10/1/15 Emerald Media - Week of Welcome (Thursday)

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D A I LY E M E R A L D . C O M

#DEALERORNODEALER

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Dispensary or

DEALER?

TODAY YOU CAN BUY MARIJUANA WITHOUT A CARD.

Medical dispensaries can now sell recreational marijuana in Oregon to people 21 or older. If you’re of age, the question isn’t how to get it, but who to get it from.

S T U D E N T P R I VA C Y I N O R E G O N M AY C H A N G E

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FA L L L E C T U R E S F R O M G U E S T A R T I S T S

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THE THINGS WE COLLECT IN COLLEGE


đ&#x;”Ś NEWS AQUATICS • FITNESS • INTRAMURALS • PE CLASSES • YOUTH & FAMILY

INCOMING FRESHMAN HAVE THE HIGHEST GPA IN RECENT YEARS

UOREC.UOREGON.EDU EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity.

CALLING ALL

EXTROVERTS! Emerald Media Group is hiring students to join our Street Team fall term. Get paid to have fun handing out papers to fellow students. Apply in person at Suite 300 or email kcarbone@dailyemerald.com

A&AA MAJORS FAIR REGISTER AT

aaa.uoregon.edu/study-aaa

BE A MAJOR OR MINOR STUDY IN THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND ALLIED ARTS

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13 4:00–6:00 p.m. HAYDEN GALLERY 120 LAWRENCE HALL 1190 FRANKLIN BLVD. EUGENE, OREGON

Learn about A&AA majors and minors Portfolio requirements Application deadlines Career paths

EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity. Š2015 University of Oregon

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➥ NOAH

M C G R AW, @ M C N O A H M C G R AW

Incoming freshmen to the University of Oregon have the highest average grade point average in recent years. Collectively, the freshman class has an average GPA of 3.61. That’s up from 3.58 last year. The average GPA has fluctuated slightly in recent years, always gravitating around 3.58. The average entering class’ high school GPA since 2009 is 3.57. UO is presenting this class as its “most diverse and academically strong ever,� according to an article by Heidi Hiaasen published in Around the O. Twenty eight percent of the incoming freshman class comes from a minority group. The university as a whole, not just the freshman class, was composed of 22 percent students of color in 2014. The statistics seem to show that this year’s incoming class is more prepared for college than any previous class. Besides

having a higher GPA than prior years, students are arriving at the university with prior college experience. According to the Around the O article, more than half of the class members arrived with college credit. The university also mentions that enrollment in its PathwayOregon program is increasing. PathwayOregon is a financial aid and educational support program available to Pell Grant recipients. The award is determined by academic standing and financial need. If a student qualifies, the university will pay for their full tuition. One third of the incoming class qualified for the Pell Grant. PathwayOregon’s enrollment this year is 722, up from 542 last year. This expansion comes on the heels of a large donation by Connie and Steve Ballmer, who donated $25 million to the program this year.


đ&#x;”Ś NEWS

New draft bill revises student privacy policy in Oregon

➥ YULIANA

In September, Senator Ron Wyden and Representative Suzanne Bonamici of Oregon released a draft bill to protect student privacy on all college campuses across the country. This proposed bill will adjust the current federal law that governs student records. The draft bill, entitled the Campus Litigation Privacy Act, is intended to add additional privacy procedures to ensure that educational institutions can not access student records without the knowledge of the student. “Senator Wyden believes student privacy should be protected and be protected at all times,� Hank Stern, press secretary for Senator Wyden, said. Currently, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) permits educational institutions certain discretion in accessing The Emerald is published by Emerald Media Group, Inc., the independent nonprofit media company at the University of Oregon. Formerly the Oregon Daily Emerald, the news organization was founded in 1900.

