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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1971)
Committee schedules Pentagon French Pete review Senator Bob Packwood's office has announced he has gained assurance that hearings on his bill to establish the French Pete in termediate recreation area will be scheduled early next year. This assurance was given by Senator Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), chairman of the Senate Interior Committee. Jackson wrote a letter to Packwood, which said in part, “I un derstand that a hearing on this bill will be scheduled during the early part of next year by Sen Alan Bible, chairman of the Subcommittee on Parks and Recreation.” Packwood appealed to key members of the Senate Interior Com mittee for hearings on French Pete when a plan to allow timber harvest was approved by former Secretary of Agriculture Clifford Hardin. The Oregon Republican has introduced a bill (S. 866) that would set aside 19,200 acres (39 square miles) of unlogged virgin Oregon wilderness in the Blue River District of the Willamette National Forest. The bill, which was introduced in similar form last year, would not allow road construction or timber harvest of any kind or use of motor vehicles, motorized equipment, motorboats or other forms of mechanical transportation. The bill would provide for trail construction, primitive walk-in campsites, trail bridges, and construction of sanitary facilities. Ex-candidate fined At Monday night’s meeting of the ASUO Election Court it was decided that Jim Davis was guilty of violating a section of the ASUO election rules which state that no more than one poster shall be erected on each bulletin board, and fined him $5.00. The Court, which met Monday, also decided that Randy Roach was not guilty of erecting posters in undesignated areas. Davis stated that he did not intentionally break the rules. ‘‘I’m not saying that I didn’t break the rules, but I didn’t go out wanting to break the rules,” he said. ups ROTC pay, size The Pentagon has a new proposition for the college student who needs financial help and is willing to pay for it with four years of active military duty after graduation. The ROTC program has been expanded and the monthly pay check it provides doubled. Instead of 5,500 scholarships being offered by the \rmy, Air Force and Navy to students who sign up for ROTC, there are now 6,500 each for the Army and Air Force and 6,000 for the Navy. This is a new total of 19,000 scholarships compared to 16,500. The monthly subsistence check which goes with the scholarship, intended to help defray the cost of food, lodging and incidental, expenses, has been doubled from $50 to $100 a month. Although the total number of those enrolling for ROTC has been dropping in the past few years, the organization’s leaders feel that the anti-military feeling on campuses is passing and that the Pentagon will be able to provide officers of the required number and caliber. How about . . . (Continued from Page 4) It is not unusual, at such posts, to see Catholic children shouting insults on one side of the barricade and protestant girls sparking the sentries on the other. My own most unforgettable sight, even after touring the city under expert guidance, came right in front of the hotel on Royal Avenue one afternoon. There, a small British van loaded with soldiers stopped in the middle of the block. Behind it, a man braked up sharply in a small Hillman that was loaded with his large family. As the tommy who stood at the end of the van turned to talk to a buddy, his carbine pointed negligently at a baby who sat on her mother’s lap in the front seat of the Hillman. Hie Hillman driver waited a few minutes, looking bored and turning his head once to say something sharp to one of the five children who crowded his back seat. Then, when the van did not move, he backed up a few feet and drove around the van. The L.A. Times Washington Post News Service FREE | FREE! FREE! Please send the January Issue of "Oregon Today" to my parents. Parents' Name . Home . Address. Zip. Compliments of University of Oregon Mothers' Club. , Clip and deposit this coupon at the EMU Main Desk or 207 Emerald Hall. • ^i//vzw^:r NATURAL FOOD STORI Wo have organic/natural food and thing* for reasonable price*, like: grains, flours, seeds, nuts, fruits, herbs, ) teas, organic meats, dairy products, j natural soaps, vitamins, books, etc. . . 744 E. 24th St. 343-9142 SPECIAU DISCOUNT NKHMECOUpON I FOR. MEMBERS ONLV OF TMC UOFO STUD€NTBO£W FACULTY A.ND EMPLOYEES • ZO per cent D> * count on all icutelry merchandise • lO per otnT Discount on all non^etfftry merchandise* Home of keepsake Dow>m4 Rmj) 0°f O .r.atlon Idc«ti<>e«tMn rc^M 3rw4a*t%, Faculty iSr^ofM. Account* U«kome Exp«c* Ukx^dU # ^«u«lry Repair Two Corwcn't eKt uoc«.t io»^s 95fcultiUmette (tJowsrtta^otv'Hn Mall) And Vallty R'w Ctirttr * Sont Tr«4* «XO*frt«ri Check out our complete selection of Lange custom-foamed boots ★ Competition ★ Professional ★ Swinger Standard The Pro We've got lots of little stocking stuffers for Christmas giving. Waxes Gloves Bonnie Bell Cosmetics Ski Straps Harvey > Fox's 611 East 13th Boneless w Pork Roast 59c. Head Lettuce 4.$1 Large Eggs 37; ffiSliced Bacon 68c. B^kSigman's Fancy Grapefruit 8 ob. Bag $1.00 White Coachella Apples ,.*41.00 Red Delicious Chicken T.V. Dinners 49c 11-oz. Turkey or Chopped Sirloir Swanson's ttVi;oz. 10-oz. ft Margarine Cold brook ftChili Townhouse ft Potato Chips Lunch Box 1 I Prices effective: Thurs.. Fri., and Sat., December 9th, 10th and ltth. Safeway stores in Eugene, Springfield, Junction City and Cottage Grove.