MONDAY MOSTLY SUNNY with Increasing Clouds in the Afternoon

MONDAY MOSTLY SUNNY with Increasing Clouds in the Afternoon

CROSS ISSUE CANDIDATES MONDAY MOSTLY SUNNY with increasing clouds in the afternoon. Highs in NEARS END TALK the low fifties, lows in the mid thirties. See City page 6 See EJectioh page 8 WASHINGTON ~ILY STATE UNIVERSITY ;VERGREEN Monday, March 7, 1988 Established 1894 vol. 94; No. 126 Student survey reveals strengths and weaknesses Judge sought "I talked with Judge Friel this Opinions mixed on ASWSU Stabbing case morning and we will get started right away finding a new judge for this case," he said. "We by Cathy Lewis to be decided should probably have one by late Managing Editor Phillips defends Senate by new judge next week." Two-thirds of WSU students by Jeff Cox hours. Hardy said tentative sentencing It's also the responsibility of by Tanya Millikan sampled drew a blank when Asst. News Editor has been set at March 25. the senate to go out, Phillips Evergreen Staff asked what their government James Robert Dinehart, 22, About 80 percent of 109 stu- said. will be sentenced on a first- has done for them. Spokane court officials have dents surveyed last week by the Some hall government people degree manslaughter charge. He In an unscientific, informal been asked to appoint a new Daily Evergreen said they have have said they haven't had con- pleaded guilty to stabbing Jeffrey poll conducted last week, more judge to decide the sentence in a than 67 percent of 108 students not met their senator. tact with ASWSU Senators. Alan Jendrycka on Oct. 27 in local stabbing case. front of a True Street Apartment. surveyed could not identify an "It's important for those In response to the unscien- Whitman County Superior Dinehart maintains he killed ASWSU program they have groups (hall governments) to tific statistic, ASWSU president Court Judge Wallis Friel con- Jendrycka in self-defense. Court benefited from. invite them (senators)," Phillips Kristi Phillips said weekly tacted the Spokane court admin- documents state Dinehart's nose Just over 80 percent said office hours are "a ample said. ~strators office requesting a new was broken in a fight that took they have never met their amount of time" for students to Concerning lobbying in Judge, who could be appointed as place before the stabbing ASWSU senator, and 75 per- meet their senators. cent said ASWSU does not Olympia, Phillips said the ques- early as Thursday, said Dave Phiilips said she encourages tion, do studer... know the Hardy, assistant court administra- Judge on page 12 have an active enough voice in tor, Friday. See Olympia. students to visit the 3rd floor of the CUB in. order to talk with Even though they couldn't their senators during office See Senate on page 12 name specific programs, a little more than half of those polled said they are satisfied with ASWSU's performance. STUDENTS SPEAK OUT ON ASWSU "Compared to ASliW (the University of Washington's Are you satisfied with the pertormance of wsu? s I government), I think ASWSU r is more concerned with what the students feel than what the regents want," said Joelle Is ASWSU worth the cost? Richartz, a junior in elemen- tary education. Jeff Gardner, a junior in broadcasting, said he is satis- Can you name something ASWSU has done for you? fied because, "Things seem to go smoothly. There's never been any major scandals. " But even those who said Have you met any ASWSU exec. candidates? they support ASWSU's efforts said student government often seems inaccessible. ~ "There's too much distance _t your..'----senator? from students," said Chris Frary, a freshman. I I I I I I I Clayton Looney, a senior in o 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 See ~urvey on page 7 Daily Evergreen Graphic Pullman plans for Super Tuesday However, Democrats won't have to come to the Participation sought main caucus to add their two cents. A "Fire House Primary" for Democrats will be held from 6 p.m. by state campaigners to 8 p.m., where registered voters can stop in, state their preference for president and leave, said Karen by Stephanie L. Simons Marchioro , chair of the state Democratic party. Evergreen Staff Votes cast early will be added to the votes of The presidential race will run through Pull- those Democrats who attend the caucus later. u.s. "We're hoping it will increase participation," man when Washington and 20 other states hold "Super Tuesday" caucuses or primaries tomorrow. Marchioro said. Republicans will have to attend the caucuses to The actual election is still a few months off, but cast their votes for president and the meetings parties will be selecting