&heck out Rhythm O Reviews every FRIDAY in the Oregon Daily Emerald. It's your weekly entertainment resource. 004993 Pacific west Cancer Fund Scholarship Three *500 scholarships are being offered for the current academic year to students diagnosed and treated for cancer. Information and applications available in Financial Aid Office. December 1 deadline. 1 $5 OFFj COLOR CALENDAR J Bring this coupon to the Kinko's listed I below and receive $5 off a Deluxe * 12-month Flip Calendar. “ kinko's* i 1265 Willamette, Eugene 344-3555 Offer good on Deluxe 12-month flip calendar only. Offer is limited to one coupon per customer. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase and is not valid with other offers or discounts. Offer valid at time of purchase only and may not be discounted or credited toward past or future purchases. Offer valid at participating Kinko's locations only. Offer expires 12/31/98. ©1998 Kinko's, Inc. All rights reserved. Kinko's is a registered trademark of Kinko's Ventures, Inc. and is used by permission. Kinko's requires written permission from the copyright holder in order to reproduce any copyrighted materials. ^AAC585j_0Pen 24 Hours • Ask about free pickup and deliveryjEXPi2/3i/98 Teleconference Continued from Page 1 Samuel Smith said grandparents were the key to dealing with mis behaving students. "The biggest weapon we have are the parents; if you can get 1,000 grandmas on your side, you can win any battle,” Smith said. Carrie Mayer, student body president at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said the so lution was much harder. “I think there’s a general tradi tion of violence,” she said. “There’s a mentality of study hard and play hard. There’s a routine of violence every weekend. There are fights at parties and bars that don’t make it on TV.” Alan Lizotte, criminal justice professor at State University of New York-Albany, said there was a 600-year history of alcohol-in duced student riots. The first on record was at Oxford University in 1355. He said the three-day riot started after some students ac cused an innkeeper of watering down the wine. Dr. Richard Keeling, medical professor at the University of Wis consin-Madison, said public poli cy was too vague to better address tbe high risks that surround col lege drinking. “Do they want to let students have a little alcohol but not a lot?” he asked. “Do they want them to act in a specific way?” Keeling said some policy risks were bar density, drink specials and service/server requirements for alcohol-serving establish ments. Keeling said there was no di rect cause-and-effect relation be tween alcohol and riots. Above all, he said, community must be Scott Bamett/Emerald Community member Shelly Sutherland watches the teleconference. at the focus of preventing riots. “We need to approach this problem as ‘we’ and not ‘they’,” he said. “I encourage us to be pa tient and to wait and see; we are still a heartbeat away from one of these tragedies.” The University of Oregon has already been structuring many of the strategies that Keeling ad vised, said Byron McCrae, assis tant dean of student life. “WeTe at the cutting edge and at the head of the curve, so to speak,” McCrae said. “An active part of the college experience is to make critical safe decisions. On one hand, we don’t want people driving drunk, and on the other hand, we don’t want to enable poor behavior.” The panel discussed police re sponse to riots in Boulder, Colo., where the University of Colorado witnessed two nights of conflict between police and students in May, 1997. The Boulder riots in volved a total of about 2,000 peo ple, according to UC-Boulder’s campus newspaper. Police have since compromised their aggressive riot-response pro cedures. “If we can take care of a prob lem when there are 50 to 100 peo ple there, we can nip it in the hud,” said Joseph Pelle, comman der of the Boulder Police Depart ment’s SWAT team. “We have since then refocused on behavior more than strict enforcement as pects.” Removing the rowdy students is often more important than con trolling any crowds, Pelle said. “Some of the ringleaders in the riots are still in jail — that had a deterring effect, ” he said. Greek houses and university of ficials have joined in a joint effort to resist the riot trend. “Here at WSU, we’ve pretty much reached a coalition,” said Andy Boyd, president of Wash ington State’s Interfraternity Council. Pelle agreed greek cooperation is important. “We actually had Interfraterni ty Council leadership and student body leadership involved in stop ping riots,” Pelle said. The University of Oregon’s Of fice of Student Life found the panel’s strategies especially en couraging, said Laura Blake Jones, associate dean of student life. “What I heard here was really affirming that we’re on the right road to dealing with this,” she said. Why Would You Want To Become Part Of The Peer Health Education Program? Develop Valuable Skills for Future Career Organize health presentations and workshops Write articles for the WellNow Coordinate Health Promotion events Peer Health Counseling Strengthen your resume through experience Learn and Discuss College Health Issues Sexual Health Fitness and Nutrition Drug Use Stress Management Develop Relationships with Health Professional* at the UO Health Center Help Others Use your knowledge and skills to make a difference | in the lives of other college students. Ml 1998 Peer Health Educators! • Two term commitment • Receive 4 credit hours • Class meets Tuesdays and Thursdays 9:30—10:50 am Pick up an application at the Peer Health Education Office in the Health Center or call 346-4456 for more information. Pre-authorization is required. Hurry* space is limited lor Winter ’98! UNIVERSITY HEALTH CENTER We’re a matter of degrees ^ Open daily 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., except Tuesdays (9 a.m.) and Sundays (10 a.m.). Appointments and after hours: 346-2770 • Web: darkwing.uoregon.edu/~uoshc