Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 03, 2003, Page 4, Image 4

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Senate brief
Short senate meeting
allocates funds for
International Night
The first spring term meeting of
the ASUO Student Senate proceed
ed with speed and efficiency
Wednesday night, lasting only 30
minutes, possibly making it the
shortest meeting of the year.
The senate passed its own special
request to transfer $50 from the sen
ators’ payroll line item into the tele
phone line item. The senate needed
this extra funding because it had
failed to incorporate the charge for
using a voice messaging service into
its budget last year, since the senate
shares a phone line with the ASUO
Programs Finance Committee.
A representative from the
Women’s Law Forum appeared be
fore the senate to request that $600
be transferred from the group’s food
holding account to its food account.
The group wanted to use this money
at a reception being held today about
practical advice and information for
women with law degrees. Senators
quickly came to a consensus and vot
ed to transfer the funds.
The senate also transferred $155
into the International Student Asso
ciation’s food account from the
group’s food holding account. Repre
sentatives from ISA said this money
would be used throughout the term
to hold ISA Coffee Hour every Friday.
Senators voted to dip into the sur
plus and gave ISA $4,000 for the
group’s International Night. ISA rep
resentatives said the money was
needed for kitchen and ballroom
rental. Several senat ui s spoke in fa
vor of giving the group the full $4,000
it was asking for, based on the
fundraising the group had done, the
projected ticket sales for the event
and the enjoyment University stu
dents get from International Night.
With the $4,000 allocated to ISA,
the senate now has $19,961 left in
its surplus for the rest of the term.
—Jennifer Bear
Rescue
continued from page 1
read one in front of the Mineral
Wells Baptist Church. At the South
ern Baptist Fellowship in Elizabeth,
another sign said, “God’s still in the
miracle business
Tuesday night, as the news
spread, people walked and drove
into the small town of Elizabeth
Soon, motorists were honking their
horns. Fire and police vehicles
cruised the streets and blasted their
sirens. Church bells rang and rang.
“She is one lucky girl,” said Gary
Roberts, 48, of Elizabeth.
G.W. Cox, a 20-year-old family
friend, said it is hard to describe
the scene.
“Nothing else in the world could
be like it was in town last night,”
Cox said. “I cried like a little girl.”
At one point during the celebra
tion, someone blasted Bruce
Springsteen’s “Born in the USA”
on a speaker. “This community
believed that she was going to re
turn,” said Wirt High School Prin
cipal Ken Heiney. And the news,
he added, was “what this country
needed to hear.”
Outside the Lynch home, about
two miles into a hollow and off a
one-lane road, dozens of reporters
and television crews from around
the world camped out.
In interviews Wednesday, Jessi
ca’s father, Gregory Lynch Sr,
said that when he first received
the call about her rescue, he
thought it was an April Fools’
joke. But soon, he understood.
“You have to keep hope and
prayer going,” he said.
About noon Wednesday, Heiney,
the principal, told a group of stu
dents that Lynch’s road to becom
ing a teacher had been made a little
smoother still.
He announced that Marshall Uni
versity in Huntington had contact
ed the school district and offered
Lynch a full undergraduate and
graduate scholarship.
“She will be a wonderful
teacher,” Davies said.
© 2003, Knight Ridder/Tribune
Information Services. Knight Ridder
Newspaper correspondents Carl
Chancellor in Akron, Ohio, and Richard
Glickstein in Germany contributed
to this report
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