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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1972)
Weekend Preview ‘Tales’ continues run By MARTY WESTERMAN Of the Emerald No matter how much there is to do this weekend, this preview will be short. You will be able to get through it in the shortest class, yet it will tell ALL. Never fear. And if elected, I pledge to give you better previews, improve the birds around campus, end discrimination against squirrels and ducks, and legislate the rain. Now for the weekend. “Canterbury Tales” continues its delightful University Theatre run tonight and tomorrow night curtain time at 8. It has been playing to a packed house, so it’s best to reserve your tickets from the box office at 686-4191. “What Time Is It?” opened at the Arena Theatre last night as part of the Festival of the Arts and will nm through the weekend, curtain time at 8. Admission price for this multimedia drama is $1.50. Women are featured all day today in the Festival of the Arts. At the 12:30 p.m. Music Smorgasbord music by women composers will be performed at the Music School Recital Hall. At 4 Pauline Oliveros and the Female Ensemble Music Workshop perform in the Music School Band Room. Only once this weekend are otters featured, however. At 8 tonight, Tom McAllister of the Oregon Journal will lecture on “The Return of the Otter” in 123 Science. And finally at 8:00 (ah! Back-to-back programming!) Kinetic Theatre V, a group from Oregon College of Education (OCE) who play a variety of music—classical, contemporary, rock—will appear in concert at the Music School Recital Hall. And of course, from 8:00 til whenever it ends, there’s folk dancing at Gerlinger. The only film here tonight is ‘‘Gimme Shelter” with the Rolling Stones and Ike and Tina Turner—at 150 Science, 7 and 9 p.m., for $1. The U.S. Navy is presenting its case for employees to those who are interested today in the EMU, too. Off-campus tonight: at the Playhouse, 871 Olive, there will be a benefit jazz performance by the Gary Beck Trio, featuring local guitarist Gary Beck. In structions are to bring a pillow, or something soft to sit on, and a $1 donation. Free coffee will be provided. Performances will be at 8 and 11 p.m. Also, Portland poet Ajule will be featured in a Monastic Art Enclosure at the same times. Up at the Odyssey tonight, Mu Farm Electric Goat Band (whew!) is playing a lot of dif ferent stuff beginning at 8. They’re from the Mu Farm commune on the Oregon Coast. Admission price is 50 cents. Tomorrow night at 8, David Auerbach will play the dulcimer, (the admission price is also 50 cents), and Patty Larkin will join him on guitar, singing and strumming some of her own original work. Saturday night this town takes a respite from all that excitement of the night before, and of course, nothing is happening. “The French Connection,” a thriller however, opened downtown this weekend, so you might catch that if your stuck for things to do that night. Up in Salem “It’s a Beautiful Day” with special guest Elvin Bishop will appear in concert at 8 p.m. in the Salem Armory. Ad vance tickets (from Meier and Frank or the Chrystal Ship) are $4; tickets at the door are $5. In Portland Saturday night, Ferrante and Teicher will per form at the Civic Auditorium. You ought to go to the concert just to find out which one is Ferrante, and which is Teicher. Tickets are $5, $4, and $3.50, curtain time is 8:15 p.m. Sunday night up there at the auditorium, one of the foremost choral groups in Scandinavia, the Stockholm University Chorus, sings out at 8. L Tickets are again $5, $4, and r $3.50. Things pick up in Eugene Sunday night. The lively Pat Boone Family Show with Andre Crouch and the Disciples will provide an inspirational evening at Mac Court beginning at 8. Ticket prices are $1, $2, $3, and $5. There are two Sunday night films—the EMU film sponsored by the Cultural Forum is “Last Summer,” and will be shown for $1 in the EMU Ballroom at new times—6 and 9 p.m. The Forum, due to lack of Sunday afternoon d attendance, has changed the f show times from the normal 2 fl and 7 p.m. to 6 and 9 p.m. for all I films to be shown for the ! remainder of the school year. The * other film is Oshima’s I revolutionary “Diary of a Shinjuku Burglar” to be shown at ® the University Theatre for $1 at f 9:15. This is a Film Society flick s, and the early show is reserved for ^ their patrons only. The film is I mysterious and erotic. | The exhibit “Woman,” in- a teresting but not very * representative of actual world | womanhood, is still being shown I at the Art Museum from noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday thru Sunday. - Women artists are featured in “Perceptions” at the EMU 5 Memorial Gallery, open all the hours the Union itself is open. There is a “Perceptions” co exhibit at Lawerence Hall Gallery room 141, open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays and 8.30 a.m. to noon Saturday. Well, was that a better preview, or wasn’t it? ON SALE NOW AT SUN SHOP 720 E 13th NEXT TO DAIRY QUEEN Grace Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) 17th and Hilyard Street 344-2381 Sunday Worship Services: 3:30 and 11 a.m. Bible Class 9:45 a.m. Harold J. Gieseke, Pastor Donald Jerke, Campus Pastor Central Lutheran Church (A.L.C.) 18th and Potter 345-0395 • Sunday worship 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Service KORE-93.1 FM • Philip L. Natwick, Edward F. 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