Any Yogurt* (•Except small cones and tinies. Expires 11/23/98) Campus I SUBSHOP Mon.-Fri. lOam-lOpm Sat. llam-9pm Sun. 12pm-9pm 1225 Alder 345-2434 Not valid with any other discounts or coupons. One coupon per customer. 0048871 HOflEY HILL RftRMS* Cam Adventure™ Camp Adventure™ is a non-profit, youth services program. In recent years, UO students have travelled to over 100 program sites in 16 countries, including: Korea. Japan, England. Turkey, Kuwait, the Netherlands, Hong Kong. Belgium, Germany, Bahrain. People's Republic of China, Italy, Russia, and the United States. Camp Adventure™ is currently taking applications for Summer 1999. Positions available as Day Camp Counselors and Aquatics Instructors. Contact Jennifer Edgar at Camp Adventure* Headquarters 1-800-252-2118 www.campadventure.com • 1223 W. 22nd. St, Cedar Falls, IA 50614-015* • • (319) 273-5960 • Fai (319) 273-2058 • $5 OFF COLOR CALENDAR Bring this coupon to the Kinko's listed below and receive $5 off a Deluxe 12-month Flip Calendar. kinko's 1265 Willamette, Eugene 344-3555 Offer good on Deluxe 12-month flip calendar only. Offer is limited to one coupon per customer. Coupon must be " presented at time of purchase and is not valid with other offers or discounts. Offer valid at time of purchase only I and may not be discounted or credited toward past or future purchases. Offer valid at participating Kinko's locations " only. Offer expires 12/31/98. ©1998 Kinko's, Inc. All rights reserved. Kinko's is a registered trademark of Kinko's I Ventures, Inc. and is used by permission. Kinko's requires written permission from the copyright holder in order to 1 reproduce any copyrighted materials. R AAC585_|j)pen 24 Hours • Ask about free pickup and delivery | exp 12/31/991 Inspired \| n (I s \\ n n led. Where you work should be a place that inspires the mind. Imagine that. Visit www.EDS-Imagine-IT.com and ask yourself, lift C7 WU 8.1! Jnsfin p irej A more productive way of working EDS & the EDS logo are registered marks of Electronic Data Systems Corporation. EDS is an equal opportunity employer, m/f/v/d. ©1998 Electronic Data Systems Corporation. All rights reserved. Choir Continued from Page 1 McLucas said the Gospel Choir grew out of the Gospel Ensemble which is lead by John Gainer, a professor who teaches the history of gospel music. Gainer founded the Gospel En semble about 15 years ago but left briefly in 1995, McLucas said. Neufeld was then hired to lead the ensemble and when Gainer returned in 1996, Neufeld began teaching the choir. The two groups have completely different repertoires and different styles. Gainer is able to concentrate on leading a select group of students while Neufeld is able to share gospel with students who may not otherwise have had the op portunity, she said. “I think, actually, it was a won derful solution,” McLucas said. “Many people would like to learn about gospel and how to sing about it.” Neufeld, who has been singing since she was 2 years old, said she feels an obligation to share gospel music. “My music is about joy and that’s what I’m giving back,” Neufeld said. “My life has been changed by it.” Sara Pavelich, a senior and the soprano section leader, said Neufeld brings a truly invigorat ing energy to the choir. “She’s not timid in the slight est,” Pavelich said. “She’s not afraid to get up and dance and re ally get into it. That’s what helps us really get into it.” Pavelich said it would be an in credible loss for the school if the choir is discontinued. “When we go out and represent the University, it brings a new di mension to things,” Pavelich said. “It would cut down on the breadth of diversity in the Univer sity.” Christine Harper, a senior so prano, said the choir attracts a very diverse and multicultural group of people, many of them in ternational students. "I think people get to learn a lot about gospel music in the United States,” Harper said. “It brings a lot of people together because people work really hard to sound good and learn. It’s just a great way to make connections with people.” Harper said she knows several students who joined the choir af ter attending the choir’s concert last spring. “If you’re not even recruiting except by the spirit and joy of the song that’s pretty amazing,” she said. Harper said Neufeld “knows how to help us celebrate life. And trials, the good stuff and the bad.” “Julia will reach out to you just as much as you reach out,” Harp er said. “Supporting each other, that’s what the arts are all about. ” Pavelich said singing with the choir is an essential part of her week. “It’s just such a huge release no matter what’s on your mind," she said. “I don’t know what I would do without it.” The Gospel Choir performed at the Hult Center bond burning cel ebration last week. Their next performance is at 7 p.m., Nov. 12 at the First Baptist Church, 868 High St. Among the songs they will perform are: “The Spirit Says Arise,” “Strength, Blessings, Glo ry & Honor,” “Sing Hallelujah, Amen” and “Worthy to be Praised.” Everyone is welcome to attend. The cost is $3 for students and seniors and $5 for everyone else. Voting Continued from Page 1 Elections on time, voters should have been given a fail-safe ballot when they show up to the polling