(Jarred Graham)

BARRALES, @YULIANABARRALES

NEWSROOM EDITOR IN CHIEF DA H L I A BA Z Z A Z X 3 2 5 PRINT MANAGING EDITOR COOPER GREEN

student records without the consent or knowledge of the student. The draft bill was modeled late this summer after guidelines by the U.S. Department of Education advised colleges and universities to take action and put in place individual policies to protect students’ privacy on campus. Colleges and universities are not bound to the department’s guidelines. Once finalized, it’s up to the schools to choose the best practices they can adhere to. “I do think the bill will better protect us,� University of Oregon junior Taylor Elliott said. “But, we always run the risk of people releasing information when they shouldn’t and then it can’t be taken away. I do like my privacy, so if there is a way to get more of it, I would love it.�

DESIGNERS JACK GRAHAM RAQUEL ORTEGA JARRED GRAHAM GINA MILLS

D I G I TA L M A N A G I N G E D I T O R JACK HEFFERNAN

OPINION EDITOR TA N N E R O W E N S

HIRING AND TRAINING DIRECTOR K AY L E E T O R N AY

SPORTS EDITORS JUSTIN WISE H AY D E N K I M KENNY JACOBY

MANAGING PRODUCER SCOTT GREENSTONE AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT DIRECTOR KIRA HOFFELMEYER

NEWS EDITORS JENNIFER FLECK F R A N C E S A F O N TA N A LAUREN GARETTO

A&C EDITORS EMERSON MALONE CRAIG WRIGHT DA N I E L B RO MF I E L D

With the draft bill released, the ultimate goal is to ensure the privacy of students and give them the confidence that their records will be kept confidential. Both Wyden and Bonamici acknowledge that if student records aren’t being safeguarded adequately, students may be wary of seeking assistance. “I do think people are afraid to go for help because they don’t want to get in trouble for anything,� Elliott said. As of now, the next step for the draft bill is hearing feedback from the public and students. After Wyden and Bonamici have compiled feedback, they will move forward to legislation. The public has until Oct. 17 to send in their comments on Senator Wyden’s website.

BUSINESS

ON THE COVER

PUBLISHER, PRESIDENT & CEO C H A R L I E W E AV E R X 3 1 7 V P O P E R AT I O N S K AT H Y C A R B O N E X 3 0 2

PHOTO EDITOR COLE ELSASSER

VP OF SALES AND MARKETING R O B R E I L LY X 3 0 3

COPY CHIEF ME L I S SA R H OA D S

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES NICOLE ADKISSON N I C K C ATA N I A BEN GILBERTS TYLER HORST E ST UA R DO P E R E Z TAY L O R B R A D B U R Y TE D DY L AC K S A L LY C A S E B E E R CAITLIN MONAHAN

The cover image was photographed by Cole Elsasser.

GET IN TOUCH EMERALD MEDIA GROUP 1 2 2 2 E . 1 3 T H AV E . , # 3 0 0 EUGENE, OR 97403 541.346.5511 VO L . 1 1 7 , I S S U E N O. 1 9

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✒ ART

ART AT UO

Top right corner: Untitled, 2015, acrylic on handwoven textile Top middle: The School of the Flower, 2013, glazed earthenware and steel Top left corner: Scott Reeder. (Joshua Lott/New York Times) Bottom corner: Still from METRO Re/Deconstruction, 2013 Bottom middle: Chris Coleman

➡EMERSON MALONE, @ALLMALONE

Several artists will visit the University of Oregon department of art in October through November. They will lead a lecture and share their catalogue of work in the fall 2015 Artist Lecture Series. All lectures are free and open to the public. The series begins Thursday, Oct. 8. Scott Reeder – “It’s All In My Head” Thursday, Oct. 8, 6 p.m. Lawrence 115 Reeder’s sculptures, paintings and films often blend an abstract expressionism, fascination with syntax and a wry sense of humor. Often inspired by language and text, he created a minimalist “text paintings” series in 2013. The series of thirty paintings paired two sequential four-letter words drawn over a soft gradient canvas, such as “Word Jazz,” “Look Poor” and “Free Acid.” Reeder is a painter, filmmaker and professor of painting and drawing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Enrique Chagoya – “Cannibal Palimpsest” Thursday, Oct. 15, 6 p.m. Lawrence 115 A mexican-born painter, printmaker and Stanford art professor, Chagoya draws from his cross-cultural background to depict often contentious and touchy subjects from colonialism and oppression. Chagoya’s provocative work “The Misadventures of the Romantic Cannibals” portrayed Jesus Christ and other religious figures in an ambiguously sexual context. Chagoya said the piece was intended as a commentary on the cases of sex abuse in the Catholic Church. A woman destroyed the painting with a crowbar in October 2010 as it was displayed in an exhibit in Loveland, Colorado. This lecture is made possible by the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art in conjunction with the exhibition “Enrique Chagoya: Adventures

