Car Care with a Conscience **S*A Aulapio EUROPEAN AND ASIAN AUTOMOTIVE SPECIALISTS 1975 W. 7th, Eugene • 687-0040 Glasses/Contacts/Exams l A Compk*h* «*\ •• t*wm> tiMturmK uwpulenAil stah* of th<* art equipment A in i i*nla»! U’tiM-s iru lulling diNpiMdbk', linliit. bihx als. ^as |X*rm<*ablt\ extended wear and f«*r |x*t>ple with astigmatism A Same day lit in rm»st * ases (>\ er ^ 000 itmtai ts in sJ«k K A i h vi 2,(01 ir*tne+ on display from designer to i Ijsmi Giorgio Armani, ( .im*ns Ralph Giurvn Polo SilhiuHtr lh*m*tton. C latborno, and many moro A All rvpairs dom- herv A SungUw*s ' Vuamet, Serongett. Revo. Kaytvin, Polaroid, I InbM*. Hollo, /lam. and mort* Complete lab on premises for fast service. rainbow optics 343-3333 7bt> I- nih Avo , fiunone C W hltk k from l of C) I rtv parking in Kick Hours M l Kjm-7pm, Sat UNIVERSITY OSU faces racial tension conflicts By Cathy Peterson Eme»ai(J WepoMer Two racial incidents have brought angry and concerned Oregon State University stu dents. administrators and facul ty together several times in the past few weeks to discuss racial tension on the Corvallis cam pus Jeff Revels, the coordinator of the OSU Black Cultural Center, said he has filed a rai ial harass ment charge with the OSC pro vost against a group of men who allegedly yelled a racial slur from a van on ()c tuber 20 Revels said he is also filing charges with the Corvallis I’o lice Department. "That was the last straw , and I'm not alone." Revels said of the encounter with the men in a Corvallis restaurant parking lot "My incident was not an isolated one.” The other incident took place on .in ASOSU student govern ment retreat, where racial jokes were made after a formal meet ing. Kovels said he would meet with OSU President John Byrne and other university adminis trators on Saturday and pro pose that a zero tolerance poli i v toward racism be adopted He will also ask for a re quired course in multicultural issues for all students, as well as a commitment from the ad ministration t<) support the school's cultural centers for at least five years. If the administrators suggest the formation of another com mittee to study the issue. Rev els said more extreme action might be taken by concerned students "We don’t need more com mittees. if that's the route they're going to take. This is not a matter of study any more.'' he said During a ASOSU meeting Tuesday night, )amae Hilliard, director of Ethnic Minority and Disabled Student Affairs read a statement askinR for the ASOSU’s executive officers, senators and task force direc tors voluntary resignation be cause of the group's behavior at the retreat, according to a story in the OSU student newspaper. Student Senate Vice Presi dent Jeff Grunwald said Thurs day the senate will not address the issue formally until its next meeting in two weeks. He said the student government would not solve the problems on cam pus by resigning. "My thinking is that if you get rid of all of us. what's the guarantee against a whole new set of people getting elected who won't do anything at all?" he said. ASUO Continued from Page 1 all the services that will have to 1m- cut if Measure 5 passes, it will force people to pass a sales tax. hut we have no guarantee of that "We lost? the services in the meantime be cause the next time a sales tax can go to a ballot will be in another 2 years There's going to lx- too much lost, even if we can recover the funding a few years down the road "There will be some things like higher quality faculty that we won t lx* able to get tiack when they leave." Manning said. Along with a stand on Measure 5. the ASUO Kxec utiva has announced its position of the fol lowing measures — • Measure 8, which would prohibit all abor tions except to save a woman's life or in cases of reported rape or incest — oppose. Measure 10. requiring parental notification before a minor could have an abortion — oppose. • Measure 4. which would close the Trojan nuclear power plant until permanent federal waste facilities are set and until the plant meets earthquake standards and is cost effective — sup port • Measure 6, requiring product packaging to 1m; either reusable five times, made of 50 percent recycled material, be packaging that is being re cycled at a rate of 15 percent or made of materials being recycled as a rate of 15 percent support Fall Sportcoat Event Sportcoats of quality and style help you create the right kx>k for this years events. Steven J is Eugene's leading store in traditional mens apparel. This offer good thru November I WO. Steven J I uuif M»' 1 jilk I M.nf S230 I fk I 'M tlll.li lUj/i f ‘>4 I ( ).ik SikvI Wioss I min I Ik- < Kcrp.uk FALL CYCLING SPECIALS Rhode Gear fanny pack . $15.00 Zefal fenders (reg $22501 $19.00 Cateye halogen light (reg $16 5t» $15.00 1991 BRIDGESTONES ARE HERE AT PRE-SEASON PRICES! DAI II 2480 Alder • 342 6155 I n U L O 152 W. 5th • 344-4105 »»»»» »--- — — — — — — — TABLE TENNIS Tournament Nov. lO (Saturday) starts at 12:OOpm in 220 Qerlinger $2.00 entry fee* •(Must sign up and pay before Thursday Nov. 8th at the EMU Kec Center)