jma Main Desk What is available at the EMU Main Desk? (Main Floor, New Addition) Sales: Key chains, candy, cameras, film, greeting cards, postcards, bicycle locks, school supplies, magazines, padlocks. Services: Check cashing for university students, faculty and staff with proper I.D. Hult Center ticket sales Theater discount tickets Film developing Trading post ads Greyhound bus tickets Fast passes and bus tokens ODE classified ads Pay telephone, EWEB & gas bills Concert tickets Shakespearean Festival tickets Oregon Coast Line Bus Tickets International I.D. cards Amer. Youth Hostel Cards University of Oregon continuation center MICROCOMPUTER LABS The University of Oregon Continuation Center invites you to look into the new Microcomputer labs opening this fall. Gilbert Hall Microcomputer Lab is equipped with IBM microcomputers, and provides computer applications instruc tion for community professionals and students in such fields as Business Management. Journalism, and Law. Condon School Microcomputer Lab has Apple I le Microcomputers and provides educators, students and com munity residents with a personal computing foundation. Condon School Lab also has graphics peripherals for artists and others interested in computer graphics. ★ There are no prerequisites for microcomputer labs ★ SELECTED BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION ACADEMIC COURSES Spreadsheet Analysis, ACTG 510. 01. An introduction to elec tronic spreadsheets as they are used in business management. Several popular programs arc covered including Visicalc. Perfect Calc; and hands-on instruction on Lotus 1-2-3 (fall quarter). Four (4) five week sessions are offered fall quarter. Instructor. Lichty.T. -71*75 Lecture session I, Sept 26 - Oct 28 Fn 10:00 11:20: -71*77 Lecture session II. Sept 26 Oct 28 Fri I 00 • 2:20 -71*76 Lecture session III. Oct .71 • Dee 17 Fri 10:00 11 20 72*78 Lecture session IV. Oct 71 - Dec 17 Fri 1.00 • 2:20 Lahs (day hours Mon Thurs, see department lor times) Business Applications Microcomputers, DSC 510. 03. Survey of hardware and software for business applications. Communications, word processing, spreadsheets, statistics, data base management (computer IBM PC; software: Perfect. Lotus. Statpro). Three ses sions. Instructor. Wilkins. D. -7216 Lecture session I. Sept 70 Dec 17 Fn 8 70 V 70: -7217 Lecture session II. Sept 70 Dec 17 Fri 11:70 - 12 50; -7218 Lecture session III. Sept 30 Dec 17 Fn 2 30 - 3:50; -Labs (day hours Mon Thurs. see department for limes) 7215 Word Processing & Business Communication, BE 199. 03. Introduction lo word processing as it relates to business com munication Examines electronic mail, written reports and manuscripts. (Perfect Software. IBM PC) Tucs. and Thurs 4:30 - 5:50. Instructor. Fagan. S. For information or registration, call the Continuation Center, 686-4231 Coupons in the Emerald save you money. Check every page, every day. It pays. 1—— -—————•——-J inter/national From Amculed Frm report* Faith healer Carter dies FAYETTEVILLE - Ruth Carter Stapleton, the evangelist sister of former President Carter, died Monday of pancreatic cancer after a five-month attempt to .treat herself through diet, exercise and faith in God. Stapleton, 53, died at home around 11:30 a.m., said her hus band, Dr. Robert Stapleton. He refused to comment further when reached by telephone. Stapleton was diagnosed in April by doctors at Duke Universi ty Medical Center as having ter minal cancer. Her son, Scott Carpenter Stapleton, an op thalmologist at Duke, urged her to have orthodox treatment, but she refused. "My whole life has been geared to this kind of thing," Mrs. Stapleton said in May. "I worked 20 years in healing, and I have seen so many miracles. Schools fail asbestos test WASHINGTON — Sixty-six per cent of schools checked so far by the Environmental Protection Agency have failed to comply with rules requiring them to identify and report on asbestos hazards that could threaten the health of students and school employees, an EPA official said Sunday. Alvin Aim, EPA deputy ad ministrator, cautioned that the sampling of schools was not a valid statistical survey because the EPA is sending its inspectors first to school districts it believes are not complying. But he said there is no doubt that the number of school districts failing to adequately address the asbestos problem is “unaccep tably high." A report issued earlier this year by the Service Employees Interna tional union estimated that 3.24 million school children and 600,000 teachers and other employees are being exposed to possibly