DOCKS RENT IT « MOVIE RCMTALS • OP€N 24 HOURS 13th A Patlerson •• 342 1727 20 TAB.... 40 DOLLARS! Oregon West 485*1624 • 1475 Franklin mm m m Beat ON SCREEN PRINTED T-SHIRTS. JACKETS SWEATSHIRTS. CAPS AND OTHER TEXTILES Anyone!! for GREEKS* DORMS* CLUBS , 3RD & LAWRENCE (NEXT TO REI) ! 344-7842 piyiftow OP TWO >MA<0« WW»NCtMfNT QWpuO J Offer good with B«rt> ILLUSIONS. 1311 Lincoln Willamette Tower# Building 40% OFF • Haircut (reg $15 w/ shampoo A conditioner) • Perms loop rods & spirals (reg $50-65 wI conditioners, cut & style Longer, color treated hair slightly more) ■ • Illusions • 345-1810 | fow» Otum IMU* '*>**• »**« IWu»» Br«i—& **»<• I •** < Good through June 28. 1993 . t o,u B»* 0,h/ Bolls' f AND MORE... «BftD€S \ V'REFLECTION IS OUR BUSINESS" One of the Largest Selections in the Northwest 524 Valley Rtver Center 545-9437 ■ Graduation Announcements Kinko's offers a line of graduation announcements created to meet your individual needs. Graduation announcements that fit your time frame and vour budget! • 4 styles to choose from • Matching name cards • Quick turnaround time • No minimum orders • Reasonable prices junto's* the copy center 344-7894 860 L 13th Avenue Eugene, OK 97401 KWVA Continued from Page 1 invested a lot in this station. Now I can relax." Thursday was a day of cel ebration at the station. Love lady said Station organizers laughed and joked around Ia*tween their shifts and pat ted themselves on the track — literally. The station’s first day of airing music and news was even sweeter for students like Love lady. )oe (.rube, chair man of kWVA's Hoard of Directors, and Steve Wood ward. KWVA music director, who have been with the sta tion almost from day one "It's something else Woodward said Last month, the F('(’ approved the station’s second permit The PCX-gave the sta tion's first permit the nod in 1992 but then de< ided too many stations were using the transmitter on Blanton Heights, which kWVA wanl ed to transmit from “It's kind of funny," Grube sai<i "When we got the per mit last month, we didn’t even feel it But being plugged in makes it more real ’’ From (i a.m. to 7 pm, the station will air a mixed selec tion of music From H p.m. to midnight. I)|s will host shows focusing on music types from jat?, to reggae. The station's request line is 34fi 0645. kWVA will have a benefit concert Sunday at 8 p.m at WOW Hull The alternative rock band Firehose will lie featured. Tickets cost $7 and are available at the door Recdf&le, this paper LANGUAGES Continued from Page 1 side grants — not the state, said Provost Norm Wessells. Exactly how much of the money would come from reallocation and how much would come from grants can't he predicted. Wessells said If it c an be entirely funded with external money, it will be," Wes sells said But if it can't. Wessells said the programs will Ih« a high priority for realloc ated funds •’This is what’s on the plotter right now." Wessells said These programs are a ma|or state need. This is an emphasis on interna tional things and that the world is changing.” Wessells and l.arson said demand is high for students with grad uate degrees in Chinese and lapnnesc- languages and literature At the higher educ ation level, universities have a shortage of instructors in Japanese and Chinese literature and culture, l-arson said Also, she said, the rw ent development of Japanese language programs in Ore gon elementary and secondary schools has c real eel a demand for well qualified Japanese instructors. "The faculty is already here.” Wessells said. "For them to not offer these degrees is a travesty and a waste of opportunity." The department has been working for about five years to offer these programs, l,arsnn said Wessells said 1990 s Ballot Measure 5 con tributed to the delay. Board President Boh Bailee said Wednesday that he doesn’t fore see any opposition to the plan. HATE Continued trom Page 1 selves. So th(• more they bash someone who is different, the more morally superior they feel." The rai ml breakdown of these incidents follows demographic lines. Whites committed about fit) percent of the crimes; blacks about 25 percent. Asians. His panics and homosexuals faced the greatest risk of attack in cities. "The figures are the same, both nationally and in Boston. Whites attack a variety of groups; blacks attack whites," Mi Devitt said. "You're seeing a rise in attacks on Asians from both groups." Howard Ehrlich, research director for the National Institute Against Prejudice and Violence, blames an increase of such inci dents on a society more tolerant of violence. "They are motivated by a kind of acceptance of violent behav ior." Ehrlich said "They pick an a< ceptable target, someone they think is OK to treat as a non per son." Levin believes antagonism has grown as various groups fight for it slice of a shrinking economic pier. "Young people no longer see the Americ an Dream as a viable resource," he said. "Whites see blacks getting special treatment: blacks see a racist behind every opportunity. This is an age of resentment.” Hut McDevitt and Levin cau tion against juil as the only solu tion. A term behind bars only polarizes those not yet commit ted to an ideology of hate, they said. "It's a crash course for hatred," Levin said. "In prison, a person will lie recruited by the Aryan Brotherhood or the Black Guerrillas When he comes out of prison ho will be a raving bigot." Several areas in the country have sought alternatives. In Montgomery County, Md., juve nile offenders and their parents must take part in a program that includes community service and counseling. We hate to see you go, but before you move, give EWEB a call so we can stop your water and electric service in your name. We'll come and read your meter right away. That way you'll be sure to avoid being responsible for service after you move. So call EWEB before you leave, it will give us a chance to transfer your service and say goodbye. 484-6016. EWEB Eugene Water A Electric Board 500 East 4th Avanua Otfica Hour*: 8 am until 5 pm Monday through Friday