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INCREASED INTEREST IN CAREER CENTER FAIR UO GRAD PAINTS MURAL ON UO BUILDING PIRZAD: CULTURAL EVENTS ENCOURAGE INCLUSIVITY MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2016 DAILYEMERALD.COM $16,000,000 $16,000,000 THE INCIDENTAL FEE PAID BY ALL UO STUDENTS HAS GONE UP BY $10. The infographic inside shows how ASUO has determined the $16 million fund should be distributed. MONDAY HOW ASUO IS SPENDING YOUR

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Page 1: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

I N C R E AS E D I N T E R E ST I N C A R E E R C E N T E R FA I R U O G R A D PA I N T S M U R A L O N U O B U I L D I N G P I R Z A D : C U LT U R A L E VE N T S E N CO U R AG E I N C LU S I V I T Y

M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 D A I LY E M E R A L D. C O M

$16,000,000$16,000,000

THE INCIDENTAL FEE PAID BY ALL UO STUDENTS HAS GONE UP BY $10. The infographic inside shows how ASUO has determined the $16 million fund should be distributed.

⚙ MONDAY

HOW ASUOIS SPENDING

YOUR

Page 2: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

PA G E 2 E M E R A L D M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6

University Health Center

To sign up for the class or to learn more, call 541-346-2770 or stop by the information desk

at University Health Center

BOOK [email protected] make events better.

facebook.com/ emeraldphotobooth

@Emeraldphotobooth

@emeraldphotobooth

We bring the camera, lights, props and staff.You bring your fabulous self.

🔦 NEWS

The University of Oregon Career Center’s Feb. 11 career fair had higher student attendance than usual. The center and attending employers said this points to its increasing success and impact on students’ lives.

Makaya Moore graduated from UO in 2015. Moore worked for the Career Center while she was a student, after attaining an internship through one of their career fairs.

“Sophomore year, I went to the career fair unaware of what I was looking for, but I brought my resume just in case,” Moore said. “I saw StoveTeam International’s table and was interested in their organization. They said they were looking for an intern and it was okay that I didn’t have experience.”

That’s something employers at the career center want to stress: experience is not required in attaining an internship. Employers don’t always expect students to have job experience.

E. & J. Gallo Winery attended the career fair this year, meeting six students they invited back for a second round of interviews.

“We go in with the understanding that students may not have an extensive amount of work experience because they’ve been dedicating their time to getting involved on campus,” Laurence Kuhlmann,

an item sales manager for E. & J. Gallo Winery, said. “We want people that have made an impact during their time on campus.”

Kulhman has been coming to the career fairs with E. & J. Gallo Winery for six years now.

“I’m always so impressed by the level of maturity these students possess,” Kuhlman said. He said he has noticed quite an improvement throughout the years he attended as a recruiter –students come more prepared and professional every year, constantly raising the bar.

Student attendance has increased as well. This last fair brought in about 1,000 students. The average number is closer to 700-800 students per fair, said Colleen Lewis, employer relations manager and event coordinator for the Career Center. Lewis brings it back to the idea of an internship.

“Academics are so important, and you never want to let those go,” she said. “But these days, a student really needs to spend these four years, through experiential learning, building up that resume, so that by the time they leave campus they really have a foundation of experience that shows their value to an employer.”

B Y M A C Y H Y L A N D, @ M A C Y TAY YG I R L

CAREER CENTER A N N U A L FA I R

SEES INCREASED POPULARITY

The UO Career Center is housed in Hendricks

Hall on campus.

Page 3: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

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The Emerald is published by Emerald Media Group, Inc., the independent nonprofit media company at the University of Oregon. Formerly the Oregon

Daily Emerald, the news organization was founded in 1900.

ON THE COVER The cover image was illustrated by Jarred Graham.

NEWSROOME D I T O R I N C H I E F DA H L I A B A Z Z A Z

P R I N T M A N A G I N G E D I T O R C O O P E R G R E E N

D I G I TA L M A N A G I N G E D I T O R J A C K H E F F E R N A N

H I R I N G A N D T R A I N I N G D I R E C T O R K AY L E E T O R N AY

M A N A G I N G P R O D U C E R S C O T T G R E E N S T O N E

A U D I E N C E E N G A G E M E N T D I R E C T O R K I R A H O F F E L M E Y E R

D E S I G N E D I T O R R A Q U E L O R T E G A

D E S I G N E R J A R R E D G R A H A M

C O P Y C H I E F M E L I S S A R H OA D S

O P I N I O N E D I T O R TA N N E R O W E N S

S P O R T S E D I T O R S J U S T I N W I S E H AY D E N K I M K E N N Y J A C O B Y

N E W S E D I T O R S J E N N I F E R F L E C K L A U R E N G A R E T T O

A & C E D I T O R S E M E R S O N M A L O N E C R A I G W R I G H T DA N I E L B R O M F I E L D P H O T O E D I T O R C O L E E L S A S S E R

