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Icelandic Lowest Jet fares to Fiurope of any scheduled airline u Thursday ■ — 21, 1977 3:30 PM, 138 Gilbert Hall on the University of Oregon Campus The University of Oregon Bookstore, Inc. will have its Annual Meeting The purposes of the annual meeting shall be to receive annual reports of officers of the corporation, review amend ment of Articles of Incorporation proposed by the Directors recording Directors' terms of office, make such recommenda tions or proposals to the Board of Directors as the members may deem advisable and to receive nominations for member ship on the Board of Directors Nominations Open for positions on the Board of Directors One (1) freshman for a one (1) year term Two (2) sophomores for two (2) year terms One (1) student-at-large for a one (1) year term Two (2) graduate students for one (1) year terms One (1) faculty member for a two (2) year term The meeting is open to all registered students of the University of Oregon, all faculty members employed on the Eugene campus and all classified staff members hold ing a fulltime University position $ problems Legal Aid faces cutbacks By BECKY YOUNG Ol the Emerald Lane County Legal Aid Service, Inc is in all kinds ot trouble Last week, Director Mervyn Loya found out that Legal Aid may have its city-county revenue sharing funds cut by $10,000 And that isn t even the worst of the financial problems that have beset the organiza tion in iennni weeks forcing its board ol directors to place limits on service Legal Aid provides free advice and represents tion for people who can't afford private attorneys and most of its legal positions are funded through gov ernment grants Seven of those grants will expire between now and October, meaning the service is laced with the loss of six experienced attorneys and a legal secret ary act ot Conqress Loya S lid that logul Aid had been hoping to receive a substantial mcreaso in its $112.000 LSC grant to oft sol somoot the other losses The corpora tion has decided, however, to tunnel its money to areas ot the country with no existing legal aid prog rams So Lane County s funding is at a maintenance level until December The possible revenue sharing loss was an un expected blow The service was funded $38,000 foi the fist al year ending June 30 and has requested $45,000 for the next year to cover one of the pow tions being Inst But last week a citizens advisory committee reviewed the request and recommended a grant of only $-5 000 Legal Aid - neks rehel from Congress The Lane County Bar Association has passed a resolution and sent it to Oregon s congressional delegation, saying the program is providing a necessary service in l ana Countv md that it needs additional funding Bar Association Pres Robert Fraser said. Soc iety lodav is complex enouoh that evervono should have accev. to a lawyer Two attorneys assignod through the Reginald Heber Smith Fellowship Program come to the end of their grants in July and Legal Aid won t be assigned any new Reggies this coming year There are a limited number of fellowships and Loya said Lane County has been extremely lucky to have had two Reggies: one for three years and one for two Legal Aid loses a lawyer assigned through VISTA at the end of April and another in August They are also experienced attorneys and even though two new VISTA positions will be assigned in October the loss of expertise will damage the program A lawyer and a legal secretary funded through Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) come to the end of their two-year funding limit on July 1 Another lawyer's CETA grant runs out in October Under CETA regulations, the positions have to be transferred to other funding, or the emp loyes have to find other work by the time their CETA grants run out, in order for Legal Aid to be assigned anymore CETA positions The legal service s permanent positions — four attorneys, three secretaries, and two paralegals (non-lawyers working under the supervision of an attorney) — are funded by National Legal Services Corporation (LSC) which was set up in 1975 by an Sian tong, chairor ot toga) Aid s board ol direc tors, .aid the income level ol people served by the program is low enough that they can I even atford to pay $20 elsewhere The service is also trying to got additional fund ing trom Hu- City ol Eugene and Luno County Rep resentatives met with the county commissioners to explain their problem and will testily at a city county revonue-sharing public hearing Thursday night Loya aid it additional funding doesnt from somewhere within tour to six weeks the prog ram will have to be cut back beyond what il already has been The board ol directors has already placed limits on service which went into ellecl March 31 Many problems the program used to handlo fully unemp loyment insurance claims, lor example are now on an advice only basis Tlie next set ol cutbacks could completely close the oil ice lor pad ol the week Loya said Legal Aid had been lucky Our prog ram has had stability But it everything that could happen, happens, we re going lo lace a substantial rebuilding job Goat (Continued from Page 1) castrate their young bucks, which can have the same effect One drink of off-flavor milk can make a person develop a permanent dislike for any goat milk Oregon brand goat milk has a slight, very slight edge to it, but nothing unpleasant Milking mothers begin receiving special care soon after their young are born The kids are left to nurse from their mothers for the first few days to guarantee good milk flow and are then taken off, so that as the kids grow older, their gnawing, nursing mouths won't damage the does teats and cause infection Sanitation practically breathes from every part of the dairy where milk is handled. The milk itself isn't handled in anything but sterilized stainless stell con tainers until the bottling stage in sterilized glass bot tles. Tiled walls and a concrete floor make the milking room easy to hose down and it's kept spotless bet ween the twice daily milkings Before a doe is milked, her teats are washed down with disinfectant The first two squirts of fresh milk are thrown away, in case they contain any dirt or debris After the milking, each doe s teats are dipped in a combination astringent and disinfectant, which helps to close up the teat and keep it healthy The milk from each doe is poured into a small stainless steel drum in the corner Each time the drum fills up, it is emptied into a large 315-gallon, refrigerated vat in the other room The vat is con stantly kept at a temperature just a few degrees above freezing and agitated automatically five mi nutes every hour to keep it from separating. The fresh milk is poured down the sides of the vat so that it is cold by the time it reaches the bottom. Here the milk stays until it is bottled Currently, bottling is the number one concern at the dairy, mainly because there never seems to be enough bottles. The wide-mouthed bottles used by the dairy make nice refrigerator jars and the ones with painting on the side become collector s it*' Since the Oregon Goat Dairy went into business last June, 2,000 bottles that have gone out haven't come back People keep the bottles without thinking con sciously of the impact upon this particular business, Crawford says The problem is mat new wide-mouthed bottles are practically non-existent The dairy has had an order lor bottles placed with a company back oast since last fall To keep in business the dairy operators are left to buying old bottles from dairys which have gone out of business — when they can be found The ofd bottles, however, usually have quaint writing on them and they re the ones wheh most often are not re turned Even with all the problems and work involved, Crawford, McGee and Edwards remain committed to the dairy, a combination of social consciousness and long-range values carrying them through Without goat's milk, some would be hard put to find a substitute The small fat globules of goat's milk do not adhere in masses and can be digested more easily than cow's milk Infants who have failed to take formulas have been successfully reared on goat milk Adults with reduced fat digestion, such as gall bladder and liver deficiency cases, often can digest goat's milk when cow’s milk proves troublesome "I suppose what keeps us going is that the oper ation of the dairy fits into an overall structure of our own values and perceptions of the world,'' Crawtord says "It's an underlying value in support of agricul ture. "Civilizations have fallen down because ot their inability to support themselves agriculturally As we look at our civilization changing, one of the things we think needs to be stabilized is agriculture and so we feel that maybe that is something we re helping do."