“30 years of Quality Service" Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen Audi • Datsun • Toyota GERMAN AUTO SERVICE, INC. 342-2912 2025 Franklin Blvd. * Eugene, Oregon, 97402 Argentina Australia China Colombia Czechoslovakia Denmark Fcuador F.ngUnd Fiji Finland France Germany Hong Kong Hungary Indonesia Israel Italy Japan Kenya Study Abroad... Think About It! • Spend one or more terms overseas • I .earn about and experience world events from a new perspective • Earn UO Credit • Use your Financial Aid General Study Abroad Information Meeting November 4, 1992 3:30-5:00 p.m. Ben Linder Room, EMU I or program brochures ait>l other information about studs abroad opportunities, please contact the Office of International education and I schangc. .1)0 Oregon Hall ( M<> 1207). Korea Mrtkn Netherlands Norway l*hilippines Poland Russia Scotland Spain Sweden Tanzania Thailand Togo Uruguay Vietnam KEGS Continued from Page 1 don'l have a problem with thorn," he said Howovor. if the kegs aro not ai the correct ad dresses. EPD trios to track thorn down If police find tho keg ot another address. they wil! confis cate it and citn tho purchaser for false swearing, firooks said University senior Joe Edwards discovered that on Friday, Oct. 23 Edwards said ho originally wrote down what he thought was his friend's address for the site of consumption Ho said ho planned to have the par ty at fits friend's house and guessed his friend's address when he bought the keg from the distrib utor According to police reports, tho address of con sumption on the OLCC receipt that Edwards signed did not exist Edwards said the keg ended up at his apartment because his friend did not want it at his house Edwards said ho and alanil six of his friends were sitting in his apartment at about 7 p m last Friday when the police arrived, gave him a lit kid for false swearing and confiscated the keg He said the keg had not been tapped Edwards said fie made a careless mistake and never intended to mislead the police diving false information is just one of many wavs keg purchasers i an get into trouble with the law. Brooks said El’U will issue citations for giving alcohol to minors, giving alcohol to a visibly in toxicutod person, possessing a keg without an Ol.Cr keg identification tag, removing or altering a keg lag, and selling alcohol without a license All are Class A misdemeanors Police are failed to most ( ampus area parties because of noise t ornplaints. Brooks said When officers arrive at a party, they have some options on how to handle the situation, he said However, Brooks salt! the one tiling the officers cannot do is ignore a violation "If the officers don't sire any violations." he said, "they will contact the person in charge and ask them to control their party Officers cun only enter a party uninvited if exi gent (in umstarices exist, said attorney Dan Koe nig Koenig, who worked as a deputy district attor ney in Eugene for eight years before leaving for private practice, said exigent cirt umstances exist when tl is likely tile crime the police believe is taking place would subside before police could ‘About 90 percent of the kegs checked are good, and we don't have a problem with them.' — William Brooks, Lugene police department obtain a search warrant If the case goes to court, it is the responsibility of the police to prove that exigent circumstances existed, Koenig said LTD Sgt Dennis Baker said it can take up to three hours t(f get a search warrant and police would enter a house uninvited if they believed evidence of a crime was being removed or do stroyixi Baker said police would enter a house if they saw minors running from the party or kegs being poured out lie said most of the time people allow the officers into their homes and that officers usu ally do not enter uninvited. "We have had doors slammed in our face," he said. "We haven't kicked In any doors, but we have entered parties without asking." If people can't control their party or are in vio lation of the law, police will break up the party, issue citations and may lake people to jail, Baker said. "We will take people to jail if it is un aggravat ed situation and it hxiks like it will got out of hand," he said. "It only takes one guy to throw the first bottle, and we have a situation like the gassing a few years ago." On March 31. HiB9, police used gas to break up a large crowd at a campus-area party. Baker said the police would rather cite people and release them than arrest them. "Taking someone to jail takes an officer off the street for at least an hour," he said "Wo want our officers out on the street.” Baker said LTD pours the confiscated kegs out and returns them to the distributors. People who have had kegs confiscated could also lose their deposits because local distributors said it would be difficult to match kegs to pur chasers after the police return them Harmonizing Culture & Nature Reading, Slide Show & Signing by Chris m.imt Wed • Nov 4 • 7pm 177 Lawrence Hall Corvallis author Chris Maser, internationally recognized expen in forest ecology & consultant to timber companies, conservation groups & government agencies around the world, will be on campus for a FREE event on November 4 th. Maser will be showing slides & reading from & signing his new book, Global Imperative, Harmonizing Culture & Nature -an impassioned yet practical & thoughtful examina tion of the relationships between culture, nature's ability to maintain harmony, & humankind’s spiritual development. Chris Maser's books are available at UNIVERSITY the UO Bookstore, Sponsored by the UO Bookstore & the Environmental Studies Dept. OF ORECON 13th & Kincaid • M-Sat • 346-4331 “Reaching Out to Lesbian and Bisexual Women” U of O Drop-In Group Educational Support Programs ottered by the University Counseling Center and Office of the Dean of Students Note our location change Mondays 3:30 pm - 5:30 pm Koinoina Center For more information 6-1142