Stickers needed to
park on campus
Faculty and student parking around campus is permitted through
the purchase of one of seven kinds of parking stickers which can be
purchased through the University’s Campus Security office.
Blue stickers are reserved for faculty-staff and cost $30 a year.
Yellow stickers are for students and cost $15 a year.
Dormitory lots are designated by red parking stickers. They are
reserved for dormitory residents who will pay $45 a year for the
assurance of a space all-year round.
There are also reduced rate lot stickers, and parking privileges
available for commercial representatives and motorcycles.
Parking fines given through the Campus Security office range from
$2 for overparking in a timed zone, to $10 for parking in a zone
reserved for the disabled. The office keeps a record of the vehicles
with outstanding traffic violations. If the violations remain unpaid at
registration the next term, the individual involved will probably find a
’ hold placed on his registration packet until he pays the fine,
i Further information about campus parking can be obtained by
| calling the Campus Security office at 686-5444.
Museum to feature
‘Art of Giving’ show
The University’s Museum of
Art will feature an “Art of
Giving” show to begin the 1972
season. The show will present all
the gifts to the museum during
the past year.
Art of all kinds was donated to
the museum in 1972, and will be
on display in a special section on
September 23, the museum’s
opening day. The art gifts, valued
by museum spokesmen at over
$100,000 will be on special display
until October 29.
The gifts were given to the
museum by Eugene residents,
former University of Oregon
students, and art lovers in
general. They include paintings.
sculpture, Chinese pottery, and
many other articles. They will
become part of the museums
permanent collection.
Featured in the Focus Gallery
of the museum will be the works
of Geoffrey Herbert, a sculptur.
The black and white and color
prints of Paul Neevel will be
presented in the photography
gallery.
The art museum, located on
campus near the library, will be
open Tuesday through Sunday,
noon to 5 p.m., from September
23 to the end of the academic
year.
The other campus museum, the
Museum of Natural History, is
open to the public now. This
museum has exhibits on
paleontology (the study of
fossils), anthropology, biology,
and geology.
The Museum of Natural
History is a research
organization for the state, and is
connected to the university
academically. The museum has
over 24,000 square feet of-*
exhibits, and is located in the
Science Complex, between
Franklin Boulevard and 13th
Street.
Often organized classes tour
this museum, but it is open to the
general public from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.. Monday through Friday.
Police,
students
patrol
campus
At most schools, campuses
are separately patrolled by
eivil service workers hired by
the University and city police
officers The two forces
usually work independently of
each other, completely
lacking in coordination.
But the University's campus
security arrangement is a
little different
It combines its civil service
force and jxilice patrols under
the leadership of one man,
who is both a police officer and
the head of a University
department.
Eugene Police Department
i EI*I) i ('apt Oakley Glenn is
the head of the University's
Campus Sedurity office While
he remains a captain in the
EPD, as OCS coordinator
Glenn reports to Gerald
Bogen, vice president for
student services.
Glenn's security force
consists of three groups of
persons
University students hired
to serve as student patrolmen.
Civil service employes
who patrol the campus in
green pickup trucks.
- EPD patrolmen who work
on campus under an annual
contract between the
University and the city.
The main function of the
student and civil service
patrolmen is to make sure
University buildings are
secure each evening and to
enforce campus parking
regulations. Those patrolmen
do not carry firearms of any
sort and they do not perform
the functions of detectives.
If a dangerous situation
arises, they are to contact a
Oakley Clenn
KIM) patrolman on one of the
walkie-talkies each student or
civil service patrolman
carries When not directly
assisting a student or civil
service patrolman, EPI)
patrolmen "simply patrol the
I'niversity as they would any
other district." Clenn has
said
Clenn's role is to coordinate
the three types of forces
working to secure the
I'niversity from theft and
generally patrol the campus.
Service
provides
medical aid
Low-cost help if you’re sick—
that's what the University’s
Student Health Service offers
students.
The service, located at the
corner of 13th Avenue and Agate
Street, offers many different
services to the student, including
minor surgical operations and
special procedures, consultation,
X-ray. laboratory testing, im
munization and medications.
The service also operates a
pharmacy which is staffed by a
full-time registered pharmacist.
The service is equipped to
handle simple fractures and
general medical treatment and
care. But all major surgery or
cases requiring general
anaesthesia and specialist’s
services are referred to a private
physician.
Each student pays $12.50 a
term in fees to the health service,
which goes toward the operation
of the service, payment of staff
salaries, and covers the expenses
of 15 days free hospitalization
which is available to each
student
Medicines and other services
are available to students at a low
price
The service is open from 8 a m.
to -1 30 p m Monday through
Friday, and 8 a m. to 11:30 a m.
Saturdays It is closed Sundays.
H-'Oto by P*lw Wemrc-oe