Cramming all night? Fee<# your head with QuickStudy® laminated reference guides, available in an awesome array of subjects. Available at the bookstore! www.quickstudy.com QuickStudy. Feed your head. iMac 500MHz with CD-RW Special Discount $799 (marked down from $949) 128MB SDRAM • 20GB Ultra ATA HD • VGA. output • 56K Modem 10/100 base-T Ethernet t FireWire M8582LUA Indigo Curtently enrolled or admitted University of Oreg6fi students as well as staff and faculty are eligible. Available at the UO Bookstore Digital Duck4 while supplies last. Corner 13th & Kincaid Streets • uobooLstore.com/electronics please recycle this paper! MASTERS AND DOCTORAL DEGREES • Asia * Comparative and Developmental Political Analysis • Development Economics • Europe • International Business and Economic Law • International Business Relations • international Environment and Resource Policy • International Information and Communication • International Monetary Theory and Policy • international Negotiation and Conflict Resolution • International Organizations • international Political Economy • international Security Studies • International Technology Policy and Management • International Trade and Commercial Policies • Law and Development • Political Systems and Theories • Public International Law • Southwest Asia and Islamic Civilization • United States • ' The Fletcher School I Cabot Intercultural Center I 160 Packard Avenue Medford, Massachusetts, USA 02155 tel: 617 627 3040 web: www.fletcher.tufts.edu e-mail: fletcheradmissions@tufts.edu News brief Public to give input on cell tower placement A public hearing will be held at 7 p.m. tonight at Harris Hall, 125 E. Eighth Ave., to give the community a chance to comment on new ordi nances for cell phone tower place ment. The hearing is a follow-up to a community meeting held last month. The Lane County Planning Com mission is developing new ordi nances for the placement of cell phone towers for the comity. Several companies are attempting to site more towers in the Eugene area; one possi ble site is close to the University at East 15th Avenue and Villard Street. Civic officials will be at the hearing, as will representatives from the group Citizens for Responsible Placement of Cell Phone Towers. Comity Commis sioners will make a final decision on the ordinances in early January. For more information, call 682-3734. — Brook Beinhard I Negotiations continued from page 1 search, some departments are in a position where they can do that. My basic message (in the negotiations) is that this is a cooperative effort.” Brian Wolf, lead negotiator for the GTFF, said the University would have to consider a significant wage increase if it wanted to make up the ground lost in recent years. Since 1983, real wage salaries for GTFs have declined by 13 percent, he said. “There’s been no talk of a mini mum or strike, per se, but we do want something more than infla tion,” Wolf said. But administrators could be faced with a difficult choice during the negotiation process. With a predict ed state budget shortfall of $290 mil lion, administrators at all of Ore gon’s state-funded universities are being forced to look at their operat ing costs, and Overbeck said that the GTFF is concerned about what that means forGTF salaries. However, state Sen. Tony Corco ran, D-Cottage Grove, who spoke at a GTFF press conference Thursday, threw his support behind the union’s request for higher pay. “Public universities in Oregon would be cutting their own throats to look at any reduction of GTFs,” Corcoran said. “We will be watch ing in Salem as we go through these budget cuts. We’ll see who is taken care of and who is not. ” The GTFF is also seeking inclu sion of “training grant” graduate employees in collective bargaining agreements and a stronger anti-ha rassment policy in its new contract. Leon Tovey is a higher education reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald. He can be reached at leontovey@dailyemerald.com. Decorations continued from page 1 over” of the Sept. 11 terrorist at tacks, he said. Hawkins said businesses are real izing how crucial this holiday sea son is, with all of the potential gift buying for Hanukkah, Christmas and Kwanzaa. “The percent of sales that a lot of retail stores do between Halloween and Christmas tends to be around 40 to 60 percent of annual sales,” Hawkins said. “How nervous com panies must be.... We haven’t expe rienced this kind of an economy since the ’40s.” The trick, Hawkins said, is for companies to figure out how to pro mote early enough to win con sumers’ attention, but not so early they turn people away. “There’s a real motivation to cap ture the buyers early before some one else does,” Hawkins said. Meier & Frank visual director Vikki Henry said it doesn’t matter when a company decorates for the holidays, as long as it’s before Thanksgiving. “There aren’t any fringe benefits to getting stuff up early,” Henry said. Though Henry said she was 25 percent done setting up the store’s seasonal decorations on Nov. 2, she said she’s not starting early to in crease holiday spending. The reason for the promptness, Henry said, is to make sure every thing is ready for the day after Thanksgiving, the busiest shopping day of the year. “Regular business still goes on,” Henry said. In addition to her deco rating duties, Henry said she must maintain the various sale displays throughout the store. She said she’s giving herself plenty of time to be ready for Nov. 23. Customers have complained about the early decorations, Henry said, but there’s a reason. “People just don’t realize that this has to be done so we’re prepared for the day after Thanksgiving. It’s not something that can be done quick ly. This is a humongous store.” Henry said she wouldn't person ally want to start thinking about Christmas until after Thanksgiving. She promised that Christmas music wouldn’t play in her store until then. In the past few years; J.C. Penney men’s department manager Dean Martin said he received complaints for the store’s “early” decorations. This year, he said he hasn’t heard a single complaint, which he called a “good sign.” University senior Tim Hove said it seems ludicrous to put holiday decorations up in October, but he said it’s not that big of a deal. "If stores want to put up stuff ear ly — let them do it,” Hove said. “I think there are people who do com plain, but lots who don’t even no tice. Some just say ‘Gee, that’s early this year’and move on.” Like Hove said, not everybody complains. Some people, such as University freshman Amalia Lucas, enjoy the hype. “I think it’s kind of nice to extend the Christmas season,” Lucas said. “It feels nice.” University junior joumalisjm ma jor and J.C. Penney Sales Associate Kristi Henderson said she was sur prised to hear Santa Claus would be coming to town before Thanksgiving. “The season tends to be a few weeks earlier every year,” Hender son said. Holiday visuals may be springing up at area department stores, but seasonal music is a rarity. Other than the Christmas Corner shop in Valley River Center, most stores haven’t yet played holiday tunes for their customers. Though they may feel differently about decorations, Hove and Lucas agree it’s not quite time for carols. “I can wait until December for that,” Hove said. Marcus Hathcock is a features reporter for the Oregon Dally Emerald. He can be reached at marcushathcock@dailyemerald.com.