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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1981)
Group studies grad cases Cafeteria Grill TRY OUR FRIED CHICKEN SANDWICH 10:30-200 _ C ultural Forum Presents Dr. Joseph Blasi DDpg □ODD umn y o D 3D soda DDQQ SfiFySa i:4 wo □□DDon no ao® dooood no 0DDB BOO® gfras Social Studies lecturer at I larvard Director of the project for Kibbutz Studies at Harvard Speaking on "Corporate R ana ways and the Polities of H In ker Ownership " Thursday, May 7 8:00 p.m. 150 Geology Free admission ///(• t-.Ml' (j/tliiriit I'urum is a student-s/iniisiireil sludi n! run nr^iiiii'iilion. ****************************>!« PUBLIC NOTICE-STEREO LIQUIDATION California Stereo Liquidators, Federal No. 95-3531037, will dispose of, for a manufacturer’s representative, their inventory surplus of new stereo equipment. The items listed below will be sold on a first-come first-served basis at...Ramada Inn (Conference Room) 3540 Gateway, Springfield, Oregon 9:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M. Saturday, May 9, 1981 ONLY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! 5 Only AM/FM Cassette Car Stereos, In Dash 5 Only AM FM 8 Trk Car Stereo In Dash 20 Only 8 Track Car Stereos. Underdash 20 Only Cassette Car Stereos, Underdash Disposal Value Price $159. $29 each $139 $29 each $69 $19 each $75 $25 each 32 Only AM/FM/8track Car Stereos In Dash (Best) $165 $59 each 30 Only AM/FM Cassette Car Stereos In Dash (Best) $189 $59 each 20 Pair Only Modular 4 Way Speakers $179 $89 pair 22 Pair Only Coaxial Car Speakers Giant Mags 20 Pair Only Triaxial Car Speakers. Giant Mags Value $89 $119 Disposal Price $29 P"" $49 pair 18 Only Graphic Equalizers For Car, High Wattage $159 $39 each 23 Pair Only 2 Way Car Speakers. Dual Cone 10 Only AM FM in Dash Cassettes For Small Cars $49 $19 pair 22 Only AM FM Cassettes For Car with Auto Reverse 27 Only Power Boosters For Stereo High Wattage $225 $89 each $225 $89 each $89 $29 each ALL BRAND NEW MERCHANDISE WITH FULL 2 YEAR WARRANTIES Buy one or all of the above quantities listed - The public is invited VISA, MASTERCARD. CASH OR PERSONAL CHECKS WELCOME ONE DAY ONLY - SATURDAY. MAY 9th ONLY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST When graduation nears, students sometimes find they haven’t met all the require ments But that doesn’t always mean another term of school. These cases often seek the assistance of the Academic Requirements Committee that CASH For Textbooks Mon.-Fri. Smith Family Bookstore 768 E. 13th 1 Bl. From Campus Ph 345-1651 meets each term to determine exceptions to the University's graduation criteria. The committee, which con sists of eight faculty members and three students, devotes 90 percent of its time to reviewing student petitions for exceptions to graduation rules, says chairer Lewis Ward, a mathematics professor. When students realize their transcripts may be deficient, they should confer intially with their counselors and the student administrative services at Oregon Hall, Ward says. The written student petitions are considered in executive session — the student never ap “Save At 1 r LAZAR’S BAZAR FREE ROACH CLIP WITH THIS COUPON (Limit one coupon per customer) No Purchase Necessary LAZAR S BAZAR RECORDS AND PIPES 1036 Willamette Street and 164 W. Broadway on the downtown mall 687-9766 or 687-0139 .——Valuable Coupon- — SAVE ON BIG PRINT REDUCTIONS! Eugene Print's Xerox 1860 printer can reduce originals as large as 36" wide down to 18"—on white or 5 colors of bond paper. Ideal for ter minal projects and port folios. And U of O architec tural students will receive a 15% discount on 1860 xerox copies. Camera services also available Line and screened prints up to 18"x23" Discount does not ap ply to camera services EUGENE PRINT 20 East Thirteenth. Eugene, 484-2601 pears in person, Ward explains. For that reason, student peti tions must be well documented with comments from instructors and counselors when appro priate. Academic advisors nor mally help students prepare their petitions. "The committee is hard nosed as a rule," Ward says. “We are very skeptical of the rationale behind a petition, but we try to understand all the fac tors involved and reach a fair decision.” The committee frequently decides on elaborate petitions concerning lower-division and upper-division course requir ements or credit transfers for a course at one university to a similar course in the University curriculum. In other cases, the request is as simple as asking permission to drop a course after the dead line. "We want to be sensitive when a hardship really exists,” Ward says of the committee’s approach. "Sometimes the decisions are very tough, especially on some petitions by transfer students.” Ward says the committee’s load grows as the school year progresses, becoming heaviest late in spring term. Students should keep track of their academic progress and have a degree analysis done occasion ally to find potential problem areas, he suggests. Blues band blows town Eugene has a tremendous amount of muscians for a town its size. But as of tonight, there are two that won’t be around anymore. Joel Foy and Don Campbell, half of the group the Blue Tones, are making the move to Austin, Texas. Tonight at B. J. Kelly's, Eugene gets its last chance to hear this incarnation of the Blue Tones. “It's frustrating working here," Campbell says of Eugene. “You can’t compete with rock and roll. We tried. “Austin’s a big place to go because there's a tradition of the blues, swing music in gen eral.” Foy is a firm believer that a large percentage of the music many of us consider current has its roots in the past. When asked to compare the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia with the music he plays, Foy answers with a tone that implies the question demonstrates an ignorance of what music’s all about. KINKO’S 4c Self Service COPIES • Binding • Two-sided copies • Reductions 344-7894 764 E. 13th