Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 23, 2001, Page 4, Image 4

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    SUMMER Pai„tlno
WORKSHOPS
Registration
Starts
June 7th
Weaving
Ceramics
Drawing
Stained Glass
Bicycle Repair
Woodworking
For more information, or to have our
Summer brochure mailed to you please call
346-4361
CRAFT CENTER
craftcenter.uoregon.edu
School of MUSIC
& Department of DANCE
FINAL CONCERTS■
Clip and Save this Calendar
For more information on School of Music events, call 346-5678,
or call Guardline at 485-2000, ext. 2533 for a taped message.
Wed. GREEN GARTER BAND
5/23 UO Ensemble 8 p.m., Beall Hall
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Thu. UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY
5/24 UO Ensemble 8 p.m., Beall Hall
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Tue. MEN’S CHORUS, WOMEN’S CHORUS, &
5/29 VOCAL JAZZ ENSEMBLE
UO Ensembles 8 p.m., Beall Hall
FREE Admission
Wed. CAMPUS BAND & CAMPUS ORCHESTRA
5/30 UO Ensembles 8 p.m., Beall Hall
FREE Admission
Thu. UNIVERSITY SINGERS, CHAMBER CHOIR
5/31 & COLLEGIUM MUSICUM
UO Ensembles 8 p.m., Beall Hall
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Sat. FUTURE MUSIC OREGON
6/2 UO Computer Music Center 8 p.m., Room 198 Music
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Sun. CHAMBER MUSICALE
6/3 UO Chamber Ensembles 1 p.m., Beall Hall
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Mon. UO LAB CHOIR
6/4 UO Ensemble 8 p.m., Central Presbyterian Church
FREE Admission
COLLEGIUM MUSICUM
UO Ensemble 8 p.m., Room 198 Music
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
THE JAZZ CAFE
UO Jazz Combos 8 p.m., Room 186 Music
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
UO PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE
UO Ensemble 3 p.m., Room 198 Music
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
Sun. UNIVERSITY GOSPEL ENSEMBLE & CHOIR
6/10 UO Ensembles 6 p.m., EMU Ballroom
$5 General Admission, $3 students & senior citizens
For our complete calendar, check: music.uoregon.edu
Tue.
6/5
Fri.
6/8
Sun.
6/10
find fun stuff in the ODE classifieds
Clark
continued from page 1
But Melissa Unger, ASUO legisla
tive organizer, said the meetings
should be public or include student
groups who also have knowledge
on many of the issues.
“They’re talking about things that
affect the student fee,” she said.
“And that affects every student on
campus. These groups could pro
vide insight and information that
could help them in the final deci
sion.”
Debby Martin, program coordina
tor for the Student Activities Re
source Office, agreed, saying she
thinks the meetings should be open.
“As a staff person, I feel uncom
fortable that they’re closed,” she
said. “It’s not very democratic.”
But by law the meetings are not
required to be open, Executive As
sistant President Dave Hubin said,
because they are “purely advisory
and non-policy making.”
Leavitt added that after meetings,
panel members write down “talking
points” about the main issues, and
this information is shared with oth
ers.
ASUO President-elect Nilda
Brooklyn said although the commit
tee has made some effort to commu
nicate with people not included in
the meetings, there could be more
access for people to give input.
Brooklyn said that she wishes
she were involved because she
will be responsible next year for
implementing any changes the
panel recommends. Although
some information has been re
layed to her second- and third
hand, she said she still has only a
vague idea of the issues discussed
in the meetings.
“It will be a major part of the work
I’ll be doing next year,” she said.
“This affects our presidency.”
ASUO Student Senate President
Peter Watts said that many of the
meetings involve “mundane” is
sues that would not be of interest to
many students. For example, some
times the committee will spend
hours discussing the difference be
tween EMU programs and PFC pro
grams.
“People think we’re discussing
top-secret stuff, but it’s not terribly
interesting,” he said. “I can under
stand why people would want more
access to the meetings, but if they
had to sit through one, their view
point would change.”
Leavitt added that information
shared from the meetings appears
vague because the panel still has not
determined any solid recommenda
tions.
“The issues are still so unclear to
us— I’m not sure we’re going to get
any recommendations done,” she
said. “We can only say: ‘We have to
figure this out.’”
We ship your stuff home!
Take advantage of our Student Discounts
Furniture, computers, stereos, TV's
Insured, custom packing — UPS, Ocean Freight, Motor Freight
2705 Willamette St.
(convenient parking)
r
UO Summer
Session
Glasses Begin
p June 25.
BookYour Summer in Oregon
Pick up your free summer catalog today in the Summer Session office,
333 Oregon Hall, or at the UO Bookstore. You can speed your way toward
graduation by taking required courses during summer.
University of Oregon Summer Session
http://nosummer.noregon.edu/