Today's crossword solution r I Premier Travel • Airfare Specials!!! • Boston - $278.00 Puerto Vallarta - $308.00 Cancun - $408.00 London - $499.00 Ui\ nol ilk likled/ivsli icl urns m;iv Stifajixl to clk4i}iicAvii|ytHi! fiu(Kv Eurail Passes issued on-site!!! E-mail: fares@luv2travel.com 1011 Harlow 747-0909 016566 Sometimes the best way to get advice is to ask! Please take the time to help us serve you better. Your input will be used by the Oregon Daily Emerald to improve the paper. Your response will be held in strict confidence. As a way of saying thank you for being a reader of the ODE, you could win $100 first prize, $50 for 2nd prize and $25 in UO campus cash for 3rd Prize for giving us your opinion. cpui! Oregon Daily Emerald Cash prizes offered by Oregon Daily Emerald and UO campus cash program. Winners will be selected from all survey respondents in a reader survey being conducted by this paper. On the internet go to... www.pulseresearch.com/dailyemerald The online reader survey is fast, fun and easy to do. Just type in the web address and answer the questions Your opinion is extremely important to us. Cret SCOOp! Log on to www.dailyemerald.com o UNIVERSITY OF OREGON It’s Here Now! 2003 Summer Session Registration Book Your Summer in Oregon Summer Session starts June 23. Pick up your free summer catalog today in the Summer Session office, 333 Oregon Hall, or at the UO Bookstore. You can speed your way toward graduation by taking required courses during summer. Check Out Our Website! http://uosummer.uoregon.edu Softball continued from page 9 Vidlund earned her second-straight Pac-10 second-team honor. Laux earned her second-consecutive Pac 10 honorable mention. Three Ducks joined Laux on the honorable mention list. Freshman right fielder Beth Boskovich, Haij and Harris each earned their first honor. Pac-10 Championship? Four Pac-10 teams start play in the 2003 Women’s College World Series on Thursday. Arizona earned the No. 1 seed overall and will play No. 8 Al abama. No. 2 UCLA faces No. 7 Cali fornia in the only first round matchup featuring two Pac-10 teams. No. 6 Louisiana-Lafayette will play No. 3 Texas, while No. 4 Oklahoma matches up against No. 5 Washington. The Ducks beat UCLA, Washing ton, Louisiana-Lafayette and Califor nia at least once this season. Contact the sports reporter at mindirice@dailyemerald.com. Prefontaine continued from page 9 of the world’s 10 best milers will be in Saturday’s field, with one notable ab sence in world record holder Hicham El Guerrouj, who raced at the last two Classics but will spend this month preparing to make an attempt at the 5,000 world record in June. Jordan said that the tough field should actually benefit Webb in his first year as a professional. “All the races he’s had last year and this year, he’s been expected to win,” Jordan said. “It’s an enormous amount of pressure. The great thing about the Pre is that he should be able to settle in, and the crowd won’t pressure him into trying to win.” Webb’s race at the Pre was, in deed, a memorable moment. Run ning in the same race but not exactly alongside El Guerrouj, Webb broke one of the oldest records in high school sports, Jim Ryun’s 37-year old mile record. Webb ran the race in 3 minutes, 53.43 seconds, and Webb, who ran under four minutes twice last season, could do it again on Saturday. Two other athletes will try to go under four minutes. The two high schoolers should battle for the un der-four crown. “They both have legitimate chances to do it,” Jordan said. Magness has a mile best of 4:01.58, while McGrath ran a per sonal-best 4:05.28 at the recent Ore gon Twilight. Mighty Micah returns for Pre Micah Harris must be jealous of freshman Eric Mitchum, who’s com ing up on Harris’ Oregon record in the 110-hurdles and stealing Harris’ Duck headlines. That could be why Harris, who graduated last year, is coming back for Saturday’s Pre to take on some of the world’s best hurdlers. Legendary hurdler Allen Johnson, the 1996 Olympic gold medalist who holds the Hayward Field record at 13.12 seconds, headlines the field. He’s joined by Larry Wade, who holds the second-best time in the country this season and finished last season ranked third in the world. But don’t think Harris doesn’t be long in the field. At the Modesto Re lays on May 8, Harris finished second to Wade. Harris ran 13.43, his fastest time since he set the Oregon record last year at 13.67. The Pre 110-hurdles field also in cludes Haiti’s Dudley Dorival, who took bronze in the event at the 2001 World Championships, as