Oregon DAILY EMERALD Thursday. October II, Id**) Eugene. Oregon Volume d2. Issue 12 ms Urews filming ii new Hurger King television ad will lx* on campus Thurs day. using fohnson Hall and the Knight Library as backdrops. The library's special collections sec tion also will be closed in the late afternoon for tap ing. The commercial, which will be aired na tionally in late October, is the first to be filmed on campus since the early 1980s. according to the University News Bureau. Producers are not seeking any extras for filming. Outdoor filming will begin after the sun sets. Students will be allowed to view filming. KRMA organizers agreed on the composi tion of a board of direc tors for the fledgling cam pus radio station after de bate on affirmative action rules and student repre sentation. Students attending KRMA’s Wednesday night meeting voted for a 13-member board of di rectors. nine of whom will be appointed by a 17 member seurch commit tee. The committee will include representatives from minority student unions, nit? vtuimm s Center, the Cay and Les bian Alliance. fraternities and sororities, as well as members representing the interests of disabled stu dents and non-traditional students. As soon as the com mittee is formed, it will appoint nine students and one at-large represen tative to the board of di rectors. The other three direc tors will Ik* appointed by President Myles Brand, the ASUO Executive Of fice and KWAX. the Uni versity's classical music radio station, which is letting KRMA use its transmitter. Marc Abrams, a Port land attorney considered by many to be the state's leading authority on stu dent press rights, will de liver a talk titled “Stu dent Press Rights: The Constitulion Starts Here” at 0 a.m. today in the EMU Fir Room At 2 p.m a panel moderated by University journalism professor Tim Gleason will discuss issues in stu dent journalism. These events are part of the CUth annual High S< htKil Press Conference living held at the Univer sitv Induy. Kids who care Children from the University 's Child Care Development Centers paraded in the CMC Courtyard Wednesday in hats made from recycled materials brought from their homes The event teas part of Recycling Awareness Week Photo by Scan Poston L Requirements change Students study other cultures By Cathy Peterson tnwralf! Repot tee In John Shorts’ world history course, students debate the cul ture and history ol early India, for mulate the Four Stages of Life, and try to comprehend such texts as the Upanishiids Later in the term they will turn their attention to the history of ancient Mesopota mia. the Mediterranean and Chi na. "The whole course is geared to ward making students understand cultures they don't have experi ence with, to give the students a wider perspective than the main stream American culture." Shurts said. World History 104 is one of 159 courses from which freshmen and transfer students can choose to fulfill a new University course re quirement beginning fall 1990. all bache lor degree students entering the University must earn three credits in an approved course studying gender, race or life from a non-Eu ropean-A merican perspect ive. The new requirement grew from a concern voiced hv faculty and administration (h