Safeway ‘remodel’ moves right along ■The construction has caused inconvenience for customers of Safeway, but competitors have reaped the benefits By Brook Reinhard Oregon Daily Emerald The University’s closest Safeway Food and Drug has been reduced to rubble in recent weeks. But the campus grocery store on East 18th Avenue is coming back bigger and better August 12 after remodeling estimated to cost $2 million. The store closed its doors March 31, and the demolition began a few days later. Whole chunks of the building fell victim to the bulldoz er, and within a week, Safeway was flattened. The foundation of the new build ing is now beginning to take shape. Hard hat-clad workers march around the site, pouring concrete and laying pipes. There’s very little evidence that the old Safeway even existed. Only one wall, shared with the adjacent Hirons Drug Store, re mains of the old store. “It’s considered a remodel be cause we left an existing wall standing,” said Project Engineer Eric Kneeland, speaking from the temporary office trailer at the site. “Everything was just outdated.” According to Kneeland, the new building will be 34,497 square feet, larger than the original building, and provide new services includ ing a pharmacy, an improvement Hirons isn’t too pleased with. Hirons, located on the corner of ARM A KEEP OUT Thomas Patterson Emerald The Safeway Food and Drug located on 18th Avenue between Pearl and Oak streets is now a pile of rubble and dirt located on 18th Avenue between Pearl and Oak streets. The market, a popular source of groceries for students, will reappear August 12. East 18th Avenue and Pearl Street for almost 70 years, operates its own pharmacy. “It will be hard, but I think we’ll pull through,” Hirons clerk Mike Moresi said. The drug store has placed signs along the fence of the construction site trying let customers know it’s still open, even if Safeway isn’t. “Business has picked up some,” Moresi said, adding that long-time customers are still navigating around the construction fences to find the entrance to the store. PC Market of Choice, on the other hand, couldn’t be happier with Safeway’s remodel. The chain’s Franklin Boulevard loca tion, which was also remodeled a year and a half ago, is several blocks east of student residence halls. Assistant Manager Greg Kruse said they’ve seen a “pretty substantial” increase in customers who formerly went to Safeway for groceries. “A lot of the new customers will stay,” Kruse said. “They really like our store.” E-mail reporter Brook Reinhard atbrookreinhard@dailyemerald.com. News brief State board works on OSU budget shortfall The State Board of Higher Educa tion implemented a plan on Friday to ensure Oregon State University re covers from an athletic budget deficit without borrowing heavily from the school's education funds, student board member Tim Young said. The plan will toughen checks and balances on OSU’s methods for erasing the remainder of the long standing deficit by requiring QSU officials to make “periodic” reports to the board, Young said. The plan also establishes target dates for re ducing the debt incrementally. A report by Oregon University System auditors revealed that as of December 2001, the OSU Depart ment of Athletics had borrowed $8 million from the school’s general fund while increasing spending. The general fund covers operating and education expenses. OSU an nounced a $19 million general fund shortfall in October. In other business Friday, the board’s Budget and Finance Com mittee approved an $8.4 million plan to build a residence hall that will house 225 students at the main branch of the Oregon Insti tute of Technology in Klamath Falls. The project also calls for a $2 million renovation of OIT’s current residence hall. Erin Watari, student member of the board, said the results of an OUS diversity report indicated a slight increase in the number of stu dents of color attending OUS schools since 1996. The report was presented to the board’s Strategic Planning Committee. — Eric Martin Ashcroft’s career thrives, despite controversies ay tnris monaics Knight Ridder Newspapers WASHINGTON (KRT) — For a time after the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Penta gon, it seemed possible to forget the uncompromising conservative poli tics and sharp elbows that helped launch Attorney General John Ashcroft’s career. More than most other Bush ad ministration officials, Ashcroft has become the public face of the gov ernment’s war on terror, appearing often before television cameras to announce the latest arrest or to pro mote the newest anti-terror initia tive. A year after the bruising con firmation hearings in which Senate liberals sought to cast him as a hard-right ideologue, his populari ty has soared. But