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D A I LY E M E R A L D . C O M
⚙ MONDAY
Budgeting on an
EMPTY STOMACH FOOD INSECURITY IS A REALITY FOR UNIVERSITY OF OREGON STUDENTS. For now, this means standing in long lines in the rain at an off-campus food pantry — but students may wait longer for a stable solution.
Q & A W I T H TOM MY ST I N S O N O F T H E R E P L AC E M E N T S
A S U O S E N AT E P R E S I D E N T L O O K S F O R WA R D
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TOMMY STINSON Q & A:
Replacement, showman, and ordained minister ➥ CRAIG
W R I G H T, @ WG WC R A I G
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TO FIND THE LOCATION NEAREST YOU VISIT JIMMYJOHNS.COM
Tommy Stinson (left) is a founding member of Minneapolis punk band The Replacements, played bass in Guns N’ Roses for 17 years and led bands Bash And Pop and Perfect. (Courtesy of Devvon Simpson)
On Oct. 21, Tommy Stinson and Chip Roberts will perform under the name Cowboys In The Campfire in Eugene at Barno’s Backyard Ballroom. Stinson began his career as the teenage bassist for the legendary Minneapolis punk band The Replacements. He played bass for Guns N’ Roses from 1998-2016, and has fronted the bands Perfect and Bash & Pop, the latter of which is set to release a new album in early 2017. Stinson spoke with the Emerald to discuss the current tour and Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Tim Kaine’s admiration of The Replacements. Emerald: Following the large-scale Replacements reunion tour and departing Guns N’ Roses, why did a stripped-down acoustic tour seem like something you wanted to do? Tommy Stinson: I’m waiting on the Bash & Pop record to come out in the new year, and it got pushed back so far that I had to do something. I had to get out and work and keep myself busy so Chip and I decided to throw it together. E: How do you compare a Guns N’ Roses stadium show to something like a house show? TS: My shows, I’m not playing for the boss. I’m not playing for anyone else. It’s our own thing and it’s gratifying in that way. We can do what we want, we can do it the way we want, and we don’t have to worry about any confines of someone else’s material, or any of that. E: You’ve probably heard this by now, but Hillary Clinton’s Vice Presidential candidate Tim Kaine has listed Let It Be
as one of his favorite albums. What are your thoughts on that? TS: That’s suspect to me (laughs). I don’t know if we need a vice president who’s favorite song is “Gary’s Got A Boner� (laughs). I don’t know. That’s funny to me. In all seriousness I think it’s fine. E: Are there any lessons politicians can learn from the Replacements’ career? TS: (Laughs). Hopefully learn how to not shoot yourself in the foot when you’re aiming for your head. E: On PledgeMusic you are offering a variety of options for fans to buy the new Bash & Pop album. The one that caught my eye is the Tommy Stinson Wedding. How long have you been an ordained minister? TS: A few years. I married my friends Dan and Kathleen like 15 years ago, pretty much to the day. I think that will be fun. That probably will be the funnest bit. E: A portion of the proceeds of the PledgeMusic campaign will benefit the Timkatec trade schools in Port-auPrince, Haiti. Why did you decide to do that? TS: They need a lot of help. They just got decimated with another hurricane and it’s just fucked up down there and they get very little help. It’s a country that really needs to get itself together and rebuild itself, and so this little school, Timkatec, it’s a trade school; they teach electricians, plumbers, or whatever kind of things like that, and all those things are necessary to help rebuild Haiti. It’s a good cause; it’s a good thing, and I support it.
