Berg’s Ski Bus to Willamette Pass, Mi Bachelor & Hoodoo! Sign up at Berg’s! Call For Details, Reservations & Information. MMS/wiMM... „ 13th & Lawrence • Eugene • 083-1300 www.bergssklshop.com VOICE YOUR OPINION! ^ WWW. dailyemerald , .com nUDKAT EE—| GOLF CLUB ** '?*«**( College Students -*20.00 822-3220 STOREWIDE SALE! 2O%-70 Ski Equipment Downhill‘Cross Country Snowboards ONNOW! Open Mon-Sat 10-7 13th & Lawrence *683-1300 7ijJ -j February 2 March 1-3 < 7-10 Tickets Ticket Oi EMU- 346 Mffl\ . ■ | A ¥ v yi Not iff your resume is ready. If you want a good job when you graduate, you need a great job now. The Oregon Daily Emerald is an independent newspaper that provides hands-on experience in the challenging world of advertising. We are looking for enthusiastic students who believe in the power of advertising in the Oregon Daily Emerald and who can transfer that enthusiasm into sales. You will have the opportunity to hone your copy writing skills, create ad campaigns for clients and see your ideas come to life in the newspaper. Pick up an application at the Oregon Daily Emerald, Suite 300 EMU, between 8 a.m. -5 p.m. Deadline to turn in applications is Monday, March 19th at 4 p.m. You must be currently enrolled at the University of Oregon and available to work this summer to apply. Training will start this spring and summer. The Oregon Daily Emerald is an equal opportunity employer committed to cultural diversity. Museum hosts open house ■The Museum of Natural History offers many volunteer opportunities for those interested By Anna Seeley for the Emerald The Museum of Natural History will be opening its doors after-hours today to serve refreshments and get the word out about its volunteer program. The museum is hosting an open house to give out information about its volunteering opportunities. The event, which will be held from 5:15 p.m. until 6:15 p.m. in the museum lobby, will be an informal way for people to talk to current museum staff members and volunteers. “This is going to be a very low key event,” said Linda Yoder, muse um store manager. “It’s a way for us to talk to people that come in and give them some preliminary infor mation and paperwork to consider.” People who go to the open house will not be committing to volunteer ing at the museum just by attending. Museum employees want interest ed people to consider the time com mitment before volunteering. How ever, the museum relies heavily on its volunteers and is in need of more, Yoder said. “When I first started, we had a lot of volunteers,” said Nancy Draper, a vol unteer. “But now poor Linda [Yoder] has a hard time filling the schedule.” There are many opportunities for people to get involved at the muse um. The museum needs volunteers to work in the museum gift shop, work at the front desk greeting guests and answering questions, and work in the courtyard with na tive planting, Yoder said. For a more outgoing person, be ing a docent is another way to aid the museum. A docent (Latin for “guide”) is in charge of leading tour groups that visit the museum. “A lot of people who do that are teachers, but anyone interested in learning and teaching can do it,” Yo der said. Denis McCarthy has volunteered at the museum for 15 years, both as a docent and as a front desk worker. He said he loves being a volunteer and would recommend it to others. “[Being a volunteer] didn’t threat en me, but it challenged me,” Mc Carthy said. “I benefit more than anyone ever taken through here be cause we have all these interested people coming and interested peo ple working here. ” The museum does not have a huge training program, Yoder said, but it does have some procedures to help new volunteers get acquainted with the museum. Most of the jobs are not difficult to learn and can be taught by shadowing, and museum employees ask that volunteers attend meetings periodically, Yoder said. “We don’t expect people to be ex perts when they first come in,” Yo der said. “Part of the fun of volun teering is learning.” To be a docent requires more training. There is no set script for the docents to follow, so they start out by doing a tag-along with the other docents. “Docent training is more one-on one,” Yoder said. “They usually start out by being comfortable with one exhibit and I shadow them and give them feedback on their tour.” The museum volunteers said they love the job and the people they work with. “This is the most wholesome, re warding, relaxing thing I do,” Mc Carthy said. “It helps you under stand a lot about the world, and it’s a great way to learn about Oregon. ” EWEB continued from page 1 would be short-sighted. “We don’t want to be forced to en danger our reserves,” Anderson said. Varner and the EWEB staff decid ed not to propose the previously discussed inverted rate model, which would charge residents more for the power that exceeded a cer tain level of use. Varner said a flat rate would be more effective to enact now than an inverted rate model. Public opinion has been split be tween an inverted rate and a flat rate, and on Tuesday night, one commu nity member said he supported the inverted rate because it would best promote power conservation. “The purpose of the board should not be to protect some people or some businesses, but to promote conservation, ” Bob Cassidy said. “Save the salmon, keep the air clean and promote conservation.” Hugh Perrine, another Eugene resident who came to speak about rate