Pulse Editor Jacquelyn Lewis Oregon Daily Emerald On Thursday Metalsmithing students are Danielle Hickey Emerald Sculptures grace the streets of Downtown Eugene on Broadway and Willamette Street where art galleries provide an interesting stroll through the artistic realm. Downtown: where it's art Downtown Eugene’s numerous galleries provide a free and visually stimulating afternoon Jacquelyn Lewis Pulse Editor Willamette Street is bustling on an unseasonably warm Sat urday, and soft afternoon light filters into Eugene’s Downtown art galleries. The area is a vir tual treasure trove of creation and contemplation, and while students might not have enough money to purchase any of the collections, viewing this art is an afternoon well spent — and absolutely free. Inside White Lotus Gallery at 767 Willamette St., the sun shine radiates off paintings and ceramics, illuminating art from today all the way back to the 15th century. “This gallery is dedicated to Asian art and showing high-end artifacts ,” owner Dick Easley said. Easley, a University alum nus, operates the gallery with alumna Hue-Ping Lin. “Our stock and trade is con temporary Chinese prints and paintings and modern and an tique Japanese prints,” he said. Easley also pointed out ce ramics from a 15th-century Vietnamese shipwreck and pottery from local artist Dan Schmitt, whose work has been commissioned by the Smith sonian Institution. A deeper look into the gallery’s winding back room uncovers addition al paintings, small artifacts and Danielle Hickey Emerald Galleries in the Downtown area exhibit international pieces and installations unique to the Eugene area. antique Japanese furniture. The gallery — in its 11th year of business — is cur rently hosting “Food is a benefit for FOOD for Lane County displaying local artists’ perceptions of food. The show will continue through March 28. In con junction with the benefit, White Lotus will host the Empty Bowls Sale on March 7, where customers can pur chase a bowl and receive a coupon for free soup at one of Eugene’s restaurants. Easley said the gallery also attracts art lovers because it contains artwork they might not see elsewhere. The collec tion, open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., includes many contem porary Chinese prints and paintings from the region’s leading academics. “In some cases, we’re the only gallery in the United States showing this work,” he said. Easley emphasized that students should not be intimi dated by the gallery’s artistic atmosphere. “We sincerely welcome stu dents,” he said. “This is not a snobby gallery. It’s a friendly place.” Gallery director Brent Hous ton said Criterion Gallery, lo cated at 790 Willamette St., also welcomes students, whether they want to view the gallery’s current exhibits or propose their own. The bulk of Criterion’s d isplays come from Oregon artists. Houston, who became director nearly four months ago, said the gallery is Turn to Art, page 7 Eugene Station runs the gamut of demographics Eugene Station, the hub for local LTD busses, provides a bustling social scene for people from all walks of life Reporter’s notebook Aaron Shakra Pulse Reporter I woke up early on a cloudy Sunday, a time when some college students are either sleeping in or hung over from another Saturday night of in dulgence and avarice. The question weighing on my mind during this already atypical morning was: Is there such a thing as bus “culture”? I headed Downtown to Eugene Station, de parting from the University Station on Kincaid Street. Students ride the bus free, as long as they have their student ID. However, it was a mistake to assume busses would be running at the same frequency on the weekends as the weekdays. On Sundays, they come in intervals of hours instead of minutes. Rather than wait ing another hour for a bus to take me Down town, I elected to reach Eugene Station — my destination of choice — by foot. When I arrived, I sat down to observe the place silently. The station was mostly desolate, yet there were still things to see. An older gen tleman with a walking stick circumnavigated the lettered arrival points, apparently looking at bus times. A police car drove around both of the station’s throughways. A boxed-in parked car close to the McDonald Theatre pulled out and drove into the station, clanking down off the thick edge of the sidewalk. Eventually, this form of observation became re dundant. I moved into the LTD Center building in search of some experiences and stories from the employers at the counter. However, they declined to comment and instead referred me to the public relations telephone number. Over at the New Odyssey Juice and Java Bar on the corner of West 10th Avenue and Willamette Street, I talked to manager Walt Hunt, and was beginning to make some progress in my search. “There’s a definite bus culture,” Hunt said. “It brings people together, different layers of so ciety — people who live in tents, street kids, businessmen, high school kids. That’s what’s in teresting, seeing all these mixes of people; it’s a real socializer.” Turn to Station, page 6 Emerald Eugene Station serves as a nexus for both social interaction and transportation.