Daily Emerald,' 19m " News • “Best Dinner "One of .101 Coo! Til 3 * "Best Dkmem Take Visitors vT-Tr 3 A lace >t Soup/’ 3rd Race ast/* Best of Teen, 4 ! Best Breakfast ”. 2r| ice, “Best Soup,* "2r|. Eaffrm mWiMkt “The best eats in town.” Sports Illustrated on Campus 2588 Willamette St. 541-687-8201 * 1340 Aider Street 541-687-0355 LIVE MUSIC POOL VIDEO POKER DAILY 5PECIAL5 Lunch Tuesday-Friday 11:30-2:00 pm Dinner Tuesday-Saturday beginning at 4 pm Wednesday March 3 • $2, ladies free DJ Scamp Wax For World Peace Thursday March 4 • free Christie & McCallum Honky Tonk/Rock friday March 5 • $4 Cheeseburgers Parrot Head Saturday March 6 • $4 The Vipers featuring Deb Cleveland Blues 018275 (541) 344-S600 • 1626 Willamette St. 018294 l Opportunity for the campus community to present oral and written comments on proposed amendments to the course fees ond program fees. Special Fees and Fines Fee Book Academic Year 2004-05 March 2nd and March 5th, 3:00 PM 214 Friendly Hall Proposed Fee Book is available online at http://wilhelm.uoregon.edu/ORM/feeapp Questions: Donna Chittenden, 346-3044, Office of Resource Management Jewish Film Fest March 3rd, 4th & 8th Jewish Student Union • EMU Suite 28 346-4366 jdu@gladstone.uoregon.edu/~jsu also from LGBTQA and Club Israel MARCH 1 - 7 PHOTO ] specials! FUJICOLOR UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE www.uobookstore.com 2ND SET FREE! 3x5 prints: 12 exp $2.25 24 exp $4.25 36 exp $6.25 1 5 exp. (one set) $4.40 25 exp. (one set) $6.66 40 exp. (one set) $9.40 Next day. orders only. Allow 1-2 days for APS processing. Glossy or ma tte finish. 20% OFF APS PROCESSING: 4x6 prints: 12 exp $3.25 24 exp $6.25 36 exp $8.25 Next day orders only. From 35mn) C-41'lull frame . color film(Panoramic, hall-frame, and negatives excluded.) ‘**ti&MM0&&&&6&es9S60!BS6es$$KefM8ss&«imKtt&Mmm&xx$i99»fSG5&assif&egs6a&X6mssstt&!mx6f6t BRIEFS continued from page 1 Women's Center, opened up a voting system that ended Friday to allow the campus community to express ideas re garding how to organize the march. Dury said the Women's Center did not receive any votes by the deadline, so the committee decided to use the recommendation of those who at tended Thursday's meeting. The Take Back the Night march, which takes place April 29, will begin at the EMU Amphitheater. The event will start with a rally and will end with a speak-out. The march will take place in between. Dury said that people can bring signs or make them in a designated area at the event. She added that more logistics of the event will be planned next term. — Lisa Catto University professor named to state healthcare board Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski has appointed healthcare system expert and University Professor Judith Hib bard to a state board designed to track preventable medical errors in Oregon healthcare facilities. Hibbard — a professor of plan ning, public policy and management — focuses her work on consumer roles in healthcare. She was appointed to the Oregon Commission for Patient Safety's new board of directors, which will be re sponsible for setting up a voluntary sys tem to collect data and report on pre ventable medical mistakes in Oregon hospitals and healthcare facilities. That information will then be used in the fu ture to help prevent those mistakes. "This is a national problem, but it is the states, Oregon among them, that are taking leadership to do some thing about it," Hibbard said in press release. "Medical errors reflect prob lems with systems and not so much individual wrongdoing or incompe tence. A first step in preventing med ical errors is to have information that details their occurrence so that proce dures and systems can be put in place to prevent them in the future." Hibbard currently serves on adviso ry boards to the National Health Care Quality Forum and the Joint Com mission for the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. — Jared Paben STOREWIDE 20-70% OFF Ski Equipment Downhill • Cross Country Snowboards • Clothing Starts Noon Today! BeraV/ki/hop 13th & Lawrence' 683-1300 • www.bergsskishop.com 017628 ADA accessible New Releases weekly VHS& DVD 5-day Rentals Over 3,000 OVDs • Arcade • Novelties • Gases HE & SHE I HE & SHE II 290 River Rd., Eugene 720 Garfield, Eugene 688-5411 345-2873 ALBANY 1-5 EXIT 233, 3404 Spicer Dr. 541-812-2522 James C. Bean appointed dean of business school A new dean has been chosen to succeed cur rent Lundquist College of Busi ness Dean Philip Romero. University of Michigan Asso ciate Dean for Academic Affairs James C. Bean will take his new position July 1, according to a University press release. "He comes with a lot of creative ex perience," College of Arts and Sciences Dean Joe Stone said. Stone, who headed the exploratory committee to find the new dean, said everyone who had a chance to meet Bean, including faculty and alumni, thought he was a good fit for the college. "They were all very enthusiastic about his coming," he said. Bean is also a professor of industrial and operations engineering in the Uni versity of Michigan's College of Engi neering. At the University, he will hold the Lundquist College's Harry B. Miller Professorship, according to the release "The wonderful, state-of-the-art Lillis Complex is an asset that will help us to recruit more high quality students and faculty while also pro viding us expanded space that will enable us to consider starting new types of programs, such as executive education," Bean said in the release. Bean added that at the same time, the college operates at a human scale that gives the dean an opportunity to interact directly with students, faculty, staff, alumni and the community. The business school has 66 faculty members and had 3,001 undergradu ates and 196 graduate students enrolled in fall 2003, according to the release. Bean was one of two finalists chosen from several dozen candidates after a nationwide search. According to the re lease, he has published almost 50 schol arly papers dealing with operations re search and management science. Stone said that one of Bean's main goals is to connect the business school with other University departments as well as with the local and regional business communities. "I think at a general level, he ex pressed the desire to do a lot of bridge building," Stone said. — Chelsea Duncan James C. Bean New business school dean CAMPUS BU JlJl Wednesday Oregon Supreme Court visit, Room 175, Knight Law Center, 9 a.m.-noon. Rules of court behavior apply. Savage Professorship Lecture featuring a talk by Mary Robinson, former president of Ireland and United Nations, high commissioner for human rights and current director of the Ethical Globaliza tion Initiative, entitled “Human Rights and Global ization," EMU Ballroom, 7 p.m. Community Conversations about affirmative action, Dunn Hall Lounge, Hamilton Complex, 7:30 p.m. UO Ensembles concert featuring the Oregon Wind Ensemble and the UO Symphonic Band, Beall Concert Hall, 8 p.m.