Ration WREiSfiL Back to the Books! 3x5 prints • 135-24 exp. film OLYMPUS 160-L Digital ]Kj^ Stylish l Compact 5* Zoom Digital J Camera with 1 5 Megapixel CCD f/' C-3030 zoom Digital 460-L Digital • Stylish l Compact 5* Zoom Digital Camera with 13 Megapixel CCD • 1.280x960 Pixel High Resolution • Super-Sharp Sx Zoom Lens • SHdeOpen Lens Barrier *3995 NOW ONLINE at vvww.THESHUTTERBUGONUNE.oom r'ShutiertoaWEs J I flfli flBPMHflg Find ODE stories since 1994 UUL fillllHIV LU @ www.dailyemerald.com ■ Ditch the mall movie scene and view a flick from atop a balcony seat or an old church By Kristina Johnson Oregon Daily Emerald It’s Saturday night, and you’ve only got S3 to spare. If you think the only culture you’re going to see is growing in the bottom of your can of Pabst, think again. For that S3, you can catch a late show at the Bijou Art Cinemas, also known as “the best little art house between Seattle and San Francisco.” The Bijou, located at 492 East 13th Ave., usually shows inde pendent and foreign films, though a certain strain of blockbuster fare (read: “Gladiator”) occasionally finds its way onto one of the two big screens. The theater is housed in an enormous butter-colored Spanish mission, which was designed in 1925 by the first dean of the Uni versity’s School of Architecture. Originally a congregational church, the building was convert ed into the McGaffey-Andreason Mortuary in the 1950s. The mortuary eventually closed Catharine Kendall Emerald A movie watching experience at the Bijou is always unique, not just for alternative film offerings, but because it’s ‘the best little art house between Seattle and San Francisco.’ and the building remained vacant for several years, until owner Michael Lamont decided to turn it into a movie house. In the 20 years since, the Bijou’s legend has grown. “Everyone says the Bijou’s haunted,” said Dana Krizan, who has managed the theater for al most 10 years. “The biggest story would have to be the Spoon Ghost.” ' Spoons have inexplicably fallen on several occasions from places where no spoon would ever be, Krizan said. “Once, 1 wasn’t there, but I walked in right after it happened, and I saw the expressions on peo ple's faces after the spoon fell,” he said. “It would had to have jumped two or three feet off the shelf to land where it did. Anoth Turn to Moviehouses, page 14D ONE MODEM NUMBER! ' 11 warn f—T- ■ -—— nw mill Dial 225"2200 and use your UO Computing Center email username address (for example, jersmith@gladstone.uoregon.edu, jersmith@darkwing.uoregon.edu, or jersmith@oregon.uoregon.edu) and your email account password to log in. Questions? Contact Microcomputer Services •http://micro.uoregon.edu/modeminfo ^microhelp@oregon.uoregon.edu *346-4412 TWICE as many modems NO separate modem account required Over the summer, the UO’s modem pool doubled in size, to a total of 576. Music of passion, power, exuberance, romance. Students $10 682-5000 or EMU Ticket Office www.augmesymphony.org Miguel Harth-Bedoya, Conductor Beethoven Triple Rachmaninoff Third Brahms, Liszt, Schumann Gershwin "Rhapsody in Blue' Stravinsky "Retrouchka" Advertise in ODE Classifieds! 346-4343 Forget Cinemark, it’s the Bijou