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IN REVIEW R A E Y A
THIS SCHOOL YEAR HELD CHALLENGES
on campus and nationwide. The Emerald has chosen five of the most impactful stories for Oregon students. STUDENTS WORK TO DIVERSIFY CAMPUS
STUDENT GROUPS YOU DIDN’T KNOW EXISTED
MEN’S GOLF WINS NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS
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Every Year Student Mental Health Advocates challenge all UO Greek chapters to a coin drive competition called Change for Mental Change. May is mental health awareness month, and to celebrate, each chapter had one week to raise fuds for the NAMI Peer Support Group at the UO! Together, the Greek and the general community surpased our goal and raised a total of $600! Because Sigma Kappa rasied the most, they will recieve a plaque and $100.00 towards their Philanthrophy- Alzheimers Disease research and program. Sigma Kappa may have won, but Thank You to all who participated! We greatly appreciate your support of mental health at the UO, we will see you next year!
“University of Oregon top 3 Greek Chapters” 1. Sigma Kappa $143.44 2. Theta Chi $62.49 3. Delta Upsilon $50.00
Congratulations, Sigma Kappa! Every penny counts!
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ð&#x;”¦ NEWS
WEEKLY NEWS WRAP-UP Sexual assault on campus, UCLA murder-suicide, and Eugene stabbing âž¡ JENNIFER
FLECK, @JENNIFERFLECK
University of Oregon student sexually assaulted on campus
Two deaths in shooting at University of California, Los Angeles
Man stabbed downtown Thursday morning
A campus crime alert sent out on the morning of May 31 reported the assault of a female student on 13th Avenue at Agate Street. The female was walking when she was groped by a passing male riding a scooter at around 7 p.m. on Monday, May 30. The man was in a group of 5-7 others who were on bikes and skateboards. The offender was described in the report as either Hispanic or Pacific Islander with long, slicked-back hair. The situation is still under investigation. Report further information to the UOPD at 541-346-2919.
The morning of June 1, shots were reported on the UCLA campus in the engineering building, Boelter Hall. The campus was placed on lockdown while the building was searched and students were evacuated. Around 12 p.m. Los Angeles Police Department Chief Charlie Beck held a press conference and revealed the shots heard were the result of a homicide suicide in one of the offices in Boelter Hall. The Daily Bruin reported that UCLA associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering William Klug was killed by UCLA alum Mainak Sarkar over an intellectual property dispute. Klug was Sarkar’s former research advisor.
Early Thursday, June 2, behind the Salvation Army on West Seventh Avenue, a 36-year-old was injured after a verbal disagreement turned physical. The victim was taken to Sacred Heart Medical Center at RiverBend with multiple, non life-threatening lacerations. The victim is unable to identify the attacker, and a search for the attacker is still being conducted.
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ON THE COVER The Emerald recaps the events of the 2015-2016 school year including pertinent news on campus and tragic events nationwide. Photographs by Samuel Marshall.
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đ&#x;”Ś NEWS
Student performers represent this year’s theme of “Keepin’ it Civil: An Ode to Black History.�
➥ CHRISTOPHER
STEPS TOWARD A MORE INCLUSIVE CAMPUS PA G E 4
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Student dancers perform at the Annual Divine Nine Step Show to a full house.
TROTCHIE
University of Oregon’s population of black students hovers around 2 percent. It’s been that way since 1986. Black students are not seeing many other black students around campus, and many are left feeling like outsiders in classrooms and hallways at UO. Black student groups are fighting to change this. Arthur Dickson, coordinator of the Black Male Alliance, knows the personal and complex difficulties UO’s 472 black students encounter on campus. “From January until now, from [Black Male Alliance] alone, six people have left and gone home because they can’t stand the climate at University of Oregon,� Dickson said. His frustration with UO’s stagnant numbers of black students has reached a critical level. He is disappointed and feels that strategies scheduled to begin fall term 2016 are too late for some of his peers. Another student feeling frustration about her situation is Akiva Hillman, co-coordinator of the Black Student Union. She views UO’s current climate as difficult and unwelcoming for black students. Hillman centers her frustrations around the isolation she feels as a member of one of the university’s smallest minority groups. “I think a lot of the reasons we don’t have black students on campus, just in the first case, are retention problems and cultural competency issues that a lot of the professors and admin don’t really carry in this campus,� Hillman said. “African American students aren’t eager to come here because it’s not a place where we are comfortable.� Her work at BSU focuses on helping black community members at UO by creating awareness and building community ties through social engagement. They recently
held an event in the Wheeler Pavilion at the Lane Events Center. On May 7, over 500 community members and students filled the auditorium for the 14th Annual Divine Nine Step Show. By 5 p.m., nearly every seat in the house was filled. Nate Jackson, comedian and emcee of the event, believes events like the ADNSS mean everything to the black community. “If you look around, it’s vibrant,� Jackson said. “This is about recruitment and retention. Look at all the young kids, they’re already wearing colors and letters. All you’re doing is adding to your own legacy of your university, so it means everything.� UO President Michael Schill recently sent an open letter to the campus community listing steps the university will take beginning fall term of 2016 to better accommodate a more enriched community for black students at the university. Schill plans to bolster the number of black students at the university with stronger recruitment strategies, the implementation of a student advisory group, increased number of black speakers on campus and inviting six of the nine historically black fraternities to join Greek Life at UO. Assistant Dean of Students Quantrell Willis sees Schill’s letter as proof that the school is putting the appropriate resources toward a more culturally competent environment for black students at UO. “President Schill’s recent announcement regarding the various commitments that the University of Oregon is making in response to the Black Student Task Force’s list of demands sends a great message about the U of O’s commitment to creating an inclusive campus for black students,� he said.
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đ&#x;“– COVER
A YEAR AT ODDS ➥ K AY L E E T O R N AY, @ K A _ T O R N AY ➥ JACK HEFFERNAN, @JACKTHEFFERNAN
The 2015-2016 school year was full of protests, rallies and new faces in administration and other departments. Here are five of the stories that had some of the biggest impacts on the University of Oregon:
Another year, another tuition raise UCC shooting and recovery FALL TERM BEGAN WITH A NATIONAL TRAGEDY. On the morning of Oct. 1, a shooter at the Umpqua Community College campus killed nine people and left seven others wounded. The shooter acted alone and was also killed after exchanging gunfire with police. The UCC campus closed down until Oct. 5. Meanwhile, Eugene and students at the UO organized outpourings of support, holding a candlelight vigil in Alton Baker Park on Oct. 4. The university also organized a vigil the following night. In their next game against the Colorado Buffaloes, Oregon football players sported ribbon stickers on their helmets in support of UCC, and the same ribbon was emblazoned on the field at Autzen Stadium.
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ONE OF THE KEY TOPICS of student protests on the steps of Johnson Hall this year was tuition. On March 4, the Board of Trustees approved a tuition increase of 4.7 percent for in-state students and 4.5 percent for out-of-state. In the past decade, tuition has almost doubled, and student leaders have led protests each year to fight against increases. The BOT sets tuition after getting input from the Tuition and Fees Advisory Board, a process that alienated some students this year. The TFAB has two student members to ensure that student voices are included in the tuition recommendation to the BOT. At a meeting in late January when both student members were absent, the TFAB decided on its tuition recommendation and then cancelled all its remaining meetings.
Fraternity and Sorority Life struggles to curb misconduct Black UO students demand to be heard More turnover for UOPD THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON POLICE DEPARTMENT struggled through a few snags this year. Most notably, three members of its department, Lieutenant Brandon Lebrecht, Sergeant Scott Cameron and Chief Carolyn McDermed, were ordered by a jury to pay $750,000 in a lawsuit against them. In 2014, former UOPD officer James Cleavenger said he was wrongfully terminated in a retaliatory manner for reporting misconduct within the department. Although the university expects to pay the damages through insurance if it chooses not to appeal, it may take time for the legacy of the department’s misconduct (which included a frequently updated list of people and things that officers classified as needing to “eat a bowl of dicks”) to fade. A few months after the loss in court, McDermed unexpectedly retired on Feb. 26 — even though she had appointments scheduled out for another week, including a meeting about Track Town 2016. A public records request filed by the Oregonian later revealed that the university paid McDermed $53,000, or the equivalent of the four months left on her contract plus two weeks of accrued vacation, to leave the position. The university brought back retired UOPD officer Pete Deshpande to fill the position temporarily and then accepted applications to replace him until May 19. The university said it plans to hire the new chief by the end of June.
