Campy Oregon’s residence halls are overtaken by sports camps over the summer. Page 5 Shifting boundaries The Oregon Secretary of State’s office has postedits redistricting plan online. Page 3 http://www.dailyemerald.com Tuesday, July 17,2001 Since 1 900 University of 'Oregon' Eugene, Oregon Volume 103, Issue 7 A day at the fair Jessie Swimeley Emerald Harold Smaude on accordion and Vito on bass play pirate songs to entertain the passing crowd between performances of Circus Contraption, their tour group from Seattle. ■ Sights, smells and sounds both weird and wonderful assailed the senses of 44,000 visitors at the Oregon Country Fair By Darren Freeman Oregon Daily Emerald The Oregon Country Fair expe rience began at the front gate, where on Saturday a woman wearing pixie wings and blowing bubbles was among those waving in visitors. “Proceed with the forward,” she said with a tranquil tone, elongating the vowels of each word. “Proceeeeed with the forwaaaard.” When asked about the fair, most peo ple sigh, struggle to find appropriate words and express feelings ranging from adoration to indifference to loathing. Nearly everybody says the event is memorable. The fair’s numbers are staggering. This year, the fair saw 44,000 visitors, 250 art booths and 50 food vendors. But as event spokesman Robert De Spain said: “What people come here for is people-watching and sightsee ing.” Though organizers tamed the 32 year-old fair four years ago by selling tickets in advance and by banning drugs and alcohol, the event is still a spectacle of human eccentricity. Every sense was stimulated almost beyond comprehension. Colors brilliant and muted, sounds staccato and sustained and smells ap pealing and unpleasant swirled around Turn to Country Fair, page 4 Jessie Swimeiey Emerald Klainda Little, 12, scrapes the bark from a twig to make a spirit stick. She can’t remember a summer without the Country Fair. Proposed broadcast limitations arouse ire ■ Broadcasters around Oregon believe a University proposal to limit their use of sports footage violates their First Amendment rights By Jeremy Lang Oregon Daily Emerald Sports broadcasters are steaming and one state senator is threatening legislative action because of a pro posed University policy to limit the length of sports highlights on televi sion newscasts. Although broadcasters statewide believe the proposal violates their freedom of speech rights, they are waiting until it becomes actual Uni versity policy before deciding how their stations will cover Duck sports events in the future. The proposal aims to restrict broad casts to 20 seconds of game highlights and 20 seconds of interviews during the 48 hours after any Duck game. Special shows outside a daily sports report dur Turn to Broadcasters, page 4 Orientation eases new students’ transition ■ IntroDUCKtion helps incoming freshmen get a head start with information sessions and the chance to meet other students By Kara Cogswell Oregon Daily Emerald Elisabeth Jackson and Stacey Stan dridge have only known each other since Sunday, but the two incoming freshmen already seem like old friends. As participants in the student orienta tion program IntroDUCKtion, they dis covered similar academic interests. Now, the two plan to take classes togeth er in the fall. The academic advising offered dur ing the two-day session was helpful, Standridge said, but the best part of In troDUCKtion was the chance to meet new people. “This is awesome because I met Elis abeth,” Standridge said as she hugged her new friend in the EMU Monday af ternoon. Turn to IntroDUCKtion, page 3