Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 30, 2001, Page 6A, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    CRIME
WATCH
Vandalism
-Monday, Jan. 22 — 9:02 a.m.
University housing staff reported glass
broken out of the back door of Boyn
ton Residence Hall.
-Tuesday, Jan. 23 — 7:25 a.m.
Facility services staff reported damage
to landscaping in the Deady Hall park
ing lot.
-Wednesday, Jan. 24 — 9:01 a.m.
A student called from the Knight Li
brary to report that the back tire of
her bicycle had been taken off of her
bike.
Disorderly Conduct
-Monday, Jan. 22 — 4:25 p.m.
A female in the Hamilton Complex re
ported receiving harassing telephone
calls.
-Monday, Jan. 22 —10:37 p.m.
Officers contacted four subjects spray
ing water-soluble Christmas tree
“snow” around the loading dock of
the Walton North Complex.
-Wednesday, Jan. 24 — 2:26 a.m.
A caller reported a reckless driver
swerving near the intersection of
Agate Street and 13th Avenue.
-Thursday, Jan. 25—10:06 p.m.
A caller reported a hit-and-run crash at
the intersection of University Street
and 18th Avenue.
-Sunday, Jan. 28 —12:07 a.m.
Resident patrol called to report that a
male subject at the University Inn was
harassing students.
-Sunday, Jan. 28—12:36 a.m.
Resident patrol called to report
screaming and horn honking in the
back parking lot of the University Inn.
Alcohol, Illegal Substance
-Wednesday, Jan. 24 —11:31 p.m.
An officer was called to check on a re
port of two subjects near the Hamilton
East Complex possessing less than an
ounce of marijuana.
-Thursday, Jan. 25 — 9:22 p.m.
Officers responded to a report of alco
hol use in the Watson Residence Hall
in the Hamilton Complex.
-Friday, Jan. 26 —12:36 a.m.
Resident patrol reported that four sub
jects in the Ganoe Residence Hall pos
sibly had less than an ounce of mari
juana.
-Friday, Jan. 26—3:08 a.m.
An officer was called to check out a
possible DU 11 driver at the intersection
of Agate Street and 15th Avenue.
Theft
-Wednesday, Jan. 24 — 7:09 a.m.
A caller reported property stolen from
her office at the College of Education.
Misc.
-Monday, Jan. 22 — 8:07 p.m.
A caller reported two people
panhandling at Gilbert Hall.
-Tuesday, Jan. 23 — 525 p.m.
A female caller reported that a young
child was left alone in a vehicle at the
intersection of Kincaid Street and 15th
Avenue.
-Thursday, Jan. 25—2:19 p.m.
Officers received reports of a female in
the Bean Complex threatening to com
mit suicide.
-Saturday, Jan. 27 — 11:43 p.m.
Resident patrol reported a subject
looking suspicious near the Bean Com
plex bike racks with tools.
Bike Thefts
Reported at the following locations:
Bean Complex.
Source: Department of Public Safety
Virtual Office Systems inc.
in Partnership with
The University of Oregon Bookstore
3131 West 11th Ph. 343-8633 Open Mon-Sat 10-6
AMDK7 Athlon»
800Thun tierbirtf
$1099.99
• Microstar MS 6330 Board
• 32 MB TnT2 AGP Video
• 20 GB 7200 RPM Drive
• 128 MB 100 MHz RAM
• 17”.27SVGA Monitor
With Athlon 900, $1139.99
With Athlon 1000, $1179.99
Add a 32x8x4 CDRW, $150
VOS, AMD, and
UO Bookstore
Supporting Women’s
Basketball. Spectacular
Give-away see our
Website for Details.
www.voscomputers.com
Celeron® JOO MHi
Workhorse”
$659.99
• Intel CA 810e Board
• On Board Intel Video
• 10 GigATA 66 Drive
• 64 MB 100 MHz SDRAM
• Monitor Additional
W/ Pentium III 700, $729.99
Upgrade to 20 Gig, Add $10
Add 100 MB Zip Drive, $80
All systems include ATX case, Windows 98 SE or ME, 52X CD, 56K v. 90
modem, mouse, keyboard, floppy, sound, speakers, 1 Year parts/ 2 Years labor
VOS Inc. Systems are also available at the UO Bookstore. Parts available only at VOS Inc.
