Sheri David Leah Ka re n 2 0 % off 1st v i s i t now open for 1745 W. 18th Ave. appointment 18th & Chambers monday - Saturday 431-1717 Les’ Barber Shop Price Reduced To $10.00 Save $2.00!! .485-6757 130 E. 13th Ave For the week of February 27th! hurry! tickets are going fast! See the Academy Awards on the BIG Screen! Feb. 29-5:00 PM. $10 Advance tickets on sale now! No-host beer & wine-snacks-auctions glamorous fun! Proceeds go to Womenspace and Greenhill Humane Society ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE Best Actress—Charllze Ttieron charlizf: theron Christina ricci nXTCTTTD based on a UIN j 1 Jl,I\ true story 4:45,7:00 & 9:20 Nightly (except Sunday) Sat Mat 2:15 SunMat2:45 No evening shows on Sunday, 2/29 2 Academy Award Nominations Triplets of fielleville 5:20,7:20 & 9:101 EE Sat Mat 3:30 Sun Mat 2: ■ BIJOU LATENITE Fr-Sat $5 Su $4 Directed by Takash! Milke, Jai Uncut! - weak stomachs! by Takashi Milke, Japan's premier stylist of ultra violence! SSICm f HE KILLER Fri, Sat, & Sun 11:00 pm Next: tai chi master The Princess Bride SOON: 2001: a space ODYSSEY Fri, Sat, & Sun 11:30 pm Need more inform t Phone, e-mail or vis website, e-mail: teach@paaficu.eJI web: ed.pacificu.edu Diana Watkins 877*732-8648, #2958 11 1 Puttingi You in E ii u c n t i i You Should Consider a Career in Teaching if... Apply today for June 2004 Fifth Year Master of Arts In Teaching Program! • Earn your Master of Arts in Teaching and Initial Oregon Teaching License in 12 months. • Enjoy small classes and personal attention from our accomplished faculty. • Take advantage of our respected relationships with local school districts. ©i l l «' 0 M forest Crove Campus Pil i NEWS BRIEF Residence hall repaired after December fire University Housing has repainted walls, changed carpets and replaced a bookshelf after a fire broke out in a resi dence hall room in Hamilton Com plex, forcing an early morning evacua tion of the building on Dec. 6. University freshmen Andrew Byrne and John Gutman were living in the room at the time of the fire. Byrne said he is currently living in an apartment complex near Hayward Field and is now allowed to visit the residence halls. He added that Gutman is living in Bean Complex. Gutman could not be reached for comment, but Director of University Housing Mike Eyster confirmed that Gutman lives in the residence halls. The cost to repair fire damage in 109 Spiller was approximately $4,000, Eyster said. That number is less than one-sixth of the $26,000 cost that Director of Resident LifeSandy Schoonover told Byme the final toll could be, Byrne said. He added that she gave it only as an example of the high costs of repair ing fire damage. Schoonover said she wasn't able to talk about any specific conversation with a student, but she did say she re membered a previous residence hall fire that she thought cost about $26,000. "At the time of the last fire I had ab solutely no idea what the cost might be and never said to anybody that it would be that particular amount," Schoonover said. Eyster said he didn't know who gave the initial estimate, and he guessed safety officials may have giv en the $26,000 figure. "Oftentimes those estimates are not accurate," Eyster said. Eyster said he could not identify who paid for the damages, but he was able to say that University Housing will gen erally assess who is responsible for damages and bill them. Byme said during an interview after the incident that a candle he lit caused the fire Eyster said lighting a candle in a residence hall room is a violation of housing rules. Byrne declined to comment on his punishment stemming from the inci dent or whether he paid the repair costs, but he said he was not aware the repairs cost about $4,000. Director of Student Judicial Affairs Chris Loschiavo said he was not able to discuss any individual student's case. Eyster said the damage to the room was "relatively minor." '"The reason for that was because an alert student heard the smoke detector and investigated," Eyster said. "I think they're caught pretty quickly in resi dence halls most of the time because people live so close together." Eyster said that about a year ago, a fire in a residence hall room caused more property damage. Before that, a similar incident hadn't occurred for nine or 10 years. "A fire that actually burns some of the fixtures in the room is pretty rare," he said. Jared Paben BOMB continued from page 1 An Emerald employee contacted a Department of Public Safety dispatch er, who said it was the second call DPS had received. DPS Interim Director Thomas Hicks said DPS received a call from library staff about the bomb threat, and Hicks decided to evacuate the building after consulting with library