Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 30, 1984, Page 8, Image 8

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    TINO’S
• Full dinner menu
• 23 varieties of Pizzas
• Whole wheat and
white crust
• Pizzas to go
-cooked and uncooked
15th and Willamette
New Hours:
Mon.-Thurs. 11:00-Midnight
Fri. 11:00-1:00 am.
Sal. 5:00-1:00 a m
Sun. 5:00-11:00 p.m.
See Your Jostens representative
Oct. 31, Nov. 1 & 2 at the Bookstore
Serving our members
since 1920
uo
BOOKS!One
13th & Kincaid
M-F 7:305:30
SAT 10303:00
Supplies MS-4331
I
1
PAT METHENY
GROUP
Tuesday, October 30
8:00 p.m. Silva Concert Hall
Tickets: $12.50, $10.50, $8.50, $6.50
Presented by the Hult Center
Call 687-5000
or buy your tickets at the EMU Main Desk
STUDENT RUSH
If all seating is not sold in advance, stu
dent rush tickets go on sale V2 hour before
curtain. Bring your student I.D.
Rush Tickets: $6.50, $3.50
Page 8
Physical Plant keeps busy
By Michael Hosmar
Of the Emerald
The University Physical Plant
is constantly playing a game of
catch-up, says William Moore,
assistant director of the plant.
The Physical Plant is respon
sible for the maintenance of
University buildings and
grounds. Moore says the plant
has not been able to keep up
with renovation and
maintenance projects for a
number of years.
“We simply don’t have the
resources at this time,” Moore
says. "We’ve managed to get far
enough behind that we don’t
know” where to start. But he’s
optimistic that with proper
funding in the future, the plant
will be able to stay on top of all
the projects.
Moore says campus van
dalism also makes it hard for the
plant to stay on schedule. In
surance companies pay some of
the damage, but most repair
costs come out of the plant’s
budget.
"There are about five items a
day we repair because of van
dalism,” Moore says. “We have
a high incidence of broken win
dows; it’s become a routine
thing.”
"There are hundreds of pro
jects going on,” says Harold
Babcock, plant director. Bab
cock says Physical Plant
workers recently painted parts
of the library, finished the
sprinkler system at Oregon Hall
and started another sprinkler
system between Lawrence and
Deady Halls.
He says the money for these
projects comes out of a
$3-million chunk of the higher
education budget — $600,000
of which was allocated to the
University for the 1984-85
academic year.
University planner David
Rowe says improvements in the
architecture building are one of
the University's top priorities.
"There will be some renova
tion, remodeling and small ad
ditions in the Lawrence Hall
area," Rowe says.
The architecture renovation
project was started a number of
years ago but had to be deferred
because of lack of funding.
“It still remains the Univer
sity’s number one priority,” he
says. "We’ve begun the process
of selecting architects" to do
the preliminary drawings. The
U.S. Department of Energy pro
vided money for the planning of
the architecture building pro
ject, Rowe says.
The University’s science
facilities also are targeted for
<m •? *~*WKWk- W WS&/
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A Physical Plant employee in
stalls sprinkler pipe between
Lawrence and Beady Halls.
improvement. Nothing definite
is planned for this project, but it
probably will be more than one
building, Rowe says. '
The University also is plan->
ning to remodel the EMU
Ballroom and to restore Deady
and Villard Halls.
Students sentenced to service
By Jolayne Houtz
Of the Emerald
Cheating, hazing, disorderly
conduct and damage to Univer
sity property are all infractions
of the University’s Student Con
duct Code.
U of O Foundation
Annual Fund
TBLEFUNI
STATISTICS
125.000
100.000
87.500
75.000
62.500
50.000
37.500
25.000
12.500
On 10/23 Kappa Kappa
Gamma received 202
pledges for a total of
$4,137.
First, second and third
places for most pledges
received are held by:
1st Lambda Chi Alpha • 404
2nd Tri Delta - 336
3rd Kappa Sigma - 297
That brings the total for
the telefund to $39,978.
Tonight Lambda Chi Alpha
will attempt to set a new
record for total pledges
received.
but instead or expulsion,
suspension or another form of
punishment, the University
uses a sanction of community
service to deal with such infrac
tions, and — surprisingly — the
University is one of only three
major universities across the na
tion that uses such a method,
says Gerry Moseley, associate
provost for student affairs.
In fact, the program is so
unusual that it resulted in a
paid trip to New York City last
week for Moseley to discuss the
program on the ABC-TV morn
ing news show “Good Morning
America.”
The community service pro
gram is “an educational compo
nent to the conduct code, an op
portunity for self
development,” Moseley says.
There are 18 infractions of the
conduct code which can result
in a variety of sanctions, but
community service is used
regularly by the University,
Moseley says.
The type and length of service
and the supervisor of the service
are agreed on by both the guilty
student and the University. The
supervisor evaluates the per
son’s work and makes a report.
The student’s sentence is up
when the service is completed
satisfactorily.
Services can include tutoring,
janitorial duties or work at day
care centers, campus libraries or
drug treatment clinics. Records
of the infraction are destroyed
when the guilty students
graduate.
Although the service
substitutes for suspension,
refusal to perform the required
service could lead to suspen
sion or withholding of a degree
or transcripts by the University.
On the “Good Morning
America" show, Moseley was
accompanied by a former stu
dent who went through a period
of community service for
cheating while an
undergraduate.
“Judy,” who cleaned Oregon
Hall as punishment, feels the
program is very effective in
deterring people from cheating.
“The whole time 1 was there,
I kept thinking about what 1 was
doing and why I was doing it,”
she says. “The shock of getting
caught was enough to stop me
from doing it,” but it might take
more to convince other
students, she adds.
Continued on Page 12
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SPRINGFIELD
651 W. Centennial
CAMPUS STORE
849 E. 13th
Tuesday, October 30, 1984