Stained glass displayed at LCC Stained glass sculpture and paintings will be exhibited by Tenold Peterson in the Art and Applied Design main gallery at Lane Community College. The show, which opened last Friday, will continue through May 12. Entitled “Triptych,” which is a window with a center panel and two side panels which close over Jazz lab band performs After a successful performance at the Pacific Coast Collegiate Jazz Festival, the University of Oregon Jazz Lab Band I will appear in a Eugene concert on Tuesday. The jazz band will begin their performance at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. Admission will be $2 general and $1 for students. The band competed at the University of California at Berkeley during the last week of April. There they placed in the top 30 per cent of the 90 ensembles performing. The band received an overall “1” rating, conferred by a panel of three professional jazz adjudicators. the center, the exhibit features stained glass sculpture and paint ings. Peterson has been at LCC since 1975. Prior to that he was on the staff of San Diego State University. He received both his bachelors and masters degrees at California State University at Long Beach. He has won numer ous awards for his stained glass pieces including the Hudspeth Stained Glass Commission of $10,000. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays. The gallery, located in the art and mathematics building on the east side of campus, is closed on weekends. VN 1$ EMU Food Service BEER GARDEN I TOMORROW 4-7 p.m. EMU PATIO Special Deli Tray $1.00 (meats, cheeses, w/salad) Glass 350 Pitcher $1.50 Entertainment By "Tumalo String Band’ FREE POPCORN!!! i»> Introducing the new Bolivar Loudspeakers from Bolivar Speaker Works New 3-way speakers that sound great for the price of good. Come hear them! coffffqtfi GECC Financing Available 411 E. Broadway UnkAmehiurd 485-1620 $114 ea. Model 18 $150 ea. Model 64 Women folksingers give concert tonight at CCPA By PETER DU RYE A Of the Emerald Tonight Ruthie Gordon and Jeanne Mackey will be singing in concert at the WOW Hall. Both have relatively obscured careers when contrasted to the amplified world of rock and roll, yet both Gordon and Mackey are known for creating an unusually strong rapport with the audience. Ruthie Gordon sings without any accompaniment about discovering who you are instead of what everyone wants you to be. She grew up near Chicago and began to sing when she got involved in the peace and civil rights movements. She has sung at prisons, union meetings, women s conferences, anti-war rallies and schools. In between traditional folk songs from all around the world, songs about being a woman or strip mining coal in Appalachia she talks to the audience as if we were old friends, without the aid of a mike, if at ail pos sible. Gordon said, “In the past lots of things have kept me from singing, and it's my hope that these songs will help you to overcome some of those things in your life and find the music inside of you. None of us will be able to fully realize that potential till al of us have fought for and won our liberation. But I know that singing helps to strengthen us for that fight, and this is a part of my contribution. Sing and fight and fight to win!" Although they both are deeply committed to their music, that is as educating as it is entertaining, they have never appeared onstage to gether or even met. Cinema Unido and the Mayday Cultural Committee have joined forces to present what they've termed as "Music for chang ing times." Jeanne Mackey believes in build ing people's culture and she sings about the struggle and celebration of women, labour and minorities. An example of her effectiveness was aptly described by Jim Dugan, former President of Pressman’s Local 6, Washington D.C., ‘The powerful Washington Post Corporation has used a number of weapons to try to wear down our morale and break our 16 month strike. There ate a number of secret weapons we have to keep us going. One of the best has been the music of Jeanne Mackey.” Operating from D.C. Mackey's songs often incorporate personal nurishment into collective strength. Her activities have been widely varied and too numerous to mention but one of the more interesting is a workshop that she helped lead on the rewriting of sexist songs. She plays piano and her guitar solos have been described as "talcing hands." Childcare will be provided for tonight's concert which begins at 7 30 p.m. at the Community Center for the Performing Arts, Eighth and Lincoln. Admission is $3. Hoohaw (Continued from Page 1) The location for this year’s Hoohaw is in and around Mac Court. A matter of utmost importance this year is the smoking situation inside Mac Court. Face it folks, the building is a fire hazard just sitting there, let alone approached by a lit match or cigarette. Use of the building has been obtained only after much assurance from the Northwest Review and the Intrepid Trips Society for Aesthetic Re volutionary Training (ITS ART), co-sponsors of the Hoohaw, concern ing the control of smoking inside the building. So please don’t. The fire marshal has the power, rather the obligation, to close down the building for the use of anything, cultural, sports, whatever, if he deems it unsafe for use. Be assured the fire people will be there, so it s imperative for the future of any event big enough to require the use of Mac Court that no smoking be permitted inside the building. Outside is your business. Sermon over. Enjoy the Hoohaw. That’s what it’s there for. Tickets are $5 for Two and are available at the EMU Main Desk. Still Dreaming at Tino’s u ^ • & * 5k v/. Live Music 7 to 11 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday Calzone Dinner Specials $2.25 llZZD 342-8111 15th & Willamette Thursday, May «, 1977