Earn $90.00 a month while you study. Become a regular plasma donor and help us save lives. Bring this ad with you and receive an additional $5.00 on your first donation. For UO Students Only Offer good through 7/31/84 Call for information and to make your appointment today. Open Mon.-Sat. 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Eugene Plasma Center 484-2241 • 1071 Olive St. (across from Kiva) ^ A 890 E. 13th • 342-FILM If you’re not seeing all your friends this summer, send a photo!! Shutterbug Processing Coupon Coupon must accompany order • Expires 7-21-84 Standard m 3x5 ^ Color Reprint 5|$^ OO Portfolio 4x6 Color Reprint 4|$^ OO Swing into summer with CARNIVAL THEATRE! University Theatre's fun-filled season of plays will fill your summer evenings with music and laughter! I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It On The Road The critically acclaimed musical starring PRISCILLA LAURIS July 5, 6, 7, 19, 25, 26; August 3, 4, 10 Side btj Side ty Seudkem A musical revue of Broadway show tunes by the master songwriter, Stephen Sondheim July 12, 13, 14, 20, 21 August 2, II Robinson Theatre • 8 p.m. $5.00 - Any Friday or Saturday $3.50 - Any other performance day Call 606-4191 for ticket reservations and information. Mass Appeal A heartwarming comic drama starring TOM LASSWELL and DENNIS SMITH July 17, 18, 27, 28 August 1, 8, 9 Potpourri of ‘out-of-step’ folks adds more life to country fair It was a people-watcher’s paradise. More than 20,000 people beat the heat and flocked to the Oregon Country Fair this weekend, and, as tradition would have it, the faces and bodies in attendance were anything but dull. There were jugglers and clowns and children sporting painted faces. A man wearing a loin cloth and sandals danced with abandon to the Celtic folk music of “Just Friends” on the Main Stage. Several onlookers joined him. The fair’s parade was an extravaganza of brass and color; everyone out of step but un Musicians made the midway a maze of melodies, with each turn offering a new song. doubtedly in tune. Teetering high above the crowd was a woman on stilts wearing satin pants; she answered no questions, even from the awed five-year-old who wanted to know. “How does she do that?” A fellow with a paper mache swan's head ex tending three feet in the air wandered through the crowd, white cotton wings flapping in the warm breeze. An Indian chief and a silver-skinned woman with silver hair also drew stares. There were others who, perhaps not so ob viously, fit into the scene just as well, and added their own shade of color to the myriad souls. A great-grandmother of 82 years was there, although she didn’t even attempt to make it all the way around the midway. Then there were the l. : A giant towered over the crowd. teenagers wearing Van Halen t-shirts and dark glasses, meandering from booth to booth, never losing sight of each other. Mothers with newborn babies and small children rested at the base of the Shady Grove Stage. The Oregon Country Fair differs from the Lane County Fair, because of its setting. The “fairgrounds” is a mostly-shaded, figure-eight path that winds it’s way through the forest just west of Veneta. There are no carnival rides and, besides the ponies available for children’s riding, the only animals to be seen were two parrots near an earring booth and some horses with riders her ding cars in the parking lot. And there’s a per vading friendly spirit not entirely uncommon to Eugene, but refreshing nevertheless. If you missed the experience this year, the fair will be back next summer for its 16th show ing. Everyone should attend at least once. As Seattle-based musician Scott Cossu said after playing at the fair, "It’s like being in another country.” Story by Kim Carlson Photos by Michael Clapp Out 2 Lunch, a local juggling group, demonstrated the “carrot and club” aspect of American foreign policy on an unsuspecting audience volunteer.