V I D E O E D I T O R S TA C Y Y U R I S H C H E VA

BUSINESSP U B L I S H E R , P R E S I D E N T & C E O C H A R L I E W E AV E R X 3 1 7

V P O P E R AT I O N S K AT H Y C A R B O N E X 3 0 2

V P O F S A L E S A N D M A R K E T I N G R O B R E I L LY X 3 0 3

A C C O U N T E X E C U T I V E SN I C O L E A D K I S S O NN I C K C ATA N I AB E N G I L B E R T ST Y L E R H O R S TE S T U A R D O P E R E ZTAY L O R B R A D B U R YT E D D Y L A C KS A L LY C A S E B E E RC A I T L I N M O N A H A N

GET IN TOUCHE M E R A L D M E D I A G R O U P1 2 2 2 E . 1 3 T H AV E . , # 3 0 0 E U G E N E , O R 9 7 4 0 35 4 1 . 3 4 6 . 5 5 1 1

V O L . 1 1 7 , I S S U E N O. 5 7

EDITOR: [email protected]

PRINT: [email protected]

WEB: [email protected]

🔦 NEWS

The ASUO Athletics and Contracts Finance Committee unanimously decided to defund the United States Student Association after seeing a lack of on-campus results.

The USSA, a student-led grassroots advocacy group, received $28,540 in the last fiscal year, but ACFC members did not see significant on-campus impact warranting continued funding, ACFC chair Andrew Dunn said. With little visible benefit, ACFC decided to pull the plug.

ACFC member-at-large Allison Wieder said it was an uphill battle for the group to receive any funding. The group needed to implement significant changes to its organization regarding membership participation and leadership to demonstrate how it would benefit the entire university.

Wieder said the most striking thing about USSA was its low membership. When consulting the USSA about its budget request, she told the group it was essential to bring as many students as possible to the meeting to show their support. Only two members showed up.

“It truly showed that USSA did not care about receiving funding and did not take the budget hearing process seriously,” Wieder said.

The USSA has tried in the past to fix its membership problem through reorganizing and restructuring the program to focus on local issues rather than national, but Wieder said the group has made no progress in the last three years and that it has regressed to fewer members.

Amy Schenk, the ASUO federal affairs commissioner that worked with the USSA, said she was disheartened that ACFC decided to defund the group. The USSA provides

opportunities for students to organize campaigns to benefit fellow students such as tuition transparency and sending students to conferences to help develop leadership skills.

“[USSA] provides resources to students and those resources will be diminished. [It] still plans to operate on campus, but it is a big blow to its accessibility for students,” Schenk said.

USSA Board Director Gabrielle Hanley respects the decision the ACFC made, but it was difficult for her to have the group defunded.

“I wouldn’t be the organizer that I am today without the USSA,” Hanley said.

Despite the low membership, Hanley has seen growth in student involvement this year and hopes it will continue to increase as the group focuses on local-level campaigns. She is optimistic that the USSA will be able to regain funding.

“We lost our student base and we couldn’t show that we deserved the funding; however, I truly believe that our student base will grow again,” Hanley said.

Despite being defunded, the group will continue to operate and help organize campaigns, but its capacity to go beyond that will be reduced, Hanley said.

Dunn said the additional funds from defunding USSA and ACFC’s total spending decrease of .06 percent will be reinvested into the Programs Finance Committee, which oversees and funds student groups.

“In a year where we really want to emphasize funding for programs, that money going back to students directly involved on campus is really invaluable,” Dunn said.

U.S. STUDENT ASSOCIATION LOSES ASUO FUNDING➡ M I L E S T R I N I D A D , @ M I L E S _ T R I N I D A D

Page 4: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

PA G E 4 E M E R A L D M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6

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🔦 NEWS

The free transportation service for people with accessibility needs has created a new routing system, and for many who need the University of Oregon Access Shuttle, the route refuses to accommodate them.