well as Du ane Ross, Ron Bramlett, Mark Crear and Robert Kronberg. Contact the sports editor atpeterhockaday@dailyemerald.com. Tennis continued from page 9 Gordon/Julia Scaringe and San Diego State’s Indra Erichsen/Silvia Tornier. Gordon/Scaringe are fresh off an upset win over Stan ford in the National Team Championships. In second-round singles action, Panova takes a 10-match tourna ment winning streak into her matchup with No. 25 Christina Fu sano of California. The streak dates back to the Pacific-10 Conference Indoor Championships in January. Panova faced Fusano earlier this year in the quarterfinals of the ITA Regionals. Panova lost the match in straight sets at the preseason tourney. The loss was the last time Panova fell in tournament play be fore winning the Pac-10 indoor and outdoor championships. The weather in Gainesville is ex pected to change slightly for the sec ond round with a forecast of tem peratures in the 80s and a chance .of light rain and thunder storms. Barring an upset, Panova will take on the winner of the match between North Carolina’s Marlene Mejia and Southern California’s Jewel Peter son in the Sweet Sixteen. Panova begins play at 9 a.m. EST this morning. Ryan Heath is a freelance writer for the Emerald. FCC continued from page 1 national television market — an in crease from the existing 35 percent cap—and allowing companies to own both a newspaper and a radio or TV station in the same market. A bipartisan group ofU.S. represen tatives and senators, including Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., are mobilizing in response to the increased concentra tion of media ownership and have in troduced legislation in both houses of Congress to prevent television net works from owning television stations that reach more of the United States than law currently allows. “Media concentration has been on the rise for some time as the big con glomerates grab up more and more of the television outlets Americans de pend on for news and entertainment,” Wyden said in an e-mail interview. “Some of these conglomerates have amassed large holdings of TV stations, and you can bet that if the Federal Communications Commission rolls back the caps on the number of sta tions a company can own, they will continue to gobble up more. The result would be that locally-owned broadcast television—with real owners who live in the communities they’re serving— would all but disappear. ” All but one of the six television broadcast stations in Eugene are owned by corporations outside of Eu gene. Although KEZI is the only sta tion with Eugene-based owners, the others are owned by media groups far smaller than giants such as Viacom or Walt Disney Co., and are still able to produce local programming. Experts in the arena of politics spec ulate that members of Congress will be unable to push for the passage of legislation before the FCC votes on the rule changes on June 2. The FCC’s two Democrat com missioners have been critical of the proposed changes as well, and asked FCC Chairman Michael Pow ell to delay the vote by a month. FCC Commissioners Jonathan Adelstein and Michael Copps ar gued for the postponement, con tending that the commission need ed to set aside time to better examine the public interest impli cations of loosening ownership reg ulations by publicly airing the pro posed rule changes. “The commission is considering significant changes that could unalter ably remake our media landscape for yearn to come,” Adelstein and Copps said in a statement. “We believe it is prudent to have a transparent process that ensures we understand the full implications of our decision.” But Powell dismissed their request for a delay, siding with the commis sion’s two Republican members, by saying that the FCC must follow the directive to revise its media ownership regulations in a timely manner. “What all of this could translate to is less local control in broadcast ing and more dominance by the networks who make their program ming and scheduling decisions on a nationwide basis,” Wyden said. “That’s the wrong path to go down, and it’s why I’m pushing legislation to prohibit any company from own ing broadcast stations reaching more than 35 percent of the view ing population nationwide. This ap proach would effectively prohibit the big media conglomerates from snapping up all of the small televi sion broadcast stations and com pletely dominating programming and news coverage with a mono lithic, one-size-fits-all approach.” Contact the senior news reporter at jenniferbear@dailyemerald.com.