NEWS
WEEKLY NEWS
UPDATE
ASUO ASUO Senate President Max Burns poses for a photo in the EMU on Oct. 12. (Samuel Marshall)
ASUO Senate President in the last stretch of his position ➡ MIGUEL
SANCHEZ-RUTLEDGE, @MSANCHEZR541
ASUO Senate President Max Burns will serve only two more terms before his departure from the University of Oregon early next year. Burns discussed some upcoming issues that the Senate hopes to tackle before he leaves his position in March 2017. Burns, a transfer student from Central Oregon Community College, came to UO in 2013 as a music major. Now his major is public policy and management with a focus in non-profit administration. During his first year at UO Burns was elected to an ASUO senate position. Burns has taken a position in the Peace Corps and may end up traveling to Ukraine as a result. The job entails a 27-month commitment with three months devoted to training and 24 months of on-site work. Burns doesn’t believe his upcoming job with the Peace Corps will negatively impact ASUO or its operations prior to him leaving. “Until a position is filled, the vice president of Senate, 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.
Ednaly [Jimenez-Gomez], will fill that role,” Burns said. “Once the position is elected for the spring term then whoever that is will take over. My time will conclude once the budget season is completed.” Burns is focusing on this upcoming term, but he recalled some of the past ASUO accomplishments that have led him to where he is now. He says one of his biggest accomplishments, with collaboration from other ASUO members, was addressing the issue of mandatory housing for first year students. The mandatory on-campus housing policy will require students to live on campus their freshman year, resulting in increased costs for students because of the competition between the university and other housing complexes. ASUO passed a measure to have University Housing reconsider this policy and make it more affordable. Despite this resolution being passed, University Housing is still planning on moving forward with the mandatory
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live on campus policy, without the support of ASUO. Moving his focus to the future, Burns discussed the budget shortfall that ASUO is tackling now. “In terms of the way the budgeting process works is; we make an assumption on enrollment and then budget accordingly,” Burns said. “If enrollment numbers aren’t what we anticipate then we have to make up that loss. Currently we have to deal with a substantially large shortfall in our allocation process.” Burns wants to focus on incorporating the student body to become more involved in student government and other student-run organizations this year. “Becoming involved is extremely easy at the ASUO with how many student organizations we have,” Burns said. “Leadership is not always about a title and authority. Being able to build a community and creating a niche on campus for anyone is important and any student can have the power to do that.”
Taylor’s Bar and Grill on West 13th Avenue.
Two drug-related cases reported at Taylor’s Bar and Grill in last three weeks ➡ TRAN
NGUYEN, @TRANNGNGN
The University of Oregon Police Department is investigating two alleged cases of “causing another person to ingest a controlled substance” at Taylor’s Bar and Grill, according to the UOPD crime log. The first case was reported on Sept. 23; the second case was reported on Oct. 12. UOPD spokesman Kelly McIver said both cases are pending full reports and are under investigation. “The report won’t be available for release, and I can’t comment or share any further information at this time,” McIver wrote via an email to the Emerald. According to state law, “causing another person to ingest a controlled substance” is a Class B felony, and a Class A felony if a person has intention of committing or facilitating a crime of violence against the other person. Including these cases, five incidents of “causing another person to ingest a controlled substance” have been reported to UOPD since Oct. 10, 2015. The other three incidents were reported to have taken place at off campus locations and are all ongoing investigations. Taylor’s Bar and Grill declined to comment on the cases.
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Students line up at the student food pantry on East 19th Avenue . The pantry often attracts long lines for those waiting for food . Illustration by Stacy Yurishcheva
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UO students
FOOD INS ➥ E M I LY
O L S O N , @ E M I LYO L S O N 9 5 1
B
y 4:45 p.m. on Oct. 6, the University of Oregon’s Student Food Pantry had been open for 45 minutes. But a line still snaked around the repurposed single-car garage. It stretched down the driveway and onto the sidewalk. And Eric* was in the thick of it, standing without a hooded jacket in the rain. The fifth-year geology major is no stranger to the pantry line. On that day, he talked with another student to pass the time, sharing tips he’s gleaned from years of strict-budget living: Be courageous enough to split rent with six strangers from Craigslist. Pack your lunch so you don’t have to eat at the expensive campus joints. Shop at WinCo — even if it means a 20-minute drive — and stock up on nonperishables so nothing gets wasted. And, as for the student food pantry: “Get here early — that’s the key,� he says. “The good stuff always goes first.� With around 90 students visiting each week, the pantry is operating at its capacity. But as potential tuition increases loom, greater numbers of students may begin feeling financial strain and facing food insecurity — and viable solutions could take years.
