The First Annual Undergraduate
Winter Business Career Symposium
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Accounting, Finance, Management, Marketing/Sales
❖Enter to win employer-donated Door Prizes❖
(contributions from Trailblazers, Target, Jeld-Wen, Deloitte & louche,
Salomon Smith Barney and many more)
Schedule (2 panels per session):
3:50—5?:00 Check-in S Reception
A.OO—10:15 Accountings- Marketing
10:50—11 Finance S Management
Noon—1:00 Reception
Friday, January 1?,
3:50 a.m.—1:00 p.m. • Chiles 225, 227, and 223
For more information, contact James Chang at 346-3421
CHARLES H. LUNDQUIST
COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
At the University of Oregon
A Dream to be Achieved:
Building the
Beloved Community”
T in the New Millennium
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Celebration
Tuesday January 16
“I Have a Dream”
Audio & Video History of the Message
EMU Amphitheater 9:30a—1:30p
4 Little Girls
A Spike Lee Documentary
on the 16th Street Church Bombing, Birmingham 1963
100 Willamette 4:30p-6:30p
BSU Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Reception
Gerlinger Lounge 6:30p-8:30p
BSU Candlelight Vigil
EMU Amphitheater 8:30p
Thursday January 18
“King's Perfect Social Movement:
Elements of the Montgomery Bus Boycott”
Mark Tracy, Assistant Dean of Students, Diversity Programs
EMU Multicultural Center 1:30p-2:30p
Workshop: “Urban Legends"
Sponsored by the BSU
EMU Multicultural Center 6:30p-8:30p
Wednesday January 17
Civil Rights Film Series
5 Films of 20th Century Social Justice Movements
Media Services Studio B 10:00a—4:30p
At the River I Stand
Frontline: The Two Nations of Black America
Unfinished Business: The Japanese American Internment Cases
Chicanoi: History of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement
Out of the Past: The Struggle for Gay & Lesbian Rights in America
Lunchtime Social & Dialogue
Sponsored by the BSU
EMU Multicultural Center 12:00p
“Two Decades of MLK Celebrations”
A Community Panel and Conversation
EMU Ben Linder Room 7:00p-9:00p
Friday January 19
“Where Do We Go from Here?"
Student Forum on Identity & Community
with Reception to Follow
EMU Ben Linder Room 1:30p—3:00p
ALL EVENTS ARE FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
MLK events are sponsored by the Black Student Union, the Center of Social Change, the Office of Student Life, the Office of Multicultural
Affairs, the Multicultural Center, the College of Arts and Sciences, University Housing, and the president's Office.
FIND THINGS IN ODE CLASSIFIEDS (BICYCLES, PETS, CARS, JOBS,
ROOMMATES, APARTMENTS, CONCERT TICKETS, PLANE TICKETS,
STUFF YOU LOST, TYPING SERVICES, ON-CAMPUS OPPORTUNITIES)
Bellotti a Buckeye
wouldn ’t surprise
SCOTT PESZNECKER
If you’d seen him at a Decem
ber press conference, you
would have noticed some
thing odd about Oregon head
coach Mike Bellotti.
Even though you, the readers,
weren’t there, try to imagine your
self sitting beneath the Casanova
Center next to Autzen Stadium.
Envision Bellotti sitting next to
Oregon athletic director Bill Moos
at the front of a room filled with
media and television cameras.
Via speaker phone, Bellotti ac
cepts the Ducks’ invitation to the
Culligan Holiday Bowl.
The atmosphere is electric and
jovial, but there’s more.
To kill rumors that Bellotti
might sign a $7.5 million dollar
contract and become Southern
California’s head coach, Moos an
nounces that he and Bellotti have
agreed upon a contract extension
that would keep “The Mustache”
at Oregon until 2007.
A reporter then asks Bellotti
about the USC job.
Bellotti pauses, then answers,
saying he has always been happy
at Oregon and that he always will
be.
And that’s what caught my at
tention the most. Not the answer,
but the pause.
A long pause, followed by a
well-planned answer.
That’s funny to me. While it
was happening, Bellotti constant
ly downplayed the Trojans’ efforts
to lure him to Los Angeles. He
said it was nothing big. He told
players and fans that he was only
listening.
But that was such a long,
thoughtful pause for someone
who hadn’t seriously considered
leaving Oregon, wasn’t it?
He had good reasons to stay
with the Ducks, he said. There
was his family — not the football
team, but his literal family — and
he didn’t want to haul his clan
from Eugene to Los Angeles, a
busy city not known for its nur
turing characteristics.
And, of course, there was his
football team. There was a re
markable nine-win season, soon
to be 10. He almost took his team
to the Rose Bowl. He became a
personal hero to players and fans.
He was the most important influ
ence on cornerback Rashad Bau
man’s decision to stay with the
team one more season.
No doubt USC offered Bellotti
far more than the $600,000 annu
al salary he receives now.
Unfortunately for the land of
Troy, Los Angeles would have
been a big adjustment for a family
so used to Eugene.
But what about Ohio State?
Turn to Pez, page 9
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