20% SALE 20% OFF general books UO sportswear gifts art supplies school/office supplies computer accessories Thursday - Sunday June 5 - June 8 some exclusions do apply sale at main store only UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE The Salvation Army 50% Off Used Goods May 31 ^0% off Large Appli^nceS^ §a®ir@® ^®0D®5fi®ini RECYCLE summer\57@[?C3 Positions filling Immsdiatsly for work aftar finals. *12 IS bas«-a»Pt. • No experience necessary, training provided • Part-time & full-time available - flexible hours • Customer sales/service • No door to door canvassing & no telephone sales • Must be 18 or older to apply • 100 national & 20 regional scholarships • Conditions apply • Recognized resume experience • Fun atmosphere Seattle. Tacoma. Everett..*. Kent/Fed. Way. Wenatchee. Olympia. Beaverton. Bend. Yakima. Bellevue.. Kitsap Co. Bellingham. Vancouver. Portland. Eugene.:. Gresham. Salem. Corvallis. Longview. Anchorage. .(206) 362-1751 .(253) 983-0170 .(425) 438-8878 .(253) 852-0621 .(509) 662-3331 (360) 236-0944 .(503) 892-5737 .(541) 388-4402 (509) 853-2185 .(425) 883-3189 (360) 692-7584 .(360)756-1911 (360) 573-1868 (503) 595-1765 (541) 461-4200 (503) 674-9527 (503) 362-2515 (541)754-3300 (360) 578-3399 .(907) 562-8880 Ov*r 400 locations nationwide. For oaonlntfs In othor aroas visits www.workforstudents.com Crime watch Theft and recoveries The Department of Public Safe ty received three bike theft re ports from Lawrence Hall, the north soccer field and the Knight Library. DPS also received four found-property reports. Saturday, May 31, 11:20 a.m.: DPS received a report of a burglary at Lawrence Hail, The suspect was later appre hended by DPS officers. outside I 80 PLC. Alcohol uisoraeriy conduct OPS received five reports of trespassing, four reports of vandalism, three noise com plaints, three reports of graffiti, three reports of aggressive pan handling and two reports of can rummaging. Tuesday, May 27, 2:25 a.m.: DPS received a report of a subject sleeping in the bushes Pregnancy continued from page 1 baby, continue with the pregnancy and give the baby up for adoption or terminate the pregnancy. According to a study by the Allen Guttmacher Institute, one in five abortions are performed on women attending college. The study also in dicated that while pregnancy rates dropped for teenagers between 1994 and 2000, the abortion rate for college-age women did not. Jones said very few of her pa tients opt for adoption, and most de cide to terminate the pregnancy. Jones said she can refer students to abortion providers in Eugene, and though the closing of All Women’s Health Services last summer limit ed local availability, women seeking abortions do not have to go out of Campus pregnancy facts * \ 6.5% of students surveyed have been pregnant or have impregnated someone * Out of the students who have had pregnancies, 53.8 % were accidental * 9.6% of these students have had multiple pregnancies - 21% of these were students at the University when they became pregnant * 56% of women in the United States having abortions are in their 20$ |Jj lilBIl Ifllltl * 87% of counties in the United State S have no abortion jjj provider j | • - . , . | SOURCB: University Health Center and The Allen Cuttmacher Institute town to find a doctor. Jones said she also refers students who choose abortion to the Coun seling Center for grief counseling, and she said she’s always aware of students who could be potentially isolated and lack support from their partner or family and friends. “It’s important to work through the grief now,” she said. “The more they deal now, the less likely it will traumatize them in the future.” Contact the reporter atlindsaysauve@dailyemerald.com. Citations continued from page 1 would improve safety of DPS offi cers by hopefully leading to prompt resolution of problems. DPS officers would not have to sit and wait for Eugene police.” Student government officials are not as excited as Hicks is about the prospect of DPS issuing citations on campus, however. ASUO President Maddy Melton has been working with DPS and other involved parties to determine whether DPS officers should be given more jurisdiction on campus. Melton said the ASUO has been struggling to make sure student voices are includ ed in any decisions, and added that the issue had been kept rather quiet and many students are unaware of the attempts to change the city code. “Because it’s so late in the game, we’re not sure about what can be done about the policy being passed,” Melton said. “If die policy is passed by the city, it will be up to the University to decide how it is implemented.” Melton said a DPS advisory board with six student members and five University staff members has re cently been formed to offer com ments on student-related issues. “We will be working to make sure the implementation has student in put,” she said. Melton and ASUO staff may still have a little time to make their opin ions heard, however. Ward 3 City Councilor David Kelly said the city had not formally heard from the University about possible changes to the city code. “The city is involved at a staff lev el, but nothing has come to the City Council at this point,” Kelly said. “The first step in implementing this would be a City Council work ses sion, followed by a public hearing.” According to the City Council agenda, a work session has not yet been scheduled, but officials at the University said they expect to go be fore the City Council in mid-July, and DPS officers could begin issuing citations by fall term, if not sooner. Contact the senior reporter at aimeerudin@dailyemerald.com. ^Oregon Daily Emerald WORLDWIDE FOR BOOKS UO Bookstore Main June 4-14 REGULAR STORE HOURS EMU Lobby and Duck Shop at Autzen June 9-13 MON. - THUR. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. FRIDAY 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE COMPARATIVE LITERATURE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON... CRN 40415 • 4 credits • 1-2:50 MUWH • 300 Vlllard • Daxton Norton In this course, we will examine how pop psychology attempts to construct and explain the behavior of those classified as serial killers; using that discourse as a toll, we will decipher and map these motifs as they surface in selected films, including M., Psycho, Silence of the Lambs, and Seven. 1 ... where the usual is a I ways extraordinary Oregon Daily Emerald P.O.Box3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub lished daily Monday through Friday dur ing the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is pri vate property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. NEWSROOM — (541)346-5511 Editor in chief: Michael J. 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