dRUATFISR to§®8 515 Hich St Eugene 48s-4ii4 NATURAL FIBER CLOTHIN6 THE FLAXLINE V CUT LOOSE TWO STAR DOC 8 AMANDA CRAY V TIBETAN TRADERS V KASHI & MORE 1 Locally owned since 1991....We support FAIR TRADE OPEN MON-SAT 10-6 & SUN 12-5 741-4676 Free applications and listings 24 hours at 637 B Street, downtown Springfield Sunset Arms Apartments, Southeast Eugene 3530 W. Amazon, 434-6179.1 bedroom $455 484 W. 13th #A, tri-plex.2 bedroom $495 1647 Mill #3.2 bedroom $525 Willowbrook Apartments, West Eugene 29840 Willow Creek, 342-8275.2 bedroom $575 Mill Race Apartments, behind Track Town Pizza 1805 Garden Ave, 344-5695.2 bedroom $575 Prague Apartments, Great Value!!! 2447 Roosevelt Blvd, 689-7104.3 bedroom $595 175 N. Grand, house.2+ bedroom $750 www. emerald pm. com 11H Not valid with any other otter. Limited delivery area. EXPIRES 7/18/01 jjf4Pizza Pipeline! I L^ii” PipelineJ Not valid with any other offer. Limited delivery area. EXPIRES 7/18/01 Jessie Swimeley Emerald After long hours of historical research, David Lewis and his fellow graduate student Scott Byram have found many reasons to believe the name Oregon originated from a Native American word. Oregon continued from page 1 even fielding interviews from the British Broadcasting Corporation about their work. He has been sur prised by the interest but is relishing the opportunity to highlight the oth er topics in their work that go be yond where Oregon got its name. As a member of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, he wants to see Native American history taught starting in elementary school and give Native American students at every education level a chance to see that their people and history are es sential portions of American history. “I hope the people who follow me will write these histories and balance the perspective of what this land is,” he said. Lewis added that he would also like to see the historical and anthro pological fields give more credibili ty to oral history. Much of his and Byram’s research is based on trac ing European and American writ ten words back into Native Ameri can verbal accounts. “Anthropology tends to say tribal history is simply folklore or myth,” Lewis said. “We’re saying tribal his tory is important — and historically important.” Keddington-Lang said the extra issues involved helped the article make it into the Quarterly. “It does make a lot of connec tions and goes beyond the origin of [the name of] Oregon,” she said. Lewis said he and Byram are looking for funding to expand the article into a book not just about the name, but tribal history, linguistics, the Native American fishing trade and other issues that connect to current popular American history. “In a sense, we share the same history,” Lewis said. The full text of the article can be found online at ohs.org/publica tions/ohq/current_issue.htm. ' * ' .. '/' .'iiii >A onopus fe&y-. » .••*.«. , va-^* «;%> <■!•%,» <.x • On bus route g .s - - || fe:«ip ■>. s yTx*, i i ' 'HIS/ courts * Superior workout facilities ♦ Starting at $320 • Roommate matching service. ♦ 10 & 12 month leases www.capstone -dev.com waiimmwuM •COM M O N S • APARTMENTS Property address: 90 Commons Drive Now Leasing! CALL 338.4000 or stop by our Leasing Office at 90 Commons Drive Open 7 days a week