Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1983)
--1 Closeout on all models Prices from $40 • $200 OFF * Sale prices effective from July 21 to August 15 Offer good with coupon only 663 E. Thirteenth 343 7086 w miiiiimHiiiiiiifmmiiiimiimiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiHiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiii Earn money while learning how to use Personal Computers! Perfect Software is testing its self-teaching software. We'll provide you with a computer and instructions and pay you while you learn ($3.50 per hour). If you are interested in learning how to use a personal computer and are willing to provide in-depth evaluation of our software, then please write to us at: Perfect Software, Inc. P.O. Box 1479 • Eugene • OR 97440 TINO’S 1 • Full dinner menu • 23 varieties of Pizzas • Whole wheat and white crust • Pizzas to go -cooked and uncooked 15th and Willamette Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11 00-Midmght Frl. 11:00-1 00 a m Sat. 5:00-1:00 a m Sun. 5:00-11 00 p m 342-8111 Misconduct charges not rare Food-Op type incidents occur at other campuses By Joan Herman Of Itw Emerald The misconduct charges currently being levelled at the now defunct Food-Op are not the first ones brought against an American university for related problems. “These types of problems are constantly occurring” around the country, said Gerry Moseley, associate provost for student affairs. An audit by the University’s business office revealed that from July 1982 to April 1983, at least 16 different University students employed by the Food-Op accumulated 361 hours of “overlap” time that they never worked. The Food Op closed its doors indefinite ly July 1. The Food-Op store was a r private, non-profit cooperative that offered low cost, natural foods to the University community. The University is conduc ting a “continuing investiga tion” and will take any action required to remedy any misconduct found, Moseley said. A related — yet much larger problem — occurred at the University of Washington over a two-year period in 1979 and 1980. In applying for federally funded financial aid, such as loans, grants and work-study monies, financial aid officials over estimated students who would be eligible for such funds. The “error" resulted in the university having to repay $1.2 million back to the federal government Library offers tours Trying to find a specific text among the University library’s 1.6 million books can be difficult — but it doesn’t need to be. ‘ Frustrated patrons should take advantage of the new library tours, which are led by experienced staff members. The tours will introduce patrons to the main library’s layout, including the Douglass Listening Room, documents room and card catalogs, said Hoiway Jones, who directs the library’s reference area. Tour participants will have a chance to ask any ques tions they might have about the library. The 45-minute tours meet Wednesdays at 1:30 p.m. and Thursdays at 2:30 p.m. at the main reference desk near the card catalog on the library’s first floor. The tours will run through July 28 and resume again next October. “In our original application for (financial aid) funding, we listed a number of applica tions for students that couldn’t be documented,” said Eric Godfrey, financial aid director at UW. Godfrey would not say why the over estima tion occurred in the first place, yet he did say university of ficials were responsible for the "error." Since then, UW’s financial aid office has undergone “substantial reorganization,” Godfrey said. The financial aid director at the time, Joe Maestas, resigned because of the incident. The financial aid office now uses a computeriz ed “support system” to handle financial aid documents, in cluding applications, he said. There are also cases in which misconduct did not in volve a misuse of financial aid. At the University of Texas, felony charges were brought against students who used more than $50 worth of com puter time without authoriza tion, said Moseley, who was employed by the University of Texas in 1977 when the pro blem occurred. Apparently the students in volved may have used the computers to reap profits from their personal businesses, Moseley said. Six years ago, computer time may have been worth as much as $200 an hour, Moseley said, yet because of rapid advances in computer science, the same amount of time might be worth as little as $1 today. 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