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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (June 22, 2004)
An independent newspaper www.dailyemerald.com Tuesday, June 22, 2004 Since 1900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 106, Issue 1 Collision kills University student Michael Joyce died June 12 after his bike collided with a car driven by another student JARED PABEN EDITOR IN CHIEF A University student riding his bicy cle in the wrong direction on East 13th Avenue died early on the morning of Saturday, June 12 after a vehicle struck him head-on, Eugene police and a wit ness reported. Pre-journalism major Michael Joyce, 23, died at Sacred Heart Medical Center after he collided with a 1994 Cadillac driven by University student David Soulier at about 12:30 a.m. Eugene Police Department officers discovered that 23-year-old Soulier, a senior studying philosophy, had a blood alcohol content of .08 percent, according to an EPD press release. Operating a motor vehicle with a BAG of .08 percent or above is illegal in Oregon. EPD did not cite Soulier at the scene and has not charged him with a crime, but might do so after an investigation by the Major Collision Team and a review by the Lime County District Attorney's Office, EPD spokeswoman Pam Olshanski said. Messages left by the Emerald at Soulier's listed Albany phone number and an e-mail to Soulier were not returned. University student Christian Kempton, who said he witnessed the accident and gave a report to police, Please see ACCIDENT, page 4 Joyce's family and friends honored his life at a ceremony last week in Portland JARED PABEN EDITOR IN CHIEF Sexy love child. Electric. 1 lope. Open. Traveler. Beauty. Grow. I love you, Michael. These were just some of the things friends of University student Michael Joyce scrawled on the \ ' - ' ,/v/ j driveway of his father Michael Joyce and stepmother s Please see MEMORIAL, page 4 ASUO President Adam Petkun works in the ASUO office. Two Constitution Court and one PFC positions must be filled by June 25. Erik R. Bishoff Photo Editor Duties at hand The ASUO Executive is planning for the fall and filling vacant positions MEGHANN CUNIFF FREELANCE REPORTER hile most students are enjoying their first taste of summer free ▼ Y dom, members of the ASUO Ex ecutive staff worked to recruit staff members and organize for the upcoming school year. First on the Executive's agenda is filling one Programs Finance Committee seat and two ASUO Constitution Court posi tions, ASUO President Adam Petkun said. The ASUO Constitution mandates that open positions be filled within 30 days, leaving the Executive working with a June 25 deadline to do so. The finance committee position has nu merous qualified applicants, but with only law students eligible for the open Constitutional Court seats, the Executive has had difficulty finding applicants, Petkun said. "It's a struggle to get law students to apply because they're not around right now," Petkun said. The administration is under increased public pressure to fill the Constitutional Court spots by the specified deadlines af ter 2003-04 ASUO President Maddy Melton left two seats vacant for months beyond the 30-day deadline, Petkun said. At least one strong applicant for the court seats has replied to the Executive's advertisements, and the administration is confident that the positions will be filled in a timely fashion, Petkun said. The Executive is also looking for candi dates to fill open seats on both the Athletic Department Finance Committee and the EMLI Board. After the open positions have been filled, the Executive will shift its focus to working with the Student Vote Coalition to coordinate an on-campus voter-registration drive in the beginning weeks of the school year, ASUO State Affairs Coordinator Amy Du Four said. With a goal of registering at least 7,500 new voters in less than three weeks, the drive is set to be the largest in the country. "It's kind of the foundation of every thing," ASUO Vice President Mena Ravassipour said. Once the registration drive has been has been organized, "we'll start weaving new beginnings ... We're in the process of figuring out what all that entails," she said. Working hard this summer to organize the drive is essential to the administra tion's success, Petkun said. A successful registration drive will "set a great founda tion for the rest of the school year" and help the staff develop awareness about ASUO activities, Petkun said. The staff will recruit volunteers for the drive at IntroDUCKtion and various campus and community events. The drive is "an ef fort to build community and educate stu dents about the importance of voting and upcoming electoral issues that affect us as Please see ASUO, page 8 UO architect died June 9 from cardiac arrest 'Campus builder' Garry Fritz led hundreds of renovation and development projects OMIE DRAWHORN NEWS REPORTER As an architect and head of capital projects and repairs for Uni versity Facilities Services, Garry Fritz dedicated himself to mak ing the campus a better place. With his openness and respect for others, his calm, laid-back style, and his professionalism and dedication, Fritz's very nature made him a problem solver. "He was the campus builder," said George Hecht, Director of Gampus Operations for Facilities Services. "I le built bridges to people, built buildings and built solutions to problems." Fritz, 54, a long-time prominent University architect, who was responsiDie tor the planning and design of buildings across campus, died June 9 of cardiac arrest at the Down town Athletic Club. Iritz, a graduate from the University's School of Architecture and Allied Arts, was responsible for the planning and design of Deschutes and Willamette halls, the Knight Library addition, the Law Library, the Lillis Business Complex and the expansion of Autzen stadium. oince ivoy, ne nas contributed to the development and renovation of 25 percent of the campus's total Garry Fritz square footage. At the time of his death, Fritz was in charge of 140 projects and oversaw five project managers. "I le had a vision of how to accomplish constaiction and a view of quality that kept us on track and solving problems, making the campus a better place," I lecht said. "I knew any thing he was working on was going to go well." During turbulent periods of growth, Fritz's co-workers de pended on him to hold everything together. "He was our anchor," said Janet Lobue, a constaiction proj ect manager for Facilities Services. "Even our maintenance people have come up to me and said, 'What are we going to do without Garry?"' Fritz's friends and colleagues said Fritz was a great listener. Lobue said Fritz had an uncanny ability to help people find solutions to problems. "(Fritz's colleague) Charlene Lindsay used to say you coukl go into Garry's office with a problem, talk to him for 15 min utes, work your way around to the solution, and leave and re alize he probably hadn't said more than 12 words to you," Lobue said. Don Peting, one of Fritz's former architecture school in structors and, more recently, one of his colleagues, described Fritz as an incredible, loving person. When his first wife, An gela Fritz, became ill and confined to a wheelchair, he nursed Please see FRITZ, page 3 NEWS BRIEF EPD: 'Kidnapping' at McKenna Estates labeled a hoax The Eugene Police Depart ment has concluded that Thursday morning's possible kidnapping at McKenna Es tates was actually a prank. A security guard at Chase Village Apartments called police immediately after the incident, telling them that he saw a man force a screaming woman into the car trunk shortly after mid night Thursday. A witness police inter viewed said the woman was not forced out of the rear pas senger-side seat and into the trunk, but that she voluntari ly crawled into the trunk and started screaming in an at tempt to fool a security guard, according to an EPD press release. The witness also said the driver — actually a woman — later returned to the com plex, with the woman who was in the trunk trying to hide in the front seat. According to the press release, those involved in the prank could face crimi nal charges and fines if identified. — Jared Paben