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of Modernist Cannibals.” It will be on display through Dec. 6, 2015 in the Harold and Arlene Schnitzer Gallery at the JSMA. Paula Wilson – “Mooning” Thursday, Oct. 21, 6 p.m. Lawrence 115 Wilson explores femininity and identity in her multimedia pieces, paintings, prints and videos. Her ornamental style is often layered with dense designs and bold colors that resemble extravagant stained-glass windows. She’s been featured in group and solo exhibitions throughout the United States and Europe, including The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; the Center for Contemporary Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico; and the Johan Berggren Gallery in Sweden. Chris Coleman – “Emerging Terrains” Thursday, Oct. 29, 6 p.m. Lawrence 115 Coleman writes on his website that his art intends to consciously create “disruptions” in daily life. Through his iconoclastic approach to digital art, Coleman creates sculptures, videos, animations and creative coding. His open-source software program “Maxuino,” developed with colleague Ali Momeni, has been downloaded over 50,000 times and has become a staple in physical computing courses. His work has been showcased at exhibitions and festivals in more than twenty countries, including Brazil, Argentina, Singapore, Finland, Italy, Germany, China, the United Kingdom, Latvia and throughout North America. Samantha Bittman – “Material Data” Thursday, Nov. 12, 6 p.m. Lawrence 115 Bittman paints patterns on hand-woven textiles and exploits the fabric and graphics that become distorted in the final product to create a multidimensional impression to the viewer. Her work has been featured in solo exhibitions in several New York City galleries

and group exhibitions in Miami, Fla. and San Francisco, Calif. Steven Matijcio ­­ Wednesday, Nov. 18, 6 p.m. Lawrence 177 Matijcio is a world-renowned curator of art museums, including his current role as curator of the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, and his prior job as curator of the Contemporary Art at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. His 2013 essay “Nothing to See Here: The Denial of Vision in Media Art” was accepted into the RENEW: Media Art Histories Conference in Riga, Latvia. This lecture is made possible by the University of Oregon’s Connective Conversations: Inside Oregon Art, a partnership with The Ford Family Foundation’s Visual Arts Program Curators and Critics Tours and Lectures. Anders Ruhwald – “Thinking Through Spaces: Objects and Site” Thursday, Nov. 19, 6 p.m. Lawrence 115 Ruhwald has gained an international admiration for his ceramic work and large-scale sculpture installations. In 2011, he was awarded the Gold Prize at the Icheon International Ceramics Biennale in South Korea. Glenn Adamson, director of New York’s Museum of Arts and Design wrote that Ruhwald’s sculptures are “enlivened by inexhaustible nuance ... Ruhwald takes seriously the idea that surface is where form interfaces with spatial context, so his surfaces have an intensity in all registers.” Ruhwald’s work is represented in more than 20 public collections around the world, including The Victoria and Albert Museum, United Kingdom; Musée des Arts décoratifs, France and The Denver Art Museum. This lecture is sponsored in part by the Robert James Ceramic Endowment.


The Cultural Forum is a program of the University of Oregon, presenting a broad selection of music, performing arts, film, contemporary issues, and the visual arts. Cultural Forum events are conceived of, initiated, negotiated, booked, promoted and carried out by student coordinators with the support of dedicated staff members. Programs reflect a wide range of diversity and artistic expression in the entertainment, art and political worlds. Here are some of the events we have coming this year:

Queer Film Festival website: qff.uoregon.edu February 5 through 7, 2016

Founded in 1992, this year marks the 24rd Anniversary of the University of Oregon Queer Film Festival. One of the first film festivals of its kind in the North West. The Queer Film Festival aims to support the LGBTQ community through films. We are a multicultural, multiethnic festival that is open to many different forms of expression.

