School of hard drinks professional bartending instruction PREMIUM-.. POUR hands on training behind an actual bar job placement 8 internships available board of education certified Tasting of liqueurs, wines and a micro brewery tour 8 tasting V " • Let our alumni and interns serve you every Monday 8 Friday at Premium Pour, starting at 4pm 1010 Oak Street (downtown Eugene) www.premium-pour.com • (541)485-4695 Don't want to BREAK into your savings? Plasma donations earn around S T 75 every month. $20 on 1 st donation $30 on 2nd donation $50 for the first week $5 extra for first-time donors if you bring in this ad! 012050i Seramed Biocenter • Eugene 1 Block east of 8th and Garfield 1901 West 8th Ave., Eugene 683-9430 also at 225 B Main St. in Springfield under new ownership & management It’s Not Just Bar Food! Whether it's soups, salads, quiche or cheesecake all of our items are homemade! Join us on Sundays! Brunch from llam-2pm $4.99 Dinners featuring: chicken cordon bleu, chicken & vegetarian alfredo lasagna, steak and fish Lunches: patty melt, monty cristo, reuben, burgers, fresh salad & more. Spacious, festive, full-service, smoking patio bar! open 7 days a week! 15% discount on menu items m student m> O Stmt Auuufi 1417 Villard (east campus) • 338-0334 Advertise. Get Results. 346-3712 Oregon Daily Emerald Broadcasters continued from page 1 sports, allows footage to be aired on KEZI, Eugene's ABC affiliate. Both ESPN and ABC are owned by the Disney Corporation. But CBS affiliate KVAL, which held the University sports contract until the 1999-2000 school year, continued to show Duck football game footage on its “Inside the PAC” show, which highlights all teams in the Pacific-10 Conference. ESPN and KEZI feared the show had unfair access to their contracted footage and "Inside the PAC" resem bled KEZI's “The Mike Bellotti Show.” Of the top ten football schools, none have official rules regarding broadcasting similar to what the Uni versity is trying to implement, De Vore said. The University of Florida has an unwritten rule asking broad casters to limit their footage to four minutes per story, he added. The University held a hearing on July 11 to gather public input, but the letters sent by local and national me dia organizations, and the editorials by The Oregonian and The Register Guard, all in opposition, were printed after the meeting, which marked the end of a public-input period. So far, the request for a 21-day ex tension to add the criticism has fallen on deaf ears. Athletic Director Bill Moos, who will make the final deci sion on the proposal, was out of the office Wednesday. Assistant Athletic Director Dave Williford is out of town all week, and Dave Heeke, the associ ate director for external operations is on vacation until the end of the week. But last week Moos said the pro posal would look different than the current version that has aroused so much ire from broadcasters, and Williford said Monday the final edi tion should come out this week. Despite signs the policy will be tempered, OAB CEO Bill John stone said his organization will not step down. Johnstone previ ously said his organization will take the policy to court if passed in its current form. “We’d like to go back to the way it was before and have the industry police itself,” he said. The Spot continued from page 1 some greek houses and poor mar keting. The University required Phi Delta Theta to go dry before the fra ternity folded, and, except for occa sional University-funded advertise ments, individual greek houses are responsible for recruitment. Shelley Sutherland, the coordina tor of Greek Life, agreed that the time commitment of recruitment is daunt ing, but she said the school’s 15 fra ternities and 9 sororities are seeing as many pledges this summer as they did in die past few years. “I don’t think being in the fraternity or sorority is a problem, but it’s living in the buildings that is,” she said. “Not all the fraternity and sorority houses are as nice, fixed up and modern as some of the apartment complexes. ” In recent years, four greek houses have closed down and two have opened. About 2,000 students live in fraternities and sororities, a number that has held steady but is relatively low compared to peer universities. Sutherland said the greek sys tem’s stiffest competition is the cluster of apartment buildings near Autzen Stadium. Also, a handful of group-living options near the University are of fering the camaraderie that fraterni ties and sororities tout. Residents in the Student Cooper ative Association, which owns three former greek houses near 16th Avenue and Alder Street, split bills and chores to cut the cost of group living. A handful of former fraterni ty and sorority houses in the area have been converted to religious boarding houses. The Collegian at 18th Avenue and Alder Street houses 43 rooms and is run much like the University’s resi dence halls at a cost similar to the University Inn. Megan Lee, the operations man ager at The Collegian, said that be cause there is so much demand for off-campus group living, she does n’t expect much competition be tween The Spot and The Collegian. “People like the smaller group en vironment,” she said. “There’s enough of a need to go around.” 741-4676 Free applications and listings 24 hours at 637 B Street, downtown Springfield Sunset Arms Apartments, Southeast Eugene 3530 W. Amazon, 434-6179.1 bedroom $455 484 W. 13th #A, tri-plex.2 bedroom $495 1647 Mill #7,.2 bedroom $525 Willowbrook Apartments, West Eugene 29840 Willow Creek, 342-8275.2 bedroom $575 Mill Race Apartments, behind Track Town Pina 1805 Garden Ave, 344-5695.2 bedroom $575 Prague Apartments, Great Value!!! 2447 Roosevelt Blvd, 689-7104.3 bedroom $595 www. emerald pm. com l|i EMERALD H Properly Management, Inc. m hhi •••• v; m : Saturday, Aug 4, 7:00 pm - Cuthbert Amphitheater Oregon Festival of American Music 2001 - Concert #3 LOCO-LOCOMOTION Poncho Sanchez Latin Jazz Band - The Dick Hyman Bop Band Tickets: 682-5000 Info: 687-6526 - www.ofam.org AT) SAFEWAY VyJ FOOD & DRUG Bank of America. 258 E. 13th Eugene _342-7975 New & Used Vinyl’s CD’s & Tapes OFF Any Yogurt (•Except small cones and tinies Expires 8/15/01) Campus SUBSHOP Mon.-Fri. lOam-lOpm Sat. llam-9pm Sun. 12pm-9pm 1225 Alder 345-2434 Not valid with any other discounts or coupons. One coupon per customer. o 1 NOtlEYHILL FARMS.