Jonathan House Emerald Kathy Hoffman and Don Nordin browse the aisles at Sundance Wine Cellars, one of several locations celebrating this year’s Beaujolais Nouveau harvest. Ambrosia Restaurant and Bar and Cornucopia Bottle Market will hold tastings as well. Beaujolais continued from page 1 But for those who cannot make the trek to France this year, some restaurants, wineries and wine bars in Eugene will offer their own trib utes to this French custom with wine tastings of a few of the Beau jolais Nouveau wines. Like Santa Claus on Christmas Eve, Air France will deliver cases of the Beaujolais Nouveau on Thursday to locations around the world, according to Armen Kevrekian, organizer of the year ly tasting at Ambrosia Restaurant and Bar. Ambrosia has been holding Beaujolais Nouveau tastings for more than 10 years, he said. On Thursday, wine lovers will descend into Ambrosia's wine tast ing room, reminiscent of a French “cave” with brick-lined walls, for an invitation-only wine tasting of the new vintage. “It celebrates the end of the har vest,” Kevrekian said. Kevrekian said he knows first hand what it means to brave harsh weather for a bottle of wine. He said he began holding Beaujolais Nouveau tastings in 1978 at his restaurant in Anchorage, Alaska, and when the cases of Georges Duboeuf Beaujolais Nouveau were flown in, he would travel by dog sled to retrieve them. Along with the Beaujolais Nou veau, Kevrekian said Ambrosia will also offer tastings of three to four Oregon Pinot Noirs. Last year's Beaujolais Nouveau earned high praise from both wine makers and wine lovers. The har vesting conditions were some of the best since 1976, according to French winemaker Georges Duboeuf on www.intowine.com. He said the combination of chilly mornings and hot afternoons creat ed a “phenomenon of concentra tion” in the juices of the grapes. “(Beaujolais Nouveau wine) is very light and fruity with a little bit of sweetness,” Simonton said. He also said Beaujolais Nouveau gives a true indication of the quali ty of the harvest. During the 2000 Beaujolais Nou veau festival in France, hundreds of people flooded the streets of Ville franche-sur-Saone, a small town at the heart of Beaujolais country, to taste the first Beaujolais Nouveau of this century. Winemakers set up ta bles along the cobblestone road that runs through the center of town and invited passersby to critique their vineyards’ wines. The air was crisp and cold, and combined with the wine, it turned many cheeks and noses rosy. As the sun set on the third day of the festival, the celebration had not lost any momentum. Several festival-goers disguised in elabo rate costumes wove through the crowd in small parades. An or chestra began to play a lively tune and led the crowd toward the Ho tel de Ville (French for city hall) where more costumed people per formed acrobatic feats from the windows of the building and the street lamps below. Beaujolais Nouveau is not a wine to store in a cellar for years or decades at a time. It is a young wine made almost exclusively from gamay grapes and is meant to be drunk only a few weeks after the harvest of the grapes. “There is nothing sophisticated or in-depth about (the wine),” said Alison Albrecht, organizer of the Beaujolais Nouveau tasting at Cor nucopia Bottle Market. “Anyone can like it.” Cornucopia will host a Beaujo lais Nouveau wine tasting on Fri day along with a hot, spiced Ger man wine called Gluwein. The tastings are open to anyone and will be held at both its Monroe Street and 17th Avenue locations. “It’s a great big party that comes from France,” Albrecht said. “It’s a taste of the new harvest, and you have to drink it all by the New Year.” Jen West is a Pulse reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald. She can be reached at jenwest@dailyemerald.com. 012978 The Pepsi Homme Croup "We sell soda" The Pepsi Bottling Group ovember 14th, 2001 Enjoy an evening with the Pepsi Bottling Group by visiting our presentation at the Erb Memorial Union (EMU) Umpqua Room 5:30 pm — 7:00 pm Refreshments will be served The Pepsi Bottling Group (“PBG”) is dedicated to the policy of equality of employment opportunity for all of its employees and applications for employment without regard to their race, color, religion, gender, age, disability, national origin, sexual orientation or any other category protected by law. This policy applies to all Company management practices. Assisted suicide continued from page t the ruling by Ashcroft tramples the rights of Oregonians. “The Bush administration is on the right wing, and we have known all along that they’d try to neutralize the Oregon law,” he said. Gayle Atteberry, executive director of Oregon Right to Life and a Eugene resident, says that Ashcroft’s ruling has nothing to do with state’s rights because the federal law that controls substances in the U.S. has been in ef fect for more than 30 years. “It was state’s rights that got in the way of a federal rule,” she said. Atte berry also said that Ashcroft’s memo won’t affect doctors’ ability to help terminally ill patients manage their pain. “Ashcroft went out of his way to assure doctors that the ruling will not affect aggressive pain treatment, even if it accidentally hastens a patient’s death,” Atteberry said. Her view was disputed by Humphry. “Even if their intention is known to be good, doctors are bound to be more nervous,” he said. Brian Terrett, spokesman for PeaceHealth Medical Group, says that physicians with the group haven’t indicated any difficulty pre scribing federally controlled pain medication in non-lethal doses as a result of Ashcroft’s ruling. “If we were seeing that as a prob lem,” Terrett said, “we’d take what ever steps were necessary. ” Oregon Right to Life believes that the courts will eventually overturn Oregon’s law. “We will prevail in the long term,” Atteberry said. Humphry disagreed. “If we are a free country, if we are a free people,” he said, “we should have the right to choose how we die. ” Brook Reinhard is a community reporterforthe Oregon Daily Emerald. He can be reached at brookreinhard@dailyemerald.com. Teach-in continued from page 1 the Northern Alliance is desperate for the air coverage that makes their job viable. So, when everybody has a vested political interest in how things are going, you can expect these people will tell us how its go ing when it is most appropriate for their needs. I can’t imagine North ern Alliance leadership reporting they had a bad day. All of those re ports have been positive, and they have all been implying that as soon as those American pilots get off the USS Kitty Hawk and drop some bombs, we will be there mopping up. Is this coverage helpful or harmful? I don’t consider that there is any coverage. I see it as a zero. What the reporters are doing is very creative — they are pretending they are get ting coverage. They are doing the best you can ever imagine, given the conditions they are working with. But, I think they are doing a disservice to everyone involved be cause they don’t have any informa tion. The news providers are put ting these ersatz stories together to make it look like there are reporters on the ground. 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