Slice
and a
only *4“
every Tuesday
225 W. Broadway, Eugene • 284-2700
FREE SEPT. RENT!
T TNI VERSITV
uE33EEEmi1
APARTMENTS
Property address: 90 Commons Drive
come by our clubhouse
and find out more
open 7 days a week
90 Commons Drive
Give Another
Loupie me
of Parenth
Consider being
an Egg Donor
Healthy Women
21-32 years of age
Non-Smokers
Limited Time
Commitment
Compensation Call: OHSU (503) 418-5333
Provided $2,500 OHSU is an equal opportunity,
affirmative action institution
iiy
H.
II
Where Healing, Teaching and Discovery Come Together
ODE ARCHIVES
Find OOE stories since 1994
@ www.dailyemerald.com
Crime
continued from page 1
where also cited for an MIP at the
same house.
Police also shut down parties at
1539 Villard St., where they cited
five University students for MIPs
and wrote one citation for allowing
minors to drink; 991 W. 11th Ave.
where four University students and
two from LCC received MIPs; 1390
Alder St., where a dozen University
students received MIPs; 1975 Hil
yard St., where six University stu
dents and one Oregon State Univer
sity student received MIPs; 3415
Onyx St., where two University stu
dents received various citations;
and at 2656 Alder St., where 13 Uni
versity students, two LCC and three
University of Washington students
received MIPs.
The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity at
1708 Alder St. also received a visit
Saturday a Latino man entered an
18-year-old University student’s
apartment in the 1800 block of Har
ris Street and “attempted a sexual
contact.” The woman ordered the
man to leave and he did, taking
some of the woman’s property. He
is described as being about 30 years
old and 5 feet 10 inches tall with a
slender build. The case will be re
viewed by the department’s violent
crimes unit to see if there is enough
evidence to charge attempted rape.
“The potential for one is there,”
Powers said.
Police are also seeking information
about the armed robbery of the Al
bertson’s Food & Drug, 3075 Hilyard
St., at 12:13 a.m. Saturday morning.
Two men wearing black nylon stock
ings over their heads and carrying
handguns robbed the store of an un
determined amount of cash.
If anyone has information on ei
ther crime, they are asked to call the
police department at 682-5121.
from the police department, and four
University students there received
MIPs. A spokesman for the house
would not comment on the incident.
Eugene police cited 49 University
students and other revelers during
the weekend at parties shut down
by the department.
Those cited received tickets for:
Minor in Possession of Alcohol
Allowing the Consumption of Alco
hol by a Minor
Interfering with a Police Officer
Police spokeswoman Jan Power
said that while the weekend was not
as bad as others in recent years, “from
the people on the party patrol, they’re
saying it’s right up there.”
Powers also said police are seek
ing clues in a burglary and possible
attempted rape case. According to a
police report, at about 5:30 a.m. on
New faculty
continued from page 1
As in Hardwick’s case, the weath
er seemed to play a role in other fac
ulty members’ decisions to make
the move as well.
“We’ve been here for three
months now, since mid-July,” said
Joel Sneed, a new accounting pro
fessor who came from Arizona. “We
wanted to leave before it got really
hot there.”
Besides the difference in weath
er, Sneed has also noticed the large
number of students that come
through campus daily.
“It is unbelievably crowded,” he
said. “The college of business at Ari
zona is off to the side and really re
laxed. Here, the College of Business
is right in the middle of everything.”
Another factor that influenced
Sneed’s decision to come here was
that he was looking for a “smallish
town” to live in.
Sneed and his wife seemed to
find what they were looking for in
Eugene.
“We just had a child nine months
ago and are expecting another one,”
he said. “It’s nice to live in a town
like Eugene.”
The “excellent” University and
faculty, as well as the fact that the
University is a Pacific-10 Confer
ence school, were also factors.
For Julie Haack, a new assistant
chemistry department head and
teaching administrator, being an un
dergraduate played a significant
role in her decision to come back to
the University.
“I was working in a bio-tech start
up company in Portland, and the
chemistry department here had
some programs that really interest
ed me,” she said.
Haack, who had previously done
some teaching at the University as a
teaching fellow, said that her first
week has been fantastic.
“The University faculty is incred
ible, and the administration has
been very helpful,” she said.
The University’s dance depart
ment and regional location is what
lured new dance professor Walter
Kennedy to the University.
“A very nice offer and a very nice
dance department in a beautiful
part of the country is what made me
come to the University,” he said.
Kennedy, who came from the Uni
versity of Illinois at Urbana-Cham
paign, said he enjoys the nature of a
smaller, more intimate campus.
“I love it, I am very excited,” he
said. “There are going to be new
challenges and talented students.”
Faculty Breakdown
Total number of tenure-track
new faculty: 42
Men: 27
Women: 15
Faculty of color: 7
Source: University Office of Resource
Management
WELLS
FARGO
SKIP
the LECTURE We make
BANKING
Here's a subject you can ace. Banking at Wells Fargo is a walk in the quad with
the Student Combo Package. It combines a range of services into one smart plan.
Sign up today at the Wells Fargo location nearest your school and you'll
score a free Wells Fargo T-Shirt.
The Student Combo Package
• Free Checking
• Free Student MasterCard
• ATM & Check Card
• Online Account Access and much more
Plus log onto wellsfarqo.com/special/sweepstakes
and enter the Wells Fargo Student Combo Sweepstakes
for a chance to win a Palm m100 handheld computer.
No annual fee when linked as overdraft protection to your Wells Fargo checking account. Credit card
issued by Wells Fargo Bank Nevada, N.A. and is subject to qualification. 2000 Wells Fargo Banks.
Members FDIC. All Rights Reserved. Palm is a trademark of Palm, Inc., or its subsidiaries.