...et al
Nominations still open
Nominations are still open for four awards to be presented to
outstanding junior and senior students during Parent s Weekend.
The Amencan Association of University Women will give a recogni
tion award to a senior woman who displays excellence in scholarship,
character, personality and serivce to campus and community life
The Gerlinger Cup will be presented to a junior women, while the
Koil Cup will be awarded to a junior man who shows leadership, service
and academic achievement.
The fourth award, the Maurice Harold Hunter Award, covers on
year s full tuition to a junior resident of Oregon. This student must show
“qualities of leadership among his fellow students.”
Applications can be picked up and returned to 372 Oregon Hall.
Call 686-3216 for information.
Foreign students tour set
The University will host a foreign student spring bus tour during
spring break as sponsored by the Foreign Student Friendship Founda
tion.
Students will be bused around the state beginning Monday. March
20. and will return March 23.
The tour leaders are Anjum Kazi from Pakistan and Peter Ng from
Singapore.
The itinerary includes tours of the state capitol. Multnomah Falls,
Bonneville Dam. Mt. Hood and Timberline Lodge, Warm Springs Indian
Reservation. Smith Rocks State Park. Lava Butte, among other places
of interest.
Some 40 students make this annual tour.
For more information, contact Liz Litchman at 686-3206
Ed sign-up begins today
A 12-<jay pre-registration period
begins today for Eugene
Springfield area residents who
wish to enroll in University classes
this spring through the
University's Community Educa
tion Program.
According to Christopher
Munoz. University assistant regis
trar, area residents will be able to
take up to six hours of classes at
reduced rates through the prog
ram and will have the option this
Health center
dosed vacation
The Student Health center will
be closed during spring break to
allow employees time off along
with University students.
Beginning Friday at 11 p.m., the
center will dose its doors and will
reopen Sunday, March 26. at 3
p.m. After that, the center will re
sume regular hours.
spring of enrolling by mail or in
person at the University
Registrar s Office, Room 220,
Oregon Hall. The pre-registration
period will end Fnday, March 24.
Munoz says copies of a mail-in
registration form will be included
in a Community Education Pro
gram supplement published in the
Eugene Register-Guard. In addi
tion, pre-registration forms will be
available at the registrar's office
for those who wish to visit the
campus to enroll.
Persons who are unable to pre
register for classes may attend a
Community Education Program
registration session to be held
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Wednesday,
March 29. in McArthur Court on
the campus,Munoz says.
Full-time University sutdents
will register in the day Tuesday
and Wednesday, March 28 and
29. and spring term will begin
Thursday. March 30.
A career in law
without law school.
What can you do with only a bachelor’s degree?
Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an
undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible
career. The Lawyer’s Assistant is able to do work tradi
tionally done by lawyers.
Three months of intensive training can give you the
skills—the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose
one of the seven courses offered—choose the city in
which you want to work.
Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has
placed more than 2.000 graduates in law firms, banks,
and corporations in over 80 cities.
If you are a senior of high academic standing and are
interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we’d like
to meet you.
Contact your placement office for an interview with our
representative
We will visit your campus on:
Thursday, April 6
The Institute for
Paralegal Training
235 South 17th Street Philadelphia Pennsylvania 19103
(215) 732-6600
Operated by Para-Legal. Inc
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POCTQRTOLP YOU,ISN'T IT?
Guest speakers
scheduled for
health course
For all students interested in the
area of health sciences and ser
vices, a seminar class is offered
spring term.
The one-hour, one-credit class
is entitled ‘ Bio 407 Topics in
Health Sciences.” It is pass/no
pass by attendance only.
Guest speakers will present
weekly programs covering eight
topics. The variety of topics will
encompass varied health in
terests.
Further information will be av
ailable at the Pre-Health Sciences
Center. 107 Friendly Hall, or at
spring registration.
Radio auditions
set for Kidwax
KWAX-FM will hold auditions
for children aged 7 to 12 who
would like to host the new radio
program Kidwax.
It helps if they are good read
ers. says Kidwax producer Elena
Engel.
Auditions will be at 10 a.m.
Saturday. March 18 in Studio C of
Villard Hall. For more information,
call Engel at 686-4243.
