1 BOY ONE 14" AT REG. PRICE And Get a 10" 1 Item For Only $030 u (joou luesciays uniy r ,c coupon per puictw;*' •i i delivery only Campus arm only •:xpti.-f] \7jwm 687-8600 3 ( rcdi(\ I 4:00 MWI (ici Ready for People and the (Oregon Coast Spring lerni at OIMB in ( lurlcston, Oregon take PS407 Coastal Resources Policy Winter term CRN 29739 jerry Mailer. Imiruunr 260 ( ondon 'ffffinnMMrww w m w m m w ’ POINTS OT 3AJTM 1'Yidav and Saturday ^ November Il)tli and 20th at the \ets Club r 9:00p.m. - l 00a.m. r FREE - NO COVER r 16th and Willamette • 3d5-3261 h****** ISA PRESENTS SNOOKER TOURNAMENT NOV 18 & 19 SIGN UP AT EMU PEC CENTER S3 ENTRY FEE • LIMITED SPACE SO SIGN UP SOON -PRIZES!!! Student Specie)! $.0/per minute Color Macintosh Rentals Hourly rentals of Mats in comfortable setting Reservations. I:caturing: Word IM 5.1, Pagemakcr 1M 5.0, 1 xtel IM 4.1), Rtfsumlxpert ®, Stt|>er Paint ,M .1.5, Personal Press IM 2.0 and more Compact Macs Delivered 683-8945 IN A CRISIS ABOUT GETTING ENOUGH CREDITS IN YOUR WINTER TERM SCHEDULE Receive 1 credit through the Department of Counseling Psychology Register Now For TUNE-UP ‘94 TOOLS FOR HEALTHIER LIVING Th* Annual Crtatt Pi*v«nMon Coniwane* When Saturday. February 12, 1994 8 30 am to 4 30 pm Where EMU Ballroom Cost S15 (Includes class packet) Register VIA DUCK CALL beginning Nov 15 Course Number CPSY 408/508 CRN 25798 (undergraduate) 25985 (graduate) Workshops on: •Substance abuse *011 therapy •grief •conflict management •sexuality •crisis intervention •career planning • suicide prevention •communication •eating disorders and much much morelll ^ Sponsored by the U of O Crisis Center f For more information, call 346-4487 Pledge song ARCHIVE PHOTO FROM THE PAST: John Stork Evans, an associate music school professor, wrote the Oregon pledge song in 1917 while he waited on a dock in New York City to disembark for France and combat in World War I. KITZHABER Continued from Page 1 tisanship in the Oregon statohou.se "We must stop viewing the budget as an isolat ed two-year balancing exercise." Kitzhaber said, "but rather as a tool for achieving our long-term objectives which include re-in vesting in Oregon’s education infrastructure.” Kitzhaber blamed the state's current economic crisis on poor prioritization of resources already i urinded hv Measure 5 Kitzhaber said lawmakers' preference for public safety and human resources over educ ation and transportation have destroyed Oregon's ec onomu foundation "Education is the engine that is going to drive our future economy.” he said, "and a well-educated work force provides the basis for us to maintain a safe, livable and compassionate sen ietv "1 don't think the vote last Tuesday (on Ballot Measure 1) was about educ ation," kitzhaber said "It was about a lai k of confidence in governance and in the ability of the sate to manage its money Although Kitzhaber commended Rolierts' res ent proposal to seek out an additional $201) million in c:uts from the state budget after the defeat of the sales tax initiative, lie cautioned that her plan is a short-term approach to a much larger budgeting problem. The c halleuger also reiterated his intentions to run a positive, issue-based campaign against Roberts and c alled on her to do the same. Ki-c enlly the gov ernor commented that Kitzhaber, an avid out doorsman, would rather spend his time river rafting than taking c are of Oregonians ‘There are those who choose to view Oregon's current economic situation as a threat, but I prefer to see it as a challenge.’ — John Kitzhaber, gubernatorial candidate Phil Bentlev. co-chairman of Students for Kitzhaber. saigrnup presented its candidate with more than 200 petition signatures gathered by the student organization. Kitzhalrer needs 1.000 signa tures from seven Oregon counties to qualify for the May ballot. 'As students, we have all witnessed the dramat ic effects of budget