Event of the day
FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 2010 • PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY • VOLUME 64, ISSUE 85
The festivities continue! The school of Social Work has moved, and is hosting a Grand Opening Celebration. When: 4 p.m. Where: Academic and Student Recreation Center
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INSIDE OPINION
Investigating more pay Student
builders
CPSO seeks to get its officers paid for overtime work in investigations Make way for consumers! The city’s latest sidewalk management plan is a dud PAGE 3
ARTS
Full bellies a-plenty Beer and wine festival fills up the stomach this weekend pAgE 5 Intelligent it’s not, brilliant it is Israeli Intelligence successfully serves up a silly spoof pAgE 6
A recycled future Midwesterner Colin Matthes imagines a future of reuse instead of refuse pAgE 7
NEWS Bucharest exonerated
Student caught in controversy was cleared of code of conduct charges pAgE 8
SPORTS
Vikings and the great outdoors
Track and field teams spring out of the gate in the outdoor season PAGE 10
Vinh Tran
The SBFC is accepting student submissions for future PSU building projects
Vanguard staff
The work of a campus public safety officer doesn’t end after a crime is logged—the real work begins with investigation. In some cases, between 20 and 40 hours can be logged, in addition to the regular 40 hours per week of patrol duty. Currently, PSU campus public safety officers do not get paid for the additional hours they spend doing investigative work. Now, CPSO chief Michael Soto is hoping to change that by making a case to university administrators. “We are looking for ways to help the office revenue,” Soto said. Due to the economic environment, all departments in the university have seen funding reduced over the past year, and CPSO is no exception. However, Soto said that where the university
Catrice Stanley Vanguard staff
Adam Wickham/Portland State Vanguard
Michael Soto: CPSO chief is working to find funds to pay officers for investigation hours.
makes cuts in funding for departments, it also leaves some room for departments to maneuver. “The university budget committee has a program called the ‘campus reinvestment program’ where we can ask for more money to be put back into our department,” Soto said. “We are now asking the university to invest money in us.”
According to Soto, extra money would help pay for officers’ overtime work. “A campus public safety officer works four days a week for ten hours. In addition to that, they work somewhere between 20 to 40 hours on a case,” Soto said.
CPSO continued on page eight
PSU welcomes Christopher Broderick Former Oregonian editor becomes vp of comm and marketing Sharon E. Rhodes Vanguard staff
The Oregonian’s former education and politics editor, Christopher Broderick, was recently hired as the assistant communications and marketing vice president for Portland State. He will officially begin his new role on May 3. According to a press release from University Communications, PSU President Wim Wiewel said the administration “had several great candidates for this position.” Ultimately, the administration chose Broderick because he “has the perfect background to help us tell the PSU story to a broader global audience,” Wiewel said. “[I’m excited] to get the opportunity at this point in my career,” Broderick said. “What draws me to PSU is the urban mission versus some of the other research universities: It’s right in downtown Portland, where the motto is ‘let knowledge serve the city.’” Scott Gallagher, director of communications at PSU, said Broderick began working at The Oregonian 12 years ago in 1998. As the education and politics editor, he supervised a team of reporters that covered issues of politics, schools, higher education, social services and the environment. Broderick said he
covered many issues that directly concern PSU, such as economic development, retention rates, the quality of higher education and teaching and sustainability. According to Gallagher, Broderick’s “team has won dozens of national and regional journalism awards” and their stories led to new laws and regulations which, among other things, “protect school children from abusive teachers and create more aggressive oversight of Oregon’s College Savings Plan.” In the press release, The Oregonian’s editor Peter Bhatia said that Broderick’s work contributed to better stories and “defined excellence in our coverage of education and politics.” “Our readers have benefitted mightily from his efforts, as have all of us,” he said. In an article published on March 18 in the Portland Mercury, contributor Matt Davis speculated that Broderick’s resignation from The Oregonian, which occurred only a week after the resignation of graphic artist Steve Cowden, resulted from his political disagreements with The Oregonian’s “new right-wing publisher, N. Christian Anderson III.” In a comment to Davis’ post, Broderick said, “I am leaving to pursue a great opportunity at [PSU], not because I’m unhappy with the publisher or the direction of [The Oregonian].” Broderick also said in his response, “[The staff of The
Christopher Broderick
Photo courtesy of The Oregonian
Oregonian has] been setting the public agenda in this state for years, and they will continue to do so long after I’m gone.” Broderick has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Humboldt State University in California and a master’s degree in legal studies from Yale Law School, Gallagher said. According to a press release, Broderick had an extensive newspaper background before joining The Oregonian: He worked for newspapers in Denver, Phoenix and Las Vegas where he covered issues ranging from education to urban affairs. “[Portland State] is a vital and growing campus in the heart of a dynamic, twenty-first century city,” Broderick said in a press release. He appreciates PSU’s civic engagement, community partnerships and the increasing diversity of the student body. “I’m excited about all the opportunities at Portland State,” Broderick said.
Portland State is offering students an opportunity to voice their ideas for the next big building project on campus. The Student Building Fee Committee is looking for students, groups or departments with a vision of how to improve the campus. However, the deadline is quickly approaching. All proposals must be submitted by 4 p.m. Monday, April 5, to ensure that they get considered. According to PSU’s Facilities and Planning Web site, $2.5 million is available for allocation once the projects are approved by the SBFC. Requests for funding may be for the full $2.5 million, or for any amount of money up to $2.5 million. Proposals must be brought to the PSU Facilities & Planning department, which can be found in the University Services Building, Suite 202, at 617 SW Montgomery. “Past projects range from the Native American Center to the Helen Gordon Child Development Center, amongst numerous other upgrades to different buildings and investment[s] toward construction projects,” said Zaki Bucharest, who is both an SBFC member and a student representative of the Smith Memorial Student Union Advisory Board. The SBFC is comprised of students from several different groups at PSU. This year’s SBFC members are Bucharest, ASPSU President Jonathan Sanford, SFC Chair Johnnie Ozimkowski, Angela Leonard from the HGCDC and David Lock from Student Recreation. “The committee members decide by democratic process which projects that fall within proposal guidelines will be allocated monies requested,” Bucharest said. For more information regarding the proposal requirements, visit www.fap.pdx.edu. After reviewing the proposals, the SBFC will invite a select group of students to further discuss their proposals with the committee by Monday, April 26. The final funding recommendations will be publically announced at a later date, following evaluation of the final proposals. “This is a great opportunity to push forward interests that require capital [to move] toward construction,” Bucharest said. “Get involved.”
For more information, a meeting will be held today at 3 p.m. in SMSU 230.