two high-profile legal set backs for the Department of Justice last week thrust Ashcroft’s social agenda back in the public spotlight. The rulings struck down part of a federal law banning simulated child pornography and rejected his de partment’s challenge to an Oregon statute legalizing assisted suicide. In the Oregon case, Ashcroft tried to use a decades-old narcotics law, initially intended to curb the mar ket in illicit drugs, to hamper physi cians who sought to help terminal ly ill patients take their own lives. In the virtual child pornography case, the Justice Department argued before the Supreme Court defend ing a 1996 law that made it illegal to use simulated images of children in pornographic films, or even to use adult actors who simply ap peared underage. The decisions served as a reminder that, despite the national near-con sensus behind Ashcroft's tactics against suspected terrorists, the na tion’s underlying divisions on social policies remain as deep as ever. “He is riding the crest of a wave of popularity ... fighting the war on terror,” said Richard Semiatin, as sistant professor of government at American University. But, Semiatin added, “that doesn’t mean that the (conservative) policies that are per sonally important to him, that go under the radar screen,” are any less controversial with some members of the public. Ashcroft had little visibility on law enforcement issues before Sept. 11. His signature issues were abor tion, support for gun-owner rights, efforts to reduce funding for the Na tional Endowment for the Arts, and limits on welfare payments. An evangelical Christian and for mer touring gospel singer, Ashcroft early in his term as attorney general organized daily prayer sessions for his staff. In the Senate, Ashcroft was of ten on the margins, even during the years after the 1994 elections when GOP conservatives dominat ed, because he insisted on pushing deeply conservative issues that did not have broad public support. That tactic galvanized opponents on the left. Pragmatic conserva tives like Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., viewed those initiatives as quixot ic quests that were more trouble than they were worth. His credentials as a social conser vative were held in such high esteem by party conservatives that he ran a credible campaign for the 2000 Re publican presidential nomination, although he was never able to broad en his appeal beyond that base and dropped out of the race early on. His hard-nosed tactics have caused him “some trouble.... He can be rather combative and take a very hard line and he has made some ene mies,” said Mark Rozell, a professor of politics at Catholic University. Despite those problems, Ashcroft’s career at Justice has taken off. He enjoys considerable support at the White House, in part because his public approval ratings are so high. There is some talk that he might replace Vice President Ch eney as President Bush’s running mate in 2004 if Cheney’s health problems keep him from running. “In a way, the tragedy of 9/11 has propelled Ashcroft into a position of greater power and leverage than one ever would have suspected; he has really cast himself as the guardian of the homeland,” said Alan Lichtmann, a history professor at American University. Yet the court cases that the de partment lost last week may pro vide more of a window on Ashcroft than his war on terror. In the Oregon case, U.S. District Judge Robert Jones rejected a Justice Department attempt to ban doctors from administering drugs used in assisted suicide. Jones issued a scorching commentary, sharply criticizing Ashcroft for overstep ping his authority in trying to thwart the law by issuing a directive warning doctors not to participate or risk losing their licenses to pre scribe federally controlled sub stances. Jones noted that the voters had twice approved the law. The Justice Department has called the Oregon law inhumane and has said that doctors should not assist in “killing” the terminally ill. Susan Bloch, professor of con stitutional law at the Georgetown University Law Center, said that the department had taken a legally aggressive approach by using the Controlled Substances Act to at tack the statute. The act was writ ten to fight drug traffic, she said, and its use in the assisted suicide issue is questionable. That is par ticularly so, she said, because the Bush administration has regularly voiced support for giving states more leeway. “Here is Oregon doing an experi ment on a difficult issue of law and the federal government is coming in and saying “You can't,’” Bloch said. “That is fairly aggressive.” ©2002, The Philadelphia Inquirer. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. 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