Buffalo Exchange buyer our buyers were less demanding, ou wouldn't love he clothes London $384 Tokyo $560 Paris $417 Bangkok $643 Madrid $468 Hong Kong $572 Amsterdam $471 Mexico City $382 Athens $586 Rio De Janeiro $715 Fares are roundtrlp from Portland. Restrictions apply. Taxes not included. Fares subject to change. Book and pay in full for any Contiki Holidays South Pacific or European land tour & airfare by March 14th and receive $50 off. Call for details. 1430 S.W. Park Ave. r "TRAVEL CUTS See the world your way Portland, OR 97201 503-274-2323 800-592-CUTS (2887) portland@travelcuts.com www.travelcuts.com David Camille (and waxing by) Karen now open for 1745 W. 18th Ave. appointment 18th & Chambers monday - Saturday 431-1717 FOR BOOKS UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE UO Bookstore Main March 12-22 Regular Store Hours EMU Lobby and Duck Shop at Autzen March 17-22 Monday - Thursday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Friday 10 a.m. -4 p.m. Save $100 with the New Apple PowerBook 12.1" Purchase a PowerBook 12.1” and get up to $100 off the cost of additional items. Examples; Reg, price After Discount Sony Playstation 2 $199.99 $99.99 Hewlett Packard Printer 3820 $99.99 $0 (also eligible for $99.00 rebate from Hewlett Packard) M8760LL/A S 1 /699 Discounted from retail price $1,799 digital UNIVERSITY*!* OREGON BOOKSTORE 12.1 -inch TFT Display • 867MHz PowerPC G4 • 40GB Ultra ATA/100 • Combo Drive (CD-RW/DVD-ROM) Some conditions apply. See store for details or call 346-4331. Offer ends March 31,2003. Jeremy Forrest Emerald President Bush approved the Omnibus Appropriations Act on Feb. 20, which would allow poultry products to be labeled "organic" even if they did not meet certain criteria set forth by the United States Department of Agriculture. Act changes organic meat requirements President Bush approved the Omnibus Appropriations Act, reducing the requirements for labeling poultry organic Ali Shaughnessy Environment/Science/Technology Reporter For many students at the Universi ty, buying organic food is second na ture. Instead of shopping at a generic grocery store, they head to the local farmers market. And instead of buy ing a random assortment of food, they focus on one type: organic. But the labeling of chicken prod ucts is in jeopardy after federal law makers passed a bill stating the quali ty of organic poultry no longer needs to meet strict requirements. On Feb. 20, President Bush ap proved the Omnibus Appropriations Act, which included a small provision allowing poultry products to be la beled “organic” even if they did not meet the United States Department of Agriculture criteria. The USDA and the National Organic Standards Board later opposed the stipulation. In response, Sen. Gordon Smith, 11 Ore., and Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., in troduced a bill on Feb. 26 that would reverse the controversial provision. Smith said in a statement that it is unfair to deceive consumers about poultry products they purchase. “Consumer confidence in organic standards and products will be lost if we don’t reverse this law,” Smith said in the release. “This bill will help build and protect the integrity of the nascent and promising organic industry.” Caroline Mullen, Smith’s spokesper son, added that Smith feels truth should be preserved in labeling organic food. “It’s wrong to label something or ganic if it’s not,” Mullen said. The organic industry is the fastest growing segment of American agri culture, with over $10 billion in sales annually. Many University students who eat organic food agreed with Smith and are supporting the new bill to reverse the provision. Freshman John Sweeney, who lives in the residence halls, said he regrets not having the same access to organic food he had before coming to the University. “I go to the store as much as possi ble,” he said, adding that he prefers to spend more money than always eat the food available to those who live in the residence halls. Katherine Drummond, a junior at the University, said she prefers buy ing organic foods and is happy that Smith is supporting organic foods. “I can taste the difference between organic and non-organic milk,” she said, adding it was terrible for the Bush administration to pass a bill al lowing farms to avoid strict USDA guidelines while still being certified as organic farms. “That disgusts me,” Drum mond said. Contact the reporter atalishaughnessy@dailyemerald.com. Elections continued from page 1 received no candidates. All 90 students met a 5 p.m. TUes day deadline to run for office, and every candidate must attend a mandatory elections rule meeting at 6:30 p.m. or at 8 p.m. today in the EMU Ben Linder Room. —Brook Reinhard