Vacation college offers leisure Join us for lunch! Don’t let our name fool you. The once-private rooms of the faculty club’s Collier House are now open to anyone who is hungry. Enjoy lunch outdoors on our deck MODERATELY PRICED SALADS, SANDWICHES, HOMEMADE SOUP. The Faculty Club The Big Yellow House at 13th and University. 11:30-2:00 Weekdays Banquet facilities available for parties, wedding receptions, and meetings. P SI IV PAvei 774 E. 13th 2nd Floor Smith Family Bookstore LOOKING FOR THE LOWEST FARES? Call us and compare. We offer airline tickets at airport prices & there is no charge for our services. • Computerized airline reservations and ticketing • Amtrack reservations and ticketing • Cruises, Tours, Group Travel, etc. • Friendly, experienced agents. 683-5577 Free Parking in Rear Registration is now open for the 19th annual Grace Graham Vacation College to be held during the 1983 summer ses sion at the University. The vacation college offers a week of study and recreation for adults on August 19 through 26. High school students accompanied by their parents may also attend. This year the participants will choose one of two concur rent academic sessions. The first will explore human achievement and capacities in individual, social and political contexts in “Human Possibilities: a sampling of perspectives.” The second group will ex plore "The Codes That Govern and Enhance Life" through a variety of subjects ranging from genetic DNA codes to computer codes to the pat terns of language. One of the oldest vacation colleges in the nation, the University program was developed and organized in 1964 by Grace Graham, a University education pro fessor emerita, for whom it was named in 1978. Based on the concept of the folk high school in Denmark, the col lege encourages the free ex change of ideas and close association with faculty leaders and fellow partici pants. There are no entrance re quirements or exams for the college, which focuses on recreation and study for the pleasure of learning. Classes are scheduled in the morn ings, leaving afternoons and evenings free for sightseeing, recreation and social activ ities. Among the special activities planned are a visit to Eugene’s Hult Center for the Performing Arts, day trips to the Oregon Precision HaifWOfKS $£* For the BEST haircut O VOu can ^et at any Pgj-1 corner of 29 ,h.^eded**'* noen Mon - Sat no appo»ntrnent — PIZZA PETE’S ITALIAN KITCHEN ALL YOU CAN EAT! SPAGHETTI SPECIAL WTH GARLIC BREAD £» A C TUESDAY ONLY * M J 5pm to9_p_nrv “ Delivery Service 484_0996 2673 Willamette •*> - *»ck rm~" L-oast ana 10 Asmand for a Shakespearean play, and a river float trip. The college is based at the University Inn. Most classes will be held there and in the University Law Center. Cost is $420 per person for a single or $410 per person for a double room. Fees include room and board, tuition and the costs of most recreational events. Reduced fees for those pro viding their own lodging are available. The vacation college also has scholarship program. For complete information, write Grace Graham Vacation College, 111 Susan Campbell Hall, or call 686-5555. Music school provides course in orchestras A free orchestra rehearsal course will be available to the general public this summer at the University’s school of music beginning tomorrow. Orchestra Reading Reper toire Rehearsal, which runs from 10:30 am. to noon Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, will offer in strumentalists a chance to read through the standard symphonic repertoire, accor- M ding to Marsha Mabrey, music ^ professor and conductor of the University Symphony. “Participants from the University and the community will get acquainted with new pieces and review old favorites,” Mabrey says. There is no admission fee, and no academic credit will be given. Interested individuals may sign up for the course during summer session registration today at MacAr thur Court. For additional information, call Mabrey at 686-3791 or 686-3761. Earth First 4 promise music, ask awareness Were you too young for Woodstock and too cheap to go to US? That’s okay, there’s another chance to frolic to music in the great out-of-doors coming up July 3 northwest of Grants Pass in the English Cabin Meadows. The only cost will be your at tention when members of Earth First, the environmental organization sponsoring the festivities, explain their cause and ask for donations. Buffet Lunch Hours: Mon. - Sat. 11:00 am to 3:30 pm Vi Dinner (upstairs) Hours: Sun. - Th. 4:30 pm to 10:00 pm Fri., Sat. 5:00 pm to 10:30 pm Bamboo Pavillion 683-8886 1275 Alder St. r-Backstage dancewear & theatrical EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED • Leotards • Tights • Dance Shoes (expertly fit) • Warm ups • CAPEZIO • OANSKIN • FLEXATARD • CARUSHKA • BARELY LEGAL • GYMKIN • TICKETS • STAR STYLED