THE EYES OF THE NATION turned toward the University of Missouri on Nov. 9, when the football team officially refused to practice or play for the school until the president of the university, Tim Wolfe, resigned. The strike echoed the demands of several Mizzou student groups, including a graduate student who participated in his own hunger strike for a week. The impacts of the demonstrations reached UO, where various student groups launched protests of their own. On Nov. 13, the Black Women of Achievement organized a rally and march called “In solidarity with Mizzou,” which drew a crowd of around 500 people. Students, faculty and community members shared their experiences with racism at the university. After the rally, organizers formed the Black Student Task Force and met with UO administration to present a list of their own demands to “create a healthy and positive campus climate for black students.” These demands included renaming buildings like Deady and Dunn Hall, both of which are named for men who had connections with white supremacy groups. In April, UO President Michael Schill and Vice President for Equity and Inclusion Yvette Alex-Assensoh published a letter to the campus community addressing six of the 12 demands from the BSTF. The actions that the UO plans to take by fall of 2016 include bringing six historically black fraternities and sororities to campus, establishing an African American advisory board and expanding efforts to recruit African American students. Efforts like renaming the buildings are expected to take longer to accomplish.
FALL RUSH WEEK ENDED WITH LESS-THANENCOURAGING results about the rate of sexual assault among members of Fraternity and Sorority Life. The latest survey released in October 2015 and conducted by UO psychology professor Jennifer Freyd showed that 35 percent of sorority women reported experiencing attempted or completed nonconsensual sexual contact during their time at the university, compared to 26 percent among non-sorority women. The 2015 results echoed similar survey results from 2014, which culminated in a moratorium on any expansion of FSL, including adding new chapters. Although the October results showed improvement over the previous year, the moratorium was extended in April following the results of another external review of FSL released in the same month that revealed other concerns about high-risk behavior in chapters. But sexual assault wasn’t the only topic tied to FSL. Two fraternities, Delta Upsilon and Delta Tau Delta began accepting transgender men into their chapters. Delta Upsilon also extended its policy to ensure that all sexist and genderist language is not tolerated. Fraternity Phi Delta Theta was suspended from campus for two years for an underage drinking incident, and Beta Theta Pi was disbanded for high-risk hazing behavior. The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity returned to campus during winter term. During the weekend of May 20, UO FSL came under national scrutiny after a massive littering incident at Lake Shasta. After photos of the litter — showing UO gear and a cooler painted with Lambda Chi Alpha’s letters and the words, “Do you wanna do some blow, man?” went viral, the university and the FSL community came under fire, despite the fact that the annual visit to the lake is not an official university or FSL-affiliated event. The UO Lambda Chi Alpha chapter was suspended by its national headquarters just a few hours after the photos gained traction online. Although fraternity and sorority members couldn’t initially go back to the lake to help cleanup crews because the litter was too hazardous, the students eventually returned to assist with the cleanup.
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10 STUDENT GROUPS YOU DIDN’T KNOW EXISTED ➥ JORDYN
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The UO Poetry Slam Team performs. (Jordyn Brown)
As a student, it’s easy to get lost in the sea of people on a large campus. It can also be hard to find a place where you fit in. Maybe you can’t afford Greek Life or don’t want to join one of the conventional groups or programs you’ve seen around. Here are some lesser-known student groups on campus.
1.
Ahiru Daiko
This is the University of Oregon’s Japanese Drumming Ensemble. Founded in 2010, the group has worked to help integrate students into the musical world of taiko drumming. There are no requirements to join except a positive attitude and a willingness to learn.
2.
UO Smash Club
This is a club revolving completely around playing a Nintendo favorite, Super Smash Bros. The Smash Club has competitive tournaments and keeps extensive and detailed records of the highest scores. Meetings are weekly on campus.
6.
U R Awesome
The whole point of this student group is to promote happiness and kindness within the UO community. They do anything from offering free hugs to hosting workshops and meet weekly.
7.
Forbidden Fruit
Love Rocky Horror Picture Show? This is the group that keeps the show going in Eugene from year to year and allows us all to get our Halloween fix. It is completely student run but receives help from others in the Eugene/Springfield area.
3.
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9.
K.Aire
The UO’s very own K-Pop dance cover group. For K-Pop fans and dancers alike, this group is a mingling of the two as they learn and perform dances and occasionally hold open sessions for those who are interested in joining as well.
Cricket Team
It definitely doesn’t get the same amount of attention as football, but it’s still here. The UO has its own cricket team that plays regularly and is open to anyone with previous cricket experience or to those wanting to learn the game.
5.
UO Poetry Slam
While you may have seen our school poets at recent events or in university news, they are still unknown to many on campus. Expressing themselves through the art of spoken word, this team is only a few years old and has already gone to compete at the national level multiple times. The team is kept small but open to new members during the year and frequently hosts events and showcases.
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TAMID
Ever been interested about the inner workings of the Israeli economy? If you’re looking for a club to give you a little bit of a unique edge in the business field, or you’re just looking to learn more about international economics, this group is open to all.
UO UO Student Student Labor Labor Action Project Project Action
If you’re looking to do something to make a bigger impact, this could be a good fit. This group works actively to influence decisions that will directly impact students like tuition increases, labor negotiations and fairness on campus.
10.
Quidditch Club
Still can’t get over the fact that the Harry Potter legacy ended five years ago with the release of the final movie? If you dream of taking flight and being the best seeker of the century, look into this UO club. You won’t be flying, but you’ll still get a workout while fulfilling at least a bit of your lifelong dream of being a wizard.
Awards 2016 Emerging Leader The Eugene Area Alumnae Panhellenic Council congratulates the 2016 Emerging Leader Award recipients:
Nicole Kiriazis
Alpha Chi Omega
Olivia Onustock
Morgan Thompson Delta Gamma
Alpha Phi
Jeske Glenn
Jordan Allison Pi Beta Phi
Chi Omega
Clarice Beasley Kappa Delta
Virginia LaGrow Gamma Phi Beta
These women demonstrate a commitment to the founding purposes of the Greek community at the University of Oregon in scholarship, service, leadership and social excellence.
⚡ SPORTS MEN’S GOLF
Oregon redshirt junior Sulman Raza celebrates after scoring the winning putt in the national championship. (Adam Eberhardt)
DUCKS WIN THE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP ➡ WILL
DENNER, @WILL_DENNER
Another day and another match rally later, the fate of Oregon men’s golf’s season once again fell on Sulman Raza and his putter. This time, against top-seed Texas in the NCAA Championships match finals at Eugene Country Club on June 1, 18 holes wasn’t enough to decide the match between Raza and Texas’ Taylor Funk. Both players battled into a three-hole, sudden-death playoff. Ultimately, Raza prevailed over Funk by dropping a six-foot birdie putt on the 10th green. The win gave Oregon a 3-2 victory over Texas as well as its first national championship in program history. The moment was surreal for both Raza and head coach Casey Martin, who walked the course with Raza during the latter stages of the round. Not only was Raza playing the highest-stakes match of his life against Funk, he was doing it in front of a crowd of several hundred, many of whom were either Oregon fans or knew Raza when he was a state champion golfer at South Eugene High. Raza had a golden opportunity to put the match away on the first hole of the playoff, but missed his putt just right of the hole. Then, going back to 18 on the next hole, Raza’s approach shot landed 20-25 feet from the pin, while Funk landed within five. Texas was one putt away from snatching the championship out of Oregon’s control. But Funk misread the putt, and it veered right of the hole. Raza got the rare opportunity of playing
the 10th twice in the span of three holes. Consider it a mulligan. This time, he made the putt from the same distance he was unable to the first time, resulting in his teammates swarming him moments later. “That pile we got into on the last green with Sulman is something I’ll never forget,” Aaron Wise said. “It was just raw emotion.” In bizarre fashion, Oregon got its first point of the match before either team teed off. Beau Hossler, who injured his shoulder late in Texas’ semifinal match against USC Tuesday, May 31, was unable to play his match against Ducks senior Zach Foushee. Texas was forced to forfeit the match and the point, which also meant Foushee couldn’t play. “I was obviously bummed,” Foushee said. “I mean, it’s my senior year ... But a point for the Ducks got us here, so I’m happy it ended the way it did.” Freshman Edwin Yi continued his steep freshman year trajectory, giving the Ducks their first earned point of the afternoon. Yi jumped to a three-hole lead on the back nine before taking down Gavin Hall 4&3. He flirted with a hole-in-one on the par-four, 350-yard 8th hole, driving a shot right down the middle of the green that eventually went long. “That kid just had a confidence and swag that I hadn’t seen before,” Oregon assistant coach Van Williams said. Then there was Wise, playing his last round for Oregon. Texas sophomore Scottie
Scheffler pushed Wise throughout, jumping out to an early lead on the third hole that he never gave up. The two battled through 15 holes, but Scheffler ultimately took the match 4&3. Wise’s week included an individual and team championship, both of which give him plenty of exposure as he begins playing the PGA Canada Mackenzie Tour in June. “This young man is going to be playing a lot of golf for a long time, and I can’t wait to watch him,” Martin said. “I’m bummed he’s leaving, but he needs to go.” Thomas Lim, playing in the last match of the finals against Doug Ghim, had one of his better outings of the week, but ultimately Ghim evened the match 2-2 for Texas. For Martin and the Ducks, this championship was the culmination of a year and half of high expectations set on them. From the time Eugene Country Club won the host bid in the fall of 2014 to NCAA Regionals earlier in May, pressure was a central topic of conversation for the Ducks. “It was real and it was significant, but it also galvanizes everybody and gets you focused because it’s like, we’ve got to perform,” Martin said. The home course advantage certainly played a factor in Oregon’s win. But playing a deep Texas team, even without Hossler, still presented the Ducks their biggest challenge of the season. And they delivered. “We didn’t lose this golf tournament. They won it,” Texas head coach John Fields said. “I’m excited for them.”
