75 Foot long Sub Expires 1/27/02 SUBSHOP 1225 ALDER 345-2434 Not valid with any other discounts or coupons MON-FRI10AM-10PM • SAT 11AM-9PM • SUN 12PM-9PM ik The EMU Cultural Forum Announces Auditions For The Vagina Monologues by Eve Ensler 300 Villard Hall • Tuesday Jan. 15th • 7:00 pm All ages and backgrounds wanted Come prepared to move and read from the script Callbacks: Wed. Jan 16,h, rehearsals begin immediately Performance Dates: Feb. 13,h-15,h at Robinson Theatre | Contact Windy Borman at 346-4376 or wborman@gladstone tjtfur vagina vou(dfQ/. 7(7 . Mould it * Become a member of the University of Oregon Student Orientation Staff. Help first-year ducks get their feet wet in college life with events during IntroDUCKtion and Week of Welcome. As a SOS member you will receive up to $1200 and 3 upper-division academic credits. For more information contact: j Student Orientation Programs j 465 Oregon Hall (541) 346-1159 Or attend our SOS interest sessions on: Wednesday, January 16, 2002 at 5:00 p.m. in the Alsea Room of the EMU or, Thursday, January 17, 2002 at 5:30 p.m. in the Alsea Room of the EMU Sen. Smith continued from page 3 Association member Tom Partin said the visit demonstrated Smith’s wide spread appeal, especially in a city known as a liberal stronghold. “He understands our issues,” Partin said. “He just harvests his a little more than we do.” Before leaving to a standing ovation, Smith also entertained the crowd with a couple of lighter, personal anecdotes about the president, and the crowd chuck led at Smith’s veiled jabs at Clinton. “The in-flight movie offerings have real ly been cleaned up of late,” Smith said of the difference between Clinton and Bush’s Air Force One atmospheres. E-mail managing editor Jeremy Lang at jeremylang@dailyemerald.com. News brief Bush faints at White House, recovers quickly (KRT) WASHINGTON — President Bush briefly lost con sciousness Sunday evening at the White House when he choked on a pretzel and fell to the floor while watching a tele vised NFL game. A White House physician said Bush recovered quickly, but suffered an abrasion on his left cheek and a bruise on his lower lip. The president ap parently fainted when his heart rate temporarily dropped after swallowing a pretzel im properly. The incident happened about 5:30 p.m. as he watched the Mi ami-Baltimore playoff game, the White House said. Bush was alone in a room of the residen tial quarters when he fainted. The president believes he •was unconscious for a few sec onds, officials said. Bush con tacted a White House nurse, and a physician was sum moned. Tests, including a neu rological exam, indicated Bush's blood pressure and pulse appeared normal. Officials said Bush would travel this week as planned, in cluding a trip to Illinois. — Jeff Zeleny Chicago Tribune ©2002. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Expansion continued from page 1 those houses go, and cite a 20-year-old growth management agreement be tween the association and the Univer sity as a reason why the houses should stay. Representatives of the Universi ty’s planning and housing depart ments say the agreement expired 10 years ago and was never intended to stop the University from building stu dent housing on the property. Jeff Osanka, a board member and longtime association president, said that a 10-year limit has never been mentioned in any negotiation with the University, and that the associa tion has operated as if the agreement was intended to run forever. He had to search through the agreement for several minutes before finding the 10-year limit reference. “That document was created so there would be a permanent agree ment, and the University has a moral obligation to honor the agree ment,” he said. “You can’t just alter or discard it because it’s inconven ient to your plans. Words like ‘cake’ and ‘eating it too’ come to mind. ” Osanka said the agreement has as pects based on a 50-year cycle, and if it expired, “That would be a dramatical ly different relationship between the neighborhood and the University. ” The sides differ in their interpre tation of a policy the University adopted in the agreement. The pas sage in question says, “This plan should govern for a period of 10 years. At the end of this period ... these policies should be reviewed and revised as changing circum stances and conditions warrant.” The 10-year period passed in 1992, and the neighborhood associ ation and the University continued acting as if it was in effect. University Housing used its own money to pay for many of the 110 lots purchased in the east campus area since the 