Clogs & Socks Classic clogs and winter socks are a natural fit THE BIRKENSTOCK STORE 181 E Broadway • Eugene Mon-Sat 10-6 & Sun 11-5 342-6107 m f PHOTO ] [SPECIALS] NOV. 25 - DEC 8 2ND SET FREE! 3x5 prints: 12 exp $2.25 24 exp $4.25 36 exp $6.25 4x6 prints: 12 exp $3.25 24 exp $6.25 36 exp $7.25 From 35mm (-41 full frame color film. (Panoramic half frame, and negatives excluded.) 20% OFF APS PROCESSING: 1 5 exp. (one set) S4.40 25 exp. (one set) S6.66 40 exp. (one set) $9.40 Allow 1-2 days for APS processing. Glossy or matte finish. North Campus 579 E. Broadway 686-1166 South Campus 2870 E. Willamette 686-1600 STUDENT ID SPECIALS • Show Your Student ID • Order by Number X-LARGE 1-TOPPING The Big New Yorker MEDIUM 3-TOPPING $8" SR99 ran, inm n unspy or hand losseo STICKS ’N WINGS 10 Breadsticks, 10 Wings X-LARGE 3-TOPPING The Big New Yoiker -$899 $1099 a MEDIUM 1-TOPPIHGS 51 Q99 Pan, Thin ’N Crispy or Hand Tossed ™ ^ STICKS ’N WINGS 10 Breadsticks, 20 Wings $1Q99 2 FREE Cans of Soda with Any Above Order! Delivery charges may apply News brief EPD receives fewer complaints The Eugene Police Department patrolled the West University neigh borhood, Commons Street and Kin srow Road this Friday and Saturday, handing out 22 citations. EPD hasn’t released data about partying in the campus area for the past two weekends, but it reported that this weekend the department received fewer party complaints and saw less people walking around than in the past. EPD cited 15 people as minors in possession of alcohol and four peo ple received open container viola tions. Two people received noise dis turbance violations and one person received a citation for driving under the influence of alcohol. —Danielle Gillespie Danielle Hickey Emerald Indonesian exchange students Meilani Lazuardi, right, and Tjhin Siska Natalia, left, put together aThanksgiving gift basket for a family who will host Thanksgiving dinner for them on Wednesday. Holiday continued from page 1 country,” Lazuardi said. Natalia added that as a former student in Singapore, she’s used to being away from her family. “Usually, in our home, the only time we get together is Christmas or New Year,” Natalia said. Natalia and Lazuardi said they take more interest in American holidays than many of their peers. Natalia added that most interna tional students don’t take the op portunity to get involved and cel ebrate Thanksgiving. “I think they don’t really care about the meaning of Thanksgiving; it’s just nice to have a four-day weekend,” Natalia said. “I know most of them go on trips, hang out at someone’s house, or watch movies. ... And of course they’ll go to the after-Thanksgiving sale.” Because the two students aren’t worried about being brought down by severe feelings of homesick ness, they’re focused on getting as much enjoyment out of Thanks giving as possible. For them, the holiday and the traditions that surround it are still fresh and mys terious, so they don’t take any thing for granted. Natalia and Lazuardi said eating a turkey din ner is the thing they are most looking forward to experiencing. “It was amazing — so big, when I saw it in the supermarket,” Natalia said excitedly. Florian Goosmann, a University student from Bonn, Germany, said he’s also in awe of the traditional holiday meal. The international student said he and his host family are going to spend Thanksgiving at the coast and have made plans to rent a couple of cabins. Gabriela Serrano, a sociology "I think they don't really care about the meaning of Thanksgiving; it's just nice to have a four-day weekend." Tjhin Siska Natalia international student major from El Salvador and anoth er participant in the OIP Thanks giving exchange program, said most of her international friends don’t in dulge in celebrating the American holiday. However, she said foreign students are wasting an important cultural opportunity by only view ing the four-day weekend as a chance to get out of the city or hang out with friends. “I think, being an international student, it’s good to try to absorb and know the traditions and customs of where you’re at,” Serrano said. Contact the reporter atjenniferbear@dailyemerald.com. Grant continued from page 1 are not going well for the state fi nancially,” she said. University Senior Vice President and Provost John Moseley said the University’s ability to make up for the lost funding depends largely on whether voters approve Measure 28 in January. The measure, if passed, will temporarily raise income taxes to close gaps in the state budget. “It won’t be known until February or March whether we will be able to do that,” he said. Currently, Moseley said, the Uni versity plans to commit $500,000 in financial aid for low-income students. “We can do that only in the con text of not taking further budget cuts,” he said. Contact the senior news reporter at kenpaulman@dailyemeraid.com. SI Raw Talen-t The Oregon Daily Emerald is always looking for young writers who want to learn and grow at a real newspaper. For information on how to freelance for the Emerald, call 346-5511.