- NATURAL HAIR DESIGNS FOR MEN AND WOMEN With this ad Free Manicure Reg. $7.00 value With your perm! ($30.00) 1 Guaranteed to please! experienced in all hair types and textures Hair Cut Sale Mondays and Thursdays *9.50 We Accept Canadian coins 561 E. 13tH Across from Max's 485-4422 Offer good through July 31, 1984 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 3-6 in the EMU Dining Room & Courtyard Now Serving Wine I.D. Required RESUMES Give your resume a professional look by having it typeset at the Oregon Daily Emerald Graphic Services Department. 300 EMU. Open 9 a m. to 4 p.m. Pass 4 EMU painting exhibit depicts motion By Kevin Rowan Of the Emerald Attending the Olympic Scientific Congress is not just listening to dull speeches and reading scientist’s reports, it also means aye-catching art work by Betty Field-Haley, a Community Educa tion Program art instructor for the University. Her paintings form a special exhibit spon sored by the Olympic Scientific Congress called “Movement in Nature and Humans,” They will be on display in Room 167, the Forum Room and the Ballroom lobby area of the EMU until July 27. “Movement in painting has been a particular area of interest of mine for years,” Field-Haley says, tracing her interest to a college class at the University of Arizona. “One summer, 1 took a class in Oriental Art and I was particularly struck by what I learned about the Sung Dynasty.” The Sung Dynasty dated from the 11th cen tury to the 14th century in China, Field-Haley says, and is known for the landscape paintings that the scholar-painters of the period created. “The scholars were literate,” she says. “And the same brushes for writing were used in pain ting, so the step to painting was a natural one. “And they could make the brush sing,” she says. Painting seems to come naturally to Field Haley as well. Her exhibit of more than 20 pain tings. which includes landscapes and seascapes, appear to flow over the walls. Her swirling rivers and sweeping oceans carry the viewer's eye along cool blues and greens that predominate her work. "The movement of water is fascinating to me to watch." she says. "It's complex, and yet so simple. But if you study it long enough, you can see how it moves. I try to capture the movement in my painting." Field-Haley cites Taoism, the prevalent religion of the Sung Dynasty, as one of her influences. "Nature was something that these people liv ed with, not something they lived in fear of," she says. "A tree was a tree, not something that they worshiped and called a god." According to their beliefs, Field-Haley says, nature included man. and they painted a world of harmony because of that. "Their landscapes are so good because they are so simple.” Field-Haley says. "With just paper and ink they could get as complex as they wanted. I just hope to someday be that good. "We are all given certain gifts." she says. "It is our responsibility to share those gifts. We are obliged to do something about it." Photo by Michael Clapp Betty Field-Haley points to the flowing textures in one of her paintings from her “Movement in Nature and Humans ” exhibit on display in the EMU. Sundaes for peace Organizers of an ice cream social Sunday hope they can help put a chill on the nuclear arms race. The event will be held at the Unitarian Church, 40th Avenue and Donald Street, from 7 p.m. until 11 p.m. Refreshments will be provided by Eugene ice cream manufacturer Sweet Surrender. The fund raising event is part of the nation wide events being planned by supporters of a bilateral nuclear freeze. Proceeds for the event will go to back candidates who support the freeze. Speakers w'ill include County Commissioner Jerry Rust, City Councilor Cynthia Wooten, and Elizabeth Furz from Portland’s Oregon Freeze Voter ’84. Music will be provided by Percy Hilo and others. ■ Admission is $2.50 for adults, $2 for seniors and $1 for children 5 through 12. Board post filled ASUO Pres. Julie Davis has appointed a transfer student from Portland State Univer sity to represent the ASUO on the Oregon Daily Emerald board of directors. Doug Pyle, a former news reporter on stu dent government for The Vanguard, PSU’s student newspaper, will serve for two years as one of the two ASUO representatives the student group is entitled to select. While studying at PSU, Pyle was active in student politics. He founded and directed a civil rights group, the Coalition for Equal Rights, and also served as coordinator of the PSU group, Students for Lesbian and Gay Rights. Pyle, a junior majoring in theater arts, has written and directed a three-act play entitl ed “The Folding Chair,” which made its first showing at PSU this past spring. 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