Come enjoy over 120 beers from around the world! Saturday May 31, 2003 —- Two Sessions - 1-5pm • 6-10pm Tickets: $20 advance/$25 door At the Lane County Fairgrounds Eugene, OR For tickets & more info Call: 888-945-BEER or beeisummit.com University of Oregon Athletic Department OREGOn Marketing and Promotions Internships Available Apply now for a volunteer undergraduate internship for the 2003-04 academic year and gain valuable experience in: * Sports Marketing * Event Management * Advertising & Promotions * Athletic Administration * Special Event Coordination * Sports Sponsorship Applications and job descriptions available now at the following locations: Career Resource Center - 220 Hendricks Business School Career Center - 271 Gilbert Warsaw Sports Marketing Center - 212 Gilbert Duniway Resource Center -134 Allen Len Casanova Athletic Center Application Deadline: Friday, April 25 For more information, call 346-4484. Elections continued from page 1 ASUO Elections Coordinator An drea Hall said she was excited with this year’s total voter turnout and the increase of four percentage points from last year. “The Elections Board is absolutely astonished with the voter turnout for the general election,” she said. “I think it was a lot more intense than last year. Maybe not in campaigning, per se, but as far as the closeness of all races.” And the closeness seemed to amp up the level anxiety, as many candi dates waited in the rain outside the ASUO office for the results, some cheering as they were released. “Yes, I’m excited,” said Jesse Harding, who won an ASUO Student Seat on the Athletic Department Fi nance Committee. “I’m ready to tear shit up. I’m going to be the guy that speaks up on senate.” Others said they were eager to get started representing students who elected them. “I feel really good, and I think it's definitely an honor that my fellow students chose me to represent them,” said Mena Ravassipour, who won Senate Seat 2, a Programs Fi nance Committee seat. For the other PFC positions, Adri an Gilmore won Senate Seat 1, Colin Andries won Senate Seat 3 and Toby Piering won his unopposed PFC At Large position. For the EMU Board, Slade Leeson won the At-Large position and Ro drigo Moreno won Senate Seat 4. For the ADFC, Laura Schulthies won Senate Seat 7 and Harding won Senate Seat 8. For ASUO Student Senate, Alicia Lindquist won Seat 13, Arts &Let ters/Joumalism; Kevin Curtin won Seat 15, Social Sciences; and Jonah Lee won Seat 16, Science. For other positions, Sarah Koski won a seat on the Associated Stu dents Presidential Advisory Council, Noah Glusman ran unopposed for the Student Recreation and Fitness Advisory Board and Cory Phillips ran unopposed for the Building Fee Committee. Ballot Measures 15 and 20 both passed. Contact the news editor at janmontry@dailyemerald;com. InterSEXtions continued from page 1 and Support Services Chicora Martin, the conference theme is “The Polities of a Multicultural Movement,” and it’s an opportunity to bring together aca demics to discuss LGBT issues. Martin said Carmen Vasquez, an activist and public policy director for the New York Lesbian, Gay, Bi-Sexual, Transgender Community Center, will be the featured speaker. Vasquez, who spoke at the conference 10 years ago, will lecture on LGBT perspectives on democracy on Friday at 7 p.m. in Willamette 110. Martin said she hopes to bring to gether a diverse audience for this year’s conference. “We get a lot of peers and col leagues,” said Martin. She said that the conference is more productive if perspectives from outside the LGBT community are included. Persson agreed. “I think it is a very positive move to focus on multi-identity oppres sions because then maybe people can start thinking about the world in a broader sense instead of just focus ing on just one system of oppression at a time,” she said. Still, Persson said the dearth of LGBT ethnic minorities frustrates her. She said it is difficult to have a stake in two communities that often don’t see eye to eye. “Entering and working with com munities of color was really intimi dating at first, partly because I’m butch, but also because there are in credibly few people of color that are ‘out’ to me,” she said. “My identity often feels divided because now I have friends on campus that are queer and friends on campus who are people of color, and they are very different crowds that understand dif ferent parts of my experience." Other students offered different reasons for attending the confer ence. Senior Michael Eaves, who is majoring in Women and Gender Studies, said he is interested in the “Fellow Families: Gay Male Intimacy and Kinship in a Global Metropolis” session, which will be held at 2 p.m. on Friday in the Knight Library Browsing Room “American masculinity in gener al and queer men’s culture in specific is something I’m pursuing academi cally,” Eaves said. For more information on confer ence locations and sessions, please go to the office of LGBT services Web site http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~pro gram/. John B. Dudrey is a freelance writer for the Emerald. Briefs continued from page 3 New York, two groups that had op posed to the U.S.-led invasion, along with colleagues in Britain, say that their investigation of possible coali tion war crimes will ensure that both sides in the war are held accountable. “We don’t want a victor’s justice,” said Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights. Referring to U.S. plans to bring Iraqi leaders to justice, Ratner said, “If there’s going to be an inves tigation of Iraq, there should also be an investigation of the coalition.” — Tosin Sulaiman, Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) rrOO MANY BOOKS* We buy texts and other good books all year long cn you need to take • GMAT • TOEFL* PPST/P The University of Oregon Testing Office is an official ETS computer-based testing site. Testing is available year-round, Monday-Friday, 2 sessions a day. Appointments can be scheduled by calling 541.346.2772 or by visiting the Testing Office. The Testing Office is located on the 2nd floor (Rm. 238) of the University Health and Counseling Center, 1590 E. 13th Ave., Eugene OR. The period of greatest demand is usually Sept, through March, so it makes sense to plan ahead. For more information visit the Testing Office web site at http://www.uoregon.edu/~te8ting/ Do GRE Oregon Daily Emerald end-of-the-year bakesale Monday, April 28 - all day, in front of the UO Bookstore All the homemade delicacies that can fit in one bake sale, held by your friendly Emerald staff members. We will be selling cookies, brownies, lemon bars, muffins, donuts, cup cakes and much more. /^T^Aff:pfoceeds will go toward Emerald expenses. Yes, it has come to this! (Come on ■qr.net some goodies and chat with net staff, i