hazardous levels of asbestos. Asbestos was widely used as fireproof insulation in many older schools in the country before it was banned from schools in 1978. The EPA has estimated that some 30 million tons of the fire retardant were sprayed on walls and ceilings, put in ceiling tiles and wrapped around pipes for insulation. Cheating for fun and profit LONDON — People who cheat on the job work harder and enjoy it more, a'Cambridge University sociologist says. When a worker steals office pens or gets the company to pay for a mistress' apartment, the results are "nothing but good," said Dr. Gerald Mars, who also heads Middlesex Polytechnic’s Center for Occupational and Community Research. In a book published Monday en titled "Cheats at Work: An An thology of Workplace Crime," Mars advises workers to carry on cheating — or "fiddling" as it's called in Britain. Mars, who spent 10 years in more than 30 different jobs resear ching the subject, said cheating is a vital part of Britain's "hidden economy.'' "I know some people will be shocked, but we have been listen ing to the moralists too long," he said. "Fiddles are real. People in industrial relations have got to realize unless they understand fid dles they will never understand workers." Mars said bosses can use cheating as a reward or punishment. "Management can turn a blind eye and use it as a reward. On the other hand, it can use it to get rid of troublemakers." U.S. grants arms to China PEKING — Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told Chinese officials Monday that most of the military technology they have re quested from the United States can be furnished now that China has been reclassified as a friendly, non-adied country, Weinberger's official spokesman reported. The spokesman, who briefed reporters on condition that he not be identified, said Weinberger told Defense Minister Zhang Aip ing at a three-hour meeting that the Commerce Department can automatically OK 32 more items of civilian high technology with possible military use. In June 1981 China presented a list of requests for militarily related or dual use technolgoy and munitions. Weinberger said 11 items initially were apporoved. China had said restrictions were a major problem in Chinese American relations and proved that the United States did not con sider China a trustworthy friend. The reclassification is expected to increase technology exports to $800 million this year and $1 billion next year. Parole set for Powell FAIRFIELD — A judge on Mon day ordered the release of a man convicted of killing a police officer in a case made famous by Joseph Wambaugh's book "The Onion Field," saying a state parole board erred in canceling his schedule parole last year. . Gregory Powell, 49, who is serv ing a life sentence at the state prison at Vacaville for the 1963 ab duction and murder of Los Angeles police officer Ian Camp bell, was ordered released in 10 days by Superior Court Judge Ellis Randall of Solano County. Randall said the parole board had relied on improper evidence of an unproven act of sexual misconduct and apparently had relied on public outcry. Deputy Attorney General Dane Gillette said he would ask a state appeals court in San Francisco to reverse the ruling and to block Powell's release. Campbell was killed in an onion field near Bakersfield, and Wam baugh's book about the crime and protracted legal proceedings became a best-seller. Hit the books FORT DODGE — A young man who shouted about Pearl Harbor and slugged a Laotian refugee has been sentenced to a history lesson. Terry Van Ornum, 23, of Fort Dodge pleaded guilty to in termediate assault in connection with an attack several weeks ago on Thong Soukaseume, a Laotian immigrant. Soukaseume was leaving a con venience store when Ornum came in and, yelling about the lapanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, struck the Laotian in the left ear. The wound required six stitches. The prosecutor recommended that in lieu of a fine or jail time, Ornum be sentenced to write an essay on the Lao culture and the workings of American immigra tion laws. District fudge R.K. Richardson agreed, saying Ornum wasn't old enough to remember Pearl Har bor and had misplaced his grudges. He said Ornum's essay would have to be a serious affair, “not just 25 words." EUGENE PLASMA GORP, 1071 OLIVE ST. fEUGEME PLASMA EARN MONEY WHILE saving lives, donate your plasma 33' EUGENE PLASMA WU-22<4t w Sc X * ui 4-UTN' EXP. DATE OOT. 31,1963 Ntw POnOwS-THiSAD IS WORTH »4<» ON fflUft t»A MMATBd Sit down....take a load off your feet....with an ODE