Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1973)
£_pj seafarer PANTS BILL BAER'S fHrtta Wrar 881 EAST 13th RELAX with the DAILY EMERALD FALL TERM CLOSE- UT SALE! Entire fall inventory must be closed out at once! Famous name merchandise - good sizes. Nationally advertised styles. Selections reduced 20 per cent to 75 per cent. LEATHER CO-ORDINATE SPORTSWEAR Jackets, vests, tunics, 1 / ## capes, long and short dresses. /3 Oil BUBBLE STYLE UMBRELLA Reg. $8.00 Sale Price $4.99 SPECIAL PURCHASE! SNORT ORESSES Reg. $22.00 Sale Price $14.99 Entire Full Stock Reduced Vi te Vi RAINCOATS ENTIRE STOCK '/t PRICE LONG DRESSES by Terri Petiles Reg. $30.00 Sale Price SI 9.99 1 URGE GROUP SHIRTS « KNIT TOPS Vt PRICE B CAMPUS STORE ONLY 880 E. 13th EUGENE The Oregon Dally Emerald is published Monday through Friday during the school year, except during exam and vacation periods, awl (our times weekly during summer session by the Emerald Board of Directors at the University of Oregon Second class postage paid at Eugene. Oregon, 97408 Subscription rates: (1) University of Oregon student and faculty staff subscription rates am baaed on auaial contracts between the Emerald and the ASUO and the Emerald and the University ad ministration The rate of these subscriptions is approximately 12.00 per year. ill) Special subscriptions for persons not included in category (11 are available at a rate of $10.00 per year. W00 per academic year and $3.SO per term Bill Bucy Editor A1 Phelps General Managei ( On Campus Dance discussed in lecture and panel Allegra Fuller-Snyder, dance-ethnologist from the University of California at Los Angeles, will present a discussion of "Dance in Non Western Cultures—Art and Science: One Vision” at 3 p.m., Sunday, Jan. 14, in the EMU Dads Room. Die lecture will be followed by a panel discussion featuring Barre Toelken, associate professor of English, and Janet Descutner, assistant professor of dance. Both events are part of the Festival of Arts now under way on the campus and are open to the public free of charge. Dieme of the Festival is “Two Visions: Science and Art”. ‘New music’ ensemble plays Sunday A composer and ensemble devoted to the performance of new music will be featured in three major events of the University’s Festival of Arts this week. Kenneth Gaburo and members of NMCE IV, will present a panel discussion entitled “Sensing” at 2 pm., Saturday, at the Gerlinger dance studio. That evening Gaburo will present a slide-lecture on linguistics, called “Extraction", at 8 p.m , also in the Gerlinger dance studio. Sunday afternoon, January 14, NMCE IV, directed by Gaburo, will perform “The Beauty of Irrelevant Music” and “Motatis Mutandis” at 8 p.m., in the Gerlinger Hall Dance Studio. The public is invited to all three events free of charge. Foreign architecture slide show offered “As Viewed From a Camper Bus” is the title of a slide-illustrated talk to be given today by University architecture professor John Briscoe. The public is invited, free of charge, to the program at 4:30 pm. in 177 Lawrence. It is part of a series of lectures by members of the faculty of the School of Architecture and Allied Arts. Briscoe will present views of Europe and North Africa as seen through the eyes of an architect, taken on his travels (hiring a sab batical leave in 1972. A member of the University faculty since 1953, Briscoe also has been a practicing architect in his own firm since 1957. He is current president of the Oregon State Board of Architect Examiners and past president of the Oregon Cotmcil of Architects. Environmental lunch group meets There will be an Environmentalist’s Luncheon Meeting at noon in the EMU on alternate Fridays during winter term, according to Debbie Dunlap of the ASUO Survival Center. The first meeting of the term will be today. Topics to be discussed include legislative ac tivities, forestry matters, important upcoming dates and “anything anyone wants to bring up.” The room will be posted. Librarianship dean named for ’73-’74 Professor Elizabeth Findly has been named dean of the University School of Librarianship for 1973-74, University President Robert dark has announced. The appointment is effective July 1,1973. Perry Morrison, dean of the School since July, 1971, has resigned to return to full-time teaching and research. A search committee is being named to find candidates for a dean to take over leadership of the School in 1974. Professor Findly s retirement date has been extended one year to permit her to serve as dean during 1973-74. She has been a professor in the School of Librarianship since 1968. She first came to the University in 1934 as a senior assistant in the University Library’s reference department. In 1947, die became bead reference librarian, a position she held until 1988, when she joined the faculty of the School of Librarianship. From 1950 to 1968 she also served as head documents librarian. Professor Findly is the third dean of the Librarianship School, which began classes in the fall of 1966 and now has 90 students enrolled in the master’s program in library science. TTie school is the only accredited library school in the state. ( Community ] Farmworker’s friends’ to boycott Safeway The Eugene “Friends of the Farmworkers” will hold a picketline in front of the Safeway Store at 145 18th E this Saturday, January 13, from li a m. to 1 p.m The picket line will set off a new nationwide campaign by the United Farm Workers, AFL-CIO. The United Farm Workers are currently involved in a boycott of all non-UFW lettuce. Safeway has been chosen as the focal point for this boycott. !nformatlon on ^ boycott contact Marion Phelan at 245-8323 or Mel Kang at 342-8630. Weekend preview correction - Weekend Preview article of Thursday’s Emerald, the name the band playing at the Roman Forum was incorrectly given as Groundwork. The name of the band should be Roadwork. Dinner slated for medical group *** Medlcal Aid for Indochina will be held dfn^?y ^ 8t **“ Wesley CenUar-1236 Kincaid, from 5-7 p.m. The TJL ■ ?0080red by Eu«ene Coalition Against the War. for information about tickets, call 688-7788.