$20 OFF prescription glasses rainbow optics frame & lenses . complete ^ *n missing. 4 EUGENE LOCATIONS ) Not valid with any insurance plans Expires February 28. 2005 CAMPUS SUN&SPORT WESTSIDE SHELDON ASUO NOW HIRING! Applications Available in ASUO Suite 4 Applications Due by 5pm February 16th or until filled Contact ASUO at 346-3724 (AA/EOE/ADA) Specializing in the Care of German, Swedish & Japanese Automobiles. Courtesy Van Service Bosch Authorized Service ASE Master Certified Technicians Since 1975 EUR®, 'ASIAN M O T I V 1917 Franklin Blvd., Eugene www.euro-asian.com 485-8226 Lauren Wimer | Senior photographer Dwight Souers of the Lakota tribe offers a blessing before the opening of the Museum of Natural and Cultural History. History: Exhibit accents indigenous cultures Continued from page 1 President Dave Frohnmayer and a rib bon cutting ceremony by two Moss Street preschoolers. Museum Director Mel Aikens said Knight’s predecessor may not be the only one who hasn’t received due credit. Aikens notes that while the discipline of natural science is often considered to be a Western construct, American Indians have had an ex tremely intimate knowledge of the environment for centuries. “We’re not the only ones who in vented it,” he said. “In order to live off the land, you need to have an ex tensive knowledge of it. ... They come to know effectively everything about their natural settings.” On Friday, about a hundred muse um patrons, young and old, streamed into the museum. Moss Street preschoolers, though unable to read, were among the most enthusiastic and excited patrons. Aikens, also a University professor emeritus of anthropology, said the museum’s content is targeted at families. “We’ve tried to create displays that both children and parents can enjoy,” he said. “We would like to have a museum that Native American par ents can send their children to learn about their history. ” The brand new exhibit is an at tempt to provide a comprehensive look at Oregon’s natural and cultural history, with a special emphasis on Oregon’s indigenous cultures. The exhibit begins with the creation of Oregon 46 billion years ago. “If you go back far enough, the land we’re standing on isn’t even here,” Aikens said. The rest of the exhibit is divided up into four parts, each representing one of Oregon’s distinct geographic re gions and the American Indian cul tures that thrived within them. “We tell the story of human history and how different people coped with the landscape,” Aikens said. Each of the four regions — the Great Basin, the Columbia Plateau, the Coast and the Western Valleys — has a diorama that represents its re spective natural and cultural assets. Oregon artist Don Prechtel created the murals for the dioramas. Aikens said Prechtel worked to ensure that every painstaking detail of the natu ral setting and of the people por trayed was accurate. One of the museum’s highlights is a replica of a 500-year-old cedar plank house in the Pacific Coast dio rama. Don Day, a graduate student and member of the Confederate Tribes of the Grand Ronde, said he constmcted the house by attempting to use the techniques one would have used a half millennium ago. For instance, Day used an ancient wood splitting technique that involves wedging pieces of wood into logs and pounding them with a giant mallet fashioned from a tree trunk. Other highlights include an au thentic fishing net and a Paiute wiki up, a dome-shaped structure that served as a shelter. The museum also features a science workshop, called “Science at the Core,” where patrons can handle volcanic rocks and participate in a range of other hands-on activities. “It’s basically like a classroom more than anything,” Aikens said. “We’ll be able to teach kids how the science is done.” Aikens called the response to the museum’s opening “beautiful.” He was especially excited about the number of young people who came to the opening, saying the museum provides a unique, multi-dimensional learning experience. “(Schoolchildren) have the oppor tunity to study these multi-layered kinds of displays from which you can draw a variety of information,” he said. Community member Sabin Lam son, who was on hand for Friday’s grand opening, could barely contain his excitement over the exhibits. “I’m fascinated with the anthropol ogy and the geology of Oregon,” he said. “I wish this museum was eight times bigger.” Lamson, who has traveled exten sively around Oregon, said the ex hibits provided him with some new insight into the sights he’d seen. “I’ve been traveling around Oregon for years and years and looking at things,” he said. “This puts together a whole number of things I’ve seen out in the landscape but never connected.” moriahbalingit@ daily emerald, com your independent student newspaper Stand out fromfche crowd 'a v'«v >'t; _• 4 mwMiimw a«»oo.v A program by the College ot Arts and Sciences and the Career Center Enhance your education with the Professional Distinctions program. Compliment your liberal arts degree with a specific set of professional perspectives and skills. 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