Academy Awards
Contest Opens
In nix more days dozens of Os
cars will no longer be the prop
erty of the National Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sci
ences
In Nix more days three people
on campus will win a one-year
pass, a six month pass and a three,
month pass to the McDonald and
Fox theatres if they correctly
predict some of those Oscar win
ners.
Participants in this contest who
do not come us close in their
predictions may win consolation
prizes of free passes to an eve
ning performance at the Heilig
good at any time.
All entries must be typed and
include the name of the category
followed by the contestant's se
lection Entries will be accepted
at the secretary's desk in the
Emerald office or by Steve Dimeo,
entertainment editor, no later
than noon of April 18, the day
of the Academy Award presen
tations.
Winners will be announced
later on that week and will be
able to pick up their prizes at
the secretary's desk.
The ten categories from which
contestants must make their
guesses include the following:
Host Picture: The Sound of Mu
sic, Itr. Zhivago, Darling, Ship ol
Fools and A Thousand Clowns.
Corps Graduates
28 in Astoria
ASTORIA—Twenty eight .lob
Corpsmen completed the program
at the University's Tongue Point
Job Corps Center during March, j
making this the largest number
to receive certificates of com
pletion in any one month since
the Center opened last year.
In addition to the 28 who were
successfully finished the voca
tional training of their choice, an
other 14 left Tongue Point to re
turn to school, go into the armed
services or to start work on a
job they said they had located
This brings the total number
of graduates in March to 42 (The
Office of Economic Opportunity
defines "graduates" as those who j
have completed the program,
joined the armed forces, gone
back to school, or found employ
ment.)
During its first year of op j
oration—February, 1985, to Feb
ruary, 1968— the Tongue Point
Center graduated 173 corpsmen,
including 40 who received certi
ficates of completion after sue
cessfully finishing vocational ed
ucation courses. In the past two
months—the beginning of t h e
second year of successful opera
tion -60 Job Corpsmen have been
graduated.
Douglas Olds, Center director,
said Tongue Point is "aiming
toward ((graduating) 60 to 65
per cent or higher if possible” of
the total number of corpsmen
who enter the Job Corps program.
As of April 7, 693 Job Corps
men were on board. Total capac
ity at Tongue Point, expected to
be reached by September, is 1,
Sftt>
Olds said the total number
graduating each month would
"level off" for a short period due
to the small number of youths
who were sent to the Center dur
ing the last six months of 1965.
"Rut eventually we should
graduate 75 to 100 per month,”
he said.
Bent Actor: Oskar Werner (Ship
of Fools), Lee Marvin (Cat Hal
Ion), Richard Burton (The Spy
Who Came in From the Cold),
Laurence Olivier (Othello) and
Rod Steiger (The Pawnbroker).
Best Actress: Julie Christie
(Darling), Julie Andrews (The
Sound of Music), Elizabeth Hart
man (A Patch of Blue), Saman
tha Eggnr (The Collector) and
Simone Signoret (Ship of Fools).
Best Supporting Actor: Tom
Courtenay (Dr. Zhivago), Michael
Dunn (Ship of Fools), Martin Bal
sam (A Thousand Clowns), Ian
Bannen (The Flight of the Phoe
nix) and Frank Finley (Othello).
Best Supporting Actress: Ituth
Gordon (Inside Daisy Clover),
Joyce Redman (Othello), Maggie
Smith (Othello), Shelley Winters
(A Patch of Blue), and Peggy
W'ood (Sound of Music).
Best Director: Robert Wise
(Sound of Music), David Lean
(Dr. Zhizago), John Schlesinger
(Darling), Hiroshi Teshigahara
(Woman in the Dunes) and Wil
liam Wyler (The Collector).
Best Song: “I Will Wait for
You” (The Umbrellas of Cher
bourg), “The Sweetheart Tree”
(The Great Race), “The Shadow
of Your Smile” (The Sandpiper).
"The Ballad of Cat Ballou” and
"What’s New, Pussycat?".