increases, said the 5.4 percent increase was good, but a 15 percent increase was better. “We need an increase that reflects the economic reality of what’s hap pening right now,” Perrine said. “If anything, it’s important to make the increase as soon as possible so peo ple can prepare for them.” Varner said some EWEB staff members thought a 15 percent in crease would send the best conser vation signal, but 5.4 percent is the minimum threshold for rate in creases to start at. “This rate sends a good founda tion,” EWEB general manager Randy Berggren said. Despite Varner’s confidence in 5.4 percent as an appropriate increase, EWEB Commissioner Sandra Bishop was still hesitant to make a decision. “It’s difficult to make a decision when the information we are getting keeps changing,” Bishop said. “But I know we need to take action in this sitting.” EWEB Vice President Peter Bartel agreed that a decision needed to be made, and said the board should The Eugene Water and Electric Board’s rate increase in comparison with other rate increases by Northwest publicly owned utilities: Snohomish Public Utility (Snohomish County, Wash.)* raised rates by 35 percent. Seattle City light (Seattle, Wash.): raised rates 18 percent. Clark Public Utility (Clark County, Wash.): raised rates by 20 percent. EWEB(Eugene,Ore.): raised rates by 5.4 percent. vote on the 5.4 percent if that was the most beneficial to the public. “If 5.4 percent gets us to a safe place, then let’s do it,” Bartel said. The board also looked at what EWEB can do within its own busi ness to cut back on electricity use, and how businesses on special con tracts could help in the conserva tion efforts. Both of these issues will be decided at a later date. The board will also still be look ing at the possibility of an inverted rate later in the year. Gambling continued from page 1 Gambling Impact Study Commis sion to report on the effects of gam bling nationwide. In November 1998, the commission reported that sports betting legally takes in $2.4 billion, and as much as $380 billion is spent on illegal sports gambling. H.R. 3575 is a direct response to the commission’s recommendation to eliminate legalized betting on col lege sports. The House Judiciary Committee favored the bill by a 19-9 vote. Congress has read the bill, but it has been referred back to committees. “The NCAA is very supportive of the legislation,” said Jane Jankows ki, the NCAA’s assistant director for public relations. “Quite frankly, when the bill was first introduced, we did not think there would be sufficient members behind it. “Now we know the bill has a chance to pass, and we are behind it.” Reps. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Tim Roemer, D-Ind., originally introduced the bill in February 2000. Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Sam Brownback, R-Kan., are sponsors of the Senate counterpart. Graham Spanier, president of Pennsylvania State University and chairman of the NCAA’s Division I Board of Directors, has testified be fore Congress in favor of the bill. Several other sports figures, includ ing Big Ten Conference Commis sioner Jim Delany, University of South Carolina head football coach Lou Holtz, University of Kentucky men’s basketball head coach Tubby Smith and Dean Smith, former head coach of the University of North Carolina’s men’s basketball team, have gone before Congress to testify in support of the bill. The Nevada Gaming Commission made several counter-proposals to the NCAA regarding collegiate sports wagering, including a proposal to limit all college sports bets to $550 and eliminate legal wagering on high school and Olympic sports. In an October 2000 press release, the NCAA called the proposals “a smokescreen” and rejected diem. The press release also said that that by pro posing a $550 limit, the Nevada Gam ing Commission is acknowledging that illegal bookmakers come to Neva da to pay off large sums of money. The Emerald attempted to reach management at Las Vegas Sports Consultants, a sports gambling agency that establishes point spreads and over-under numbers for games, but a receptionist said that the com pany will not allow employees to talk to media for “the next few months,” and that the company re cently changed management. The gambling impact commis sion found that legal gambling on sports feeds illegal gambling activi ty. Opponents of the bill argue that it would not address the larger is sue of illegal college sports wager ing and bookkeeping, or manage ment of a gambling organization. The bill’s proponents argue that it is intended only as a starting point. Jankowski said the NCAA does not feel that the bill will lead to increased illegal gambling on college sports. Randy Sealby, a special agent in the FBI’s Chicago bureau, said that to his knowledge, the FBI has re leased no official statement about the bill because its effects cannot be determined. Sealby also said that most book keepers rely on point spreads creat ed at Las Vegas consulting agencies. If sports gambling is made illegal in Nevada, the bookkeepers would not have access to the currently available range of betting odds and may decide to stop taking bets as a result.A sports wager is legal only if one is physically in Las Vegas, ac cording to Sealby. “Point spreads start in Las Ve gas,” said Sealby. “If you didn’t have that, you might not have the offshoots, and it might just dry up. We really don’t know.”