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đ&#x;“Ł OPINION GUEST VIEWPOINT:
ASUO EXECUTIVE
YEAR IN REVIEW ➥ 2015-2016
ASUO EXECUTIVE
This piece reflects the views of the authors, the 2015-2016 ASUO Executive, and not those of Emerald Media Group. It has been edited by the Emerald for grammar, style and brevity. Read the full letter at Dailyemerald.com. Send your columns or submissions about our content or campus issues to letters@dailyemerald.com. Thank you to all students who have allowed us to serve as a support for student voices over this past year. After a contentious election in 2015, we have worked hard to engage, grow student power and advocate for access on campus. The ASUO is spread across many areas and is heavily involved in issues of policy. This year, we worked primarily in the areas of sexual violence prevention and education, campus safety, food security, accessibility and tuition affordability. In addition to these projects, we advocated for funding for higher education in Salem, sought to secure student input on the health center expansion project and attempted to improve education between students by obtaining the student email listserv from UO admin.
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As our sexual and mental health advocate, Sophie Albanis expanded on her already vast intersectional feminist sexual violence prevention and education work by arranging the first ever summit on sexual assault early in the year, bringing together student groups in the field to come up with collaborative goals. Lisa Weiss served as the accessibility advocate, pairing with the AccessABILITY Student Union to bring guest speaker Reveca Torres to campus for a discussion on spinal cord injury, developed a phone app with the infographics lab to update the true campus accessibility as reflected in the UO map, developed a flipbook with her team that highlights accessibility resources on campus and wrote a policy change for universal design with members of AASU. Weiss’ hard work has created more accessibility on campus, as well as overall awareness of the issues students with disabilities face every day. Tuition will be going up by over 4.5 percent in the upcoming school year, but it didn’t happen without strong opposition from
students this year, and we thank everyone for that participation. We presented the UO Board of Trustees with over 1,000 petition signatures against the tuition hike, suggested a reduction in IT expansion and Trustee Kurt Wilcox recommended alternative funding sources, all as ways to reduce the increase for this year. After convincing the Board to reject a 10 percent hike in a transition to a guaranteed tuition model, they unfortunately sided with the goals of President Schill and the Tuition & Fees Advisory Board administrative members in their tuition increase. In the upcoming years, there are a few things that we hope students are cognizant of. First, find any way to learn more and get engaged. This year, the administration has worked to keep the list of student emails away from the ASUO in order to break communication and awareness of issues. Though no other department or apartment rental company has a contract for sending emails, we have been dragged through several months of negotiations to even send one message and will leave office without getting the emails, despite being promised the list for several weeks now. Secondly, while this same administration wants the $6 million of student building fees to go toward a health center expansion, and we want the same, they want the ASUO to sign off on that money with no agreement in place for how conversations around the new space will be conducted. Also, they will be coming back with an ask for $10-18 million from students as they haven’t begun fundraising for the new building yet. We want to give them the $6 million because these resources are needed, but having students pay the full amount of the building with no control over the construction would be bad practice of stewardship of funds for the ASUO. Thank you again everyone for an incredible and progressive year. Stay aware and willing to challenge the university when it acts against students’ best interests, and work together to find a means of accountability.
FUN & GAMES: CROSSWORD
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1 P 1 1969 and 1986 World Series champs 5 Web address starter 9 Overhead tennis shot 14 Troop group 15 Little injury, to a toddler 16 Phi Beta ___ 17 Touchy subjects 19 Homeric epic 20 4-0 World Series win, e.g. 21 Beginning that doesn’t go smoothly 23 %: Abbr. 25 Twin of Jacob and in-law of 30-Down 26 Prefix with realism 27 Leave port 31 PX patrons 33 Like classic hospital thermometers 34 Lighten one’s portfolio, say 40 Texas home of Baylor University
41 Towing co. name near the start of the Yellow Pages 42 “Here comes trouble!” 43 Comes to rest too soon 47 The “she” in the lyric “I’m not the world’s most physical guy, / But when she squeezed me tight she nearly broke my spine” 48 “Yikes!” 49 Something to take and “make it better,” in the Beatles’ “Hey Jude” 51 Boob tubes 54 Is under the weather 57 12 on a grandfather clock 58 Quits fidgeting 61 “Hardball” airer 65 Nasal stimulus 66 Reels from a haymaker 68 Get tangled up 69 Greek philosopher known for paradoxes 70 Actor Morales 71 Icy precipitation
Edibles & Extracts for All!
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DOWN 1 “No ___, no fuss” 2 Sufficient, to a bard 3 Uniroyal product 4 What a nearly vertical hill has 5 Bunny’s movement 6 Noah’s Ark groupings 7 Her Royal Highness, e.g. 8 Mexican moolah 9 Winter attire in Vail 10 Ice cream drink 11 Beelike 12 Knockdown of all the pins in two bowls 13 Couldn’t say no 18 Protector of stray cats and dogs, for short 22 Goes back and forth, as a tail 24 “___ the season …” 27 Scatters, as seeds 28 The “E” of Q.E.D. 29 Tex-Mex serving 30 Wife of Jacob and in-law of 25-Across
32 Best black female friend 35 Philosopher ___-tzu 36 Swedish version of Lawrence 37 When doubled, a child’s train 38 City on the Rhine, to locals 39 Layered hairdo 44 It’s left when ocean water evaporates 45 Variety show segment 46 I.R.S. money 50 Loses brightness 51 Old Russian autocrats 52 Go ___ (spread online) 53 Kitchen range 55 “Hungarian Rhapsodies” composer 56 Streamlined 59 “Peter Pan” buccaneer 60 Jay formerly of latenight 62 Apollo org. 63 Young miscreant 64 Some CBS forensic spinoffs 67 Signal from a marooned sailor
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EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT! Elephant Extracts
72 Some boxing results, for short 73 “Darn it!”
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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).