1950s. University Housing Director Mike Eyster said the money exclusively comes from students’ rent, Adam Jones Emerald Strong opposition to the University’s housing plans in the east campus area sparks propaganda on 13th Street outside Columbia Hall. and housing as a separate department doesn’t receive University funds. The University purchased the property with the intent of building apartments or residence halls, and the need for more student housing is pressing enough that it must build apartments on some of the proper ties, Eyster said. “We had a waiting list of 300 stu dents for the new graduate student housing complex” on Moss Street, which has 72 units, Eyster said. “Everyone would like to keep the houses, but that’s not what they were purchased for, and the need for more housing is dramatic.” Maintaining the single-family homes is simply not feasible, he said. University Planning Associate Christine Thompson also said the University intended to use the prop erty for student housing. “When the University purchased the properties in the ’50s and ’60s, nobody would have imagined they would still be single-family housing 40 years later,” Thompson said. “That land was purchased for stu dent housing.” Thompson also said the agree ment with the neighborhood asso ciation should be re-evaluated. Eyster said he favors creating more apartment complexes like the gradu ate student housing and is finishing a proposal for another such building near the first. He said he does not, however, want to build a residence hall in the east campus area. “It would be too far away from the nerve center of campus,” Eyster said. Instead, the University should build a new residence hall between the Walton and Earl complexes, he said. Tennis courts are currently lo cated there, but they could be moved to a less centralized location on campus, according to Eyster. Laura Marriott, the current presi dent of the Fairmount Neighborhood Association, said she is meeting with University Planning Director Chris Ramey on Friday to discuss the Uni versity’s plans for the area. She said she needs to study the agreement be fore making further comments about it, and will be “on the fence” until she studies it and meets with Ramey. E-mail community reporter Marty Toohey at martytoohey@dailyemerald.com. Eugene continued from page 5 such as the library and federal build ing would “go a long way toward maintaining economic vitality by keeping employees downtown and by providing daytime customers for the numerous small businesses that rely on those employees.” The general consensus at the meet ing was that subsidizing large com panies such as Hyundai and giving tax-free incentives to businesses such as Symantec are not only futile tac tics in sustaining economic growth, but actually contribute to the lack of government funds needed to sustain other sectors, including education. Sociology professor Greg McLauchlan said Hyundai, also known as Hynix, is an example of urban sprawl development. Hyundai is a subsidized company built on Eugene wetlands that was supposedly going to bring money to the area, he said. Instead, Hyundai didn’t hire as many people as ex pected, then later laid off a portion of the workforce, while developing a $5 billion debt, he said. Wilson calls this type of economic recruitment a “race to the bottom.” “Our government needs to find ways to support public-minded pri vate developers who creatively take on the challenges of downtown new development with commitment to the community as a forefront,” Wil son said. Jan Spencer, a member of CPA, is concerned that the mayor is not go ing to learn from the past. But Spencer and other CPA members are hopeful that with a large community voice and a small-town spirit, the uniqueness of Eugene will flourish. On a similar note, one of the new ideas Mayor Torey brought up last Wednesday was the possible widening of the Autzen Foot Bridge. The bridge would be wide enough to create a lane for a Breeze shuttle route, which the city hopes would decongest traffic to and from Autzen Stadium. City Councilor David Kelly said Friday, “I think there is some po tential in a shuttle.” To get the idea rolling, the council will have to seek feedback from the Lane Tran sit District. He added that using an existing bridge to cure a transit problem would be wiser than building a new one. He added that from an engi neering standpoint, the bridge could be widened without spending a lot of money. The project is an idea that he is willing to look at, he said. Ben Hughes is a freelance reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald.