Custom Tattoos State Licensed Student Discount Call For Appointment Exotic Body Piercing Hospital Sterilization Walk Ins Welcome 143C PEARL ST. EUGENE, CR. ((§41)434-5611 VISA MORE ALL MIGHTERS THAN A 24-HOUR NATIONAL LAMPtfNs VAN WILDER IN THEATRES SPRING 2002 WWW.niATIOMALLAMPOON.COM lARTISANl © 2001 Die Sechste World Media Productions GmbH & Co. Medien und Musik KC. All Rights Reserved. NATIONAL LAMPOON® AND © J2 Communications. All Rights Reserved. C.Jot a story idea? Jive us a eal Oregon Daily Emerald 346-5511 CRIME WATCH Drugs and Alcohol Thursday, Jan. 24,11:22 p.m.: DPS cited a person for drinking outside Carson Hall. Friday, Jan. 25,10:25 p.m.: DPS cited a person outside Thornton Hall tor drinking in public. Saturday, Jan. 26,12:14 a. m.: OPS cited two people outside Spilier Hall for drinking in public. Saturday. Jan. 26,12:25 a.m.: D PS cited one person outside Watson Hall for possession of less than an ounce of marijuana. Saturday, Jan. 26,12:42 a.m.: OPS cited three minors for drinking in Boynton Hall Saturday, Jan. 26,1:35 a.m.: DPS cited minors for drinking outside Carson. Sunday, Jan. 27,12:66 a.m,: DPS cited one person near H.P. Barnhart for possession of less than an ounce of marijuana. Thefts and Recoveries Wednesday, Jan. 23,2:09 a.m.: Someone reported theft of equipment from Gerlmger Hall. Thursday, Jan. 24, noon: A student reported a computer stolen from McKenzie Hall. Thursday, Jan. 24,10:30 p.m.: A man reported his wal let stolen from the Student Recreation Center. Friday, Jan. 25,2:21 p.m.: Astudent reported a backpack stolen from the Knight library. Disorderly Conduct and Vandalism Thursday, Jan. 24,11:08 p.m.: DPS cited several people near Carson for disorderly conduct. Saturday, Jan. 25,4:56 p.m.: Mttfdent reported someone vandalizing a vehicle in the Bean Hall parking lot. Saturday, Jan. 26,5:17 p.m,: DPS found a drunk transient wrth undisclosed University property near campus. Several acquaintances of the transient took him to an alcohol detoxification center. Saturday, Jan. 26,5:51 p.m.: DPS cited a man for disorderly conduct at the Atder Street and 11th Avenue intersection. Sunday, Jan. 27,2:24 a.m.: DPS cited a man for disorderly conduct outside Thornton. Sunday, Jan, 27,3:44 a.m.: A student reported a man breaking a car window on 15th Avenue. Miscellaneous Wednesday, Jan. 23,2:35 p.m.: DPS received a report of a suspicious person in the Barnhart lobby. Friday, Jan. 25,1:30 p.m.: DPS questioned a man found in a Huestis Hall women’s bathroom. Saturday, Jan. 26,6:58 p. m DPS cited a man for trespassing near the College of Education. Sunday, Jan. 27,3:21 a.m.: Someone activated the f i re alarm at Barn hart. Sunday, Jan. 27,6:35 p.m.: DPS received a report of a natural gas teak at Mil race Apartments. Students less problematic than snow The quarter-inch of snow that fell Saturday night did not cause any accidents around campus or result in additional problems, according to Tom Hicks, Department of Public Safety associate di rector. “There were probably more than the normal number of incidents of us citing people with alcohol because of the snow and the possibility of them driving in it," Hicks said. “But the snow didn't cause any p robie ms” —Marty Toohey News brief Health Center offers students cheap shots The University Health Center is offering discount Hepatitis B vac cines to students aged 19 and younger — but supplies are limited. According to Nurse Coordinator Sharon Harbert, the health center I has several hundred doses of the discounted vaccine, available to students younger than 20 years old for $6 per dose. The health center received the vaccine as part of a state program to vaccinate young people against He patitis B, a viral disease that can lead to cirrhosis and liver cancer. The program was canceled in June 2001, but the center still has vac cines available. 1 013271 January 30, 2002 After the Career Fair ^ Gerlinger Lounge ^ ^^4:30-7:00 Quickest way to great career: AMA Main Event Yole Your resume. Your resume with recruiters FREE casino night with recruiters! Don’t gamble with your future! A FREE career event offering food, prizes and gambling^ \m iBsissanaajiB The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that as many as 1.25 million people are in fected with Hepatitis B, and that 80,000 more are infected each year. The disease is spread through con tact with the bodily fluids of an in fected person, and the CDC esti mates that a many as a third of those infected don’t know it. Hepatitis B cannot be cured, so health officials recommend vacci nation for everyone under 18 years old and those who are at risk. The vaccine is administered in three doses over a six-month peri od, and Harbert said the health cen ter’s supply should last long enough for students who start the series now to get two doses. Once the supply is gone, the vaccine goes back to the standard price of $31 per dose. — Leon Tovey ODE sports coverage is always a winner. Read us daily. Oregon Daily Emerald Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates independently of the University with'bffices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. 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