University tiealth Center Free Services [/")/IIKKSHOPS The following workshops are offered most terms and are designed to help you make positive health changes. Call 346-4456 for more information. )/ Smoking Cessation Weight Management low fat or Vegetarian Cooking NDIYIDUAL HEALTH COUNSELING Peer and Staff Health Educators can address your specific health concerns and assist you in making health promoting changes in your fife. Call us at 346-4456 to schedule an appointment. S IT TIME FOR A NAP? Too many calories? Not enough calcium or iron? Let us help you nna me answers. It you are concerned and/or curious about the nutrient breakdown of your diet then NAP is for you. The Health Education Program now offers a FREE Nutrition Analysis Program to all registered students. Simply pick up an application at the Health Education room. *7- OTAl CHOLESTEROL SCREENING Every Tuesday from 9:30-11:30 a.m. you can get free total cholesterol screening. Simply check in at the Health Education room on the first floor of the Health Center. X ENDING library Excellent books, cassettes and videos are available for loan to U of 0 students from the Health Education room in the Health Center. There you will also find health related ] newsletters, articles, and pamphlets. Just stop by. l ES I SPEAKERS AND PRESENTATIONS Peer Health Educators and Health Center Staff are available to speak to your organization on any of the listed health issues as well as others. Call us for details. 004003 Topics Addressed: HIV/AIDS, Nutrition, Alcohol, Sexuality, Smoking, Cholesterol, Eating Disorders, Fitness, Stress, Relationships, Weight Management Health Education Program at the Health Center 346-4456 Visit us at our web site: darkwing.uoregon.edu/~uoshc News Briefs OSA releases survey on student loans The Oregon Student Associ ation cited an overwhelming student reliance on loans in the results of their Student Opin ion Survey, entitled “Back to School UN-SALE,” Sept. 2. The survey included 428 students from all Oregon University Sys tem campuses. “The Oregon Need Grant currently covers only 11 per cent of educational costs,” said ASUO President Geneva Wort man. At an EMU Amphitheater press conference, OSA student officials also released statistics contending that OUS faculty compensation is in need of a dramatic increase. “With some salaries (more than] $16,000 below the na tional average, Oregon univer sities have a difficult time re cruiting new faculty members,” said an OSA fact sheet. The disproportionate amount of student borrowing and the low standing of OUS faculty compensation will hamper the economy of Oregon as a whole, OSA officials said. Art professor wins award in New York A University artist's design received one of only seven awards presented at a national exhibit in New York. Leon Johnson, an assistant professor of fine arts, won the Columbus College of Art and Design Award for Technologi cally Integrated Media at the 41st Annual Exhibition of the Chautauqua Center for the Vi sual Arts, The $300 award is presented to art works that use technology as an artistic medi um. Johnson’s award-winning diptych pairs a black and white self-portrait with a color satu rated image of a man wearing lace pants. The images were scanned and manipulated through a computer to produce an ink jet print Johnson says the design was sought to create a dialogue about the truth and fantasy of the roles men engage in and to elicit suspicion of these sup posed irreconcilable images. Twenty-seven artists were fi nally selected to exhibit 83 works in the juried show. Need help selecting a major? l fiediei a career? W Planning 4 years of courses? sharpening ynnr study skills? Take a 1 credit Discover Oregon course and tour an interesting academic topic in a small group with a faculty member who can give you regular advice. Discover: The Arts, CRN 15762 Women and Electoral Politics in Oregon, CRN 15781 What's Happening in Science, CRN 15766 Inside Musical Instruments, CRN 15778 Social Science Perspectives on Income Inequality, Crime, & Gender, CRN 15775 The News, CRN 15779 Humans and the Natural Environment, CRN 15771 Sports, Games, and Shows in the Ancient World, CRN 15767 New Frontiers in Child and Adolescent Psychology and Education, CRN 15780 Research in Exercise and Movement Science, CRN 15768 The Humanities, CRN 15770 What's Private ? What's Public?, CRN 15763 Twentieth-Century Science, CRN 15782 A World of Literature, CRN 15769 Exploring the Musical Arts, CRN 15777 The Growing Interdependence of Our World, CRN 15773 The Science and Politics of Earthquakes, CRN 15772 Language and its Relation to Society, CRN 15776 Social Science Perspectives on Human and Cultural Origins, CRN 15774 The Universal Machine, CRN 15764 Hot" Issues in the "Cold" North, CRN 15765 Open to ALL freshman students, regardless of interest disc°vER OREGON PROGRAM - 72 Oregon Hall • University of Oregon • 346-1136 heshsem@oregon.uoregon.edu / opportunity, affirmative -action institution committed to cultural diversity and compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act.