Additive-Free Cherokee Cigarettes $11.95 a Carton+$1.75 s/h Save Money! Make Money! Call our 24 hour hotline at (800) 764-7704 Then (541) 688-8094 ww^.wisel.com/smokes PitEpAitiNq For tIie CBES1 Nov.: 1,3,8,10,17 3:30pm-5:00pm Practice Test- Nov. IS ,3:30pm-5:30pm The fee of $75 includes printed materials. 5 instructional sessions and a practice test. Contact ALS to register: 68 PLC, 346-3226 Services Jan.: 10,12,19,24,3 3:30pm-5:(!)0pm Practice Test; Jan. 26 3:30pm-5:30pm Academic , ,, Learning fcjl 1999110 COLLECT BOWL CAMPUf TOURNAMENT Give your brain a workout! Register you team of five at The Break (formerly the EMU Rec Center) before 5 pm Fri. Oct 29th. Stop by The Break for details or call 346-3711. Join in on the fun of THE VARSITY SPORT ON THE MIND! All participants must be full time UO students for Fall 99 & Winter 00. Tournament held Nov. 2, 9 & 16, 1999 in the EMU. Brought to you by: Ground floor of me EM 0 Recycle • Kefyde • Recycle • Recycle Historic hotel scheduled to blow RENO, Nev. — The historic Mapes Hotel, where Mae West and the Marx Brothers once enter tained gamblers along the banks of the Truckee River, has a Super Bowl Sunday date with the wrecking ball. Reno’s city council on Tuesday approved the demolition of the 52-year-old downtown hotel casi no for 8 a.m. on Jan. 30. Preservationists tried for years to save the 12-story brick build ing, which was Nevada’s tallest building when it opened along the banks of the Truckee River on Dec. 17,194*7. Its unique art deco style earned it a listing on the Na tional Register of Historic Places in 1984. During the Mapes’ heyday in the 1950s and 1960s, entertainers such as Sammy Davis Jr., Marilyn Monroe and Frank Sinatra were regular visitors. But since 1982, the Mapes has sat boarded up and vacant, much to the chagrin of city officials who view the prop erty as key to the city’s downtown redevelopment. Some business leaders wanted to promote the implosion of the Mapes as a tourist attraction on the busy Super Bowl weekend. The city council decided Tuesday night to set up a public viewing area but decided to bring it down with minimal hoopla. “There’s no need to make a spectacle of it,” Councilman Bill Newberg said. Mayor Jeff Griffin said earlier he opposed a big promotion be cause he didn’t want to rub it in the face of those who lost the bat tle to save the hotel. “I just want to make sure it’s a public process with a safe place set aside to watch,” Councilman David Aiazzi said. The Mapes was the first in the nation to house a casino, hotel and entertainment under one roof. Its window-walled Skyroom on the top floor featured some of the biggest names in the entertain ment world. Officials for a San Francisco de veloper, Nationwide Capital Ser vices, made a late offer in Septem ber to refurbish the Mapes. They said they were willing to buy the building, pay off the city’s $2.5 million debt to the former owner, submit plans in four months and begin construction in nine. But council members said they had waited too long and were moving ahead with the demoli tion. The Associated Press Babbitt pledges no changes for Steens BURNS — Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt disarmed local groups ready to fight him over fed eral protection of Steens Moun tain, pledging Wednesday there would be no presidential decree creating a national monument. Babbitt met with Harney Coun ty officials, leaders of the Paiute Tribe and members of a citizen ad visory board which had recom mended against his proposal to create new legislation to provide environmental protection for the mountain that dominates the high desert of southeastern Oregon. “I expected him to really deliv er a mandate,” said Harney Coun ty Judge Steve Grasty/the coun ty’s top elected official. “I was pleasantly surprised and opti mistic that we will have a chance to end up with something that keeps the mountain as those of us who know it appreciate it.” Steens Mounfain, a 30-mile long, 9,700-foot tall fault block of basalt, is one of several areas in the West that Babbitt has pro posed as worthy of new protec tions. The mountain is a mix of private and public ownerships. Environmentalists would like to see the National Park Service take over the publicly owned por tions of Steens from the U.S. Bu reau of Land Management to manage them as wilderness and buy out the grazing permits from cattle ranchers to improve condi tions for fish and wildlife. Many local residents fear th at designation as a national monu ment would draw crowds of visi tors that would interfere with their enjoyment of outdoor activities. Hamey County ranchers repre sented by The Friends of Steens Mountain would like manage ment of the patchwork of private and public lands to stay just the way it is, with BLM continuing to allow 30,000 cow and calf pairs to graze on it each summer. Babbitt praised the work of the advisory group saying he had lit tle disagreement with the bulk of the recommendations it had made for the future management of the mountain. Babbitt added that he thought grazing should continue on the mountain, and pledged that there would be no surprises, such as us ing the Antiquities Act to desig nate a national monument with out going through Congress. The Associated Press “'^VthYiy www.decide.com