Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 04, 1983, Page 11, Image 11

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    National cake sales
cream Reagan, Watt
From Associated Press reports
This weekend introduced the
celebrated "First National Let
Them Eat Cake Sale" to Eugene,
an event designed to raise money
for the needy while taking some
digs at the policies of the Reagan
Administration.
But Eugene isn't alone in this
liberal venture.
Foes of Reagan's economic
policies held a nationwide bake
sale Monday, peddling "Flat
Broke Bread" and "Prune the
Military Muffins" and sponsoring
carnival events like the (interior
secretary) James Watt shoe toss.
Cakes such as the "James Watt
Clear-Cut Forest Cake," a burned
sheet cake with toothpicks stick
ing out of it, were displayed and
actioned as part of the Eugene
Celebration downtown.
Nationally the "First National
Let Them Eat Cake Sale" enlisted
entertainers, political cartoonists
and politicians from the left and
was held at lunch time on street
corners in scores of cities.
Their goal was to use Reagan's
call for volunteerism to raise half a
million dollars to help the nation's
poor, who they say are victims of
the Administration's budget cuts.
"Reagan said go out and do it
based on volunteerism and we're
going to show him it can't be
done," said Marilyn Ondrasik, ex
ecutive director of the New York
Public Interest Research Group.
Other grievances were not
forgotten in the day's activities.
"Ronald Reagan's cake is un
doubtedly made from the same
hazardous waste, toxic chemicals
and polluted water that his ad
ministration tolerates," Susan
Merrow, chairwoman of the Con
necticut Environmental Caucus,
said at a bake sale and rally in
Hartford.
"I and millions of other
Americans want no part of that
recipe," Merrow said.
On Pennsylvania Avenue, just
two blocks east of the White
House, peddlers of baked goods
erected a plywood cutout of Watt
with a big hole in place of his
mouth. A chance to throw a shoe
through the hole cost 50 cents.
Designers of the game dubbed
it "Help Jim Watt Put His Foot In
His Mouth."
The sales were held in pleasant,
Indian-summer weather in much
of the country and puns Were the
order of the day: "Guns or Butter
Cookies," "Strawberry Short
Recovery Cake" and "Unemploy
ment Rolls."
Protest sponsor Thomas Harvey,
a reverend and director of the Na
tional Conference of Catholic
Charities, said in a statement that
Catholic relief agencies are fin
ding it difficult to keep up with
services for the poor.
"From 1981 to 1982, the number
of emergency meals we provided
jumped from 497,000 to 999,000,"
Harvey said.
"And emergency shelter for
single adults grew from 3,900 to
63,000."
Leaders said more than 500 local
organizations took part in the
bake sale and rallies, with the pro
ceeds to go to soup kitchens,
elderly centers, halfway houses,
crisis centers and other local
projects.
i(0duciy:
As a way of introducing ourselves, we're
offering these special prices on Oregon's
Best Photofinishing. In addition, for each roll
processed and printed, you will receive
photo postcard mounts (one for each 12
exposures on a roll) for sending your best
shots to others.
12 exposure
process & print
*2.29
Borderless, semt-marte prims
from Kodacotar VR
and other C-4t type films.
ISO 400 and 1000 50c aditional.
24 exposure
process & print
*4.69
*3.79 for ID exposure films
Borderless, semi-malte prints
from Kodacolor VR
and other C.41 type films.
ISO 400 and 1000 50« aditional.
15 exposure
disc film
process & print
*3.79
Borderless, semi-mane prints
from Kodacolor VR
and other C-41 type films.
fSO 400 and 1000 50« aditional.
36 exposure
process & print
*6.89
Borderless, semi-matte prints
from Kodacolor VR
and other C-41 type films, f
ISO 400 and 1000 504 aditional
ERB MEMORIAL UNION
(Arnni from the Main Desk)
484-6646
offer ends Oct. 14,1983
» JUSTINIAN, Byzantine Emperor
A SYMPOSIUM
Commemorating 1,500 years
I since the birth of Justinian
j University of Oregon October 6-8, 1983
J Thursday, October 6, Room 107 Lawrence Hall
* 7:30 P m Professor John Barker. History
t Department, University of Wisconsin,
\ Madison. *‘77ie Nika Riots and Byzan
* tine Social Violence"
l 8:30 P m Professor A. Dean McKenzie, Art
; History Department, University of
Oregon. “Justinian and Mt. Sinai"
! (slide lecture)
\ Friday, October 7:
1:30-2:30 p.m. Tour of Photographic Ex
hibition (Art and Architecture from
Justinian's Time). Gallery 141 School
of Architecture and Allied Arts (Guide
| Professor A. Dean McKenzie)
J 7:30 p m.. Room 107, Lawrence Hall. Pro
fessor David H. Wright, Art History
Department, University of California,
Berkeley. "Justinian as Most Chris
tian Emperor • the Iconographic
Evidence" (slide lecture)
8:30 p.m.. Room 107, Lawrence Hall. Pro
fessor Jakov Bacic, Russian Program,
University of Oregon "Justinian and
the Slavs"
Saturday, October 8, Room 107 Lawrence Hall
University of Oregon faculty speakers
10:00 a.m. Professor Stephen Reynolds,
Department of Religious Studies.
"Neo-Chalcedonianism in the Sixth
Century"
11:00 a.m. Professor M. George
Zaninovich, Department of Political
Science. "Some Aspects of Political
Theory During Justinian’s Rule"
2:00 p.m. Professor Clyde P. Patton,
Department of Geography “Food Sup
ply and Distribution in the Byzantine
Empire During the Sixth Century"
3:00 p.m. Professor John Nicols, Depart
ment of History. “Justinian and the
Codification of Roman Law"
Concurrent with the Symposium will be an
exhibition of photographs, cast ivories and
metalwork as well as architectural models,
illustrating the artistic creations during the
sixth century A.D. in the Byzantine Empire
This exibition will be held in Gallery 141,
Lawrence Hall, September 26 - October 7,
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
For further information about the Sym
posium or the Exhibition, contact Pro
fessor A. Dean McKenzie, 686-3663 or
Mark Levy, 686-4877
Sponsoring organizations: (JO Russian & East Euro
pean Studies Center. (J O. College of Arts & Sciences.
Oregon Committee for the Humanities. Department of
Art History. Department of History, and the Visiting
Scholars Program
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Great thinkers— come check out our
Philosophy section. One of the greats
the University Bookstore. In the Book Dept.
686-3510