movie night Fridays at 9pm. DOWNSTAIRS IN SIAM SOCIETY LOUNGE AT MEKALA'S - / Sharing classic films / fancy-schmancy COCKTAILS & SUPER SEXY BARTENDERS? One block from UofO CAMPUS 1769 FRANKUN BLVD 541.342.4872 Abandon all willpower, YE WHO ENTER the Siam Society, - iddlefielD '• Golf course'^ T, OAKiVAY Cottage Grove 5,002 yrds. 942-8730 Tee Times 484-1927 No Tee Times GOLF 9 HOLES $8 SECOND 9 HOLES $4 Stucfe;its Only. Must show ID. Good for month of October. Oakway Golf Course located in the heart of Eugene 2000 Cal Young Rd. (off of Coburg Rd.) T1 • i • Thinking about applyir Graduate Graduate school expert and the author of uGraduate Admissions: What Works, What Doesn’t and Why?” Don Asher will speak on... • Learning how to make your application more effective • Getting the Inside scoop on how admissions decisions are made • Questions you should ask yourself before applying • Writing great essays • Much more! Monday, October 25th • 3:30 - 4;30pm Geriinger Lounge jsurvhar ?20 Hendricks Hall • 346-3235 w w» wwl 11 V«>l httpj/uocaieer.uoregoneau Guns: Campus mles questioned by candidates Continued from page 1 amendment to bar gun manufactur ers from being released from debts brought about by lawsuits charging fraud, negligence or product liability. He voted "no” in 1999 on a bill al lowing for voluntary background checks on all firearm sales at gun shows. He also voted in 1999 to keep a motion that required that all gun sales at gun shows be complet ed by federally licensed gun dealers. In 1998, he voted “no” on an amendment that prohibited charg ing prospective gun owners a fee to cover the cost of a background check and that required the destruc tion of information used during a background check. He also voted in 1998 in support of an amendment that made it unlawful for gun deal ers to sell handguns without provid ing trigger locks. Republican candidate A1 King said that because he’s a gun owner and former law enforcement officer, he understands gun issues. King said the assault weapons ban is a “myth” because “assault eapons are in the eye of the behold er” and are sometimes less danger ous than smaller, easier to conceal weapons. “A lot of this is myth and we need to dispel that myth and get down to what we really want to do — we want to make people safe,” he said. He said citizens should have the right to bear arms and form a mili tia, which the ban infringed upon. “That’s another case where the government said, ‘it’s ok for me, but it’s not ok for you the citizens,”’ he said. “I don’t believe that our found ing fathers and the Second Amend ment intended for the government to be special.” King, who said he worked as a police officer at the University of California, Davis, said schools should be allowed to prohibit con cealed weapons on campus. “1 think that the universities and the colleges and schools have a right to set that kind of standard,” he said. King said all firearms are danger ous, but can be regulated with safe ty training and strict enforcement of existing gun laws. “I don’t have any problem with training, classes, requirements for things like that, but I believe in the right to bear those weapons,” he said. King also said manufacturers of weapons should be protected from lawsuits by gun-crime victims. “It’s not the manufacturers of the weapons that are responsible for the killing, it’s the people, and people don’t need guns when they want to kill,” he said. Congressional race Jim Feldkamp, Republican candi date, said he is a “Second Amend ment supporter,” but doesn’t see gun control as a key issue in this election. Feldkamp said he probably wouldn’t have voted to extend the assault weapon ban if he had been in Congress when it expired, saying the ban applied to weapons it shouldn’t have. “They're technically not really as sault weapons,” he said of some semiautomatic firearms covered by the ban. Feldkamp added that students should be allowed to carry con cealed weapons on campus. “If a student has a concealed weapon permit, I don’t feel that's an issue,” he said. “They’re complying with the law.” Democratic candidate Peter De Fazio also voted on several gun-relat ed issues during the last four years. He voted “yes” in 2003 on a bill that prohibited liability lawsuits from being brought against gun makers and sellers based on the criminal misuse of firearms. He voted “no” on a passed amendment in 1999 to decrease the time allowed for a background check at a gun show from 72 hours to 24. He also voted yes in 1999 on a passed amendment that would make it illegal for anyone who com mits a violent act as a juvenile to own a gun once he or she turns 18. DeFazio voted “yes” in 1998 on a successful bill imposing mandatory minimum prison terms for crimes committed with a firearm during drug trafficking. parkerhowell@ daily emerald, com STUDENTS SHARE VIEWS ABOUT GUN CONTROL, ASSAULT WEAPONS Many students interviewed by the Emerald said gun-control is sues are important, but have been neglected during the current cam paign rhetoric. Business administration major Lance Lucas said the assault weapons ban was ineffective. “I’m against a ban that 1 think is just useless legislation, like this one was,” he said. “I don’t think that what they did to guns changed anything about their lethality ... rather it just drove up prices for en thusiasts and consumers.” He said the ban didn’t affect people who buy guns through ille gal channels to commit crimes and other methods are necessary to re duce gun crime. “I’m (more) in support of prose cuting, punishing criminals for crimes they are already committing as far as buying illegal guns and using illegal weapons, than trying to push new legislation that isn’t going to affect those criminals any ways,” he said. He said the Constitution gives students authority to carry con cealed weapons in open areas of the University campus. “I don’t mind when private estab lishments have billboards or plac ards stating that there are no hand guns allowed, but when you have an area such as a federal campus ... the University should have no juris diction over that,” he said. Lucas added that more gun edu cation is needed. “Criminals would be more care ful committing crime if they knew that more people were educated and responsible gun owners in stead of sort of preying on a culture of fear,” he said. Senior Brendan Morley said changes should be made to the as sault weapons ban to close loop holes that allow gun makers to sell modification kits that turn semi automatic weapons into fully auto matic weapons. “Basically, there are a lot of loopholes, and a single person can get a lot of killing power,” he said. Morley said the University should $181 Mexico City $291 $198 Lima $609 $383 Rio de Janeiro $767 $104 $1061 $1083 Los Angeles New York London Paris Rome Istanbul Bangkok $409 Delhi $485 Nairobi $530 Sydney $600 Fares are roundtrip From Portland. Restrictions apply. Taxes not included. Fares subject to change. Eurailpass issued On-The-Spot 1430 S.W. Park Ave. H TRAVEL CUTS See the world your way [On the Park Blocks by PSU] 503-274-2323 800-592-CUTS (2887) portland@travelcuts.com ASK US ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE FLEXIBLE FARES ^aa?ww. trove l cuts, com decide whether students can bring legal weapons onto campus. “The school has its own securi ty forces, so ... it should have the right to basically regulate what kind of devices and implements and contraband people can bring onto the property,” he said. He added that he favors more regulation of gun shows. “If you can’t get a gun from your local sporting goods store, you can go to a gun show and buy basically the same gun,” he said. Graduate student Emilie Cate said the assault weapons ban should be extended. “As a general rule, 1 don’t feel as sault weapons have any business being in anyone’s hands,” she said. She also said complete back ground checks and a lengthy wait ing period should be required for people to buy guns, adding that she doesn’t see a need for students to carry concealed weapons on campus. Parker Howell Monday 6pm - 12am Large PBR pitchers $5.00 Everyday 2841 Wilamette • 484-1727