SHOf-A-HOLIC snJNJVVVV Buy 1, Get 2 FREE ■ CmSc Kw Sale! M 'V' * On selected shoes at our outlet store 957 Willamette St - 687-0898 www.Lazars.com Come and join us for the DivinM $tep^ & show Saturday, May 22 Oregon State University 5:30 p.m.-Gill Coliseum For more info, contact MUPC at (541) 737-1672 or toll free 1-800-291-4192 Ext. 6872 and ask for MUPC. Tickets on sale now! • Homemade Soups • Fresh Salads • Fresh Pizza • Hamburgers • Fish & Chips • Pastas • Ribs • Microbrewed Beer and full bar GAMBLING continued from page 7 warned that these might be low-end figures. "If the game is affected negatively by gambling, " Malloy said, "the sport loses integrity, and then everything becomes professional wrestling with a predetermined outcome." Current NCAA rules prohibit stu dent-athletes, coaches and athletic de partment employees from betting on a college or professional sporting event, legally or illegally. (Wagering on sports such as boxing, auto racing or horse racing is not against the rules.) They also cannot share infor mation with gamblers. Fewer than 60 percent of Division I athletes — and fewer than 40 percent of Division III athletes — said they knew the NCAA's rules about sports wagering, which call for penalties that could include a loss of scholarship. "That's alarming when you recognize that nearly 50 percent of the student athletes don't really know or under stand the mles," said Grant Teaff, vice chair of the NCAA task force and the executive director of the American Foot ball Coaches Association. "To throw away your opportunity for an educa tion is one of the most disastrous things that can happen to a student-athlete." The survey also found that sports gambling on the Internet was less com monplace than expected, with just 5.3 percent of Division I male athletes par taking. It found that NCAA golfers (30.3 percent) and lacrosse players (29.3) were most likely to bet. 'There will always be gambling, but we want to control the situation better. We don't want it to go down a slippery slope where you (a student athlete) find yourself in an environment that encourages gambling..." Myles Brand NCAA President It also found that football was twice as susceptible to point-shaving at tempts as basketball and that male athletes were four times more likely than female athletes to bet. "I should say parenthetically that personally, as a religious figure, I don't think gambling is morally abhorrent in and of itself," Malloy said. '"Ihe ques tion is not whether gambling is accept able — that's a policy question for the nation — but rather the degree of harm that some people can experience." Specifically, when a student-athlete goes into debt for sports betting and is then at the mercy of a bookmaker. "We're not trying to change the world," Brand said. "Many people have problems with gambling for all kinds of reasons. Our issue is the wel fare of students. "There will always be gambling, but we want to control the situation better. We don't want it to go down a slippery slope where you (a student-athlete) find yourself in an environment that encourages gambling then you partici pate in gambling with a dorm bookie and then before you know it you're en wrapped in a very unsavory situation that affects that student-athlete's life as well as the integrity of the game." Malloy, after noting that Chicago is among the cities pushing for a new casino, added another element to the discussion. "The thing we haven't talked about at all is who are the most susceptible people?" he said. 'The referees. We have no evidence, none. But theoretically, if you wanted to affect the outcome of any sporting events, that's probably the place you could do it most easily." Malloy, though, said the task force was unlikely to delve into that issue. (c) 2004, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.. WHEELCHAIR continued from page 7 experience and plans to return for next year's game. In his team's place will be the Eugene Express, a mem ber of the National Wheelchair Bas ketball Association that also partici pated in last year's game. "Last year was a lot of fun," Jaquiss said. "To just raise money for a good cause is awesome. (The game) lets wheelchair basketball players who are fairly accomplished compete against able-bodied basketball players who are fairly accomplished." Westendorf and the athletes in volved are all looking forward to hav ing a good time on the floor. Jaquiss said he was surprised last year at how quickly some of the / v write for the Oregon Daily Emerald For more information about freelancing call 346-5511. N_-_/ BACKST ng the summer in Portland • " or-r we'« waived ss# ^£rces'’ a"dS:^on«ne, ;laS? n starts May 20 ss-ssr ^vSSSl* Special, £ summer' itSii Portia# Community College is an Alfirmaive Action. Equal En -3 contact the uJPl