Before the change, freshman Abdullah Alshabanah could call the Access Shuttle’s number and driver Vickie Peterson would put his stop on the schedule for the week. Now, Alshabanah is required to wait a maximum of 40 minutes for the Access Shuttle to head his way, making it difficult to get to his classes that have 10 minutes in between them.

“Even if I want to wait for the Shuttle, there aren’t any chairs--we’re tired of waiting,” Alshabanah said.

Since 2008, the Access Shuttle has served those “with permanent or temporary conditions that limit mobility,” according to the service’s website.

“We used to serve about 100-250 people a week before the route system and now we serve at max 30 people a week,” Peterson said. “That’s about one to three people a day.”

Peterson said she used to be able to pick up students, staff and faculty through the scheduling system as far as 22nd Avenue and as far south as Mill Street, but now she cannot make a stop even one block off of campus.

“I was told no scheduling and to stay on this route unless someone screams loud enough,” Peterson said.

Peterson said the new route stays close to UO campus, only detouring to places owned by the university, such as the Baker Center, Spencer’s View Apartments and Autzen Stadium.

“It isn’t an accessible shuttle anymore,” graduate student Janet Stafford said. “[Alshabanah and I] had to change our schedules.”

Peterson said the system is trying to follow a campus-only route similar to the system Oregon State University has in place, as UO gained iPads for the routing system and another vehicle.

“We’re now serving less people than before [when] we didn’t have iPads and served more people with one vehicle,” Peterson said.

Stafford said the new routing system came with an online interactive map that allows people to know when the shuttle will arrive, but Stafford’s visual condition makes reading a screen challenging.

“On a scale of one to 10 of how accessible the new system is, I’d give it a two,” Stafford said.

While there are other options to get to the UO campus, such as Ride/Source and Handi-Cab, both services charge their riders. For Handi-Cab, Peterson said it costs $25 to get to campus if a person lives one block off of campus.

“I like what I do and I love the students and staff,” Peterson said. “I’m not frustrated, I’m angry. I don’t want to lose my job over it, but something needs to be done.”

Peterson said the Access Shuttle mainly receives funding from subsidies from Johnson Hall, which pays for the bus’ gas charges. The Department of Parking and Transportation field operations supervisor provided no comment.

“When Abdullah told [the field operations supervisor] about this inaccessibility, he was told to change his schedule,” Stafford said.

Stafford and Alshabanah said they are both supported through the university in other ways, including having notetakers for their classes.

“There are helpful resources, but I’m not fully supported,” Alshabanah said.

Alshabanah and Stafford said they present on invisible disabilities every term and hope others on campus acknowledge the Access Shuttle’s current inaccessibility.

“We need just a little appreciation for what we do,” Alshabanah said.

B Y O L I V I A D E C K L A R , @ O D E C K L A R

ROUTING SYSTEM DECREASES

ACCESSIBILITY

ACCESS SHUTTLE

Page 5: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 E M E R A L D PA G E 5

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In a highly anticipated Civil War matchup, the No. 16 ranked Oregon men’s basketball team (21-6, 10-4 Pac-12) put its recent two-game skid to bed and got back to playing its up-tempo, transition-flourishing, defense-driven game.

Flipping the script on its conference opener, Oregon cruised to a 91-81 win over Pac-12 rival Oregon State (15-10, 6-8), finishing with an advantage in every major statistical category.

This lopsided result was heavily influenced by the stellar play of freshman Tyler Dorsey who tied his career-high of 25 points (set against Western Oregon) on 9-of-16 shooting in front of a sold-out Matthew Knight Arena crowd. It was his fourth 20-point game of the season as Oregon extended its school-best home winning streak to 23.

Having struggled recently, the team felt like it was important for Dorsey to have this slump-snapping type of performance.

“I think Tyler needed that game,” senior Chris Boucher, who finished with 14 points and three blocks, said. “Today, he was fired up. When he plays like that, it really helps the team.”

This season, sophomore Dillon Brooks has been the alpha dog for highly touted Oregon — leading the team in points (17.2 per game) and minutes (33.1 per game). He finished with 17 points in 29 minutes Saturday night.

But during the game, it wasn’t about him. It was about his freshman co-star who notched a late season breakout performance in an all-important rivalry game. Dorsey

outplayed Oregon State All-American guard Gary Payton II, who finished with just 11 points, in the process.

“Tyler is very confident,” senior Elgin Cook, who finished with 16 points, said. “He played well. I’m glad he had this type of game too, and it helps our team a lot.”

