Sfaetif BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER Duck Special Start off with three of our original recipe buttermilk pancakes or two slices of French toast. Served with two eggs and two slices of smokehouse bacon or country sausage links Just $3.99! Available all day, Monday thru Friday Offer available for a limited time and only at the Eugene Elmer’s. Must present a valid University of Oregon student or staff ID. 730 E. Broadway • 393-0703 (Corner of Franklin & Hilyard) Hours: Sun-Thu 6 am - 9 pm Fri-Sat 6 am - 10 pm Oleatuta'd, Q>uU 830 Olive St. • 393-0830 Reservations Available 'Wednesday, ii Go-uple A Night To Remember • bruschetta • caesar salad • choice of our pasta-for-two dishes • amaretto creme brulee • full bottle of Oregano's % house wine Los Angeles $156 Lima London $324 Tokyo Frankfurt $348 Bangkok Paris $348 Sydney Fares are roundtrip from Portland. Restrictions apply. Taxes not included. Fares subject to change. Eurailpass issued On-The-Spot XITRAVELCUTS See the woridyour way $613 $467 $633 $669 1430 S.W. Park Ave. [On the Park Blocks by PSU] 503-274-2323 800-592-CUTS (2887) portland@travelcuts.com ASK US ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE FLEXIBLE FARES www.travelcuts.co m ^10U CUify SPAGHETTI A garlic bread $350 Every Tuesday PIZZA PETE’S 2506 Willakenzie 344-0998 flocic Pla73 2673 Willamette 484-0996 27th and Willamette EVERYDAY 2841 Willamette • 484-1727 L-j uma (farcer f air 200$ vjorld. • MaL;^ j UNIVERSITY O ter htip://uocarm.uoregon.edu IN BRIEF New appointments allow PFC to continue hearings During a special meeting Monday night, the ASUO Student Senate ap proved appointments to the Pro grams Finance Committee, enabling the PFC process to continue after be ing halted two weeks ago due to in junctions placed against three of the committee’s members. Senators approved senior Mike Sherman to Seat 3 and freshman Jared Axelrod to the PFC at-large position formerly occupied by Dan Kieffer, filling all positions on the seven-member committee. Kieffer, along with PFC members Mason Quiroz and Eden Cortez, re ceived injunctions from the ASUO Constitution Court preventing them from voting after the PFC’s controver sial hearing of the Oregon Commenta tor’s budget Feb. 1. The court has since extended the injunction against Quiroz, and Kieffer has resigned. Sherman served on the Senate for the past two years. Axelrod is a former ASUO intern. PFC chairwoman Persis Pohowalla said the appointments will allow her committee to resume meeting tonight. During the meeting, Pohowalla said it was “unfortunate” the injunc tions have prevented committee members from “functioning as prop er committee members,” but said her main concern is the “entire budget” because the PFC has exceeded its funding benchmark. She said the PFC has until March 31 to submit a finished budget to University Presi dent Dave Frohnmayer after it is approved by the Senate. She said if the PFC does not submit a budget that is approved, groups will be funded at last year’s levels. During the meeting, Quiroz urged the Senate not to approve the appoint ments because he said it would result in inexperienced PFC members sitting in on hearings of budgets that will be reassessed later in the process. Senate President James George said Quiroz could still be the “knowledge able voice at those meetings,” even though Quiroz can’t vote. Quiroz also expressed concerns with the hiring process, which he said did not include sufficient input from PFC members. Several senators said they approved of the appointments. “I feel confident that the executive ... did well in their hiring process,” Senator Nick Hudson said. — Parker Howell Cortez: Committees will meet to discuss complaints Continued from page 1 perceived problems. The*group consists of nine former members of Eugene’s Racial Profil ing Task Force who resigned in protest following Jordan’s allega tions, including Police Chief Robert Lehner, Eugene Police Department analyst Linda Phelps and other community members. The Eugene Police Commission contracted with the Police Assess ment Resource Center to research and analyze different complaint mod els after the City Council allotted $65,000 for the task in July. The center’s report, which out lined 30 possible oversight mecha nisms, was released Feb. 2, and since then two community meetings have been held to verse the public on the findings. The Eugene Police Commission has two committees that will meet numerous times in March and April to give the public opportunities to discuss the complaint process and make suggestions for improvements. meghanncuniff@dailyemerald.com Disaster: Program serves state and teaches graduate students Continued from page 3 storm waters present to facilities. The workgroup will even look into business losses the University might incur at the hands of a natural disaster. “The University of Oregon is one of only four universities in the western United States to receive new funding under the Pre-Disaster Mitigation Dis aster Resistant University Program,” FEMA Region 10 Director John Pen nington said in a press release. “Ore gon has been a national leader in dis aster mitigation.” ONHW is an educational program offered by the University that both serves the state and helps to teach graduate students. The program is small, LeDuc said, but provides the highest level of the graduate learning experience. It is mentor-based and embeds students in the target communities for a year. The workgroup uses partnerships with communities, cities and the state to work on mitigation plans in every comer of the state. “We really try to build that bridge between academia and the real world,” LeDuc said. adamcherry@ daily emerald, com Summer Empl Glacier National Park “"intana Apply Todayj ' Interviewing On Campus March 2nd The Resort at Glacier, St. Mary Lodge For information call: 1-800-368-3689 ^ ***1" r*'i: Apply Online (a) www.glaciernarkjohs.com