016514 spsaKers inciuae: Anita Weiss Gwyneth Kirk iviargu ocnaeier Miranda Vorres this event will be sign language interpreted, free childcare is available, please contact 346.4095 for more information. 6 pm emu amphitheater an annual event dedicated to ending violence against women Help us cover campus life Join the award-winning student newspaper The Oregon Dally Emerald Is now accepting applications { for the foHowing positions on next year’s news staff. All positions are paid APPUCAHON DEADLINE: ..... 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Call 346-5511 Also hiring for summer term The Oregon Daily Emerald is an Equal Opportunity Employer and is committed to a culturally diverse workplace. 014008 a*bizzillion is heading south.... a»bizzillion is heading to The Southtowne Shoppes to join our sister store Boux and we need you to help us lighten our load! take JO-10% OFF! including jewelry ALL OUR WONDERFUL BRAND NAMES SALE DATES 5/3-5/24 016311 a-bizzillion 901 Pearl Street 541.485.1570 Tues-Sat 12-5:30 Walk aims to curb assault The Men’s Center’s Walk to Prevent Sexual Assault hopes to raise awareness among men about sexual assault Aliyson Goldstein Freelance Reporter By Wednesday afternoon, Univer sity students, faculty and staff will have walked more than 60 miles around campus in support of the University Men’s Center’s Walk to Prevent Sexual Assault. The walk, which took place on Monday and Tuesday and continues today until 4 p.m., is part of Sexual As sault Awareness Week. Groups leave every half hour starting at 9 a.m. to complete the approximately mile and a half walk through the campus. The route makes a figure eight and takes participants from the EMU, around the residence halls, back up past Ger linger, and finally back down 13th Av enue to end at the EMU. Although this is the walkathon’s first year, the Men’s Center plans on making it an annual event, ac cording to the center’s Student Di rector George Hanawahine. He said many groups, from fraternities to physical education classes, partici pated in the walk this year, and said he hopes that next year even more groups will get involved. Hanawahine said the center’s goal is to raise awareness among men about what they can do to help pre vent the sexual assault of women. “Sexual assault has traditionally been viewed as a women’s issue, but it’s important for people to know that it is an issue for everyone,” he said. He added that the majority of men are not perpetrators of sexual assault, but they still need to get in volved and show their support. The Men’s Center Leadership Team Supervisor Jon Davies also said men should take an active stance against sexual assault. “Often times it’s difficult for men to speak out against sexual assault, and the walk allows them to show their concern,” he said. Dave Lichtenstein, a GTF for a Pre vention of Interpersonal Violence class and a member of the Men’s Center leadership team, brought his students to participate in the walk Tuesday. “People enjoyed having a chance to be a part of something on campus in relation to this issue,” he said. “It was a good way to put classroom learning in a practical context.” In addition to sponsoring the walk, the Men’s Center provides edu cational programs on topics such as depression, relationships and overall health to promote awareness of the emotional, physical and social health of men to all students on cam pus, according to the center’s mis sion statement. For more information, or to join the walk, visit the Men’s Center table outside the fishbowl at the EMU, or visit the Web site at www. uoregon. eduJ~ counsel/UOMC/ UOMC.htm. Apart from the walkathon, other events scheduled today for Sexual As sault Awareness Week include a talk by the Sexual Wellness Advocacy Team on healthy sexual communica tion, titled “Does Anybody Wanna Have Sex Tonight,” taking place from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in the EMU Ben Lin der Room, along with a self-defense workshop for women in the EMU Wal nut Room at the same time. Former NFL quarterback Don McPherson will also speak about men’s roles in pre venting violence against women in a speech titled “You Throw Like a Girl” at 6 p.m. in the EMU Ballroom. On Thursday, survivors of sexual vi olence and supporters can design T shirts that illustrate their feelings in the “The Clothesline Project T-shirt Generation Workshop” from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the EMU Fir Room. Stu dents can also see the Clothesline Pro ject of Lane County on display in the amphitheater from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. The weeks ends with the annual Take Back the Night event, where people will march through the streets of Eu gene to protest sexual violence. The march begins in the EMU Amphithe ater at 6 p.m. Allyson Goldstein is a freelance writer for the Emerald. News brief Students for Choice host guest speaker University Students for Choice is hosting a guest speaker and film maker from Willamette University tonight at 7 p.m. at the Knight Li brary Media Center. Rosemary Roberts will show her half-hour film “Paris to Portland: Conversations about Abortion, Con traception and Feminism in Two Cultures.” The film will be followed by a question-and-answer session. Roberts spent five months studying in Paris, France, last spring, and her film includes interviews with women from there. She asked women about their thoughts on reproductive choice issues and conducted similar inter views with American women from Portland and Salem. The film was presented as Roberts’ senior project at Willamette. —Lindsay Sauve keep in touch www.dailyemerald.com