Why pay for one dish when you can 24 for 1 low price? Lo Mein noodles Broccoli Beef Orange chicken Sweet qncflour chicken Soups Fried Rice Appetizers and more Colbsn Cnua Burrer 1525 Franklin Bivd. Eugene, OR 97402 541-343-2828 11:30am-9:00pm Daily Next to Campus ALL YOU CAN EAfl (every night $7,99 includes drink and ice cream") come eat buffet-style or order to go 24 Szechwan and Mandarin dishes to choose from Join us on THURSDAY NIGHTS LIVE DJ Hip hop, funk, dance, groove 9pm - 12am • Grab a bracelet early • No cover • Full menu all night • * Play pool & lottery games • GET YOUR GROOVE BACK! 115 Commons 349-0707 Choice of eating meat or not guided by taste, values, diet The Atkins low-carb diet has changed eating habits, but some people choose to stick to a meat-free lifestyle By Jennifer Sudick Freelance Editor From widespread protein-rich diets to the ongoing mad cow scare to Mc Donald's new all-white-meat chicken nuggets, meat — and the controversy surrounding it — has helped shape American nutritional values. The Atkins "very-low" carbohy drate diet plan has made its mark in fast food restaurants such as Subway with its "Atkins Friendly" chicken bacon wrap, in bookstores with a multitude of guidebooks and cook books, and in supermarkets with Atkins brand sugar-free pancake syrup and barbecue sauce. The diet, which touts proteins and fats as weight-loss substitutes to processed and refined carbohy drates, has often been portrayed as synonymous with a butter-laden red-meat-eating lifestyle, according to http://www.atkins.com. However, the Web site attempts to debunk this perception with its article, "Doing Atkins Is Not Synonymous with Eat ing Red Meat," which states: "It is not advisable to eat steak every day. Variety is what makes food interest ing. There are plenty of other deli cious ways to get the protein and di etary fat you need. In fact, plenty of people do Atkins without eating red meat or pork." The Atkins Web site enthusiasti cally advocates eating cold-water fish, such asgtuna, salmon and sar dines, twice1| week. Other red meat alternatives, Including turkey and chicken, also work as long as they aren't in "nugget" form. "Abstaining for ethical or religious reasons is an understandable choice ... if you're not eating meat because you're worried about saturated fat and cholesterol, your concern may well be misplaced," the Atkins article states. However, response to the diet has been varied. In Rome last week, pasta manufacturers and chefs gathered to protest the diet in the wake of de creased sales of traditionally high-car bohydrate foods. Susan Toussaint, director of market ing for the American Italian Pasta Com pany of Kansas City, Mo., told The New York Times on Feb. 11 that her compa ny saw a 5 percent decline in grocery store pasta sales during the past year. Lauren Wimer Photographer Despite the mad cow scare, beef is still popular thanks to diets like Atkins. "Pasta's getting lumped in the same category as Krispy Kreme," she said. "It’s not fair. All carbohydrates are not created equal." For some, the decision to eat se lect meats or refrain from eating meat altogether has religious or cul tural influences. "(The) Chinese have a traditional notion that foods that are 'warming' in nature, like meat, are important for building up physical strength; so in the minds of some of the older generation, one could not possibly get all the nutri tion one needed from the "cool" bean greens, white radishes, and so forth that vegetarians favor," author Lin Ching Shywan wrote in "Vegetarian Cooking — Chinese Style." Shywan wrote that she became a vegetarian because of her belief in Buddhism, not because of a healthy lifestyle. She added that many Bud dhists advocate vegetarianism because of their belief in having mercy for oth er living creatures. According to "Diet for Transcen dence," by author Stephen Rosenln, traditional Hindu scripture dictates that products of the cow, including milk, curd, urine and dung, are puri fying because the cow is considered a sacred animal. The Hindi word for cow is "aghnaya," which means "not to be killed," but cow dung is still used as an inexpensive fertilizer and for heating and cooking. In the Jewish religion, several meats Turn to MEAT, page 10B DANCE • EQUESTRIAN • FENCING • ICE HOCKEY • KARATE cluLr offered include: • Aikido • Badminton • Baseball • Bodybuilding • Bowling • Crew • Cycling • Dance • Equestrian • Fencing • Ice Hockey • Karate • Lacrosse • Running • Ranger Challenge • Racquetball • Rugby • Sailing • Skiing • Skydiving • Snowboarding • Soccer • Surfing • Table Tennis • Tae Kwon Do • Triathlon • Ultimate Frisbee • Volleyball • Waterpolo • Wushu . 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