Today Tuesday Wednesday High: 66 High: 65 High: 61 Low: 45 Low: 44 Low: 44 Precip: 20% Precip: 10% Precip: 30% IN BRIEF Oregon Guard, Reservists to receive free tuition Oregon National Guard and Reserve members who have served in areas of active hostility since Sept. 11,2001, will receive free tuition at Oregon Universi ty System colleges starting fall term 2005, OUS reported Friday. The State Board of Higher Education approved the Voyager TUition Program at its March 4 meeting. The program will waive remaining institutional fees not covered by federal tuition assis tance for eligible Oregon Guard and Reservists. All seven of the state’s pub lic universities will offer the remission. According to a press release, OUS is working to exempt the program from legislative fee remission caps. Students must be Oregon residents, admitted to the campus they wish to attend and working on their first de gree in order to be eligible for the pro gram, according to an OUS fact sheet. Students must exhibit satisfactory aca demic progress to continue receiving assistance. The University is expected to receive less than 100 Voyager-eligible students. OUS calculated that more than 600 would use the program statewide for an estimated total payout of $316,900. — Adam Cherry Campus construction project closes sidewalk For the duration of the Living Learning Center construction project, the fencing along the north side of East 15th Avenue will be moved onto the street. Students can use the temporary crosswalk at the east end or the raised crosswalk at the west end in place of the walkway on the street next to the site. The sidewalk will be closed to provide moving space for heavy equipment. The Department of Public Safety also asks students to avoid creating a traffic hazard alongside the construc tion site. Those with questions or comments may contact DPS at 346-5444 or the project manager, George Bleekman, at 346-2625. — Emily Smith Hazelnut industry reacts against deadly fungus SPRINGFIELD — Authorities have discovered a deadly fungus on the branches of the nation’s oldest com mercial hazelnut orchard. The Eastern filbert blight has, in the past, decimated Oregon’s hazelnut in dustry and led to a quarantine of af fected orchards as recently as last year. As part of an aggressive campaign to stamp out the blight, officials will spray the 80-acre Dorris Ranch as early as next week. The Dorris Ranch is the oldest commercial hazelnut orchard in the nation. Located just south of Springfield, the trees at the Dorris Ranch orchard date to 1903, and more than half of all commercial filbert trees in the United States originate from the ranch’s nursery stock. Officials have been scouring trees all over the region for signs of Eastern fil bert blight, which infiltrated Lane County orchards about a decade ago. At Dorris Ranch last August, or chard manager Garry Rodakowski found little black pustules on a single branch of a single tree — evidence that the blight had landed. Rodakowski cut and removed the branch and flagged the tree for close observation. — The Associated Press Programs Finance Committee Three student positions take big cuts Pay for the president, vice president and radio station general manager may be 75 percent less next year BY PARKER HOWELL SENIOR NEWS REPORTER Despite last-minute concerns that new pay rates approved for student-group leaders would unfairly cut pay for the ASUO president, vice president and the general manager of campus radio station KWVA, the Programs Finance Committee finalized its al location of student money Friday. The new pay rates reduce funding for each of the three positions by three-fourths or more. Pay for the president and vice president posi tions will drop from $8,400 per year to $2,100 per year, while the general manager’s pay will be cut from $6,600 to $1,500 per year. The PFC approved a 6.91 percent increase for a total budget of about $5.23 million next year. Although it falls within the maximum 7 percent increase allowed by the Green Tape Notebook, the budget exceeds the 5.62 percent benchmark approved by the ASUO Student Senate earlier this year. Senators will hear the budget during its Wednesday meeting. The PFC targeted the stipend model for cuts, approving an 8.9 per cent overall increase earlier in the process as a way of remedying ex cess budgetary spending. Stipends came under scrutiny this summer when University President Dave Frohnmayer expressed concerns that some groups received more money for stipends than programming. By decreasing the number of paid positions some groups can have, reducing pay for all positions by $25 and changing payroll stipends into scholarships, the PFC was able to save enough money to use its budg et recommendations for all groups. The committee previously consid ered using the ASUO Executive’s recommendations, which only account for groups’ spending and fundraising habits. Yet ASUO President Adam Petkun told the Emerald he is concerned that reducing the president’s stipend from $700 per month to $175 per month next year will deter some students from running for the office. He said students vying for the posi tion need to be able to work about 40 to 60 hours per week with “very little pay.” “What I’m worried about... is that it affects who has the ability to run for ASUO president in the first place,” he said, adding that the reduction might make the ASUO a “place where only the privileged can work. ” KWVA General Manager Charlotte Nisser expressed similar concerns to the PFC on Friday, noting the gener al manager’s pay will decrease from $550 per month to $125 per month. She said students who work as the general manager are working the equivalent of a full-time job because they are on-call 24/7 in case some thing goes wrong at the station. Petkun said the president’s duties also prohibit a student from working other jobs to supplement his or her income. “I think that if someone’s dedicat ed to the job, it’s very hard to have any work outside the ASUO at the same time,” he said. He said the vice president would be similarly affected. Despite his concerns, Petkun said it was necessary for the PFC to ex amine stipends. “While I definitely see this as a PFC, page 12 BUS SERVICE MAY CEASE ON MARCH 7th, 2005. LTD Wants to Make Sure You Still Have a Way to Go. As early as March 7th, the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU), Local 757, may go on strike. Lane Transit District (LTD) will not be able to operate bus service during the strike. Once a settlement has been reached, LTD will be committed to getting buses back on the road as quickly as possible. LTD’s Guest Services office will be closed but if you call 687-5555 we will have staff to assist you. What you can do: ► Register at ltd.org for carpool-matching. It’s easy and fast. Sign up to drive as well as ride. ► RideSource will continue to run and serve those passengers who are eligible. We expect demand to increase significantly. Medical appointments may be given priority over other trips. ► Go to the LTD website for information on ways to get around including links to the City of Eugene for Bike Path Maps. Please plan ahead. For further information, log onto www.ltd.org or call LTD at 687-5555. cP Lane Transit District