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special advertising section DUCKSHOUSING.COM
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Flying the college coop
PRESENTED BY THE EMERALD’S ADVERTISING TEAM
NOW LEASING FALL 2016
3 Bedroom Apartment $795 per month
• Rate for entire 3 Bedroom unit • Within a block from campus • Gated parking garage under complex • Coin operated laundry facilities • Double Pane Windows • Great West Campus location
625 Country Club Rd. Eugene, OR 97401 P: (541) 688 - 3595 info@renteugenehomes.com www. renteugenehomes.com
DUCK FLATS 945 PATTERSON ST DUCK ABBEY 1848 HILYARD ST DUCK LOFTS 1364 PATTERSON ST
Come HOME to Bell PIPER APARTMENTS
ROYAL TERRACE
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MYRTLEWOOD APARTMENTS
1585 FERRY ALLEY
550 E.15th Ave 2 & 3 bedrooms Patio’s or balconies in most Secure building Washer & driers in units Limited parking $30.00/month 460 E.14th Ave Newer Complex! 2 & 3 bedrooms Patios & Decks On-site laundry Limited parking $30.00/month
HESS APARTMENT
1390 Alder 2 & 3 bedrooms All have balconies! On-Site laundry Limited parking $30.00/month
625 E.16th Ave 1 & 2 bedrooms Patio’s or decks On-site laundry Limited parking $30.00/month
1437 High St 1 & 2 bedroom units Townhome and loft styles On-site laundry Off Street parking
Studio’s & 2 bedroom townhomes Near Hayward Field On-site laundry Limited parking $30.00/month 2 bedroom townhomes Washer & driers in unit Off street parking
1591 HIGH/341 E.16TH AVE.
1, 2 and 4 bedroom units. On-site laundry MARLATT APARTMENTS Off street parking 749-773 E.17th Ave 1 bedroom units 610 E.14TH AVE On-site laundry 1 bedroom unit with Limited parking $30.00/month hardwood floors On-site laundry Off street parking (1 space)
GREAT VALUE! WALK TO CAMPUS
Large, 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom apartment $650/month
ALL UNITS INCLUDE
WATER, SEWER, GARBAGE, CABLE & INTERNET!
Bell Real Estate 2001 Franklin Blvd., Suite 2 Eugene, 97403
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bell-realty.com
campus direct: 541-501-3513 • office: 541-686-6188
Call 541-344-4619 280 E 17th Eugene, OR 97401
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Northbound grubhound By Alyssa Holtrust The hardest thing about planning a road trip is deciding where to eat, especially when the starting point is Eugene and the destination is Seattle. Leave the granola bars, trail mix and peanut butter pretzels at home. You won’t be needing any snacks for this trip! Start off by eating at Brail’s Restaurant in Eugene. Wesley Wachob, a junior at University of Oregon and the epitome of #exploregon, recommends having breakfast at Brail’s and ordering Joy’s Special. Wesley explains, “Joy is actually the owner of the restaurant and the Joy’s Special is a mix of ham, eggs, peppers and gravy — it’s a hangover savior, if you’re 21 of course.” Wesley also raved about the coffee shop located in the parking lot. Don’t eat too much though because in three hours you’ll want to stop by La Tarasca in Centralia, Washington, located halfway between Portland and Seattle. Julie Regnier, a retired Senior Vice President at World Vision, says, “[La Tarasca] is a family owned Mexican restaurant… the
homemade corn tortillas are to die for and the food is authentic — not your typical American-Mexican food.” If you’re in the mood for something spicy, try the Bisteck en Salsa de Jitomate. This family recipe simmers pork in a spicy tomato sauce and is served with rice, beans and fresh tortillas. Since La Tarasca is only about an hour away from Seattle, play tourist for a day and swing by Pike Place Market. You won’t be there to see the workers throwing around the catch of the day, but you certainly can pick up some fresh fruit or flowers, take a few pictures by the famous Gum Wall and maybe pop in the original Starbucks for a latte. For dinner, Brianna Lovest, a sophomore at the UO from Sammamsih, WA, suggests going to Serious Pie for dinner, which is conveniently located in walking distance of Pike Place Market. “Serious Pie is one of my favorite places to visit when I’m home. All of the ingredients are fresh and the pizzas are cooked to order… the atmosphere is really cool too with candles, mood lighting and a huge brick fireplace. I love it.” The first Serious Pie opened in 2006
DUCKSHOUSING.COM Ducks Housing, the Emerald’s housing guide, is published by Emerald Media Group, Inc., the independent non profit news company at the University of Oregon. Formerly the Oregon Daily Emerald, the news organization was founded in 1900.
in Seattle and has expanded, adding two more locations in Washington. Serious Pie uses a “600 degree stone-encased apple wood burning oven,” to prepare their pizzas. Brianna raved about the pizza with sweet fennel sausage, roasted peppers and provolone cheese. If your mouth isn’t already watering, maybe dessert will liven up those taste buds. Take a 10 minute drive to Pie where you can enjoy an individual sized sweet or savory pie. Founded by Renee Steen and Jessamy Whitsitt, they claim, “All pies are completely hand crafted and baked fresh everyday with innovative and delicious creativity.” By the looks of the menu, Pie offers eight pies served daily with over 50 pies in rotation; each day a different combination of freshly made pies are available. With such a wide variety of flavors including Chicken Pot Pie, Smoked Salmon Pot Pie, Northwest Blackberry and French Toast Cream, Pie will have a dessert for everyone. A road trip is about adventure, and it’s the perfect time to try something new! Take advantage of everything these cities have to offer and indulge.
Editor Hunter Shannon
Creative Director Alisa O’Neal
Copy Editor Erin Weaver
Designers Lisa Donato Gabrielle Gomez
Writers Gabriel Dufurrena Gretchen Henderson Alyssa Holtrust Sam Styles Erin Weaver
Photographers Sierra Pedro Cecilia Tremaine Jessica Ballestazze Trevor Myer
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End of lease cash-out By Sam Styles FIXING DOORS When thinking of doors in the college setting three big problems come to mind. Perhaps you share a bathroom or a bedroom. In a fit of rage, you decide that you will never ever allow your foul mannered roommate in again. A tug-of-war ensues between the two of you and under the pressure the door comes unhinged, or your roommate trying desperately to get you out of the bathroom so that they can get at some hot water detaches the doorknob completely. 1. Find a friend with a screw driver and remove the hinge. If it is still working, pick up a box of screws and reattach it. If not, take the broken hinge with you and match it to a wide variety of hinges available at Home Depot. (Screws: $8.50, Hinges: $1.90-20.00, Home Depot) 2. If a doorknob comes off, doorknob kits are sold at supply shops. These will require a bit of mechanical ability, but there are directions on the side of the box and lots of easy YouTube tutorials. (Doorknob kit:15-20.00 Home Depot) The other common issue with doors is someone goes through one completely. Whatever the reason may be, there is now a man-or-woman sized hole in your door.
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3. If you live in a house, you have probably destroyed something custom, in which case, you have a problem. But if you live in the more generically laid out condos and apartments around campus, there is a good chance you can find a matching door. Take a picture or look on the online store to try and match it. (Door: $91.00, Home Depot) REPAIRING HOUSEHOLD SCUFFS One knows that when acquiring furniture for a college home, you take what is free and that as you host various social gatherings, this furniture will shift a hundred times. On top of this, your walls will be leaned on, used to stable one’s self, be subject to the splatter of foods (most likely high in grease) and a hundred other house hold atrocities. This can lead to only two things, scuffs and stains. 1. Scratched and scuffed floors are possible to fix in a cheap manner. All households should have a bottle of WD-40 and most linoleum scuffs can be removed with a stiff scrubbing motion and a splash of WD-40. Scratches in hardwood are a bit more permanent, but minor scratches can be repaired using wax. Specific floor waxes are sold and if you can find one close in color to your floor ,the match is often identical. (WD-40: $4.97, Floor wax: $6.47, Home Depot)
2. Repairing scuffs and stains on walls is easy; you just paint over them. The tricky part is matching the paint. Take a picture of the paint in good lighting and at the store they can match the color and make a custom blend for you. (BEHR 8 oz. paint: $3.47, Home Depot) FIXING HOLES IN THE WALL Perhaps due to the uncontainable and free wheeling nature of the college student’s spirit, holes in dry wall may be one of the most common repairs made to a student residence. Who can blame the student for constantly wanting to break free of the box? When a hole is made, it often seems daunting, like a serious unrepairable issue. This is not true. 1. Once the hole has been made and the initial panic has settled, take a quick trip to the hardware store and pick up a whole repair kit. This will come with spackle and a spreading tool. Push in all of the edges of wall so a smooth edge forms and then spread the spackle over it. Once this has dried, paint over it with the custom wall color of paint you have picked up to repair scuffs. After this all dries the hole is hardly recognizable. The writer can attest to this from personal experience. (Drywall patch kit: $7.48, Home Depot)
. 1850 Ferry St. ,
Studios, One & Two bedrooms
PLUMBING HOUSEWARES ELECTRICAL HARDWARE LAWN & GARDEN TOOLS PAINT
• Secured entry • on-site laundry • secured • heated bike garage • limited parking
You’re Going To Like Living Here! Bell Real Estate 2825 Willamette • Eugene, Oregon • 541-342-5191
2001 Franklin Blvd., Suite 2 Eugene, 97403
bell-realty.com
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STORE HOURS: open 8am – 9pm $30 minimum purchase
Come HOME to Bell 940/943 Hilyard
Make your list, then catch the bus to Grocery Outlet.
