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Thais ' CPSY 199: College Career Success Fall, Winter, and Spring 4:00PM to 5:50PM Wednesdays 2 Credits This course will provide students with an overvievFSF a variety of career and related services on campus. This is an ideal course for incoming freshmen and sophomores. The class will also focus on skills for success in college, including organizational and academic skills. Students will begin reflecting on thier own strengths and weaknesses as they explore potential career options. CPSY 406: Career Decisions Fall, Winter, and Spring 12:00PM to 1:50PM Tuesdays 2 Credits This course is intended to help students gather in-depth information about themselves, their interests, skills, personality, and values as they relate to career decisions. The course will also help students understand career development, ways of gathering career information around campus, styles of decision making, and the next steps in career planning. Ideal for sophomores, juniors and seniors. CPSY 408: College to Career Fall, Winter, and Spring 2:00PM to 5:00PM Thursdays 2 Credits > Offered through: Counseling Psychology 135 Education Building 346-5501 This course is designed to help students develop practical skills and the confidence needed to conduct a successful, comprehensive job search. The content will cover resume writing, interviewing, and planning tips to strategically conduct a job search. Students will focus on their own strengths and weaknesses as they approach the end of their college careers and plan for future employment Content will also include tips for applying to graduate school and writing cover letters to graduate programs. Ideal for juniors and seniors. O UNIVERSITY OP OREGON Jessica Waters for the Emerald The Civil War Veteran Statue, located in Pioneer Cemetery, was rededicated on Saturday with help from the Eugene unit of the Northwest Council of Civil War Reenacters. Vandals broke off and stole the statue's head in December2001. Ceremony recognizes Civil War statue repair The beheaded Civil War Veteran Statue in Pioneer Cemetery was finally repaired after being vandalized in 2001 Roman Gokhman Campus/City Culture Reporter Students walking down Universi ty Street on Saturday afternoon could have taken a bullet to the chest —had the Civil War reenactors in Pi oneer Cemetery been firing their 1847 Springfield or 1853 Enfield ri fles with real ammunition. Instead, the soldiers of the 116th Pennsylva nia Infantry fired blanks into the sky as part of a 21-gun salute. The soldiers, the Eugene unit of the Northwest Council of Civil War Reenacters, were playing a role in the rededieation of the Civil War Veteran Statue located in the center plot of the Eugene Pioneer Cemetery. Vandals broke off and stole the stat ue’s head in December 2001. Local artist David Miller sculpted a new head out of blue marble from the same quarry in Vermont where the statue’s marble was originally quarried in 1904, and it was restored in February. “It’s beautiful and different,” Eugene Pioneer Cemetery Association mem ber Quentin Holmes said. “The new head is this era’s interpretation of what a civil war soldier would look like. ” EPCA member Ruth Lake Holmes said while the vandalism made more people aware of the statue, she is glad it finally has been restored. “It had stood there with no prob lems for almost 100 years,” Ruth Lake Holmes said. “It’s our center piece, it’s our logo.” Quentin Holmes read the rededi cation proclamation, quoting Presi dent Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. He said the statue is impor tant to the community because it recognizes the memory of those who died during the war. “It stands with dignity and grace,” he said. “Our statue has been restored due to the efforts of many people.” The statue was originally funded by the estate of John S. Covell, a Civil War veteran from Michigan who later set ded in the area. When he died in 1903, his will left provisions to construct a memorial in honor of other veterans. Eugene Granite and Marble Works founder Egbert G. Lake commis sioned the statue. When the eight ton, blue marble statue arrived in Eu gene in a freight car, it was drawn to the cemetery by an eight-horse team. An inscription on the statue reads: “Soldier rest / Thy warfare is o’er / Sleep the sleep that knows no waking / Dream of battlefields pp piore.” “John Covell and the Grand Army of the Republic now belong to histo ry,” Quentin Holmes said, adding that Covell would be pleased that his legacy, and that of other Civil War Soldiers, will live on. Kevin Burton, a reenactor in the 116th Pennsylvania Infantry, said the salute was not intended to glorify war, but to remember those who fought for the country. “War is hell,” Burton said, quoting Civil War General William Sherman. The cemetery was established in 1872 and its center plot was designat ed for free burial of Civil War veter ans who lived in the area. Fifty-one veterans are buried there. In 1997, it was listed as a historic site in the Na tional Register of Historic Places. The rededication imitated the orig inal dedication that took place Memorial Day of 1904. Soldiers wore wool Union uniforms, which includ ed a cap pouch, cartridge box, a bayo net holder and canteens. After the 21-gun salute, a bugler played “Taps.” “It’s a living and breathing place — it’s not just a cemetery,” Holmes said of the grounds. Contact the reporter atromangokhman@dailyemerald.com. \ English as usua] ^ Literature of the Northwest ENG 325. CRN 40602. 2:00-3:50 p.m. MIJWH. John Witte. I.V 21-Al (il SI 15 English in Summer 2003 SUMMER SESSION • JUNE 23-AUGUST15 Register on DuckWeb now. Pick up a free summer catalog in Oregon Hall or at the UO bookstore. It has all the information you need to know about UO summer session, http://uosummer.uoregon.edu UNIVERSITY OF OREGON o diversity of Oreft0^