pw Community Center lor the Performing Arts 8th & Lincoln ■ Tonight a Ike Ian Mandolin Project Jazz Rock 8:oo pm, $14 door, $12 advance ■ Friday m The Koozies, Toad in the Hole Cowpu nk/Celtic 8:00 pm, $5 door Att Ages Welcome • 687-2746 AIR CONDITIONED! 492 E 13th 686-2458 For the week of Friday 9k of Friday, July 25thl Sign-up for our weekly WebPage Update! www.bijou-cinemas.com ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM 7 [\Jowhere in A Africa _ In German with English subtitles (H 7:00 Nightly SUN MAT 2:00 ' !it is rare to find a Film that defies one's expectations as sweetly and satisfyingly as this coming-of-age comedy-drama." IJU A I I |L I — Jean Oppenheimer. l\MIOlll\3 DALLAS OBSERVER VICTOR VARGAS 5:10 & 9:45 Nightly SAT MAT 3:1! "INAL WEEK! SCXiU^ WINGED MIGRATION f “Has tlie feel of a great and rare children's movie.'' —Jeffrey M Anderson, SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER WHALE RIDER 5:05, 7:25 & 9:35 Nightly SAT & SUN MAT 2:50 fpgTfj pleafe recycle this paper! NEWS BRIEF Bill would fund study to restore Eugene Millrace A Congressional committee on Tuesday authorized a new bill to the U S. House of Representatives floor that could result in a $20 million study for restoring Eugene's Millrace waterway. The Water Resources Develop ment Act of 2003, sponsored by De mocratic Congressman Peter De Fazio of Springfield, was approved by the Transportation and Infra structure Committee — the first step in securing funds for the study, DeFazio spokeswoman Kristie Greco said. Congress still has to determine how much to allocate toward the project — up to a maximum of $20 million — which would be spent during a two-year period. The bill would also authorize $2.5 million to improve the research col lection storage facility at the Universi ty of Oregon Museum of Natural His tory. The museum stores and studies items found on lands owned by the Oregon Department of Transporta tion, the Bureau of Land Manage ment, the U S. Forest Service and the Army Corps of Engineers. The bill now goes to the House floor for consideration. — Jared Paben CAMPUS oi 177 K3P y&htJf dKLmmSrnm Thursday “Black Valley" book reading and signing by author Jim Brown, former Eugene newscaster, 6 p.m., Luna Jazz Club on 30 East Broadway, free. “Black Valley" is a suspense thriller set in a fictional rural Oregon town. Friday Oregon Ballroom Dance, dress up or casual, leather-soled shoes advised, no partner needed, 7:30-11:30 p.m., 220 Gerlinger Hall; $5 general public, $4 students and faculty. Saturday Peach picking from 10 a.m.4 p.m. with the Chinese Student Association. Meet at 10:00 a.m. in front of Bookstore. Lunch will be provided after peach picking: roasted chicken, salad, com and ice cream. Free. RSVP by July 24 by calling 914-8389. Monday "Hot Summer Winds” film viewing with guest speaker Edward Miyakawa, author of “Tule Lake," 2 p.m.-4 p.m., 360 Condon, free. "Hot Summer Winds" is depicts a Japanese-American farm family in the 1930s. Nowhere to run to. Nowhere to hide. The Oregon Daily Emerald on the world wide web. www.dailyemerald.com o UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Stretch 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. 016722 Couret Mo. Courea Title Inrtmttr_CBM Room ANTH 110 Intro Cultural Anthropology ANTH 170 Intro to Human Origins GEOG 206 Geography of Oregon HIST 192 Japan Past & Present HIST 382 Latin America 1910-Present INTL 240 Perspectives on International Development PSY 330 Thinking PSY 375 Development SOC 301 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 Arrow, H. 42485 Measeile, J. 42486 Dreiling, M. 42488 112 Eslinger 154 Straub 216 Allen 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, 9am-5pm, Monday through Friday 346-3227 TESTING SERVICES 9am-5pm, Monday through Friday by appointment 346-3230 | 2nd floor Student Health & Counseling Building University of Oregon Disability Services 164 Oregon Hall Coordinates services, provides advocacy and support to students with documented physical, learning, and psychological disabilities. • Academic Advising • Adaptive Technology • Books on Tape • Classroom Relocation • Note taking Services • Priority Registration • Specialized Equipment • Exam Accommodations (Services dependent upon individual documented need & eligibility requirements.) Ensure yourself the most beneficial type of Education 346-1155 disabsrv@darkwing.uoregon.edu interviews by appointment