Seattle Hostel Seaside Hostel Portland Hostel, Northwest Portland Hostel, Hawthorne www.hiseattle.orgwww.2oregonhostels.comwww.2oregonhostels.comwww.portlandhostel.org 888.622.5443 888.994.0001 888.777.0067 866.447.3031 6fT A SECOND NIGHT Coupon must be presented at check-l PLEASE RECYCLE THIS PAPER. Strange courses spice up spring-term class schedule Students can explore cyborg babies and Asian rock art at the University this spring By Chelsea Duncan News Reporter The University is offering an array of courses during spring term that al low curious students to dabble in un usual and unexpected topics. Among these classes is a women's and gender studies class called Tech no-Sex and Cyborg Babies, which explores the integration of technol ogy into processes such as pregnan cy and birth. Alexandra Stotts, women's and gen der studies visiting assistant professor, will teach the class next term. She said the class is important for analyzing human interaction with technology, adding that it explores the advantages and disadvantages of advancing tech nology in reproductive medicine. "This course gives students an op portunity to think about their own Style • Convenient * Experience • All at a great price. rand • i^i iia HAIRCUT Grand Opening OFFER EXPIRES 4/2/04 Good at Commerce St. Plaza. ^Great Clips for hair® Commerce St. Plaza 4355 Commerce Street Suite 105 Eugene, OR 97402 541-342-4247 (HAIR) HOURS: AA-F 9-9; Sat. 9-6; Sun. 11-5 No Appointment Necessary Danielle Hickey Photo Editor Associate Professor Malcolm Wilson teaches his Introduction to Greek class on Friday morning. Wilson will also teach the class during spring term. values and priorities around techno science," she said. "Just how cyborg do we want to be?" Other course topics focus more on the arts and less on the sciences. In Art History 407, students learn about rock art in Northern Asia. "There's an enormous amount of rock art from that region," Professor Esther Jacobson-Tepfer said. "The quality is just beautiful." Jacobson-Tepfer, who is the first to teach the class at the University, said students study rock art that dates as far back as the Paleolithic period. She said she bases the class on her own field work in countries with this form of art. The University also provides students with the chance to learn dead languages, such as Latin and ancient Greek. Associate Professor Malcolm Wil son, who teaches an introductory course in ancient Greek, said ancient Greeks probably wouldn't under stand modern day interpretations of the language. "It's dead so we don't know how it sounds," he said. He said the course gives students the ability to ponder the original "pristine" writings of famous an cient Greeks, such as Homer, Plato and Euclid. For students who are hoping to im prove their Japanese writing abilities, the Japanese special topics course, Learn Writing Through Comics, could do the trick. Graduate student Kyoko Sato, who teaches the class, said students study Japanese anime to make read ing Japanese texts easier and to "in crease motivation." "I think for most students it's helpful to have some visual input," she said. Junior Ashley Wright, who is study- t ing music, said the most unusual class she has taken at the University was a ' music class in which students learned how to play instruments in an Indone sian Javanese Gamelan orchestra. "You don't really find a lot of those instruments in the United States," she said. "I didn't really even hear about it until I came here." Sophomore Sayer Singleton, who is studying general sciences and busi ness, said the Evolution of Human Sexuality anthropology course made a strong impression on him. "It was sex," he said. "It was exciting." He said his most memorable expe riences were his professor's dirty jokes and drawings of Chimpanzees' sexu al behaviors. "I was a little surprised and shocked at times," he said. Students can check out other un usual courses on the University's DuckHunt Web site at http://ore gon.uoregon.edu/~bnrserve. Contact the higher education/ student life/student affairs reporter at chelseaduncan@dailyemerald.com. GOT A STORY IDEA? 7TI give us a call oj3