OUTDOOR STORE GARAGE SALE LOCAL ourooo* KfTAtLfKS */iLL B£ EAAU BALLKOOAA ofF€KiN6 GRfAT DCALS ON: UNiVfKSify of OKf&oN ♦ R£ TURNS 4 DtSCONTiNU£D iT€AAS ♦ €XC€SS iNV£NTORy ♦ US£D R£NTAL G£AR H/^H/.0UrD00RPR06RA/VA.U0R£60N.£DU 3H6-H3G5 730 PM TUESDAY, MARCH 7 Make your event a success.. Q Let people know it’s happening! ■ 88% of the freshman class read the Oregon Daily Emerald each week. ■ On average, 82 % of all undergrads read the Oregon Daily Emerald each week. ■ Olie ad in the Oregon Daily Emerald will reach OVer 20f 000 students, faculty and staff in the University community. Advertise it in the Oregon Daily Emerald. Call our ad office today at 346-3712. Emerald Seminars provide additional credits ■ Weekend seminars offer students a way to earn credits while learning about a range of topics By Jessica Etheridge for the Emerald It’s no longer a secret. A large per centage of University students have discovered a way to earn extra cred its over the weekend: seminars. Seminars are pass/no pass and can be taken for two days and for up to two credits. Most seminars take place on the weekend. Typically they begin at 8 a.m., pause for a one-hour lunch break, then continue until 5 p.m. Students are usually given at least a pair of 15-minute stretch breaks. Participants are asked to take hourly quizzes to verify their pres ence. At the completion of the seminar, students are then given essay questions to complete. For two-day seminars, students are usually required to complete twelve essay questions to deter mine their pass/no pass status. The one-day seminars require complet ing six of twelve questions. The journalism school’s assistant dean for student services Greg Ker ber, believes that seminars can be an easy way for students to squeeze in those last few credits as well as to be a meaningful experience. “It appears that many of the seminar topics are timely and may be relevant to students, either per sonally, or in relation to situations they may be writing about profes sionally,” Kerber said. Kerber’s only concern is that students may potentially register for more than 20 credits by includ ing seminars. He encourages stu dents to not rush graduation. “If the substance of the seminar or any other elective course out side the University and major re quirements is appropriate, that’s what counts,” Kerber said. Greg Hartman, a senior ac counting major, participated in a seminar about sexually transmit ted diseases and summed up the experience as being less than easy. “All day in a classroom is a lit tle harsh,” he said. Most participants agreed that the experience was well worth the sacrifice, not only for the credit but also for the overall experience. Shannon Smith, a senior busi ness major, admits to wanting, “a quick, easy two credits.” Al though, she, like many other semi nar participants, walked away with more than that. Last spring, a seminar about al cohol and drugs included a speak er whose children were killed in a car accident. Kinley Engdahl Johnson, a junior journalism ma jor, recalls the experience as “ex tremely moving.” “I went in wanting a credit and came out with a whole new out look on drinking,” Kinley said. Many seminars are still available. Several can be found in the sched ule of classes under “Education” with the subhead of “Substance Abuse Prevention Program. ” • V* ir V k ir 2000 . ifS l tun "s;iu qfOngrm 74% ofVO students chink 1 or fewer clays a week ...or don't drink at all.