“40 years of Quality Service” Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi German Auto Service 342-2912• 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 qo I he Fertility Center of Oregon has J helped many couples achieve pregnancy since 1978. We are in need of Egg Donors to help infertile women. Procedures are done in a pleasant local environment over a period of only six weeks, and donors are compensated $2500 for their time. If you are a healthy woman age 21-31 and are interested, call 683-1559 or visit our website at www.WomensCare.com. Series to sponsor linguist GLOSS is hosting linguist Marianne Mithun through a colloquium series to speak on language oppression Jennifer Bear Campus/City Culture Reporter Students at the University enjoy a privilege that many people around the world are denied — the right to speak and converse in the language of their birth. GLOSS treasurer Lindsay Jones said language oppression and en dangerment have reached critical levels in many populations around the world. “Every two weeks there is a lan guage dying in the world, and lots of things, like cultural identity and tra ditions, die with it,” Jones said. This term, GLOSS, the student run organization devoted to the study of linguistics, is addressing the issue of language oppression in their colloquium series, “Lan guage Endangerment and Language Revitalization.” As a part of the series, every Fri day GLOSS sponsors a colloquium and brings in a different speaker to address the topic. Today, Marianne Mithun, a professor from the lin guistics department at the Universi ty of California, Santa Barbara, will be the guest speaker at the group discussion on language endanger ment at 3:30 p.m. in 142 Straub. Mithun will also be leading a work shop on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in 216 Allen. Mithun is a theoretical linguist. She examines the link between language and identity, and what happens culturally when a lan guage dies. Christiane De Oliveira, founding chairwoman of GLOSS and co-or ganizer of the fall colloquium series, said Mithun differs from many lin guists in the way she carries out her fieldwork because she honors the needs of the community whose lan guage is threatened while she con ducts her research. Mithun will be addressing the top ic of balancing academic work ver sus serving community needs at her workshop on Saturday. Linguistics Department Head Spike Gildea said many languages are dying out in different societies around the world because their tra ditional way of life is being eroded on all sides. He added the alarming trend of smaller communities being assimilated into dominant cultures is threatening the survival of tradi tional languages. “The world is facing what appears to be an unprecedented extinction of languages,” Gildea said. De Oliveira said this term’s theme was chosen because the group felt it was a good general in terest topic that everyone would enjoy learning about. “Language endangerment is a top ic that has to do with minority popu lations and repressed communities around the world,” De Oliveira said. Linguistic research, especially re garding the world trend towards lan guage oppression, is of great impor tance, Jones said. “Language is a manifestation of a population’s heritage,” she said, not just a collection of words and gram matical rules. Contact the reporter atjenniferbear@dailyemerald.com. Grant continued from page 1A to utilize resources and work closely with two local violence prevention groups, Womenspace and Sexual Assault Support Services. SASS Community Education Co ordinator Michelle Edwards said she thinks the grant will be an effective way to do more outreach on campus. “There will be more resources to put in the direction of Family Hous ing and the greek system,” she said. “I think a lot of people think this might be where it’s needed the most.” The grant money will also be used to expand law enforcement training with the Department of Public Safe ty, Eyster said. Additionally, the groups plan to refine programs for incoming stu dents, whether through residence halls or in brochures handed out to students, Eyster said. Women’s Center Office Coordina tor Lori Brown said the money will also be used to support the Sexual Wellness Advocacy Team, an intern ship program that educates about sex ual assault, to help pay for its outreach efforts and project programming. Brown said she hopes the grant will work in a way that reaches the community and helps change the norms that cause sexual violence. “I hope the program teaches peo ple about sexual empowerment and how to have healthy relationships,” she said. To track the grant’s effectiveness, the Institute of Violence and De structive Behavior will collect data for the next two years and report back to the groups. Contact the reporter atdaniellegillespie@dailyemerald.com. 015320 Take Ben Sherman home for the holidays! 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