Monday, November 30,1998 Weather forecast Today Rain High 47, Low 41 Tuesday Rain High 47, Low 38 Wrestlers brings home fifth Three TO wrestlers took third place trophies at this years Mat-Toum Invi tational in Pennsylvania/?AGE 7 ■HMIIIIHIIIII llil lllH 1111 Ducks claim title The Oregon women s basket ball team clinches itsfourth PepsiShoot-outtitle/PAGE 7 An independent newspaper Volume 100, Issue 63 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon IDs to double as debit cards Campus Cash will allow students to carry> a balance on their cards that can be used in the EMU and other locations By Peter Breaden Oregon Daily Emerald The sound of a pocket jingling full of arcade-bound quarters will soon be re placed by the silent efficiency of Campus Cash, the new University debit card. With the swipe of the new card, a variety of EMU services will be accessible to stu dents, faculty and staff. At the beginning of winter term 1999, the UO Card Office, located downstairs in the EMU, will begin issuing new ID cards encoded with a debit card feature. The new cards will carry a same-as cash balance that can be used at the EMU ticket office, craft center, recreation cen ter, convenience store and EMU food ser vices and food service cates in the Knight Li brary, Lawrence Hall and Willamette Hall. In several months, video games in the EMU Recreation Center and vending ma chines will be equipped to take the card. “If you have (( Every place that you can use it ivill have a big sign. We want to make it as convenient as possible. ” Lee LaTour EMU marketing coordinator in tne Dank and $20 on your card, you’re probably going to go to the EMU and use your card,” said Student Senator Jessica Tim pany, who helped test the new card as an EMU board member. The Campus Cash system was installed during last year’s large-scaled EMU reno vations. The $200,000 installation paid for new cash registers, the computer in terface used to encode the cards and a new check-in system for Physical Activi ties and Recreation Services. To open an account, people may sign a cardholder agreement and disclosure statement in the Card Office. Room 12, downstairs in the EMU. There also will Turn to CAMPUS CASH, Page 4 Mart CartotZKmerald While one student pays for coffee with cash, another student, participating in a pilot program for a Univer sity-wide Campus Cash program, buys coffee using her University ID at The Buzz cafe in the EMU. Bike bridge to be named for DeFazio The naming is in appreciation of the representative's help in securing funds for the Ferry> Street Bridge improvements By David Ryan Oregon Daily Emerald The Eugene City Council voted unani mously on Wednesday to name the Ferry Street bicycle bridge, which has not yet been completed, the DeFazio Bike Bridge. The new suspension bicycle bridge will connect pedestrian and bicycle traffic on the west side of the Willamette to Alton Baker Park. It is scheduled to be complet ed in 1999. Ruth Bascom, former mayor of Eugene, originally asked the council earlier this month to change the bridge's name in ap preciation of Rep. Peter DeFazio’s help in securing $23.7 million in federal funds for the $30 million cost of improving the Fer ry Street Bridge Corridor, which includes the Ferry Street Bridge upgrade. Earlier this month, DeFazio was reelect ed as the congressional representative for the local House district. "I believe that his commitment and con tributions to our community should be rec ognized by this important symbolic ac tion,” Bascom wrote in a letter to the council earlier this month. Although the vote was unanimous, some council members needed coaxing, espe cially Councilwoman Betty Taylor. Turn to BRIDGE, Page 4 Matt (iartort/Emeralci Campaigns hope to discourage students from drunken driving ■ Minimum drinking age laws have saved ap proximately 16,513 lives since 1975. M Approximately three out of five people will be affected by an alcohol-related crash at some point in their lives. ■ In the past decade, four times as many Americans have died in drunken driving crashes as were killed during the Vietnam War. Source; National HlgtwayTrafflc and Safely Administration Young adults age 21-34 have the highest risk of driving drunk, especially during the holidays By Sarah Skidmore Oregon Daily Emerald Despite many national campaigns to curb drunk driving, college students are still choosing to drive after consuming alcohol. According to a 1998 University Student Health Center Survey, 10.3 percent of Uni versity students have chosen to drive after consuming three or more alcoholic drinks. “There is a common delusion that if you just act more carefully when you are drunk, it will be OK. That misconception has really negative implications for innocent by standers and the drivers,” said Annie Dochnahl, health educator at the Health Center. The holiday season, particularly Decem ber, are a busy time for anti-drunk driving campaigns. Many of these campaigns focus on reducing the number of young adult drunken drivers. Nationally, young adults are drinking at an alarming rate, said Charlie Durrant, of fice manager for the Lane County Chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving. If all the beer consumed by all of America’s college students were stacked end on end, the cans would reach the moon and surpass it by 70,000 miles, according to MADD. However, progress has been made, ac cording to statistics. The number of young people killed in drunken-driving crashes went down in 1997, according to the Na tional Highway Traffic and Safety Adminis tration. “There is still work to be done, that is for Turn to HEALTH, Page 3