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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 15, 1972)
thorn as rnoorv Democrat for State Representative Dist. 41 "KEEP OREGON'S GREAT ENVIRONMENT GREAT ... BY SOUND ECOLOGY" Gasoline Tax funds should help finance Public Transportation, support bicycles as alternate transportation. Elect Thos Moore Comm Larry Broderick Ch., 1910 Montreal, Eugene VOLKSWAGEN MERCEDES & PORSCHE DATSUN ft TOYOTA Z_wmm/ INC. FACTORY TRAINED EXPERTS GUENTER> SCHOENER 2045 FRANKLIN BLVD ;II2-2UI2 Eugene, Oregon 97403 Clark delays early semesters Will the University change from quarters to “early semesters?” Not for the time being. University President Robert Clark announced Wednesday he won’t send to the State Board of Higher Education a faculty approved proposal for such a changeover. The University faculty voted 66-60 in favor of changing to semesters. Clark said the Faculty Ad visory Council had recommended to him that he not send the proposal on to the board because of the close vote by the faculty. He suggested that the ad hoc Committee to Study the Semester System—where the changeover proposal originated—study the matter again and attempt to canvass students further on the proposal. The “early semester” system refers to the fact that the school year would begin about a month earlier than at present and would end about a month earlier. In a nine-month school year there would be two semesters instead of the present three terms. i iV'-kloH tuition toe- .\11 "Kxlont" 11 vtv tlx\n IXX) couix'" 11X M A 01V, two i\l vl txiP-WCok OCX II "O' tlvxv-torm "Wjiioivo" tlx' Miimxr Ktllotin will Ix^t wxi fuxl \oup w<v the Oregon 0**1 v Em#r*kl it an m dependent student newspaper *t the Un. varsity Ot Oregon 1 ugenr 0»agon The tme«*ld »t published *%*'day through f noey dur mg the es*m year escent dur mg es*n> #isd vacation periods and lour timet Meetly during summer session by the Oregon Daily f.meraid fftoard ot Directors M a herd Reynolds chairman \v.*»n office 301 Allen Nall. University of Oregon t740J Telephone (4a 2712 Sob Afiption rates 110a tea' V) a term Second class postage paid at Eogene editor Bill Bocy managing editor Cay Eats editor ia> page editor Steve Smith *. ampoS»'ews editor Torr te Me Allister lommgmty rews editor Nea« Rosen photo editor Phil Watdstem national news editor Cindy Bed sport* editor Paul Buker review of the art* MikePetrym general manager At Phelps adverting manager Janice Pene production manager Tim Ferguson The opinion* expressed herein are not necessarily those of the University of the s»udent pody Returning grad students must file form All Graduate School students returning Fall term 1972 must file an “Intent to Re-enroli” form with the Graduate School. Forms are available at your major department or at the Graduate School. Deadline is July 15. A . Post-baccalaureate students must obtain their special form from the Graduate School only. Teton slide show to be presented The Outdoor Program is sponsoring a slide show of a climb to the summit of the Grand Teton at 7:30 p.m. tonight in 177 Lawrence. Admission is free. Climbers will be present to answer questions. The climb was held in March and the climbers were the second group this year to attempt the climb in the winter. Music recital slated for tonight The compositions of University student Daniel Green will be performed tonight at 8:00 p.m. The recital will be in the Music School Recital Hall, is open to the public and free of charge. Some of Green’s compositions are “Is it Irregularity,” performed by the University Contemporary Music Consort, “Burned Out,” with saxophones, drums, bass, and electric piano, “Relevant Hippies Can Dance,” and “Psoriasis (Heartbreak of).” Besides playing the electric piano in these selections, Green will solo in Beethoven’s “Op. 110” for the piano. ‘People’s Blockade’ scheduled An anti-war demonstration is tentatively scheduled for Tuesday night at 8 o’clock. It will leave from the Growers Market, 301 Lincoln, and will be “A People’s Blockade.” The march is sponsored by the May 8th Movement. Print show set for Koinonia Center Serigraphic prints by Corita Kent will be shown at Koinonia Center, 1414 Kincaid, from Tuesday to Saturday. Kent’s color prints have received international recognition, hanging in museums such as the Art Institute of Chicago, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York to the Bibliotheque National in Paris. Tuesday deadline for absentee ballot University students who are registered to vote in Multnomah County must write the office of the registrar to secure an absentee ballot if they wish to vote in the May 23rd primary. The address is 1040 S.E. Morrison, Portland, Oregon 97214. The request should include full name, home address, precinct number, reason for request, local address and signature. The deadline for return of the ballots is 8 p.m. Tuesday. Porter demands end to program secrecy Charles Porter, Fourth District congressional candidate, Thurs day demanded the veil of secrecy surrounding financing of Republican Congressman John Dellenback’s Congressional Scholar program be lifted. Porter is also writing to eleven of the known sponsors of the program asking them to make public the amounts they have con tributed and the accounting they received. The move comes after Porter was approached by a former scholar who Porter said "resented" being told that the names of program sponsors were to be kept secret. Consumer protection measures outlined The State Department of Agriculture will soon redouble its efforts to assure that only safe meat products reach the consuming public, Governor Tom McCall announced last Wednesday. "Oregon intends to furnish consumer protection through a system of uniform sanitation, sampling and analysis of meat products at the point of sale,” McCall said The Oregon meat inspection program has been on a cooperative basis with the federal government since 1968, with costs shared equally McCall said amendments to the Federal Meat Inspection Act would mean that the state's cost will rise, but “at the expense of adequate protection at the immediate consumer level.” The entire state federal relationship wall be terminated July 1. The change in direction of the state effort is in response to the findings of a study made last July by the Oregon Student Public In terest Group (OSPIRGK