a*bizzillion is heading south.... a*bizzillion is heading to The Southtowne Shoppes to join our sister store Boux and we need you to help us lighten our load! TAKE 70% II1f EVERYTHING! including jewelry 016311 a-pizzilljpn 901 Pearl Street 541.485.1570 Tues-Sat 12*5:30 ALL OUR WONDERFUL BRAND NAMES SALE ENDS SAT, 5/24 TOflT 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. 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. CfOU,! 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. Rosenstiel continued from page 1A be “practicing conscious journalism.” The media critic and author de based two “fundamentally flawed ideas” of journalism. For many, he said, journalism equals elitism, meaning that it can not merely be taught within the classroom, but instead learned by on-the-job experience. “There is a long vein of thinking of journalism as something instinctual, some kind of mystical art, a kind of news voodoo — and voodoo and in stinct cannot be explained or theo rized about,” he said. “News is some thing you smell, or taste, or sense.” He said these senses must be honed by be coming more informed, setting and ad hering to stringent ethical standards. While there have to be standards, he said journalism is also more than simply a “series of techniques” but rather “responsibilities and princi ples.” Just following methods does not make people journalists. “Confusing the principles of jour nalism with the technique also makes us vulnerable to imitators who want to hitchhike on the credibility of jour nalism by looking like it, but who are fundamentally engaged in different work, such as commercial propagan da or infomercialism,” he said. Rosenstiel also addressed the steady decline of public trust of the media in light of the recent contro versy about Jayson Blair, former re porter for The New York Times. “The reason the scandal has not blown over — indeed it has intensi fied — is because readers and jour nalists, and even more so, people in side The Times itself, expect more of The New York Times,” he said. He added journalists must be transparent and inform the public of what they know — and what they don’t know. During his visit to campus, Rosenstiel also met with a reporting class where he discussed his latest book, “The Ele ments of Journalism: What Newspeo ple Should Know and the Public Should Expect,” which he co-authored with Bill Kovach. This was selected as a primary text for the course because it defines journalists and journalism. “He raises the important questions about the role of journalists to stand back and reflect what we are doing right and what we are not doing,” asso ciate professor Scott Maier said. “This takes us back to our original mission that we’re there to serve the public.” Graduate student Ken Paulman said the book articulates many things he already believed. “It’s a step toward establishing a standard of professionalism,” he said. Rosenstiel said by arming the pub lic with more information, people will be more able to make educated decisions for the future. “Without journalism, democracy is not possible,” he said. “Without democracy, journalism has no pur pose other than profit. Journalism and democracy will rise and fall together.” Robin Weber is a freelance writer for the Emerald. List continued from page 1A “People who join see a dramatic stop in telemarketing calls,” he said. “It’s a way to protect people’s priva cy and time.” Meyer said both residential phone users and cell phone users are eligi ble for the list, adding that the pro gram will really take off once cell phone users learn more about it. “More and more people are using cell phones as their primary tele phone number,” he said in a press release. “As a result, telemarketers are increasingly making unwanted calls to these numbers.” Oregon was the first state to pass such a law, but 27 other states have created similar legislation since Ore gon enacted the list in 1999. At the federal level, President George W. Bush has also signed legislation creat ing a national No Call List that will start this summer. Oregon’s list is op erated by a private No Call List ad ministrator in coordination with Ore gon Attorney General Hardy Myers. Since the Oregon bill was passed, Myers has fined 120 companies more than $450,000 for violating the No Call Law. However, Richard Meyer said companies that market products via telephone have been working harder to stop any telemar keters from calling people on the No Call List. If a resident on the list gets a call from a telemarketer, Meyer said the person should call the attorney general’s office. “Get information from the tele marketers by playing dumb,” Meyer said, adding that getting information like the company’s name will help the attorney general in prosecuting it. University student Andrew Williams said his parents have been a part of the No Gall List for the past two years, which he said has made a big difference. “Telemarketers used to call all the time,” he said. “During breakfast, during dinner, when I needed to fin ish homework. After my parents signed up for (the No Gall List), the telemarketers stopped bugging us.” Contact the reporter atalishaughnessy@dailyemerald.com. 014968 ARE YOUR WEEKENDS MISSING SOMETHING? ±± + + Join us on Sundays for worship services featuring Holy Communion. We have traditional services on Sunday mornings and Marty Haugen services on Sunday evenings. Sundays 8:15 and 10:45 am & 6:30 pm Student/Young Adult Bible Study, Sundays, 7:15 pm Central Lutheran Church Corner of 18th & Potter • 345.0395 www.welcotnetocentral.org All are welcome. News brief LTD to run Sunday schedule for holiday For students sticking around town for Memorial Day weekend, getting around Eugene may not be a problem. Lane Transit District bus services will operate on Monday using regu lar Sunday bus schedule hours. LTD’s Guest Services office will also be open regular Sunday hours, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday. 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