LOANS Continued from Page 1 Krnig told reportws The students were given an analysis of lawmakers from their state, including sug gested arguments that might turn them against the Clinton proposal, kraig said. "What I find objectionable is Sallie Mae’s attempt to disguise a portion of their adver tising and lobbying campaigns ns indepen dent student opinion." he said. Commercial banks now loan money to col lege students with repayment guaranteed by the government, eliminating the risk for banks The loan is then sold in a secondary market to Sallie Mae Federally chartered, but owned by its shareholders. Sallie Mae finances about four of every 10 student loans through such trans actions Clinton has proposed that the federal gov ernment loan money directly to students He would allow them to pa\ off the loans uftnr graduation through payroll deduction of a percentage of their salary or through per forming national service The VVhito House argues that eliminating the profits of hanks and middlemen would save $1 billion for students and taxpayers. The student business now cornea to $15 bil lion a year Sallie Mae's critics point to Its high profits and huge executive salaries The General Accounting Office estimated that Sallie Mae's president. Lawrence A Hough, col lected $21 million in compensation in 1991. His vice president. Albert I. Lord, roller ted $1 7 million The loan underwriter also has hired at least seven of Washington's top lobbying firms to fight Clinton's proposal. Simon said The list includes the firms of superlohbvists Tonum Boggs and Robert Strauss, he said Swumar }«p«mm SMy Inli-mivv 5-wori program in Portland, OR, lulv 21 Aug 2S Fam 12 quarter hnin Study language (alt level*) .irut culture with Japanese student* Outdoor wilderness program uv hull'd Prior language itudv run nquind SctiWar*>irp» jraiUNf Oregon/Japan summer Program UmU * (lari Coutfit Bo« W2. Portland, OR t721*. (VUt 7i*-7J05 ET ALS MEETINGS Rho Omega Tan C.hi will have an organisational rnwhng for military, prior military or ROTC today at 5 p m »n Room 2 Agate For mow* information, call 346 6005 Asian /Par ifu -American Slutient I mon will meet for m« nfivm today at 4 p.m ami a general meeting at 5 p.m hi Room 20 EMU For mow mforma lion, call 346 9315 Prr-Phv*« aKh i upat tonal Therapy Club will moot and nave officer elm lion* tonight at 6 30 in Room 154 Straub For more information, call 146 3211 Korean Student A»»o< lation will have a final meeting and officer elm lions tonight at 6 10 in EMU Onturv Room F For more information, call 346 9782 | a pa near Student Organisation will have a final mooting today at * 30 p m in Room 146 StraiiD For more infor mat ion. call 687-1662 MISCEU-ANKOUS Career Planning and Pluemenl Ser vices will havci an oriental ion of the Mjrvw t*s and the campus interview pro gram requirements today from 5 to 6 p m. in Kooiu 221 Hendricks. Also, there will be a K mart group presents turn from 5 to t> p m m KMU Odar rooms A and H Asian Studies Program will sponsor Cynthia Hrokaw's presentation The Feudal Ideal hi l ate Imperial China today from J JO to 4 30 p m in KMU Century Room A For more informs lion, call 346 1521 Alpha lambda Delta/Phi Fta Sigma will have spring initiation tonight at 6 in the FMt Mall room For more in for mat ion. call 340 H377 99 hw oniv (chwie rxtni limit *» with cow pun \ot v*l*J with o«hr? < FAMOUS I STAR* I HAMBURGER Prwmi thr* I coupon & npcwvr 4 f-jmuu%sur | I UmtXiryrf I I 0a on the air. "I've seen all the hoops we've had to jump through." she said The rain caused yet another frustrating delay, but Foote said she can handle the setback "I've lieeii here for three years, so waiting one more day is not going to kill me," Foote said "In the past years. I've learned not to be impatient because it'll hap pen eventually.” And KWVA is finally going to happen Initially, the station will broadcast from t» u rn. to midnight. Lovelady said. In summer. KWVA will cut its hours back from IB to 12 hours a clay. "I'd like to go to 24 hours a day." he said "It's just a matter of getting dependable people who are willing to c ome in at 2 a. rn." The station will broadcast mush . news, community pro gramming and educational broach asting KWVA's musu al focus will Itt! album-oriented rot k. Lovelody said Hist Jock eys will play any son# from any album, unlike other stations that play only one or two songs off of an allium From 6 a m. to 7 p m . the sta tion will air a variety of music from jazz to rock From B p.m to midnight, D)s will host shows focusing on a specific type of music SEMITISM Continued from Page 1 United States is not even debatable.’' Taylor said the debate wasn't only about the lan guage of the proposal "Most faculty (who) want to destroy the require ment don't want to open up discussion aliout peo ples whose voices have been historically submerged." Taylor said Student Lydia Lerma said the incentives for u multicultural curriculum should lie obvious. "The majority of students need to understand they can gam something from me. my history, lan guage and culture." Lerma said "I am Chicana. and in this society I am forced to act and behave differently because l tun a woman, my skin is brown and my parents speak another language " Yulianna hinliergof the Jewish Student Union listed a number of nets of anti-Semitism. "It makes me feel afraid to say I'm Jewish." she said. Assistant Professor Clarence Spigner railed against being labeled an anti-Semite by "forces that wish to use it against us" and 1 ailed on the University administration to respond "Is anti Semitism important to Johnson Hall' I n Myles Brand? it doesn't seem to lie.'' he said Bookstein urged students to contact their pro fessors and lobby for the passage of an expanded multicultural curriculum that includes anti-Semi tism. He criticized the lock of discussion about dis crimination against Arab-Americans 26 $ 2 - Th« Quordfans »teV^27 $5 Uttfe Woman *«wll Pbh ?V\tol .May /V S3 Don Dooth NoRhal Won Mast bell or Bi er roH.v rftYfe ^ llll) 5® 3423351 V team ikifb, s«ip I t it : St ‘If Av\; i: f ' i )( 11v i 'i 1;f 1 f H )\A I »U ,1 M »l . .1 1* ' I ‘ I » ■. » •• 1 * H ■ ! ! 1. I* ' M 1. |i V■*. ' » H ! The Self-Aware Universe How Consciousness Creates the Material World UO Professor of Physics Amit Goswami, Ph D, will sign copies of his stimulating new book which shat ters the widely held worldview that matter is the primary "stuff' of creation. The Se(f A wart Universe shows that by adopting a philosophy of idealism, in which consciousness, not matter, is taken to be the primary "stuff” of creation, we can obtain a consistent paradox-free interpretation of the new physics. This book brings together the most recent discov eries in quantum physics and provides a powerful argument for transforming not only the way we view nature, but also how we view our own personal reality. Hardcover 25.95 ragman OP OIICON