5 bedroom / 3 bath / 2 car garage
160 South 14th St., SPRINGFIELD 1. EMX to Springfield Station 2. Transfer: bus number 11 to Thurston 3. Stop at 14th St.You’re here!
•Brand new town homes •3 full bathrooms •oversized rooms and living space •Heated double car garage •Dishwasher •Vaulted ceilings •Washer and dryer •Private patios and balconies
EASY TO FIND. EASY TO SAVE.
Valid at Springfield Grocery Outlet only. One coupon per person. Minimum purchase excludes alcohol. Not valid with any other offer. Duplicated coupons will not be Capri_Eugene_PostCard_Front2.pdf 1 2/9/15 8:51 PM accepted. Coupon must be surrendered at time of purchase. Expires: 6/30/16
M
Y
CM
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CMY
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+ deposit
Bell Real Estate
Living ’s Ea sy At
C
$2,100 - 2,895
2001 Franklin Blvd., Suite 2 Eugene, 97403
950 Alder St
24 HR LOOK AND LEASE: APPLICATION FEE AND RESTORATION FEE WAIVED + $200 RENT CREDIT IF YOU ALSO CHOOSE CC SMALL, CQ, KQ FLOOR PLAN.
bell-realty.com
campus direct: 541-501-3513 • office: 541-686-6188
$1,495 - 2,495
2 bedroom / 2 bath 4 bedroom / 3 bath 5 bedroom / 3 bath
1863 KINCAID STREET • 541.344.2657 • CAPRIEUGENE.COM
•Full private or semi-private bathrooms •Individual air conditioning •Individually heated suites •Dishwasher •9 foot ceilings and vaulted top floor ceilings •Full size washer and dryer •Private patios and balconies •Secured parking (1 spot per unit) •Common study area •Private workout area
YOUR GO TO FOR AFFORDABLE CAMPUS HOUSING JENNINGSGROUP.COM | 541-683-2271 PA G E 6
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Goodbye
from the graduating Special Sections staff
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By Erin Weaver Fresh from the dorms, ready to metaphorically spread our wings and enter the world as real, genuine adults, my roommates and I occupied a less-than-ideal apartment our sophomore year, to put it lightly. While glossy images in the leasing office had advertised bountiful space, a place to entertain friends and proudly show your mom, in reality, the kitchen consisted of a single line of counters that crowded the couch the complex had the nerve to call the “living room.” The walls were so thin that my neighbor’s alarm clock would wake me up hours before my own, and every time he “snoozed” I would mumble curses at him from under my comforter. You could hear every door swing shut, every goodbye yelled from balconies, every rattle of glass in the recycling when someone heaved a new bag over the bin’s ledge. The parties thrown above us sounded like raves that would make Amsterdam proud, regardless of how loud their music was or how many people were actually milling around. Every day, the shower would have two settings, glacier cold or lava-like, and you had to tap the knob with infinitesimal finesse to coax the temperature into a range you could actually stand under comfortably. The funny thing is, as ridiculous and horrible as the set-up was, it was ours, our first attempt at living without supervision that would have said, “No, you can’t just have hummus for dinner” or “You really think you can fit all those photos on just one wall?” The sitcoms had lied to us: we weren’t lounging around in our Pottery Barn apartments or going to daily rooftop parties; we were picking up scattered pantry food after the landlord had knocked a shelf over, muttering, “We will rebuild” and flicking uncooked pasta noodles at each other. As small as it was, though, the roommates and I constantly packed ourselves into that meager living room, complained about the finicky plumbing
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and played so much Just Dance our downstairs neighbors probably loathed us. That kitchen was the place we learned not to stuff potato peels down the garbage disposal, while the dining table became the site of confessions, lively back-and-forths, and bonafide “family time.” We abandoned the apartment after just a year, moving into a veritable adult-sized house after searching through ads flaunting crack dens and mouse havens. After spending our junior and senior careers in the tiny abode, we love it so much we still joke about having the address numbers tattooed on our thighs. Which is not to say that our little blue house is not without its own issues. Our kitchen is structured in such a way that we’re constantly mock-yelling, “Behind!” like line cooks in frenzied restaurants. The walls were apparently built in a time before insulation existed, so in Eugene’s wet winters, we huddled around the space heater and bitterly congratulated Leo for making it so far in The Revenant. The hallway somehow augments sound, meaning that one person’s bedroom sock hop becomes a dance party for the whole house, and serenades performed in the shower aren’t exactly secret. When I think about my time as a UO student, though, the experiences I’ve had are inseparable from the places I’ve lived and the people I’ve lived with. So much of my studying was done in that little “living room”; we’ve had countless household meetings on our hand-medown couches, and every time the weather decides to be even halfway decent, we’re sunning ourselves like cats out in our backyard. UO’s campus is a stunning and unforgettable place, but my own memories as a student will always be tethered to the rooms they happened in: my cramped kitchen, our house’s front steps and that sound-amplifying hallway.
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1585 PATTERSON ST.
PATTERSON ROW Divine campus living. Just blocks away from campus and the duck store, these apartments offer everything you could want for student living. Air-conditioning and gas heating, including large gas fireplaces. Incredibly spacious living areas, lots of storage, and large bedrooms. High efficiency washer and dryers available to every unit. Private balcony or patios. Off street parking. Trash provided.
your choice your location your lifestyle
INCREDIBLE Campus Location
your choice your locati your lifesty
2 & 3 Bedroom Units
Large Living Spaces
■ 1-3 bedroom units ■ washer/dryer in most units ■ parking & internet included
■ 1-3 bedroom
Balconies and Private Patios
■ washer/dr
■ parking & in
Bell Real Estate 2001 Franklin Blvd., Suite 23, Eugene, 97403
541-686-6188 • bell-realty.com campus direct 541-501-3513
1400 High St. Ste C3 541-505-9906 Agcampushousing.com info@agcampushousing.com
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Bell Rea
2001 Franklin Blvd., Suit
Bell Real Estate 35986 1-2v.indd 1
541-686-6188 • bel campus direct 5 2/25/14 10:14 AM
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By Gabriel Dufurrena When I first came to Eugene, I knew no one. I was the only student from my class in high school to pick the University of Oregon, and I was sort of happy about that. I knew better than to try and “reinvent” myself; I knew who I was and I didn’t see any reason to compromise my sanity by denying that. This meant I was essentially at the whim on the dorm matching system University Housing uses. While I was confident in my interests and who I was, even in high school I never globbed onto any one group of friends long enough to define myself as a jock, nerd or whatever other stereotypical social caste that might make the matching process easier. I was unsure of my major, so like any other aimless freshman, I stated my intention to be a business student. I was placed in a hallway with a mish-mash of sports business and uncertain students. For a while, it was fun: getting to know a bunch of kids who were just getting to know themselves, partying with different crowds every weekend, feeling around for who I may make connections with. Funnily enough, two of the people in my hallway became roommates and close friends. My sophomore year house search was ridiculous. First, a potential roommate offered us a property
his parents owned and were currently leasing to a family who were expected to move. The house was way too nice for three guys who had never lived independently. It sat at the top of Hendricks park, overlooking campus and downtown. Great kitchen, great deck and potential for ridiculous parties because it was fairly isolated. The only real downside was the distance from campus, but we were all willing to cope. It was a sure thing. Only not really. At the last minute, the family decided to stay in the house, and we were screwed: we had no house and it was way too late in the season to find a place even half as good. Luckily, the same friend promised to make it up to us, and he quickly found another house. It was smaller, closer to campus, same price (cheap) and perfect for a first house. A little more drama followed when said roommate dropped out last minute and my friend and I had to scramble to find a replacement, but it worked out. I mean, the house was a hole. We had a rat problem from December to May. The landlord, nice as she was, wasn’t reliable for repair jobs. She even once lost a rent check and asked for another one, even though my bank statement showed it had been cashed. It was kind of a headache, but it was a home to call our own. No more harassment from RAs, no more noise issues
late into the night. It was all we could really ask for. It wouldn’t cut it for another year. I had just undergone two moves in one summer (my parents moved out of my childhood home while I moved from the dorms into the new house), so I was exhausted. I didn’t want to go through the hassle of another. Luckily, my friends from the dorms were motivated to find the perfect house for us, and after a grueling search, they did just that. My house these last two years has been perfect in every way. A visiting friend once referred to it as a “trap” but for a house with five 21-year-old male tenants, it was in pretty good shape. We threw massive parties, potlucks, BBQs and spent many nights watching The Simpsons in front of the roaring fireplace. The kitchen was amazing; my room was well insulated and decorated. Any issue we had, like a lack of hot water in the kitchen sink, was dealt with after due harassment of our landlord. It was perfect for us. My best college memories are in that house, and I know I’m not alone in that. Every once in awhile, I’ll see some guy drive by with his girl in a beat-up old car and point at the house, undoubtedly telling tales of when he set the front yard on fire or dropped pumpkins from the deck onto the driveway. That’s what any college house is good for: holding memories of the best times of our lives.