Best Foreign Film: Marriage
Italian Style (Italy), Shop on
Main Street (Czechoslovakia),
Blood of the Land (Greece), Dear
John (Sweden) and Kwaiden (Ja
pan).
Best Special Visual Effects:
“ThunderbaU” and "The Great
est Story Ever Told.”
Best Sound Effects: “Von
Ryan's Express” and "The Great
Race.'
Author, Editor
To Read Poetry
A poet described as "grand and
exciting” with a gift for the
phrase that carries deep emotion,
will be a guest lecturer at the
University today,
I’oet John Logan will give a
public reading of his works at
8 p.m. in the SU.
Logan began publishing poe
try in 1953, and has since be
come a critic as well as a fiction
writer.
Among his poetic works are
"Cycle for Mother Cabrini,”
"Ghosts of the Heart,” and
"Spring of the Thief.” His fic
tion and criticisms have appear
ed in such periodicals as The New
Yorker, the Kenyon Review,
Epoch, The Commonweal, and
Poetry.
Logan graduated Magna Cum
Laude from Coe College in Ce
dar Rapids, la., where he stud
ied zoology and philosophy. He
received a Master of Arts degree
in English literary and language
from the State University of Iowa.
He has taught at St. Johns,
Notre Dame, University of Wash
ington, San Francisco State Col
lege, and the India School of Let
ters.
The editor of the poetry mag
azine Choice and poetry editor
of the Critic, Logan has given
readings at more than 70 univer
sities and other institutions in
this country and Canada.
Since 1903 Logan has been a
professor of world classics and
poet in residence at St. Mary’s
College in California.
ASUO Petitions
Available Now
Petitions (or 26 ASUO offices
are now available in room 310
of the Student Union
The following offices may be
petitioned this term for the
general student body election
in May:
For the student body — pres
ident and vice-president;
For the Senate—six senators
at-large, three class representa
tives (one fron each), one fra
ternity representative, one so
rority representative, one men's
co-op representative one wom
en’s co-op representative, one
men's off-campus representa
tive, one women’s off-campus
representative, one married
student representative, one up
perclass men’s dorm represen
tative, and one upperclass wom
t en’s dorm representative;
For class officers — sopho
more, junior, and senior class
presidents, and sophomore, ju
nior, and senior class vice •
i presidents.
Cahill to Lecture
On Chinese Art
James Cahill, an authority on
Chinese art, will lecture on “Yuan '
Chiang: A Chinese Professional!
Artist in a World of Amateurs," '
i for the Browsing Boom program
at 7:30 p.m. today in the Student
j Union.
Yuan Chiang was a painter of
the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
Cahill, professor of art at the '
University of California at Berke-'
ley. will illustrate his lecture with
: slides. He was Curator of Chinese
Art at the Freer Gallery of Art
in Washington, DC, until recent
ly.
Cahill has lectured extensively
land contributed a number of arti
|clcs and reviews to a wide variety
| of publications.
The program is also sponsored
I by the Asian Studies Committee
and the Institute of International
Studies and Overseas Administra
I t.on.
Discussion leader will be Wal
lace S. Baldinger, director of the
University Museum of Art and!
professor of art.
Anthropologist Set
For Talk on India
An anthropologist whose fields !
of specialization in physical an
thropology are fossil man, ancient
man in the New World, and pre
historic archaeology, will be a
guest speaker at the University
today.
He is Theodore D. McCown of
the University of California at
Berkeley. His talk today will be
on "The Pleistocene Prehistory of
India.” He will discuss the pres
ent status and some of the prob
lems of India's pleistocene his
tory as gathered during his field
experience in India during 1964
65. The talk will be at 3 p.nv in
the SU. The public is welcome.
MeCown has published major
works in his areas of specializa
tion. Based on his work in Pales
tine, Peru, and India, are three
published volumes and numerous
articles in scientific journals. He
is co-author of "The Stone Age of
Mt. Carmel.” He is also the au
thor of “The Comparative Strati
graphy of Early Iran,’1 and “The
Pre-Incaic Humanachuco.”
