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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1973)
fertilize your garden fertilize your mind cyclerecyclerecycle GEORGE BARKHORDARIAN. CLASS OF M. PRESENTS Persian Rags Auction Tuesday Tuesday, Oct. 2nd, at 7:30 p.m. Free Exhibition Starts at 6 P.M VALLEY RIVER INN \ alley River Center. Eugene. Ore. Please Bring Your Room Measurements Consultants to interior designers will be at the auction to offer courtesy decorating advice on Persian Rugs FREEorochures provided by Iranian Government will be distributed among visitors. Movie on Art of Persian Rugs will be shown IRANIAN RUG WEAVERS West Coast Main Office, 533 Sutter St., San'Francisco, (415) 391-4«a fmm FRANK BREWER. AUCTIONEER WOMEN ON THE MARCH “THE WOMEN’S Film speaks in clear and unmistakable words from real people about what’s wrong with the system and how women are especially victimized by class, racial and sexual inequality. The anger of THE WOMEN’S Film is positive, even op timistic. These beautiful, strong sisters are ready to struggle for a better world for themselves and their children . . . seeing and hearing them, it’s impossible to think they can - Ruth McCormick, CINEASTE. Also OLIVE OIL FOR PRESIDENT, a POPEYE cartoon. lose. 177 Lawrence Admission $1.00 Wed., Sept. 26 7:00 & 9:15 pm All profits go to movement and community groups Democrats meet for ‘rap session’ National representatives from the Oregon Democratic Party reported their activities at a meeting of the Lane County Democratic Central Committee, held Thursday night at the Eugene Hotel. The panel of representatives was composed of Delegation Selection Committee member Lucy Hanks. State Chairman Caroline Wilkins, and National Committeeman Blaine Whipple. Helen Linde reported for her husband, Vice-Presidential Selection Committee member Hans Linde, who was unable to attend. In introducing the panel. Lane County Democratic Party Chairer James Klonoski termed the meeting “a rap session" between the “grass roots” of Lane County and the national party representatives, with give and-take between panel and audience. Delegation Selection Com mittee member Hanks opened the panel discussion with an account of the recently-formed McKulski Commission. “This commission, based on the McGovem-Fraser guidelines, is trying to open the party to all Democrats,” she said. “We’re determined to keep the party’s ideals going. “In the guidelines, however,” she said, “there is no mention of quotas for women. Blacks, and other minority groups. These quotas are basically advocated by Black party members,” Hanks stated. State Party Chairer Wilkins informed the group of a meeting of the Democratic Party’s charter commission, held in Ft. Collins. Colorado, last July. Reading portions of an article nfeliusj n whereyou Lto hurt!f~~ we can help! 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COME IN AND TRY BOTH MODELS AT THE PEN COUNTER, MAIN FLOOR OR CALL 686-4331 It’s like having your own com puter in your pocket BOOKSTORE Formerly University of Oregon CO-OP ampus Phone 4331 895 East 13th Avenue published m me wasningion Post, Wilkins said, “the com mission was formed to draft the first formal constitution in the history of the Democratic Party, a charter to be submitted for ratification at the party’s 1974 mid-term conference. “Hearings are to be held by this fall in every state on drafting such a charter,” Wilkins said. Linde, reading notes left by her husband, stated, “after the vice presidential selection problems encountered last year, a com mission was appointed to meet last July to discuss different procedures in selection “Some proposals were more feasible than others,” Linde said, and listed some of the more radical suggestions as elimination of the vice presidency entirely and a mid term election of a vice-president to obtain executive leaders “of separate political identities.” “More reasonable were the proposals for open conventions, in which vice presidential selection is entirely up to the delegates, and the partially open convention, in which the presidential nominee names several choices to be decided upon by the delegates. “October 16 is the next meeting of the commission,” Linde said. “Affirmative action is being taken to choose minority delegates,” National Com mitteeman Whipple said, and rules specify that the convention chairman in 1976 is not to be of the same sex as was the chair man in 1972. Solid waste by L-COG adopted Lane County’s preliminary solid waste management plan was adopted Thursday by the Lane Council of Gover ments (L LOG). The plan, which was previously adopted by the Lane County Board of Commissioners, has been praised by the US En vironmental Protection Agency and the State Department of Environmental Quality. It is the first solid waste management plan to be adopted in Oregon, according to Bruce Bailey, the county’s solid waste director. “Flexibility is the most im portant aspect of the plan,” said Bailey. It will be reviewed and revised every five years, he said. In other business Thursday, L COG board members asked L COG’S Citizen Advisory Com mittee to study the energy situation. According to William Rankin, L-COG’S director of economic development, electric utilities plan to impose mandatory cur tailment on “major consumers first,” or industry, in case of an energy crisis. An industrial curtailment could push the current unemployment rate of 6.7 per cent to over 10 per cent, said Rankin. Rankin said Bonneville Power Administration officials are predicting a 20 per cent chance of a serious power shortage during the winter or spring. The committee is being asked to find possible alternatives to industrial curtailment. One possibility, suggested Rankin, is an area-by-area residential curtailment for two or three hours at a time.