SCHOLARSHIPS!
The U.S. Navy has scholarships available for
highly qualified Engineering, Physics and
Math majors. You will receive $800 per month
for your last two years of college, without
affiliation with an ROTC Unit. Job positions
after graduation are:
• Nuclear Power Plant Manager
• Graduate Level Technical Teachers
• Civil Engineering
• Research and Development
For more information contact:
Phil Wallace collect in Portland — 221-3041
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V.
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F.merald Classifieds is offering you a
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Use that free ad for anything you want
— sell your waterbed, or send a personal
to a friend.
Here’s how to get your free ad:
•When you buy an ad in one category
you get a FREE 20 word ad in a
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•Both ads must be placed at the
Emerald office (300 EMU).
•Don’t delay. This offer good January
19 through January 30, 1981.
free.
7
WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW'
tamara swenson
double play
One week after the NCAA
voted to include women's athle
tics in its governing structure
and sponsor women's cham
pionships, the move is still rais
ing eyebrows and questions
about the "new” direction of
women's athletics.
No one is certain what will
happen or how soon, but at tfje
University, coaches and admin
istrators agree it is only time
before Oregon moves from the
AIAW to the NCAA.
“It’s a matter of economics,"
says Deputy Athletic Director
Julie Carson. "We can’t really
afford to join, and we can’t af
ford not to join.”
The economic implications of
the NCAA maneuver are the
most far reaching and possibly
the most devasting to econ
omically straddled athletic
departments.
Coupled with the NCAA’s
traditional stance against
women’s athletics, especially
the organization's opposition to
Title IX, women are caught in
quite a dilemma.
The economic implications
present the biggest challenge
for athletic departments. To
maintain Division l-caliber
women's programs, athletic
departments will be forced into
the NCAA’s recruiting game.
If they don’t join up, they
won't have the top athletes,
i/WWWWWWWWWi
Emerald Graphic
since AIAW recruiting rules
don’t allow off-campus
recruiting. NCAA rules do.
The University and Oregon
State University feel this accu
tely. Both schools support top
women’s programs, sending
teams to national champion
ships and national tournaments
r w w w
V^T^-T
Spectacular School
& Office Supply Sale
Bulletin Boards 12x18 Reg. $5.98 SALE $3.77
18x24 Reg. $9.25 SALE $5.77
3M Magic Transparent Tape Reg. $.98 SALE $.67
Sterling Deskmate Organizer Reg. $4.25 SALE $2.99
Eldon Stackable File Trays Reg. $3.49 and $6.69
NOW ON SALE $1.97 and $3.88
Ring Binders Reg. $2.49 NOW $.99
4 Hi Files Reg. $1.99 NOW $1.29
Limited to stock on hand
Hurry, Sale ends Friday, January 23,1981
13th & Kincaid
Mon-Fri 8:15-5:30
Sat 10:00-2:00
On the main floor, in the office
and school supply department.
In the UO Bookstore
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Paae 2 Section B
each year. To support this habit
they need top caliber athletes.
By being rescued from the
dark ages, women have been
forced into the recruiting mode
that men have grown to despise
and women have tried to avoid.
As the rules stand now,
women’s coaches can’t even
talk to a recruit away from cam
pus or visit their high school.
Under the NCAA, all that will
change.
“I don’t relish the thought of
camping out on a recruit’s
doorstep,” says Oregon
women’s basketball coach El
win Heiny.
While women's athletics
won’t require the recruiting
megabucks that football
demands, it takes lots of cash to
send coaches on the recruitinq
trail.
NCAA officials have said they
will pay for a team’s travel ex
penses to its national cham
pionships. The AIAW is finan
cially unable to.
"That has to be taken into
consideration,” Carson says.
“We’re sending four or more
women’s teams to national
tournaments each year. A
cheaper way of supporting na
tional championship teams has
to be found.” _
The NCAA has offered a
cheaper way, but the offsetting
costs for recruiting will add
several thousand dollars to the
women’s athletic budget, Car
son says.
A majority of the University’s
women’s athletics coaches
want to go with the NCAA, Car
son says, “but we can’t afford it.
We’re caught between what we
want to do and what we can
afford to do.
"A lot of other schools will be
in the same place — caught
between dreams and reality.”
jab
TM-OT
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