UO will spearhead fine arts program The University of Oregon Museum of Art is set to help reinforce local arts programs in K-l 2 schools Jillian Daley Family/Health/Education Reporter The University of California at Irvine chose the University to be the first school in Oregon to pilot Arts Bridge America, a national program dedicated to providing a fine arts ed ucation for K-l2 schools without art facilities or sufficient funding. University of Oregon Museum of Art officials said UC Irvine, where the program started, provided the University with funding because UOMA had already established pro News briefs Seminar to advise on scholastic savings The Oregon 529 College Savings Plan will host a free seminar Satur day at the Hilton Eugene from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. to advise the public of the benefits of early planning and to remind families of upcoming deadlines. By investing before the end of the year, Oregon taxpayers can take up to a #2,000 deduction from their 2002 taxable income. The seminar r grams similar to Arts Bridge. The National Endowment for the Arts recently granted #30,000 to the University and the Lane Arts Coun cil for Art Access — a program simi lar to Arts Bridge — that sends UOMA staff and trained volunteers to speak and teach at local public schools. For Arts Bridge, the UOMA staff trains undergraduate and graduate students for a term in public speak ing, classroom management and ar eas of the museum’s collection be fore teaching at K-12 schools in the Eugene-Springfield area. “Since I’m in the arts administra tion program, I’m interested not only in art, but how to bring art to other people, so this is the ultimate part nership of those two things,” second year arts administration graduate student Jennifer Galame said. Galame said students who receive the instruction also benefit. “I think that it can change any student’s life,” she said. “Art’s been shown to help other disciplines like language arts, mathematics and science.” However, teaching is not the only function of the Arts Bridge program. “The idea is that the students we select are not necessarily going to teach, but it’s a way of giving back to the community, regardless of what they plan to do (as a career),” Uni versity Arts Bridge director Lisa Abia-Smith said. If the program is successful, it may will also explain some new changes at the state and federal level that make it easier for families to partici pate in the savings plan. More information about the plan can be found at www.OregonCol legeSavings.com or by calling 1-866 772-8464. — Brad Schmidt EWEB expects level 2003 rates Electric and water rates won’t increase — or at least shouldn’t increase — for consumers during 2003. The Eugene Water & Electric Board announced its ,8257 million 2003 operating budget Tuesday, a plan that doesn’t include any rate in creases for the company’s approxi mately 80,000 customers. But if Bonneville Power Adminis tration, from which EWEB buys about 70 percent of its power supply, raises its rates, customers could see increased costs. Last year, Bonneville raised its wholesale rates by 46 percent. EWEB then raised customer rates by an average of 33 percent. — Brad Schmidt Iimimii Gifts and cards just around the corner. Cookbooks and Calendars Best Sellers and UO Faculty Authors Magazines, Newspapers and Paperbacks Artist’s Supplies, Sketch Pads & Notebooks Espresso, Tea and Snacks UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE www.uobookstore.com • 13th & Kincaid become a permanent fixture at the University, beginning fall 2003. So far, Abia-Smith said Arts Bridge has managed to subsist on a small budget of UOMA funds. A Depart ment of Health and Human Services bill, she said, could delegate $1.5 million dollars to fund the arts na tionwide — however, only if Con gress passes it next year. UOMA will receive $100,000 for the Arts Bridge program in fall 2003 if Congress ap proves the initiative. Even with this year’s limited fund ing, UOMA has been able to help public schools that have small arts budgets or no arts programs at all. “With the budget cuts in educa tion, quite often art gets cut, so this is the way of bringing arts into the classroom,” UOMA public relations and marketing coordinator Katie Sproles said. “Basically, I feel the Museum of Art is helping to fill a void in funding.” Sproles said that the program is helpful not only because schools get assistance, but because students also receive professional experience. Three schools, O’Hara Catholic School, Edison Elementary School and Fox Hollow Elementary School, are currently involved in the new program. Sproles said that the muse um hopes to expand the program to 10 Lane County schools next year. Contact the reporter atjilliandaley@dailyemerald.com. Hanukkah continued from page 1 perspectives on the meaning ofHanukkah “Latkes, candles and primarily presents,” freshman Josh Erde Wollheim said. “Hanukkah is basi cally something we commercialized to combat Christmas so Jewish kids wouldn’t be left out.” Junior Ariel Ungerleider said Hanukkah means spending time with her family. Ungerleider said she wishes people would recog nize Hanukkah like they recog nize Christmas. “Most of the people who celebrate Christmas aren’t even Christian ... they celebrate it because it’s the American thing to do,” she said. Jews started celebrating Hanukkah after they defeated the Greek king Antiochus Epiphanes, who had forbidden the Jews to practice their religion. The Jewish army known as the Maccabees tri umphed over the Greeks in 165 B.C.E., and on the 25th day of Kislev reclaimed their Temple. When the Jews wanted to rededi cate the Temple, they could find only one bottle of oil, which would normally last a single night, to light the menorah used in the Temple service. Miraculously, the oil lasted eight nights. Jews commemorate this miracle by lighting a menorah during the week of Hanukkah. Each sundown, a candle is lit until the eighth night, when the whole menorah is lit. There is a ninth candle on a meno rah called the Shamesh that is used to light the other candles. The Jewish community has planned many events for the holiday, including a Hanukkah candle light ing celebration that started Monday and ends tomorrow at the Hillel House, located at 1059 Hilyard St. The Hillel House will host a “Hanukkah and Rosh Ghodesh Par ty for Jewish Women” at 6 p.m. to day. Women will be meeting at this time in front of the Hillel House to carpool to the event. On Friday, Hillel House and the Ghabad of Eugene, located at 1307 E. 19th Ave., are hosting stu dent Hanukkah Shabbat services at 6 p.m., with food afterward. The Ghabad of Eugene is request ing an RSVP; call 484-7665 for more information. On Saturday, the Eugene Middle East Peace Group is sponsoring a Festival of Light and Renewal at the Lane Community College main campus cafeteria from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. The event will celebrate the Muslim holiday Eid el Fitr as well as Hanukkah, and is requesting dona tions of $5 to $25. Alison Shaughnessy is a freelance writer for the Emerald. Danielle Hickey Emerald (Left to right) Rabbi Mordechai Horovitz, David Helfand, Rabbi Yitz Husbands Hankins, Alfredo Cormezano, Justin Osher, Jonathan Seidel and Rabbi Asi Spiegel participate in a menorah lighting ceremony on Tuesday night in celebration of the fifth day of Hanukkah at Agate Hall. Need to get rid of that old computer? Get results with Oregon Daily Emerald Classifieds! Call 346-4343! 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