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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1977)
Bring This Ad Fri July 1st HAIRCUTS *3.0© with FRANK HAIR FAIRE 686-2544 ^German reliable service for your foreign car AUTO SERVICE VOLKSWAGEN MERCEDES • DATSUN • TOYOTA GUENTER SCHOENER Bus. Ph. 342-2912 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene. Ore. 97403 Home Ph. 746-1207 Ik $ / sir" ■ Ink MAX’S Fox & Weasel 9-2 Sunda\ Jul\ 3rd $1 cover 4 V50 K. l ith Hair Loft> r for* Men and tybmen yrr;' A - Keep a coo/ head this summer! £ Let the Hair Loft give you an easy-to-care-for, breezy summer cut. •■ft ■■ sy\ i 3 locations - relaxing atmosphere f H W „ . „ ~ . ,<»L4«2isgraE/ f,)J J i^walk in or call: u,^ 606-1496 465-1202. 464-2563 2033tt/itoefe \232>tide** 1461 B. (9* (.-dpcoK hrom the (acr#** from (next to Hie Mametefiaza) Sacred Heart) ^laot^rirvier) _ j. Read the Emerald Calendar of Events Compiled by Bob Webb; Campus Information 686-INFO TODAY Robin Hickman. Free. Noon. Downtown Mall. “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" $1. 7 and 9:15 p.m. 180 PLC. “Bus Stop” $3. 8:30 p.m. Oregon Repertory Theatre, Atrium Building. “Equus" $3 and $4, students and senior citi zens 1/2 price. 8:30 p.m. Carnival Theatre. Tom Grant and Friends. Free. 9:30 to 1:30 a.m. Eugene Hotel Lounge. "North by Northwest” and “Notorious" Cinema 7. FRIDAY Emerald Chamber Players. Free. Noon. Down town Mall. “Bus Stop” $4. 8:30 p.m Oregon Repertory Theatre, Atrium Building. “The Resurrection of Eve” Midnight. Cinema 7. "Equus" $3 and $4, students and senior citi zens 1/2 price. 8:30 p.m. Carnival Theatre. Tom Grant and Friends. Free. 9:30 to 1:30 a.m. Eugene Hotel Lounge. "North by Northwest” and "Notorious" Cinema 7. Liso. $1.50. 9 to 1 a.m. Community Center for the Performing Arts, 8th and Lincoln. SATURDAY “Skupper-Duppers" $1. 11 a m. Carnival Theatre. "The Resurrection of Eve” Midnight. Cinema 7. Dave and Grady, members of Liso. Free. Noon. Saturday Market. Chico Schwall. Free. 1:30 p.m. Saturday Mar ket. "Bus Stop” $4. 8:30 p.m. Oregon Repertory Theatre, Atrium Building. “North by Northwest” and "Notorious" Cinema 7. "Equus” $3 and $4, students and senior citi zens 1/2 price. 8:30 p.m. Carnival Theatre. Tom Grant and Friends. Free. 9:30 to 1:30 a.m. Eugene Hotel Lounge. SUNDAY “North by Northwest” and "Notorious” Cinema 7. Tom Grant and Friends. Free. 9:30 to 1:30 a.m. Eugene Hotel Lounge. "Bus Stop” $3. 8:30 p.m. Oregon Repertory Theatre. Atrium Building. MONDAY Open Mike Poetry Reading. Free. 8 to 11 p.m. Zoo-Zoo’s, 5th Avenue and Blair Street. ‘'Skupper-Duppers'' $1. 11 a.m. Carnival Theatre. Recreational Folkdancing. Free. 7:30 p.m. teaching, 8:30 p.m. request dancing. 103 Gerlinger. “North by Northwest" and “Notorious" Cinema 7. Arroyo and Mithrandir. Free. 12:30-5 p.m. Skinner’s Butte Park. TUESDAY Cumulo Nimbus. Free. Noon. Downtown Mall. “Skupper-Duppers" $1. 11 a.m. Carnival Theatre. "North by Northwest" and "Notorious” Cinema 7. Bach Cantata BWV34. $1. 3:30 p.m. Beall Concert Hall. WEDNESDAY "A Night at the Opera" and "My Little Chick adee" Cinema 7. Tom Grant and Friends. Free. 9:30 to 1:30 a.m. Eugene Hotel Lounge. Bach Cantata BWV23. $1. 3:30 p.m. Beall Concert Hall. Filmmakers Cinematheque. $1. 7:30 p.m. Community Center for the Performing Arts, 8th Av enue and Lincoln Street. ‘‘Skupper-Duppers" $1. 11 a.m. Carnival Theatre. Fiddlin' Earl Willis with Mrs. Willis and the Hoedowners. Free Noon. Downtown Mall. CONTINUING Works by Sekino Jun ichiro. Free. Museum of Art. Thru June 30. Original Lithographs and Woodcuts by W.C. Weltzin. Free. Alan Anderson Executive Apparel Ltd., 837 Monroe. Thru July. Summer Group Show. Free. Gallery West, 1597 Oak Street. Thru Sept. 25. "Continuum" Works by Robert Racine and Ste ven Oshatz. Free Open Gallery. Thru June 30. “Environs” Multi-media by members of Open Gallery and Oregon Artists. Free. Solid Ingenuity Thru June 30. All my children By GLEN OZONEWOOD Of the Emerald Hello, and welcome back to the first column of the summer. Hope the vacation left you happy, heal thy, and in better shape than Donna Beck or Kristina Karas, ‘cause they’re in real trouble. For Donna, it looks like it’s back to Locust Street (her old working ground). Seems Kristina needed to get a check cashed and so she stop ped by the grocery store where Donna worked and asked her to cash it. Donna had to go ask her boss, and while she was gone Kristina had one of her mental blackouts and reverted back to her childhood. “But everybody else gets an al lowance, Daddy,” she spat out childishly as she lifted $80 out of Take Time to Relax State Licensed Polarity therapy Swedish massage Sauna & Whirlpools Non-Membership Relaxation Spa Tues, Thurs - Sat: Noon - 9 Wed: Noon - 6 117 Monroe 485-0654 Across front Spaghetti Warehouse V. J the till Donna had left open. Donna dealt with it by heading for Chicago. In Chicago Donna set up base at Nancy Grant’s (Frank's soon to-be-ex-wife). From there she went to visit her parents, a visit that provided some good laughs and some nice performances by some bit-part actors. Donna s parents were about as sleazy as you could get. Her father kept talking about how stacked she was (she split in the first place because he started making passes at her when she was 13) and her mother was a slobbering drunk. Anyways, Donna ended up get ting kicked out of her parents house and when she found out that Chuck was headed for Chicago to see her, she headed back to Center City, land of the low-life. On the way there, she got busted for hitchhiking and had to call her old hooker friend Estell to try and scare up $50 for her bail. Instead of Estell, it was a sleazy pimp who ended up bailing Donna out and taking her back to Center City, where he wants to put her to work. And Krisitna has joined a long line of All My Children types to threaten suicide. When we last left her, she was dancing around David s cabin looking crazy as hell and mumbling how nobody would ever have to worry about her again. She's out in the country, and there really isn’t anyone around to stop her if she decides to end it The irony of the situation is that she really doesn’t have anything to end it for. You’ll remember that she is convinced that she stab bed her father. It turns out that what really happened is that her father had a massive heart attack and fell forward onto her knife. $12.00 for summer term fora 2 cubic foot refrigerator ALSO: T.V.s typewriters steam carpet cleaners — at | reasonable rates Taylor Rental Center1 344.4226 Thursday, June 30, 1977