officials and EPD. Personal Materials Clerk for Uni versity Libraries Jen Lindsey made an announcement over the public address system shortly before 3:45 p.m. telling everybody to evacuate the building for safety reasons. No alarm was activated, she said. Lindsey stood outside the library's Media Services entrance blocking ac cess to the building and told people it might be 30 to 45 minutes before people would be allowed inside. She said she saw only officers inside the building before leaving. After establishing that the build ing was safe, DPS reopened it at 4:40 p.m., Hicks said. The bomb threat was the first he could remember the library receiving, and it was the first bomb threat directed at the Univer sity in a couple of years. Contact the people/culture/farth reporter atjaredpaben@dailyemerald.com. NIGHT continued from page 1 women-only section, a gender-queer section and a gender-neutral section — so each group has its own space. "It started out as a woman-only event because we were, and are, afraid to walk alone at night," said Erin Dury, the sexual violence pre vention and education coordinator for the Women's Center. "But it's now kind of evolved to include men too because there's lots of male feminists." But the march organization could be changed if enough people attend today's public forum on Take Back the Night and oppose sectioning off the march. The meeting will be held in the EMU Board Room from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Dury said she is uncertain whether a decision will be reached at the meeting, adding that the pub lic's input on how to organize the march will greatly influence the fi nal decision. Senior Tanya Widger, a women's and gender studies major, said she thinks the march should include a women-only space because some women feel uncomfortable around men. She added that changing the organization of the march to lump everyone together would keep some women from participating. "It would defeat the purpose (of the march) because, historically, it has been an event for ending the violence against women," Widger said. She added that the whole point of Take Back the Night is to empower women, and that goal is compro mised if any woman feels uncom "(Take Back the Night) started out as a woman-only event because we were, and are, afraid to walk alone at night. But now it's kind of evolved to include men too because there's a lot of male feminists." Erin Dury Women’s Center fortable participating in a march where she is around a man. ASUO Multicultural Advocate Austin Shaw-Phillips said he sup ports keeping the march divided into different sections. "\ think the line separations allow as many people as possible to partic ipate in the march without violating the integrity of the women-only space," Shaw-Phillips said. Shaw-Phillips said the three dif ferent sections are necessary because he wouldn't feel comfortable being around all the men in the gender neutral space because he spent the majority of his life living as a woman. He added that he wouldn't feel comfortable marching in the women-only space either because he identifies as a male. Shaw-Phillips said dividing the march into differ ent sections honors diversity by giv ing each group of people a space that recognizes their identity. But some students don't see the need for separate sections. College Republicans Chairman Jarrett White said he thinks having a women-only space in the march is unnecessary. "I think that's pretty stupid," White said. "I don't know if these women think they're going to go through life without any contact with men." He added that he thinks it's hypo critical to relegate men to a separate marching space because they go to the event to show their support for women. "I don't know why (women) would be uncomfortable (marching with men)," White said. "Especially since the men are there supporting their cause." Dury said that as far as she can re member, Take Back the Night has al ways reserved a space for women only, and if Thursday's forum con vinces the Women's Center to organ ize a mingled march, it would be a first for the University. Contact the news editor atjenniferbear@dailyemerald.com. 018282 FREE TRAINING OFFERED DURING SPRING BREAK March 22nd to March 25th - Limited space available $$ Earn money during summer break $$ DON’T PLAY WITH FIRE! Phone:(541)688-1900 29772 Clear Lake Rd. WORK FOR THE BEST...SKOOKUM ...THE SAFEST. MOST PROFESSIONAL, PRIVATE WILDLAND FIRE FIGHTING COMPANY IN THE WEST.. Positions available immediately and during the summerfor men and women. Training available for inexperienced workers. P.O. Box 40610 Eugene, OR 97404 Today's crossword solution hREfiflN DAIIY FMFR&ID your independent student newspaper