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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 2002)
OVEN TOASTED BY TWO LOCAL GUYS! TOASTED SUBS • SOUPS • SALADS UO Campus at 13th & Alder (Inside Starbucks) 5th Street Public Market • Gateway Blvd. & Beltline Rd. — poppiV— ^4na4oli& "The Land East" Traditional Greek & Indian Food Lunch Monday through Saturday Dinner 7 Nights a Week 992 Willamette Eugene, Or 97401 343-9661 o UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Your Summer Check out the September Experience Program September 3-13, 2002 • Short on group requirements? • Looking for a unique way to wrap up your summer? • Want to get ahead in your course of study? • Excited to get hack in the swing of classes? • Does $450 for 4 credits sound like a deal to you? If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, you need to find out more about the September Experience Program. Resident and nonresident students take one course for 4 credits in nine days for just $450, and all but WR 49 and MATH 95 are group satisfying! Classes meet from 8:00 a.m. to 11:50 p.m. We have the courses you want, the courses you need, and the courses you should take. Course No. Course Title Instructor CRN Room ANTH 314 Women and Culture I: Politics, Production, and Power Fulton 42387 106 CON ANTH 361 Human Evolution Nelson 42198 260 CON GEOG206 Geography of Oregon Baldwin 42199 360 CON HIST 192 Japan: Past and Present Hanes 42200 214 MCK MATH 95 Intermediate Algebra Loft 42201 102 DEA PS 205 Introduction to International Relations Hartwig 42210 189 PLC SOC 301 American Society Smith 42203 136 ED WR49 Developmental Composition Mariner 42204 184 PLC UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SUMMER SESSION SEPTEMBER EXPERIENCE PROGRAM Register using DuckWeb <http://duckweb.uoregon.edu/> or DuckCall (541) 346-1600 today! For more information, visit our website, <http://uosummer.uoregon.edu/SepExp.html>; call us, 346-3475, or send us e-mail, <septexp@darkwing.uoregon.edu>. FIND THINGS IN ODE CLASSIFIEDS (BICYCLES, PETS, CARS, JOBS, ROOMMATES, APARTMENTS, CONCERT TICKETS, PLANE TICKETS, STUFF YOU LOST, TYPING SERVICES, ON-CAMPUS OPPORTUNITIES) Kirkpatrick continued from page 1A Paris, who is also an associate pro fessor of law. Kirkpatrick is the third dean to work with Executive Assistant to the Dean Barbara Moore. She be lieves it takes a certain kind of per son to do the job right. “It takes someone that has a great deal of patience and can address a variety of issues at the same time,” she said. “The dean has to simulta neously deal with everything from mundane to large issues.” Kirkpatrick said he will not teach for the first year of his deanship be cause there will be so many respon sibilities with his new position. One of his goals as dean is to in crease the law school’s ranking. “It’s a chance to move the school forward into the front tier of public law schools,” he said. When Kirkpatrick found out that he would be the next dean, he was n’t overwhelmed. “I knew there’d be challenges,” he said. In a released statement, Kirk patrick outlined some of his biggest goals. One of these is outreach. “It’s a chance to move the school forward into the front tier of public law schools.” Laird Kirkpatrick law school dean “We need to strengthen the con nections with our alumni, and in particular we need to establish greater visibility and presence in Portland, where so many of our graduates practice.” Contact the managing editor jennischultz@dailyemerald.com. Award continued from page 1A how to litigate. ADRP advisor and Assistant Pro fessor Michael Moffitt said the ADR Advocates have been successful be cause the group has a variety of ac tivities, such as studying theory, re searching, doing fieldwork and attending national conferences. The program’s plethora of oppor tunities and pioneer techniques are getting attention. “I think there’s a growing un derstanding that law school cur ricula (need to) reflect the reali ties of modern lawyering,” Moffitt said. “If (lawyers) are spending their time negotiating, we should be teaching (students) how to negotiate.” Moffitt said recent studies show that around 90 percent of cases are settled out of court. Moffitt said that the courses and real world ap plications the ADRP offers reflect this different understanding of the legal realm. Students are afforded the chance to employ the out-of-court media tion skills they learn in the ADRP by going out into the community to work on cases. ADR Advocates member Jodee Scott said that focusing on out-of court settlements may save clients time. “Courts are really crowded,” Scott said. She added that in court there is a winner and a loser, but in mediation and arbitration, both sides reach a compromise. 7 think there’s a growing understanding that law school curicula (need to) reflect the reality of modem lawyering.” Michael Moffitt law assistant professor ADRP Director Jane Gordon said that the solutions lawyers find us ing alternative dispute resolution tend to be less adversarial and more creative than traditional problem solving methods. These solutions might also be better than what a court could hand down, said Gor don, who is also the associate dean for student and program affairs. Contact the reporter atjilliandaley@dailyemerald.com. ',*1 Still the Best Still just... $1025 Trendy and professional haircuts by friendly haircare specialists. Call Ahead Service available at WILLAMETTE SQUARE 2526 Willamette Ave. 683-1405 Open 7 days a week; Mon-Sat 9am - 7pm • Sun 11 am - 4pm SUPOCUTS As hip as you want to be. g/ Love to get the scoop? www.dailyemerald.com