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By Gretchen Henderson My experience at the University of Oregon has been nothing short of incredible. Going in my freshman year, I could not have dreamt of the things I have done and places I have gone over the past four years. I didn’t think I would pet a crocodile and go to the movies with a famous rapper in Ghana. I didn’t think I would have over 200 girls I could count on and call my sisters. I definitely didn’t think I would spend a week of my life in New York learning about the advertisement industry. Going into my freshman year, I had no idea what was ahead. Choosing to go out-of-state for college was a major change in my life. Many individuals from my hometown never venture more than a mile away and
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definitely do not attend a four-year university. I was scared going in. I was scared to fail and let people down. I was scared of change and that I would not adjust. And I was definitely scared of the rain, and still have not adjusted four years later (but have learned the value of the sun). Looking back on my freshman self and to now, it is day and night and I have the University of Oregon to thank for that. I was heavily involved in areas like my sorority, the Rec center, and the journalism school. All of the areas pushed me to be better and try harder. At some point in these four years, I stopped seeing failure and started seeing opportunity. I took a few steps out of my
comfort zone and found new exciting things and people. In a few months, when I am sitting in my apartment miles away from Eugene, I will miss this place. Eugene has been my home where I have learned and grown and I will cherish all the memories and experiences I have had during my college years. Going in, I never thought I would look at this hippy town as a place I would miss. Actually for the first year, I dreaded coming back to school and was looking to transfer but I am glad I did not. So thank you Eugene, for taking this big city girl and showing her the beauty of a small town.
PRE -L NOWEASING FAL FOR L 20 16
BUDALL GET
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BED 1-5 ROO M
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541. 501. 3513 STU DUP DIOS, APA LEXES HOUSE RTM , & S, Offe E NTS of th ring ca mpu e le y
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FIND YOUR NEW HOME Studios - 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 bedrooms
Individual leases Friendly & resourceful staff Like us on Facebook! LLC VONKLEINRENTALS.COM • (541) 485-7776 • 1301 FERRY ST, EUGENE, OR 97401 PA G E 1 4
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QUIET LOCATION 3 BLOCKS FROM THE LAW SCHOOL Large Units and Parking Available
1455 Mill Street
Garden Courtyard Large 1 & 2 Bedrooms Starting at $650
Call 541-344-4619 280 E 17th Eugene, OR 97401
CHECK IT OUT!
Located only a few blocks west of the University at 1455 Mill Ally
YOU KNOW YOU WANT TO LIVE HERE.
Bell Real Estate 2001 Franklin Blvd., Suite 2 Eugene, 97403
Ultra Sleek and Ultra Modern • 2-5 bedroom units • Bathroom on Each Level • Off-street Parking • Stainless Appliances • Washer/Dryer in Units
$525 to $2995
bell-realty.com
campus direct: 541-501-3513 • office: 541-686-6188
Immediate move-in available for Summer 2016! WALK OR BIKE TO CLASS
APPLY ONLINE TODAY @ 2125FRANKLIN.COM
F U L LY F U R N I S H E D A PA R T M E N T S DESIGNER INTERIOR FINISHES A M E N I T I E S F O R A F I T & H E A LT H Y L I F E S T Y L E 2125 Franklin Blvd | 458.201.8130
A C A D E M I C A L LY- O R I E N T E D E N V I R O N M E N T CABLE TV & INTERNET INCLUDED
Amenities are subject to change. While supplies last. See office for details.
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112 DAYS OF SUMMER
SUMMER FESTIVAL GUIDE
1 1 2 D AY S O F S U M M E R E M E R A L D M E D I A G R O U P
112 days of summer 112 Days of Summer is the first annual summer festival calendar put on by the Emerald Media Group. We’ve included our picks of the West Coast’s finest festivities for the summer break. Editor Hunter Shannon Copy Editor Erin Weaver
FEATURING: Sizzla Kalonji & The Fire House Band KRANIUM & Agent Sasco Anthony B Protoje & The Indiggnation Band Soul Syndicate featuring Mad Professor with Big Youth, U-Roy, Randy Valentine, Marty Dread & Earl Zero Mbongwana Star King Yellowman Million Stylez Fatoumata Diawara Jesse Royal Sister Carol Ziggi Recado Jah9 & The Dub Treatment House Of Shem Gappy Ranks No Maddz Democratoz Keznamdi Mr. Williamz Locos Por Juana New Kingston Addis Pablo Jah Sun Lion D Raphael DubTonic Kru Newen Afrobeat The I-Deals Meleku Bayonics The Dubba Dubs 7th Generation Rise - with more TBA- including DJs, sound systems and hot guest artists like Keida, Fyakin, and Prince Levy!
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Contributors Gabriel Dufurrena Gretchen Henderson Erin Weaver Benjamin Rothenberg Rachel Brungardt Delaney Rea Sierra Pedro Cecilia Tremaine Trevor Meyer Jessica Ballestrazze Creative Director Alisa O’Neal Designer Gabrielle Gomez Emerald Media Group 1222 E. 13th Ave., #300, Eugene, OR 97403, 541.346.511, Dailyemerald.com
eugene june
july 2016 US OLYMPIC TEAM TRIALS HAYWARD FIELD 7/1-10 ALL DAY
REFRESH YOUR RUN (CLASS) REI 6/7 6:30-8PM
august 10TH ANNUAL WHITAKER BLOCK PARTY WHITAKER NEIGHBORHOOD 8/6 ALL DAY/NIGHT
SILVERSUN PICKUPS MCDONALD THEATRE 6/8 8PM
EUGENE PRO RODEO OREGON HORSE CENTER 7/1-4 4PM
NCAA D1 MEN’S AND WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS HAYWARD FIELD 6/8-11
KISS MATTHEW KNIGHT ARENA 7/9 7PM
SCANDINAVIAN FESTIVAL JUNCTION CITY, OR 8/11-14 ALL DAY
OREGON COUNTRY FAIR VENETA, OR 7/10-1211AM-7PM
BIMART WILLAMETTE COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAL, BROWNSVILLE 8/12-14
LAVENDER FESTIVAL VARIOUS LOCATIONS 7/11-12 10AM-5PM
TWILIGHT 5K SILVAN RIDGE WINERY 8/13 6PM
