Speaker discusses session at meeting
The session was very in
teresting, but it’s important we
look ahead to the interim com
mittees and the special session,”
State Representative Wayne
Whitehead (R-Eugene) said in a
speech Friday to the Eugene
Rubicon Society.
He said previously legislators
were appointed to committees
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with no choice in the matter, but
Speaker of the House Richard
Eymann (D-Springfield) has
changed policy to allow each
legislator to choose those com
mittees they’d like to sit on and in
which they have a particular
interest or knowledge.
Interim committees work to
identify problems for the special
session which then attempts to
solve them, Whitehead ex
plained.
Whitehead said the most im
portant legislation to come out of
the House Labor Committee of
which he was a member was new
Unemployment Compensation
and Workman’s Compensation
(Continued on Page 7)
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[ On Campus
Noted conductor featured in music workshop
Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Karel Husa, who is also a noted
conductor, is the featured lecturer and conductor at a workshop for
concert bands and wind ensembles this week at the University School
of Music.
The workshop for high school and college conductors will include
18th and 19th century scores as well as a variety of styles in con
temporary music. It will feature an intensive study of programming
for the 1970s, utilizing some of the trends in programming that have
been used in both London and New York City for the past two or three
yars.
Husa, who has been one of the leading composers in the United
States for several years, will be a guest conductor at a public concert
featuring one of his newest works, “Concerto for Percussion and Wind
Instruments,” at 8 p.m. Thursday, July 26, in the Music School
Auditorium. Admission will be $1 for adults and 50 cents for students.
University students may pick up complimentary tickets at the Music
School.
Czech-born Husa, who won the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for his String
Quartet No. 3, is professor of composition and director of orchestras at
Cornell University. He has made numerous recordings of classical and
modem music.
Other instructors and conductors for the workshop will include
Robert Vagner, director of bands at the University and coordinator of
the workshop, who is recognized as one of the outstanding figures in
the 20th century music and its interpretive aspect; and Richard
Strange of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Strange is one of
the leading band and orchestra conductors in the east.
Eugene woman wins Law School competition.
Pamela Finley of Eugene has won the $250 first prize in the 1973
Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition at the University School of
Law, Stanley Adams, presideni of the American Society of Com
posers, Authors and Publishers announced today. The competition at
the University School of Law was under the supervision of Dean
Eugene Scoles, and the title of the winning essay was “Parody,
Piracy, and Free Speech.”
Finley received a Bachelor of Arts degree in English in 1968 from
the University of California at Berkeley. She had also attended Bryn
Mawr College in 1965-66.
Finlev is the daughter of C.V. Lawson of Eugene and Jeanne
Elliott of San Francisco.
The Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition is sponsored annually
by ASCAP, America’s most prestigious performing rights licensing
organization, in memory of ASCAP’s first General Counsel, who died
in 1936. It is designed to stimulate interest in the field of copyright law.
First and second prizes of $250 and $100 are offered in each of the
leading law schools throughout the nation. A panel of distinguished
judges then considers all the prize-winning papers which are received
from participating law schools, and selects the outstanding essays for
National Awards of $1500, $1000, $750, $500 and $250.
Skinner Cabin replica to be open to public
The replica of Skinner Cabin in Skinner Butte Park will be open to
the public 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Wednesdays, beginning July 25. Volunteers
will be at the cabin to describe its contents and some of the history
behind the settling of the area by Eugene Skinner and his family.
The replica was built in 1970 by three Oakridge men with tools of
the period and donated to the city by the Lane Historical Society.
County-wide library system considered
A county-wide library system is being studied by a subcommittee
of the Lane County Advisory Library Committee before being
presented to the full committee at 7:30 p.m. July 31, in the Lane
Council of Government offices at 135 E. Sixth Avenue.
The subcommittee of the advisory group will formulate the
wording for the proposed ballot measure. The advisory committee will
also be responsible for preparing factual data for voters to use in
deciding whether or not to approve the county-wide system. If the
wording of the measure is adopted by the full committee, the measure
will be submitted to Lane County commissioners for final action.
The proposed program would include such county-wide exchange
programs as library service anywhere in the county, more emphasis
on reaching outlying areas such as special services and assistance for
libraries in small communities, a mobile unit to provide regular
service and the establishment of two new libraries in “critical, but
conveniently accessible areas.” Committee members have indicated
they hope that the library measure can be placed on the May, 1974,
primary election ballot.
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