. . . of environmental concern By Catherine Siegner Portland General Electric Co.’s (PGE) request for a prelimi nary injunction to stop the Trojan Plant occupation August 6-9 was denied Friday in Washington County Circuit Court. PGE had attempted to enjoin i over 100 persons and two organi zations from demonstrating at the plant. Judge Albert R. Musick said he could not enjoin unincor porated organizations whose membership was unclear from trespassing, although he did issue an order that would place 27 indi viduals in contempt of court if they participate in the occupation. Pacific Power & Light Co. (PP&L) and Portland General Electric Co. (PGE), Oregon’s two private investor-owned utilities, have filed separate suits against the Bonneville Power Administra tion (BPA) to gain a share of guaranteed federal hydropower. BPA is required by the 1937 Bonneville Act to give preference to public bodies and cooperatives (such as the Eugene Water & Electric Board and the Springfield Utility Board) when marketing power produced by federal dams on the Columbia River. The two suits seek to break this “preference clause’’ and obtain “firm” power— power that is guaranteed by contract and can not be cut off by BPA — for PP&L and PGE. Since 1973, when the private utilities’ contracts with BPA ex pired, both PP&L and PGE have not been able to buy firm power from BPA, and have had to pur Unload your Books for Cash August 10 and August 11. Our Buyback Policy: 1. You get half-price— if a faculty member has ordered the book for the up coming term. Note that at times we may have more books for a class then needed and stop purchasing at the one-half price. 2. You get Dealer prices— for those texts not needed on this campus. We’ll pay the price offered by used books dealers, which is based on the national market for the books. 3. We do not accept— old editions, spiral-bound books, programmed texts, certain in expensive paperbacks, workbooks, most consignment material, and extensively cribbed or damaged books. They are of no value to us or the used book dealers. We purchase such books only at our option. When to sell your books— The buyback counter, located upstairs, is open during our regular business hours. It’s not necessary to wait for a specific buying period to resell your books. However, don’t wait until the new quarter has started because we do not buy back used books for use in any current term. We are always purchasing for future terms only. 13th & Kincaid 686-4331 BOOKSTORE (~)Pen: Mon-Fri8:15-5:30 Page 6 chase “surplus” hydropower that was not needed by the so-called preference customers. The State Board of Forestry held hearings Thursday and Fri day in Salem on two proposals to regulate aerial herbicide spraying in Oregon. Over 100 persons presented testimony on proposals that were submitted to the board by Gov. Straub and the Oregon Environ mental Council (OEC). The Governor’s proposal would set up 200-foot buffer strips around large streams and open bodies of water, and the OEC proposal would require posted notice in all areas to be sprayed as well as the 200-foot strips. Currently, the board s regula tions on aerial spraying of herbi cides require "one swath” be left unsprayed on either side of streams. The two proposals would each define “swath” as 200 feet. Testimony was evenly divided on the proposals. Proponents of either proposal cited evidence that aerial herbicide spraying in evitably contaminates streams, while opponents claimed the 200-foot buffer strips would re move too much timber from pro duction. The board will rule on the pro posals late this month. Teledyne Wah Chang of Al bany, which manufactures the metal zirconium, used in flash cubes and fuel rods for nuclear power plants, will reopen at mid night, August 13. The plant has been closed for a month to reduce inventory. The State Health Division ordered Wah Chang two weeks ago to re main shut down until it submitted a detailed plan to control the radioactive waste that results from the zirconium manufacturing pro cess. Last Friday, the company com plied with the order and drew up a safety plan to keep waste from spreading from the plant. A spoon-billed sandpiper was spotted near Vancouver, B.C. last Wednesday by two reporters from the Vancouver Sun. The species has only been seen three times in North America in the past 64 years — once in 1914 and again last year. The spoon-billed sandpiper (Eurqnorhynchus pymeus) is from Siberia and apparently is found in this part of the world only when it loses the way on its normal migra tion route. The State Department of En vironmental Quality (DEQ) has lifted air pollution alerts in both Portland and Medford. DEQ cancelled the warnings last Friday after a one-day posting in Portland, and a three-day post ing in Medford. The cause was not photochem ical oxidants or carbon monoxide, but excessive levels of ozone in the air. Cooler air came in Friday in both cities and provided the necessary ventilation to lift the warnings. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has asked the Oregon Department of Agriculture to schedule hearings on the use of the farm chemical heptachlor. The agency claims that hep tachlor, which is used to coast seed grain and protect it from wireworm and other diseases, is killing game birds that eat the treated grain. The U.S. Environmental Protec tion Agency (EPA) has banned the use of heptachlor on seed grain after Sept. 1, 1982, but the Fish and Wildlife Service claims that “the EPA phaseout period will not safeguard susceptible wild life.” The majority of bird kills occur in Umatilla and Morrow counties. Canadian wild geese in the area of the Umatilla National Wildlife Refuge along the Columbia River have also been killed by hepta chlor poisoning, according to the Wildlife Service. The Oregon Department of Ag riculture has set August 22 as a tentative date for the hearing. Group promotes humanities study University Vice Provost Robert Albrecht, former University En glish Prof. Joan Pierson, and former University Pres. Robert Clark were recently selected to serve on th Oregon Committee for the Humanities (OCH). The committee is a collection of community leaders and academi cians dedicated to promoting a sense of the human importance of the humanities within Oregon communities. Its primary goal is to encourage historians, writers, philosophers, jurists, linguists and others whose work is collectively termed "the humanities," to relate their study to the experience and concerns of community residents. Because the Western, mainly literary, tradition usually as sociated with the word "humanities” does not fit most minority people in Oregon, a full time staff person works to adapt the OCH program to the differing needs and settings of Oregon minorities. Committee members believe that social issues are significant contexts for applying humanistic knowledge and perspectives. The committee funds projects for this purpose. After nine months of funding in January, the committee had awarded 27 grants out of 38 proposals submitted. The largest grant was $18,485 to Oregon State University for a project entitled “Television News: Reflection of Reality or Creation of Myth?” Mini-grants are also awarded in amounts ranging from $500 to $1,500 for short programs on polit ical or cultural topics, such as a lecture and discussion series highlighting the contributions of Asians, Blacks, Chicanos, Native Americans, and Scandinavians to the history and culture of the Northwest. The proposal deadline for mini-grants is August 21. The committee also provides grants for public humanities programs sponsored by non-profit organiza tions. For more information write to the committee at 1633 S.W. Park, Portland OR. 97201, or call 229-4821.