et al...
LCC offers ‘safari’
"Summer Safari," a series of 10 weekend tours to points of historic
and geologic interest in Oregon, will be offered this summer by the Lane
Community College (LCC) Community Education Division.
The guided tours, which carry no college credit, will offer families an
opportunity to experience an informal, first-hand introduction to the
history, geology and biology of selected sites in the state.
The excursions begin Saturday, June 24, and will be held every
consecutive Saturday through August. Two outings, on July 22 and 23,
and on August 26 and 27, are scheduled two-day tours.
An August 12 tour will take visitors to Sumpter and Granite, two
eastern Oregon ghost towns that are enjoying a modem rebirth, and will
explore nearby mining operations and visit one of the largest gold
dredges in the world.
A July 29 excursion to the coast will feature exploration of coastal
intertidal zones and tide pools, and visits to Cape Perpetua and New
port, where participants will tour the Oregon State University Marine
Biology Center, the Undersea Gardens and the wax museum.
Persons wishing to participate must pre-register by June 16. Tui
tion is $27, plus a $15 per trip travel fee. The cost does not include
incidental expenses.
For further information call the LCC Downtown Center, 484-2126.
briefs
MEETINGS
The Eugene chapter of the Oregon Association
of Railway Passengers wil meet in the Dean Hub
band Room of Andy's Eugene Station Restaurant
on 5th and Wilamette tonight at 6 Agenda wil
include discussion of summer protects.
The Sociology Student Union needs ail sociology
majors and those who hope to become sociology
majors to attend a meeting Wetfrieeday at 4:30 p .m.
in 714 PLC.
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Free workNtops in resume-writing. job interview
ing. job finding, and an action plan workshop will be
offered this week. These wil be the last workshops
until Fall Term Listings for immediate, tun-time and
permanent jobs are available now and through the
summer at the Career Planning and Placement
Service. 246 Susan Campbell Hal
Special arrangements tor workshops are availa
ble for handicapped students by eating 686-3235.
MISCELLANEOUS
Today from 1:30 to 4 p.m. in the EMU there wil be
a symposium on Community and Worker Owner
ship of Business Quest speakers include Jerry
Rust. Can GokJrich, Jerry Lembke. Bill Behn and
Jonathon Walter in a panel and open dsucsston
The pubic is invited.
TEACHERS, aids and helpers needed to assist
mentally retarded young adults in Christian Sunday
School class Ecumenical approach. Valuable ex
perience. Call Wesley Ctr, 344-4219.
An Evening of Theatre Including Brecht, Chekov,
Stoane and others at 4 and 8 p.m., tonight at Arena
Theatre, Villard Hal Admission Free
POLICY
The Emerald's briefs column is open to anyone
wishing to announce meetings, lectures or miscel
laneous events. Briefs are run only once and are
subject to space limitations. They should be typed
and triple-spaced in a 65-character margin Include
all perfnent information, including the date you
want it to run. Also, include a name and phone
number in case we have questions. Events with
donations or admission charges will not be ac
cepted.
All items must be turned in by 2 p.m. the day
before publication at the Emerald office. Room 300,
EMU
BUILD A KAYAK
Outdoor
Program
sponsorship
and cooperative cost sharing
assure facilities materials and expertise
to produce quality boats at minimum cost.
No experience necessary!
Direct questions to The Outdoor Program, Rm 23
EMU 686-4365 or call Jim, at 746-5707.
Meeting TODAY at 6:30
Rm 23 EMU
PEANUTS
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THE PLEXI6LAS5 BEHIND
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5--3.7
Student wins
writing award
Winner of the 1978 award for
teaching expository writing at the
University is Dolores Stockton,
doctoral student in English and
assistant director of composition
for 1977-78.
Stockton won the $500 prize
donated by an anonymous
emeritus member of the English
faculty for her repeated teaching
excellence in freshman composi
tion and expository writing. She
has taught writing classes at the
University since the fall of 1973.
She taught at Western Illinois
University from 1965 to 1967 and
at the University of Washington
from 1967 to 1969. She holds B.A.
and M.A. degrees from the Uni
versity of Arizona. She has pub
lished a short story and several
poems, and is currently writing a
dissertation on Victorian novelist
George Eliot.
btockton is among some 75
graduate teaching fellows in the
English department teaching writ
ing classes.
The teaching award is deter
mined by members of the
department's composition com
mittee, which includes faculty,
graduate students and under
graduates, on the basis of student
evaluations, observations of class
room teaching, and teaching
materials.
Chamber choir
to give concert
Capella Antiqua, a local chorus
and orchestra, will give the third in
its series of concerts tonight at 8 at
the Newman Center, 1850
Emerald St.
