Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 07, 2003, Page 9, Image 9

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    Candidates continued from page 5
CabrielleCuidero
Jonah Lee
Seat 17, Business
Erik Fordyce
Scott Koketsu
Bethany Larson
Seat 18, Graduate/Law
Andre Ahuna
James Jensen
Associated Students Presi
dential Advisory Council
Two-year seat
Richie Carpenter
Alexander J. Gonzalez
Nick Hudson
Sarah A. Koski
Tucker Staley
David Russell Willey
Two-year seat *
Jonathan R. Kloor
Student Recreation Center
Advisory Board
Three two-year seats
Courtney Warner
ASUO Programs Finance
Committee, At-Large
One-year seat
Joseph Snyder
Two-year seat *
Cory Phillips
Toby Piering
EMU Board, At-Large
Two two-year seats
Ethan Firpo
Two-year seat *
Omid Kianersi
Slade Leeson
Joshua Rapp
Building Fee Committee
Two two-year seats
no candidates
* Denotes two-year term that is being
filled halfway through the term; the po
sition will last only one year.
PFC
continued from page 1
fully comment on PFC duties with
out Section 4 in front of him.
Q: How will you interact with stu
dent groups?
Piering: I’m already attending the
meetings of some of the various pro
grams to get a feeling for all of the in
dividual programs. I think as a PFC
member, it’s important to know who
you’re representing, and so I have
planned to attend a majority of stu
dent program meetings so I can rep
resent them on the PFC better. I
also plan to
make myself
available to any
student feed
back, and be
open to all the
programs to
hear the input.
Q: What is
the most im
portant thing
you should
know in order
to deal with the
budgeting process?
Piering: I think the most impor
tant thing is knowing how much
money you have, and how it can be
allocated, and knowing where the
student groups are going and what
they’re planning to do with the
money you give them. You want to
be able to know exactly where your
money’s going and make sure it’s go
ing to the right places because this
is a finite amount of money and it’s
very hard to distribute it when
everyone wants a piece of the pie.
Overall you have to look at each
Piering
program as an individual case and
judge how much should be appro
priate.
Gory Phillips, a freshman busi
ness major, is a member of Theta
Chi fraternity and is the publicity
and information chair for the Inter
fraternity Council. Phillips did not
know to whom PFG submits its
budgeting benchmark to and did
not know PFG had its own bylaws.
Q: How will you interact with stu
dent groups?
Phillips: Personally, I’d just like to
be a part of more student groups on
campus, just, like, get involved.
That’s something I’d like to get in
volved in, and like I said, I’d like to
see the programs succeed. I looked
at a bunch of campuses and there
are 120 programs on campus and I
think that’s really cool. I mean, I’d
want to know what they’re up to,
what they are, what they do on
campus because honestly, I don’t
know what 120 programs do on
campus, so I’d want to know what
they’re about, what they’re into,
what the University can do to sup
port them. I think that’s key to help
them succeed.
Q: What’s the most important
thing you should know in order to
deal with the budget process?
Phillips: Like I said, probably
what every program, what every or
ganization is about. I think that’s
key to understanding, understand
ing their goals, understanding what
economic needs they have. Gory
Phillips’ picture was not available at
press time.
Contact the reporter
atalishaughnessy@dailyemerald.com.
Seat 9
continued from page 1
Kevin Day and
Patrick Sulli
van.
Each candi
date was asked
four general
questions per
taining to the
ASUO senate
and two ques
tions specific to
student govern
ment: Who is
responsible for
the payment of
stipends to senators (answer: the
senate president and vice presi
dent), and what’s the most impor
tant part of Senate Rules Section 5,
which lists senators’ duties, and
why?
Anthony R. Gain did not respond
to numerous attempts by the
Emerald to schedule an interview.
Kevin Day, a junior majoring in
computer science, has already
done some work with the senate.
Day did not know who was re
sponsible for the payment of
stipends to
senators. He
did not know
what Section 5
was, but said
senators didn’t
need to memo
rize the rule
book but could
refer to it if
they were un
sure of some
thing.
Q: How will
you figure out
how to spend the surplus?
Day: Currently I am part of sen
ate, so 1‘ve dealt with that. Spend
ing the surplus is one of those
tough things because a lot of groups
want the money for different
events. I feel that the groups who
show the most effort in budgeting
and show that they can actually use
Turn to Seat 9, page 10
Sullivan
Bowl full of Jell-O
I--TT-- vwy
Adam Amato Emerald
Nine-year-old Selah Shepherd tests out an omniscient jell-O fishbowl at the 15th annual Jell-O Art Show Saturday
at the Maude Kerns Art Center.
Historian
continued from page 7
privilege and the right to dissent.
Journalism Professor Steve Pon
der said he is thrilled to have Kutler
visit the graduate seminar class he
teaches. He added that Watergate
has a special symbolic meaning for
journalists and represents one of the
greatest triumphs of American jour
nalism. However, Ponder said every
one, not just journalism students,
should attend Kutler’s public lecture
because the issues he will be ad
dressing touch everyone’s lives.
“Anyone at this point who chal
lenges the policies of the administra
tion faces a great deal of criticism,”
Ponder said. “It is often said that
truth is the first casualty of war.”
Contact the senior news reporter
atjenniferbear@dailyemerald.com.
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