Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 05, 1990, Page 4, Image 16

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    U. NEWS
California
Ethnic requirements approved .
Beginning next fall, all U. of
California, Irvine, freshmen will he
required to take two courses in multi
cultural and international studies
The new requirements are the result
of a two-year study by the Task Force
on General Education, made up of
administrators, faculty and students
Although the new requirements will he
added to the current general studies
courses, task force members said they
should not overburden students
because they also will fulfill other
requirement categories ■dim Kanalli
Neu University, U. of California,
Irvine
SMITH
CORONA
Crossword
Challenge
ACROSS
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4 'Thu m fun'*
H "You art* you
12 ‘Much
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13 Cnmtoii and
tomato
14 Tbrlotac rival
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15 Fmir-n rft11.
19 Com poitkm
20 High-tech ia*
write til pe A hi'!
21 One _ time
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23 November veg
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30 Dorm, tor one
34 1V Smith
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39 Colummat
40 Profeiwit*
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41 The Hockir»
foi s nut Alice At>bi
44 Clean air -igrn
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49 prime time
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bailer
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58 Literature
assignment
.S9 Mminlaintop
60 Yale student
61 Trade
62 Make* u iIm'm
63 Kennedi tn
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i Kanaat- senator
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6 Kim
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9 l h\v t, poker *. ai il*
10 Neighbor two*
1 i Matter™ in final
10 Thompson of
‘Back to the FuiurvIT
17 _ la in
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24 1 titi«‘
25 Pop the ijucfclion
27 December 24 oi .11
W “Takt- On Mr’
31 Bran iwjurcc
12 trip vacation
J.’i Graduate* of 55
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52 Sloeking ituflei » ‘
53 Acting pact
54 Ken of “thir
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DECEMBER ANSWERS
r
Look for February
Crossword answers in
the next issue of U.
Brought to you by:
SMITH CORONA
Illinois
Armed unrobbery ... Joseph Muleahey, a
first-year law student at the U of
Illinois, was arrested and put in jail
overnight after trying to withdraw $15
from his hank account. Muleahey said
he unknowingly used a withdrawal slip
that had a holdup note written on it The
note said, “Give me $10,000, 1 have a
gun " Fifteen minutes later, about 10
police officers arrested Muleahey for
attempted armed robbery. They hand
cuffed, fingerprinted and photographed
him. and transferred him to the county
jail where he spent the night. He was
released the next day after bank secu
rity officers reviewed a tape of the
"holdup," checked Mulcahey's back
ground and determined the incident
was a hoax and Muleahey was innocent
■ Julie M Anthony. The Daily
Northwestern, Northwestern U
INDIANA
Student receives 20-year drug sentence ...
A Northwestern U junior was sen
tenced to 20 years in prison for dealing
cocaine this fall The student was
charged with two counts of conspiracy
to deal cocaine and one count of dealing
more than three grains of cocaine.
Defense lawyers pointed out his previ
ously clean police record, but Judge
William MaHanna sentenced him to a
total of 60 years m prison. 20 years for
each of the three counts. However,
because of his age and background, he
will be allowed to serve the sentences
concurrently MaHanna said, “One
thing to learn from this is that the
penalty for such crimes is severe." The
student is appealing the sentence. "Rob
Swanson, Purdue Exponent. Purdue U.
Kansas
A secure way home ... The U. of Kansas
offers inebriated or vulnerable stu
dents a way home through a taxi ser
vice, Secure Cab The ride is free with
a student I D. and is available from 11
BeThe Author Of
Our Next Bestseller.
St-nd usvour most closet idea fot out I-Shitt
Slogan t ’.onicst. and \tnn message could appeal
on a Siena ( luh 1 Shu t1
I hat s out Grand Pri/e, plus a gifl-qualii\ .
