Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 02, 1982, Page 2, Image 2

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    UNO’S
• Full dinner menu
• 23 varieties of Pizzas
• Whole wheat and
white crust
• Pizzas to go
-cooked and uncooked
15th and Willamette
Open every day
Mon-Fri 11-1:00 am
Sat 5-1:00 am
Sun 5-11:00 pm
EAfl' Cultural Forum presents
TRADITIONAL YIDDISH MUSIC
performed by the KJezmer Band
KAPELYE
with guest artists: STUARTBROTMAN,
C AROL FREEMAN, .ANDY STATMAN
^avmw/A\mw/Awaw«
llWiMi
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 10 Gf
8 pj^jTEMPLEBETHlSRAEL
2550 PORTLAND ST
One Wear of Wgbznerte St ir. E-upmc
Computer ed
seminar eyed
Teachers, parents and
students will learn about ways to
integrate a "C" into the tradi
tional three R's during the third
annual summer conference
sponsored by the University
education college
‘ The Computer: Extension of
the Human Mind” will feature
workshops, guest speakers and
presentations on the use of
computers in education It is
scheduled for July 21-23 at the
Eugene Hilton Hotel
The conference presenta
tions will contrast traditional
and revolutionary approached
to using computers in educa
tion, says Judy Ohmer, a
graduate teaching feilow in the
teacher education division and
1982 conference coordinator
David Moursund. president of
the International Council for
Computers in Education and a
computer and information
science professor, will deliver
the opening speech at 8 p m
July 21
The C schools should add
to the three R s is computer
literacy, he says That s the
functional knowledge of com
puters students will need to
compete m the future job mar
ket. Moursund says
Some estimates predict a
high percentage of all jobs will
involve the use of computers by
1985 creating a need for the
educational system to keep
abreast of the trend, he says
Other general session
speakers representing various
educational institutions and the
business community will ex
plore such topics as preparing
teachers to teach with com
puters. the ethical and social
issues associated with com
puters and how computers as
gDOIHM DS©TIHIRQAKI
President Zionist Organization of America San Francisco
Former Advisor to the Nixon Admin.
Mr Rothman has just returned from his Israel trip with reports on:
AMERICAN-ISRAELI RELATIONS
UP-DATE
February 2nd 7:30-10 pm
Room 107 — Lawrence Building at the University of Oregon
Sponsored by Hillei and JSU
sist teaming
Two of the workshops will
focus on the use of computers
with gifted and talented children
and with students in the early
grades Others will cover
evaluating course matenals and
supervising instructional pro
grams using computers
An exhibit of computer hard
ware and software is also
planned Conference par
ticipants also will be able to see
and use a variety of computers
Kids, parents
to vist Feb. 13
Htgh school and community
college students and their par
ents who did not register in ad
vance for the University of
Oregon s annual UO Preview
still can attend the session
Saturday. February 13
Interested persons will be
able to register for the day-long
program Saturday morning in
the EMU. according to Jim
Such. University admissions
director
Registration which costs $4
for each student, will begin at 8
a m There is no fee for parents
Charter bus transportation is
still available to bnng students
and parents from the Portland
and Salem areas Buch says
The preview is held each year
to give interested students and
parents the opportunity to
become familiar with the
University
Five Women,
Five Births
Pregnancy, birth and parent
ing will be the subjects of a
five-part film series The
Drama of Birth shown Feb 9
in Geology 150
The films a quarterly film fes
tival are directed at anyone in
terested in the subjects but are
aimed at expectant mothers and
fathers in particular They are
being sponsored by Birthways
— Lane County Childbirth Re
source Center Inc and the
Women s Resource and Refer
ral Center on campus
The Birthways organization is
a private non-profit organiza
tion that provides childbirth
education counseling and
referral
The films are
Five Women Five Births ' —
five different births in hospital,
birth center and home settings,
and the women s feelings and
chorees on the bnth experience
Children At Birth" — four
stories of children of various
r
« i .
/
ages witnessing birth
"Birth Without Violence" —
the LeBoyer method of "gentle
birth and early boding"
"Ties That Bind" - expectant
parents describe their emotion
al experiences of pregnancy,
birth and early childhood
"The Caesarean Birth Exper
ience” — the Caesarean
delivery is explored
Admission to the series, start
ing at 7 p m , is $2 75 Further
information is available by
calling 683-4773
Gins support
elevator goal
When the state told the
University s art museum it could
not afford to match museum
funds for an elevator as
promised, the museum s sup
porters didn't lose hope
Turning to the private sector,
they began collecting what is
now over SI03,000 towards an
elevator which will be used for
both access for the han
dicapped and freight
movement
The total needed for the
elevator and the construction
involved is S130.000. leaving the
museum $27 000 shy accord
ing to Hope Pressman. Univer
sity special programs director
Pressman along with the
University Foundation, has
coordinated the fund-raising for
the museum elevator
The museum's lack of acces
sibility for its four levels is
typical of older campus build
ings not built for full accom
modation of all citizens and
students Pressman says
This lack of proper access
has kept some aged and han
dicapped people out of the mu
seum. she adds
"It's astounding how insensi
tive we were back then Press
man says
In addition to allowing access
for the handicapped, the eleva
tor will accomodate the freight
that is moved in and around the
museum This has always been
done manually up and down
stairs Pressman says, limiting
the mobility of some exhibits
Pressman thanks the Univer
sity museum's Art Council — a
33-member council with
members throughout the state
— for collecting the funds Jor
don Schnitzer of Portland is
president of the council, and
Alfred Herman also of Portland
chairs a special subcommittee
formed for the fund-raising
A $10.000 donation was made
through the Friends of the Mu
seum of Art Other donors in
clude the Autzen Foundation.
University Foundation, and
numerous groups and in
dividuals throughout the state
The efevator will be in the
northeast section of the Mu
seum, near the gift shop Con
struction should begin during
the museum's two-month clos
ure in August and September
Tlte Oregon Daily Emerald it pubUsbed
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