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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 2003)
[For the week of Friday, November 14th!] Sign-up for our weekly WebPage Update! www.bijou-cinemas.com JDGE *Mf> DON I Tfh. ANIMATOR SHOWl From the creator of "Be avis and Butthead. Don't miss this rare opportunity to see Academy Award nominated animation and mad hilarity! 7:30 & 9:30 Nightly SUN MAT 3:10 nice Campbell as Elvis1 Ossie Davis as JFK One of the most cool and tantalizingly bizarre flicks of 2003. this movie isn't afraid to try anything ” - JammBorantn&k REEL VIEWS HO-TEP 5:00, 7:00 & 9:00 Nightly . SAT & SUN MAT 3:00 E, Final Week! Don’t miss this one! Directed by Alan Rudolph The Secret Lives of Dentists 5:10 Nightly SAT MAT 2:45 Campbell Scott Hope Davis Denis Leary 1 nwppte"—' wHSS» CIS? 21,22-8 pm Nov. 16 - 2 pm teaer* Berta rroa Bee lMSft8tergare.SW.1282 UO Ticket Office /fMU 340.4363 Mon-frl 9-5 BTluftttiCf fWM***»l 9 fteitmutti Mi THEATRE Btreeietl fty ftei ftrtHneti iRTntTd re<jup4i Mt&mmoefctrkms f f f*M*4 t© <JttafeUttw* W UT mw», M*.4t9Q S' November 13 & 14 EMU Taylor Lounge, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. This year, Oregon's football teams won't just be competing for points ... they're out for blood. Students, staff, alumni, fans, and friends are invited to roll up their sleeves and donate to the local blood supply in the 1st Annual Civil War Blood Drive. Stop by the EMU from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday, November 13 and Friday, November 14 to give blood in support of the Ducks. One FREE Civil War Blood Drive tee shirt will be given each hour of the campus blood drive. Questions? Call the Student Alumni Relations Board at 346-2107 or contact Lane Memorial Blood Bank at 484-9111. Student Alumni Relations Board Sponsored by Lane Memorial Blood Bank and the University of Oregon Student Alumni Relations Board LANE MEMORIAL blood bank Need Cash for a night out? Earn Extra Money New donors bring this ad in .. for an extra $5 Aventis Bioservices (Formerly Seramed ) 2 Locations: I Block east of 8th and Garfield 2,25 B Main St. 1901 West 8th Ave., Eugene in Springfield 683-9430 747-4390 pulse.create Quixotism Strikes Again By Mike Dykstra Such subtle words Her poignant, enduring face Wickedly cunning sarcasm 1 long to taste With seductively sapphire eyes My gaze becomes ever so fixed An enigma of tranquil beauty Solely shines here, betwixt What my heart so desires And what hers now suggests Woeful lament Is all that is left Mike Dykstra is a sophomore studying English. Old Bones By Iris Moon Benson Dig my heart from a prehistoric forever. I wish grave on every star waiting. With the patience breathe in of dinosaur bones. the dust Hold me like a drowning man's last breath. Kiss me like a lost lover found after death Push me into the wall Mug me for my freedom. Blown away with one kiss. Your ghost still dances. In my hall, drinking, a bottle of wine poisoned, by lying lips. I rest on a broken chair. Fishing for my way home. After dark. 1 fold the night like velvet, hold it Cough. Coal into diamonds. Coil in blood letting regret. String your tendons on the wall, and play slide. Your hands up a black leather mini skirt. Only to catch my eye dangling on a fish hook. Iris Moon Benson is a senior studying landscape architecture and a student in the University's Kidd Tutorial creative writing program. Any artistic submissions should be directed to pulse@dailyemerald.com. EXHIBIT continued from page 9 were assassinated in 1976. Los An geles visual artists Ivo Vergara and Francisco Letelier, who is the son of Letelier, brought a portion of their traveling exhibit to the gallery. Lete lier said their paintings, installations, photographs and documents focus on happiness instead of tragedy. "Our work deals with human be ings, human rights and the human spirit," he said. "It shows the under standing that love and beauty exists among the atrocities." Francisco Letelier said they have a strong social activism component to their art. Vergara created a mural in Belfast, Ireland, in 1998 with Protes tant and Catholic groups who were being attacked by the Irish Republi can Army. "We are often invited to work with communities that have experienced a loss of rights," he said. University student Chelsea Wright's display consists of photo graphs, written pieces, dried flowers and crosses. Like Francisco Letelier, she wanted to show the victories of Latin Americans in her work. One photo depicts 20 students who were killed protesting their government, while another shows a boy running with a flower arrangement for the students' memorial. "I wanted to strike something in people that would make them realize what happened, but also show the tri umph experienced," Wright said. Spanish instructors Amanda Fil loy and Heather Valle Torres wanted to educate the public on how op pressed Latin Americans come from every background imaginable. Their display honors doctors, lawyers, artists, journalists, pregnant women, couples, teachers and adolescents who disappeared or were tortured and killed under the Argentine mili tary dictatorship from 1976-1983. "We wanted to show that the crimes were undiscriminating," Fil loy said. The display includes 300 names of people who suffered in Argenti na, photographs and short stories about their disappearances or assas sinations. Objects on display in clude special Argentine tea and cookies and items that correspond to the people being honored, such as a rattle and baby clothing for pregnant women. Filloy said some of the people who disappeared have recently been found, which makes the crimes very present in the minds of Argentines. "For Argentines it is still very fresh," Filloy said. "The crimes are over, but the long-term effects aren't." The exhibit will run in the Adell McMillan Art Gallery through Nov. 28. Contact the Pulse reporter at natashachilingerian@daityemerald.com. DARK continued from page 11 film noir with outlandishly bizarre but deeply symbolic images of Ger man expressionist films of the 1920s — particularly those of Fritz Lang (his "Metropolis" is all over the place here). The filmmakers put these styles together without merely creating a cultural grab bag of cool images stolen from other places, something that is to their credit. Other films, like "The Matrix," commit a sort of cinematic theft with their imagery, taking what is currently trendy and turning it into box office magic. But with its empty symbolism and meaningless plot, "The Matrix" tril ogy will likely be remembered as merely an entertaining diversion. "Dark City" is real cinematic artistry, and that's something you can't steal from anyone else. Contact the senior pulse reporter at ryannyburg@dailyemerald.com. Courtesy Sports Illustrated on campus Every Thursday only in the Oregon Daily Emerald. o LUNA open Tuesday through Saturday at 4 pm 30th East Broadway (541 J 434-LUNA Event info and more at www.lunajazz.com I Next to Adam’s Place Restaurant 434-LUIMA Dinning Room open 5 pm to 9 pm weeknights 10 pm weekends Musique Gourmet Classical Music Opera Broadway Filmscores CD's SACD'S DVD'S Open Noon - 5:20 Sundays Noon - 4:00 Closed Tuesdays Behind Bradfords Across from Library 0 942 Olive St. | FREE PARKING 349-0461