Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1966)
BHfflHHfMI Weekend Preview £ By JAY TILLAPAUGH Emerald Entertainment Editor Students already quivering be fore the bogeyman of midterms can shake their way downtown this weekend to “shudder” at a couple of fright-filled shock ers. “Chamber of Horrors." with a fear flasher and a horror horn for fore-warning, is playing at the McDonald. If the exploits of a killer terrorizing Baltimore don't shake you up. the co feature, Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho.” may—unless you saw it in 1959. Also for the goulish group. “Seconds.” without a fear flash er but with Rock Hudson and Salome Jens, opened at the Heilig. Since “the answer is too terrifying for words," we’ll leave Rock Hudson “in the hands of a sinister international organi zation”—that could be anything from the PTA to SWINE these days. At the Fox, “Tiie Wrong Box," which has got to be a comedy, is co-featured with Debbie Rey nolds in “The Second Time Around.” (And for Debbie it seems like it is.) Eugene's Newest “Eugene's newest in-time theatre." the 1085 at 1085 Oak Street, schedules three showings now — 7, 9, and 11, Friday through Sunday. On tap this weekend for silent screen en thusiasts are six films starring Rudolph Valentino, Douglas Fairbanks, Mack Swaine, Andy Clyde. D. W. Griffith, Mary Pick ford, Lionel Barrymore, Ben Turpin, Wallace Berry, and Charlie Chaplin. With a list of all-time greats like this, the MAYFLOWER Open 7:30 — Movie 8 HELD OVER! 6th WEEK KiwnavmMm IKvtiurwJi hujuuvn DAVID LEANS FILM Of eWttSWSTERKilKS , doctor / Advance Tickets on Sale Phone 345-1022 * Why Not Travel And Be Paid For It Too?? YOU CAN—AS A UNITED AIRLINES STEWARDESS I ff you are single, 5'2" to 5'9", and at least 19'/2, why not give it a try? For more information about this exciting life write to: United Air Lines Employment Office Seattle-Tacoma Int'l Airport Seattle, Washington V 1805 is already upstaging the theatres on Willamette Street. On Campus Friday night, George Orwell's “Animal Farm" along with “Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" are being shown by CORE in 150 Science, with admission priced at 75c. Michael Sidney's "Dylan,” riot ous episodes in the later years of poet Dylan Thomas, opens to night at the University Theatre (see story this page). Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. oil the SU Terrace, the second “Festival UO” swings into a five hour open-air program of jazz, poetry, flamenco, and folksing ing While Eugene will never be another Left Bank, the per formers scheduled promise that Eugene has left the Rock Sprinp, Wyoming, category. “Festival UO” sounds like fun for all who despair at the arm chair variety—good luck to a welcome program. Saturday Tame Saturday night on campus looks tame, with students having a choice between a Bottom-of the-Bowl Dance and the Iowa String Quartet in the Little Con cert Series at the Music School auditorium. Sunday, the SU movie at 2:30 and 8 p.m. is “Seven Days in May." The Film Society shows at 7 and 9:15 p.m. a 1933 musi cal, “Gold Diggers of 1933.” with Dick Powell, Joan Blon dell, and Ginger Rogers. Eugene offers art fans an in terlude from midterms with two new exhibits opening this week. “Living With Art.” an exhibi tion of paintings, drawings, and prints by Oregon artists opened yesterday at Rubenstein’s Furni ture. Sponsored by the Friends of the Museum, the exhibition and art sale is open to the pub lip stare hours Two photographic surveys of architecture, “40 under 40” and “The Architecture of MLTW,” exhibits the work of prominent young architects (including Don , lyn Lyndon, head of the Uni !. versity Architecture Depart ment) at the University Mu seum of Art. 12th Street Gallery For a whole weekend on the arty side, check into the exhibits i of three University grads at the: 12th Street Gallery and on: Printmaker’s International at! Maude Kerns Art Center. Now for something really out of the ordinary, “The Maestro 1 of Crime (Brings a Treacherous' Time)” by 15-year-old Randy Bowser of Eugene, plays tonight and tomorrow on the “Batstage” at Maude Kearns Art Center. The Village Players, originally started by University theatre major Margaret Wilmot, present this satire on a satire where boistrous chases incorporate the audience into the action. Students should find some where between the horror horn and the Batstage something en tertaining this weekend to take their minds off the terrors of next week. 4 DAYS! ENDS SATURDAY! cDONALD |IO?1 wmamvtl* SI. - 344-434) 6:15-8:20 Tnemniatretne McDonald s Magic Toils and Tro ubles By STEVE DIM 150 Emrrald EiUrrtAinmrnt Kditor This is that rarilied device com monly ycleped Allegory. Once upon a wasted time there was a creature called Xof that was scheduled to expose what it had to offer to the critical natures of a student adventurer conveni ently but a little bi/arrely named Rotide Tnemniatretne Dlareme and his guest and comrade who had managed to escape for an eve ing with him for their cell in the institution called Egelloc. . Though the two had intended to examine "The Wrong Box" Xof was projecting. Xof spewed out rather impolite Haines from its mouth and said, "It is only you, Rotide Incmniatretne Dlareme, whom I will admit, not your guest and comrade.” Whereupon he and his guest assumed that it was the wrong box after all. They were not em barrassed by the creature’s ob jection to let them see its "Box,” but they were enough of human mettle to be duly offended. Therefore Rotide Tnemnia tretne Dlareme said, “If not the two, then not the one.” Pilgrims Wende The pilgrims then idginantly made their epically significant odyssey by bike to another crea ture that dwelt in a cave nearby and was called Dlanodcm. Dlanodcm, a nicer animal that knew the value of publicity and the virtue of consideration, admit ted the both of them into its hovel and attempted to offer them sanc tuary from the evil Xof and the Krouemoh gremlins who had sent “A frank and uninhibited exposition of the onrush of physical desire!" —Bosley Crowthef. N. V. Times “A truly adult Im story! It is a beautiful film, finely made!" -Judith Crist. N. Y. Htrsld Tribuns COMING WEDNESDAY, OCT. 26 McDonald out a silent hue and cry to re capture their escaped prisoners. Dlanodcm tried the best it could to entertain its unexpected visitors but all it had to offer was a cinematic magician who flaunted the title "Chamber of Horrors.” His legerdemain, as enthusias tically as he tried, was only tried, obvious and awkward — all of which Dlanodcin’s aged sorcerer was entirely unaware. All his ar tificial thaumaturgy made the two escaped pilgrims wend and wince with heroic pity—but never awful terror. What "Chamber of Horrors” tried to conjure up was a vision of sadomasochistic paranoiac, psy chotic lunatic (portrayed by Pat rick O'Neal) who strangles his fi ancee after discovering her chas tity was not quite what might have been called unblemished. He seeks refuge in a chamber of whores but is apprehended by (Con linnet/ mi (’iii/e 9) DAVE CLARK SENATOR-AT-LARGE Try Something Different Tonight! A complete selection of EUROPEAN SMOKED MEATS, IMPORTED CHEESES, SPECIALTY BREADS, AND A GOURMET SHELF EUROPEAN SAUSAGE AND DELICATESSEN Open Mon.-Thurs.—10 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday—10 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturday—10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday—1 p.m.-6 p.m. 1936 Main Springfield Phone 747-8431 Homecoming—1966 Presents NANCY WILSON IN CONCERT WITH Bola Sete SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 5 8:00—McArthur Court Tickets-Combination Concert and Dance-$7.00 Couple Concert Tickets-$2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3 50 Now on Sale at Student Union Main Desk, and Mattox Pipe Shop *(«i-C*l«" end "Coka" an rafh1«r*4 frcdrmarki vkkk Idotify *«4y !fc« prW«t if ft* (wH*f t '*r?r? {MMRMK' • "WW? • ■ Now there** o double-date. Coca-Cola adds extra fun to dating—(ingle or double. That's because Coke hat the taste you never get tired of... always refreshing. That’s why things go better with Coke... after Coke... after Coke. Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Eugene