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Men of U of O Calendar
THE IMAGE
Oregon s first look at '83
How would you like to help the
University of Oregon join in the rage
across campuses?
Calendars of men in Universities are
quickly becoming the talk of the year
Men at the University of Nebraska.
Arizona State University, the University
of Massachusetts/Amherst and Oregon
State University have already taken
part in this enthusiasm Join in this
new trend soon to become a campus
tradition
Men representing the University of
Oregon will be selected for the IMAGE
Be a part of the excitement Submit a
photograph of yourself along with the
coupon below (or reasonable
facsimile) to
The Image
P.O. BOX 3174
Eugene, OR
97403
NAME__
ADDRESS
PHONE _
Fiitriet limited to rho*e currently enrolled •< the I of O
Deadline for entnea t* November S. I9#2
Hendriksen
renews duel
with Wingard
By Michette Matassa
OllNtanN
State Rep Margie Hendnk
sen Democratic challenger to
Dist 20 state Sen George
Wingard. continued her attack
of Wingard s voting record
during a Thursday debate
sponsored by the ASUO and
the Student University Affairs
Board
The attack began Tuesday
during a candidates forum co
sponsored by Land, Air and
Water and a iocat Sierra Club
chapter
Hendriksen accused Win
gard of being absent during
one-third of the special ses
sion. including the second
vote of House Bill 3301, a
proposal to increase income
taxes and alter tax brackets
Wingard called the remark
political rhetoric, and said he
was excused from the vote on
H B 3301 for legislative busi
ness He also pointed out that
the bill passed anyway
In my 14 years, I have never
been absent from a session
without excuse." Wingard
said
Hendriksen also criticized
Wingard for being on a com
mittee that watered down a
proposal (H B 3074) to in
crease civil rights for students
Among accomplishments
State Rep Margie Hendriksen continued her challenge for the
District 20 seat currently held by Sen George Wmgard m a
candidate forum sponsored by the ASUO and the Student
University Affairs Board
Hendriksen claimed for herself
was her tax plan which, if
passed, would have lowered
income taxes for 67 percent of
Oregonians and collected
$200 million over the next two
years by collecting some of
Reagan s tax cuts for the state
Wingard said If we passed
her plan we d be back in
special session right now try
ing to raise more money
because the proposal
wouldn t generate enough
revenue
The seven-term legislator
defended his record citing
endorsements from the
Oregon Education Associa
tion and AFL-CIO in addition to
a 95 percent approval rating
from Lane County Democratic
Central Committee
When asked about the goals
of the state corrections sys
tem. Hendriksen said the
problem of prison overcrowd
ing results from cuts in human
resources
Ballot Measure 5 only part of
national nuclear freeze effort
By Mike Anderson
Ol the Emerald
Oregon s Ballot Measure
Five, part of a nationwide
movement to end the arms race,
will let voters decide whether to
support a nuclear arms freeze
The measure calls for Gov
Vic Atiyeh to send an official
message to Pres Ronald
Reagan urging the United
States to propose a bilateral
nuclear freeze to the Soviet
Union
The freeze take the form of an
agreement by both countries to
immediately halt the testing
production and deployment of
all nuclear weapons, missiles
and delivery systems in a way
that can be checked and ver
ified by both sides
About 25 percent of the
American electorate will be vot
ing on the issue on Nov 2, ac
cording to Doug Barber, man
ager of the Oregon Nuclear
Weapons Freeze Campaign
' It will give President Reagan
and his administration a clear
sense of what the American
people want, he says
Despite the large number of
voters involved. Tom Lynch, of
Citizen Action for Lasting
Security, says The mam value
of the ballot measure is the
public education The voting
is not as important as the
education because the vote
isn't actually going to change
anything,” Lynch says
Most polls show that the nu
clear freeze initiative has a sig
nificant lead in Oregon, Barber
says A Bardsley & Haslacher
poll shows that 82 percent of
voters 18 to 24 years old favor
the freeze
But young voters are least
likely to vote, Barber says
Students for a Nuclear Free
Future is serving as the campus
coordinator of the freeze cam
paign, according to SNUFF
member Carl Cole
This is the first step, not the
end, he says