Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 18, 2005, Page 4, Image 4

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    English in
SUMMER
Register
^for Summer
Courses
It’s not English as usual this summer at the University of Oregon
Introduction to Literature: Fiction
ENG 104. CRN 41637. Hannah Tracy
A broad introduction to literary fiction. Fulfills
the arts and letters group requirement. Eight weeks.
10:00-10:50 a.m. MUWH.
Celtic Myths
ENG 199. CRN 43046. Martha Bayless
Myths and legends from medieval Ireland and Wales,
with an introduction to the culture and literature.
Four weeks. June 20-July 15. 2:00-3:50 p.m. MUWH.
Shakespeare
ENG 208. CRN 43047. Kristine Lodge
Major comedies and tragedies from the second half of Shakespeare’s career, including
Twelfth Night, Measure for Measure, King Lear. Macbeth, Anthony and Cleopatra,
The Tempest, and Othello. Satisfies the university’s group requirement in the arts
and letters category. Eight weeks. 1:00-1:50 p.m. MUWH.
Introduction to Literary Criticism
ENG 300. CRN 41641. James Crosswhite
Survey of approaches to literary criticism (e.g., historical, feminist, formalist,
deconstructionist, Freudian, Marxist, semiotic) and their application. Four weeks.
June 20-July 15. 10:00-11:50 p.m. MUWH.
Women Novelists 1840-Present
ENG 315. CRN 43048. Catherine Laskaya
Major contributions to the genre of the novel by women writers, including Charlotte
Bronte, Virginia Woolf, Jean Rhys, Jeanette Winterson, Toni Morrison, and Susan
Krieger. Examines gender-genre issues. Eight weeks. 9:00-9:50 a.m. MUWH.
Shakespeare on Page and Stage
ENG 352. CRN 41644. Lisa Freinkel
Traditional lectures and texts are supplemented with acting workshops, film, and a trip
to Ashland to see Shakespearean drama performed on stage. One week. June 13-17.
8:00 a.m.-3:50 p.m. MUWHF.
American Novel
ENG 392. CRN 41645. Chad May
Survey of major American novels from 1900 to the present.
Fulfills the arts and letters group requirement. Eight weeks.
9:00-9:50 a.m. MUWH.
Twentieth-Century Literature
ENG 394. CRN 41646. Paul Dresman
Survey of American, British, and Continental literature from
1900 to 1945. Fulfills the arts and letters group requirement.
Four weeks. July 18-August 12. 12:00-13:50 p.m. MUWH.
Twentieth-Century Literature
ENG 395. CRN 43049. Kathleen O’Fallon
Survey of American, British, and Continental literature
from 1945 to the present. Fulfills the arts and letters group
requirement. Eight weeks. 11:00-11:50 a.m. MUWH.
Ken Kesey
ENG 399. CRN 41647. Mark Chilton
Intensive study of Kesey and his impact; includes reading from Acid Test, Cuckoo’s
Next, Sometimes a Great Notion, Demon Box, Jail Book, and the critics. Four weeks.
June 20-July 18. 2:00-3:50 p.m. MUWH.
Renaissance Thought
ENG 431/531. CRN 41654. George Rowe
Survey of major British and Continental Renaissance thinkers, including Petrarch,
Pico della Mirandola, Machiavelli, Boccaccio, Erasmus, More, and Bacon. Four weeks.
July 18-August 12. 10:00-11:50 a.m. MUWH.
Contemporary Ethnic Novels
ENG 468/568. CRN 43167. David Vasquez
Study of novels written by authors of color—Maxine Hong Kingston, Sandra Cisneros,
Toni Morrison, Danzy Senna, John Rechy, and Judith Ortiz Cofer—focusing on texts
that grapple with questions of genre, history, and identity
formation. Eight weeks. 1:00-1:50 p.m. MUWH.
WR 121 College Composition, WR 122 College Composition II,
and WR 123 College Composition III are also offered in summer.
Courses are 4 credits unless otherwise indicated.
UNIVERSITY
OF OREGON
BOOK YOUR
SUMMER
IN OREGON
2005 Summer
Session
June 20-August 12
Register on DuckWeb
now. Pick up a free
summer catalog in
Oreogn Hall or at the
UO Bookstore. It has
all the information you
need to know about
UO summer session.
http://uosummer.uoregon.edu
Today Thursday Friday
High: 64 High: 65 High: 61
Low: 51 Low: 49 Low: 45
Precip: 90% Precip: 50% Precip: 50%
IN BRIEF
Scientists discover new
Oregon salamander
PORTLAND — A new species of
salamander has been identified in
the Siskiyou Mountains of southern
Oregon and Northern California,
demonstrating the biological rich
ness of the region, researchers say.
The Scott Bar salamander, classi
fied as Plethodon asupak, had been
considered to be a member of the
Siskiyou Mountains salamander
species, or Plethodon stormi, until
genetic analysis showed a distinct
evolutionary line, said Joseph Vaile
of the Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands
Center in Ashland.
“Everyone talks about how biologi
cally rich the tropics are, but we are
still discovering species right here in
the Klamath-Siskiyou,” Vaile said.
The word “asupak” is the Shasta
Indian name for Scott Bar, an area
near the confluence of the Scott and
Klamath rivers.
— The Associated Press
Left: Students criticize, praise
Flynn's choice of examples
Continued from page 1
Audience members interrupted Fly
nn several times during his lecture.
“That is campus tolerance,” he said.
“I did not bring these people in as my
props. They’re real people who came
in from Eugene.”
Audience members took different
stances on Flynn’s ideas.
Junior Zebula Hebert said Flynn’s
presentation seemed to be more for
entertainment and didn’t provide
in-depth examples or attack specific
issues. Hebert also said Flynn over
looked American Indians when assert
ing that the United States
isn’t imperialistic.
"I felt overall that he had some kind
of agenda he was trying to push here,”
he said.
Junior Jonathan Irwin also said Fly
nn used selective, extreme examples to
make his case.
“It is just as easy to do that with the
extremes he acknowledged on the
right,” he said.
Irwin said people interrupting Flynn
was inappropriate, but he remembers
a member of the College Republicans
yelling during a Teresa Heinz Kerry
rally last year.
Sophomore Jeff Woods said many
people targeted Flynn’s specific points
without addressing the larger issues.
“People, they just nit pick,” he said.
“It’s very frustrating when people just
get stuck on these issues.”
Woods also emphasized Flynn’s
point that America can’t be compared
with an ideal.
“We’re comparing real things here
and not ideas,” he said.
Junior Allie Senger said she dis
agreed with Flynn about his com
ments against the war in Iraq but said
he made “a lot of really good points”
despite glazing over others.
parkerhowell@ daily emerald, com
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