Vanguard March 29, 2011

Page 1

“Rethinking Paper & Ink” hits shelves on Earth Day

Vikings finish season with win at Seattle

PSU’s Ooligan Press leads the sustainable publishing revolution

Portland State heads toward next season with a positive win and plenty of promise

ARTS: PAGE 8

SPORTS: PAGE 12

INDEX NEWS OPINION ARTS SPORTS

2 4 8 12

FREE The Vanguard is published twice weekly on Tuesdays and Fridays.

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TUESDAY, MARCH 29TH, 2011

VOL. 65 NO. 45

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Portland shows its support for Japan Students, community members keep Japan in mind through relief efforts Vinh Tran Vanguard staff

Portland residents, including several Portland State students, have showed their support for Japan over the past few weeks since the 9.0 magnitude earthquake and subsequent tsunami hit the Tohoku region, located northeast of Tokyo, on March 11. When Jamie Bower first felt the light tremors, the 20-year-old PSU student was resting from a recent trip to southeast Asia. Rather than ducking underneath a tabletop, she thought—in true fashion of a Tokyo resident—“just another earthquake; I’ll wait it out.” “Should I get out of bed?” Bower recalled her experience in a blog entry dated March 11. “Shaking gets more inBower said she tense, this seems like a didn’t realize the pretty good one, typing this as a pretty big shock severity of the rocks my house.” disaster until she Bower said she didn’t realize the severity of the turned on the disaster until she turned television. on the television. As nature would have it, Bower learned a few days later that all students in her study abroad program were being evacuated from Japan. Bower, who had recently landed a teaching job, said she was reluctant to return home so soon. Like many Americans, Bower is safe from the aftershocks and the spread of radiation. However, she said her thoughts are still with the people of Japan. Since the earthquake, she has stayed in contact with her friends and host family in Tokyo, where basic supplies such as toilet paper are being rationed. According to Japan’s National Police Agency, the death toll stood at 10,151 as of Saturday. JAPAN ON PAGE 3

Joshua Hunt Vanguard staff

Shortly before the holidays, Ooligan Press Director Dennis Stovall announced that he would retire in December 2011, 10 years after he founded the graduate program in publishing. Since the announcement, the future of the program has been mired in uncertainty, as university officials announced no plans to hire a replacement. Graduate Assistant Alyson Hoffman was frank in her assessment of the effect that such inaction may have. “It’s a good way to slowly kill the publishing program at PSU,” Hoffman said. “We were told

Senate votes on recommendations, budget will be a day late to president Corie Charnley Vanguard staff

As students crammed for their last exams of winter term, the Senate met during finals week to vote on its final recommendations for the Student Fee Committee 2011-12 budget. The SFC approved the recommendations with minor changes, and therefore the Senate must final the budget at tonight’s meeting before it goes to the Portland State president for approval. “The budget will be presented [to the president] late,” SFC Chair Krystine McCants said. “I expect that either he will not have the full 10 days to review it, or the Budget Office will have SFC ON PAGE 3

PSU Recycles! receives another year of funding Aramark to assume many of recycling program’s services Sierra Pannabecker Vanguard staff

25 titles and independently raised $105,000 for the program. On April 22 Ooligan will release “Rethinking Paper & Ink,” a critical examination of avenues for sustainability in the publishing industry. It will be the second Ooligan publication of the academic year, an undertaking that it achieved with a student to full-time faculty ratio of 60:1. If the university does not hire a director to replace Dennis Stovall, that ratio will drop to 120:1. The Masters in Fine Arts program in the English department has a student to full-time faculty ratio of 7:1, according to Hoffman. “We bring in 36 percent of the credit hours in the English department,” Hoffman said. “That’s about $1.2 million in tuition generated by a program that costs around $260,000 to run.

Just days after learning that the program would no longer be funded by the Facilities and Planning department, Portland State’s recycling coalition, PSU Recycles!, received word that it would be provided for by the department’s budget office for one more year. This short-term solution came last Thursday from John Mclean, associate director of Finance & Business Services within Facilities and Planning. In order to divert some expenses from the program, many of its functions are being handed over to Aramark, the multinational company that already provides food and custodial services for PSU. To further its budget woes, PSU Recycles! will not receive any funding from the Student Fee Committee next year, though it has been partly funded through student fees since 2005. PSU Recycles! is a team of recycling specialists who work to support sustainability on campus through a wide range of initiatives and services. According to Christel Eichner, resource management coordinator for the program, the team is currently composed of five employees and multiple volunteers who perform physical duties such as collecting compost in offices, managing reusable material flows on campus through the “ReUse Room” in Smith Memorial Student Union, setting up composting at catered events on campus, providing waste collection during move-in and move-out and creating and posting signage around campus. The team also makes it possible to recycle materials that are not collected by Aramark, such as ink cartridges, Styrofoam, batteries and hard plastics. In addition, the team, most of whom work part-time, implements many of the items from PSU’s Climate Action Plan and suggestions from student research. They also track material flow data and conduct educational campaigns.

OOLIGAN ON PAGE 7

PSU RECYCLES! ON PAGE 7

DREW MARTIG/VANGUARD STAFF

Helping words: A prayer tree has been set up in SMSU for students to hang condolences for the people of Japan.

Fighting for the right to publish Ooligan Press director set to retire, graduate students worry program will disappear

Budget process moving forward

they [the university] need to save money, and we understand that, but they seem to be trying to save an inordinate amount of it through us.” PSU Director of Communications Scott Gallagher said that a transitional committee was recently appointed to examine the situation. “There has been no decision so far not to replace Dennis,” Gallagher said. “So far it has been a reexamination of what can be done to continue the program. Maybe that means replacing Dennis, maybe it means having greater involvement from others in the English Department.” Ooligan Press is a university publishing house that prepares students in the publishing program of PSU’s Department of English for careers in the book publishing industry by immersing them in it. With students controlling every aspect of production—from editing and design to printing and marketing—Ooligan has released


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