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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1973)
Comi unity Application deadline OSPIRG Chairman Robin Grove has announced that the OSPIRG summer in ternship application deadline has been ex tended to April 7. There is still time to submit applications for one of the 13 research positions. Applications are available at the state office and at all campus OSPIRG of fices. Rubicons to hear Wingard State Senator George Wingard (R Eugene) will address today’s meeting of the Rubicon Society. He will speak on legislation concerning taxation and land use planning. The luncheon meeting begins at noon at the House of Lee, 165 W. 11th. The meeting is open to the public at no charge except for the optional lunch fee. PEACE CORPS-VISTA on campus all week for the last time tkis year seeking senior and graduate students majoring or witfc experience in : Arts A VISTA TODAY - EMU TERRACE BOOGIE WITH “WINGS OF FREEDOM" Saturday, April 7 8-12 midnight, EMU Ballroom Tickets only $1.00 at the door A Cultural Forum / Jay-Jan Production The Oregon Daily Emerald ia published Monday through Friday during the school year, except during exam and vacation periods, and tour times weekly during summer session by the Emerald Board of Directors at the University of Oregon Second class postage paid at Eugene. Oregon 97403 Subscription rates : I > University of Oregon student and faculty staff subscription rales are based on annual I contracts between the emerald and the ASUO and the emerald and the Umve: -■> ministration The rate of these subscripts' approximately *2 00 per year till Special subscriptions lor persons not included in category (11 are available at a rate of $10 IS) per year P» W) per academic year and $3.50 per term Hill Buev Al Photos editor General Manager On Campus J Correction The dance concert to be presented by Betty Jean Clark, senior in dance, will take place at 12:30 p.m. April 12, and 8:00 p.m. April 13 in 353 Gerlinger Annex. The dates for the concert were incorrectly listed in the weekend preview in yesterday’s paper as being April 5 and 6. ASUO candidates meeting today A meeting for all ASUO candidates will be held today at 5 p.m. in the EMU, room to be posted. All candidates are urged to attend. Today last day for dorm RA applications Today is the last day to submit applications for dormitory resident assistants for next year. Applications should be turned in by 4:30 p.m. to the housing office in Carson Hall. Shakuhachi recital slated Elliott Weisgarber, one of the few Westerners to master the Japanese flute-like instrument called the “shakuhachi”, will present a lecture-recital on the shakuhachi Saturday at 8 p.m in the School of Music Recital Hall. The public is invited to the performance-discussion, free of charge, which is sponsored by the School of Music and Asian Studies. Biology department seminar scheduled The biology department will sponsor a seminar an “Cell substrate interactions in vitro: effects upon muscles and nerve mor phogenesis.” Stephen D. Hauschka, of the department of biochemistry at the University of Washington, will speak today at 4:30 in 123 Science. An open tea is scheduled for 4 p.m. in 361 Science Sunday: A silar concert A unique performance of Indian music, including two si tars and a tabla. will be presented Sunday in the Music School Recital Hall at 4:00 p.m. Performing on the si tar will be Ram Das Chakravarty, who has achieved high critical acclaim for his vocal approach to the music, and Krishna Sanyal, the most widely beard female sitarist, known for her extreme speed and delicate clarity. Accompanying them will be Zakir Hussain, one of the foremoq^ musicians on the tabla. He has appeared in the west with such artists as Ali Akkar Khan and also has performed with such groups as the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver. Hussain will spend three weeks in the summer of 73 as a visiting professor to the University of Oregon. There is no admission charge for the event which is sponsored by the School of Music and the ASUO Cultural Forum. Bluegrass headlines folk concert One of the West Coast’s top bluegrass bands, the Tall Timber String Band, will headline a folk concert today at 8 p.m. in the EMU Ballroom. The group’s material is strictly bluegrass ranging from the rapid tempo favorites known by many to slower traditional tunes em phasizing group harmony. The concert is the last in a series entitled “Our Music,” co sponsored by the ASUO Cultural Forum and the University Folk Music Club. Tickets will be sold at the door for $1 for adults, 50 cents for children. Hitler: German resistance talk Hans Mommsen, professor of modern history at the University of Bochum, West Germany, will be a guest speaker at the University today. Professor Mommsen will speak on “The German Resistance to Hitler: Its Social and Political Philosophy.” His address will be at 3:2)0 p.m. in the EMU. The public is invited to attend. ‘Mass’ concert tomorrow A concert of Renaissance, Baroque and Contemporary Masses will be presented by a group of graduate students from the School of Music Saturday night at the Central Lutheran Church, 18th and Potter Streets Scheduled to be performed are William Byrd’s “Mass for Three Voices,” featuring Virginia Hancock, Bill Kempster and Peter Lovely, and deGrigny’s “Organ Mass on the First Tone,” played by organist Greg Teeter. The concert will conclude with a performance of Igor Stravinsky’s rarely heard “Mass for Choir and Double Wind Quintet,” conducted by Charles McDermott. The concert begins at 8:00 p.m. and there is no admission charge. Architecture slide show slated The public is invited to a free slide-illustrated talk today at the University by an architect who is experimenting with designing for people’s activities. David Sandahl, visiting assistant professor of architecture will discuss “Role Enactments and Environmental Codes — Architecture As an Experiment” at 4:30 p.m., in 177 Lawrence Hall Sandahl s lecture is sponsored by the School of Architecture and Allied Arts as part of a spring series.