Too-ra-loo-ra-lura on tap
The Boys of the Lough, a group
of Irish and Scottish folk singers
and musicians, will present a con
cert at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the
EMU Ballroom,
The concert is co-sponsored by
Northwest Review, the University
literary magazine, and Eugene
Folklore Society.
Tickets are $3.50 for the gen
eral public and $2.75 for senior
citizens and children 12 years old
and under. Tickets are on sale at
the main desk of the EMU; Kimball
Music, 537 Willamette St. and
Odyssey Records, 1015 Wil
lamette St. Tickets also will be
sold at the door.
Baroque concert slated
The Baroque Chamber music concert will take place at 3 p.m.
Sunday, March 19, at the Central Lutheran Church.
Chamber music by J.S. Bach, G.P. Telemann and Jean-Baptiste
Loeillet will be performed. The instrumentalists, all University students
will perform on flute, recorder, oboe, harpsichord and viola da gamba.
‘What you see is...’
“What You See is What You Get" — or how we each create the
world we live — is the topic of a three-hour seminar sponsered by the
Good Neighbor Project of Family Counseling Services, Wednesday,
from 7-10 p.m.
Led by Jerry Edin, Janet Kopp and Allan Flood, the seminar will be
held at River Road Park District (Emeraid Park) 1400 Lake Dr. A
donation, not more than $4, is requested.
For more information, call 342-2551.
Cultural values class set
A new SEARCH course will be
offered spring term on "Modem
Issues in Freedom.” It will cover
the origins of cultural values so the
individual will be more aware of
the forces that influecnce be
havior in contemporary society.
Freedom will be considered not
briefs
MEETINGS
Th*r* Ml be a support meeting lor the striking
COM miners tomght in the EMU There Ml be a
<*»cueskm on ooreMons in the mines, the uses o<
the Ta*-Hartley Act and the issues in the strike
There Ml alec be erienarvs singing oI mining and
other labor songs Sponsored by the Mayday and
Nam
The Campus Zen Fellowship wl meet tor med
ial on today from 1 30-2 20 p.m. in the EMU (room
sal be posted).
LECTURES
Stanley Aronowkz Ml speak on class strallca
tion in Am«ican society today at 3 in 101 EMU
Aronowitz is the author d ' False Promaes: Ameri
can working class consciousness'' and numerous
articles on potties, labor and culture
b®ChJr®® T u**da> tea,ur*s Chemis
hyProf John Keana speaking on Pufferlish and
ottw Poisons The lecture hapoens at noon ,n the
EMU Century Room.
SEMINAR Tuesday. 3:30 p m.. 30 Science I.
Tea at 3. 75A Science II. VMiam WHts. Marine
Biomedical Institute, Galveston. Texas. Organiza
tion ot the primate spino-thalmic tract"
(Psychoiogy/Biology Seminar).
SE*NAR: Friday, 8 p.m., 123 Science I (Lec
ture jointly sponsored by the Eugene Natural Hts
'C^rT^land^“ot°9y Department) Robert
Storm Protestor oi Zoology, Oregon State Unrirer
^ &tperiences with Oregon's Amphibians and
only from the perspective of the
i ndividual, but with an assessment
of society's ability to provide qual
ity alternatives for those unwilling
or unable to participate in tradi
tional mainstream values.
The course carries three units
of credit and will be taught by a
doctoral student from the Center
for Educational Policy and Man
agement.
Students may enroll at the edu
cational policy section at registra
tion.
Numbers err
in coffee story
Thursday s feature story on cof
fee contained an error in quantity.
The McKenzie Coffee Company
stocks more than 20 kinds of cof
fee and 65 kinds of herbal and
black teas, instead of the figures
printed.
Oregon Daily Emerald
n. uregon L>aiiy tmwaM is published Monday threough Friday
«■" «»••» vacMlone. by the Oregon Daily Emerald
KSshng Co Inc at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore 97403.
TheOregon Daily Emerald operates independently ol the University
«4tho«cea on the third Door of the Erb Memorial Union and Is a member
of he AssooMed Prase
Emerald subscriptions are $7 per term and S20
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