Pacific North West Art Annual

Emerald

MOBILE

To exhibit Spring Term 2016

Over the past 65 years, the EMU has purchased many pieces on behalf of the U of O student body and as a highlight in the community we encourage you to submit your work and be a part of the 2016 Pacific Northwest Art Annual.

Willamette Valley Music Festival

website: wvmf.uoregon.edu May 7, 2016

The Willamette Valley Music Festival is an all day, multi-stage festival that takes place on The University of Oregon campus. This festival is open to all ages and is free to both students and the surrounding community.

DailyEmerald.com

GIRL WHO’S ALWAYS READY FOR AN ADVENTURE Need some hiking buddies? Interested in the Outdoor Program? Looking for somewhere to go other than Spencer Butte? Check out the Adventure page at DailyEmerald.com

A program of the Erb Memorial Union, the Cultural Forum is funded by student incidental fees, event revenue, grants, and sponsorships. For more information on how to support cultural events, please contact our office.

YOUR ESSENTIALS. YOUR EMERALD.

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đ&#x;“– COVER

Living room deals ➥

DANIEL BROMFIELD, @BROMF3

*Names of sources and strains have been changed to protect subjects’ privacy.

A

riel has just driven across town to make a delivery. She plops down on a couch in a dusty college living room and unzips her bag, surrounded by tapestries and posters of rock stars on the walls. She pulls out jar after jar in front of her buyer, who stares greedily at her wares as an unmistakable reek settles over the room. Her wares come with colorful names like Beezlebud, Trinity and Dolly Dagger. For those unsure, there’s the signature “Ariel Mix.� “I’ll take the Blue Dream,� her customer said, gingerly sniffing a jar. This is a scene from the twilight of Oregon’s soonto-be-bygone era of illegal recreational marijuana. These sorts of living room pot deals are likely to become far less common once the sale of recreational marijuana is legalized Oct 1. In fact, Ariel’s friend Sebastian, another dealer who sometimes sells her wares for her, intends to stop as soon as it becomes legalized. Ariel has no plans to quit anytime soon. She predicts there will still be ample demand for black-market pot, thanks to the high taxes and prices of legal recreational marijuana. “People are going to be paying 20 bucks or more a gram at rec shops,� she said, compared to her average price of $10 per gram. “[Plenty of] people who smoke weed in this town are poor college kids.

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The number of people that want weed won’t go down with legalization. And there’s always the under-21s.� Selling pot is Ariel’s main source of income at the moment. Currently unemployed, she sells marijuana to repay her student loans at the University of Oregon, hoping to re-enroll in courses this winter. She generally picks up a half to a pound from her grower, making between $100 and $500 every five-day business cycle before she re-ups her stash. Though most of her customers use pot recreationally, Ariel sees a future selling to medical patients who can’t afford highpriced dispensary marijuana. “Selling ganj is something I can feel good about doing in that the plant is, for a lot of people, an important medicine to have access to affordably,� she says. “I have always felt like if dealing was something I was going to get into, I wanted it to be worthwhile.� Ariel isn’t completely closed to the idea of going into the legitimate marijuana business someday. She apprenticed to a grower over the past summer, learning the ins and outs of cultivating and harvesting pot plants. She could see herself growing for recreational or medical dispensaries. The black market isn’t dying out any time soon, and dealers like Ariel are sure to give the state’s newest industry some serious competition.

di


Same bud,

different source. Now that pot is legal, the marijuana marketplace is split in two. The story on the left follows a local dealer, selling it the old school way. The right explores how local dispensaries are accommodating recreational smokers.

