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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 8, 1981)
tamara swenson double play ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY STUDENT TEACHERS AND T.E.E.M. I AND II STUDENTS Deadline for making application for T.E.E.M. I, T.E.E.M. II and Elementary and Secondary Student Teaching for Fall Term is April 10, 1981. Folders may be picked up at the Office of Field Experience, College of Education. For more information call 686-3530 Orleans Whole Oysters 8 oz. tins 95 Welch’s Grape Juice 64 oz. $1 99 Kraft Velveeta $078 2 lb. pkg. Mission Macaroni and 3/ Cheese Dinners 7% oz. pkg 89 Kraft Mayonnaise *i 32 oz. jar ™ 29 Imperial Oleo 1 lb 59 Pillsbury Flour Bleached or Unbleached 10 lb. bag $1 79 Family Scott Bathroom Tissue Scott Towels Mrs. Butterworth Syrup Welch’s Grape Jelly 4 roll pkg. Jumbo Roll 24 oz. bottle 2 lb.jar Hormel Chili Re9 orHot_15 oz tin Oroweat Francisco Vienna Bread fiQ Thin and Thick Sliced 16 oz loaf ^0 %0 Cello wrapped Cauliflower KDC lb. 2370W. 11th at City View DRIVE-N-SAVE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. dally, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays We accept Food Stamps Prices effective WED., April 8 thru TUES., April 14. 30th A Hllyard Wanted ATHLETIC DIRECTOR, must be willing to work with diverse groups, balance an already overdrawn budget, increase revenue, steer clear of scandal, soothe 17 coaches in 20 sports and keep everyone (alumni, coaches, staff, students and especially administrators) happy. Apply at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon. Oregon is in the market for some athletic administrators. Last week John Caine, Julie Carson and Ed Swartz bowed out to take other jobs or just to pick up their checks. This week, the search for a new athletic department hier archy will begin in earnest. The 12-member committee that has been named to conduct the national search for a new athletic director has quite a job ahead if it hopes to find an ath letic director who meets ever yone's criteria. They'll be looking for someone who has a proven record, is adept in public rela tions and fund raising and can direct a sports program into na tional prominence. What the athletic department would like is another Tom Jern stedt, the former Oregon busi ness manager who is en trenched solidly in the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Who the athletic department will end up with is anyone’s guess. But one aspect of the search is clear — whoever they choose will have to be enticed with a healthy salary. Faced with a $600,000 budget deficit that threatens to bailoon to $1 million and limited funds, the University needs someone who is a cross between George Allen and Lee lacocca. Any other corporation that juggles a $5 million budget would pay its boss in the $50,000-60,000 range just to mind the store. But unless Oregon is willing to offer more than the $43,000 a year that John Caine received, another Jernstedt isn’t what it’ll get. While Caine’s salary wasn’t exactly slim pickings for the average white collar worker, it has to be put in perspective. The new director will face a program that has suffered from putting excellence on the field ahead of excellence in the classroom and in society. And in the search for a higher win-loss percentage, the budget was squandered until the situation now has gotten out of hand. In addition to these stumbling blocks, the new man (or woman) will face the usual pressures from alumni, fans, coaches, students and athletes. Swartz, now athletic director at the University of Texas-EI Paso, is earning $48,000 a year — $19,000 more than his Oregon salary. "You get what you pay for," Swartz told the Eugene Regis ter-Guard. “Any major universi ty is only kidding itself if it thinks it can pay the athletic director the same as the librarian. Not when it’s a $5 million-a-year business." How accurate. But is the athletic department willing to pay what it takes to bring in a top administrator? In light of the blighted budget and the urgent need to increase the athletic department’s respec tability, it should be. Prep hoop star decides on OSU PORTLAND (AP) - A C. Green, the most-recruited prep basketball player in Oregon this year, announced Tuesday he will attend Oregon State University. The 6-foot-8 Green was the dominant player on the Benson High team that won the Oregon Class AAA basketball title in March. He had narrowed his choices to Washington State and Oregon State. ‘‘It was a very tough deci sion,” Green said. "I just really decided last night.” Green said Oregon State soaches have told him he could wind up playing anywhere on he front line for the Beavers. IMPORTED coffee (&tea By the Pound or by the Cup Kinko’s 764 E. 13th 344 -7894 Bean of the Month Panama $4.45 lb. Compare Our Prices