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It’s cars!
It’s cash!
It’s an all-day
party!
Thursday July 29th, 2004
Win the car of your dreams from Dunham Motors of Florence, plus free gas for
a year, some cool hard cash and plenty of other great prizes!
Join us for live music, BBQ and fabulous prizes! It’s an all-day party!
DRAWING TIME
PRIZE
Noon
$777 in Cash
2pm
$200 in Xtra Cash
4pm
$200 in Xtra Cash
6pm
$100 in Xtra Cash --
Plus Free gas for a year from Dunham Motors
(if you are drawn as the winner of the car)
7pm
WIN THE CAR OF YOUR DREAMS from Dunham Motors
9pm
$500 in Cash
Must be present to win. Winners must be 21 and older. Each winner will have 5 min-
utes to claim their prize until a new winner is selected. Entries for the drawing will
be taken until midnight July 26, 2004.
show we stand unified with our LGBTQ
Christian neighbors,” says a note from Sally
Sheklow, an LGBTQ activist and writer
Last week the U.S. Senate defeated a res-
olution to pursue a constitutional amendment
narrowly defining marriage, so attention is
now focused on state initiatives. Oregon’s
Defense of Marriage Coalition is expected to
get a constitutional amendment defining mar-
riage on the November ballot, and one group
actively opposing it is Heterosexuals for the
Right of Gays and Lesbians to Marry
(HGLM), a UO Law School-based organiza-
tion fighting marriage discrimination.
“The stakes in Oregon are now extremely
high,” says Dan Galpern of HGLM. “We are
determined to respond effectively. HGLM
has determined to press ahead with a public
campaign to call the heterosexual majority to
its better nature. We who have availed our-
selves of the benefits of our discriminatory
marriage laws — or who contemplate doing
so in the future — are especially obliged to
ensure that the right to marry is extended as
well to same-sex couples.”
For
more
information,
visit
www.hglm.org
or
e-mail
ccs@law.uoregon.edu — TJT
BUSH ENVIRO RECORD
DRAWS MORE CRITICISM
The Portland political group America
Coming Together (ACT) has issued an analy-
sis of President Bush’s environmental record
following the recent visit of Secretary of
Interior Gale Norton to central Oregon to an-
nounce a compromise on a three-dam system
on the Deschutes River.
Norton’s visit “only reminds Oregonians
how offensive the Bush administration poli-
cies have been on clean water and clean air,”
says Scott Ballo of ACT. Ballo’s examples in-
clude:
• The non-partisan League of Conserv-
ation Voters President Deb Callahan says the
Bush administration is well on its way to
compiling “the worst environmental record
in the history of our nation.”
• The administration wants to destroy the
Clean Water Act. “Under pressure from the
Mining industry, the Bush administration ob-
jects to any provisions in the Clean Water Act
limiting the mining industry’s ability to pol-
lute our nation’s lakes, streams and rivers.”
• Under the administration’s Clear Skies
Initiative, “the Clear Air Act will be gutted
and the nation’s air will be filled with more
mercury, nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide and
other dangerous emissions.”
• White House efforts to weaken the
Clean Air Act will compromise public health,
says Ballo. “The Clean Air Task Force re-
ports the Bush administration’s new loop-
holes in the New Sources Review portion of
the Clean Air Act will mean at least 20,000
deaths per year and over 12,000 new cases of
chronic bronchitis around the country.”
For more information, visit www.actfor-
victory.org
CORRECTIONS/CLARIFICATIONS
HWY 126, FLORENCE • 541-997-PLAY
8 JULY 22, 2004
• In last week’s CHOW story “Little
House, Big Flavor,” the story should have
said that the coffee being served at Zalaya is
custom roasting from Cafeto Coffee Co.
• A credit was inadvertently omitted from
the photo of John Dobson in last week’s
“Seeing Stars” news story. The photo was by
carolezoom.