Students face a choice this election between being led to achieve what is possible or being told what is not possible.
When led by people who dedicate themselves to making it work for students, the ASUO can be a powerful voice for your interests. This year alone, students registered 7,500 voters and convinced the administration to eliminate the “sketchy scheduling penalty,” which previously forced students to pay money for classes they dropped before even attending.
When the ASUO was leading the citywide coalition to win housing standards, Ashley Rees and Jael Anker-Lagos were there, representing students. Adam Walsh was not. When students lobby the legislature to make education affordable, Ashley and Jael are there. Adam Walsh is not.
We want student leaders who work to give students every possible advantage as they continue their education and their lives. Ashley and Jael are those leaders. Their opponents are not.
Louis William Guptill
Senior
Inbox: Rees-Anker-Lagos fight for housing, education
Daily Emerald
April 14, 2005
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