Sierra Club Book Second and Third Pri/e
wmneis rec etve a lull-color Siena Club lk>ok
Send vour etui v typed on a S\f> card j
with voui name, address, phone numbei t \
and entt s categoi \ ()utdoor Adventure
01 Fnvironmental Protection. Oneentis pei
c ategoi \ please Mail to: Sierra Club T-Shirt
Slogan Contest, \ttn Wench Smith. 7S0 Polk
Street. San Francisco, (A 94109, postmarked
b\ Febnian 10,1990 Vc)u don't need to be a
mcmlx'i to entei
SierraClub-h
.... • '
W< l . .0 VU" • v r t t;t . i (e-; . • i Cm >! *<J Cr, .-Mi J *1 i <1 iK«0 *n tftf Ap • 99C iSSc-f o' V VliJi.'t'T# ’ "npi rttt 3» $*«* Chl9
it: ’h«i- ur*.m i f >- wig** Aut-'.ti cxcome pretty o* S<n Cfcfc «oor luOraan?-’’. $*r<i Dtt %/it Mw i gMs to futxwttefl yopn*
loin Us.
\ IIWI I. . v i. !i
Now's ,i great time
, 10 join Siena Gub
Ainenca's action-oriented envi
ionmemal organization! Student
membership is onh M i ,t scat Mail
«mt check along with this member
ship coupon Do not mail membci
shipwnil contest entry
YES, sign me up for one sear'
Ms t heck is enclosed. (Choose one.)
-1:> Individual Student
s23 Joint Student
'X\ Individual Regulai
HI Joint Regulai
Duo liukklc suhtcnpuun in Sin in (S730)
and Chapin pubtirauom (St i Due are ihm
us stediK iiliic
Ao3»m
-
SU» ~
Enclose check and mail to Sierra Club Dept H902,
P 0 Box 7959, San Francisco. CA 94120
p m to 2:30 a m. seven days a week.
On-campus calls receive priority, said
KU Student Coordinator Charles
Bryan. Bryan said the group takes pr<
cautions to avoid abuse of the program
He said students are asked for an I I)
number and drop-off address to avoid
abuse. "The purpose of Secure Cab is
to give people who are in trouble a ride
home,” he said. “We're there when they
had one beer too many or their friends
left them at a bar or they are on campus
and think someone is following them.
People still need to be responsible for
their own transportation." ■ Beth
Behrens, The University Daily
Kansan, U. of Kansas
Kentucky
Whu ordered the pizza?... U. uf Kentucky
business students standing in the add
drop line received a surprise when fret
pizzas and sodas were delivered.
College of Business Alumni Affairs
Director Ralph Brown ordered lunch
for about 200 students after he realized
how slowly the line was moving. “While
it wasn’t our fault, it was our respon
siblity to take care of the students," he
said. Senior Tracv Harris, who waited
in line four hours, said, “1 thought it
was really considerate of them to bring
food and drinks to us. Sometimes cam
pus feels so big, and it made you feel
like someone was thinking about you
■ Cynthia Lewis, Kentucky Kernel, l
of Kentucky
NORTH CAROLINA
Milk crate misdemeanor ... As of last
month, North Carolina students and
residents using plastic crates for st 1
age or furniture may be fined $3(><)
and/or sentenced to six months in ja
The unauthorized possession of plast
milk crates from North Carolm
dairies was made illegal after tl.
Carolina/Virginia Dairy Product
Association realized the two states lo
nearly 1 million crates each year at
cost of about $2 million. Executive
Director Barbara Short said the ass
ciation launched a publicity campaign:
encouraging students to return the
crates to groceries and dairies, guar
anteeing amnesty through Dec 1 ■
Julie Gammill, The Daily Tar Heel, l
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Pennsylvania
Police thwart planned flag burning
.Political protest took the form of sym
bolic art last November at Carnegie
Mellon U when an art student Jessica
Caplan’s performance art flag burning
ceremony was stopped. Caplan
planned to hang kerosene-soaked flags
from 8 countries, including the l S
soil them, wash them and burn them
together in a metal basin. The ashes
would have been placed together in a
hollow model of the earth. Assistant
Dean of Student Affairs Ron Campana
had campus police stop the protest for
safety reasons. Caplan said politics
were the issue. 1 did disscuss in depth
with (Facility Safety Analyst for the
university) Bob Anderegg what I was
going to do. We discussed my burning
pieces of 100 percent cotton soaked in
an accelerant; he said he’d supply the
extingishers and that it was a 'go,”’ she
said. "The only thing 1 left out was
what patterns were on the material
■ Farron W. Levy, The Daily Tartan.
Carnegie Mellon U.