| Bacon** our waattyWafoPoge Update! I Movms r»v**w*. scheduling * e&ntmtt* subscribe at www.btjou-einraraM.eom r Ereai Hi« Otrrctw *nd Star g Rl?N LOLA RUN* Soon: Ttw GoXten Bowl Si Songcatcher "Sen Kiogriey'* b«ipetforaants evsr'-G Ksnm.i'umittt 5:00, 7:00 & 9:00pm - Sun Mat 3:10pm so atJOU l.rn-MXe $3 TH-SA/S2 SU Wt Mike Slyer* f xktu Merpky Cameron iMae it i . Shrek *z 11:00pm Nightiy OFF Any Yogurt (‘Except small cones and tinies. Expires 8/29/01) Campus SUBSHOP Mon.-Fri. 10am-l Opm Sat. llam-9pm Sun. 12pm-9pm 1225 Alder 345-2434 Not valid with any other discounts or coupons. One coupon per customer. 1 HOMEY HILL FARMS. 741-4676 Free applications and listings 24 hours at 637 B Street, downtown Springfield 890 E. 37th.2 bedroom $650 2574 Alder St..2 bedroom $695 532 W. 8th #4.1 bedroom $425 1647 Mill #5.1 bedroom $425 Sunset Arms Apartments, Southeast Eugene 3530 W. Amazon, 434-6179.1 bedroom $455 Willowbrook Apartments, West Eugene 29840 Willow Creek, 342-8275.2 bedroom $595 Mill Race Apartments, behind Track Tom Pizza 1805 Garden Ave, 344-5695.2 bedroom $575 Prague Apartments, Great Value!!! 2447 Roosevelt Blvd, 463-9733.3 bedroom $595 www. emeraldpm. com Wizza Pipeline EU6ENE SPRIN&flELP 686-5808 746-7666 We accept UO purchase orders! 1 J Groovy Weekly Reader Polls. Vote online See results instantly. Ivlvifi .com Graduation continued from page 1 this term, 624 will be receiving bachelor’s degrees, 260 will be el igible for master’s degrees, and 45 will be receiving their doctoral degrees. More than 10 percent of those graduating — 139 — will receive degrees in education. “Our students make up a signif icant portion of the students who complete in the summer,” said Marty Kaufman, the dean of the college of education. Many education students gradu ate in the summer so they can earn a master’s degree or teaching li cense, he said. And, he added, because most educators do not work in the sum mer, many teachers take Universi ty classes during summer term. Negotiations continued from page 1 hourly wage of $9.50 is the mini mum salary needed to cover work ers’ cost-of-living expenses. She added the $30,000 cut-off for receiving full medical insur ance coverage penalizes higher paid workers. Other union members said they suspect that the OUS has another motive for offering more medical coverage to lower-paid employ ees. Cherie Smith, president of the University OPEU chapter, said the move is a typical “divide and conquer” strategy. The idea, she said, is to pit lower-paid workers against higher-paid em ployees so that not all union members will vote in favor of a strike. While Smith said she is en couraged by some of the econom ic concessions the OUS has made, she is concerned that with so much of the discussion cen tered on salary and benefits, union members may let other as pects of the contract proposal slip by unnoticed. For example, she said, proposed changes by OUS would create more temporary positions and al low more jobs to be “contracted out” to non-union employees, which could result in layoffs of regular classified workers. OUS representatives would also like to change the seniority system for classified employees, Smith said, which would make it more difficult for workers to use their experience to transfer to another University department if their cur rent position is eliminated. She also criticized a proposed change in overtime hours that would only allow classified em ployees to be paid overtime wages if they work more than 40 hours a week. As it is now, work ers are paid overtime for all time over eight hours a day, regardless of how many hours they work in a week. The OUS proposal “sounds 515 High St Eugene 4ss-4ii4 Locally owned since 1991....We support FAIR TRADE OPEN MON-SAT 10-6 & SUN 12-5 NATURAL FIBER CLOTHING THE FLAXLINE V CUT LOOSE TWO STAR DOC M AMANDA CRAY V TIBETAN TRADERS V KASHI &MORE Twin Rivers Traditional Music Festival 2001 - All Blues Saturday, Aus 25, 6:00 pm - Cuthbert Amphitheater The Holmes Bros. Joe Louis Walker & The Bosstalkers - Alvin Youngblood Hart - Don Latarski & Rue de Blues Tickets: 682-5000 Hult Center & EMU Ticket Offices Info: 687-6526 - www.ofam.org Weyerhaeuser UNITED fC') SAFEWAY vyJ food & DRUG good,” Smith said. “But when you start delving deeper ... there’s more to it than the economic pro posals.” Bruce, however, dismissed Smith’s argument that the OUS is using a strategy to divide union members. Lower-paid workers are being given more medical coverage because they need it more, he said. When the OUS contracts outside workers, he added, it is for the sake of being as efficient as possi ble. And the change in the defini tion of overtime hours is consis tent with how most workplaces pay their employees, he said. “We think that we’ve put on the table a fair package and a fair of fer,” he said. “We would hope that the union would move quickly and favorably toward helping us reach an agreement.” Representatives from both sides will go back to the bargaining table on Aug. 22 and 27, when they will meet with a state mediator to con tinue contract renegotiations. — poppi V— "The Land East" Traditional --V Greek & Indian Food Lunch Monday through Saturday Dinner 7 Nights a Week 992 Willamette Eugene, Or 97401 343-9661 012184 Community Center for die Performing Arts 8th & Lincoln ■ Tonight ■ New Found Glory, 800 Octane, Easy Target Pop Punk % 10 advance, $10 door, 8:00 pm ■ Friday ■ 2 Bucks Short, Shortround, Spillover Punk Rock $5 at the door, 7:00 pm ■ Sunday ■ The Itals Reunion Tour Reggae S12 advance, $11, door, 8:00 pm All Ages Welcome • 6S7-2746 Advertise in like ©US Classifieds