McCown’s talk at the University
i is being sponsored by the depart
! ment of anthropology.
AT THAT VLRY M0
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HAPPENS To LOOK
OUT HIS WINDOW.
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A.6 PWLEGNMNG PUSHES THE
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GOES OUT, AND IS IMMEDIATELY
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LOOKlNG VEHICLE.
J
Museum Shows
Functional 'Art'
An exhibition of “Shaker Art” j
from the Hancock Shaker Village
of Pittsfield, Mass., will be on dis
play at the University Museum
of Art today through May 1, as
part of the second annual Reli !
gion in Culture Week at the
University.
It is a unique exhibition of art,
since the items were never in
tended as "art.” The collection:
includes household items such as !
chairs and tables, farm tools,
utensils, and photographs of ar
chitecture.
The Shakers designed their
“art” objects to perform effici
ency and effectively the func
tions for which they were intend
ed—a hay rake was intended to
rake hay and was so designed.
The resulting forms of the ob
jects are distinguished by sim
plicity, exactness, and quiet col
oring They constitute, together
with Shaker architecture, an art
of unparalleled quality in early
19th century America.
The Shakers, who formed a
socio-religious society of Amer
ica’s 19th century history, were
an off shoot of the Quakers. While
the Quakers merged with the!
world, the Shakers separated '
from it and attempted to estab- ■
lish a “perfect” society.
The peoples in each community :
lived together in “families,” each
with its own spiritual and tern
poral head. The administration j
was equally divided among the j
men and women—for although
they eschewed marriage and prac
ticed celibacy, they recognized
the equality of the sexes in a
manner far ahead of their time.
The temporal foundation of j
-Shaker Society was an “order of:
trades," the nature of such large- j
ly depending on the resources of
the particular community.
The exhibition in the Univer
sity Museum of Art presents a se
lected documentation of the Sha
ker way of life. With the arti
cles on display will be proto
graphic panels of buildings and
interiors which give a feeling
for the environment in which the
S’’ 'ikers lived and worked.
In conjunction with the ex
hibition, the Museum will hold a !
gallery reception honor on April j
19. honoring Salli Terri, noted
folk singer. Miss Terri will be
on campus to give a lecture and
concert on Shaker art and music.
The lecture-concert will be at
8 p.m. in the Music School Audi
torium, with the reception in
the museum at 9:30 p.m.
Hours at the Museum of Art
are from 11 a m. to 5 p.m. Tues
day and Thursday, and from 1 to
5 p.m. Wednesday through Sun
day. The museum is closed on
Monday.
r
PATRONIZE YOUR
• ADVERTISERS •
Kwama Selecting
New Members
Kwama, national sophomore
women’s honorary, is now holding
its annual membership drive. In
terested freshmen must have a
25 accumulative GPA. Petitions
are available on the third floor of
the SU.
Petitions must be turned in on
the third floor of the SU by 4
p.m April 20th. Kwama will tap
30 new members at the Mothers’
Weekend Luncheon on May 7.
Kwama functioas as a service
honorary on campus, hostessing
and ushering at University events.
Money is raised primarily through
cookie sales and goes to scholar
ships offered to three freshmen
women each year.
Use Emerald Classified Ads—
Phone 342-1411, Ext. 1818.
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Brando is outstanding!"—Boston Globe
COLUMBIA PICTURES
MARLON °™
BRANDO “
SAMSP/EGELS
PRODUCTION OF
AN EXPLOSIVE STORY OF
TODAY! OUTSTANDING
ACTING-TREMENDOUS CAST!
JAN! mi IG
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Screenplay bp [HEIM HtElMAH ZXZZSSl Jlllffl BMIUE • Dilated bp MM SRHM■ Directed by AKIHUH rtM
Based in a novel and play bp HGRIOS H'A HORIZON PtCIURE • filmed m PANAVISION * TECHNICOEOR’1
Also First Run - "BRIGAND OF KANDAHAR"