343-4480 Authentic Chinese Cuisine RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 947 Franklin Blvd. 344-7288 521 Market St., Eugene Shirtp^Brains .com TRINGLE SCREEN PRINTING EMBROIDERY r Rumors & lies University to offer students luxury classroom seating In another move to increase funding, the University announced Friday it would build luxury boxes in large lecture halls. The new plan could bring an extra $1.2 million to the school each year to offset budget cuts, officials say. Construction crews will begin building the 12 luxury boxes in 100 Willamette, home of many large lecture classes. Students may buy a box as a group, or single students may pay to sit in single seats within the box. The University has not an nounced a price, but said seats will go on sale later this term. Ticket holders of the boxes will re ceive free coffee service, a large buf fet, an executive washroom and their personal graduate teaching fellow. The boxes will also include large-for mat televisions and stereos, video games and large recliners and sofas. “We see luxury boxes as a win-win situation for the 21st century Univer sity,” spokesman Kyle Lundgrass said. “Students will get a new, excit ing learning opportunity, and the Uni versity will see some extra funds.” Many students are excited by the thought of learning in new state of the art facilities. “This is the best thing that ever happened to this place,” said sen ior Josh Freeman. “This will give me that extra advantage I need to get into the real world.” Lundgrass said that if all goes well with the boxes in Willamette, other buildings may also see luxury boxes. State Board crosses its fingers on tuition hikes Members of the State Board of Higher Education used a little known Oregon law to back out of a promise not to raise tuition at public universities. The State Board said Friday that it simply “crossed their fingers be hind their backs” when pledging it would not raise tuition for the 2002-03 academic year. “It was never our intention to honor such an action,” board spokeswoman Jennifer Lutz said. “We were under so much pressure from student groups. What were we supposed to do?” The move stunned student lead ers, who questioned its legality. However, the board conferred with Oregon Attorney General Hardy [PP09R9PH9W The UO Summer Session \ Catalog with Schedule of Classes is now available on campus. | The catalog contains important information about courses and | special programs {offered this summer, registration, housing, I and fees. {Registration starts {May 6. Here Now! Pick Up Your Free Copy Today Pick up your copy today in the Summer Session office, 333 Oregon Hall, or at the UO Bookstore Telephone (541) 346-3475 rrrrmxTl Meyers before making its announce ment. Meyers told the board that “crossing fingers” was legal under an Oregon law dating back to 1870. “Oregon law states that govern ment organizations can recant any actions if they ‘cross their fingers’ when making the pronouncement,” Meyers said. University lawyers said the law was primarily designed to help the state of Oregon make — and subse quently break — treaties and other arrangements with various Indian tribes living on state lands. Student leaders vowed to take the board’s actions to court. “One thing we will look at is in voking the ‘cross my heart and hope to die’ defense,” said Matt Le Farj, legal director of Oregon Stu dents United. — Billy Eldred Made-up words make the grade Sophomore history major Joshua Messing reported Friday that he re ceived “the highest damn grade in the class” on a final paper about the history of literature that he said he had “completely blown out (his) ass.” Here is an excerpt from the pa per, which was returned with an “ A+” on Friday: “The semiotics of understanding cannot properly be systematized by the paradigms available to the mod ern thinker interested in rewriting the baby boomer hegemony of war and victory. The old literary his toricity routinely erases the multi plicity of difference in mapping the triumph of the center over the mar gins and substituting a falsity of unity for a reality that was and is of fering continuousness through a multiracial, multiethnic and multi cultural semantic system.” Messing, who had not studied at all for the final, said he got the idea to string together a variety of aca demic “terms” after listening to a speech by Purdue University Profes sor Chad Ryan and after being daz zled by the continuous use of “non words” by his professor in lecture. “Basically, these people make up words that sound good, or that have such an esoteric meaning that they might as well not exist at all,” he said. After the finals were handed back, Messing’s paper was used by the professor as an overhead to il lustrate the meaning of “some garbage that I sure as hell couldn’t understand,” he said. Messing admitted that he had “pretty much just lifted” the text from Ryan’s recent speech inaugu rating the Koehn Colloquium, estab lished by Michael and Stacy Koehn to bring outstanding scholars to the University to work with Architec ture and Allied Arts faculty. — RiptPantz 011630 IVlUYlHAil Community Center for the Performing Arts 8th & Lincoln ■ Wednesday » Jonathan Richman with Tommy Larkins, Markus James with Sidibe Rock/Afro-Blues $8 advance, $10 door, 8:oopm ■ Thursday ■ The Itals Reggae $13 advance, $15 door, 9:00 pm All Ages Welcome • 6S7-27^6