For a game this late in the season, with a lot riding on the line, it’s usually the seniors that rise to the occasion. But Dorsey went against that sentiment on Feb. 20. He exploited the Beavers’ zone with strong finishes at the rim and knockdown threes.

“They were in that zone most of the time and he’s our best shooter, so I thought he made some good plays,” head coach Dana Altman said. “I really liked how he got to the basket.”

It was a timely win for Oregon. With four games remaining – two at home – Oregon was able to keep hopes alive for winning its first Pac-12 regular season title since 2002.

As it stands, it will likely be a two-team race to the finish with Arizona, who’s tied with the Ducks atop the Pac-12.

But if players like Dorsey can hit their stride in the coming month, it will be hard to keep this team from achieving its ultimate goal of making a deep post-season run in March.

“Tyler is a pretty confident young man,” Altman said. “He’s scored a lot of points in his career. You got a scorer like that, they just know it’s a matter of time. I think Tyler felt that way [season].”

B Y H AY D E N K I M , @ H AY DAY K I M

⚡ SPORTS

TIES CAREER-HIGH IN POINTS IN CIVIL WAR

TYLER DORSEY

Tyler Dorsey played a pivotal role for the Ducks in the Feb. 20 Civil War game.

(Adam Eberhardt)t)

Page 6: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

A BREAKDOWN OF THE INCIDENTAL FEE

PA G E 6 E M E R A L D M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6

EVERY TERM, YOU PAY $223.75 to the incidental fee, which funds the University of Oregon’s student

government. It decides how to use that money to fund student groups, child care for students, SafeRide and more.

ASUO Senate approved its $16 million incidental fee budget on Feb. 17. ASUO is raising the fee by $10 per term –

an increase of $339,435 to the incidental fee budget.

Below is a breakdown of most of the items funded by your fee money. This doesn’t represent the entire ASUO

incidental fee budget, which can be found at emrld.co/I-Fee2016.

📖 COVER

$25,871

$2,215,277

$97,501

$178,063

$193,873

$277,183

$326,828

$80,663

This money goes to fraternity and sorority events.

This service supports survivors of sexual violence and their families without requiring survivors to report to the police or university.

This money goes to print costs and sometimes paychecks for editors on all of the smaller student-run publications on campus — from the Student Insurgent to Art Ducko.

LGBTQ ESSP focuses on improving the lives of LGBTQ individuals and fighting homophobia on campus, among other things.

This makes up about 20 percent of the Emerald Media Group budget. It includes the funding for Ethos Magazine, which is now an EMG publication.

This pays for the two student-run carpool services on campus.

This funds the campus radio station.

FRATERNITY &SORORITY LIFE

SEXUAL ASSAULT SUPPORT SERVICES

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS

LGBTQ EDUCATION SUPPORT SERVICES P

EMERALD MEDIA GROUP

SAFERIDE AND THE DESIGNATED DRIVER SHUTTLE

KWVAM I L E S T R I N I D A D , @ M I L E S _ T R I N I D A DT R A N N G U Y E N , @ T R A N N G N G N

➡ R E P O R T I N G B Y :

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M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 E M E R A L D PA G E 7

$722,172

$852,358

$2,215,277

$1,397,277

This pays for student lottery tickets.

ATHLETIC TICKET AGREEMENT

This pays for free public transit for every UO student and the 79x bus from 6 p.m. to midnight.

CONTRACT WITH LANE TRANSIT DISTRICT$1,695,348 $800,633

This includes budgets of the ASUO Office, the four finance committees and Executive.

This pays for everything from badminton to nordic skiing.

CLUB SPORTS

ASUO funds the daily operations and stipend positions of recognized clubs, from the Arab Student Union to Toastmasters.

STUDENT UNIONS, CLUBS, ASSOCIATIONS AND SOCIETIES

ASUO

CHILD CARE

This includes the childcare subsidy for UO students and two childcare centers on campus.

Page 8: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

PA G E 8 E M E R A L D M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6

PLANT SPECIAL

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Page 9: 2/22/16 Emerald Media - Monday Edition

M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 E M E R A L D PA G E 9

UO

👥 PERSONALITIES

After staring at a brick wall on 25th Avenue and Harris Street, University of Oregon alumnus Nikolaj Byrdman drew a celestial sketch using a ballpoint pen.

After showing it to the building directors, he got approval to transform the wall of the Wesley Community Center into a mural, now under construction.

The mural is a colorful and vibrant collage of outer space. Byrdman said the painting represents movement, passion, exploration and awe — which he thinks line up with the values of the Wesley Center.

“Although you will not find any metaphysical inspiration in this ice-cold atheist heart, I strongly believe that religious differences should never be an excuse to avoid participation in movements that shape a more equitable world,” Byrdman said. “I will always gravitate towards wherever good work is being done, and the Wesley Center is a great place for that.”

Doug Moore, a Wesley Center board member, said that Byrdman used to go to the Wesley Center’s previous location at 13th and Kincaid to participate in events being held there.

Warren Light, pastor and director at the Wesley Center, said the move was necessary because the old

location was too small to fit the center’s needs. The center provides free space for student groups, hosts identity and advocacy groups and facilitates free meals among other things. The new center should be big enough to accommodate all of this, according to both Moore and Light.

Light said he’s proud the center can display Byrdman’s art on the new building.

“[His] art is like the best of Eugene: bold, feminist, independent and unique — created by a young artist of color,” Light said. “We have received a lot of positive feedback from many students on the new building and the mural.”

Byrdman was born in Hawaii and moved to Eugene to study psychology. He got an office job after graduation and didn’t anticipate pursuing his interests in the arts; he was surprised when he was confirmed to paint the mural.

“The catalyst was enough people thanking me and telling me my art resonated with them,” Byrdman said.

The building is still undergoing renovations, and although Byrdman doesn’t know when the mural will be finished, he said it will be worth the wait.

UOGRADUATEPAINTS MURALAT NEWWESLEYCENTER

➡ A N N A L I E B E R M A N

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M O N DAY, F E B R U A R Y 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 E M E R A L D PA G E 1 1

herbivore. Carnivore. Locavore.

tacovorepnw.com541.735.351811am-10pm daily530 Blair Blvd. Eugene OR 97401

(541) 503-9906agcampushousing.com

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ACROSS

1 Any old person, so to speak

6 French connections9 Top12 Super-13 Mischievous15 Cooper preceder16 Party spreads17 Like triple plays18 Radio button19 Chat room overseers,

for short20 Low camera

perspective22 Slept with24 Command and control25 Part of 52-Across26 “Surely not me?”27 Yank’s opposite29 Budding31 Band with the 1988 #1

hit “Need You Tonight”33 Eyesore35 Currency that

features architecture, not portraiture

36 “Birthday” or “mother’s maiden name,” e.g.

39 Bandleader who became a 1950s sitcom star

42 General ___ chicken43 Desert royal47 Capital in sight of

Kilimanjaro49 Percussive dance51 Post-surgery place52 Buster of rock53 Mad rush55 Judge of 1980s-’90s

TV57 “Officially …”60 Leader Castro61 Athletic shoe brand62 ___ Field63 What an endangered

animal may get65 Depend66 Goddess in a chariot

drawn by peacocks67 ___ acid68 Field ration, for short69 Fifth on an eight-part

scale70 Cause of a stuffed-up

nose

DOWN

1 Get ready to play2 Make the scapegoat for

3 German Expressionist who was blacklisted by the Nazis

4 Title judge of a 1995 sci-fi film

5 The P.L.O.’s Arafat6 You can’t stop

humming it7 “East of Eden” family

name8 What a tech specialist

might ask you to send9 Constraint10 Conflagration11 Dunces14 2003 OutKast hit that

was #1 for nine weeks15 Dallas player, for

short21 German steel center22 Fat meas.23 Blue state majority,

for short28 Books that may depict

dragons, unicorns and griffins

30 Reply to a bit of cleverness

32 Ship’s pole34 Renaissance fair props37 Mercury, in alchemy38 “___ the light!”

39 Provider of underground entertainment?

40 Trampled41 Latex-like glove

material44 Detail45 Smallest NATO

member by population46 Sci-fi play of 192148 Tree with burs50 Outcast54 Hip again56 “Star Wars” queen58 Scotland’s Firth of

___59 After-dinner drink64 Peter out, as a trail

Fill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and 3x3 block. Use logic and process elimination to solve the puzzle. The difficulty level ranges from Bronze (easiest) to Silver to Gold (hardest).

Looking for the solutions? Download the Emerald Mobile app today. It’s available on both the iTunes and Google Play stores.

SUDOKUS

FUN & GAMES: CROSSWORD1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

12 13 14 15

16 17 18

19 20 21

22 23 24 25

26 27 28 29 30

31 32 33 34 35

36 37 38

39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46

47 48 49 50 51

52 53 54 55 56

57 58 59 60

61 62 63 64

65 66 67

68 69 70

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THEWHY OFWHERE

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