Tell us what you think and enter to win cold hard cash! 1st prize: $100 cash 2nd prize: $50 cash 3rd Prize: $25 U0 Campus Cash Cash deposited to your account 016544 Monday -> May ]fl You can check out our survey online- If you fill out the entire surveyn you will be entered in the contest to win cold hard cash! Your opinion matters! (The link to the online survey will appear in Monday's paper-) Musicians head west for summer concerts A variety of standout musicians are coming to Eugene, Salem and Seattle to entertain fans this summer Jacquelyn Lewis Pulse Editor The summer season is finally em barking on its West Coast tour — and when the bus finally arrives, a wide array of musicians, from the poetic Tori Amos to funky bayou band The Neville Brothers, will stumble onto our shores. Fasten your seat belts, ladies and gentlemen; it’s going to be a wild summer of music, and fans who want a guaranteed spot at one of these shows should purchase tickets now. Below is just a tiny sampling of what Eugene and nearby cities have to offer this season. Locally, a number of venues will host a plethora of standout shows. Cuthbert Ampitheatre, located in Al ton Baker Park, has an explosive sum mer in store, boasting some of the biggest names in music. Veteran rock band Crosby, Stills & Nash will play the amphitheatre July 21 at 7 p.m. Singer/songwriter Tori Amos, perhaps Eugene’s most notable summer per former, will appear at Cuthbert on July 27 at 6 p.m., along with special guest Ben Folds. Tickets for both events will be available at the Hult Center Box Of fice, which can be reached at 682 5000 or www.hultcenter.org. Passes to the Crosby, Stills & Nash show go on sale today at 11 a.m., priced at $46, and tickets for the Tori Amos perform ance will be available starting Saturday at 11 a.m., for #39.50. WOW Hall’s summer schedule is chock-full of rock. The hall’s “School’s Out Party,” scheduled for Pulse briefs Poets to compete in ‘Grand Slam’ Judges have pared Eugene’s slam poets down to the best of the best, and the six 2002-03 Eugene Poetry Slam finalists will compete in Satur day’s “Grand Slam!” The event will mark the culmina tion of nine months of successful slam competitions, and four of the six finalists will be chosen to become the first-ever Eugene Slam Team, which will go on to perform in Chicago’s Na tional Poetry Slam in August. News brief Holocaust talk gives different perspectives Professor Emeritus Orval Etter has organized an hourlong discus sion on non-Jewish perspectives about the Holocaust. The event is today at noon at the Wesley Cen Media continued from page 1 “News organizations are notori ously stingy and uncommitted to substantive professional develop ment and skills and training for their staffs, for both the less expe rienced and the veterans, whom we know can be just as bad or boneheaded as the rookies,” the editorial said. Bivins said while pressure and competition can make editors and reporters forget about what they learned in ethics classes, they can also drive reporters to make hasty and unwise decisions. In a highly June 13, will include performances by Rock N’ Roll Soldiers, The Lovers, Soft Core and Big Venus. For more information on WOW Hall’s summer schedule, including times and ticket prices, contact the venue at 687-2746. Wild Duck Music Hall also will boast an eclectic lineup, including a June 5 appearance by blues artist Marcia Ball. Wild Duck Music Hall can be reached at 485-3825 for schedules and tickets. For fans seeking southern sounds, New Orleans’ “first family of funk” The Neville Brothers will raise the roof at the McDonald Theatre on July 8. Call 345-4442 for more information. Just a hop, skip and a jump away, the Foo Fighters will come to the Salem Armory on June 7 with spe cial guests Pete Yom and Special Goodness. The Salem Armory is lo ■ Acclaimed singer and songwriter Tori Amos will appear at Eugene's Cuthbert Amphitheatre in July. Courtesy cated at 2320 17th Street NE in Salem, and doors for this perform ance open at 6 p.m. Seattle’s White River Amphitheatre opens in June, and the venue will host this year’s Lollapalooza on Aug. 23. The musical extravaganza will feature Jane's Addiction, Audioslave, Incubus, A Perfect Circle and a staggering num ber of other sought-after bands. Tickets for Lollapalooza run from $53.50 to $69.50. Passes for both the Foo Fight ers show and Lollapalooza are on sale now at all Ticketmaster outlets or at www.ticketmaster.com. The above is merely a teeny sliv er of the local scene’s summer mu sic pie. With a little advance plan ning, everyone from folk fans to classical music aficionados to met alheads can schedule a season of excellent entertainment. Contact the Pulse editor atjacquelynlewis@dailyemerald.com. In addition to the finalists, Los An geles-based International Slam Champion Talaam Acey will per form, along with improvisational band Eleven Eyes. Foolscap Books is located at 780 Blair Blvd., and admission will be a $3 to $5 sliding scale. —Jacquelyn Lewis Residents can try out for The Real World’ Eugene residents harboring fan tasies of escaping from the actual “real world” into MTVs version will have the opportunity to audition for ter of the Pacifica Group, 1236 Kincaid St. Etter said the discussion is the second part of a multi-part series called “Zionism and its links.” He said the point of today’s event is to explain how some extremists brand Holocaust revisionists — those who question specific details about the Holocaust — as Holo competitive field such as newspa per journalism, where a Pulitzer Prize may be one story away, pride can also get in the way of reason. “Journalists have to let egoism stay at home,” Bivins said. “The sto ry is the star, not the journalist.” Wendy Barger, a University jour nalism graduate student, ponders whether ethics classes help guide journalism students in the right di rection when faced with ethical dilemmas. In an article she co-wrote for Quill, the magazine of the Soci ety of Professional Journalists, Barg er says ethics teaching had been present in journalism schools for many years, but learned ethical guidelines don’t always make it to the show on Saturday. Casting agents from MTV’s “The Real World” will hold an open ses sion at Wild Duck Music Hall, locat ed at 169 W. Sixth Ave., from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Potential cast members must be between the ages of 18 and 24 years old and bring valid identifi cation and a recent photograph. MTV has not disclosed the location of the next “Real World” season, but the network confirmed the series will begin in mid-August. Call Wild Duck Music Hall at 485-3825 for more infor mation regarding the casting call. — Jacquelyn Lewis caust deniers. “If you deny any allegations about how bad the Holocaust was ... then you become a Holocaust denier,” Etter said. The event is free and open to the public. For more information about the center or its Friday discussions, call Etter at 344-0483. —Brook Reinhard the newsroom. “Only when news managers are comfortable with modeling and re inforcing sophisticated ethical analysis can we start to see the full effects of efforts in journalism ethics education,” Barger said in the article. Bivins agreed. If prospective jour nalists learn one thing in their ethics class, it’s to question whether the work is bringing good. “Everything a journalist does should bring some good to the world,” he said. “If it doesn’t, it doesn’t deserve to be reported.” Contact the reporter at lindsaysauve@dailyemerald.com.