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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1981)
QUADS NOW RENTING Beginning $139 Private Vi bath, private refrigerator. CAMPUS COURT QUADS 1544 Alder 686-1075 2189:ttn SI45 INCLUDING UTILITIES. CLEAN, QUIET QUADS. Vi block from campus on E. 16th Furnished, private bath and refrigerator Air conditioned. 345-1272. 1882:tfn DORM CONTRACTS DORM CONTRACT FOR SPRING SPRING Call ext 4253 or 485-9506 for Libby, please leave message if I'm not there 2-16 CONTRACT FOR SALE Schafer/Walton. 3rd" floor. Contact Stephanie at 484-3166. 2-13 TWO DORM CONTRACTS FOR SALE Call ext 5391 or Mike or 485-9034 for Cathy 2-17 SWAPS OREGON STATE BASKETBALL ticket for one ticket to each of remaining home games 895-3595 evenings. 2-12 I QST & FOUND HELP, I’M FREEZING Lost pair of wool gloves waiting in line for Jackson Browne tickets If found please call 741-2517.2-12 NECKLACE FOUND in east gymnasium Call Jeff 342-1512 or 686-4150 to identify Found Feb. 3. _2-12 LOST: CAMERA Pentax K1000 w/50mm lens in black case, also Pentax 135mm lens (Jour nalism School property). Call David at 683-5679. No questions asked REWARD _2-12 LOST AT CORNER OF 13th AND ALDER on 2/3: Ladies red LeSport change purse All I.D. contact immediately. 686-6051.2-13 LOST Favorite scarf at Beer Garden 2/6. Blue/green woven with magneta, red stripes. $Reward$ Call Claire 485-7094.203 I’VE LOST MY GREEN BACKPACK while in the art dept, of the Bookstore. Keep the books, I need all else Please return. No questions asked! 686-9487. 2-13 MARKET BASKET WILLAMETTE PEOPLE’S FOOD CO-OP E. 22nd A EMERALD 10-7 M-F 10-6 SAT 1-7 SUN Introductory student discount Membership optional Discount bulk buying 1347:MH EVENTS taking back o it strategies in ^ , Cs ,n Detroit ?aniz,n9and sSS,*^*!» ®ATUBOAv*cp!f 7 30pM CINEMA 7 EB M .*125 Sponsored 5y New A 4:30 P* Ma^y&Cltl^nsep* American SESUR^lhW|a?N ,Mp,}OVEMENT r. Hubbard Ne®a'es MW>°d Instrorm C^S* ?r\F!b &** Movern^° 2-13 HERE’S your ®w«a,SK52®5 i 2-17 and ___. fh© <Euu Acting \r p Provost “iisipsr for os gA“esm°ore S- Seotogteal Sur vey Mount SmSSS* T^yX;r12 apnUli%n,on 2-12 HEmr throbs Fe*>- 13 th Human Rights in Crisis: Latin America LECTURE ON NICARAGUA THURSDAY, FEB. 19 4-5:30 PM EMU BALLROOM NICARAGUA UPDATE Throughout Nicaragua, 1980 was a year of literacy, increasing equality tor women, and economic reconstruction. In a five month National Literacy Crusade, more than 100,000 volunteers, including 60.000 high school students, were enlisted to teach 420,000 people to read and write In the second phase of the program, 40,000 star students began to teach 40,000 more The illiteracy rate fell from over 50% in March to 12.9% in August The follow-up effort aims to cut it to 4% in three years The reading primer was based on the educational theory of Paulo Freier, a Brazilian teacher and adult literacy consultant tor the World Council of Churches in Geneva,.Swit zerland Directing the campaign was Fernando Car denal. a Jesuit priest. All over the country, it opened with a special Mass in the local par ishes; and the effort was strongest where there were strong parish priests The Association of Nicaraguan Women Luisa Amanda Espinosa (AMNLAE), with 30.000 membes, worked to attain full econ omic, social, and political equality for women. It helped set up community kitchesn, laundries, dispensaries, and free day care centers for all working mothers. It has created center for the 40.000 war orphans. This year, AMNLAE is concentrating on a preventive health campaign. 