Half Sub 'V**, N«t mM an « «M SUBSHOP• I ■***• 7 14*} 1225 ALDER 345-2434 Disappointed With Your MCAT Scores? Don't despair! Stanley H. Kaplan has helped over 100,000 students overcome their fears and improve their scores... • Small intimate classes Expert Instructors • Free repeat guarantee. • Computer analyzed diagnostic exam. • Scholarships and student discounts awilable. • Oirr 50 years of experience. 1 KAPLAN uwf r m wtw iax>nwM com* us The world's leading lest prep organization. MCAT Classes begin Saturday, June 27 GRE and LSAT classes begin in July Call 345-7496 to enroll EXCELSIOR CAFE CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST 8-11 M-F LUNCH 11:30-2:30 M-F DINNER Seven nights a week BAR OPEN ‘TIL MIDNIGHT light meals, coffee, desserts, & dnitks 342-6963 • 754 E. 13th Ave. xmmummiaaiHsnm I\nvl3cm. MUSK' THAI'S ALSO WONUF-RrUU-Y SUBTLE. a; sk ist as sLunx as ti ns. TICKETS HALF OFF THE DAY OF Tl D CONCERT FOR STUDENTS wmIU OF O ID. AWE I»-PAY 1 purchase tickets at iiult center ticket office- a?.5000 * UNIVERSITY UPDATE j University film wins festival prize j A documentary film exploring the struggles I and challenges of students of color at the Univer ■ slty won the second-place award in a North Caro ■ linn film festival held May 28-31 I In Plain English. produced bv Julia Usage, a University associate professor of lelecommunlca I lion and film, was awarded second prize in the (documentary division First place went to the makers of Mnllye and Max. a film produced in I Chicago. In Plain English was finished in April after more than two years of work. The; film focuses on men and women of color and varying ethnic backgrounds as they comment individually on the many racial issues facing University students. '‘Sometimes the students have a unified voice in the film and sometimes they have a varied voice," said Lena go in a press release "I wanted to express the contrast of their experiences as well as the unity." The film can he purchased for $50 by calling Lesagn at 34f>-4241 und is available for viewing at the Knight Library's Instructional Media Tenter The film will also be distributed to the local cable access channel and to access channels In Portland and Salem New students urged to sign up early Newly admitted University students need to sign up by Tuesday for this summer's IntroDUCKtion now-student orientation program, in order to reserve appointments with their advis ers and register for fall term classes Roger Morris, University orientation director. said he expect* more than 2,800 students and par ents to participate in the summer program. While on campus, IntroDUCKtlon students can register completely for fall classes rather than waiting until the start of fall term in September. Special sessions addressing parents' questions and concerns urn included in the program, which will lake place in July. Five two-day programs are scheduled for July 12-13, 17-18. 10-20, 23-24 and 27-28. A one-day program for transfer students is planned for July 25 The participation fee of S60 for students and S20 for parents includes a University catalog for students and an outdoor luncheon for students and parents. For mom information, contact the Office of Stu dent Development at 346-1159. Two students win Hairston Bell award The University’s Offir* of Multicultural Affairs awarded two students of color in May during the fifth annual Recognition Awards Reception. Seniors Eric Ward, an African-American plan ning. public policy and management major, and Jon Motohiro, a Japanese-American marketing and management major, each received a S500 Jewell Hairston Bell Award during tin; reception, which honors students of color who have made outstanding contributions to the* University and community. Boil, who died of cancer in August 1990, head ed OMA from 19B3 to 1986. 1 PHONES Continued from Page 1 oul Information, helping people decide If they want to go to U of O." Halstead said. After that, students who have applied and been accepted are given a call. "They may have been accept ed to several different schools and are trying to decide where to go." Halstead said, who add ed that it isn't (list public, rela tions work, hut an honest at tempt to help people plan their future. "Whut we try to do is give out information that makes the U of () look attractive, hut some of the information wo givo out could just as well be used to go somewhere else," Halstead said. The "hard sell" approach doesn't work, he said, and call ers give information to help choose the right school, which isn’t necessarily the University. Halstead said it doesn’t do (ho student any good to attend the University on false pro tonses. They end up unhappy and would likely leave at the first opportunity For that rea son. it doesn't do the Universi ty any good either The students who make the calls answer questions about the dorms, life in Uugene, class es, sports and student pro grams. But what makes the pro ject work is that students who'vo boon through it all are the ones giving the answers. "A lot of the people wo call want to know how much hard er college is than high school, how much time you have to spend studying," Halstead said. "Thoy really want to hoar per sonal experiences, Kach caller tries to figure out whnfs of con cern to the student and it varies with each person." Halstead first began working for the OfTicu of the Dean of Students through NSTP and one of lust year's callers, Tara Carpenter, ulso landed a job Plan Ahead For Your Summer Road Trips With Preventative Maintenance At... 485-8266 1917 FRANKLIN BLVD. Close to Campus with tho office after her gradua tion in 1991. Now an admissions counsel or, Carpenter said in a press re lease that the experience with NSTP was ns much a benefit to her as those she called. "I realized how greatly I en joyed letting students know what an Incredible opportunity higher education Is and how much the University of Oregon has to offer," Carpenter said. "As an admissions counselor, I have the same opportunity, ex cept I got to do it full-time. NSTP is an extraordinarily helpful and rewarding experi ence for both the staff and in coming students." Halstead said the positive feedback is a testament to that. "We've had parents call and say how great this is, that they didn't know we did this. And a lot of students who end up working for us do it because they remember getting that call themselves," he said. “IPs un usual for a college of our size to do this type of thing, but peo ple havo really expressed to us that they appreciate it." TERiyAKI ALLEY CURRY DISHES_lg.3.50 sm.2.50 VEGETABLE RICE_3.50 CHICKEN BREAST STEAK.___3.50 YAKISOBA NOODLES_lg.3.50 sm.2.50 SWEET A SOUR Take Out Available Across Irom Dairy Queen 1306 Hilyard (345-9555) 8 RIGHT ®N TRRGET Call our Advertising Department: 346-37)2