More than just numbers
UO student Kelly Woltjer volunteers at the food pantry every week. (Justin Hartney)
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This May, the College and University Food Bank Alliance surveyed nearly 4,000 students from 26 American universities. The group found that 48 percent of respondents had experienced food insecurity within the last 30 days, meaning they lacked “reliable access to sufficient quantities of affordable, nutritious food,� because of time, transportation or financial obstacles. About 22 percent met the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s definition of hungry: They faced physiological strain due to inadequate food intake. The survey’s creators say it is the largest and most college-specific survey to date. According to UO Health Promotion Director Paula Staight, student food insecurity has only recently made agendas at national college health conferences. No conclusive, UO-specific survey on food insecurity has
recently been conducted. However, Reverend Doug Hale, director of UO’s Student Food Pantry and UO religious director, has surveyed first-time pantry visitors for the last two years. He said that over 800 distinct students have visited, and their circumstances represent the range that the term ‘food insecurity’ encompasses. Some, like Sarah*, only come once or twice, when in a pinch. “My husband and I are just going through a tough time right now,� said Sarah, who is pursuing a master’s degree. “He’s working, but I haven’t been able to find anything.� Sarah tracks everything she spends on a spreadsheet. It wasn’t feasible for her to spend her $300 for food this month, given that she has pressing expenses like rent and monthly medical treatments for an autoimmune disease. Others, like Jessie,* come because they want to nutritiously supplement their UO residence hall meal plans. When he ran low on meal points his freshman year, Jessie realized that the healthy food on-campus, “is definitely more expensive.� “I just wanted a home-cooked meal,� he said. “Coming [to the pantry] allows me to have a sustainable meal for free.� Because there is a limit on how much students can take, the pantry acts like more of a cushion than a source for three square meals a day. “At the end of the day, if this wasn’t here, I could still eat,� Eric said. “But I’m on a strict budget.�
Ideas for a fix Over 360 colleges and universities have started food pantries or food banks through the College and University Food Bank Alliance. This July, the University of California system announced that it will commit $3.3 million to increasing food access for its students. And 20 universities have joined the ‘swipe out hunger’ program, which allows students to donate unused meal points to other students. At UO, the first step came when the pantry began in fall 2011. A student connected with the Episcopal Campus Ministry expressed concern that a fellow student was not able to afford
struggle with
SECURITY regular meals, Hale said. It started a conversation between the ministry, administrators, campus dietitians and a group of students. The group wanted to start a food pantry on campus, but could not find adequate space and faced obstacles to obtaining donated food. The ECM building offered up a single-car garage connected to their property located at 1329 E. 19th Ave. UO provided a little administrative support through the Health Center, but then backed off, Hale said. In winter 2013, the pantry partnered with Food for Lane County, which is still its primary food provider. Food for Lane County helped the pantry grow from serving 90 people per month to today’s 360. Among the pantry’s inefficiencies, Hale lists space — students have to wait out in the rain — and the limited hours: Thursdays from 4 to 6 p.m. If the pantry did have the time and space to begin offering more food, it would need to satisfy USDA pantry requirements and serve more than just students, Hale said. Opening the pantry to the greater community might turn off some students. Eric said he’d “feel bad taking food from a city food bank” because it would feel like taking from Eugene’s homeless. With the pantry’s growth at an impasse, Hale said the UO community needs “to be working on some other ideas to spread the solution around.”
