1225 ALDER 345-2434 Not valid with any other discounts or coupons. MON-FRI 10AM-10PM • SAT 11AM 9PM • SUN 12PM 9PM is 15th & Peart • 683-7833 12 HAon.-SaK. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. * 5 p.m.-9 p.m. V._ I Best Noodles Around! We make them herel Specializing in Japanese Noodles “37 years of Quality Servicem Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi German Auto Service • MERCEDES • BMW • VOLKSWAGEN • .-1— 342-2912 • 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 (fre-t-f yrzi-f fu** Jr^f espe/fpice. Don’t miss out. Work for your college paper. For more information on how to freelance for the Oregon Daily Emerald call 346-5511. Women of color continued from page 1 oppressions that women of color face, is organized by the ASUO Women’s Center Diversity Coordinator. This year’s coordinator, Celine Jo, said she was hap py with the way the conference turned out. Jo, a sen ior history major, wanted the keynote to be entertain ing and uplifting to conclude the event. All day, the EMU housed nine panel discussions and workshops about problems and issues particu lar to women of color. The workshops addressed many different topics, such as affirmative action, healing white racism, celebrating diversity and sur viving sexual assault. At 6 p.m., about 100 people gathered for a buffet dinner and performance called “Womyn with wings.” The main theme of the three-person play was how women can still “fly” even if someone, or something, is trying to hold them back. James Chapmyn, who choreographed the play, was the voice of all men and stood far to the right, al most out of sight. The performance touched on domestic abuse, gen ital mutilation, abortion, eating disorders and other issues that face mainly women. “Some people were crying, they were so moved by the play,” Jo said. - As the caterers cleared the tables and organizers popped balloons, the remaining people inside the ballroom mixed with the actors and expressed grati tude for their inspiring performance. D'Ebrar Chapman, one of two actresses in the play, said she enjoys the message the performance gives. Chapman has been with the Chapmyn Spoken Word performing arts company for four years. The play shows that “no matter what you’ve been through, Francis Piven continued from page 1 vate funding made possible an expansion of the associated pro grams including the creation of four classes dedicated to the is sues Piven will address. For three decades, Piven, 67, has stridently worked toward un derstanding public welfare poli cies and how they impact or pro hibit democratic citizen participation. Her most famous work, the 1971 book “Regulating the Poor: The Functions of Public we throw all kinds of tuition isn't one of Sure, we’ll have you climbing walls. But if you qualify for a 2- or 3-year scholarship, tuition’s one obstacle you won’t have to worry about. Talk to an Amy ROTC rep. And get a teg up on your future. ARMY ROIC Unlike any other college course yon can take, j|§ Contact CRT Rich Lewis for more information 346-ROTC army@oregon.uoregon.edu you have power,” she said. Chapman stood or $at center-stage arid often added clothes, changed her headdress or put on glasses to signify a change in character. At the beginning of the play, she boldly declared that she was every woman. “I am European women, I am Native women, I am Aboriginal women,” she said. Meanwhile, Amy Varshock portrayed a woman who had been violated by a man she formerly trust ed. Varshock has been acting for only a year. “I feel I am learning more than I teach,” Varshock said. “Helping people along the way is an added bonus.” Chapmyn took on the voice of society in a section on eating disorders. He boomed demands from men over Chapman and Varshock as they tried to explain what women with eating disorders go through. “When we accept ourselves, we find the beauty we all possess,” Chapman and Varshock said in unison. Varshock, who had stood stage left the entire play, finally took center stage near the end of the show. She portrayed a woman who had been raped, stabbed and beaten and left to die. She stood in front of Chapman and displayed her strength as she de clared she did not have to go it alone to be strong. She vowed she would fight to bring the perpetrator to justice and show that he could never destroy her. Darlene Dadras, a theater arts and romance lan guages major, said she thought the play was wonder ful. “It had a lot of powerful messages.” Dadras, who also attended some of the workshops, said she learned a lot at the conference. “I’m glad they decided to have a performance in stead of a speaker.” In future years, }o said she would like to see more collaboration in planning the event and is working on ways to facilitate this for next year’s coordinator. Welfare,” examines the connec tion between systemic welfare policies and the widespread so cial change they incite. Currently distinguished pro fessor of political science and so ciology at the City University of New York, Piven’s extensive writing and personal activism make her an ideal occupant of the chair, according to Morse committee member and director of the Labor Education and Re search Cener Margaret Hallock. “We invited her because we believe economic inequality and the growing disparity between professional and wage workers is of paramount concern,” Hallock said. “And we are at risk if we al low this gap to develop and grow leading to alienation and a lack of participation.” Speaking to participatory poli tics, Piven will use the recent WTO protests in Seattle as a step ping-off point for much of her presentation topics schedule. In her view, such groundswells of activism are signs of hope against the behind-the-scenes govern ment policy making she evalu ates. In a statement regarding her trip to Eugene, Piven said, “The overall theme of the visit is eco nomic inequality, which is taking a heavy toll on American life, and not only on the poor who are its first victims. When money talks as loudly as it does today, the voices of ordinary people cannot be heard, and democracy atrophies.” But Hallock acknowledged the author’s positive outlook for the future when large-scale protests like Seattle bring these issues to the forefront of American con sciousness. Changes in policy, Piven believes, often come from the bottom up, not from the top down. “She is simultaneously a critic of the systems in place but also very insightful and optimistic about opportunities for mobiliz ing people and including them in the political process,” Hallock said. “Having a voice, that’s what it’s all about.” Giving voice to the issues close to home, Piven’s participation in the community forum will give local residents a chance to dis cuss the labor and justice issues that affect Lane County. With a total population of 313,000, according to 1998 Ore gon Employment Department data, the average annual wage in Lane County is $26,137. The area’s unemployment rate, how ever, is slightly higher than the national average. This is partly because of the decline of lumber and wood products jobs over the last decade, which provided the largest component of manufac turing employment for the re gion. Eugene and Springfield have seen an increase, though, in serv ice sector and high-technology jobs over this same period. Yet as Piven argues in her writing, un skilled workers get squeezed out when their jobs are either mech anized, outsourced or require ad ditional training. As regional economist for Lane County, Brian Rooney studies these trends and agrees that they help to create the “disappearing middle” Piven discusses. “There is more of an income disparity here because lumber production jobs have been re placed by high-tech ones like Sony Disc Manufacturing that don’t pay as well,” he said. In the past, we were dependent on those jobs, and we felt the pain when they left. Still, Rooney is encouraged by the influx of companies that have moved to the area recently, in cluding Levi-Strauss and a num ber of call centers which provide new jobs to both skilled and un skilled laborers. “The economy looks good here in Lane County,” he said. “Ex panding manufacturing, finance and software design is helping us to diversify and that’s good for our future.”