Syndicate contentSend to friendPrinter-friendly version

Oregon "In the News"

E-clips: A quick summary of UO in the daily news

E-clips provide a snapshot of media coverage of the University of Oregon. Each day’s edition (Monday-Friday) is compiled by the Media Relations office using a variety of search engines of online news sources or other reports. Our daily edition of E-clips, including full stories, is distributed by email to members of the UO community who subscribe to the service. (See below for how to subscribe to your campus address.)

Below you will find a brief summary of the day's top story or stories chosen from the each day's full E-clips.The summaries do not include the full stories because of the often short life of media URLs and copyright considerations. (Monday's E-clips each week includes stories from the weekend.)

(See our News Archives for items prior to Feb. 16, 2009)

To subscribe to UO E-Clips: Send an email to "uonews@uoregon.edu" FROM YOUR "@uoregon.edu" ADDRESS with "Subscribe E-clips" on the subject line.

  • Top stories for Sep. 11, 2009: Oregon usinesses still struggling, says UO economist Tim Duy in an Associated Press story; students, nationally, taking more than 4 years to finish college but UO's retention and graduate rates on the rise, reports the Associated Press; and local TV station KEZI reports on those rising rates at the UO
  • Top stories for Sep. 10, 2009: Oregon recovery will lag behind the nation's, says UO economist Tim Duy in the Register-Guard; meanwhile, Duy also comments to the R-G on a slight slowdown of foreclosures in Lane County; research by the UO's Ellen Peters on choosing quality health care is cited by the American Psychological Association; and the Register-Guard previews upcoming visual arts, theater, music and dance events at the UO
  • Top stories for Sep. 9, 2009: Workers in university system, including those at UO, agree on contract settlement, reports the Register-Guard; UO economist Tim Duy's monthly index shows weakening state economy in July, reports the Portland Business Journal; High Desert Museum tabs UO's Dennis Jenkins with annual Chiles; and UO journalism Dean Tim Gleason comments in an Associated Press story on the coming retirement of Oregonian publisher Stickel
  • Top stories for Sep. 8, 2009: State's funding of higher education needs improvement, according to UO president, reports Albany Democrat-Herald; UO museum exhibit 'Art of the Superhero' is covered by The Oregonian and the Comic Book Bin; the Ontario Argus Observer reports on a visit by the UO president; UO stands to lose big in proposed state budget distribution plan, reports The Oregonian; and, from Friday, the Associated Press reports on the suspension of UO's running back
  • News stories for Sep. 4, 2009: Tempers flare after Boise State beats the UO in football-season opener, reports the Associated Press; KEZI reports on UO students learning the art of putting tomatoes into pizza; the Associated Press quotes the UO's Nathan Tublitz in a story on NCAA athletes working long hours on football than on academics; and The Oregonian notes the UO post office is among to USPS locations remaining on a proposed closure list
  • Top stories for Sep. 3, 2009: The UO's Dennis Howard is quoted by the Chicago Tribune in its story about wavering interest for Chicago's hosting the 2016 Summer Olympics; ScienceDaily and Red Orbit pick up a UO news release about work by Shih-Yuan Liu and Brian Matthews; the UO's U.S. Post Office in the EMU is still on a possible closure list, reports the Portland Business Journal; and the East Oregonian reports that police will be on the highways as UO fans go to and from tonight's season-opening football game at Boise State
  • Top stories for Sep. 2, 2009: OUS workers, including those at UO, waiting for contract deal, reports Salem's Statesman Journal; UO's president supports push for structural change for the Oregon University System, reports OPB; and the UO president visits Bend, reports The Bulletin; Portland's Daily Journal of Commerce reports on a $3 million funding gap that could force the Eugene Emeralds to leave the city; and UO student leaders are being forced to deal with budget miscalculation, reports Medford's KDRV-TV