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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1981)
MT. ST. HELENS: KEEPER OF THE FIRE WISTEC - THE FILM SHOT ON THE MOUNTAIN Friday, May 29 — 8 p.m. Saturday, May 30 and June 6 — 2 p.m. Sunday, May 31 and June 7 — 2 p.m. $1 or 50c plus Science Center Admission Next to Autzen Stadium 484-9027 ON BIG PRINT REDUCTIONS! Eugene Print’s Xerox 1860 printer can reduce originals as large as 36” wide down to 18"—on white or 5 colors of bond paper. Ideal for ter minal projects and port folios. And U of O architec tural students will receive a 15% discount on 1860 xerox copies. Camera services also available Line and screened prints up to 18"x23'\ Discount does not ap ply to camera services. % EUGENE PRINT 20 East Thirteenth, Eugene. 484-2601 Working the night shift? Take Vivarin. It's got what it takes to keep you going. The active ingredient that makes Vivarin Stimulant Tablets so effective is the same caffeine you d find in two cups of coffee only now squeezed into one little tablet. It has twice the active ingredient as the other leading brand. So when taken as directed, Vivarin keeps you alert for hours. Take Vivarin r SAVE $1.00 WITH THIS VIVARIN REFUND CERTIFICATE n L1 Read label for directions To receive vour Si 00 refund fill out this certificate and mail with the required proof of purchase to Vivarin Dollar Refund Dept X81. J B Williams Co . Inc , Cranford, New Jersey 07016 Name Address City (Print) State .. . Zip_ ... Required Proof of Purchase: The back panel of any vivarin package which shows the ingredients and dosage instruc tions No other proof of purchase will be accepted This Re fund Certificate must accompany your request The Refund Certificate may not be reproduced in any way Refund lim ited to one per family group, or organization Offer expires Dec 50.1981 Please allow 4 6 weeks for receipt of your refund Offer void where prohibited taxed or restricted J Make society accessible, stess disabled students By MIKE RUST 01 the Emerald It’s estimated that one out of every 10 people is disabled. To increase understanding of the problems associated with dis abilities, the United Nations de clared 1981 the International Year of Disabled Persons. The idea behind IYDP is “making society accessible,” says Physically Limited Union of Students director Chester Faller. Local groups are working to give disabled people access to roles that society has tradi tionally viewed as closed to dis abled citizens. Disabled people — Faller calls them the “last minority” — are working in two movements, says PLUS member Susan Sygall. One is the effort to obtain equal rights. The other is a consumer movement that seeks to let dis abled people “take control of our lives,” she says. In addition to political activity, many disabled people also are pursuing cultural equality in various arts, often subsidized by the National Endowment of Arts for the handicapped. “A lot of these groups are starting out not so much to be separate but to be integrated into theater, television and dance,” Sygall says. Few television shows feature disabled doctors or lawyers, she points out. “It’s necessary to have posi tive role models. It’s changing, but it’s sure as hell slow." Another example of the disa bled integrating their concerns with other interests is the IRON DUCHESS, described by member Anet Mconel as “a support group for women with disabilities that places an em phasis on feminism.” The IRON DUCHESS group, now five years old, grew out of the first University Women’s Symposium. The group spells its name in capital letters “for our egos,’’ Mconel says. It works with disabled consumer groups such as the Center for Independent Living she says. “They establish a philosophy of independent living. Feminism fits in well with that.” However, budget cuts are casting a pall over the domestic effort to achieve equality for disabled persons. “Reagan’s being sarcastic when he talks about the Inter national Year of Disabled Peo ple,” says Faller, who predicts that the IYDP “will have the same effect as International Women’s Year — not a damn lot. However, one IYDP project may help bring about change — encouraging developing coun tries to begin industries for in expensive “do-it-yourself” wheelchairs. Multinational cor porations currently are selling the necessary technology to Third World nations, Falter says. Another area where acces siblity is important is transpor tation, Faller says. There the United States lags behind other countries. “Socialist European coun tries are way ahead. We get accessible vehicles from Can ada. GM decided there wasn’t a big enough profit margin in ac cessible transportation.” Rather than gradually replace their current models with ac cessible vehicles, GM prefers to develop specialized buses, Faller says. However, a local LTD study has shown that it is more cost-effective to phase in accessible buses instead of us ing special vehicles, he adds. Recycle this paper THE PAPER