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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1994)
FRf E Initial Consultation Call Today 465-4967 Dtako Koofoed student Pates UofOGfOd MX Oakway O JOIN NOW I DOC'S COCKTAIL RESEARCH TEAM 165 W. 11th* 683-8101 -*----v“ Hu- University of Oregon Creative Writing Program and the ' | Walter Kidd Tutorial Program announce The 1994 Walter Kidd Writing Prizes Two First Prizes of $1000 Two Second Prizes of $ 300 Two TFtird Prizes of $200 „ Competition Rules I i‘n;c'. ompcim, .n n oj vn to ,di, urrmth mu sir.,1 I puimm ,! i Hrpn uu.lrrjjT.idu.ltej | II Each contestant may submit only .me story andew up to five poems j I k turn entries must tv no longer than VYV »<>rds. Entries must tv typewnttrn, double spaced (run jsvtty) and delivered to the t trailer Writing Program C 'Hue. 1441 otuml'i.i You must include yout name, class standing, addirvs. ('hone nundvr. and student ID number on the lust (cage, all suecceding jstgrs must Iv numlvred and must include only your student II' numtvt Please note 'KIDD PRI/E' on the front [ age (.( all entries. Entries uiilvout j,|j the jitr. edmg information ss ill not he i onsidcied III Entrants slviuld also note if they ssocild like to tv considered for enrollment in next year’s Kidd Tutorials in fiction and poetry. CRWR 410. W car expanding I he program for nnl year and arv seeking | applu ant* from all i las*e* and major*. An informati**n flyer on the lutnnaU i% available in the* Creative Writing Program Office. | l\ Hirer witmriN will lx* sclcvfed tn c.kh genre (fiction and poetry) t. r | overall litcfa*ry excellence Ihc jx*rt ( harlr* NX tight will announce tlw* j winner* .it hi* public reading m (*rf linger 1 »xmgr m Mav I he dctiMon of the judge* t* final, winner* may in* U* chosen »! by the judges* dm fctmn | no cnine* meni award V Entries must lx* received b* Friday, April IS, 1994. Witter* should g retain a c«vpy of ail suhimvnon* Manuscripts will not lx* tetumed -*..... .. .. Northwest Christian College Eugene, Oregon M.A. In Marriage and Family Therapy through a two year program. EMPHASIS; Family studies; psychotherapy; professional stiidles; psychopathology; brief therapy methods; effective Interpersonal communication; counseling for the grieving; clinical experience; systems approach to counseling. CLASSES: Held on the NCC rumpus Monday and Thursday evenings. SCHOLARSHIPS: Available to qualified and needy students. APPLICATION DEADLINE May 1. 1994 DIRECT APPLICATION INQUIRIES TO Dr. Ruth Harmellnk Director of Graduate Studies. NCC 826 East 11th Ave.. Eugene. OR 97401 or call (603) 343-1641. NCC MW1H CWrtlUl (AUG _ 4 ■wihbh MARKET Continued from Page 1A are offered in the food court, as well as the more familiar pizza, lemonade and cheesecake. Entertainment from local performing artists is a big part of Saturday Market Including Holiday Market, which is at the Lane County Fairgrounds from Thanksgiving to Christmas, more than one thousand performers appear on Market stages each year In addition to the stage performers, strolling musii luns and other entertainers can also be found at the Market Smokin foe is one such performer A guitar player who has lmen performing on the streets for sis or seven years.' Joe apple* iales Saturday Mar ket because it gives him a chance to play and because it "provides a sizable income for me." joe does not earn enough at Saturday Market to pay the hills he also does electrical work — but he says the small size of the Market and the responsiveness of the people there are what he enjoys. 1 feel appro* uted at Saturday Market." he said Located on the park blocks at Fast 8th Avenue and Oak Street. Saturday Market is open, rain or shine, from lti a m to 5 p.m The Market began with 29 vendors on a rainy May 9. 1970. and now has.almost 200 vendors each wf«>k from the begin ning of April to late November Lotte Streisingor. a local artist and the founder of Saturday Market, was inspired by market plazas in Central America and Europe to < rvatc a place in Eugene for kx al handcrafted goods Eugene boasts the original Saturday Market other, similar mar kets in Oregon use the name with permission of the Saturday Market Hoard of Directors There is a purposeful feeling in the crowded walkways of Saturday Market, yet people don’t seem to know or care where they are going. The urgency of the mall is not here The rain that was predicted last weekend held liack. treating the Sat urday Market regulars to a i loudv but dry reunion on the first day of the new season Saturday Market is a hippie hangout, but it is also a place for students, families and senior citi zens The crowd is an odd mixture of suburbia and alternative Men wear ponytails and nec kties. Grandmothers with big purees and soft-sole shoe* «s« past other women wearing nose rings If Saturday Market is anything, it is comfortable Here, the same dress or behavior that would attract stnn's at Valiev River Center goes noticed. Despite its freedom. Saturday Market is carefully orga nized and monitored There aren't many rules, but eac h one is observed Vendors not only make a living at Saturday Mar ket. they also an earn enough to take a vacation when not tr. season Richard Hunt, who has had a jewelry table at the Market sine e 1978, relies on Saturday Market business and selling some jewel ry to the University and Oregon State University bookstores to earn a living Hunt spends one day per week selling earrings, bracelets and necklaces, and the rest of the week he replenishes Ins stex k "It's a full-time job." Hunt says "1 plan to dor this as long as it works." Farmer's Market, a sister market, is located across the street Vendors at the Farmer's Market si ll organically grown fruits, vegetables arid herbs, as well as both hotiseplants and outdoor plants. lax* Miller has Ixxin selling herbs and vegetables at Farmer's Market for 10 years He also works in Corvallis at a health fixed co-op. "1 deplore the use of pesticides. It is the absolutely wrong direction that agriculture and health should be taking." Miller said. Miller, who sells more tomatoes than anything else, also offers vegetables such as broccoli, cauli flower and cabbage, as well as herbs sui;h as oreganq and garlic. Saturday Market is fully wheelchair accessible. The Market has plenty of bicycle racks and also offers free parking all day in the two city Overpark buildings at Fast Hth Avenue and Willamette St reel. Performances scheduled for Saturday. April 9. are Therese Wagner's magical mystical morning flute songs at 10 am, Sharon Rogers' children's folk songs at 11 a.in. and Peter Wilde and his orig inal "Home Groan Folk" at noon. At 1:30 p in., students of the David Feung Chi nese Kung Fu Tai Chi Academy will give a demon stration on the Market stage, and at 3 p.rn. OREGON TRACK 1 9 9 4 r COMING FRIDAY APRIL 8 OREGON DAILY EMERALD | Please recycle this paper!