Simple affordable solutions. Your Summer Check out the September Experience Program September 2-12, 2003 • Short on group requirements? • Looking for a unique way to wrap up your summer? • Want to get ahead in your course of study? • Excited to get back in the swing of classes? • Does $500 for 4 credits sound like a deal to you? If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, you need to find out more about the September Experience Program. Resident and nonresident students take one course for 4 credits in nine days for just $500. All are group satisfying! Classes meet from 8:00 a.m. to 11:50 a.m. Monday - Friday. We have the courses you want, the courses you need, and the courses you should take. Courses are included in Summer 03 DuckHunt. £gurggJ^QQMrseTltlp U&mM_CBM Boom ANTH110 ANTH170 GEOG 206 HiST 192 HIST 382 INTL 240 0 / PSY 330 PSY 375 SOC 301 Intro Cultural Anthropology Intro to Human Origins Geography of Oregon Japan Past & Present Latin America 1910-Present Perspectives on International Development Thinking Development American Society Fulton, K. 42479 360 Condon Nelson, G. 42480 203 Condon Power, M. 42481 106 Condon Hanes, J. 42483 373 McKenzie Aguirre, C. 42482 112 McKenzie Verdu-Cano, C. 42484 112 Eslinger Arrow, H. 42485 154 Straub Measelle, J. 42486 216 Allen Dreiling, M. 42488 123 McKenzie UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SUMMER SESSION SEPTEMBER EXPERIENCE PROGRAM Register using DuckWeb . Visit our Summer Session web site, ; call us, 346-3475, or send us email, going overseas? catch the Oregon daily emerald On the world wide web: www.dajlyemerald.com Courtesy The first'Rocky'film made its debut nearly 30 years ago and now has four sequels. ‘Rocky’ sequels pack a punch for underdogs Forgotten films Ryan Bornheimer Senior Pulse Reporter It’s hard to believe Sylvester Stallone at one time represented the underdog. The actor bumbled his way to su perstardom as the ultimate hundred to-one shot, Rocky Balboa, nearly 30 years ago. Audiences fell in love with the humble boxer from Philly and made Sly the number one box office star of the 1980s. The irony of Stal lone’s career is that he gave us two of the most memorable underdogs in film history — the other being John Rambo — then proceeded to destroy them both by turning them into comic book hero jokes and vessels for his inflated ego. But time is the great equalizer, and Stallone himself proved to be the joke. That’s unfortunate for Rocky, be cause if Stallone had been half as humble as his alter ego and stopped at “Rocky III,” the series may have been remembered as a good solid trilogy in stead of a deadly case of sequelitis. While the original “Rocky” retains most of its shiny reputation, all the se quels have been lumped into a “Who did he fight in that one?” category. But “Rocky II” deserves a spot right beside its Oscar-winning predecessor. It ac complishes all the goals a sequel should. It stays true to its characters while expounding on the evolution of their lives and providing the next Turn to Rocky, page 9 CcM\veivteivi €&Mg»u£ Loc