46% of Nicar aguan children die before the age of five. Over half of those who survive their fifth birthday are malnourished, and the average life expectancy if 52. Local AMNLAEs are teaching nutrition, first aid, helath, and cmild care classes, dis tributing extra food to children, expecting mothers, and the elderly, and organizing volunteers to dig latrines. Nicaragua's mixed economy made con siderable progress toward recovering from the shambles left by the civil war. 99% of the planned production targets were met; the targets for rice, corn, and beans were over-ful filled. The planned revenue from coffee exports was also obtained, in spite of a five-year low in world coffee prices and inflated prices for imported fertilizers and- insecticides Unem ployment plummeted from 32% to 17%; if the 1981 target is reached, the unemployment rate will again fall to production of cotton, meat, and especially industrial goods. Industrial produc tion has been seriously handicapped by soar ing oil import price; 100 bushels of coffee bought 17 barrels of oil in 1977 but will only buy 2Vi today. Further reconstruction in 1981 will bestowed by the suspension on Jan. 15 of $75 million U S loan to Nicaragua's private sector. The loan was suspended in response to an alleged invasion of El Salvador from Nicaragua on Jan 14 by 100 troops in five boats. The charge was made by Salavadorean President Napoleon Duarte and repeated by former U S. Ambas sador Robert White. No prisoners or bodies have been produced in evidence. According to Christopher Dickey, writing from San Salvador in the Jan. 20 Washington Post, U S. officials now are saying white "no longer thinks the evidence about it as 'compelling' as the day he spoke ' But the funds have not been restored. ENTERTAINMENT CINEMA 7 10th & Olive-Atrium Building 687-0733 EUGENE PREMIERE-ENDS SUNDAY ONE TRICK PONY Paul Simon stars and wrote the screenplay about a singing star ot the 60s coming to terms with 15 years on the road. SHOWING 7:30 ONLY Red Adm Mat Sun 2 pm and REMEMBER MY NAME A sleeper that deserves to be seen. Geraldine Chaplin gives a great performance as the jailbird trying to reconcile her life to haunted lover Anthony Perkins (his best role in years) The superb soundtrack in by Alberta Hunter. SHOWING 0:30 ONLY Red Adm Mat Sun 4 pm 2-13 EMU CULTURAL FORUM presents Marta Meszaros’ WOMEN The Hungarian director Marta Meszaros is perhaps one ot the most important directors working in Hungary today. Meszaros' outstanding quality is her ability to invest woman-woman friend ships with the same kind of complexity and richness that a director like Wim Wenders brings to his men. WOMEN is about the friendship which springs up between a passionate young rebel and an older woman who is just beginning to realize the inadequacy of her well-or dered married life. SUBTITLES SUNDAY, FEB. 15 7 A » PM 180 PLC *1-25 P-13 EMU CULTURAL FORUM proudly presents an evening of fine country music with the renowned RONNIE MILSAP on MONDAY, MARCH 9 Tickets now on sal* tk the EMU Main Desk MHF EMU CULTURAL FORUM presents Franco Zeffirelli’s ROMEO and JULIET Shakespeare's classic romance comes to stunning visual life in a modern inter pretation of one the most beautiful and durable love stories ever written. A wonderful movie to smare with your valentine FRIDAY, FEB. 13 7 4 9:45 150 GEOLOGY $1.25 2-1? EMU CULTURAL FORUM proudly presents the witty and candid BBC production of I, CLAUDIUS With the mad Caligula now emperor, Claudius is thrust into the inner circle of power as co-consul with him # 9 ZEUS, BY JOVE documents the decay of Rome under crazy Caligula But in # 10 HAIL WHO? he is assassinated by his own brother-in-law and guess who is pro claimed the new emperor? THURSDAY, FEB. 12 8 PM ISO GEOLOGY $1.25 2-13 WOMEN'S LAW FORUM presents Cary Grant & Joan Fontaine in SUSPICION The Hitchcock thriller that won Fontaine and Academy Award THURSDAY, FEB. 12 74 9 PM LAW SCHOOL. Room 129 $1.50 1-12 TAKE A BREAK FROM THE MOVIES Come See The University Opera Theatre production of GILBERT 4 SULLIVAN'S lolanthe Outrageous comedy and poltlcal satire FRI-SUN, FEB. 6-8 8 PM SAT, FEB. 7 2 PM FRI & SAT, FEB 13 & 14 8 PM SAT, FEB. 14 2 PM BEALL HALL Tickets: $4 4 $2 WHF2-13 THE BIJOU TO6-0UU “■’"SSssfflS' Adm*B!2SS2 The Garden of the Flnzi-Contlnls Be c;tarrina Dominque Sana . |ved and vlttorlo DeSica's ^'"'f Z eTects ot Mus solinis anti-Semrt^V AwWd, BartFotatg" 7 Beauties , Lina VJHfir.nlia' vmiinp a",. A nandDooL lor &KS3w*SS1SS ssssskssSsS'‘ b«oum1M!S"E dirtyduck Uln • ' n pTiuthe Cat. A zany, Rated X flaunchter than nr,vssey that man riSf^r« Sunday '1:30 P»" MALCOLMX jswsssr^-1 tass*- a 123 «CdN« Main Desk or door Tickets at EMU Ma Q, ^ Op Sponsored by 2-13 oressed — ALPHA kappa psi presents Fantastic Animation Tne graalesi co"^1[^,e^Mes'^orilm®' sssrcaws Oscar nominees. orize winners from asssss?