Journalism student awarded 'Top Ten' status, $10,000 Parker Howell is one of 10 nationwide recipients of a fellowship from the Scripps Howard foundation BY GABE BRADLEY NEWS EDITOR The top editor at the Emerald is one of the 10 best collegiate journal ists in the country, according to the Scripps Howard Foundation. Journalism major Parker Howell, Emerald editor in chief for the up coming year, was awarded a $10,000 “Top Ten” fellowship by the founda tion, whose mission is to think it demonstrates my level of com mitment and what I want to put into working as a journalist,” Howell said, Howell, who has a 4.09 GPA, came to the University as a freshman in the fall of 2003. “I decided to come to the Universi ty just based on the strength of the program,” he said. He plans to work for a daily metro paper upon graduation. dUVcUILt lilt LdUi>t Ui lilt free press through support of excellence in journalism, quality journalism educa tion and professional de velopment,” according to its Web site. Every year since 1999, the foundation has picked 10 collegiate journalists from nominees across the country to receive “Top Ten” fellowships. PARKER HOWELL SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT L7v.11a jw licii ism major with a focus in news and editorial, Howell is also a multimedia minor. “I just have always been interested in visual design and different electronic art forms,” he said. Howell said his interest in multimedia has also served him in journalism. “I think they have a lot to do with each other,” “We’re looking for excellence in journalism,” Scripps Howard Vice President Sue Porter said. “We meas ure it by their contributions ... their internships, their grades, their letters of recommendation. They’re nomi nated by their school.” The foundation solicited nomina tions from over 140 schools. “It is definitely an honor to be picked for a fellowship just because I Howell said. Just the rules ot design and how to convey ideas — how to express yourself.” This will impact how Howell runs the Emerald this year in that he plans to increase the paper’s Web presence through blogs and “a lot of multime dia options,” he said. Howell first came to the Emerald as a reporter covering city and state poli tics during spring term of his freshman year. During the 2004-05 academic year, Howell served as a reporter cov ering campus and federal politics. “I definitely recall my time work ing as a reporter fondly because I got to meet a lot of interesting peo ple and cover a lot of issues that I think truly have an effect on stu dents,” Howell said. He said one of the most interesting stories he covered was the series he wrote on gun control. It was “fasci nating to research,” he said. “Another one of the stories that stands out to me was the Sunriver story,” Howell said, referring to a se ries of stories that he and Emerald senior news reporter Meghann Cuniff wrote about members of the ASUO who illegally drank and smoked mar ijuana on a student-fee funded retreat in Sunriver, Ore. “That story was particularly diffi cult because no one wanted to talk,” he said. Howell’s interest in journalism started at Glencoe High School in Hillsboro. He found a great outlet for his interests in art and writing when he started working for his high school paper, the Crimson Times. Howell eventually became editor in chief of the Times his senior year, and runner-up for the Oregon High School Journalist of the Year. “I really enjoyed it and worked my way up from there,” Howell said. gabebradley@dailyemerald. com Harris: Labs should best serve primary users Continued from page 1 the types of technology purchased, monitor size and the physical layout of a computer lab. To pay for the transition to more group-use-friendly computer labs, Har ris said the information services de partment will need to evaluate spend ing priorities. “I think part of the challenge here is not to come up with new money.” Rather, Harris said, the challenge will be to reorder priorities when it comes to allocating existing funds in the nor mal replacement cycle. The primary consideration in this process is “how to make best use of the technology fee that is charged to students,” he said. Harris has already spoken with vari ous decision-makers on campus re garding his plans for more group-use friendly workstations. “Everyone seems very interested in these ideas,” Harris said. He hopes to continue to drum up support when he reports for work in early August. “I need to obviously make a number of visits when I get to campus,” he said. The information services 1011 Harlow 747-0909g^p4p?| [Student Travel Expefts "*-■-_ Oregon Daily Emerald. A campus tradition—over 100 years of publication. department works very closely with the libraries to provide students ac cess to technology. “That partnership between those two organizations is really critical to being successful and offering better services to students,” Harris said. Harris also wants to make sure com puter labs best serve their primary users. “Part of that is just the idea of seeing what’s appropriate for the different areas.” Harris mentioned a music-oriented computer lab where the machines might need to be hooked up to elec tronic keyboards as opposed to a busi ness computer lab that might be more oriented toward producing presenta tions as an example of how different computer labs can cater to the needs of different departments. Harris said the University’s national reputation in terms of information technology and the institution’s rela tionship with several professional as sociations contributed to his decision to come to the University. “The opportunity to work in some of the groups that the University is already a part of was obviously very attractive,” Harris said. “It’s going to be great to work with people that up until now I’ve only known on a seeing-them-once-a year basis at national conferences.” Also, Harris said he was glad for the opportunity to live in Eugene. “There’s obviously some quality of life issues,” he said. “I’m living in the middle of Atlanta. The traffic and con gestion and the heat and humidity kind of get old after a while.” Harris said he and his wife are glad they don’t have to worry about where their kids are going to go to school. “We spent a little bit of time in the Northwest on vacations,” Harris said. “So it’s an area that I’m familiar with. ” The local recreational and cultural opportunities also appealed to Harris and his family. “ We used to do a lot of cross-coun try skiing, so the opportunity to go up to Mount Bachelor and do some of that just sounds really great. ” Particularly, Harris said he is excited for the Oregon Bach Festival. “My wife has a music background,” Harris said. “That there are so many things related to the arts (in Eugene) is also really attractive to us.” gabebradley@dailyemerald. com Family Treatment Services for the Chemically Dependent 541-343-2993 687 Cheshire Ave. Eugene OR 97402 Strengthening Our Community One Family at a Time Men and Women • Teen Start (Girls 12—18 years) • Child Development Center • Alcohol and Drug Treatment 021753 Call for an Assessment m EPEE POOL TILL 10PM(moosemenow Tuesday $2.25 Sushi Polls Wednesday 1/2 price nachos DINNED HOLDS SUN ®MCW 6-9 da/rarSATSraDwosr 99 WEST BDOADWAY • 683-3154 $7.00 CAC BOMBS $2.25 PABST $5.75 DOUBLE WELLS «R 50 LONG ISLANDS R a -4§~ 1 WQ s Weekday rates starting at: $45" MOTiEL Weekend rates vary Motel 6 3690 Glenwood Dr. Eugene, OR 97403 (541)687-2395 800-4-MOTEL6 Only 1 Mile from U of O Take 1-5 South to exit 191. 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