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LEGAL
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♦ Legal Services handles a wide range of legal
problems from divorces to landlord tenant disputes,
t There is never a consultation or settlement fee.
t Legal Services staff members are experienced,
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| Legal Services are FREE to current fee-paying
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Contact Legal Services, EMU, Room 334
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2nd.glnnual OregonJlomecoming
October 20, 2000, 8:30 pm
1 ( (Ballroom
Tickets are now on sale at the Break in the EMU
Tickets are running out!
Speech
continued from page 1
with an election approaching.
“There are ballot measures on the
November ballot that could be hor
rific in their impact,” he said.
According to Frohnmayer, the
real question people need to ask
themselves is, what is worth doing?
When questions of ethics come up,
In this election, we
need to look at the ballot
measures and candidates
that have the greatest in
mind for the people.
Dave Frohnmayer
University president / j
the answer, he said, is service, and
“to remove ourselves and own self
interests.”
“In this election, we need to look
to the ballot measures and candi
dates that have the greatest in mind
for the people,” he said.
He also cited Measure 91, which
he said would mean a $2 million cut
out of state education budgets.
/onnnnonno
“This would strip for us self-de
termination of our future. This is
not in the interest of engaged citi
zenship,” he said.
Frohnmayer also gave examples
of how activism is taking place on
the University campus.
“Students have gotten 4,500 new
voters registered, more than any
other college campus as of this
hour,” he said.
Local residents organized the Eu
gene City Club to provide credible
analysis of community issues, hon
or diverse perspectives and stimu
late informed community decision
making and constructive action.
According to Don Kahle, the
club’s president-elect, the club was
started about a dozen years ago.
“It's modeled after Portland's
City Club, which has been strong
since early in the last century,” he
said.
Betty Niden, a city club member
and one of the original founders,
concurred.
“It was formed because Eugene
needed a group that looked at issues
from a non-partisan view,” she said.
A recording of the speech can be
heard on KLCC radio Monday at
6:30 p.m. and can be seen on Metro
television Monday, Tuesday, and
Friday at 10 p.m.
DonnnooocN
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Calendar
Monday, October 16
Exhibition: Multi-media by Naomi Kasumi, photography by Tera Gambill and
painting by Michael Gambill and Ryan P. Glaser-Flynn. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Oct. 16
20. LaVerne Krause Gallery, Lawrence Hall. Free. Reception 7-9 p.m. Oct. 16.
Food for Thought Video Series: "Shattering the Silences: The Case for Minority
Faculty." Preregister. Noon-1:30 pm. Board Room, EMU. Free.
Romance Languages Seminar Speaker: I leana Rodriguez discusses "Multicultur
alism in the Romance World: Latin American Studies.” 4-6 p.m. UO Campus.
Free.
Presentation: Jesus Tecu Osorio speaks on how the World Bank funded Chikoy
Dam and Rio Negro massacre. 7 p.m. EMU Fir Room. Free.
City Council work session considers resolutions regarding statewide ballot meas
uresand the April 2000 Draft Eugene Land Use Code. 5:30 p.m. City Hall, 777
Pearl Street, McNutt Room. Free.
days left,
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