fWlJNDFRLAND 5*VIDtC GAMES H»i STREET PUBLIC MARKET 683-8464 f CSS VIDEO ADVENTURE i WANTED People who4 like 10 mod perftomm. enjoy bring part of a family, an] appftiuie good huirw General Meeting • Kultura Pilipinas • Philippines Student Assoc. • Oct. 11. 1992. <«' 1 :(X) • KMU. Cedar Room C Gat rtiulti. Advartisa In tha. ODE 500 count, continuous sheet Computer Paper Reg 6* \ ^ (, % •; 20# Bond, 81/2xll Thru Oct 10th, 1992 Si for ‘MemBers-S tuden ts, ‘faculty & Staff UNIVERSITY Of OREGON TROLLEY Continued from Page 1 znn Stadium Dan Williams, vine president for administration at the Uni versity, said he needs more In formation about the proposal bcforo making any decision about It. The Emerald Empire Rail road proposal would link Eu gene and Springfield to outly ing communities with narrow gnu gn, steam-powered trains and streetcars. Streetcars would also run routes through down town Eugene and Springfield. Trolley cars served as Eu gene's mass transit system dur ing the early part of the con tury. The last trolley was re tired in 1927 after it no longer made a profit for the Southern Pacific Railroad. Kay Robinson, president of the Emerald Empire Railroad, said tho nostalgic trains includ ed in tho 1992 proposal will be an Irresistiblo lure for tourists. "It’s something that can touch the little kid In every body,” Robinson said. "There’s something magical about trains." Neale Hyatt, assistant to Commissioner Rust, said the idea behind tho rail system is to attract enough tourists to subsi dize the daily costs of running the streetcars. "We'll draw people with the old-fashioned steam engines and the old-fashioned stroot cars," Hyatt said. "Wo'll draw a lot of people in so we can keep the cost down for local pnoplo year-round.” According to the current plan, steam trains would run loops that spider out from Eu gene to nearby towns. During the past six months the plan has boon endorsed by Creswoli, Junction City. Veneta. Cottage Grove and Springfield. At its Sept. 30 meeting, the Lane County Board of Commis sioners voted 3-1 to endorse the proposal But before trolley cars can return, the proposal must win the endorsement of the city council. However, after years of plan ning, the city may bo sot on a transportation system that would ease automobile travel with on expanded Ferry Street Bridge Among the build op tions being looked at are an eight-lane Forry Street Bridge, another automobile bridge over the Willamette River and alter native transportation systems. Cost estimates for the Ferry Street Bridgo proposals range from S55 to SflO million. County Commissioner Jack Roberts, who voter! against en dorsing tho rail system, said the plan would divert resources from other proposals. "Right now we have have more immediate concerns," Roberts said. "The reality is that it will take funds away from other projects." No cost estimates have been made for the rail proposal, but Roberts said a feasibility study alone could cost S250.000. Roberts said there is not enough information about tho proposed rail system to pro ceed. He also said other cities have not had great success with similar rail systems. But according to the rail plan summary, Lugene is particular ly well-suited to a streetcar sys tem because the city is still "in its infancy,” and it will be rela tively cheap to lay the neces sary groundwork for streetcars. GETTHE MESSAGE ANDCOOD VIBRATIONS An you too busy... to play telephone tag or miss important calls? You mod a payer... so friends and family can reach you, whether you're in class, at work, working out or hanging out. Catch the buzz...a pager will alert you with a silent vibration- others won't know you received a message. Now is the time to yet one. Come into the Bookstore on Oct. 8-9 and try on a pager. $99student Special* wWi service it $10/im. Stop by the Bookstore October 8-9 ^OREGON PAGING 484-1121 392 East 3rd Street * Pager rentals also available