Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 17, 1989, Page 9, Image 9

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    The 1989 Spring Street haire will likely bring out.is man\ rei
elers as last year's event.
Assortment of food, music
spices up spring street fair
A host of food and i r.dt
booths and an assortment of
musical entertainment will be
featured on 13th Street this
Wednesday. Thursday, and 1 ri
day as part of the Spring Street
l-'aire sponsored In the AS! t >
The fair is an annual event
that has been attracting a di
verst? group of vendors and
crafts people lor more than ID
years, said Brenda Hansen,
ASl'() events coordinator
"The Street l-aire is some
thing tlillerenl to add a 111111'
spil e to campus." Hansen said
This year about 70 informa
tion. c raft, and food booths are
expec ted to line l.tth. Hansen
sail) The music al entertain
ment offered from t 1 10 to 1 to
p in im hides reggae, folk and
1 lassii al groups
Hansen said the ASIJO ex
ports to earn approximately
S2000 from the fair t hat mon
ey will be pat into othei ASl'O
events, stie said.
Bag Ladies of the World unite
to form rich, life-long intimacy
Bv l isa Svanesik
Emerald Contributor
Bag ladies of the World
They're not u h.it von think
Part extended fantilv. part
support group and part sm nil
experiment, this i>< lei fit group
ot Kugene women "is around
not lieing bag ladies " said
HI.OU representative Margo
Sr haefer at an informal seminar
Tuesday afternoon
HI.OW h.is founded ill I'ltt'i
bv Martha Snvder and I lien
Weaver along with t! other
original HI t)V\ sisteis
Schaefer said In the i nurse of a
conversation about the spit Ire
of being old poor and done at
the end of their lives Snyder
and Weaver inked that "we
could always he hag ladies to
gether " and the seeds of the
organization were sown
The purpose of HI l )W
which has grown into four
small groups in hugeue is to
provide a safe plat e to build
lifelong intimacy" fielween
members. Schaefer said. Kac.lt
group holds a monthly politick
as well as occasional “HI.OVA
nuts " vvliii !i are larger gather
ings
"The purpose is not to he
small talk and surfat e ori
ruled." Si haefer said, hut rath
er to tin11d strong and lasting
relationships in whit h ' regard
less of what happens we're
still going to he there for each
other in some i apat its some
Murfto N< h.ieter s/xi ke Tuesdm about him Hu it Indies ul the
World promotes litelanft intimui \ umonft txomen.
w li.it lik.' .m extemleit family
Hei ause unt' nt tlif group s
purposes is in t route .1 s.ite
plat e til W OUien III I"' I'limt imi
.111 v iiilim.itf with .mil to trust
nno .mother tlie group size
must tie kept small Si h.iefer
s.iiti Hie tour Ht.OU groups
range in size in.igtit to in
members
Si h.iefer i alls MOW .111 ill
i reitihh ei lei tic group" of
women who together iomptl.se
a gre.H piei e ol women’s i ul
lure " She lamented the ah
sent e of auv women ol l olor in
ill.' group, however, hei .inse I
think we'd be .1 lot itrongn
w ilh more divcrsil\
Si harder cm oil raged other
t ugene women to form HI.OU
groups ot their own
The foundation of sur li <1
group, she said, is simpl\ "an
agreement II1.1t we re going to
have something real going on
with eai.h othoi. and even
tiling else beyond that is for the
members to dei ide
Scdiaefer has faith that the
movement will spread through
Ktigene and beyond "We’re
going to he unite an arm\ Till
sure " she said
Panel will consider pay for mayor, councilors
By Greg Hough
Emerald Reporter
An ad hoi: citizen committee
is being established to look at
the issue of compensation for
Eugene's mayor and city coun
cilors.
A University faculty repre
sentative will serve on the
n i ne-me mber com mitt ee.
which will include members of
the business community, as
well as former Eugene mayors
and councilors. In addition,
three of the group's nine mem
bers will represent the commu
nity at large.
