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Mentor. rVolunteer with an at-risk youth age 7 to 15 015103 mm mion 199 E. 5th Ave *(541)484-1334 Sushi on the conveyor Variety of sushi, sashimi, and chef specials starting at $1.50 • Lunch special: • Box • Tempura • Teriyaki • Udon • Yakisoba • Kafsu • Variety of sea food salad • To go available • and more Lunch Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 Dinner Mon-Sat 5:00-10:00 Sunday Closed Bush: Analysts say proposals a political game Continued from page 1 “If we had been able to just lower taxes and to cut deeply into basic pro grams that really do help a lot of fami lies, that would be one thing; but what the president is proposing is deep cuts to Medicaid,” Leachman said. Lynn Read, deputy administrator at the office of medical assistance programs for the Oregon Department of Human Services, said while the proposed budget harms Medicaid’s financial state, there are other aspects of the budget that are beneficial. According to the White House Web site, the proposed federal budget would improve health care in the country by creating more than 1,200 community health centers nationwide to “make health care more accessible.” Read said investing more money in federally qualified health centers is a helpful way of “expanding that safety net,” but she added the costs of such an endeavor could be quite high. Part of the budget also includes a change in how states reimburse for prescription drugs, which Read said could prove to be a more accurate and financially fair reimbursement process. The budget would switch Medicaid re imbursement for pharmaceuticals to a system that uses the average sales price rather than the average whole sale price, which the National Confer ence of State Legislatures said inflates reimbursements. The change is ex pected to save $542 million in 2006, according to the NCSL. Read said the budget also includes increased support for a children’s vaccine program, which could prove very beneficial. “It seems like any expansion that would allow children access to vac cines would be positive,” Read said. Carl Hosticka, an emeritus associate professor in the public policy, planning and management department and a Portland City Councilor for District 3, said it is important to remember that the budget is just a proposal and has to pass through Congress before any ad justments can be made. “These budgets are very political and very often the game isn’t about what the person who proposed the budget actually wants to see enacted into law; it’s about what political trade-offs they can force the other side to make,” Hosticka said. Hosticka, who served as a state rep resentative in Lane County from 1983 to 1994, said Bush’s rate increase pro posal for BPA and his plan for Medic aid are unlikely to make it through both Congressional chambers and are primarily political statements about the need for fiscal responsibility. “It’s not a very pretty way of doing things, and that’s part of why the public is so skeptical over how (politicians) do business,” Hosticka said, referring to the process of politi cal bargaining. Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ashland, said it is unlikely the budget will make it through Congress without undergoing significant changes, and the proposal should be seen more as a representation of the Bush admin istration’s ideological priorities than its immediate policy plans. “It does give kind of a horrifying view of what the priorities of the administration are,” Buckley said, adding that the budget proposal is “fiscally irresponsible and morally reprehensible.” Leachman said proposed tax cuts add insult to injury for those who will already be feeling the effects of the reduction in Medicaid funding by giv ing relief to the very wealthy and not the families struggling to get by. Many low-and middle-income families have seen tax decreases un der the Bush administration and Leachman said those were beneficial but become overshadowed by the program cuts being proposed. A decrease in food stamp funding as proposed in the budget would harm the improvements to Oregon’s hunger rate that have come about since the state expanded the qualifi cations for the food stamp program, Leachman said. “We would have to scale back the program, and we think that will hurt Oregon’s anti-hunger act,” Leachman said. Hosticka said the political ideology behind Bush’s budget proposal is such that the consequences of the proposal could be an irrelevant topic of discus sion because of the likelihood it will go through drastic changes. Leachman said the impact political ideologies have on policymaking is apparent with each year’s budget proposal. “It becomes quite clear that it does make a difference who’s president,” Leachman said. meghanncuniff@dailyemerald.com Education: Funding cuts impact research projects Continued from page 1 submitted,” said Andy Clark, senior associate director for federal affairs at the Oregon University System. Clark said the State Board hasn’t taken up any formal consideration of budget items yet, but that it will be paying close attention to what’s hap pening on the federal level. The White House is planning on four more annual increases to Pell Grants to bring the total award per student to $4,550. Increases to Pell Grants will be bene ficial to low-income students, said Eliz abeth Bickford, director of Student Fi nancial Aid. She sees both positive and negative points in the budget. “We’re always in support of the needy students receiving more grant money,” Bickford said. “ (The Perkins Program) has me a little worried; it’s the one I’m keeping my eye on,” she said. A Perkins loan is a mix of federal and institutional dollars. “A certain amount of the federal share that we’ve been receiving over time may go back to the federal gov ernment, which reduces the amount of money that we can lend out to stu dents,” Bickford said. Research activities also depend on federal dollars. “Federal investment in academic research has been critical from World War II to the present,” said Richard Linton, vice president for re search and graduate studies. “About 85 percent of our (research) grants are federal in origin.” Linton added that the budget, which the White House described as a “pause” in research funding increases, had a 2 percent overall gain in items re lated to research. The National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and the federal Department of Education have the most impact on re search money. “Considering the federal deficit, I’m worried that it’s more of a halt than a pause,” Linton said. “Research is key to U.S. competitiveness in the global economy. All of this is a major ongoing concern.” Research dollars could also impact graduate studies. “Many of those grants include re search assistantships and teaching fellowships. If those budgets are flat or decline, we’re going to have more trouble supporting our graduate stu dents,” Linton said. The U.S. Student Association, a national lobbyist group comprised of students, will help represent the in terests of University students. Ashley Rees, ASUO federal affairs coordinator and representative to USSA, said that overall, she isn’t happy with the budget. “The budget doesn’t prioritize high er education,” said Rees, who didn’t feel the Pell Grant increase was worth the tradeoff in terminated programs. “One in three of (the program cuts) are education-related,” she added. USSA will be lobbying in Congress over spring break to encourage stu dent-friendly changes to the budget. Rees said she believes senators and representatives are supportive of USSA. “I’m confident that they at least support our goal of increasing ac cess,” she said. Clark said the program cuts will bolster opposition or support for those programs. “This year I believe that Congress will get to the re-authorization of the Higher Education Act,” Clark said. “(The president is) sending a mes sage to the authorizing committees that these are programs that he does n’t want to see in the reauthorization. He’s created groups to fight for the things they care about.” adamcherry@ daily emerald, com 1809 Franklin Blvd. 284-8484 BASIC MATH. "Pav-ty Patk" 3 large single topping pizzas + 2 2-liters of soda For under $2“ a person, you can feed 8 people the best pizza in town! Do the math. Use the coupon. NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER