McKay’s Open Pantry Delicatessen FEATURING Broasted Chicken - by the bucket or the piece • Party trays made to order • Fresh home-made pizza • Fresh bagels and pocket bread • San Francisco style sour dough bread • 31 varieties Imported and Domestic cheese • 35 varieties lunch meat and sausages • Full line salad bar • Hot food to go • Fresh sandwiches made daily Hot or cold, imported or Domestic foods with old-fashioned service — S fr H Green Stamps. Too! 1960 Franklin Blvd. Eugene 343-6418 Open 8 am to 8 pm daily 655 W. Centennial Blvd. Springfield 747-3004 V r Rainbow Optics SERVICE Own Lab On Premises STYLE Over 1.000 frames on display SENS I 1 IVE To Your Needs *N Present this Ad and receive ON 2nd PAIR OF GLASSES T i -w t'lOSK ie -rrlerir ir i y it rex- j. ilar t O: if 1 jlrj-ises wrier o if id t dit T jl J-e tinted r t. » jy - clear i ■',( •[ tt if- -p» .i: i j f jif (Offer expires April 15th 2nd pair must be same prescription as first) 766 E. 13th ST. • 1 BLOCK FROM U OF O • 343-3333 _ J WW7'r‘ THE BOOK BUYERS ARE HERE! Our amicable bookbuyer and his congenial assistant will be back again during finals week to give you the most available money for those texts from which you wish to depart. By all means keep and ^pfierish the titles which have become old friends, but, be as sured that exchanging the other texts having insidious covers and inane contents for cash is the most acceptable and fitting disposition. Others, eager to fol low in your footsteps, await the coming in future terms of these previously utilized texts so that they may derive the enlighten ment therein. ANYTIME DURING FINALS WEEK, MARCH 15-20 During regular store hours, the two aforementioned gentle men will be anxiously awaiting your arrival in the Bookstore basement lobby to speedily lighten your load and reinforce your financial circumstances. What all this means is. . . recycle your textbooks. We will pay cash. Our buyers will be here all of finals week, so bring in 13th & Kincaid BOOKSTORE those texts! The Bookstore will give half of what you paid for your textbook, if it has received an order for that book. If not, we use used book dealers catalogue prices. Textbooks 686-3520 • General Books 686-3510 • Supplies 686-4311 MMIMM 0 0 Feminist singer-songwriter Holly Near appears tonight a 8 p.m at South Eugene High School in a benefit concert for Citizen Action for Lasting Security, a group opposing the nuclear arms buildup Twin pianos Richard and John Conii-Guglia, classical pianists, will present a special concert Thursday at 8 p.m at South Eugene High School Bluegrass John Hartford and The New Grass Revival appear at the EMU Ballroom Saturday at 7:30 p.m for an evening of bluegrass Tickets are $5.50 for University students, $6.50 tor the general public. EPAC IMPACT continued from page 1B Tom Prewitt of the University theater department agrees. "It's going to be a problem for a lot of people We re talking about production costs, paying tech nicians, paying actors, paying singers, paying ushers, paying ticket-takers, paying the or chestra Some of the groups that have been getting by on a lot of community spirit are going to be faced with paying for professional theater tech nicians A lot of theater groups are going to rush into it, and then back out six months later A lot of people are going to be dismayed that they can sell out a 2,500 seat auditorium and lose a lot of money," Prewitt said at Saturday s forum UNIVERSITY PROBLEMS Another problem which could effect the University is the absence of a set construction shop on the EPAC site Origin ally a shop was to be located in the basement of the center, but budget cuts cancelled the idea Performing groups using the large auditorium will need large sets built, and touring groups may require repairs and main tenance on sets Riley Grannan said, "You need a place for people to build the sets Unless someone starts a professional shop here, Port land's the nearest place Up until now, we’ve been fortunate enough to find a place.” One of the few possible alter natives is the University’s set construction shop in in Villard Hall. Although, Grannan says, there are "tight restrictions" about its use, and although it’s usually busy with projects for University productions, some fear that it may be overloaded with emergency construction projects for non-University groups Another University problem would effect the EMU Cultural Forum, which has been targeted as a possible user of EPAC's facilities Frank Geltner. assis tant coordinator of the promot ing group, says that there might be problems with the various promoting groups in the area bidding against each other for contracts The Cultural Forum has prior ity for Mac Court, which Geltner . calls "the only facility in town for major concerts because of its 9.000 seating capacity The Cultural Forum, he explained at Saturday's conference, signs a special contract with regional promoters which makes the promoters responsible for any losses incurred in the events Because of these factors, Geltner says "promoters with a marginal concert would go to EPAC before they came to us,” possibly running two shows at EPAC rather than trying to run one large show at Mac Court This could mean trouble for the Cultural Forum, a student or ganization already hampered by budget cuts. WHAT DOES IT MEAN? At this point, there's no turn ing back. The Performing Arts Center will open its doors on Sept 24, bringing a new aware ness of culture to the area's inhabitants, a tidy sum of tourist bucks to the area's merchants, and some hopes and headaches to the area’s arts groups by matt meyer