SCIENCE REQUIREMENTS
Natural Environment
Global Environmental Change
Geomorplxtogy
Weeks 1-4 Geog t4i
Weeks 5-8 Geog 143
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SOCIAL SCIENCE REQUIREMENTS
Human Geography Weeks 1-4 Geog 142
World Regional Geography Weeks 5-8 Geog 201
Population & Environment Weeks 1-4 Geog 341
FIELD-BASED FRIDAY COURSES
Oregon Field Studies Weeks 1-4 Geog4io
Oregon Natural Landscapes Weeks 5-8 Geog 410
GEOGRAPHY FOR TEACHERS
Workshop Methods/lnstructional Materials Weeks 1 -8 Geog 408/508
OTHER GEOGRAPHY COURSES
Cartogiaphic Mefhods Weeks 1-4 Geog 311
Intro, to Geog. into. Systems Weeks 5-8 Geog 416
UO GEOGRAPHY
; EARLY DRIVE THRU
I Northern California
I Long before early
| conservationists formed
h living chains around
I the giant fedwoods or
McDonald's offered drive
I thru convenience, early
Redwood promoters bored
car-sized holes into a
select few of the lowering
sentinels. Eager tourists
coughed up their hard
earned cash for the
privilege of making the
20-foot journey from one
side to the other. In
Geography, we call this
the “human-made
environment." The globe's
packed with fascinating
geographic sights. Why
not take a class and
see for yourself.
the(G)fii.es
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Senate, JSO decide
Sushi Night is free
■After requesting additional
funds, the Japanese Student
Organization chooses not
to charge for its culture night
By Emily Gust
Oregon Daily Emerald
After Wednesday night’s ASUO
Student Senate meeting, the price for
attending the Japanese Student Or
ganization’s Sushi Night this Friday
fell from $7 per person to zero.
The JSO approached the senate
Wednesday, asking for $757 from
surplus to pay food costs for its up
coming event.
But the senators quickly pointed
out that they could not provide stu
dent incidental fee money to groups
charging for their events and expect
ing to see profits. The JSO originally
wanted any profits to go toward pay
ing for a graduation party at the end
of the year.
In addition to the surplus request,
the JSO also needed to transfer $550
from within its own budget to pay for
the food. The senate, however, could
not do that either as long as the group
was charging for the event.
After a bout of confusion, recesses
and explanations to each other, the
senators offered the JSO a solution: If
the group didn’t charge, the senate
could give it the maximum amount
of money from the surplus.
The JSO accepted the suggestion,
and the senate transferred $550 from
within the JSO’s budget, giving the
group an additional $999 from sur
plus.
In the other business, the Black
Student Union’s request for $574
evoked memories from earlier this
school year, when the senate shot
down a Chinese Student and Scholar
Association request. The year before,
CSSA officers had bought gifts for
some of the group’s members, and
the senate decided that was not OK.
The BSU’s
request was in
part to help buy
gifts for the
group’s gradu
ating students.
BSU Director
Dominique
Beaumonts ar
gued that the
senate gave the
Native Ameri
can Student Union money to buy
blankets for the group’s graduating
students. He did not see a difference
between that and the BSU’s request,
he said.
But Sen. Jennifer Greenough said
the gifts the BSU wants to buy are the
same as the CSSA’s gift purchases.
“It’s not right to have a double
standard,” Greenough said. “We
were brutal to that group. ”
In the end, the senate granted the
BSU the money it needed, with the
stipulation that it pay only for the
graduation ceremony speaker, and
that any gifts for graduates be paid
out of the group’s own fundraising
account.
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