Hit the market

EMERSON MALONE. @ALLMALONE

A

fter an historic low from the Oregon football team last weekend, the state of Oregon is preparing for an historic high today, as those over 21 years old may now legally buy and recreationally use marijuana. Medical marijuana dispensaries around Eugene are now extending their services to recreational sales, starting Oct. 1, when the law goes into effect throughout Oregon. Customers will be able to purchase a limit of seven grams (a quarter ounce) of marijuana flower and four clones (immature MJ plants.) “Based on the amount of [non-patients] currently calling in or trying to come in [for recreational weed], I’m thinking Oct. 1 is just going to go crazy for all of us,” said Jim Wymore, manager and budtender at Oregon Medigreen (570 Lawrence St.) While buying bud is allowed, marijuana edibles, concentrates (such as hash, oil, and tinctures) and topicals (a medical lotion or essential oil to rub on your skin) cannot be sold recreationally, according to the Senate Bill 460 that Gov. Kate Brown signed into law on July 28 this year. This mandate expires on Dec. 31, 2016. Beginning Jan. 4 next year, retail outlets can apply for recreational marijuana licenses from the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, the governing body that oversees and regulates marijuana sales and usage in the state. Recreational marijuana sales will be taxed somewhere between 17 to 20 percent, until Jan. 4, when it’s hiked up to a 25 percent tax. A downside for people who don’t have a connection in the black market is an upside for schools, mental health, alcoholism and drug services and state police, who will receive some cut of the taxes (as written in Measure

91.) Recreational shops won’t open until later in 2016, at which point some dispensaries, including Oregon Medigreen, will revert to being exclusively medical. Depending on your preference, adults over 21 can now choose between sativa (the kind that makes you active) and indica (the much-less active) strains. For beginners, budtenders at several dispensaries around Eugene recommend that newcomers and the uninitiated should go for a strain of marijuana that’s high in cannabinoid (chemical compounds known as CBD) and low in tetrahydrocannabinol (the active chemical known as THC.) The high-CBD/low-THC combination makes for a mild, relaxing high with low psychotropic effects that won’t be overwhelming. Budtender Andrew Thatch at Twenty After Four Wellness Center (located at 420 Blair Blvd.) recommends the following flowers for beginners: Bubba Kush (indica, 25 percent THC) and Lemon Haze (sativa, 20 percent THC.) Wymore suggests that the uninitiated try small amounts of different strains – the operative phrase being small amounts. “You don’t have to look like the guys from Cheech and Chong and blow out a big plume of smoke that fills the room,” Wymore said. “Just take one or two small hits, give yourself a half hour to an hour and see how it really affects you.” If you were lucky enough to get a sticker from Twenty After Four, you may redeem it on Thursday for a free pre-rolled joint while it’s open (10 a.m. to 10 p.m.). Twenty After Four has roughly 14 varieties of flower for recreational sale, says budtender Chris Miller.

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đ&#x;?‚ FOOD FILLING OUT THE COLLEGE DIET ➥ANNA LIEBERMAN

Cooking for yourself can be frustrating and time-consuming, but it allows for more variation than cereal and instant noodles every day. These three recipes are simple and take no more than 20 minutes to prepare and cook. They look nice enough to impress your friends and healthy enough to please your parents. Note: All recipes are one serving.

START COMMANDING ATTENTION. START OUT ON TOP. START RAISING THE BAR. START HIGHER. START ONE STEP AHEAD. START MOVING UP. START STRONG FROM DAY ONE. START STRONG. There’s strong. Then there’s Army Strong. Want to be a leader in life? Joining Army ROTC at the University of Oregon is the strongest way to start. You’ll learn leadership skills, and can earn a full-tuition, merit-based scholarship. After graduation, you’ll also be a U.S. Army Officer. To get started, visit goarmy.com/rotc/ca07.

