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SATURDAY, APRIL 14
students 1.00
8:00 P.M.
adults 2.00
The Ririe-Woodbury Company looks at the human condi
tion and comments on it with insight. Most often the meth
od is humor.
Glenn Griffin
Denver Post
Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company. Living, loving and giving
persons ... to an audience proud and grateful to have
shared in the exploration.
George Raine
Salt Lake Tribune
SOUTH EUGENE
400 EAST 19t*i
687-3351
| Community
Myers to address Rubicons
Secretary of State Clay Myers will address today’s meeting of the
Rubicon Society to be held at the House of Lee, 165 W. 11th. Myers will
talk on current legislation to the noon gathering.
Medical aid organizer to show slides
A west coast organizer for Medical Aid for Indochina, Greg
Movesyan, will be speaking and showing slides tonight at 7:30 at 1136
E 2 0 t h .
I °" Ca-P-S )
Biology professor to speak today
Frank Stahl, from the University’s Institute of Molecular Biology,
will give a talk on “Genetic Recombination in Bacteriophage Lamb
da” at 4:30 p.m. today in 123 Science. The talk will be preceded by a
tea at 4 p.m. in 361 Science.
Mosaic slide show scheduled
A slide-illustrated lecture entitled “The Last Mosaics in Hagia
Sophia” will be open to the public free of charge at 4:30 p.m. today in
177 Lawrence.
The lecturer will be George Stricevic, visiting lecturer of art
history at the University.
Stricevic spent 15 years as an archaeologist at the Archaeological
Institute of Belgrade. He has taught at the University of Edinburgh
and Columbia and Brown Universities.
The last mosaics of Hagia Sophia are a group of three figures —
Christ, St. John and the Virgin — in Istanbul. Scholars disagree on the
date, but Stricevic believes they were done during the 13th century,
the time of the fourth Crusade, when the Latins occupied Con
stantinople (Istanbul).
His lecture is sponsored by the University School of Architecture
and Allied Arts as part of a spring series of lectures and experimental
films.
Talk on Wounded Knee slated
Vernon Bellecourt, a leader of the American Indian Movement
(AIM), will speak on Wounded Knee at the Central Presbyterian
Church, 15th and Ferry Streets, tonight, at 7:30p.m.
According to Bellecourt, “The issue is the destruction perpetrated
on our way of life, our land, our reservation, and our religion...”
The talk is sponsored by the Eugene Coalition Liberation Support
Movement.
Tax plan exhibit on display
An exhibit, “What priority for education?”, featuring Governor
Tom McCall’s tax plan, has gone on display in the main circulation
area at the University Library.
The materials will remain on display through the May 1 statewide
vote on the tax plan, which will remove most of the burden of public
school costs from the property tax.
The display was prepared by the education-psychology section of
the library with the assistance of Henry Osibov, assistant to the
provost, and John Wish, director of the University’s Consumer
Research Center.
The display includes tables on interstate and intrastate disparities
in per pupil expenditures for education and sample intrastate
disparities in property tax receipts derived from the same tax rate in
various Oregon school districts.
Graphs show the governmental, personal, and average family
expenditures for education nationwide.
Copies of the legislation embodying the governor’s tax plan, plus
other materials in the display, are available for study in the education
psychology section and the Oregon collection of the library. The
education-psychology section librarians will also remove material
from the display for closer inspection upon request.
Bicycle Committee says
yes to bike route signs
I he Eugene Bicycle Com
mittee approved a recom
mendation Thursday to post
bicycle route signs on 12th
Avenue from Olive Street to
Chambers Street.
The Westside Neighborhood
Quality Project approved the
recommendation at its February
meeting. At that meeting, the
project also voted its opposition
to a proposal calling for traffic
diverters on 12th Avenue.
In other action, the committee
approved the “striping” of Agate
Street from 13th Avenue to 19th
Avenue for bicycle traffic and
added a bikepath on the Amazon
slough from 19th Avenue to 27th
Avenue to its 1973-76 bikeway
plan.
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