OREGON'S BEST BUYS ON VOLKSWAGEN! NEW'99hJ ETTA 1$ 188 s i #W99010 /JW98084 »ALer^‘ 160. $2058.39 cash or trade down. $198 1st omt $43 *- v. ‘ roe $12,090 $0 incl? )0 mi/yr On approved atinceptroafotal lease cl $250 termination tee 12. |R iic/titie fees, $35 doc fee, tejj rebate and $250 refund NEW '99PASSAT Drivers wanted 2300 West 7th « EUGENE • 343-8811 • www.sheppardmotors.com for your BOOKS! For books we need for the upcoming SPRING term, we'll pay you of the current student price. And... YOU can win $20 Gash (Donated by Nebraska Books) If you're selling books where the alarm clock rings. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON 346-4331 • 895 E. 13th www.uobookstore.com M-F 7:45-6 Sat 10-6 Sun 12-6 Main Store March 10 - 20 Regular Store Hours Emu Lobby March 15-18 M-Th 8:30a-5:00p March 19 Fri 8:30a-4:00p Texas INSTRUMENTS Calculator Buyback* Models TI-82, TI-83, TI-85 & TI-86 ONLY! ‘Calculator Buyback is Upstairs with the Book Buyback. Must have Manual and Cable. Pick up an Emerald at 03 campus & community locations. Trees Continued from Page 1 seconds. They make a lot of noise and tend to fall slowly. But even though they are loud, King said, it was lucky it fell at night because there’s always the possi bility of panic if a lot of people are around. About three years ago, the Uni versity started looking more care fully at potential problem trees and took out 10 they thought were a serious risk. “The campus was barren when the University started [in 1876], and some of the trees on campus today are in excess of 100 years old,” King said. Trees are living organisms, he said. They live and die, and the University is now experiencing some of the drawbacks of having old trees. Facilities Services always re places the trees it cuts down after reexamining the area and decid ing if another tree would survive in its place, King said. “Sometimes we replace one tree with two,” he said. “We al ways want new trees growing so the population has a good range of ages.” In the city of Eugene, Johnny Medlin, the maintenance support services manager, said it is typi cal to have problems with trees, but he said this year is the worst wind damage the city has seen in a number of years. Trees mainly fell on streets, causing six street closures and damaging a large part of Hen dricks Park, Medlin said. He said the city has an emer gency command center that has two-way radio capability that helps the city’s employees mobi lize and act quickly. “We anticipated the storm and had people to man that,” he said. “It’s common to call crews in for overtime.” Medlin said it is still too early for a cost estimate, but the most significant damage was at Hen dricks Park, where at least 20 trees fell and a picnic shelter was ruined. Concerning preventive mea sures, Medlin said the city usual ly doesn’t respond until it gets a call about a problem, but it does periodically check for problem trees. “We have staff almost full time to do condition assessment and hazard assessment,” he said. “But there’s not much opportuni ty to do a prediction more than a few hours ahead of time.” The trees hardest hit in last week’s wind storm were ever greens, because they have a large canopy-like structure that creates a wind sail, he said. A big prob lem is that when weather fronts come in, wind is often a part of them, he said. “With rain, wind and ice, it is not uncommon that they all go together,” he said. Even though the city trees were hit harder than those on campus, University Arborist John Anthony said, the Universi ty is a tough place for trees. “Trees have a life span that is sometimes compromised by the conditions,” he said. “On cam pus, there are injuries to trees that would not be done in the wild." Anthony said trenching for sewers, laying concrete and dig ging for irrigation can often cause problems for trees. In these situa tions, trees go into decline soon er than normal, he said. These environmental stresses, old age and an event like a wind storm all contribute to tree prob lems on campus, he said. Felicity Ayles covers city develop ment and the West University neighborhood for the Emerald. She can be reached via e-mail at fizzer@gladstone. uoregon edu. fy. off th® b*t. Buy ours or sell us yours... The friendly used Levis Store ' 925 Pearl St. • 485-4885 /wr* for you a{ ik* (/Aiv-erSify of OrzjoK Spying byeak in Mazatlan fb€700 pey peyson based on «y*ad yate Includes A'v/Hotel/trans-Pers _ out o$ Portland -4-'' Council Trawl CIEE: Council on International Educational Exchange University or Oregon In the EMU Building Eugene 877 1/2 East 13™ Street Eugene (541)344-22631