jason Fife’s teammates stopped asking long before the sea son was over. They just knew he didn’t want to hit the bars. Or hit a party. Or hit a bong. “There’s always the peer-pressure thing, where the guys may want me to come out and celebrate after a game,” Fife said. “But for the most part they understand that I don’t want to go drinkin’, I don’t want to go smokin’, I don’t want to do any of that stuff.” Fife is a devout Mormon and, like any Mormon college student, wrestles with issues that pit fun against faith. It just happens that Fife started every game at quarterback for the Oregon football Turn to Faith, page 10 Jason Fife (12) is one of many faithful athletes on the religiousiy diverse Oregon football team. Adam Amato Emerald