Prices through 02 2 01. AMD. kb. K7. and Duron are trade'marks ol AMD. Inc. Specs subject to change vv.ww .voscbiiiputcrs.coni
Humanity. Environment. Make a difference.
Environmental Career Paths
Noon -1:00 p.m.
EMU Ben Linder Room
Panelists in "green" careers will speak
about their career paths and answer
your questions about working to
improve the environment.
Developing Professional
Networks
11:30- 12:30 p.m.
EMU River Rooms
Experts on making the most of
professional and personal contacts will
describe their jobs, how they relate to
networking and answer your questions.
Environmental Careers
Teleconference
11:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m.
Media Center (IMC)-Knight Library
Government agencies and NGOs will
discuss some of the hottest summer jobs,
paid internships, and entry-level career
opportunities in parks, wildlife, natural
resources, environmental education,
ecosystems mgmt and related areas.
Human & Social Services
Career Paths
Noon -1:00 p.m.
EMU River Rooms
A panel of professionals in the helping
professions will be here to answer your
questions on how to get established and make
the most of the opportunities that are out there.
Social Services & Environmental Career Fair: Thursday, Feb. 8, EMU Ballroom
For more information, visit http://uocareer.uoregon.edu
CAREER
Scouts
continued from page 4A
with the school district’s policies.
“The issue is not whether or not
the Boy Scouts are a good organiza
tion,” Miller said. “That’s a given.
In a general sense, [the question is]
how should the district spend its
resources on a program that isn’t
open to all students.”
Committee members will likely
finalize their recommendation
when they vote on whether to al
low the Boy Scouts the ability to re
cruit during school hours at their
Feb. 27 meeting.
The committee’s suggestions will
be passed on to the superintendent
of the 4J district, Miller said. He
then has the choice to either pass
the recommendations on to the
school board or do nothing with it.
If changes in policy regarding the
Boy Scouts of America are accept
/OOOOOOOOO
ed by the school board, the decision
will not take effect until next year.
Regardless of any decision the
district makes, the community will
continue to support the program,
The issue is not
whether or not the Boy
Scouts are a good organi
zation. That’s a given.
Gretchen Miller
Equity Committee
chairwoman
said Mike Marchese, assistant Boy
Scout executive for Western Ore
gon.
“The schools have always been
very friendly to scouting,” March
ese. “We’re flexible, and we’ll roll
with the punches.”
noDoom
eVeVeVeVe'
Calendar
Tuesday, Jan* 30
—International Film Series: France's
“Blue” is part of a “Death and Taxes”
series of films shown in their original
languages with English subtitles. 7-9
p.m. Room 121 Pacific Hall. Free.
— Meeting: EMU Budget Board hear
ings begin. CCDC, 3:30 p.m.; Facili
ties, 4:30 p.m.; Administration, 5:30
p.m. Owyhee Room, EMU. Hearings
will continue throughout the week.
—Career Expo: “Environmental Ca
reer Paths Panel” offers information
for all students. Noon-1 p.m. Ben Lin
der Room, EMU. Free.
—Tribute: “ Remember the Mahat
ma” commemorates the 53rd an
niversary of Gandhi’s assassination
and celebrates his life and work. 5-9
p.m. Room 322 Knight Library. Spo
ken tributes at 7:30 p.m. Free.
C3WeMe FWe'
Run your for sale item in the
ODE classifiedsfor five days
(items under $1,000) ...
if you don't sell it, we'll run it
5 more days for free!
i
Duck
to Lunch
Sponsored by the UO Student
Alumni Association, Eugene
Chamber of Commerce, and
U-Lane-O Credit Union
Friday, Feb. 23, 2001
Noon to 1:30 pm
Pittman Room,
Casanova Center
Cost: $5
RSVP by Friday, Feb. 16
Call 346-5656 for reservations