Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 06, 1981, Section A, Page 4, Image 4

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    Group studies grad cases
Cafeteria Grill
TRY OUR
FRIED
CHICKEN
SANDWICH
10:30-200
_
C ultural Forum Presents
Dr. Joseph Blasi
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BOO®
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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.
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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
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1036 Willamette Street
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on the downtown mall
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SAVE
ON BIG PRINT
REDUCTIONS!
Eugene Print's Xerox 1860
printer can reduce originals
as large as 36" wide down to
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bond paper. Ideal for ter
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Camera services also available
Line and screened prints up to
18"x23" Discount does not ap
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EUGENE PRINT
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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