Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1978)
Political activist Hayden to speak in EMU _ .... i i_. uiArLoH nn Sk nlflH HAniZStion. Tom Hayden, a political activist since the 1960s, will speak in the EMU Ballroom tonight at 8. His free appearance is spon sored by the EMU Cultural Forum. Hayden was the first president of the Students for a Democratic Society, SDS, and was actively involved in the anti-Vietnam War movement. In 1970, he was one of the Chicago 7 convicted for con spiracy to demonstrate in Chicago during the 1968 Democratic Con vention. He then moved to Berkeley and removed himself from national politics. In 1976, he ran for the U.S. Se nate from his district in the Ber keley, Calif., area, i nougn ne iusi, Hayden aroused considerable citizen involvement. Currently, Hayden is administrator for Cam paign for Economic Democracy (CED), an organization founded by Hayden and his wife, Jane Fonda. The CED is heavily involved in a campaign for solar energy. nayucn MW*' - • known as Solar Cal to create a publicly controlled solar-energy industry in California. Hayden’s CED also lobbies in Sacramento for greater public in volvement in corporate policy, low-income housing and a variety of other programs, while working for a pervasive grass-roots or The headquarters are housed on a ranch above Santa Barbara, where Hayden, Fonda and their two children live. During the sum mer, the ranch is a summer camp for children of various back ground, emphasizing equal itarian, humane and environmen tally conscious principles. Cycle to Salem for TDA The Trojan Decommissioning Alliance (TDA) is organizing a “Knock Nukes Bike-A-Thon” from Eugene to Salem, June 20-23. Anyone interested in participating is invited to a dinner gathering at the TDA office, 348 W. 8th Ave., tonight at 5:30. Participants in the bike-a-thon will visit Gov. Bob Straub and Fred Miller, state director of energy, and ask for immediate shutdown of the Trojan Nuclear Plant. For information, contact Skeeter at 345-7394, or call the TDA office at 687-2557. Protest speech today An anti-nuclear protester will speak on the brick area outside the EMU today at 12:30 about efforts to stop nuclear power in Oregon. Lloyd Marbet will speak about the initiative petition campaign to stop utility companies from charging customers for cost of power plants that do not yet produce electricity, according to Mark Cogan of Orego nians for Utility Reform. Musicians to perform The Fine Arts Quartet will perform at the last Chamber Music Series concert of the season Thursday at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. The members of the quartet are Leonard Sorkin, violin; Abram Loft, violin; Bernard Zaslov, viola and George Sopkin, cello. They are cur rently artists in residence at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee. The program will be Quartet in E-minor, Opus 44, No. 2 by Men delssohn; String Quartet in one movement by Anton Webern and Quar tet in E-flat, Opus 127 by Beethoven. The quartet has performed in Europe, Australia, and Asia. The ensemble also performed weekly broadcasts by the American Broad casting Company for eight years. Although the chamber music series has been a sell-out, some tickets may be available at the Beall Hall Box Office one hour before the performance. Admission will be $3 for students and senior citizens and $4 for adults. Overseas study still open Applications are still being taken for Oregon summer programs in Austria, Germany and Italy. For information on the Austria and Germany program, contact Prof. Helmut Plant in the German department. Information on the Summer Session at the Italian University for Foreigners is available from Sylvia Giustina in the University romance languages department. EMU FOOD SERVIC TRAILER for your convenience IS PARKED IN THE LIBRARY TURN OUT MON - FRI FROM 9:30-2:15 PEANUTS ® bv CharlH M. Sfhuli i can see uw VOU LIKE SOCCER 50 MUCH, LUCV..v r, it's Also a real n TEAM GAME...PUTTING TOGETHER A PERFECT PlAV CAN 0E VERY GRATIFYING.. Faculty receives Fulbriqht awards Two University faculty have been named recipients of Ful bright awards for the 1978-79 academic year. Harmon Ziegler, professor of political science and research as Folk art scholar to give lectures A leading scholar of American folk culture will deliver two public lectures Thursday and Friday. Henry Glassie, head of the de partment of folklore and folklife at the University of Pennsylvania, will speak on “Folk Architecture and Social Revolution” at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 177 Lawrence. Friday he will address the ques tion “What Is Folk Art?” at 12:30 p.m. in 283 Lawrence. Glassie, recognized for de veloping methods for analyzing