rociain'5 Ice Cream and Coffee Parlour 19th & Agate St. Open Daily 12-1 1p.m. We make our own Ice Cream! — poppiV— "The Land East" _ Traditional Greek & Indian Food CrQ Lunch Monday through Saturday Dinner 7 Nights a Week 992 Willamette Eugene, Or 97401 343-9661 Advertise in ODE Classifieds! 346-4343 013214 w/coupon $4.00 value l ONE FREE HOUR OF OL IIJ Carl Thursday & Frida) niglils !)£{ (Hive (hdvvmi Broadway & llllli) To earn a 4*00 in Brewolosy all you need to know is STEELHEAD* n 9 Award-Winning Micro-Brews □ Soups, Salads n Ribs n Fresh Pizza □ Sandwiches n Pastas □ Burgers □ Spirits □ Home-Made Rootbeer TAKE A BREW HOME IN STEELHEAD'S BOX O' BEER Steelhead Brewing Company 1 199 Hast 5th Avenue Eugene, OR Phone 686-2739 Eugene, OR - Burlingame, CA - Fisherman’s Wharf, San Francisco, CA - Irvine, CA STEAKING A CLAIM 13th Avenue’s newest addition, the Philly Grill, recently opened its doors to the campus area By Mason West Oregon Daily Emerald With broad arms and a barrel stomach, Matt McAllister looks just like a cheeses teak man might look. Per haps, then, it is of little surprise that he finds himself managing the Philly Grill, the newest addition to the smorgasbord of restaurants in the campus area. McAllister, 30, was born and raised in Springfield and graduat ed from the University in 1999 with a degree in economics. So to capture the true East Coast sand wich flavor, he and co-owner Richard Mellert, 32, went on a two-week survey of cheesesteak cities, including Philadelphia and New York. “Not a bad vacation,” McAllister said. On Thursday, he oversaw the team at the Philly Grill working the first “lunch rush,” while trying to iron out some opening bugs. “We can’t use the key for the weekly special, but we’ll probably start it (Friday) with the Philly,” he said. The “Philadelphia Cheesesteak” is the staple of the restaurant and what sets it apart from the four other sub shops in the East 13th Avenue campus area. Mellert, a dedicated cheesesteak lover, said simply, “You can’t get a good cheesesteak around here.” But Mellert isn’t putting all his eggs in one basket. The menu in cludes a variety of subs, includ ing the “Scooby Snack Sub,” which allows diners to create their own. When Mellert secured the loca tion at 860 E. 13th Ave., previous ly home to Face the Music, he de cided to further diversify the business by creating the Blue Buf falo to serve pizza and wings. Mellert said the Blue Buffalo, also located inside, will begin opera tion toward the end of next week. While taking a break from his meal, senior music major Marshall Bex said that offering different meal options through the Blue Buf falo was a good idea to hedge the restaurant’s bets. “Anywhere you go, it seems like there’s a lot of sub shops — it’s hard to tell how this one will do,” he said. Bex was pleased with the cheesesteak he tried on Thursday, Thomas Patterson Emerald Kyle Banes and J.J. Colwell build cheesesteaks at the Philly Grill on 13th Avenue. The process is a hallowed tradition to the true cheesesteak connoisseur. and said he will probably come back. But Campus Sub Shop em ployee Alyssa Oziel said there’s more to sub culture than the sandwich. “People have their loyalties,” she said. “Our place is a bit more affordable, so people come here because they know it’s cheap.” Senior political science major Kevin Baptista gives his alle giance to Big Town Hero, where he eats every day. “I don’t even like that Quizno’s moved in,” he said. “I probably won’t even go in there (Philly Grill).” Jeff Alie, the other Philly Grill owner, said that the restaurant isn’t trying to capture the whole market, but “just a slice — no pun intend ed,” he said. But Christi Rapp, co-owner of Big Town Hero, said she wonders how much more the market can be divided. “There really isn’t enough.to go around. There’s too much compe tition, especially since the EMU opened up restaurants,” she said. Mellert and Alie have a lot rid ing on the success of the Philly Grill and the Blue Buffalo; the two have plans to eventually franchise the restaurants. Mellert said one of the reasons this loca tion was designed more elegantly than other sub shops was to be a “showpiece” for potential buyers. But when all is said and done, the prize is in the pudding. “You might come into a place once because it looks good, but un less the sandwich is good, you’re not coming back,” Mellert said. E-mail senior Pulse reporter Mason West at masonwest@dailyemerald.com. Air travelers should pack their patience ■ Starting today, Eugene Airport is employing stricter methods of checking travelers’ baggage By Brook Reinhard Oregon Daily Emerald Travelers flying from Eugene Airport today will have their lug gage examined more closely be cause of more stringent bag check ing methods. “We’re telling customers to pack their patience,” Horizon Air spokeswoman Cheryl Temple said. Airport officials are being patient as well, as Horizon and the other two airline companies that service Eugene Airport haven’t said what security measures they’ll use to screen baggage for bombs. Congress passed the Transportation and Avi ation Security Act on Nov. 19 and required airlines to check bags us ing one of four procedures. Starting today, bags must be examined by hand, screened by special bomb de tection machines, passed by the noses of canine bomb-sniffing squads or kept on the ground until the bag’s owner is aboard the plane. “The airlines are not quick to ful ly discuss what they’re doing,” Eu gene Airport Director of Operations Mike Coontz said. The Eugene Air port doesn’t have one of the mil lion-dollar bomb machines yet, and there are no dog teams in place, so airlines are left with two options. Manually searching bags is more thorough, but could cause long lines. And 100 percent bag match ing, the security process that re quires a passenger to be on the same plane as the luggage, has its own problems. Coontz reiterated that a passen ger failing to show up for a flight after checking a bag would have the bag yanked from the cargo hold of the plane, so no-shows could cause considerable delays. Bag matching doesn’t foil suicide bombers, and right now the gov ernment only requires airlines to bag-match on the first stage of a flight. This may streamline the process, but does nothing to keep passengers safe from bags trans ferred onto planes on the second or third leg of a journey. In fact, a transferred luggage bomb de stroyed Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988. Coontz. said whatever method the airlines use, they’ll have to work out problems on their own. “Baggage screening is not within our oversight,” Coontz said. “Al though we will work with the air lines, at the end of the day, I don’t check up on them.” E-mail community reporter Brook Reinhard atbrookreinhard@dailyemerald.com.