delegates, to county conven- should last for about an hour, said Chris Black, Daily Evergreen/Ted Palazzolo tions in April. From there, delegates will be chosen for each president of WSU Young Republicans. Fred Nichols, a senior in broadcasting, prepares for People can only participate in the caucuse~ if party's state convention, and delegates from those the spring golf season by sharpening his chip shot they have registered to vote in the parties. will go to the national conventions this summer. Saturday afternoon during opening day at the WSU Precinct caucuses for both parties will start at 8 Golf Course. p.m., and party issues as well as presidential pref- See Voters on page 6 erences will be discussed. Page 2 Daily Evergreen Monday, March 7, 1988 Dividing up the S&A pie Athletics to take largest slice CAMPUS BRIEFS by Ed Hunt run Student Legal Services, but a reserve built up Evergreen Staff this year should cover it. • GPSA received $82,200 - a 7.7 percent Panel covers ethnic issues Over $190 of a student's tuition bill is spent on increase over last year's $76,734. About $5,000 of Services and Activities fees each year. Here are that could go to committee members if GPSA An ethnic awareness panel will discuss issues facing Asian American, Latina, Native American and Black women and their next year's tentative allocations: decides to pay them next year. ' . • The athletic department received $514,572. Other areas of spending include a TA traimng experiences at WSU at 7 p.m. today in CUB 212. The panel is That figure is down 2 percent from last year's allo- workshop and travel grant program. GPSA depends part of the "Women's Unity and Diversity Celebration." cation of $525,000. solely on S&A fees for its funding. "We felt a lot of things were needy this year, so • The CUB and The Association of Women Stu- our goal was to keep it (allocation to athletics) dents maintained the same level of funding as last above half a million. Although it went down 2 per- year. AWS, completely funded .by S&A fees, Sophomores wanted cent, it's still above half a million and we felt that received $41,992. The CUB took III $414,836 for Upcoming sophomores interested in meeting new friends and would be enough," said Nancy Ahson, GPSA pres- the second year in a row. getting involved in campus and community activities can pick up ident and S&A committee member. • WSU Child Care received more than It asked an application for SPURS on the third floor of the CUB this week. S&A fees account for only 8 percent of the ath- for this year. Its $43,840 allocation was a 43-per- letic department's budget, but even with the 2 per- cent increase over last year and almost $10,000 cent decrease, athletics takes the largest portion of more than they requested. the S&A pie . The extra money wilt go toward hiring more Help plan Dad's Weekend • ASWSU received $327,430 in fees, up 15.5 employees to keep the ratio between child and child Applications for the Dad's Weekend Committee can be picked percent from last year's allocation of $283,171. care employees as low as possible. "It's the same allocation as last year with added New employees will be needed to staff a new up on the third floor of the CUB. Deadline is March 10. funds for Student Legal Services," said ASWSU facility, Ahson said. president and S&A committee chair Kristi Phillips. • Student Publications took a .8 percent drop The added $44,000 may go to keep Student after requesting an added $40,000 to cover reserves Legal Services open, depending on the budget depleted by a change in the payroll system and lack .Low-impact aerobics offered decided on this spring by next year's ASWSU The YMCA is offering a low-impact aerobics class beginning members. See Fees on page 12 today. Classes are held Monday, Wednesday and Thursday from Phillips said it actually costs close to $60,000 to 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. for eight weeks. Call 335-3915 or go to CUB 318 to sign up. j33Z-1410 NE 1000 COLORADO Scholarships offered "We're sorry, dear, but your father and I just can't afford to See the Office of Scholarships and Financial Aid: • Woman enrolled at a four-year school with a GPA of 3.0 or send you to Mazatlan for Spring Break •..KONATAN instead!' better. Deadline for $500 award is April 20. • Student enrolled in at least 10 credits with a 3.0 GPA intend- ing to complete a program leading to teacher certification and agreeing to teach in Washington for 10 years or repay the scholar- ship. Deadline for $3,000-a-year award is April 15.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    16 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us