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 Superlative Apparel Accessories and Jewelry for Women 541.485.4891 $ www.boux.com Student Groups Advertise in the Oregon Daily Emerald. Call 346-3712 to speak with a sales rep. We have great University rates. A one tomp0n CtMPUTINti • 4U..WUi ^ .. Buying, Selling, Repairing, and Virus Removal (541) 515-5791 • zencomputing@gmail.com Oregon Daily Emerald STRETCH your budget! Find Duck Bucks™ in the Oregon Daily Emerald every Tuesday during winter and spring term. Also online every day at www.dailyemerald.com Enjoy coupons from the following businesses: • Track Town Pizza . Siegmund’s Cleaners • Carl s Jr. • Golden China Buffet • Harlequin Beads and Jewelry • Black Jack Pizza • Mission Mexican • Papa Murphy’s • House of Records • Precision Cuts • Emerald Lanes Oregon Daily Emerald The independent newspaper for the UO community The ASUO Executive capitalized on sunny weather Tuesday, soliciting students to fill out postcards asking legsiators for a tuition freeze as port of the student government's ongoing campaign. Campus and Safety Outreach Coordinator Corey Harmon said the campaign is designed to advocate for legislators to end some tax breaks and use the recouped revenue — Nicole Barker | Photographer to freeze rising tuition costs. She said the executive had a goal of collecting 2,500 cards during the day. While she didn’t know how many they had gathered, she said there was a "large box full.” She said students will travel to Salem next week to make their presence known to legislators. ” PSAG: Group will continue policy review Continued from page 1A been in the past.” “Essentially, our message is ‘call 911, save your friend and there will be no consequences,’” Blake Jones said. “That’s been the practice the 10 years I’ve been here. ” Blake Jones and several other peo ple voiced concerns that automatical ly issuing citations to people with al cohol poisoning will have a “chilling effect” on whether students will call when they think they need help. When students living off campus take friends to the hospital because of alcohol poisoning, they do not typi cally receive citations, Blake Jones said. She said sending students through University Housing and the student judicial system would more effectively prevent future incidents, and she worried the threat of going through the city’s court system and paying municipal fines could deter underage students from calling for help in situations involving alcohol. “If this is our practice, we’re going to have students, particularly first year students, not being as willing to get their friends help when they need it,” Blake Jones said. “The chilling effect is real and the danger of allowing it to happen is so much greater,” ASUO Legal Services Director Ilona Koleszar said. “En forcement shouldn’t be done to where it’s chilling whether (people) get assistance.” Hicks said DPS’s position is meant to protect the campus community. “There needs to be a bit of a wake up call for this problem,” Hicks said. “It creates widespread community concern for safety, and if (students cited for drinking) persist with this kind of behavior, they’re going to be putting themselves in jeopardy.” DPS Lt. Herb Horner said the one or two cases of alcohol poisoning that occur in University residence halls each week use a tremendous amount of resources, taking up the time of facilities workers, paramedics, emergency workers and public safe ty officers who respond to help. “We cannot protect (students) by not enforcing really basic laws and holding them accountable for their behavior,” Horner said. “If we don’t teach them these lessons now, then they’re really going to be in trouble when they get out into society.” The meeting did not produce an agreement on how to handle the Uni versity’s policies on alcohol poison ing, but a compromise is necessary, Koleszar said. “We can’t have one part of the Uni versity doing one thing and another part of the University doing something that contradicts it,” Koleszar said. Hicks said he hopes PSAG will get input from other groups on campus. The group will continue to review the policy on alcohol poisoning at a meet ing near the beginning of spring term. karahansen @ dailyemerald. com Interested in becoming a Neutral Observer for campus events?? for more information contact Annie Bentz. 346-0617 or annhb@uoreaon.edu or go to http://studentlife.uoregon.edu/programs/crs/index.htm nRFfiOW DflIIV FMFRAIH your independent student newspaper