University of Oregon Library System & Computing Center present The IT Curriculum The "IT" stands for Information Technology, and refers to the technology you'll use in your classes, from email to web publishing, from operating systems to word processing, and more. These workshops are free, and there are learning opportunities for every skill level. Workshop participation is limited to the UO community. The schedule of workshops offered is available in any library or computing lab on campus, as well as on the web: http://libweb.uoregon.edu/it/ For more information contact Office of Library Instruction, cbell@darkwing.uoregon.edu or (541) 346-1817 Start The Year Off Right... ...Rent It At VIDEOLAND 004149 “Wvt Got Ml The Stars On Tape" Convenient Store Hours: 10am to 11 pm Sunday thru Thursday 10am to 12 Midnight Friday & Saturday FREE New Release/Super Hit Movie with New Membership (Value: $3.00) Expires: 10/21/98 SKO#: 1215 Valid one per customer. Must have coupon present. Cannot be combined with any other otter or discount. All membership rules apply. Limited time offer. Valid only at these four store locations: 2000 W 111h Ave.. Eugene. OR • 485-6520 377 Coburg Rd., Eugene. OR • 342-4129 5447 Main St. Springfield, OR • 726-2445 1821 Pioneer Prky E. Springfield, OR • 747-8941 003926 Where you always get the BEST for LESS! Students get Discounts! 756 Charnelton, Eugene, OR 97401 • 345-7391 2065 NW Buchanan Ave., Corvallis • (541) 757-2445 Financing Available OAC • 90 days Same as Cash • Visa/MC/Disc Consolidation hurts record companies The industry flocked to the new music video cable channel, Access Entertainment Network By David Bauder The Associated Press NEW YORK — Music you’ve never heard before is turning up in the strangest places. You can hear it over the loud speaker at minor league basket ball games, on TV sets displayed in department stores or in movie theaters before the trailers begin. Every note is a measure of the desperation that record compa nies feel about having their new music heard by possible buyers in a radio climate in which deci sions on what to play are made by fewer and fewer people. The search for new ways to ex pose music even revived a prac tice that once shamed the indus try: a record company paying a radio station to play a song. The practice was called payola decades ago. Now it's called busi ness. Songs will always be able to capture the public imagination, like this summer’s duel between Brandy and Monica on “The Boy Is Mine’’ or Shania Twain’s genre-smashing “You're Still the One.” But for every hit, there’s a big ger pile of misses. The business of making a hit record is compli cated today by changes in how radio stations operate, the frag mentation of public tastes and the sheer volume of music com peting for air time. “You can’t just count on peo ple hearing it on the radio and going to the store on Saturday,” sighed Ron Shapiro, executive vice president and general man ager of Atlantic Records. Subject to the whims of public taste, creating a hit record has never been a science. Who knew that so many teen-age girls would swoon over “My Heart Will Go On,” or that teen-age boys would emphatically reject the new Van Halen? At least the process was rela tively simple: Get a few key radio stations to play the record, make sure MTV airs the video, and let music fans decide. Consolidation of the radio in dustry has changed the rules. Dominant companies like Chan cellor Media, Jacor Communica tions and CBS have bought hun dreds of stations across the country. Executives for these companies often decide what songs will or won’t be played on dozens of stations. It’s rare now for one disc jock ey to take a liking to a song, champion it in defiance of indus try experts, and see it catch fire. That's how a hit like Marc Cohn’s “Walking in Memphis” got its start a few years ago. “What made music exciting is when a station somewhere decid ed to play one song that nobody else was playing. Now it’s so well-organized and so well-re searched,” said Andy Allen, president of Alternative Distribu tion Alliance, a company that de livers music to record stores. This year, Flip/Interscope Records reportedly paid a radio station in Portland, Ore.. $5,000 to repeatedly play “Counterfeit” by its band. Limp Bizkit. The arrangement raised un comfortable memories. In the late 1950s payola scandal, popular disc jockey Alan Freed's empire collapsed in disgrace after it was revealed he had accepted money from record companies to play their songs. The practice was made illegal, but not if the arrangement is dis closed upfront to listeners. A ra dio DJ might say, for example. Turn to MUSIC, Page 23D BACKSTAGE DANCEWEAI <£ Theatrical Supplies Welcome Back U of O Students! Dance Shoes * Leotards Tights * Knitwear Skirts * Pants & More! Capezio Freed Gamba Repetto Bloch Dansk'm Grishko Mirella & More! v* Opens 7 days a week! Friday Evenings until 8:00pm! Eugene's Halloween Store! Costumes Make-up * Wigs Hats * Accessories & More! 62 W. Broadway * Downtown Eugene 541-686-2671