Saturday Market celebrates Eugene’s downtown area LAURA GOSS/Emerald Steve Albrechtsen uraps a ceramic bowl for Maureen Frahm of San Diego at the Saturday Market. Local artisans have been selling wares at the Market for almost three decades By Peter Breaden Oregon Daily Emerald From the April planting season until Thanksgiving’s harvest time, a goblin in its 29th year rises in the heart of Eugene. The Saturday Mar ket is often branded the “last bas tion of the terminally hip,” a link to the thirty-something expression of communal life and flower power. Described as a clan by some, the market occupies the park blocks at 8th Avenue and Oak Street, across from Eugene City Hall. The mis sion of the market is to provide “a low-cost marketplace for local handcrafters and artisans and a weekly celebration for the Eugene community.” Along with the hand-crafted wares are 24 food booths and a stage that holds a va riety of musical performances. The same stage hosted the Mar ket’s first wedding when Eileen Polk and Anthony Cormier were married last July. The Market will BOOH YOUR Short courses, seminars, and workshops begin throughout the summer. Summer Session starts June 21. Duck Call begins May 3,1999. The 110 Summer Session Bulletin will be available in early April. You can speed your way toward graduation by taking required courses during summer. SUMMER SCHEDULE First four-week session: June 21-July 16 Second four-week session: July 19-August 13 Eight week session: June 21-August 13 Eleven-week session: June 21-September 3 UNIVERSITY of OREGON SUMMER SESSION 333 Oregon Hall 1279 University of Oregon Eugene OR 97403-1279 Telephone (541) 346-3475 http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~uosummer/ hold a clearance sale on October 10. “It doesn’t matter if it rains, if it’s sunny, or if it’s an election year,” said Kim Still, assistant manager of the Market. “It’s pretty much just a festive atmosphere every week.” The Saturday Market was founded by Lotte Streisinger, who borrowed the idea from Central American market plazas and her own childhood memories. “The Eugene community was losing its downtown to Valley River Center and to the suburbs,” said Streisinger, who is a professional potter from Munich, Germany. “The Market is a centralizing force.” The original 29 vendors have grown into a body of over 800 ac tive members. It is governed by a nine-member board of directors, which is composed of artisans and community members. “It’s a good way to participate in the economy of Eugene, to make it stronger, with no middle-men,” Still said. “It’snot that common.” The Saturday Market Standards Committee enforces criteria related to “uniqueness, originality, and craft processes.” Vendors pay $8 and 10 percent of sales for their booth space, which is eight feet deep by eight feet wide. At the first gathering on May 9,1970, the fee was $1. “In the beginning, many people thought of it as a political state ment, opposing the military and industrial complex,” she said. “Now it’s more a collection of small businesses.” The Market, which is a nonprofit organization, carries an annual budget of more than $350,000. The same organization operates the Holiday Market between Thanks giving and Christmas Eve. Market staff estimate sales that total more than $2.5 million at Market events. The dissemination of personal computing will further entrench the Market, Streisinger said. The more that people sit in front of a computer screen, the more the Market will be needed because, she said, “it’s real and something you can touch.” ACUPUNCTURE & CHINESE HERBAL MEDICINE Effective treatment for chronic pain, asthma/allergies, PMS, menopause, anxiety/panic attacks, emotional/behavioral issues, insomnia, sexual dysfunction, bladder and bowel dysfunction. • EVENING & WEEKEND HOURS AVAILABLE • HOUSE CALLS AVAILABLE • SENIOR AND STUDENT DISCOUNTS fzIfrOO PETER CHABAREK LICENSED ACUPUNCTURIST 492 W. Broadway, Eugene • 579-5843 20% off Sports Supplements EVERYDAY 15% off Vitamins & Herbs w/ student ID VITAL FOOD 3 255 E. 18th St.