Night of the living dead Four student journalists have designs to revive the Oregon Voice magazine. Page 5 i Bigger and better The UO’s music school has received $7.6 million fora remodeling project. Page 4 An independent newspaper http ://www. dailyemerald .com Thursday, August 9,2001 Since 190 0 lly OF'Oregon'■ Eugene, Oregon Vr\lnr*-i^ 1 n-4 I overing Mhe Country ■The hype over the Ducks’ 2001 football campaign reaches new heights with national magazine covers and billboards in Los Angeles and San Francisco By Peter Hockaday I Oregon Daily Emerald 1 Oregon fans have always known the Ducks have if a good football team. m Now, 15 million more people know how m good Oregon is. Jlyj Two days after it was announced that Duck quarter- Mt| back Joey Harrington would be featured on the covers jZ of Sports Illustrated and ESPN Magazine, the Oregon Hi Athletic Department confirmed that billboards of ^^-J**1** cornerback Rashad Bauman and running back \ ^ Maurice Morris will be erected this weekend in \ San Francisco and Los Angeles, respectively. \ ** The billboards, unprecedented simply because If they aren’t in the team’s hometown, are being funded V by the same group of donors that paid for a 100-foot \ billboard of Harrington in downtown New York, ac- ’ cording to Oregon Director of Media Services Dave Williford. “They’re basically the same style as the ones around [Eugene],” Williford said, referring to advertisements luuiuimg) LiOLiii l ccic emu. uuidi uuux luuiuan piayers. Bauman’s billboard sits next to an entrance to the Bay Bridge in San Francisco, while Morris’ image will grace the side of Highway 405 in Los Angeles. “It’s great that [the boosters] think those kids war rant the attention,” Oregon head coach Mike Bellotti said. “Not that Joey doesn’t deserve it; it’s just nice when other kids get a shot.” But Harrington has been the one receiving all the national attention recently. He poses on the cover of Sports Illustrated’s college football preview issue — which should hit stands today — with Oregon State running back Ken Simonton, and on the cover of ESPN Magazine all by himself. The ESPN cover was one of four regional covers and was distributed across the West Coast. Both magazines name Harrington and Simonton as early candidates for the Heisman Trophy, given an nually to the top college football player in the nation. Sports Illustrated ranked Oregon State first in the country in its preseason poll and chose the Beavers to win the National Championship, which will be held at Turn to Football, page 4 courtesy Photo L ■ ' City will continue negotiating with PeaceHealth ■The City Council has removed one obstacle to Sacred Heart’s move by not altering a land use ordinance By Darren Freeman Oregon Daily Emerald The City Council on Wednes day scrapped a proposed land use change that would have blocked Sacred Heart Medical Center from expanding into North Eugene and directed city staff to continue discussions with the hospital’s parent com pany, PeaceHealth. While the vote dropped one hurdle to PeaceHealth’s planned expansion to North Eugene, hos pital spokesman Brian Terrett said the meeting presented a new setback for PeaceHealth. The council didn’t vote on a motion to seek state dollars for an interchange between the Belt Line Highway and Coburg Road that Terrett said the hospital would need to open at its pre ferred site near Crescent Av enue. “WeTe pretty disappointed,” Terrett said after the council ses sion. “The council had an oppor tunity to take clear, decisive ac tion to help us build on the North Eugene campus. To have the council vote only to continue to discuss is a setback ... We’re at the point now where we need to take action.” The next City Council meeting on the issue will be held Sept. 10, after the council’s summer vacation. Since March, when PeaceHealth first announced it would build a new inpatient center to relieve overcrowding at Sacred Heart, the city has tried to keep the hospital downtown to promote compact urban growth and to keep hun dreds of jobs in the area. At Wednesday’s meeting, most councilors admitted they can’t force PeaceHealth into building downtown but assert ed the council should continue seeking the best possible solu tion for the city. Councilors Betty Taylor, Bon ny Bettman and David Kelly ar gued that they still support Turn to Sacred Heart, page 3 hmH University abandons broadcast limitations ■After receiving a mountain of criticism over the last month, the school decides not to restrict the use of sports footage By Jeremy Lang Oregon Daily Emerald The University has dropped all plans to institute a new policy that would have restricted how long television news broadcasters could air footage of Duck football games. Athletic Director Bill Moos an nounced Wednesday that after almost a month of public feedback and angry, critical letters from media groups na tionwide, the school will keep its “open access” game day policy for tele vision journalists. Instead of the University imple menting a policy, iTiwuu JU1U U1G 111 MOOS dustry will take re sponsibility and po | lice itself. But Bill Johnstone, the CEO 3 of the Oregon Association of Broadcast ers, said his group has no plans to en act specific rules or guidelines on | when highlights can be aired and for \ how long. \ Moos said he and other members of ■ the Athletic Department have been \ leaning toward dropping the policy 'j for the past week, a decision sparked fa \ in part by the cries of First Amend \ ment infringement from media or \ ganizations ranging from The Ore i \ gonian’s editorial board to the | \ Society of Professional Journalists. \ “It is in our best interest to go " ^ ^' back to the original policy,” he said during a press conference call. “I don’t feel we had the arrogance to take on First Amendment rights.” But he added that the attention creat ed by the University’s high ranking in a number of national preseason football polls and Duck quarterback Joey Har rington’s presence on the covers of Sports Illustrated and ESPN Magazine played a major role in the final deci sion. “This is a year of all years that we want the most exposure of Duck sports,” Moos said. The issue of limiting coverage grew from a year-long dispute between ESPN Regional Sports, which allows footage to be aired on KEZI, Eugene's ABC affil iate, and the CBS affiliate KVAL, which airs Duck football game footage on its "Inside the PAC” show. Both ESPN and ABC are owned by the Disney Corporation. ESPN Regional claimed “Inside the Turn to Broadcasters, page 3