Open late to serve you! tihS ADMISSION Th-Sa $6 • DISOOl NT SHOWS SuAVc S4 <0 Matinees S3 • Seniors S3 30 • kids 12 A under S2.50 •! H \R( l AIN l'\SSI S ON S M l’ VOW S NtOVII S I (S2U.OO 10 FOR S3S • anTCFRTIFICATI-.SAVAn.ABU7 \ 5:00, 7:00 & 9:05 Nightly SUN MAT ® 3:00 A Vivid Portrait!" THELMA AfHMi KiWYORK K*T WINNER - 1938 Cannes film festivai.*specml .tie» p» rt the Celebration SOON I Ilf IS 111 AUIII LJI HCLU LIVEft: UUN I MISS II! IHfl 4.45JM^^.35 Nightly SUN MAT @ 27151 Two Thumbs Up!” ^ SISKEL6 F.BtRT A Breathtaking Mlm! Hogc. (Wii.SISKF.L6 tRMTT ELIZABETH UKOLUTE KWElt DEMANDS AB*M.UTE IOYALTY 11:15 Nightly SAT MAT <3 2:30 ^ I die• ? bery Sfi((er\ 12:00 Nightly iacfcie chan Q05133J ©MOW ®@MWT§ FOR A DOZEN DONUTS One coupon per customer. Not valid with any other offer ■■ WOT MOT MM 1'4/" 485 E. BROADWAY ♦ FOR DELIVERY INQUIRIES CALL 484-2780 unwind at the EMU Rec Center and The Buzz Bring your receipt from the Rec Center to The Buzz and any beverage is f3 R t C E Bring your receipt from The Buzz to the Rec Center and shoot pool for Y offer good December 3-11 Hours: Mon-Wed 10am-l 1:30pm • Thur-Fri 10am-2am • Sat llam-2am • Sun 1 lam-11:30pm 005147 Hey Students, Need a Place to Study During Finals?? Come to Lyon’s. • Appetizers • Burgers • Shakes * Free Beverage Re-fills! Open 24 Hours 933 Franklin Boulevard • East of Villard • Call 484-4333 We’re Up Late to Serve You. Come Visit Us! Continued from Page 1 “It’s nice to see some progress in their sculptures and work when they fire it,” Coleman said. The kiln, located off the bike path next to the Millrace, was de signed and built by students two years ago. The kiln has only been fired a handful of times since it was completed. "There have been kilns on that site for 30 years,” said George Kokis, a fine and applied arts professor. "It used to be the only thing out here.” Kokis talked about the juxtapo sition of the kiln with the River front Research Park, where they do “white-gloved research of silica.” Silica is a material used in computer-chip technology and in ceramics. “When you think about it, the space shuttle is just a big pot heading for the heavens," Kokis said. The process is “untimely, or it’s timeless.” Wood kilns are no longer a common tool for firing ceramics. The thousands-of-centuries-old process, called anagama, came to the United States from Japan. “You don’t have to glaze the stuff you put in the wood kiln,” Sill said. “You get some beautiful, unexpected things. You get what you get — you sort of have to re linquish control. You can control the shape, the form, but the finish is determined by the fire.” Kokis said firing the kiln is “very process-oriented," and the finished products are unpredictable. u You get what you get — you soil of have to relinquish control. You can control the shape, the form, but the finish is determined by the fire. ^ George Kokis Professor of fine and applied arts "We do get some handsome products, but that’s a bonus,” Kokis said. “The real meat of the matter is doing it.” The process is very low-tech, but that means the techniques are subtle, he said. Kokis compared the process to an old toaster that a person has to watch to determine when the toast was done. “There’s a lot of subtle atten tion being paid,” Kokis said. “You have to be sensitive to its needs. It's paying attention to things you care about. It’s about craft and how to extend the car ing into other affairs.” Kokis said students involved with the wood kiln are interested in learning how to refine the process. “We don’t want to find the per fect way to run the kiln,” Kokis said. "We want to try different things. There’s a certain grace to it that you don’t find in this rushed world.” Crime Continued from Page 1 a court of law. The suspect told Agent Olson that he needed "pathological help” but was too lazy to go. He admitted to participating in "20 to 30” on-campus masturbating incidents, all but one of which occurred in the EMU or Knight Library. Citing legal reasons, the sus pect declined to talk about specifics of the case. “I’m dealing with this on many levels,” he said. “I want to talk to people about the whole thing, but I have to be care fid because of the nature of the case.” Police are asking the victims of this type of crime to step for ward. “In most of these cases, either the intended victim did not see him, or they did not report it," Eugene police Sgt. Rick Gilliam said. “Obviously, if somebody has seen it, we want to know about it.” Those who believe they have been victimized are urged to call the Eugene Police campus line at 346-2904. "We hope that by the aware ness of this crime he won’t be back on campus doing this again,” Gilliam said. Public indecency has been a recurring problem on campus for about two years, and several women have filed complaints that they saw a man masturbat ing while watching them. Most of the reports came from the Knight Library or the EMU. The most recent complaint was an Oct. 14 incident in the EMU. The statute of limitations is two years for the crime, and promptness in reporting inci dents would help in the investi gation of the current suspect, Gilliam said. According to the police report, the suspect told police he mas turbated in front of women to as sure himself “that he was a man.” He also said that he never did this when he felt that his ac tions were “unwelcome by the woman.” He admitted he must have been wrong on a couple of occasions because the women contacted the police. OPS has posted case informa tion on its Web site, safetyweb.uoregon.edu. “34 years of Quality Service” Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi German Auto Service • MERCEDES • BMW • VOLKSWAGEN • 001721 342-2912 • 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 Reeyck • Recycle • Recycle * Recycle