As a student in Military Science, you will also be eligible for a 40% discount while living in university housing. Please stop by our office on the corner of 17th and Agate Street or contact Darren McMahon at 541-346-7682 or mcmahond@uoregon.edu. Š2015. Paid for by the United States Army. All rights reserved. PA G E 8

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Broccoli Pasta (prep + cook time: 15 minutes) Ingredients: 1 ½ cups of broccoli 1 cup of any pasta 3 tablespoons of olive oil 1 ½ tablespoons of Parmesan cheese 1 teaspoon of salt Directions: 1. Fill a small pot about three-quarters full with water. Cover and let water boil on medium heat. 2. Once the water’s boiling, add salt, pasta and broccoli. Cook uncovered for the time specified on the pasta box, stirring a few times. 3. Drain the pasta and broccoli when the pasta done, then pour them back into the pot. 4. Pour the olive oil on top and mix everything together. 5. Remove most of the broccoli and mash it into tiny pieces with a fork. 6. Pour the broccoli and Parmesan cheese into the pot and stir. 7. Let sit for two minutes and enjoy. Salmon Taco Salad (prep + cook time: 20 minutes) Ingredients: 1 serving of salmon (about 5 oz.) 1 cup of spinach 1 tablespoon of olive oil 1 squirt of lemon juice 2 taco shells Directions: 1. Set oven temperature to 400 degrees. 2. Place the salmon in a Pyrex pan and put it in the oven when the oven is ready. Let it cook for 1720 minutes, or until it’s a dull pink. Complete steps 3 through 5 while the salmon is cooking. 3. Pour the olive oil in a bowl. 4. Crunch the taco shells into small pieces and pour into the bowl. 5. Rip the spinach into small pieces and pour into the bowl. 6. Pour the lemon juice over the salmon, then crush the salmon into small pieces with a fork. 7. Pour the salmon into the bowl and mix all of the ingredients together. 8. Enjoy.


đ&#x;“Ł OPINION

HOARDING

THROUGH THE COLLEGE YEARS ➥ TA N N E R O W E N S , @ T _ O W E N S 2 1 I have never found myself relating so much to a reality television show until I started emptying out my storage unit before moving in for my senior year. As the moving truck started piling higher and higher, I came to the realization that I am a hoarder. Like many University of Oregon students, I moved to Eugene for my freshman year with nothing but a backpack full of books and a suitcase full of clothes. Living in the Bean West residence hall, there wasn’t exactly room for anything else. Throughout the year, I collected a few more essential items: bed sheets, a television, posters, a skateboard and a hamper. Come sophomore year, I made the decision to move into an unfurnished two-bedroom apartment with a friend. This is where my hoarding began. We had three rooms to fill so we kicked our money-saving skills into action and started asking around for furniture. Before we knew it, we had grandparents, siblings and friends offering up the furniture they no longer needed. Although we were willing to accept anything, we could not believe some of the quality furniture that these people were willing to give away. That year, our apartment was the place to be. Compared to most of my friends’ apartments, ours felt more homey due to the vintage furniture and wall decorations. Everyone wanted to come over for Duck games and movie nights because we had the perfect amount of seating for any occasion. Once the lease for our apartment was up, we felt it was time to upgrade to a house, furthering the need to fill space. Moving out, we realized we had more stuff than we thought, but we had no idea how much we were about to acquire. With the addition of two new roommates coming from their own apartments, we each had our own full set of kitchenware, enough table space to feed 10 and a movie collection to die for. Before the end of junior year, one of our roommates decided to leave. When she had moved out for good, we noticed that she