« ’“i” 1B0PLC Academy Award Best Foreign Film "Z DAMN NEAR KN(jcKS YOU OUT OF YOUR SEAT’ THE NEW YORKER A Greek pacifist leader is struck down by a speeding truck while hundreds watch Despite the official police report of accidental death, a journalists persistent questioning leads to full scale investiga tion. Mounting evidence points ot the mvolvment of highest public officials in both murder and attempts to consume an enormous webb of government scandal SUNDAY, FEB. 15 6:30 A 9 PM 150 GEOLOGY $1.50 THE ANANDA MARGA SOCIETY presents GONE WITH THE WIND Shown two nights It took three years to make this revered love story of a roguish gambler and a pampered Southern belle during the Civil War and the Reconstruction This epic romance embodies all the grandeur that was Hollywood in the 30s Shown two nights! FRIDAY, FEB. 13 180 PLC SUNDAY, FEB. 15 177 LAWRENCE Both shows 7 pm $1.50 ■_ 2-11 A FRIDAY THE UTHf'W TRAVAGANZA! English Graduate Students present A NIGHT OF HORRORS!! Vincent Price in Edgar Allan Poe’s clas sic thrillers: The Fall of the House of Usher and The Masque of the Red Death FRIDAY, FEB. 13 7 « 9:30 PM 107 LAWRENCE $1.25 2-13 LOVERS * AND OTHERS SWING TO THE BIG BAND SOUND OF EUGENE’S STARLIGHTERS VALENTINE'S EVENING-FREE IN THE EMU BALLROOM SEE PAGE 5 2-13 THE SUFI CIRCLE PRESENTS Superman THE MOVIE One ot the most spectacular motion pictures ever made, full of special effects and top performances. Christopher Reeves manages to the duality ot mild mannered Clark Kent and the Man of Steel, Superman, to perfection. SATURDAY. FEB. 14 7 A 9:4S 150 GEOLOGY S1.50/S1 children 2-13 PERSONALS LARS: Meet me for a pastrami sandwich at Lenny's Nosh Bar in the Courtyard LOLITA 376:tfn Speed Reading YOU CAN LEARN TO READ POTTER WHILE YOU IMPROVE YOUR COM PREHENSION AND RETENTION. The Learning Resources Center offers a reasonably-priced alternative to expen sive commercial speed reading course 4-week workshops begin next week Call the Center at 686-3226 for more information, or stop by our office in the basement of Friendly Hall._2-17 HORST: Meet me for a kosher salami sandwich at Lenny's Nosh Bar in the Courtyard LUIQI 375:tfn CANDID PHOTOGRAPHY will add class to any party to your party! Compare and save! DANA JOHNSON PHOTOGRAPHY 345-6112 _2-21 SEX is not a 4-letter word! HEART THROBS are coming Feb 13 Don't miss your chance to say 20 LOVING WORDS FOR $1.50 Deadline Feb. 12,1 pm 2-10 HERE’S YOUR CHANCE! Bring your questions and opinions and talk to some people who care! In the SUAB INFORMATION AND GRIEVANCE CENTER (EMU Main Lobby) this week: THURSDAY, FEB. 12 10-11 am: Adell McMillan, Dir EMU 11:15-12:30 pm: Bob Bowlin, Dean of Students 2-3 pm: Richard Hill, Acting V P. for Academic Affairs and Provost Due to conflicting dates, DUFFY'S ALL CAM PUS TALENT SHOW has been rescheduled for Feb. 19. Duffy's apologizes for scheduling conflicts this has caused. 1922:2-12 THURSDAY NITE AT DUFFY'S DUCKS vs BEAVERS LIVE on the BIG SCREEN 1923:2-12 JACKSON BROWNE I have four very decent tickets. Call 485-9761. Bob, room 109. 2-12 HAVE A DIRTY SLEEPING BAG? Find Dependable Service at Slegmund's Cleaners 921 E 13th Ave _ 185:UWH Why wait for your new contacts . one day service at the Contact Lens Clinic of Eugene 401 E. 10th 663-2224 1699:H CRISIS CENTER U of O Telephone Hot Line from 5 pm to 8 am Help with personal & emotional problems. Strictly confidential. Call 686-4488 164 MH SHHH. . . Don’t spread it around. The Boss is out of town, and to celebrate the employees of Teleprompter Cable TV are giving away FREE SHOWTIME Installations. Give us a call today at 484-3006 and we’ll install your SHOWTIME for FREE. This offer is good today only so hurry.. .beforethe Boss gets back. Teleprompter of Oregon 484-3006 IT'S YOUR MONEY WE'RE SPENDING OVER S2,000,000 OF IT! DO YOU CARE WHERE IT GOES? The seven-person Incidental Fee Committee decides where to spend the $50 00 each student pays each term. The IFC will hold public hearings on funding requests from various groups today. Come give us your input. See briefs (p. 2) for groups and locations. V