Eugene Mayor Jeff Miller will
nominate committee members
for council approval. He will
consider a recommendation
from Universit\ President Paul
Olum on who will till the Uni
versity position.
Miller, elected to his first
term as mayor last year, said In
got a lot of feedback on the is
sue of pay for mayors and
councilors during the mayoral
campaign
1 kept hearing that more
people would run for i lls coun
cil if svc offer them .1 salary."
Miller said "Ms initial rear
lion had heen that things were
fine the way they are Hut since
I’ve been mayor. I've seen the
tremendous time drain of this
job on the mayor even more
than tlu1 count ilors I think I've
become pretty neutral on the is
sue. and that’s why I want
there to be a people’s 1 ommit
tee.”
(ills Financial I’lanning Ana
iyst Tony Mounts will svork
with the committee, helping it
research aspects ol the issue
"Nothing’s been set yet. but
we’ll probably wind up doing a
survey of comparable cities,"
Mounts said "We ll find out
the size and strut lure ol the dit
ferent government organiza
tions. and how much the may
ors and i mini ilors work
Mounts said the i its 1 ouiw it
office did a phone smses ot
i its governments tsvo years ago
that found that the compensa
lion for mayors and councilors
"ranges from salats to health
1 are benefits to nothing I he
surveyed mayors who did get
Election
Continued from Page 1
out of tin- safety net by giving
them adequate tux bases I he
third and final phase of the
plan would have been to tome
up with ways tor the state gov
eminent to take a larger share
of the school finance burden.
In addition to the tax bases.
Measure 1 would have provid
ed $112 million in school aid
and property tax relief pro
grams Ini luded in the lull was
Sir'S million for handicapped
programs. $35 million in cred
its for districts with high prop
ertv tax rates .$JII million in
homeownet t.i\ r*r 1 i«*f ami tin
additional million alloca
lion to tlif state's si hool H.isii
Fund
Supporters ot Measure I
raised nearly $?>()<).000 for the
campaign. mostly collected
from i orporale donations
(ioldsi lunidt and other politi
c.d leaders went on a statewide
barnstorming tour. visiting
schools and talking withpeo
ple to lobby support tor the
measure
paid made an average uf
Sill 000 a year, he added
"I would anticipate that it
the committee does re* ommeiui
compensation, then the issue
probably will go to a publii
hearing, and well get some
sense ot how the public truly
thinks about it. Mounts said
"One of tbe difficulties ot the
whole ei|uattuu is that any re<
ommeudation would have to go
to a vote of the people."
Mounts said lie explained tb.it
i ompens.ilion would require all
amendment ot the Kugene laly
( halter and would have to u in
voter approval to be ena< fed
Olum is "considering a vari
ety of names" for the t'niversi
ty slot on the committee said
Alison Itakei his exei utive is
stsl.ml I If w ill probably dei ide
on a rfi miimi'nilation In Miller
bv iit*nI hwI. she added
President ()111 lit has a VV eek
lv meeting with Ins i*xih olive
staff am! some names Were
brought totwnfd. during last
week's nieetmv, Itaker said
' 'These .ue primarily people
w ho have interest in pnlitiial
issues, they t otne Iroiu areas
like pnlilit.il science, etononi
it s and H’M (Planning, I’ublii
1‘olicv and Management I
1 riday is the deadline for ap
plications to till the at large
seats on the committee (atv
I’ublir Information Spet lalist
Kelli Osborn said She estimat
ed that the i ommittee u ill form
by |ime ami work bn n
months oil the issue
“
IHI Millt-r
Attend
RIGGS CPA
I l\ I liislriutiun for [hi
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( )uf IX ». law I'nn t.im i> ollctcti
m iVnlaiul bcjiinnini! June 1
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i Di ( Aims
IVj • .R\Ms 11! J
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You i an enjoy low
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low & no pastries
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