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With an ever decreasing amount of time and energy need ed to acquire knowledge on an ex haustive list of topics, this ad vanced computer technology made it possible to graduate from college without ever stepping foot inside the campus library. So too, is it now feasible to have a fruitful and fulfilling dating life without stepping foot outside the front door. If repositories of ideas are in jeopardy of being thrown to the wayside in favor of the super stealth caches in cyberspace, is the same fate to be had for lovers’ tra ditional meeting places? Replacing a first glance with a first mouse click is dangerous to society because it breeds a new mass of relationships started with out body language, says Rod Met zger, a professor of sociology at Lane Community College. This void of intimacy, tradition ally the major buil ding block of ro mance, is indicative of the kind of empty relationships that are being forged from across computer screens, he says. Internet romance is also harm ful because it is “somewhat ro manticized and idealized,” says Diane Rogers, who owns Amethyst Counseling Services in Eugene. She says she has coun seled her share of individuals who thought they were entering a utopian world, only to be left love less over the lines. “The Internet is not just a fast lane, but a super fast lane,” Met zger points out. “It’s sort of like that cud cl ich6 you get out of a rela tionship what you put into it.’” Metzger regards relationships as harder work than a few strokes on a keyboard. At least with tele phone interactions, voice inflec tions give a clue as to the dia logue’s sincerity, the two professionals agree. Many participants, however, seem to like this aloofness and ad mit to being stimulated by the melodrama it creates. “It’s almost an addiction at first because it’s something new and different,” says Scott Lilleboe, a geography major at Oregon State University. “I’ve always hated the first date deal,” he says. Lilleboe admits he would rather get the awkwardness of initially getting to know some one out of the way over the com puter. That approach concerns Met zger, however, who says that on-line, you encounter people you have no overt awareness of. You can’t identify any facades or masks of those you meet in cyber space. If that weren’t so, Metzger says, we wouldn’t be so con cerned about letting children roam freely on the computer. But people lie all the time. What’s to stop somebody from ly ing at a bar, wonders Lilleboe. He acknowledges that he has dated six women whom he initially met Catharine Kendait Emerald on-line. While only a handful have last ed longer than a month, his cur rent relationship with Anna Tau fik, an OSU graduate, is nearing its half-year anniversary. After a year-and-a-half of searching, he says he has finally found what he was looking for all along. Even though the Internet pro vides more room for fantasy and wishful thinking, Rogers points out, Lilleboe maintains that his on-line activities were not about being someone he’s not. “I always planned on meeting someone, so I never said anything false,” he said. Nor has he been duped by women who embell ished their self-descriptions. Mike Vial, Lilleboe’S roommate and fellow OSU student, wit nessed his friend’s practices first hand. He has even personally dab bled in the services from time to time. “Scott must either spend a lot of time on the Internet or he must be really good at it because it seems to really work for him,” Vial says. “I couldn’t take it seriously enough to make it work for myself. Scott [spent] a lot of time being a nice guy and I think it paid dividends.” Lilleboe says he was turned on to the new dating concept after seeing the happiness it brought his mom; she recently married a man she met on-line. Lilleboe first tried on-line cruis ing one day dining the summer of 1998, while bored at work. Turn to Internet, page 9B Eugene Ballet's elia The classic comedy ballet of love, envy and mistaken Saturday, February 26, 8pm • Sunday Hult Center for the Performing Tickets available at EMU and Hult Center Ticket