} Black & white I and READ fygxi y / all over campus. Oregon Daily Emerald Suite 300 EMU *346-5511 www.dailyemerald.com UNIVERSITY OF OREGON o It’s Here Now! 2003 Summer Session Registration Register for Summer Classes Book Your Summer in Oregon Summer Session starts June 23. Pick up your free summer catalog today in the Summer Session office, 333 Oregon Hall, or at the UO Bookstore. You can speed your way toward graduation by taking required courses during summer. Check Out Our Website! http://uosummer.uoregon.edu 016436 Applying Psychology to the Real World Department of Psychology, Summer Session, 2003 Join us for an exciting summer of Psychology! Our summer classes are small and are geared towards investigating real life issues. Course offerings include: Human Sexuality • Psychoactive Drugs • Psychology of Trauma • Psychology of Gender • Perception • Psychopathology • Explore Consciousness. Several courses also fulfill social science, science and multicultural requirements. Registration begins Monday, May 5, 2003. For a complete course listing and more information, please visit our web page: http://psychweb.uoregon.edu/summer Danielle Hickey Emerald Ryan Murphy, a music director and deejay at KWVA, the University's student-operated radio station, will help with the station's week-long birthday bash. The celebration is also a budget-boosting fundraiser for new digital equipment KWVA continued from page 1A realized the need for a local music medium. “Early on, there was almost a militant feeling that the University needed a station to promote inde pendent labels, something other lo cal stations weren’t doing,” said Ken Fletcher, a Eugene resident and deejay for KWVA since 1993. Fletcher’s show, “Mr. Random,” runs Tuesdays from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. In April 1991, KRMA began broadcasting to the EMU Fishbowl from a tiny room in the EMU base ment. It was 1993 when the station was finally licensed by the Federal Communications Commission and allowed to broadcast on a local fre quency. The name was later changed to KWVA. Now KWVA broadcasts from a remodeled women’s bathroom on the mezzanine level of the EMU, which also lent them the meaning behind the banner slogan, “Smell the Music.” Because most radio stations have already made the move to digital broadcasting, students from KWVA moving into radio ca reers may find themselves a little behind in the times if the station doesn’t get more funding. KWVA offers students the chance to work in a fully functioning radio station, but Nisser said the expe rience can only be complete if the station receives enough funds to buy digital equipment. However, KWVA has made some modern advancements in recent years, such as increasing its outreach via the Internet. The ability to broadcast on the Inter net allows the station to go be yond its local scope and reach the world community. Local bands featured on KWVA programs are able to reach a much larger fan base, which helps the station to further its mission to “represent the underrepresented.” “Last week, we got a call from Spain. It’s amazing, the channel we have to the rest of the world,” Cox said. Contact the reporter atlindsaysauve@dailyemeraid.com. bash events Monday Who: The Koozies, I Can Lick Any SOB in the House, Los Pistoleros Mexicanos del Norte Where: John Henry’s, 77 W. Broadway When: 9 p.m. Cost: $4 21 and over lUmsdmy Who: The Lovers with special guests Where; Tiny Tavern, 394 Blair Blvd. When: 9 p.m. Cost: donations accepted 21 and over. Who: The Bastard Saints, Out of This Comes That, Monkee Tourture Where: The Wetlands. 922 Garfield St. When: 9 p.m. Cost: $3 g $2 students and KWV •< deejays 21 and jver Thursday Who: Mr. Uf & DJ Fakts One, Sleep & Norman of Oi’ Dominion Where: WOW Hall, 291 W. Eighth St, When: 8 p.m, Cost: $8 advance, $ 10 door all ages Friday Who: Toad to the Note, Hello lobster, Bloody Castles Ragtime Band, Chevron, Rock and Roll Soldiers, Some Cheap Where: WOW Hall, 291 W. Eighth St. Cost: $5 genera $4 students and KWVAdeeja^s'v - all ages Campus buzz Tuesday "Striking Against the Empire: An Analysis of the True Indigenous Roots of Chi canes," and "Bienvenidos a Mi Puellito Afro-Antiliano" (Part of a final three-part session of the first Graduate Research Colloquia on Diversity and Community, sponsored by CODAC. Speakers are Zel da Lopez Haro and Carla Guerron-Mon tero), 3:30 p.m., EMU Alsea and Coquille rooms, free, 346-3212. "The Artist and Her Work" (lecture by weaver Virgina Davis), 7 p.m., 115 Lawrence, free (Note: Event conflicts with "Money Pit," call 346-3610 to check if event is still being held at same place/time). "Money Pit" (film in a week-long series for Eugene and Springfield Historic Preservation Week), 7 p.m., 115 Lawrence, free (Note: Event conflicts with "The Artist and Her Work," call 346-3618 to check if event is still being held at same place/time).