* • Local galleries offer Eugene may not have a Gug genheim or a Louvre, but that doesn't mean there aren't quality art exhibits and museums in the city. One doesn't have to travel to New York, Paris, or for that mat ter, very far away from campus to partake in a visual and aesthetic feast. There are many exhibits and museums on campus, and others within walking distance. That big brick building in front of the library that many people walk by hundreds of times during the year, never bothering to see what's inside, is the University Museum of Art. Don't make the same mistake. This museum is the closest thing Eugene has to the major art museums in large cities, with its various galleries and rotating ex hibits. It's a nice place to slow down and forget about classes or work. i Sundae Special 99* Friday, Saturday, Sunday Sept. 30 - Oct. 2 Your Campus BASKIN-ROBBINS ( ICE CREAM STORE' 343-2380 In the center ol the University (Located in the EMU Breezeway) 13th flr University This Edo period doll from Japan is part of the extensive permanent col lection of Oriental Art at the University Museum of Art. The main exhibit from Oct. 2 to Nov. 6 is "Decoding Dragons: Status Garments of the Ch'ing Dynasty." These colorful garments, of which about 100 are being shown, represent a dynasty spanning from 1644 to 1911. The exhibit is in the lobby and main floor of the museum, which is free and open to the public from noon to 5 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday. Historical ambience mixed with modern visual art gives the Maude Kerns Art Center its charm. Located in the oldest church building in Eugene, the center is on the corner of 15th Street and Villard, a short walk from campus. The center has three galleries which all change exhibits each month. Showing until Oct. 15 in the Henry Korn Gallery is "New Work: Old Potters,” which features noted area potters. Also on display are pastels and draw ings by Ann Baldwin, and photography by lack Liu. Maude Kerns is open Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from noon to 5 p.m. Back on campus, there are some smaller galleries that regularly ex THREE REASONS TO SHOP BRADFORD'S FIRST. $71. OFF NAKAM1CH1 CASSETTE DECK. The Nakamichi BX 2 2-Head cassette deck is unsurpassed in performance, reliability and value in it's class. Black or silver. Dolby B & C. SALE 379. Reg. $450. $11. OFF SONY'S MOST AFFORDABLE CASSETTE DECK. The Sony TC-FX25 stereo cassette deck is one of their newest models with features found in more expensive cassette decks packed with Sony confidence and performance but at a very low price. SALE 159. Reg. $170. M 30% OFF COMPLETE SONY SYSTEM. Features: Sony STR-VX250 AM/FM stereo receiver, Sony PS-LX2 turntable with Grado GCE + 1 cartridge and Sony SS-U350 3-way loudspeakers. SALE 399. Reg. $575. NEW FAI.L STORE HOURS: Mon-Thurs. 10-6; Fri. 10-8; Sat. 10-5:30: Sun. 12-5. And by appointment Visa, Mastercard, A mar lean Ixpram «r*lcom» bradford's hi-fidelity 150 WEST BROADWAY 344-8287 fine feast hibit different artists. Two are somewhat well-kept secrets, stuck away from the main campus traf fic. One is right in the thick of that traffic. Aperture photo gallery is situated amidst the busy intersec tion between the fishbowl and the Fountain Court Cafe in the EMU. Whether someone just gives it a sidewise glance or an extended study, the photography is always interesting and certainly helps to break up the monotony on a wet and dreary day. The Faculty Club is thought of as a place to eat, but it also hosts an art exhibit each month. Local watercolorist Ellen Cabehart, a teacher at Maude Kerns, will display her work from Oct. 3 to Oct. 31. Gabehart's pain tings are known for their layered effect, with different images overlapping eachother. The Faculty Club art gallery is open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays and from 8:30 to noon on Saturdays. Gallery 141 in Lawrence Hall holds many different exhibits in the room the gallery was named after, 141. The small gallery is mostly for art students who are showing their first exhibits. Were searching out talented graphic artists, cartoonists and photographers who are interested in having their work used in The Fri day Edition, the Oregon Daily Emerald's weekly entertainment and arts newsmagazine. We're also looking for people who can write with some originality and knowledge about film, dance, classical and jazz music, the visual arts, theatre and/or books. All work will be hired out on a freelance basis, and much to many students' and community members' surprise, will be compensated for monetarily when printed. This year's arts and entertainment supplement promises to be a visual ly and verbally interesting one; the more talent the better. Contact Angela Allen Morgan or Kim Carlson at the Emerald. note Country Continued from Page 6B gives them the freedom to do what they want. If you're doing rock you're pretty limited. You have to have a tunnel-type view to please the teenagers. They can turn you off so fast you don't know what happened." Bosche agrees with the argu ment that rock music is mired, to the point of wallowing, in an adolescent angst. But unlike rock, country music is primarily about adult situations. "You can turn on our radio sta tion... and say, 'I understand what these people are saying.' The words they are singing are about everyday things — about happy and hurt," he says. The Silva Hall audience stands and applauds Don Williams’ final song of the concert. Williams waves and leaves the stage. The audience continues to stand and applaud, they want Williams to do an encore, but they don't demand it in the way a rock music au dience would stomp and chant "more.. .more." Williams returns to the stage but not for an encore. He waves his cowboy hat and slips backstage. The applause dies down and the audience, amid calm but not disgruntled murmur ings, files out of the hall.