Goin’ -! . . just for the halibut ■The Street Faire opens today with a wide variety of food, drink, shopping, music and art ByAiixKerl Oregon Daily Emerald Frisbees flying, halibut flying and babies crying — boy howdy, it’s time for the ASUO Spring Street Faire, the true rite of passage for the coming of spring. This year’s Faire, which runs to day through Friday, will feature more than just food qnd craft booths. There will be a 24-hour art marathon, 20 bands will play over three days in the EMU Amphitheater, and Cam pus Recycling is attempting to make the event waste-free. This year, there will also be a few more food booths. The Street Faire's organizers felt bad about making the nonprofit groups pay a fee for the space, so this year the nonprofit groups will be along the Amphithe ater breezeway and they won’t be charged a participation fee. The move means more room for art and food booths, and Street Faire organ izers said the food court will be the biggest it’s ever been. There will be the standard India House and Bangkok Grill booths, but new ven dors include Kettle Com and Just for the Halibut, which will serve fish as well as elephant ears. Along with adding all the new food, there is a plan to compost it, as well. At the Fall Street Faire, Cam pus Recycling reduced overall waste by 50 percent through recycling and composting efforts, according to Karyn Kaplan, the recycling manag er. This year, there will be six recy cling stations on 13 th Avenue that will include compost bins, and all cardboard, glass, plastic, metals, re cyclable paper, plates, napkins and chopsticks will be recycled. “Composting is on the cutting edge right now,” Kaplan said. Campus Recycling has encour aged food vendors to buy things that are compostable, and student workers will be directing people to place compostable waste in pro vided containers. The music lineup was organized by campus radio station KWVA. Tambi Boyle, ASUO marketing di rector, said that the organizers of the Street Faire enlisted KWVA’s help in getting bands in order to have a vari ety of different music. “KWVA has more tentacles in the band community than we do,” Boyle said. Charlotte Nisser, general manager for the radio station, said that the idea was to get a variety of interest ing bands that would appeal to a col lege audience. “KWVA is an outlet for the under represented,” Nisser said. “And many of these bands are under-rep resented.” On Wednesday the music will start at 10 a.m. and go until 5. p.m. On Thursday, bands will play from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. On Friday the mu sic will start at 10 a.m. and go until 4 p.m. Each day from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m., there will be all-acoustic sets so that the noise level will be low dur ing the Career Fair and classes. Highlights of the Faire include: Wednesday: Justin Martinez will rock the acoustic as Basic Assump tion unplugged. Thursday: Honey Vizer, a Eugene resident who has been playing her Thomas Patterson Emerald Plenty of shiny things were in evidence at last year’s ASUO Street Faire. This year’s Faire, held today through Friday, will undoubtedly be similar. guitar, banjo and accordion for years now, will perform. She has been carving out a comer for herself in the world of country-folk-punk. Bitesize is from the Bay Area and plays short songs about automobile accidents, body parts and freak love. Friday: Papa’s Soul Kitchen plays R&B, soul and funk. The band mem bers said they like to groove and want to spread messages of peace, love and understanding. Miami Air lines, which plays a form of mexi cali-ska kind of like Sublime, will also play. There will also be a 24-hour art event sponsored by a group that calls itself The Experiment. The art marathon will take place during the Street Faire at a booth near Con don Hall. The event will run from noon Thursday to noon Friday. From 10 p.m. Thursday to 10 a.m. Friday, the event will take place at the EMU Amphitheater. The marathon is a fund-raiser for Inside-Out, a two-day art festival that will take place the first weekend of June at the McDonald Theatre. The Experiment has organized a variety of art events throughout the last two terms to raise money for the event. Mary Rasmussen, visual arts coordi nator for the UO Cultural Forum, is one of the event’s organizers. “The idea is to have people creat ing and producing art for the straight twenty-four hours,” Rasmussen said. “Basically, we are all artists that would normally be doing art at the wee hours of the night, and we have decided to present it as a spectacle in order to help make a local two-day art show possible.” The organizers have scheduled a varied group of artists to do sculpt ing, art demonstrations, painting, an interactive continuing art piece and poetry. The group cannot have amplified music, however, because it is restricted to the Amphitheater during class hours. “We also wanted to make art more visible on campus, because it seems as though support for the arts isn’t such a priority in an athletics driven school,” Rasmussen said. E-mail reporter Alix Kerl at alixkerl@dailyemerald.com. Schedule of bands playing at the Spring Street Faire All bands will play in the EMU Amphitheater; bands playing between 10a.m. and 2 p.m. will be performing acoustic sets. Wednesday, April 24 10 a.m. Introduction 11 am. Jttslin Martinez 12 pm Lady lingers 1p.m. Rex Morning Star 2 pm John Shipe 3 pm, Wallace 4 p.m. Beard Thursday, April 25 10 a.m. Jamie Rust 11 a.m. Honey Vizer 12pm0ddibie 1p.m. Latin Dancers 2 p.m. KWVA 3 pm. Bitestee. 4 pm. Paradigm 5 p.m. Hillbilly Holocaust . 6 pm. Mr. Sparkle 7 pm, Alpha Charlie 8 p.m. Two Sucks Short 9 pm. Alter Ego Friday, April 26 10a,m.TBA 11 am. Papa’s Soul Kitchen 12 pm. 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