WOMEN IN JAZZ THE JAZZ STATION 6/11 7:30-10:30PM COMMUNITY BLOCK PARTY YMCA EUGENE 6/12 11AM-3PM EUGENE FOOD TRUCK FEST 2016 VRC BACK PARKING LOT 6/18 11AM-3PM
OREOGN BACH FESTIVAL HULT CENTER 6/23 ALL DAY
LOVE’S LABOUR’S LOST AMAZON COMMUNITY CENTER 8/6-28 6-8PM
EMERALD EMPIRE HEMPFEST MAURIE JACOBS PARK 7/17-19 ALL DAY
september GOV’T MULE CUTHBERT AMPHITHEATER 9/1 6:30PM THE MAVERICKS MCDONALD THEATER 9/8 6-8PM
MAD DECENT BLOCK PARTY CUTHBERT AMPHITHEATER 9/9 4PM
TIËSTO CUTHBERT AMPHITHEATER 9/9 7PM EUGNE SUNDAY STREETS SOUTH UNIVERSITY STREETS 9/25 NOON-4PM
ANIMAL COLLECTIVE MCDONALD THEATER 9/26 8PM
“WEIRD AL” YANKOVIC, CUTHBERT AMPITHEATER, 7/29 7PM
CHECK OUT THESE WEEKLY EVENTS: - FARMER’S MARKET, TUES/SAT, DOWNTOWN, 10AM-2PM/9AM-3PM - COWBOY KARAOKE, 1ST TUES, IZAKAYA MEIJI CO., 10PM - YOGA IN THE VINEYARD, 26TH, 3RD, 17TH, 31ST,14TH, 20TH, SARVER WINERY, 10AM - TRIVIA NIGHT,EVERY TUES, RENNY’S LANDING, 9PM - 2PM TALKS AT THE MUSEUM, TUES-SUN, UO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM, 2PM - LIP SYNC BATTLE WEDNESDAY, EVERY WED, THE WAYWARD LAMB,9PM-1AM - RUNNING GROUP, EVERY WED, RUN HUB NORTHWEST, 6PM - SUP! DANCE PARTY, EVERY SAT, COWFISH DANCE CLUB, 9PM M O N D AY, J U N E 6 , 2 0 1 6
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WASHINGTON
PORTLAND, OR
oregon
SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL INTERNATIONAL DANCE FESTIVAL DANCE FESTIVAL 6/11 6/11
PDX BEER WEEK 6/9-19
SANDCASTLE CONTEST CANNON BEACH 6/10-11
MARYSVILLE STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL 6/12
THE CRAFT BEER AND WINEFEST OF VANCOUVER 6/10-12
SEATTLE
SEAFAIR seattle, wa 6/15 EDMONDS ARTS FESTIVAL 6/17 WASHINGTON BREWERS FESTIVAL REDMOND, WA 6/17 SAM LACHOW SEATTLE, WA 6 PM 6/18
VEGAN FOOD AND BEER FESTIVAL 6/11
6/17-20
FREEMONT SOLSTICE FESTIVAL 6/18 CAGE THE ELEPHANT & PORTUGAL THE MAN 7 PM WAMU 6/19 WALLA WALLA SWEET ONION FESTIVAL 6/19 PARADISO FESTIVAL COLUMBIA GORGE 6/24 SEATTLE PRIDEFEST 6/25
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WHAT THE FESTIVAL 2016 WHAT THE MUSIC FESTIVAL 6/17 DUFUR, OR
SILETZ BAY MUSIC FESTIVAL LINCOLN CITY, OR 6/22-30 PORTLAND JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL 6/15-29 PORTLAND PRIDE FESTIVAL AND PARADE 6/18
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA RALEY FIELD BREWFEST WEST SACRAMENTO, CA 6/10
PANGAIA FESTIVAL Fair Oaks, CA 6/11-12 SACRAMENTO FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL 6/17-26
BAY AREA, ca HAIGHT ASHBURY STREET FAIR 6/12
REGGAE IN THE HILLS 6/13
SF BLACK FILM FESTIVAL 6/16-19
SIERRA NEVADA WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL 6/17-18
ISLETON CAJUN AND BLUES FESTIVAL Lodi, CA 6/25-26 OLD SUGAR MILL GRAPES AND GRUB FESTIVAL Clarksburg, CA 6/25
FETTY WAP, YG AND RAE SREMMURD AT ORACLE ARENA 6/19
lOS ANGELES, ca SPLASH HOUSE PALM SPRING, CA 6/10-12
O.C. BREWERS GUILD FESTIVAL 6/11
L.A. PRIDE 6/10-13
HUSH CONCERT 6/18
SAN DIEGO, ca SAN DIEGO GREEK FESTIVAL 6/10-12
SAN DIEGO FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS 6/11-12
SANTEE FIDO FEST 6/11
TEEN AND BRIDAL EXPO 6/12
VEGAN BEER AND FOOD FESTIVAL PASADENA, CA 6/18
SAN DIEGO OYSTERFEST 6/17-18
B.E.T. EXPERIENCE AT L.A. LIVE 6/23-26
SAN DIEGO INTERNATIONAL BEER FESTIVAL 6/17-19
STANFORD JAZZ FESTIVAL 6/24 L.A. WINE FEST 6/25-26
SUMMER SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL 6/19-9/18
OCEAN BEACH STREET FAIR AND CHILI COOK 6/25 SAN FRANCISCO PRIDE 6/25 M O N D AY, J U N E 6 , 2 0 1 6
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DOMAINE SERENE…. WHEN YOU’VE GRADUATED!
2016 SIXTH ANNUAL NORTH UMPQUA MUSIC FESTIVAL WWW.NUMUSICFEST.COM JULY 15-16
2012 EVENSTAD RESERVE PINOT NOIR
2013 EVENSTAD RESERVE CHARDONNAY
94 pts Wine Enthusiast 93 pts Wine Spectator 93 pts Wine Advocate 93 pts Int’l Wine Report 93 pts James Suckling
95 pts Wine Enthusiast (Editor’s Choice) 95 pts James Suckling 94 pts Int’l Wine Report 91 pts Wine Spectator
SYNRGY, SOL SEED, INDUBIOUS The AUTONOMICS NEIL JOHNSON & HIS FLOCK OF STRANGE BIRDS w/ DAWN DAY
GREAT FOOD, BEER GARDEN, ART VENDORS, KIDS ZONE, CAMPING, RAFFLES, GAMES and FUN FOR ALL!
THE RANCH: 15888 NORTH BANK RD ROSEBURG OR
Mention this ad at our Dundee Hills tasting room and receive a free “Prestige Flight” upgrade. 6555 n e hi l lto p l a n e, day to n , o r 9 7 1 1 4 (503) 864- 4600 | www. do ma in e se re n e . co m
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SCOREBOARD SPORTSBAR
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EMERALD
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july
WASHINGTON BELLINGHAM FESTIVAL OF MUSIC 7/1
PORTLAND, OR BLUES FESTIVAL PORTLAND WATERFRONT 7/1
LAKE UNION WOODEN BOAT FESTIVAL 7/2
THE BIG FLOAT 6 7/10
KOOL AND THE GANG SNOQUALMIE CASINO 7 PM 7/3
TOP DOWN: ROOFTOP CINEMA 7/14
FREMONT ALMOST FREE OUTDOOR CINEMA 7/4 DIXIE CHICKS WHITE RIVER AMPITHEATER 7/8
TWENTY ONE PILOTS MODA CENTER 7/19
SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL BEER FEST 7/8-10
BITE OF SEATTLE 7/15-17 NORTHWEST RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL NINE MILE FALLS, WA 7/16 ADELE KEY ARENA 7/25 WATERSHED MUSIC FESTIVAL THE GORGE, WA 7/29-31 & 8/5-7 PA G E 8
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BEND SUMMER ART FESTIVAL 7/7
YACHATS MUSIC FESTIVAL 7/8
SISTERS QUILT SHOW 7/9
THUNDEREGG DAYS AND FESTIVAL NYSSA, OR 7/14-16 PENDLETON WHISKEY MUSIC FESTIVAL 7/16
KENT CORNUCOPIA FESTIVAL KENT, WA 7/8-10 WEST SEATTLE SUMMER FEST 7/8-10
oregon
PDX POP NOW CONCERT 7/22
THE 38TH ANNUAL OREGON COAST MUSIC FESTIVAL COOS BAY, OR 7/22
FIRST CITY CELEBRATION 7/23
OREGON JAMBOREE SWEET HOME, OR 9/29
29TH ANNUAL OREGON BREWER’S FESTIVAL 7/27
CAPE BLANCO COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAL 7/29 HUCKLEBERRY FESTIVAL NORTH POWDER, OR 7/30
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
BAY AREA, ca
CALIFORNIA STATE FAIR Sacramento, CA 7/8-24
VANS WARPED TOUR 7/2
SACRAMENTO JAPANESE FILM FESTIVAL Sacramento, CA 7/15-17