Solutions in the works The Student Food Security Working Group is exploring solutions. It formed in October 2015, after a visiting lecturer from Oregon State University spoke about national student food insecurity and OSU’s implementation of an emergency relief center. The group’s 33 members include representatives of academic programs, community groups and student organizations like ASUO and the Radical Organizing and Activism Resource. The working group has met three times, and they’ve discussed the need for a collaborative, multifaceted approach to fighting food insecurity. According to member and undergraduate student Kiara Kashuba, the group hopes to start a bigger, more accessible food pantry oncampus. Per UO President Michael Schill’s request, Vice Provost Lisa
Freinkel and Associate Vice President Kathie Stanley met with members of Kashuba’s sub-committee. “It takes a while to get stuff moving, but they support it,” Kashuba said. ASUO Local Affairs Commissioner Amy Schenk worked with the student group ROAR on an early attempt to set up a food pantry in the EMU last winter. The group couldn’t find a space larger than the current pantry. She said ASUO plans to re-commit support to an EMU pantry, and aims to have one in place by the end of this year. “We want a centralized, safe, accessible space,” she said. She is in conversations with OSU and Western Oregon University — both of which have successful on-campus pantries.
Reverend Doug Hale, who runs the food pantry on East 19th Avenue, with a student. (Justin Hartney)
The starting point In the meantime, Staight and her colleagues at the UO Health Center hope to help educate students on nutrition through the Duck Nest wellness center. Student volunteers will teach programs on healthy eating on a budget, and applying for the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits. Staight helped implement the most recent UO health policy: the smokefree campus initiative. It took eight years, she said. It’s likely that getting university resources to fight student food insecurity would take just as long, but with the interest from the working group and ASUO, she “feels like it’s starting.” She explained that the process would require sufficient, UO-specific data to illustrate that food insecurity is a problem on this campus. With that in hand, groups are more likely to gain administrative approval. “There’s kind of a tipping point that happens,” Staight said of administrative support for health policies. The smokefree policy was deemed unnecessary at first, but then more and more colleges started going smoke-free. The administrative leadership at UO didn’t want to fall behind peer-institutions by default, Staight said. For now, students like Eric and Sarah and Jessie will wait in the pantry line, fighting to not fall behind on meals, not to mention the education and careers they came to UO to pursue. *Names have been changed at students’ requests.
The student food pantry is open to students at the University of Oregon, Lane Community College, Northwest Christian University and Gutenberg College. (Justin Hartney)
Students often line up down the block at the pantry, which has been increasing in popularity over the last few years. (Justin Hartney) M O N D AY, O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 6
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SPORTS
Oregon forward Kyra Fawcett (14) tries to keep the ball from Boise State defender Hailey DeVries (32). (Kaylee Domzalski)
Women’s Soccer
Kyra Fawcett is a bright spot in Oregon Soccer’s up and down season KUNDICH, @COLESPORTSUO
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Ever since Kyra Fawcett has been on the Oregon soccer team, she’s led with her uncanny ability to score. That was the case when she was a freshman, and now as a sophomore, she’s not showing any signs of slowing down. “She’s making an impact right away, fighting for every ball,” head coach Kat Mertz said. Fawcett is arguably the team’s top weapon on the offensive side of the ball. She was second in goals scored last year. She’s continued to elevate her play, leading the team in goals scored midway through Pac-12 play. Fawcett, a native of Bountiful, Utah, knew from the first time she visited campus that Oregon was the right fit for her collegiate career. “Once I came here, I felt like I was home,” Fawcett said. “It’s one of those feelings you can’t explain.” Through the first 14 games of the season, Fawcett’s five goals and 15 shots on goal lead the team. She’s already passed her own marks of three and 11 from last season. Even with all the individual success Fawcett has had, she’s deflected praise of her success. Fawcett said being able to rely on her teammates has elevated her game this year. “I feel like I’m more a silent leader,” Fawcett said. “I’m going to show you the work I put in, and hopefully [my teammates] see that, feel the energy and jump on with me.”
