Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, July 13, 2004, Page 4, Image 4

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Restaurant and Lounge
Authentic Chinese Cuisine
Fresh, Quality Ingredients
947 Franklin Blvd. (near UO) • 343-4480
Individual, Family Style, Banquets to 100, Take Out
Tues.-Thurs. 11-10:30, Fri. 11-11 Sat. 12-11, Sun. 11:30-10
Premier Travel
1011 Harlow
1747-0909^4'
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INTERNATIONAL
FILM AND VIDEO
FESTIVAL
5-day film package $29
1-night $6
All-day Saturday $10
For details,
video clips
& tickets:
website:
www.archaeology
channel.org
0193951
e-mail:
filmfest ©archaeology
channel.org
telephone:
(541)344-5572
mail:
TAC Festival,
4147 E. Amazon Dr.,
Eugene, OR 97405
Tickets can
be purchased
at the box
office during
the festival.
July 13 - 17, 2004
McDonald Theatre Schedule
Tuesday, 13 July 2004
5:45pmDoors open
6:30 Opening Ceremony
6:50 Guardians of Angkor (USA)
7:53 Cultural Wars: Tales from the Trenches, Keynote
address by Dr. Jane Waldbaum, American
Institute of Archaeology
8:45 Iraq’s Lost Treasure (USA)
Wednesday, 14 July 2004
5:45pmDoors open
6:20 Introductions
6:30 Alexandria-Center of Knowledge (Germany)
7:33 Secrets of the Dead: Search for First Human
(USA)
8:41 Tubabs in Africa (USA)
Thursday, 15 July 2004
5:45pmDoors open
6:20 Introductions
6:30 The Mystery of Chaco Canyon (USA)
7:38 Tonto (USA)
8:17 Searching for Blue (Peru)
9:03 Sastun: My Apprenticeship With a Maya Healer
(USA/Belize)
Friday, 16 July 2004
5:45pmDoors open
6:20 Introductions
6:30 Bilad Chinqit-The Land of Chinguetti (Italy)
7:40 A Forgotten Place: The History of an Abandoned
Farming Community (USA)
8:45 Ephesus-Metropolis of the Ancient World
(Austria)
Saturday, 17 July 2004
10:15am Doors open
10:50 Introductions
11:00 The Mummies of Taklamakan (France)
12:03pm Sagalassos, the Forgotten City (Belgium)
1:06 Kurtal-Snake Spirit (Australia)
1:35 lunch break
2:35 Time Team-Garden Secrets (UK)
3:25 Skull Wars Revisited, Keynote address by Dr.
David Hurst Thomas, curator of anthropology,
American Museum of Natural History
4:17 Guardians of a Legacy (USA)
4:28 The House of Julius Polybius in Pompeii (Italy)
4:37 The Splendor of Rome (Italy)
Festival Events
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, July 13-15
1-4:30pm Teachers’ Workshop, Downtown Athletic
Club, $49
10 a.m. Guided trips to Heritage Sites, length varies
$15
Fri., July 16
10am-1pm, Children’s Workshop, Alton Baker Park, $15
10am Guided trips to Heritage Sites, length varies
$15
1 - 4pm Heritage Film Symposium, Downtown
Athletic Club, $20
CAMPAIGNS
continued from page 3
campaign stands for the "values of
helping to open the doors of oppor
tunity." The four-term Massachusetts
senator used the forum to criticize
Bush for snubbing a meeting of the
National Association for the Advance
ment of Colored People, which Kerry
will attend Thursday.
"Friends, 1 will be a president who
meets with the leadership of the civil
rights (in) Congress, who meets with
the NAACP," Kerry said. As he has
done in previous years of his presi
dency, Bush has declined to address
the group.
The Democrat announced that he
is spending $1 million on Spanish
language ads, and The Associated
Press has learned that on Wednesday
he plans to unveil a $2 million ad
campaign on radio stations, newspa
pers and television stations popular
with blacks.
Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md.,
who chairs the Congressional Black
Caucus, said the ad buy will go a long
way toward helping Kerry win sup
port among blacks. Cummings also
said blacks feel a connection with Ker
ry's running mate, Sen. )ohn Edwards
of North Carolina — something they
couldn't always say about Kerry.
"African-American people feel Ed
wards. T hey feel it like they felt Clin
ton," Cummings said, although exit
polls conducted during the primar
ies showed blacks favored Kerry
over Edwards.
Cummings said he told Kerry when
it became clear he was going to win die
Democratic nomination that blacks
were tired of coming out to vote for
Democrats without getting much in
put in dieir campaigns. He said Kerry's
campaign is listening, with weekly con
ference calls with members of the black
caucus, often with campaign manager
Mary Beth Cahill and chairwoman
Jeanne Shaheen.
"I have direct access to Mary Beth,"
Cummings said. "I probably talk to
her every other day."
The Kerry campaign's concern is
not that blacks will vote for Bush but
rather low turnout on Election Day.
The campaign for Hispanics is more
hard-fought, with both campaigns
trying to win the backing of the politi
cally disparate group.
Blacks who went to the polls in
2000 chose Democrat Al Gore over
Bush by a 9-to-l margin, and nearly
two-thirds of Hispanics supported
Gore. Still, Bush made inroads with
Hispanics in the last election and was
rewarded with 35 percent of their
vote. Previous Republican presidential
nominees failed to break 30 percent
among Hispanic voters — Bob Dole
garnered 21 percent in 1996 and
Bush's father got 25 percent in 1992.
The Hispanic-targeted ad Bush be
gan airing Monday is titled "Havoc,"
and it singles out two votes Kerry has
missed — one to cap medical mal
practice awards and one to fund the
war in Iraq. The ad points out that
Kerry made it back to the Senate to
vote against legislation that expand
ed the legal rights of the unborn by
making it a separate crime to harm a
fetus during an assault on a
pregnant woman.
"If these are John Kerry's priorities,
let's hope there is a lot of havoc in his
schedule," a narrator says.
The ad includes a clip of Kerry
complaining, "This is wreaking hav
oc with my schedule." However, Ker
ry was complaining about the length
of a television interview, not votes in
the Senate. The Bush ad doesn't
explain that.
Kerry's 30-second Spanish-Ian
guage television ad titled "Honor"
features aspects of Kerry's life that his
campaign is hoping will appeal
to Hispanics.
"We introduce you to a man of
faith," a narrator says in Spanish. "A
man of family. A man of honor. A
man for our community. His name is
John Kerry. And for more than twen
ty years, he has defended working
people. And has fought so they can
reach their dreams."
As the narrator speaks, the viewer
sees images of Kerry playing with his
daughters when they were young, get
ting a medal in the Navy and working
in the Senate. At the end, Kerry is
heard saying "Si se puede!" — yes we
can — to a cheering crowd.
Nedra Pickier is a writer for the
Associated Press.
22*610
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Tuesday, August IOl\ jlam—
Re<ys-ter in tbe Taylor Lounge, T/V1U
sponsored by
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