We’ve Moved ! (next door) Oregon's Best { Photofinishing dot dotson’s 430 E. 11th St. "" al»o at 1668 Willamette St .Student Valley River Center Discount Any « Yogurt* 1 (*l *»cpt %in.iM ctwv* ,irkl linns I ipim 10/ 1H ‘O) Campus d SUBSHOP 1225 Alder 345-2434 WfieYHM.nwg FALL STUDENT SPECIALS! Basic Tune-up Special $19.95 rag $26 00 Lights: Vista $12.95 300 CX reg S15 95 Cateye S12.95 HL 500 req S15 96 Krypto Locks s19.95 teg S24 96 All ’92 & '93 Bikes on Sale Save S28.00-S140.00 • Mongoose • Rocky • Bontrager ' • Wheeler REPAIRS A CYCLES (JLJ Groovin’ at the Grind JtFF PASlAV £ mtima Audience members dance to the music of headliner Jimmy Cliff at last weekend's Ore gon Grind Music Festival TRAIL Continued from Page 1 lew years. ' Williams said. "Willamette Industries was sitting will) a no-lcneer needed liability, so they were anxious to dispose of it somehow While Willamette Industries was unwilling to donate the trank, an agreement was eventually reached that offered the track to partly settle Bohemia < o \s outstanding debt to the Hl.M Construction of the trail should begin tn late December, Williams said Tite trail will Im avail able for hikers, hit vt lists and equestrians and will allow a< i es , to Domna Cake tor sw imming, fishing or birdwatching and to various Dine County parks and smaller communities along the trail. Trail users i an also continue into the Bryce Cwk recreation area or travel north to Mount June anti the Lost Creek Hank Country Hyway. whit h leads to Pleasant Hill and Eugene. Bn vt le tourists will also have the option of con tinuing through the Willamette National Forest into the town of Oakridge Williams said segments of the trail should he ready to use in March, "in time for the good weath er." George Lavios. Cottage Grove s director of plan ning and development, said the t its supports the trail Lavios said, at cording to Army Gorps of Engi neers figures, more than H00.000 people used out door recreation facilities ill the Cottage Grove area last year, tit) percent of whom were from Lane Counts MINORITIES Continued from Page 1 The alleged violations includ ed a "disproportional distribu tion" of women in the lower ranks of University fat uity, and a lat k of women at the professor and assoi iate professor level The Off It e of Federal Contract Compliant* Programs report also alleged tiiot the University's writ ten affirmative action plans did not oomph with a number of technical federal requirements, and that the University needed 10 improve at ensuring its super visors understood its affirmative action regulations toward appli cants and etnplovees with dis abilities The hiring of more minorities anti women for faculty positions is not in response to the alleged violations. Davis said. "We were already moving in directions that the audit dealt with," Davis said, noting that the Targets of Opportunity program was in plat* sis months before the federal report was released. "People have been working toward these ends for quite some time, hut not as successfully as one hoped." As of November 1992. out of 1,002 teaching fatality at the Uni versity. then* are BO Asion-Anier 11 ans. 23 Hispanics, eight African-Americans and two Native Americans. Statistics for this year were not yet available, so the new faculty don't count in that total, Davis said. Those statistics brought protests from University students last February, who threatened to leave the University unless administrators heeded their demands for change, including better recruiting and retention of minority faculty. The Targets of Opportunity program is no longer formally in plat e due to the University's cur rent financial situation, Davis said. !fowever. University adminis trators will keep up tht'ir equal rates in hiring men and women for assistant professor positions, as they have for the past three years, and will continue to act as mentors for women to ensure that they will he eligible (or promo tion, Davis said. Recruiting more minority stu dents and faculty will also con tinue. Lehrtnan said. “We Came Down From The Mountains to Continue to Fight... ” —Gerson Martinez. FMLN-FPL The war in El Salvador Is over, but the struggle continues. Get involved. UO/UES Sister University Project. • General interest meeting: Tuesday, Oct, 5 5:30 pm. Ben Linder Room EMU • Slide presentation/discussion • All interested students welcome, regordless of knowledge or background in Central America issues I 1 11 I >1 N.S !•' i iciay Night Lineup X • Buckhorn (l:imk '|azz/Rock l-usion) 1 s•TMA 2 2 • i-ha 2l> • UNSHAKABLE RACE (Reggae) November 5 • ,tiv Dealfi and Ujriculhur 1 ■< .1 I I I o Y< >1 I 11V I I It I Ml J C I <1 I l III Al I <>111 IM AND I Ml ) I OOt) ,S| II \ K I . I nil C iHD' le.ti M'<'u and -S a.i ' a *4 As. rx» > '* „ VM \ 1 * ^ ’ IM t VltN rv Nl> 7 .* 1 ami < > v' « - » I I > Ket | in » c-1 l ■\ lit*! t I .l! I V' «**■ I 1 t .• V t* ■ ; t C* *» Ava t 1**1 >li