Comission passes Krugerrand motion
The Eugene Commission on
Rights of Minorities passed a mo
tion Thursday recommending that
the city take some action to en
courage the boycott of the sale of
the South African Krugerrand.
The commission indicated that
a more elaborate written state
ment would be drafted and sub
mitted to the City Council to rep
resent the commission's position,
which will include a call for a public
hearing on the matter.
The motion was passed unarri
mously.
"The sale and advertisement of
the Krugerrand is offensive to
minority peoples. It is not condu
cive to our good health," said
Lewis Merrick, member of the
commission.
Three members of the People
for South African Freedom tes
tified before the commission and
presented a resolution opposing
the sale of the Krugerrand which
they hope to present before the
city council.
Roger Walke of the group said
that his analysis leads him to be
lieve that $51.75 goes directly to
the South African government for
every Krugerrand sold. He adds
that sale of the coin is “crucial to
the South African economy.”
Programs seeking willing-to-work students
By CAROLYN BEAVER
Of the Emerald
Sitting back and observing is a safe and
sometimes worthwhile position. However,
those who observe might not get as much
out of a situation as participants.
Various programs and centers have
openings across the University.
ESCAPE needs volunteers both in their
office and in other positions. If you’re coor
dinated, ESCAPE is looking for a ‘‘coor
dinator to coordinate coordinatees” for their
secondary school division.
ESCAPE is in need of a computer major
to teach elementary children computer
games, someone who speaks Vietnamese
r
to tutor a young boy, persons interested in
office management, personnel manage
ment and clerical systems for work in their
office. ESCAPE has a registration table in
the EMU lobby.
The ASUO office needs clerk typists.
Work-study students can apply at Suite 4,
EMU.
Three ASUO programs are taking appli
cations for directors. The Women’s Re
source and Referral Center will take appli
cations in Suite 4 EMU until Wednesday;
the International Education Center, 202
EMU will take them until Monday and Off
Campus Housing will do the same in Suite 3
EMU, also until Monday.
The Cultural Forum needs students in
two areas, visual and performing arts and
heritage music (folk and jazz). Better hurry,
though; applications are due today by 5
p.m. in the EMU, Suite 2.
If you’re interested in research, apply
with the Oregon Student Public Interest
Research Group (OSPIRG) in Suite 2 EMU.
OSPIRG needs office workers.
Journalistically inclined? Both the
Oregon Daily Emerald and the
ASUO Course Guide are looking for peo
ple. The Emerald needs reporters, photo
graphers and an Assistant Sports Editor.
Applications for Assistant Sports Editor
must be turned in by Wednesday, in 300
EMU.
The Guide' has openings for an Ad
vertising/Business Manager and
Editing/Production assistants. It requires
some previous experience. Advertising
salespersons are needed and can apply at
Suite 4 EMU by 5 p.m. this afternoon.
The Child Care and Development Center
will make appointments for work-study
persons interested in working with children.
Call 686-4351.
Several positions are open at the Center
for Self-Development, including tutors in
sciences, math, languages, writing, busi
ness and social sciences. A work-study
opening for an academic, career and per
sonal counselor is available as well as a
teacher’s assistant to work with a listening
skills instructor. Apply at 207 Emerald Hall
or call 686-3232.
If all else fails, call Fuller Brush.
HOW JVC CASSETTE DECKS
WENT FAST FORWARD
AND ERASED THE COMPETITION.
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SUPER-ANRS selectively
compresses high-level, high
frequency sounds during
recording. When expanding
in playback, highs retain dy
namic range without distor
tion and tape hiss is cut a
full 10dB
3W*s
SENALLOY HEADS
ARE HARD AND
DISTORTION-FREE.
Every tape deck you’ll look
at either has low-distortion
Permalloy heads (which are
so soft, they literally get
ground away) or hard
ferrite heads (with severe
distortion problems.)
Except JVC decks with
Sen-Alloy heads, a metal
that combines ferrite’s
hardness with Permalloy s
superior magnetic qualities.
Sendust alloy chip bonded to the
front of the permalloy core
Sendust alloy
Shield plate
Permalloy core
Shield case made of Permalloy
MULTI-POINT
PEAK LED’S
BEAT METERS.
A VU meter takes 10~
300 milliseconds to react,
good for average levels but
not fast enough to avoid
peak saturation. MPI is an
array of five LED’s that
continually tell you exactly
when peaks are occurring
within ONE millisecond.
SWITCHABLE
RECORDING
EQUALIZATION
DOESN’T TREAT
YOU LIKE
AN IDIOT.
Other decks just have a
couple of buttons marked
“Normal/Cr/Fe02”. JVC
thinks you’re smarter and
more precise than that so
their exclusive RecEq
system has 15 Eq settings
to finetune any tape to the
deck.
X
2 CDC .70.000
• -2 position
-Rec Eq.
-0
2
Normal Tape (Rec./Playback)
Level-20dB below OVU
DECKS WITH
SOME OR ALL OF
THESE FEATURES
START AT $200.
After you’ve seen the
me-too brands at the other
stereo stores, come into
your nearest Napier Audio
Store and see why JVC is
fast forward of the
competition.