had left some of her things. We asked her about the extra stuff and, to our surprise, she was willing to just give us her things. We still could not believe that college students had so much extra stuff — until we started moving out of our house for the summer. After days of packing, we had a house full of boxes ready to be hauled into the moving truck. A number of trips and a handful of squished fingers later, we were all moved out. Our storage unit was full to the brim with tables, chairs and bikes piled high on top of beds, desks and couches. Since we were losing a roommate, we had to find new accommodations for senior year. In turn, we found two more roommates, making us a total of five. Like before, adding two new roommates meant adding another truck full of household items. When it came time to move in for our senior year, we were all up and ready to go at 8 a.m. with smiles on our faces. We knew we had a long day of moving ahead of us, but not having seen each others’ storage units, we had no idea what we were really in for. Although we never stopped complaining about how much extra stuff we were unloading, we were happy to each have our own couch or recliner to relax on at the end of the day. Now two weeks later, we are finally getting the last boxes emptied into every nook and cranny we can find. A lack of closet space has caused some suitcases to sit full of clothes and the couches may be squeezed together a bit. But we have finally come to terms with the fact that we have too much stuff. We are now trying our best to offer up our items on Oregon’s Free & For Sale Facebook page, donate to St. Vincent DePaul’s and throw away knickknacks we have no recollection of buying. We still have certain stuff we just can’t seem to get rid of, but who knows, we might need it when we go our separate ways after graduation.

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Need a hand with Xniversity UHODWHG FRQFHUQV?

O ffice S tudent Advocacy of

Free advice and assistance (541) 346-3722 • officeofstudentadvocacy.org OSA is an ASUO LQFLGHQWDO IHH IXQGHG program Services are available to current UO fee-paying students.

IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS For a variety of Student Leadership Opportunities. Please apply at asuo.uoregon.edu no later than Monday, October 5 For additional information please contact asuo@uoregon.edu or (541) 346-3724

Photo by Cameron Christensen

MORE COVERAGE, MORE PHOTOS,

EXPANDING FRONTIERS The Jack and Susy Wadsworth Collection of Postwar Japanese Prints

MORE ARTS & CULTURE.

October 3 – January 3

Opening Reception

Friday, October 2, 6–8 p.m. A Conversation on Collecting with Susy and Jack Wadsworth Saturday, October 3, 2 p.m. Moderated by Anne Rose Kitagawa, exhibition co-curator and Jill Hartz, executive director. Followed by a tour of the exhibition For additional programs, visit jsma. uoregon.edu/Wadsworth

Are you a UO Student Member? Join today! http://jsma.uoregon.edu/ student-membership

Plus reader polls, videos, and reader comments.

The exhibition is made possible by the WLS Spencer Foundation, the Coeta and Donald Barker Changing Exhibitions Endowment, The Harold & Arlene Schnitzer CARE Foundation, the Oregon Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, and JSMA members. NISHIOKA Fumihiko, Untitled, Japanese, Shōwa period, 1977. Kappazuri (stencil print); ink and color on paper, edition 4/10. 30 1⁄16 x 20 5⁄16 in.

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We give you more, and that makes college better.

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a campus classic. SUDOKUS

Looking for the solutions? Download the Emerald Mobile app today. It’s available on both the iTunes and Google Play stores. ACROSS

1 Peanut butter holder   4 Kilt wearer   8 Coffee lure 13 Penny prez 14 Have the ___ for 15 Singer Josh whose self-titled 2001 debut album went 4x platinum 16 Milky Way, for one 17 Comedian cultivates flowers? 19 Schlub 21 Toning targets, for short 22 What a court interprets 23 Poet inks a contract? 26 Nosh 27 The opposition 28 GQ or S.I. 29 Conundrum 30 Exhibit some grief 31 Looney Tunes devil, for short 32 Assassin John ___ Booth 33 Opera singer scrawls graffiti? 36 Monasteries 39 Bagel topper

40 Sondheim’s “Sweeney ___” 44 Land of Minos 45 ___-pitch softball 46 Prefix with comic 47 Squealers 48 Actress stumbles? 50 Egg cells 51 “___ Wiedersehen” 52 Supporter of the arts? 53 Philosopher removes his clothes? 57 “___ don’t!” 59 Adjusts to one’s environment 60 “Tout ___” (“All mine”: Fr.) 61 Cable inits. for film buffs 62 Weighty books 63 Elects 64 Word after “you might” or “you don’t”

Down

1 Poke   2 Ornamental shell source   3 Send on a detour, say   4 Tatters   5 “As cold as the Rockies” sloganeer   6 Non-Rx

7 Disapproving cluck   8 Flight board column: Abbr.   9 Fishing shop purchase 10 Bunker Hill Monument, for one 11 Everglades mammal 12 They cross in a crossword 15 Yaks 18 Crew 20 Tiny excerpts 23 Part of the Iams logo 24 Apple variety 25 Graceful antelope 26 Gives support 29 Squealer 31 “___ the season …” 32 Medium for Madame Tussaud 34 New York city with an amusement park that’s a National Historic Landmark 35 Plane, for one 36 Trapeze artist, e.g. 37 Impressive show of courage 38 Early Sony recorder 41 Gives new-employee training, e.g.