The group, Eugene’s only per
manent chamber organization,
consists of 17 singers and 12 in
strumentalists drawn from the
University music school, Eugene
Opera and the Eugene Sym
phony. The musical director and
conductor is Terry Ross.
The concert is sponsored by the
Eugene Parks and Recreation
Department. Admission is $1.50
at the door.
/
Oregon Daily Emerald
A
The Oregon Daily Emerald is pub*shed Monday through Friday
except during exam weeks andvacations. by the Oregon Daily Emerald
Publishing Co., Inc , at the University of Oregon. Eugene, Ore. 97403
The Oegon Daily Emerald operates independently of the University
•4th offices on the third floor of the Erb Memorial Union and is a member
of the Associated Press
Emerald subscriptions are $7 per term and $20 per year.
News and Editorial 686-5511
Display Advertising and Business 686-3712
Classified Advertising 686-4343
Production 686-4381
Editor
Managing Editor
Asst Managing Edtor
News Editor
Graphics Editor
Asst Graphics Editor
Editorial Page Editor
Waly Benson
Tom Wolfe
Becky Young
Cheri O'Neil
Adrienne Sainger
Jm Payne
Tom Jackson
V
Sports Edtor
Asst Sports Editor
Entertainment Editors
Wire Editor
Associate Etttora:
Departments and Schools
Features
State and Local Potties
Community
State System and Student Services
ASUO
Enrionment
Night Edtor
Production Manager
Advertising Manager
Controller
Mike Mahno
Nick Dawson
Jerhl NHson
Eric Maloney
Chris Norman
Melody Ward
Jock Hattl eld
Ann T reneman
Kevin Harden
Richard Seven
Carolyn Beaver
Kathleen Monte
Becky Young
Betsy Bodlne
Cart Bryant
Jean Ownbey
Theater focus of program
The Institute of Renaissance Studies of the Oregon Shake
spearean Festival, Ashland, Ore. announces its summer program, June
19 through July 29.
There are 30 diverse courses, for credit or non-credit, ranging from
one week to six weeks in length, for two to 12 units, graduate or
undergraduate credit.
The institute takes advantage of the festival's three theatres, one
Elizabethan, two modern. A company of more than 150 actors, direc
tors, dancers, musicians, teachers and scholars are available for all the
courses.
The plays of the season are: “Richard III,” "Taming of the Shrew,"
“The Tempest,” and “Timon of Athens,” Brecht’s “Mother Courage,”
Moliere’s “Tartuffe” and Zindel’s “The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man
in-the-Moon Marigolds.”
Institute students receive a 15 percent discount on all tickets.
Some of the courses are: From Script to Stage (6 one-week
courses): Shakespeare and the Drama of Religion (4 one-week
courses); Workshop in Renaissance Music and Dance, The Art of Stage
Fighting; The Festival Plays (3 two-week courses); The Shakespearean
Renaissance Academy and Freshman English with a Difference.
For more information, write Homer Swander, director, Institute of
Renaissance Studies, Box 14403, University of California, Santa Bar
bara, Calif. 93017, or call (805) 961-2911.
Alcoholism Lecture set
Treatment for alcoholism will be the topic of the next Alcohol
Education Program tonight at 7:30 in the Scout Room of Central Pres
byterian Church.
Jeff Davis, manager of the Substance Abuse Program, Lane
County Mental Health Division, will be the speaker. Anyone interested is
welcome to attend.
Third World discussed
The University YWCA-sponsored Women/Speak series will end
the year with a panel of women disscussing the Oregon Third World
Women’s Conference today at noon in the EMU, room to be posted.
The conference was held in Salem May 26 through 28. Panelists
will discuss conclusions drawn from the conference and implications for
the future.
For information, contact Kathy Smith at 686-4439.
Civic Center forum topic
“The Civic Center: What’s in it
for you?” will be the topic of an
open forum at noon Wednesday in
Woodwinds
perform tonight
University music students will
perform in a double-reed ensem
ble recital at Central Lutheran
Church, 18th Avenue and Potter
Street, tonight at 8.
Oboe and bassoon students
and a woodwind quartet will pres
ent works by Mozart, Bach,
Riecha, Beethoven, Morley,
Berger and Boismortier. Admis
sion is free and the public is in
vited.
the EMU Forum Room.
Dean Baumgartner, develop
ment director for the Civic Center
Project, will discuss the facility
and its spaces and uses.
Those in attendance will share
information on whether the new
facility will feature their favored
events, how the spaces can be
used and other details.
Citizens will be able to vote on
the Civic Center on June 27.
A question-and-answer-ses
sion will follow Baumgartner’s
presentation.