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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 2003)
100% vegetarian cafe since 1991 Golden Avatar offers a unique dinning experience fall of variegated pistes set in a relaxed cafe style atmosphere. Our 100% Vegetarian menu features rotating entrees and includes a variety of soups, salads, fried savories, chutueys and children-friendly items Open for breakfast 8 a.m. Full buffer II a.m. - 8 pan. Monday-Friday 2757 Friendly St. Market • 502-1565 (inCule Friendly St. Market) FULL BAR LIVE MUSIC POOL VIDEO POKER DAILY SPECIALS Lunch Tueday-Friday 11:30-2.00 pm Dinner Tuesday-5aturday beginning at 4 pm Live IKEusic This Week! Wednesday Oct. 22 • Free Bourbon Renewal Blues Thursday Oct. 23 • Free Christie & McCallum honky Tonk/Rock Friday Oct. 24 • $5 Edypse with Morma Frazier Blues/Rock Saturday Oct. 25 • $3 Mo Fessor Rew Orleans Funk & Boogie 017441 (5U1) 344-8600 • 163.6 'WiUametie. St. oai r -SrtLt BUY TWO 5X7s and GET A THIRD FREE Write can be made from slide, negatives or digital files. Sale runs firougfr November 15 2003. This ad must accompany order. PHOTO CONTEST Every month gou may enter an unframed 5x7 from a slide or negative to win a matted £x12 enlargement. Ail winners are eligible for a grand prize of $100 of "Oregon's Finest Photofinishing" to be chosen at the end of the school year. Monthly contests will be judged on the last business day of the month and the decision of the judges is final. While every effort will be made to protect your print Cerlachs/Dotsons cannot be responsible for loss or damage and our responsibility will be to replace the print with an equivalent film and processing. Contest rules are available at the Campus Cerlachs store at £491.19th Avenue. 3 qerlactVs jeiKcMMSfl § ■ /. ■ \ S^dcSson’s IMAGERY EXPERTS FOR OVER 70 YEARS A LOOK AT THE UNIVERSITY’S BUDGET Right: A breakdown of the University’s $541.3 million budget for the 2003-04 academic year Below: The recent history of State General Fund contributions given to the University State General Fund $60,765,446 Other Funds Limited $165,765,702 Nonlimited Other Funds $314,781,545 $80 70 60 State General ^0 Fund allocation 40 (in millions) ^0 20 10 0 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 Academic year SOURCE: Oregon University System Sean Hanson Senior Graphic Designer BUDGET continued from page 1 for a long time," Kahle said. "At some point it becomes more difficult to do the things you want to do without what you wanted to receive." Kahle, a professor of marketing, said he was worried that with in creased tuition, fewer students would be able to pay for an education. Ad ditionally, there would be many stu dents who would have to work hard er to stay in school, he said. "If you're putting in a lot of work at a part-time job, you're working that much less at what needs to be accomplished for your education," Kahle said. Sheri now open for 1745 W. 18th Ave. appointment 18th & Chambers monday - Saturday 431-1717 Kahle said budget cuts also make it a challenge for administrators to bal ance the budget. He added that facul ty members are also strongly affected. "It makes it more difficult to at tract and attain the best faculty and having the best faculty is one of the main things that makes a universi ty," Kahle said. "I don't like to see that in jeopardy." Vice President for Academic Affairs Lorraine Davis said she was very "dis appointed and discouraged" with this year's budget. "There is a disinvestment in high er education," Davis said. "It is short sighted not to look at the longer pic ture of the health of the state and general economic development." Davis said state lawmakers weren't "understanding the importance of higher education." "Higher education is critical in the growth of the state," Davis said. Davis said the University, in order to meet reductions in the budget, will have to look at "all possibilities" while also trying to maintain the quality of the school. Davis said she hopes that state law makers would be more supportive of higher education in the future. "We would hope that they would be able to provide us with resources in keeping with the quality education that we are giving to people from this state, this nation and across the world," Davis said. Contact the city/state politics reporter at shoikeda@dailyemerald.com. Wednesday PAMPI IQ Center for the Study of Women in Society seminar, 12 p,m.-l p.m., 330 Hen jfhitt dricks Hall. CSWS Associate Director Judith Musick will discuss and answer II11 Ir questions regarding CSWS grant opportunities. For more information, visit http://csws.uoregon.edu or call 346-5015. raiaaraGiniBraiaiiiinHnrciiiianiira b d a s s n a n a □ a Find fun stuff in the ODE Classifieds: Comics, your daily horoscope, and, of course, the crossword. GIVE ME 5! Run your “for sale" ad (items under $1,000) for 5 days in the ODE Classified Section. If the item(s) doesn’t sell, call us at 3464343 and we’ll run it again for another 5 days free!