Three University public hearings planned The University has scheduled three public hearings on pro posed administrative rules and amendments on Tuesday in Room 101 EMU. The first hearing, at 3 p.m., will concern a rule for collec ting accounts and notes receivable. At 3:30 p.m., the topic will be proposed rules for appealing University library fines and policy. The last hearing, scheduled to begin at 4 p.m., will focus on proposed amendments to an ex isting rule on general fund raising on campus. The proposal to collect ac counts receivable specifies techniques the Office of Business Affairs may use in col lecting debts, including such methods as withholding transcripts, denying registra tion and using collection agen cies. The proposed rule also outlines an appeal procedure. Two rules involving the library would codify existing HARMONY HAIR FAS/HIONS . . ea^redScn^, wuz^e ten^ dfy^e Call For Appointment Today! 1504 Willamette St. -g/l 7 Eugene, Oregon, 97401 340" procedure. One outlines a three step process by which library borrowers may appeal fines and charges they believe have been assessed in error and provides an ‘‘extenuating cir cumstances” appeal. A second proposed rule outlines two avenues for appeal of current library policy and describes how new library policies may be proposed. The fund-raising rule amend merits reorganize the structure of the existing rule to simplify understanding of University fund-raising requirements, clarify that all such activities are subject to prior review by the University president (or a designee) and correct outdated agency and unit names and titles. Those interested may present oral or written statements at the hearings, or send written statements in advance to Muriel Jackson, assistant to the vice president for administration, in Oregon Hall. Copies of each of the rules are available during regular business hours at the library’s reference desk and the offices of the president, 110 Johnson Hall, and the ASUO president, Suite 4 EMU. Music scholarships awarded Music scholarships totaling nearly $51,000 were awarded to 33 of the 74 finalists who audi tioned March 15-16 for the Ruth Lorraine Close awards at the University music school. The scholarships are worth $3,000, $2,000 and $1,000 each, says Morette Rider, music school dean. Selection of the finalists was based on preliminary screening of applicants by the music The LTD Term Pass ~ Now you can express .yourseif'to and • from school and all over town with an:. ‘ ' LTD Term Pass. . . ' \ It gives students, faculty and staff unlimited rides for three months at a. price that’s hard to pass up—only $44.00 for the entire-term. The Term Pass is oh sale now at the. LTD Customer Service Center at 10th & Willamette, the EMU Main Desk and the. U of O Bookstore. Express yourself with a Term Pass from LTD. expressly for the U of O Lane Transit District For information call 687-5555. faculty. The contest was open to students of voice, harp, keyboard, all orchestral in struments, composition and music history or education. The awards were started in the early 1970s through a be quest from the late Ruth Lor raine Close, a harpist and com poser who attended the Univer sity. Each year, in keeping with preferences expressed in the be quest, one of the judges is a har r l ill. £MXKJI Half the world is hungry for your experience. As a Peace Corps volunteer, you could help people in developing countries obtain the skills they need to grow their ow n fond. I he Peace Corps trains volunteers with agriculture degrees or experience. Call toll-free 800-424-8580. And put your experience to work where it can do a world of gixxJ. U.S. Peace Corps. The toughest job you’ll ever love. Many positions available now for any degree and an interest in agriculture. Call 686-3235 soon. pist, one is a composer and the remaining two represent other areas in music, which vary from year to year. The judges for this year’s con test included composer Morton Subotnick of the California In stitute for the Arts in Los Angeles; Armando Ghitalla, a music professor at the Universi ty of Michigan and former prin cipal trumpet for the Boston Symphony; William Jones, con ductor of the Greater Min neapolis Youth Symphonies; and Ann Mason Stockton, presi dent of the American Harp Society. The scholarship winners for 1985-86 from the state of Oregon and their specialities are: Stephen Kuske, French horn; Lynette Schenkel,: voice; Albert Ahlstrom, composition; Brett Anderson, piano; Barbara Baird, organ / harpsichord; Pilar Bradshaw, violin; Tim Cogswell, percussion; Don Kelley, composition'. Waiter Letkiewicz, composL tion; Lisa Morton, oboe; John Musa, string bass; Gina Pfaff, flute; Tracy Robertson, violin; David Young, composition; Richard Dahl, trombone; Daniel Brugh. composition; Mark Emerson, percussion; Gary Talbert, saxophone; Mark Rhoads, music education; and Lisa Fulks, cello. Plan Continued from Page IB will save Eugene library's rural “ bookmobile and nursing home services, keep county libraries from having to cut service hours and help pay for the cost of an inter-library computer system. The levy property tax is estimated to be 7.5 cents per $1,000 assessed value, or $3.75 annually for the owner of a $50,000 home. Levy funds allocated to the libraries are estimated at $184,000 to Eugene, $65,000 to Springfield, $19,000 to the Siuslaw Library District at Florence, $12,400 to the Fern Ridge Community Library, $8,400 to Cottage Grove, $4,800 to Junction City and $3,400 to Oakridge. Lane Community College asked for and was refused a $1.53 million three-year serial levy. This is the sixth tax measure failure the school has faced since the last successful measure passed in Nov. 1980. School officials said the money had been earmarked to help cover the costs of operating ex penses and the repair of aging campus buildings, as well as other projects. LCC board member incum bent Charlene Curry will retain her Zone Three position. Curry has served on the board for three consecutive terms beginn ing in 1978.