Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1977)
Les Betes Noires He COUU> TlS AND W/& INVISIBLE To Everyone except Mt, ANP So i wou^D 5ENP H'M OFF SPWNCr ANO EAVES MoPPINCr. ESPECIALLY ON MV lfi/lE*PO PARENTS. 1""^ Igl’T NOVI THAT I AW A SMr PERSON AfY friend Doesn'r visit as often as Berne ujhich is me, you 5££, arcAuse wow / m^e A MAOIC P/NO H/H/at CM TRANS PORT ME ANVUHERe IN Tm l WHEN 1 WA5 A UTILE PERSON, I HAD AN EVEN UTTLER FRIEND UhO ItlOjLP 15IT IN THE />ALM OP MY HAND My FRlZND MS Rom a VtlTf pi STAN T LAND AND Uk£D fit €NOU6H Tb UV£ IN A MATCHBOX /W5/OE A i*6SSER DRAWER. At<7rt&- ia/itm w sox Ano wpenweAR I Seminar courses abound at registration Several experimental or topical courses will be offered at the Uni versity this term though some of them are not listed in the General Catalog or Time Schedule of Classes. Most departments and schools have some 199 (experimental) or 407 (seminar) courses. These are in addition to regular department listings. The music school has revived a former SEARCH course, “Con temporary Jazz Survey,” to offer it this term with its regular depart ment listings as Music 199. Robert Anderson, a senior music major, previously taught the course five times through SEARCH, often attracting up to 75 students at a time, he says. The two-credit course is open to anyone but may be taken only pass/no-pass. The class is scheduled for Mondays 7 to 9 p.m. in Room 202, Music. Non-music majors have taken the class in greatest numbers in previous years, Anderson says. Primarily, the course will involve in-dass listening to contemporary jazz, Anderson says. “I want to acquaint students with as many sounds as possible.” he says. “We will start with Charlie Parker, Miles Davis and John Col trane, After concentrating on them we will branch out and relate them to other musicians,” he says. Students will be required to at tend eight of the 10 scheduled class meetings and demonstrate that they have “picked up a few things” about jazz history in a small in-class final, according to Anderson. Two special art history courses, one on Japanese art and one on gothic sculpture, also will be of fered during spring term. “Selected Topics in Japanese Art,” dealing with Japanese art from prehistory to the 19th cen tury, will be taught by Edward Kidder, Jr. Kidder, a visiting Maude I. Kerns Distinguished Pro fessor of Oriental Art, is a faculty member of the International Chris tian University in Tokyo. Content of the course will be determined by the interests of the students and will include ceramics, ar chitecture and painting. Although there are no prerequisite courses required, some knowledge of Japanese art is desirable. The three-credit course will meet Mondays from 7:30 to 10:20 p.m. “Gothic Sculpture,” a study of the iconography and styles in French sculpture from the mid twelfth to mid-thirteenth centuries, will emphasize three classic cathedrals — Chartres, Reims and Amiens. The course will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10:30 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. Previous study in the medieval period is necessary for the three credit course, which will be taught by Timothy Chasson, a visiting pro fessor of Art History. The University will offer an evening course spring term de signed specifically for financial managers. The course, titled “Municipal Finance,” is listed as Finance 407 by the College of Business Ad ministration and the Center for Capital Market Research. Intended for municipal finance officers and other business pro fessionals interested in financial management, the course will cover such topics as financial ad ministration, budgeting, cash management, investment, debt management, municipal account ing, auditing, tax and revenue analysis and intragovernment fiscal relations. Thomas Mitchell, a municipal finance consultant, will teach the class, which is scheduled to meet Monday evenings from 7 to 10 p.m. Assisting Mitchell will be a variety of resource professionals, including bond underwriters, con sultants and practicing municipal finance officers. Registration in the course is open to nonmatriculant students and regularly enrolled students. For more information, contact the finance department. ©1977 JOS SCHLITZ BREWING CO MILWAUKEE WIS THE DEAN OF BEER'S QUICKIE QUIZ. Q: A mini-brewery is: a) Hidden in a basement somewhere in Greektown. b) The result of trying to make Broken Toe, Idaho, the beer capital of the world. c) The right way to pretest beer ingredients. d) Both (a) and (c). A: (c) If you answered this question (a), you obviously know something I don’t. And you are in a lot of trouble. Now, as for the correct answer. Yes, Schlitz actually does have a mini-brewery where they test-brew the ingredients that go into Schlitz. And if they’re not right, they never go into Schlitz. Which is something to remember the next time you’re going into your favorite place for a beer. You know which one. THERE'S JUST ONE WORD FOR BEER. II l Have a Favorite Teacher? Nominations are open for the Ersted Distinguished Teaching Award. Two $1,000 awards will be given. Pick up a blank nomination form* or make up your own and send it to Kim Defenderfer, 103 Johnson Hall. Closing date for nominations: April 20th, 1977 ...» v V Nomination forms available in Suite 4, Information & Grievance Center and 103 Johnson Hall. LC -