Make it Happen!
Free Services
l/T?
ORKSHOPS
The following workshops are offered most terms and are designed
to help you make positive health changes. Call 346-4456
for more information.
Smoking Cessation Weight Management
Vegetarian Cooking Sports Nutrition
ake the test: Free HIV testing
Free HIV testing is available to University of Oregon students at the
University Health Center for a limited time beginning Spring term
2000. Free testing will continue while funding is available. Coupons
available at the Peer Education Office at the Health Center. Call us at
346-2770 to schedule your appointment.
ou are what you eat...Get a free
NUTRITIONAL ANALYSIS!
Too many calories? Not enough calcium or iron? Let us help you
find the answers. If you are concerned and/or curious about the
nutrient breakdown of your diet then NAP is for you. The Health
Education Program now offers a FREE Nutrition Analysis
Program to all registered students. Simply pick up an application
at the Health Education room.
OTAL CHOLESTEROL SCREENING
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Every Tuesday from 9:30-11:30 a.m. you can get free total
cholesterol screening. Simply check in at the Health
Education room on the first floor of the Health Center.
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£j ENDING LIBRARY
;
Excellent books are available for loan to U of 0 students from
the Health Education room in the Health Center. There you
will also find health related newsletters, articles, and pamphlets.
Just stop by.
9
EALTH EDUCATION AT THE
STUDENT RECREATION CENTER
UEST SPEAKERS AND PRESENTATIONS
Peer Health Educators and Health Center Staff are
available to speak to your organization on any of the
listed health issues as well as others. Call us for details.
Come visit our cart for updated health and wellness information on topics such as:
alcohol and the effects on “workouts,” training and fitness; food supplements and
replacement fluids; effects of tobacco on physical fitness; eating disorders and much
more! Come check us out inside the main entrance of the Student Rec Center on:
April 5,12, 26 and May 10, 24 from 3pm-5pm.
Topics Addressed:
HIV/AIDS, Nutrition, Alcohol, Sexuality, Smoking, Cholesterol, Eating
Disorders, Fitness, Stress, Relationships, Weight Management
Health Education Program
at the Health Center
346-4456
Visit us at our web site: http//healthed.uoregon.edu
Student fees
continued from page 1A
campus life outside of the lecture
hall.
“If the university reaches this
conclusion, it is entitled to im
pose a mandatory fee to sustain
an open dialogue to these ends,”
Kennedy added.
ASUO President Wylie Chen
said the decision is a major vali
dation of student government as
a whole, as well as the other pro
grams on campus.
“It reinforces any questions
and erases any doubt people
have about paying the fee,” he
said.
While the decision protects fee
allocation, it also opens the door
for more liberal spending on
campus in the future because
other political and religious
groups now have a claim to Uni
versity funds.
The University of Oregon’s fee
system is currently stricter than
Wisconsin’s in that political
groups such as the College De
mocrats and College Republicans
do not get fee funds. Also, OS
PIRG does not receive money for
political campaigns whereas
WisPIRG can use student fees for
political purposes as well as en
vironmental and informational
campaigns.
In the decision, justices also
said funding decisions need to be
“viewpoint neutral.” The Pro
grams Finance Committee,
which allocates fee money for the
student groups on campus such
as the Black Student Union and
the Multicultural Center, current
ly gives fee money without re
garding a group’s views. The new
rule could cause controversy if
more political and religious
groups come to PFC for student
money.
“We’ll be seeing what else we
can fund,” Chen said. “Wiscon
sin shows they can do this, and
[A university] is enti
tled to impose a manda
tory fee to sustain an
open dialogue...
Anthony Kennedy
U.S. Supreme
Court justice
it’s totally legal.”
Merriah Fairchild, state board
chair for OSPIRG and an advo
cate for the fee while the justices
deliberated the Southworth case,
said it is a possibility that OS
PIRG would look into spending
fee money for political cam
paigns.
“We will look into creating the
most social change possible [and
look for] ways to be more effec
tive,” she said.
One final part of policy might
have to change at the University,
however. The justices ruled that
it is unconstitutional for stu
dents to vote on whether to fund
a group. Students made that
choice last year when a majority
voted to fund OSPIRG for two
years.
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Bring your textbook
information to
Smith Family Bookstore
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• Author
• Title
• Edition
s We 7/ help you find
used copies that
will save you $$$
Sell us those texts,
paperbacks & magazines
you no longer use. '
alR^W w Cv:A: $£,:
One block from campus