FREE HOME COOKED DINNER!! A College Student Welcome Dinner. To welcome you to our community - and for you to meet other students. Friday, October 30,6:00 pm Grace Lutheran Church 710 E. 17th Ave, right next to the campus Bring a friend, it would be helpful if you called and told John that you are coming so we can prepare enough food. e 343-8384 - Hosted by Grace Campus Ministry 50% off great travel packs! Eurailpasses issued on the spot! Plan early for Thankgiving! WSBMTmvel - ( IKK: Council on Intcnutional Educational Exchange 877 112 East 13th Street, Eugene 1222 East 13th Street, EMU Building, Univ. of Oregon, Eugene [54l]-344-2263 uwu.counciltravel.com 004573 tation A representative from WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW will meet with prospective students: Wednesday, October 28, 1998 5:00PM to 4:00PM 164 Oregon Hall Learn more about our Trustee Scholarship Program, Law & Government, Joint Degree in Law & Management, International Programs, and Center for Dispute Resolution. WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW Established 1883, Beside Oregon's State Capitol & Courts Willamette University College of Law is the oldest law school in the Pacific Northwest. Willamette is accredited by the ABA and is a member of the AALS. For more information: www.willamette.edu/wucl or 50S.370.6282 OREGON DAILY News briefs Viagra may affect pilots’ color vision WASHINGTON — Add anoth er line to a pilot’s preflight check list: No Viagra. The Federal Aviation Adminis tration is recommending pilots not take the impotence drug with in six hours of flying because it could make it tough to distinguish between the blues and greens found in cockpit instrument and runway lights. So far the drug doesn’t seem to be a problem for other transporta tion workers. “For the above reasons, ‘Six hours from Viagra to throttle’ is recommended,” wrote Dr. Dona to J. Borrillo, a flight surgeon who issued the warning in the most re cent issue of the Federal Air Sur geon’s Medical Bulletin. Studies show it takes that long for Viagra to leave the bloodstream. The phrase mimics the absti nence rule for pilots who drink al cohol: “Eight hours from bottle to throttle.” In clinical studies of Viagra, 3 percent of patients reported see ing a bluish haze. Others taking higher-than-recommended doses had trouble telling the difference between blue and green. Both conditions are trouble some for pilots, since blue and green lights are used to outline taxiways and illuminate digital instrument panels. Glenn may need help releasing payload CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — John Glenn may be a 77-year-old medical marvel to NASA and just about everybody else on the plan et, but he still may need help mak ing all systems go. He will have Metamucil aboard when he rockets away from Earth on Thursday. The world’s oldest astronaut has requested Metamucil wafers, the apple crisp variety, for Discov ery’s nine-day flight. The next oldest shuttle crew member, 46 year-old Japanese astronaut Chiaki Mukai, also put in an order, for cinnamon spice. No one else on the crew appar ently wants, or needs, the 100 per cent natural fiber wafers, intend ed to help those suffering from constipation, troubled bowels or hemorrhoids. The wafers were on a NASA-is sued list of out-of-the-ordinary foods requested by the astronauts. “It’s important for all of us to have to worry about regularity, es pecially when we’re out in space,” said Dr. Dave Williams, an astro naut who is the life sciences direc tor at Johnson Space Center and who relied on his normal diet and exercise when he flew on a med ical-research shuttle flight in April. He said he didn’t know whether previous astronauts had carried Metamucil into space. Naked clown video odd but not obscene LINCOLN, Neb. — A public-ac cess TV program showing a naked man in clown makeup masturbat ing was “bizarre and disgusting” but not obscene, an appeals court ruled Tuesday in throwing out the performer’s pornography convic tion. The Nebraska Court of Appeals dismissed the case against Scott Harrold, who had been fined $1,000 for distributing pornogra phy. His videotaped performance was aired twice in 1995. “While the adjectives strange, weird, graphic, unnecessary, dis tasteful, indecent and offensive are all applicable to Harrold’s videotape, it is not legally ob scene,” Judge Richard Sievers wrote. — The Associated Press Measure 64 Continued from Page 1 sustainable for the environment and protects jobs,” she said. Bill Wynkoop, Lane County coordinator for the Healthy For est Alliance, said Measure 64 would devastate Oregon's econo my. Wynkoop said he believes the measure would cost upwards of 28,000 timber jobs and $1.6 billion in personal income. “It's poorly written, unjust and will result in the virtual elimina tion of timber harvesting in Ore gon,” Wynkoop said. “The secre tary of state says our schools will lose over $33 million a year. "Try to find a job after gradua tion in that kind of job market.” The projected financial impact statement is based on a report by the Department of Forestry. The department used a computer generated analysis called ORGANON, which was devel oped by researchers at the Ore gon State University College of Forestry. But that’s the problem, accord ing to Richard Bowden, co-direc tor of Oregonians for Labor Inten sive Forest Economics, the group that qualified Measure 64 for the ballot. Bowden said he believes there will be no impact on timber jobs or the economy. “You have to understand that the State Department of Forestry, Oregon State University Depart ment of Forestry and the big tim ber companies are all buddies,” Bowden said. “It’s a fraternity, a society of foresters. Their growth model was skewed to unrealisti cally low numbers, and they did n’t even replant trees in their model.” Some small woodland owners agree that clearcutting has gone too far, but so, they say, does Measure 64. “Some of these large clearcuts are wrong,” said Carl DiPaolo, a private woodland owner who 004800 Classes begin January 16th. Classes begin December 5th. Classes begin November 15th. Classes begin November 5th. Classes begin November 5th. Classes begin October 31st & Nov. 18th. Classes begin November 3rd & Nov. 15th. Classes are Starting Now! Call today to reserve your seat. Visit or call our Eugene office at: 720 E. 13th St. #303 Near UO Campus • 345-4420 60 YEARS OF BUILDING FUTURES. ONE SUCCESS STORY AT A TIME. ‘Course names are registered trademarks of their respective owners manages his land in the coastal range by selective cutting. "If you want to shut down 120-acre clearcuts, get out of my way — I’ll carry the flag. "But at the same time, I think it’s chicken to say we want you to do very selective cuts, then write the measure so we can’t.” Other private land owners dis agree. They say Measure 64 is not only possible, but also sustain able and responsible. Like DiPao lo, Gil Harrison considers his trees part of his retirement plan, but he believes Measure 64 will work. “If there are specific problems with small woodland owners about the number of trees per acre and size in diameter, the leg islature will change it,” Harrison said. “My primary feeling is that clearcutting has to stop. “The health of the land and the wildlife is more important than making money.” I Fun Wheels ©regoaWjfimeraltr The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon, Eugene. Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald op erates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private prop erty. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable bylaw. 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