00/899 ■ ' .. — ' ' . ' $ .... .. ,, open 7:00 cnn-11:00 pm */ Always clean! Maytag Top Loaders Large Front Loaders located behind Hirons and Safeway 165 E.l7th The Admiral David E. Jeremiah and Mrs. Connie Jeremiah Lecture Series Chinese TopuCar Trotest at the Turn of the MiCCennium Elizabeth Perry Henry Rosovsky Professor of Government, Harvard University 'Thursday, May 11 7:30 jp.m. Cjer Linger Lounge reception to follow This lecture series is sponsored by the Jeremiah Family and the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies and is free and open to the public. For more information, call 346-1521. University of Oregon AT AIL FAST1XX OUTLETS INCLUDING THE EMU BOX OFFICE. ALL DATES, ACTS t SERVICE CHARGE IS ADDED TO EACH TICKET PRICE. TICKETS WITH NO SERVICE 11) 682-5000 iiWJRMZ 1-800-992-TIXX m Online Classifieds- use this gw a then use this Decision on Internet kiosk in EMU still up in the air ■ Campus Link would provide student access to the Internet, but critics fear excessive advertising By Lisa Toth Oregon Daily Emerald The EMU Board made no final decision at its Wednesday meet ing on a proposed kiosk in the EMU, and board members said the issue will likely be unresolved until next school year. Campus Link, a national com pany that installs information centers in student unions, previ ously pitched its product to the board on March 29. The business specializes in installing booths that provide free services such as computer terminals offering stu dents access to the Internet, e mail accounts and telephones. The service is paid for by local and national advertising. Although the board put the de cision on hold, a volunteer com mittee of board members present ed their research on Campus Link. Student Senate President and EMU Board member Jessica Tim pany addressed her concerns with the Campus Link project. Tirtipany said a specification she wants to see in the terminal is the display of advertising from local Eugene businesses only, instead of mixed with national business es. Timpany also said the contract with Campus Link should be lim ited to two years to test the kiosk’s effectiveness. Campus Link has initiated contracts for periods of seven- or 10-years on other uni versity campuses. Campus Link President Matthew Dinnerman said the University’s project is different than other campuses because there has been “more sensitivity to commercialism.” “The board would decide what they want even after it was built,” Dinnerman said. “It is our job to provide a service that the board, students and visitors of the stu dent union are satisfied with.” Dinnerman added that because the project is still in preliminary stages, flexibility would be re quired to address everyone’s con cerns. “We need to push forward and see what Campus Link can do for us,” EMU board member Bryan Myss said. Myss said the volunteer com mittee’s duties will be to work on the specifics of what the structure would look like and include. Timpany said she has taken into consideration some issues of controversy around kiosks, in cluding the idea of “prostituting the EMU with advertising in a student-centered space.” Also, she said people are afraid the kiosk would be ugly in appear ance. Timpany pointed out during the board meeting that the infor mation center at San Francisco State University was “badly van dalized.” In response, Dinnerman said Campus Link has an insurance policy and that the California school’s information center was in the process of being taken down and reinstalled when the construction site was vandalized. Myss said the board can decide what they want. “We want them to work with us,” said Myss, who said he will be on the EMU Board next year. “If we don’t like it, we don’t have to accept it. ... Until we actually sit down with them, it doesn’t mean [Campus Link] is coming.” Giuliani, wife to separate By Timothy Williams The Associated Press NEW YORK — A downcast Mayor I^dolph Giuliani dis closed Wednesday that he and wife Donna Hanover are moving toward legal separation. It was the second personal an nouncement in the last two weeks for the often stern Republi can Senate candidate who guards his privacy zealously. Giuliani announced on April 27 that he is fighting prostate cancer and said he may rethink his Senate candi dacy, depending on his treatment. “For quite some time, it’s prob ably been apparent that Donna and I lead in most ways inde pendent and separate lives,” Giu liani said at a news conference. “It’s been a very painful road and I hope we’ll be able to formalize that in an agreement that protects our children, that gives them all the security and protection that they deserve.” Giuliani, 55, and Hanover, 50, a TV personality who has also ap peared in movies and soap op eras, have been married for 16 years and have two children. They have not appeared in public together in years, although she made the point of issuing a state ment of support after Giuliani’s cancer diagnosis last month. After Giuliani’s comments Wednesday, Hanover summoned reporters to Grade Mansion, the mayoral residence, and said the marriage had been strained for years. She referred to a relation ship the mayor had with a staff member whom she did not name. “Today’s turn of events brings me great sadness,” she said, her eyes welling with tears. “I had hoped that we could keep this marriage together. For several years, it was difficult to partici pate in Rudy’s public life because of his relationship with one staff member.”1 In 1997, Vanity Fair magazine reported there was a romantic link between the mayor and his communications director, Cristyne Lategano. Giuliani and Lategano denied the report, and it was never confirmed. Lategano has since left City Hall and gotten married. Earlier this year, a reporter asked Giuliani why he had stopped wearing his wedding ring. He responded, “I respectful ly suggest that that’s none of your business,” emphasizing the last four words. Recently, newspaper photo graphs have shown Giuliani about town with a 45-year-old di vorced woman, Judith Nathan. The New York Post called her the mayor’s “mystery brunch pal.” The mayor said Wednesday he had “tremendous respect” for Hanover, whom he called “a wonderful woman (and) wonder ful mother.” He went on to de scribe Nathan as “a very, very kind person.” “She’s been a very good friend to me,” Giuliani said. “I rely on her and she’s helped me a great deal. And I’m going to need her more now than maybe I did be fore.” Giuliani said his disclosure of the separation has nothing to do with politics and he does not ex pect his announcement to harm him in his Senate race against Hillary Rodham Clinton. When asked her reaction to the mayor’s announcement, Clinton replied, “I don’t have anything to say.” “I don’t really care about poli tics right now,” Giuliani said. “I’m thinking about my family, the people that I love and what can be done that’s honest and truthful and that protects them the best.” He added: ‘‘It will all work it self out some way politically.” Later, campaign aides said Giu liani is staying in the race and planned to attend a fund-raiser Wednesday night in suburban Westchester County, a key area in the Senate battle. Giuliani revealed a side that he has never shown before publicly — and that contrasted sharply to the upbeat manner in which he announced that he had cancer. Looking wan and weighing each word with caution, Giuliani spoke of the pain his troubled marriage has created and in part, blamed the media. “I’m motivated by all the tremendous invasion of privacy that’s taken place,” he said. “My family’s, Judith Nathan’s family. This is something that had devel oped over some period of time and it is something between Don na and me, not anyone else.” Republican political consultant Jay Severin said the mayor’s an nouncement doesn’t automatical ly translate into a political loss, but it can only help Clinton. “Remember, we have a presi dent serving out his second term who was literally caught with his pants down in the Oval Office, so the mayor’s announcement need n’t be a disqualifying event,” Sev erin said. “But politics is a zero sum game. Nothing bad happens to one candidate that doesn’t ben efit another.” Nowhere to run to. Nowhere to hide. The Oregon Daily Emerald on the world wide web. www.dailyemerald.com