Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 30, 1998, Page 4, Image 4

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    JADE PALACE
CANTONESE & SZECHUAN CUISINE
Professional Wok Cooking
Coming
^ December 4th
► Seafood Buffet
Irklav-Sauirdn SAO-Ni.AOl’M
AII.YOI (.AN I'AI <a
Regular Lunch & Dinner
Buffet served everyday.
'Uetfeia'Uatt Buffet /JvailaJUe ^luei. & *7UusU 5:30-8pm
Lots of tofu & vegetable dishes, veggie egg rolls, pot stickers & more.
906 W 7th, Eugene • 344-9523 • Closed Mondays
iddlefielTV
'^Solf :Cbu«sFll/
18 Minutes south of Eugene
in Cottage Grove • 942-8730
2000 Cal Young Rd.
Eugene • 484-1927
0049971
GOLF ANYTIME
18 Holes...s12“
School of MUSIC
’OF OREGON
& Department of DANCE
DECEMBER CONCERTS
Clip and Save this Calendar!
For more information on School of Music events, call 346-5678,
or call Guardline at 485-2000, ext. 2533 for a taped message.
Tue. OREGON STRING QUARTET
12/1 UO Faculty Artist Series 8 p.m., Beall Hall
$7 General Admission, $4 students & senior citizens
Wed. OREGON JAZZ ENSEMBLE & JAZZ LAB BANDS
12/2 with Kim Richmond and Clay Jenkins
UO Ensembles & Guest Artists 8 p.m., Beall Hall
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Fri. OREGON OPERA ENSEMBLE
12/4 UO Ensemble 8 p.m., Beall Hall
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Sat. UNIVERSITY PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE
12/5 UO Ensemble 2 p.m., 198 Music
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Sat. FOLK DANCE PARTY
12/5 International folk dancing with free instruction.
7:30 p.m., 220 Gerlinger FREE Admission
Sun. HOLIDAY CHORAL CONCERT
12/6 UO Ensembles 4 p.m., Beall Hall
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Sun. HUNDREDTH MONKEY ENSEMBLE
12/6 UO Contemporary Music Ensemble 8 p.m., 186 Music
FREE Admission
Campus Cash
Continued from Page 1
be a $10 minimum first deposit,
said Joel Woodruff, UO card
manager.
The office will collect old ID
cards rather than running current
IDs through the card machine,
Woodruff said.
Student Shari Takara speculat
ed that one day the system
should expand benefits to stu
dents in housing, as well.
“It would also be helpful if you
could use your ID for washers [in
the residence halls], because it's
hard to always have quarters,”
she said.
Campus Cash is in its first
phase, which focuses on using
the card for direct purchases.
The next phases add the card
system into vending machines
and arcade games and hope to
expand to include use at the Uni
Campus Cash
Starting Jan. 4, people can trade
their old 10 card for a new ID with
Campus Cash at the 110 Card office
in EMU room 12.
Campus Cash will be accepted
at all food outlets in the EMU and
Lawrence and Willamette halls.
The EMU ticket office, recreation
center and craft center will also ac
cept Campus Cash.
versity Bookstore.
“The intention is for it to be
utilized in other applications
around campus,” Woodruff
said. “This has the potential to
be a full-campus card opera
tion.”
The card system has taken a
long time to get to the Universi
ty, EMU Director Dusty Miller
said.
“Frankly, it’s pass6,” Miller
said.
The University debit cards are
starting in an established
process, Woodruff said.
“There are campuses that have
been doing this for 15 years,” he
said
The system was put in mo
tion as soon as possible, said
Lee LaTour, EMU marketing co
ordinator.
“I wanted to launch it in Janu
ary as opposed to spring because
it’s ready to go, and I didn’t want
to sit on it,” LaTour said.
The marketing aspect is work
ing on highlighting the conve
nience of the card.
“Every place that you can use
it will have a big sign,” LaTour
said. “We want to make it as con
venient as possible.”
Bridge
Continued from Page 1
"I like Mr. DeFazio, but I think
if anything is named after him, it
should be after he leaves office or
dies — whichever comes first,”
Taylor said.
Councilman Pat Farr said the
new name might take credit
away from the people who made
the bridge possible.
Mayor Jim Torrey said Bascom
worked hard enough on the pro
ject to warrant putting her name
on the bike bridge.
“It is not at all unlike Ms. Bas
com to shove the high praise on
someone else,” he said.
But Torrey also said he recog
nizes how hard DeFazio worked
to press former U.S. Sen. Mark
Hatfield to push through federal
funds for the bridge project.
Councilman Bobby Lee agreed.
“It is tough to be a congress
man in charge of four counties,”
he said. “I think he deserves it.
It is not fun at all being a con
gressman.”
Lee read a sentence from the
council agenda that said the
bridge project and the new bike
bridge would not exist without
DeFazio.
“Assuming this sentence is true,
I think he deserves it,” he said.
Taylor said she understood
Lee’s opinion.
“I like Peter DeFazio. I know
how hard he works,” she said.
“But 1 think we should have
more time for other people to ex
press their opinions.”
Councilwoman Laurie Swan
son Gribskov said DeFazio “ran
the ball” to carry the funding
through.
Torrey said he wanted con
sensus.
"I know we can find a way to
make this a unanimous vote,”
Torrey said.
And when it came time to
vote, no members of the council
dissented.
The Emerald was unable to
contact DeFazio for comment on
the council’s decision.
David Ryan covers the Eugene City
Council, community groups and
politics for the Emerald.
Freshman Seminars
WINTER 1999
PREFIX
ANTH 199
ELTA 199
ENG 199
INTL 199
HIST 199
J 199
MIL 199
PS 199
RUSS 199
SOC 199
TITLE
Health and Healing in Southeast Asia
Living, Learning, and Working in the 21st Century
Science Fiction: A New Mythology?
Australia Through Autobiography
The Death Penalty: Historical, Political, and Ethical Perspectives
Seeing Television
Come Fly With Me: Exploring the Heritage of Flight
Theories of Leadership
Asian American Literature and Film
Social Identity and Oppression
For more information, see page 77 in the winter UO Schedule of Classes.
FRESHMAN SEMINARS
372 Oregon Hall • University of Oregon . 346-1136
freshsem@oregon.uoregon.edu
.4- tffntutnt-actum nmmtud u culmraUucruty ,*dcmplumc With the Amcrutm with DiuhtLha Act
Get results with Oregon Daily Emerald Classifieds! 346-4343
©resonWCmeralij
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NEWSROOM — M6-W11
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