Student Senate debates BSU fashion show funding The Black Student Union was granted its special request funds Wednesday Moriah Balingit Freelance Reporter The ASUO Student Senate approved the ASUO Athletic Department Finance Committee's $1.37 million budget, a controversial special request from the Black Student Union and a slightly less substantial name change for a senator in its meeting Wednesday. The meeting started off on a lighter note, with Sen. Colin Andries motioning to change "Johan" to "Jonah" on the meeting's agenda. Sen. Jonah Ijee's name was unfortunately misspelled in the doc ument. The motion passed with Sen. Joe Jenkins providing the single dissent ing vote for unknown reasons. BSU weathered a rough debate in its special request for $999.99 for the Black Heritage Fashion Show, an event it co sponsors with the historically black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha Inc Because the sorority is not allowed to use its own raised funds for events, representative Natasha Holstine explained, its fashion show is co-sponsored and funded through BSU. BSU was unable to raise the necessary funds this year, however, because many of its traditional sponsors were unable to donate this year. Some senators felt uncomfortable with transferring the requested funds since Alpha Kappa Alpha Inc. is putting on the fashion show and the group is not incidental fee-funded, as groups that receive surplus funds are supposed to be "It's kind of like a loophole" Sen. Re becca Shively said. But Lee saw the situation differently. "But this is BSLI's request... they're (Alpha Kappa Alpha) constituents of the organization," he said. The motion to transfer the funds was passed and the Black Heritage Fashion Show will be held Saturday in the EMU Ballroom from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. and is one of the many events sponsored by BSU during Blade History Month. The next item on the agenda was ap proval of ADFC's budget. The $1.37 million goes toward football and bas ketball tickets for students. The amount is a 7 percent increase from the previ ous year as ADFC is working to reach its contractual agreement of paying the athletics department 30 percent fair market value. Senate Ombudsman Mike Sherman expressed reservations with increasing ADFC's budget in light of what he de scribed as the "real economic dire situation" in Oregon. I Ie said he fears incidental fees will have to be raised, or that students here during the academic year won't benefit from a recent raise in summer students' incidental fees. Other senators believed it was im portant to keep the contract with the athletics department. "Maybe the ADFC isn't the place to start looking at the way we allocate fees, * Sen. Aryn Clark said. The budget passed, 10-5, with ASUO President Ben Strawn casting one of the dissenting votes. Moriah Balingit is a freelance reporter for the Emerald. Kenneth Roth pinpoints U.S.’s human rights violations i ne advocate linked violations with the War on Terrorism Beau Eastes Freelance Reporter Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, the largest human rights and the effects ofits actions. He argued that the present administration's rationale that some human rights must be sacrificed in the name of security is counter-pro ductive to fighting terrorism. "The U S. views international law like Gulliver and the Ulliputians," Roth said. "International law is nothing but a restraint of U.S. power to the current administration." Roth, whose interest in human rights was influenced by his father having fled Nazi Germany in 1938, proceeded to outline six major areas where the Bush administration had "thrown human rights out the window." Roth noted that soldiers of an enemy army, such as the Taliban, are guaran teed Prisoner of War status under the Geneva Convention, which among other things guarantees that POWs have the right to return to their home Turn to VIOLATIONS, page 4 PARKING continued from page 1 "This is a good time to maybe change things over," Stamm said. However, he said that removable permits would force DPS to restruc ture their permit pricing. "If we were to change from (perma nent parking stickers), probably the price for the individual permit would have to go up because you would no longer have first and second vehicles, you would have a single permit that you would trade between vehicles," Stamm said. "Permits are vehicle-spe cific, so it basically prevents them from being changed around." If DPS decides to update the permit system, the changes could take place as early as fall term. Stamm said DPS or ders permits to be purchased each Au gust in time for the law school to begin. The department is talking to differ ent permit vendors and organizations that use other types of permits to get feedback on the different kinds. "Whatever we use will have to go on the rear of the vehicle," Stamm said. "Our officers... have to be able to go by the cars parked in the lots and be able to check them. We can't afford the staffing it would take to have people walking between the cars checking for permits." Currently, parking permits must be placed on the left of the bumper with the permit's adhesive, not tape. Ac cording to the DPS Web site, failure to obtain or correctly display a valid parking permit carries a $20 fine. Stamm said the reason permits are placed on the bumper is vehicles on campus are required to park head first. He added that parking patrol of ficers also have an easier time glanc ing at bumpers for stickers than other places on a vehicle. Also, Stamm said that Oregon mo tor vehicle code has a technicality that states a driver is not supposed to put anything in the windows. "If it were permanently affixed to the exterior of the window with its own ad hesive, as a general rule, the officers will accept that" he said. 'Technically it has to be on the bumper." But Stamm said if patrol officers cannot see the sticker in the window of a vehicle they will give out a ticket. Specifically, Stamm said trucks and cars with tinted windows usually have this problem. Some students are not happy with using permanent adhesive stickers on either their windows or their bumpers. Senior Sherry Telford has not pur chased a parking permit at the Univer sity because she has heard how diffi cult they are to remove, and she thinks the permits cost too much. "I think they're too expensive and it would be difficult to find parking on campus even with a permit," Telford said. "I also worry that I would not be able to get the permit off my car with out ruining the surface." Stamm said that the permits are re movable with patience and the right tools. He personally uses boiling wa ter to remove his permits. Others have told him that vinegar or WD-40 help to remove the sticker. I le added that the permits are de signed to come off in pieces to pre vent theft or permit sharing. Telford said that she might consider purchasing a permit if they were stat ic-cling or had a removable adhesive, but only if the price didn't go up. Contact the crime/heatth/safety reporter at lisacatto@dailyemerald.com. Since 1990, 58 University of Oregon graduates have applied their leadership skills to the growing movement to end educational inequity in our country. Will you join them? 1 FINAL APPLICATION DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 15 apply online at teachforamerica.org TEACHFORAMERICA www.teachforamerica.orq m J human rights organization in the United States, spoke to more than 125 people Wednesday night at the Knight Law Center. In his speech, "Human Rights as a Response to Terrorism," Roth charged the Bush administration with a con sistent disregard for international