VISTA
Vista is fully funded for next year. Nowall we need
is you.
Representatives will be on the ERB Terrace this
week to accept applications from seniors in the
following fields.
Law Journalism
Architecture Liberal Arts
Economics Business Ad.
Community Service-Pub. Affairs
Vista - Not Just A Job.
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EMI MEZZIIiME
Bridge
competition
begins
Student bridge players can
begin competition tonight for a
trip to regional playoffs at
Pullman, Washington, according
to University Bridge Club
director Nick Moss.
The pair winning at Pullman
will, in turn, be given an expense
paid trip to the nationals at
Knoxville, Tenn. sponsored by
American Colleges and
Universities International, Moss
said.
Students must compete at both
sessions of the play-through
duplicate bridge qualifying event
on campus, Moss said. The first
session will be conducted at 7
p.m. today at the Faculty Club,
Moss said, and the second will be'
held at 7 p.m.* Wednesday,
January 31.
Tonight’s Bridge Club meeting
will be the first weekly meeting of
the club this term. Moss said that
Students, faculty, and anyone
interested in bridge is invited to
attend.
Feminists ask
ASUO day
care support
The University Feminists
voted Tuesday night to ask the
ASUO Senate to come out in
support of day care.
With day care centers in the
area threatened by financial
cutbacks, they hope the Senate
will put pressure on the
University Administration, City
Hall, the County Commissioner
and Governor Tom McCall to
continue the programs.
The Feminists point out that
students who can no longer put
their children in the centers will
be severely handicapped. This
will be a particular hardship on
women students who may feel
pressured to drop out.
Since the issue ffects students
so directly, the Feminists feel
that it is time the Senate took an
interest.
The Feminists also plan to
support actions of other groups
working to maintain financial
backing for day care centers.
[ Briefs
ESCAPE seminars for ESCAPE tutors at 7
p.m. Wednesday, unless otherwise
delegated.
Elementaries: Lincoln, Adams, Parker,
Westmoreland—Group A, 415 E. 17th No. 2,
Group B. 1455 High No. 7, Harris, Patterson,
1552 Ferry No. 8; Laurel Hill, Fox Hollow, St.
Marys 1154 Patterson No 2; Whitaker,
Willakenzie, Willagillespie—1414 Kincaid
(koinonia House); Coburg, Willard—1834
Potter (Newgate); Howard, Washington—
Smith Walton Lounge; Condon, Edison,
DrainTrent, Dunn, Spring Creek, Silver
Lea, Edgewood, Mt. Vernon—1851 Onyx
(Alpha Delta Pi).
Secondaries: Roosevelt—Posted on
bulletin board in EMU lobby; Colin Kelly,
North Eugene—1933 A W 17th, Churchill,
Marist—1090 Alder; South Eugene—59 W
18th; Jefferson, Kennedy, Monroe, Spencer
Butte—495 W. 29th; Cal Young—244 Wik St„
Springfield; Sheldon (Mondays?—1018
Hilyard.
Special Areas: Looking Glass (8:30 p.m.
Wednesdays)—1940 Willamette; Friendship
for the Elderly—pasted on bulletin board in
EMU lobby. Pearl Buck—137 Comm.; Day
Care: Infants and Littles (7:30 p.m. Wed.)—
1511 Moss. Middles Bigs (7:30 p.m Wed.)—
1533 Moss, Elders (7:30 p.m. Wed.) — 15im
Moss. TRY-1480 Alder; TYR-341 Comm.;
Illahe (7:30 p.m. Thurs.)—pasted in EMU;
Opportunity Center—1405 Pearl; HEP
EMU posted, Eugene Jail—724</z E. 14th,
Whitebird (8 p.m. Wed.)—at Whitebird.
All Others: please contact the ESCAPE
Office-327 EMU, 484-4351.
(Continued on Page 8)
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[ On Campus
IUS to provide Salem car pool
IUS is attempting to provide a transportation pool for those
students who wish to go to the legislature in Salem. They are in need of
both people who are driving up to Salem and those who need rides.
Scott Andrews of IUS requests those interested call their office at
886-4367 any weekday before 5:30 p.m. Andrews can be reached at 686
2185 after 5:30 and weekends.
Oregon scenes slide show tonight
“Oregon Spectacular” is the title of a slide show of Oregon scenes
which will be presented tonight at the University as part of the
Festival of Arts now under way on the campus.
Don Hunter, director of the Audio-Visual Media Cento* at the
University, will present the program, which, he explains, integrates
photography, sound recording, and technical equipment to “express
one person’s commentary on the world as he sees it.”
The event will beats p.m., in the Music Recital Hall of the School
of Music. It is open to the public, free of charge. “Two Visions:
Science and Art” is the theme of the 1973 Festival of Arts.
Last chance for Cal Poly tickets
Today is the last day to pick up student tickets to Saturday’s
basketball game with Cal Poly Pomona.
Tickets are $1 each until 5 p.m., then $2 tickets go on sale at the
door on game night.
Multnomah official to speak tonight
Eric Sten, Multnomah County Assistant D.A., will speak to John
Wish’s BE 339 class at 7 p.m. tonight in 134 Commonwealth. TTie topic
of his speech will be “Consumer Problems of the Poor.” Rev. Jim
Coppedge, Pastor of the Asbury Methodist Church, who was recently
convicted of second degree theft (shoplifting), will also be a guest at
the class.
«_ __ _ _
[ Community
Council to discuss ordinances
Subcommittee reports on proposed ordinances dealing with
disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and public indecency will be
discussed at today’s Council of the Whole meeting at noon in the
Eugene Hotel.
The Council will also discuss a resolution urging the State
Legislature to ratify the equal rights amendment and arfriittofis to
Spencer’s Butte Park.
Expressing emotion topic of seminar
Tim Scott, a Eugene area psychologist, will facilitate tonight’s
People to People! seminar, “You Are Your Body.” The public and
students will learn how expressing emotions (love, anger, hate, etc.)
relates to tensions and movements in the body. The seminar will be
held at 8 p.m. at 470 E. llth.
Baker Park plans discussed
The Alton Baker Park Committee will discuss several proposals
for the park at today’s county commissioners meeting at 11:30 a m. in
the county courthouse.
Proposals for the park to be discussed include the auditorium, a
baseball stadium and a nine-hole golf course.
BRING sets ‘rejuvenation’ meeting
BEING is having “a rejuvenation, a starting all over again.” At
least that’s what Peter Thurston, director of BRING (Begin Recycling
In Natural Groups) calls the annual meeting scheduled for Thursday.
“We invite anyone in the community who’s into recycling at all to
come and tell us what BRING is supposed to do,” he said. What
Thurston has in mind is an interaction between people “who have been
around and those who are interested,” to determine what the oath of
BRING will be for the next year.
This type of meeting is identical to the one held last year. “Last
year we got all types of people from many different community groups
involved in doing things in the community in many different ways.”
mee,ting a y®81- *8° Sreatly contributed to the growth
of BRING. We now have BRING pickup trucks, an annual BRING-a
thon, educational classes in schools, more items that we can recycle
and generally more acceptance in the community,”
Since BRING is a non-profit community service organization,
the community has to get involved or you don’t have anything So we
kept telling people that if it was going to be done, they were going to
have to do it,” he said.
The meeting wifi be at 7 p.m. in the Central Presbyterian Church
parlor, 1475 Ferry St.
KEED raises *1450 for Whitebird
U£i! luck orJdiyine intervention, but KEED radio mat
ched their frequency dollar for dollar Saturday during its
“radioathon” for Whitebird clinic. ^
KEED, 1450 on the dial, raised $1450.
Paul Damon of KEED said of the station’s efforts, “We wished we
w™ UnV'va ™ more *“* 1 we <Ud our share. I just hope it
» omh'vt^fl^Li!l°Ci?'n,tJic!1 dinic to Eugene, must raise seme
$9,000 by next week or lose the house it is located in.