42 Item on many a doctor’s wall 43 Spanish couple 45 Search (through) 46 Equilibrium 48 Commotion 49 The Home ___ 51 Some “giants” in “Honey, I Shrunk the Kids” 54 Unlock, to a bard 55 1990s Indian P.M. 56 Little handful 58 Like Arctic waters

Bring Bring in in this this completed completed puzzle puzzle for for 1/2 1/2 price price appetizers appetizers between between the the hours hours of of 2 2 -- 9 9 p.m. p.m. Monday Monday through through Wednesday! Wednesday! 550 E. 13th Ave, Eugene • (541) 349-8986 • Open Daily 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.

Fill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and 3x3 block. Use logic and process elimination to solve the puzzle. The difficulty level ranges from Bronze (easiest) to Silver to Gold (hardest).

WE BRING

THE PROPS,

CAMERA,

LIGHTS, & STAFF. YOU BRING

YOUR FABULOUS

A simple way for UO students

TO SEARCH FOR

HOUSING DucksHousing.com

SELF. BOOK NOW

photobooth@dailyemerald.com T H U R S D AY, O C T O B E R 1 , 2 0 1 5

EMERALD

PA G E 1 1


FALL 2015 BACK TO SCHOOL

ART & SCHOOL SUPPLY SALE Save on Art & School Supplies now thru 10.12.15 ART SUPPLIES

reg. SALE

Open Stock: Copic Markers (Sketch & Original)

$6.25 $5.00

Art Alternatives 8 ½ x11 Sketchbooks

$10.95 $7.95

Prismacolor Pencil Value Pack

$27.00 $14.99

(12-piece Prisma pencil set & 5.5x8.5 globetrotter sketchbook)

$11.99 $5.00

Jack Richeson 12ct Pastel sets (Choose from white, black or variegated grays)

Jack Richeson 8pc Ceramic Tool Kit Staedtler 3pc Woodless HB Pencil Pack

$12.95 $8.00 $4.99 $1.00 20% OFF

M. Graham Paint - Buy 3 tubes, get 1 tube free (includes Oil, Acrylic, Watercolor, and Gouache*)

Art Advantage Twin Pack Canvas

50% OFF

Alvin Cutting Mats

25% OFF

(black, green or translucent)

NEW! We’ve doubled our color selection! Check out our expanded range of Daniel Smith Watercolor Paint! A northwest favorite — now available at The Duck Store!

NEW! Princeton Elite Brushes (4850 series) These brushes have great liquid holding capacity while still being able to maintain a fine point!

SCHOOL SUPPLIES

reg.

SALE 20% OFF

Selected Plain and Imprinted Spirals

(Includes: Roaring Springs, Ampad 13085,13384 ,13376, 25481,40013)

April Copy Paper

$6.00

$4.00

Tot Fashion Mini Stapler (#79141)

$4.00

$2.95

Scotch Ultra Edge Scissors

$4.30

$3.25

WRITING INSTRUMENTS

reg. SALE Assorted Carded Pens and Pencils $1, $2, $3 Energize-X pencils $1.95 $1.55 Slicci Gel Pens 50% OFF Coometz Pencils 50% OFF IRemedy Pencils .5mm & .7mm $4.79 $1.00 Integrity Pencils .5mm $7.00 $4.00 Sharpie Accent Highlighter (Pocket & Tank) $1.10 $0.85

PA G E 1 2

EMERALD

T H U R S D AY, O C T O B E R 1 , 2 0 1 5


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