WINE COUNTRY BIG Q BARBEQUE AND FESTIVAL 7/9
GEORGE NA’OPE HULA FESTIVAL Sacramento, CA 7/15-17 COURTLAND PEAR FAIR Courtland, CA 7/31
ROCKSTAR ENERGY MAYHEM FESTIVAL 7/10
DIXIE CHICKS SHORELINE AMPHITHEATRE 7/12
CALIFORNIA WORLDFEST 7/14
lOS ANGELES, ca PURPLE RAIN 7/2
HUMPHREYS CONCERTS BY THE BAY 6/1
GREASE WITH FIREWORKS 7/3
MLB ALL-STAR WEEKEND PETCO PARK 7/8-12
4TH OF JULY BLOCK PARTY 7/4
SELENA GOMEZ REVIVAL TOUR 7/8
TWILIGHT CONCERTS AT THE SANTA MONICA PIER EVERY THURSDAY THROUGH 9/8
ANAHEIM FARMER’S MARKET EVERY FRIDAY TEQUILA & TACO MUSIC FESTIVAL SANTA CRUZ, CA 7/27
THE COLOR RUN 7/10
G-EAZY & LOGIC: THE ENDLESS SUMMER TOUR 7/6
BLUES & BREWS FESTIVAL 7/15 CAPAY TOMATO FESTIVAL 7/16
SAN DIEGO, ca
SAN DIEGO PRIDE 6/15-17
COMIC-CON INTERNATIONAL 7/21-24
HEROES BREW FESTIVAL 7/23 DEL MAR GOURMET FOOD TRUCK FESTIVAL 7/23
DIVERSITY FILM FESTIVAL 7/27-28
M O N D AY, J U N E 6 , 2 0 1 6
EMERALD
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august
WASHINGTON ZIGGY MARLEY SEATTLE, WA 8/2
PORTLAND, OR
oregon
BONES AND BREW 8/6
MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD IN CONCERT BEND, OR 8/11
FLUME SEATTLE,WA 7 PM 8/4
PICKATHON 2016 HAPPY VALLEY 8/5
MOSSYROCK BLUEBERRY FESTIVAL 8/5
NATIONAL PARKS FEE FREE DAYS 8/25
ORTING SUMMER FEST 8/6 WOLF PARADE seattle, wa 8/8 GRAYS HARBOR COUNTRY FAIR 8/10 107.7 THE ENDS SUMMER CAMP SEATTLE, WA 8/13 THE COLOR RUN TACOMA, WA 8/14 SEATTLE HEMPFEST 8/19 SEATTLE STREET FESTIVAL 8/20 HUNTER HAYES MONROE, WA 8/30
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VANCOUVER BREWFEST 8/12
VANS WARPED TOUR 8/13 94.7 BIRTHDAY BASH 8/13
MUSICFEST NORTHWEST PRESENTS: PROJECT PABST 8/27 HAWTHORNE STREET FAIR 8/28
HOOD TO COAST RELAY 8/27
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA PETALUMA MUSIC FESTIVAL Petaluma, CA 8/6 SACRAMENTO BANANA FESTIVAL Elk Grove, CA 8/20
BAY AREA, ca
lOS ANGELES, ca
ADELE ORACLE ARENA 8/2
BIG BITE BACON FESTIVAL 8/1
SUMMER SIZZLE MUSIC FESTIVAL 8/6
OUTSIDE LANDS MUSIC AND ART FESTIVAL 8/12
REGGAE ON THE DELTA Stockton, CA 8/27
SAN DIEGO, ca LATIN FOOD FEST! 8/12-15
EAT SEE HEAR OUTDOOR MOVIE EVERY SATURDAY
LONG BEACH JAZZ MUSIC FESTIVAL 8/12 SUMMER GRASS SAN DIEGO 8/19-21 SAND SCULPTURE ART FESTIVAL 8/16-17
OAKLAND ART AND SOUL FESTIVAL 8/20
STONE ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION 8/19-20
L.A. TACO FESTIVAL 8/20 EAT DRINK SF 8/25
SAN DIEGO SPIRITS FESTIVAL 8/27-28 LIFT-OFF FILM FESTIVAL 8/24-29
GOURMET WINE & CHEESE FAIRE 8/27 STOCKTON LGBT PRIDE FESTVAL stockton, ca 8/27
FYF FEST 8/27-28
M O N D AY, J U N E 6 , 2 0 1 6
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THE
CRAFT CENTER
SUMMER IS WHAT YOU MAKE IT register now at craftcenter.uoregon.edu | (541) 346-4361
Proudly Supporting the Oregon Bach Festival Proud O’Hara Parent and Supporter
EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity.
Wisdom Teeth Dental Implants Dental Emergencies Oral Surgery 2233 Willamette Street Building G Eugene, OR 97405located Conveniently
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Student discounts available and most insurances accepted. Phone 541.484.2136 Fax 541.484.0960 eugeneoralsurgery.com 2233 Willamette Street Phone 541.484.2136 Building G Eugene, OR 97405
Fax 541.484.0960 eugeneoralsurgery.com Board Certified Diplomate of the American Board of Oral and John E. Villano, DDS, PC Maxillofacial Surgery M O N D AY, Fellow of the American College of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons
JUNE 6, 2016
EMERALD
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september
WASHINGTON
PORTLAND, OR
DAVE MATTHEWS BAND THE GORGE, WA 9/1-4
FATHER JOHN MISTY EDGEFIELD 9/1
BUMBERSHOOT SEATTLE, WA 9/2-4
ART IN THE PEARL 9/3
CARRIE UNDERWOOD spokane, wa 9/4
BELMONT STREET FAIR 9/10
BREMERTON BLACKBERRY FESTIVAL 9/5
FEST 9/22-25
PACIFIC NORTHWEST BREW FEST ASTORIA 9/23
BLINK 182, A DAY TO REMEMBER & ALL AMERICAN REJECTS SPOKANE, WA 9/16 GAVIN DEGRAW & ANDY GRAMMER PUYALLUP, WA 9/21 FLO RIDA & NATALIE LA ROSE PUYALLUP, WA 9/24
PENDLETON ROUNDUP 9/14-17
OREGON’S ALPENFEST EASTERN OR 9/22-25
FIFTH HARMONY AUBURN, WA 9/13
M O N D AY, J U N E 6 , 2 0 1 6
70TH CRANBERRY FESTIVAL BANDON, 0R 9/9-11
ROSE CITY COMIC CON 9/10 OREGON’S ALPEN-
FOR KING AND COUNTRY & MATT MAHER PUYALLUP, WA 9/12
EMERALD
faerieworlds north plains, OR 9/2-4
PINE FEST MUSIC FESTIVAL HALFWAY, OR 9/9-10
FEAST PORTLAND 9/15
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oregon
OKTOBERFEST AT OAKS PARK 9/23
GERMAN FILM FESTIVAL 9/23
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA MONTEREY JAZZ FESTIVAL MONTEREY, CA 9/16
BAY AREA, ca SAUSALITO ART FESTIVAL 9/3
lOS ANGELES, ca NOCTURNAL WONDERLAND 9/2-4
AMERICAN RIVER MUSIC FESTIVAL COLOMA, CA 9/16-19
THE TASTE 9/2-4
TAHOE LAKE FALL CLASSIC LAKE TAHOE, CA 9/11
DRAKE: SUMMER SIXTEEN TOUR 9/7,9,10,27,28
CRAWFISH AND CATFISH FESTIVAL WOODLAND, 0R 9/10-11
BACON FESTIVAL OF AMERICA 9/3 GHIRARDELLI CHOCOLATE FESTIVAL 9/10
SAN DIEGO BACON FEST 9/3
TASTE OF DEL MAR 9/8
SOUTH BAY PRIDE ART AND MUSIC FESTIVAL 9/10 SAN DIEGO BRAZILIAN DAY FESTIVAL 9/13 KAABOO 9/16-18
JEWISH FOOD FAIRE CARMICHAEL, CA 9/18
BOYCE AVENUE TOUR 9/15
LODI GRAPE FESTIVAL LODI, CA 9/15-18 BEYONCE SANTA CLARA, CA 9/17
THE FORMATION WORLD TOUR 9/14
SAN DIEGO, ca
DRAKE AND FUTURE ORACLE ARENA 9/13
LET’S DANCE YOUTH EXPERIENCE 9/24-25
MIRA MESA STREET FAIR 9/17
GET SHAMORCKED IRISH MUSIC FESTIVAL 9/23-24
BAY AREA BLUES FESTIVAL 9/24
FOLSOM STREET FAIR 9/24-25
M O N D AY, J U N E 6 , 2 0 1 6
EMERALD
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TICKETS ON SALE AT
PORTLAND.PROJECTPABST.COM
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M O N D AY, J U N E 6 , 2 0 1 6
SUNDAY AUGUST 28 SATURDAY AUGUST 27
21+
DURAN DURAN ICE CUBE
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UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA PARQUET COURTS / SHEER MAG HOP ALONG
/ DIARRHEA PLANET / TENEMENT
WATERFRONT PARK
PORTLAND, OR