the building procedures of anonymous vernacular builders, is the author of several books, in cluding “Pattern in the Material Folk Cultures of the Eastern U.S.” Both talks are free and open to the public. They are part of the Department of Architecture's spring lecture series. briefs MEETINGS Today's mooting of the Campus Zen Felowship has been cancelled Meeting of Phi Theta Upsiton, junior honorary, today at 4 p.m at 850 E 15th Questions cal Felaa Uanosga at 686-4068 MISCELLANEOUS Chile/South Africa: Two fronts in the same strug gle. A side show about the connections between the South African struggle against apartheid and the Chilean struggle against the miltary junta. Pre sented by the Eugene Friends of NICH (Non r Oregon Daily Emerald The Oregon Daily Emerald is published Monday through Friday except during exam weeks and vacations, by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co., Inc., at tie University of Oregon, Eugene. Ore 97403. The Oregon Daily Emerald operates independently of the University with offices on the third floor of the Erb Memorial Union and la a member of the Associated Press. Emerald subscriptions are $7 per term and S20 per year News and Edtoria! 866-5511 Display Advertising and Business 686-3712 Classified Advertsing 086-4343 Producton 686-4361 Editor Managing Editor Asst Managing Editor News Edtor Graphics Editor Asst Graphics Editor Editorial Page Editor Wady Benson Tom Wolfe Becky Young Chert O’Neil Adrienne Salnger Jm Payne Tom Jackson V. Sports Editor Asst. Sports Editor Entertainment Editors Wire Editor Associate Editors: Departments and Schools Features State and Local Potties Community State System and Student Services ASUO Enrionment Night Edtor Production Manager Advertising Manager Controller Mike Marino Nick Dawson Jerril Nil son Eric Maloney Chris Norman Melody Ward Jock Hatleid Ann Treneman Kevin Harden Richard Seven Carolyn Beaver Kathleen Monje Chris Norman Betsy Bodne Carl Bryant Jean Ownbey J sociate of the University’s Center for Educational Policy and Man agement, will serve as a senior scholar next year at the University of Sidney in Australia. Theresa Ripley, coordinator of career planning and assistant pro fessor of education, will partici pate in a three-month travel study fellowship to the University of Lund in Sweden. Ziegler is a second-time Ful bright scholar and former recipient of Guggenheim and Ford founda tion overseas study grants. As a senior Fulbright scholar, he will do research in Australia and will participate in study semi nars. His research work will ex plore the tension between the de velopment of a highly technologi cal society and a competing de mand for greater citizen involve ment in societal decision making Ripley will use her Fulbright grant to study at the Lund University’s Leisure Studies Center next spring. Her work will center on leisure and its relation to careers. Disarmament discussed “Strategic Nudear Disarmament" will be discussed in the Eugene City Council Chambers at 7:30 tonight, sponsored by the Lane County United Nations Association. John Masser will emphasize the disarmament discussion to be held in special session at the UN General Assembly starting May 23. Masser is regional director of "Operation Turning Point" and rep resentative of the UN Association. Tut tour seeks members The Eugene Society of the Ar chaeological Institute of America, whose members are authorized to join the Vassar Club of Oregon on its tour of the King Tut show in Intervention In Chile) Also Information on continu ing solidarity work will be available. EMU. room to be poeted. 7 tonight. Unguistics Club book sale today 10 a m. to 4 pm, EMU University Pres. Wllam Boyd will host student hours Thursday from 8 to 10 a m at his Johnson Hal office Appointments may be made by eating 686-3036 LECTURES Jerry Blake, assistant professor of Urban Studies, Portland State University. Ml speak to night on "Black Youth Unemployment: A Case Study of Portland" at 730 in the Honors Colege Lounge. Seattle, are iooking for additional people to fill a bus in September. The tour group will go to Seattle Saturday, Sept. 9. The group will view the exhibition entitled ‘‘The Treasures of Tutankhamun" be fore it is officially open to the pub lic. The group will attend a lun cheon at the Olympic Hotel for a presentation by Emily Teeter of the Oriental Institute at the Uni versity of Chicago. The tour group will return to Eugene Sunday af ternoon, Sept. 10. Cost of the round-trip bus fare, the entrance fee to the exhibition and the luncheon is $40 per per son. Hotel reservations can also be made, and anyone wanting additional information should con tact Frances Stern at the art his tory department, or call 344-1259.