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This special issue is guaranteed to titillate, stimulate, activate, arouse, provoke, intrigue or tickle your fancy in one way or another. On stands Wednesday, February 23rd Call for Nominations Faculty Distinguished Teaching Awards Nominations due: MONDAY, MARCH 1, 2005 Faculty, staff, students, and alumni are invited to nominate any current faculty members appointed at .50 FTE or greater, tenure or non-tenure related, who have taught at the University of Oregon for a minimum of two (2) years for distinguished teaching awards. The Ersted Award and Thomas F. Herman Award for distinguished teaching are presented annually to award winners at Spring Commencement. Each award is accompanied by a recurring monetary reward for the recipients. (Please note: Graduate Teaching Fellows have their own competition and are ineligible for these teaching awards.) Eligibility for Awards Ersted Award for Distinguished Teaching The late Mr. A. J. Ersted established the Ersted Award for Distinguished Teaching so the University of Oregon could annually honor faculty members “who have taught comparatively short periods and have demonstrated exceptional abilities to induce students to reason and not merely memorize.” The Ersted Award is presented only to faculty who are early in their teaching careers (and who have taught at the UO at least two years). This teaching may occur at the undergraduate or graduate level. Thomas F. Herman Faculty Achievement Award for Distinguished Teaching This award honors senior faculty members who have achieved outstanding records as teachers. The Thomas F. Herman Award is presented only to faculty members who have had academic rank at the University of Oregon for at least seven years, and who have demonstrated long-standing excellence in teaching and have contributed significantly to student learning at the undergraduate or graduate level. kTkIT SUBMIT NOMINATIONS online at http://academicaffairs.uoregon.edu/Awards/ Nomination.html. Names of nominees and the eventual award winners are kept confidential until announced by President Frohnmayer in mid-May. See http://academicaffairs.uoregon. edu/Awards/pastwinners.pdf for a list of previous award winners. For questions or more information, contact Gwen Steigelman, Academic Affairs, at gwens @ uoregon.edu. A A L A. A. A I t i t A L 1 i , L t L A l t t , ■£■ L_L ,,, 4 , t A,,,,,,.,',,, t ,. UO health center offers new form of birth control University pharmacy manager says products similar to Seasonale have been on the market ‘'forever' BY KARA HANSEN NEWS REPORTER Female students found a new option for birth control at the University Health Center starting this term. The health center pharmacy added Seasonale, a birth control pill that reduces the frequency of men struation from once a month to about once every three months, to an already extensive lineup of birth control options, pharmacy7 manager Julie Dewsnup said. Seasonale was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2003, but the con cept of using birth control pills to set a quarterly menstrual cycle is not new, according to Dewsnup. She said before the health cen ter had Seasonale, staff prescribed birth control pills such as Nordette. The two products have the same active in gredients, and i Nordette can work * the same as Sea sonal if a person eunmidies me weeK s worth of placebo pills included in the month-long regimen for a woman to menstruate, she said. “We had an equivalent for people who wanted the same thing,” Dews nup said. “It’s been around forever. It’s just marketed differently.” The pharmacy added Seasonale on Jan. 7 when it was approved for cover age by the Family Planning Expansion Project, a government-funded program providing free birth control and access to low-cost reproductive health care, Dewsnup said. If not covered by FPEP, students would have to pay $83 for three months worth of Seasonale, compared to about $30 for a three-month supply of birth control pills such as Nordette, Dewsnup said. Nurse practitioner Colleen Jones agreed that taking birth control pills steadily, without the week of placebo pills in conventional birth control regi mens, helps Seasonale to be effective. “Unintended pregnancies related to missed periods are more likely to occur in the couple days on either side of the week without hormones,” Jones said. When taken correctly, birth control pills are more than 99 percent effective, she said. The risks of using Seasonale are similar to the risks of other conven tional oral contracep tives, including in creased risk of heart attack, blood clots and stroke, according to the FDA. Because Sea sonale users have fewer periods, the product’s label ad vises women to consider whether they coula he preg nant if they miss one of their quarterly periods. In addition, it takes time for a per Nicole Barker | Photographer ^ sun s uuuy iu aujusi to not having a menstru al cycle as often, potentially leading to bleeding between periods for Sea sonal users, Dewsnup said. Jones said there is no health risk associated with reduced menstrual cycles. She said research has shown that extended use of birth control pills can decrease a woman’s risk for several types of cancer. But which method of birth control is best ultimately depends on the per son, she said. “Everyone’s body is different,” Jones said. “If women are conscien tious, they can figure out a system that works for them.” karahansen@ daily emerald, com Law: Resolution program to promote cultural competence Continued from page 1A Appropriate Dispute Resolution pro gram director, said one of the things that makes the program unique is the interdisciplinary focus. “It’s based on the premise that there’s not one single discipline that has all the answers when under standing conflict and dispute resolu tion,” Gordon said. The first year of study will require full-time participation from students and will consist of nine core courses. In the second year, students will take elective courses and a practicum. A professional project or thesis will also be required during the second year. “Our hope is that the students that come out of this program will have the awareness, knowledge and skills that are associated with being cultur ally competent,” Shuford said. “There’s a lot of work that’s built into the courses that we’re developing that tries to develop mindfulness about who you are and what you bring to a situation.” Gordon said she originally thought about a program in conflict resolution about 10 years ago, but didn’t believe she had the right mix of resources and people until recently. Planning for the immediate program began about three years ago. She hopes by introducing the de gree, she can raise awareness of con flict and dispute resolution practices in academia and in the state. “There isn’t enough work done in higher education to equip future de cision makers, leaders and citizens in understanding these important matters,” Gordon said. “The Univer sity is very strongly supporting this (program).” The priority application deadline for the new master’s is set for April 1. Prospective students can visit www.law.uoregon.edu/org/adr/ or call 346-3042 for more information. adamcherry@ daily emerald, com