Senior Ashlee Schulz said she’s been continually impressed by Fawcett’s growth from her first to second year with the program. “She didn’t quite know how strong she was,” Schulz said. “She’s definitely broken out of her shell.” Some members of Oregon’s coaching staff say they knew Fawcett’s abilities would develop with more mentoring. She was named first team all-state in Utah during her sophomore and senior seasons. “We challenged her from her freshman year,” said Mertz. Fawcett accepted the challenge and didn’t shy away from her scoring responsibilities. “It’s a confidence booster that my team is relying on me to go out there, work hard and put out my effort, execute under pressure -and not have the nerves or anything to get in the way of that,” Fawcett said. Oregon, after an encouraging 6-3-1 nonconference start, has started 0-6 in Pac-12 play. It has been a tough stretch for a fairly young team, but Fawcett hasn’t lost sight of the big picture. Fawcett is on track for a memorable career at Oregon. In the coming years, she’ll likely receive Pac-12 honors accolades and with that, increased attention. She said it won’t change her approach. “[I want to] go out and be myself and stand for what I believe in on and off the soccer field,” Fawcett said. “I wanted to come to a school and make a difference.”
FUN & GAMES: CROSSWORD 1
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Looking for the solutions? Download the Emerald Mobile app today. It’s available on both the iTunes and Google Play stores. ACROSS
1 Italian scooter brand 6 Fleet opposed by Sir Francis Drake 12 Wrath 15 Unreactive 16 Fruit in a cereal bowl 17 It’s smoked in a deli 18 Fireworks expert 20 One mile, at Churchill Downs 21 Fasten (to) 22 AOL or Verizon, for short 23 Hera, to the Romans 24 He “cometh” in an O’Neill play 27 Dutch cheese 29 Head and neck physician 35 Stinky Le Pew 36 Uno + due 37 Haute couture monogram 38 Election Day mo. 39 Roman roads 41 “Terrible” period 43 Boris Godunov and others 45 Cremains container 46 Word after pen or gal 48 Fed. agency that conducts raids 50 Suffix with towel 51 Hard rubber, maybe
55 Infomercial component 56 Colorado city just east of Denver 57 Grub 59 Book of the Bible between Lev. and Deut. 61 Pub game 64 DiCaprio, to friends 65 Alternative name for 18-, 29- or 51-Across? 69 Sculler’s need 70 Like some threats and brides 71 Heart chambers 72 Common taxi feature 73 Say yes 74 Minuscule
DOWN
1 Bigwig 2 One-named Irish Grammy winner 3 Feudal worker 4 Serial crime investigator 5 New York prison famous for a 1971 riot 6 Lob’s path 7 “Go team!” 8 Field in which people pick their work? 9 Risky way to buy a used car
10 Drives away 11 Tidbit for an aardvark 12 “Angels & Demons” group whose name is Latin for “enlightened” 13 Color similar to chestnut 14 Montreal baseballer, once 19 Apply, as pressure 23 Show from which “NCIS” was spun off 25 ___ Beach, S.C. 26 All over again 28 Lamebrain 29 Heroin source 30 Half of octo31 Affords opportunities 32 Pearl maker 33 Puts in order 34 Something that might have you working through channels? 40 Stuff caught in a filter 42 Pearl Harbor location 44 Not together 47 Miseries 49 “The Lord of the Rings” ring bearer 52 Use a Singer, say 53 Cornhusk-wrapped food 54 1994 Peace co-Nobelist 57 Drano target
58 Amount of trouble? 60 Israeli submachine guns 62 Amount subtracted from gross weight 63 Body part guarded in soccer 65 State whose license plate says “Wild, Wonderful”: Abbr. 66 Stimpy’s cartoon cohort 67 Pesticide banned in 1972 68 Second word of “The Star-Spangled Banner”
SOLUTION
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).
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Deal of the Week:
We’d really appreciate a haiku about cats, and a drawing of a cat too please
Black Forest: 2 Philly Cheesesteaks w/ 2 Fries or Tots & 2 Sodas
SOLUTION
Order online at HungryDucks.com M O N D AY, O C T O B E R 1 7 , 2 0 1 6
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Democracy is not a spectator sport.
EASY.
Looking for housing shouldn’t be difficult.
Become a Wayne Morse Scholar and get ready to rumble. Find out more and apply at waynemorsecenter.uoregon.edu/scholars. Applications are open to sophomores and juniors. Deadline: noon on Thursday, October 20.
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think Go to duckshousing.com to use one search engine for all off-campus housing.