place. This ballot allows voters to vote on all candi dates and measures that appear on the normal ballot. When registrations are confirmed, fail-safe ballot votes are tabulated with the normal votes. “The only time that voters cannot vote on local is sues and candidates is when they register with a change of address at the last minute,” said Lois Beck er of Lane County Elections. “The challenge ballot only lets them vote on state and federal issues and candidates.” The challenge ballot does not include local mea sures and candidates because it has to be confirmed that voters actually live and pay taxes in the precinct for which they are registered. “It’s unfortunate that some people were not regis tered,” ASUO Vice President Morgan Cowling said. “Whenever you do anything at this level, there is go ing to be a margin of human error. Overall, we con sider the voter registration drive to be a big success.” The ASUO Executive estimates they registered close to 3,500 people for this election, better than ex pected for a non-presidential election, Cowling said. Elections officials have safeguards to prepare poll workers for errors that may have occurred when peo ple were registering to vote. “We have detailed, step-by-step instructions that inform the poll workers of what they are supposed to do,” said Becker. “Every once in awhile a worker will make a mistake and we regret that very much.” Two teen shooters plead guilty The Associated Press KENT, Wash. — The two 16 year-old boys aren’t pals or class mates. Several months ago, they didn't even know one another. But Edward Adam Hopper and Joseph Ualifi Taualii found them selves together in a King County Superior Court room, their ac cusers telling similar tales of loaded guns, empty beer cans and fatal horseplay with friends. In each of the separate cases, the teens bowed their heads in contri tion and entered barely audible guilty pleas to first-degree manslaughter charges. A week be fore Christmas, they’ll come be fore Gain again to learn how much youth they will lose behind bars. Prosecutors say they will join defense attorney John Henry Browne in asking Gain to sentence each boy to five-year prison terms. The shootings — one in April, the other in June — left two teens dead and four families anguished. “This has got to stop,” said James Wolf, whose son, James G. Wolf, was killed from a shotgun blast discharged by Hopper. "There are too many kids dying.” Hopper’s mother, Sara, watched her son plead guilty Friday before Gain, tears lining her face. "This is every family’s night mare,” she said later. “And we are living it.” Charging papers show the coin cidences that brought Hopper and Taualii before the same judge on the same day began months be fore, with the same alcohol-fueled mistake and the same irreversible result. Authorities say the last word 17-year-old James G. Wolf heard was “freeze.” Hopper had said it to him on April 16, in a night of beer drink ing at an Auburn apartment the boy shared with his mother and stepfather. It was after midnight, and Wolf was about to leave. Hopper, feign ing a robbery, pushed his sawed off shotgun into Wolfs back. “Freeze,” he said, and the gun discharged. Edward Hopper told police he’d bought the weapon for $40 in Feb ruary. Sara Hopper and her husband knew. They had told him to get rid of it. He didn’t, even though he was on home detention for an at tempted car-theft conviction and told by a judge not to possess firearms. Two months later in Renton a .357-caliber revolver was in the hands of Taualii. Charging papers say he and a 15-year-old friend, Justin Womack, were having a pre tend argument inside Taualii’s car. They, too, had been drinking beer. Taualii took the gun from under the front seat and pointed it at Womack’s chest. He thought the weapon was unloaded. It wasn’t. Browne praised prosecutors for not seeking the standard 6 1/2- to 8 1 /2-year penalty range for either teen. James Wolf, like Sara Hopper, sat sorrowfully in Kent’s Region al Justice Center as the two boys’ lives converged. “We can’t just slap them on the wrist and send them back to their parents,” he said. “If we do that, we are going to keep burying our kids.” ©regon#€meralt) The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University ol Oregon. Eugene. Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald op erates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Ert) Memorial Union. The Emerald is private prop erty. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable bylaw. NEWSROOM — 346-SSH Editor In chief: Ryan Frank Managing Editor Laura Cadiz Community: Mike Hines, editor David Ryan. Felicity Ayles Entertainment Mike Burnham, editor Amy Boytz Higher Education: Ten Meeuwsen, editor Sarah Skidmore. Tricia Schwennesen In-depth: Nicole Gatton, Eric Collins Penpechw: Kameron Cole, Stetanie Knowlton,edi tors. Amy Goldhammer, Vince Medeiros, Ashley Bach, columnists. Giovanni Salimena, Chris Hutchinson, illustrators Student Activities: Kristina Rudinskas, editor Peter Breaden, Rachel Rosner. James Scripps Sports: Joel Hood, editor, Rob Moseley, asst editor Tim Pyle, Scott Pesznecker, Allison Ross Copy Desk: Sarah Kickler, copy chief. 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