Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 04, 1985, Page 3, Image 3

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    ^German
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Gentle care for students for 13 years.
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680 E. 18th Ave., Eugene
(corner of 18th & Hilyard)
344-6371
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March closes women’s conference
About 150 women, men and children
braved the evening chill Saturday to par
ticipate in the “Take Back the Night” rally
and march, which ended a three-day con
ference on violence and women.
The crowd gathered in the EMU Cour
tyard around 6 p.m. for singing and
distributing signs and candles for the
march.
Photo by Karen Stallwood
Week of films, talks planned
Women’s history is celebrated
By Jolayne Houtz
Of the Emerald
The University will celebrate National
Women's History Week this week with a series of
speakers and films, says Barbara Corrado Pope,
who will coordinate the events.
Elinor Langer, author of the nationally ac
claimed biography “Josephine Herbst," and Rose
Glickman, a Russian history professor from Stan
ford University, will be the highlighted speakers.
Langer, a Portland-based author and jour
nalist, will answer the question “Who was
Josephine Herbst?” at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
Dad's Room, EMU.
Langer spent 10 years writing the biography
of Herbst, a leading«American novelist, journalist
and radical of the 1930s and 40s.
Glickman will speak on' ""Women in the
Soviet Union: Does Work Bring Liberation?" Fri
day at 3:30 p.m. in Room 167, EMU.
Her lecture coincides with International
Women's Day, which recognizes the 1917 Inter- >
national Women’s Day march and subsequent
demonstrations in St. Petersburg that signalled
the onset of the Russian Revolution.
This year will mark the first time the Univer
sity has celebrated National Women's History
Week, which was initiated in 1978 by a group of
women serving on the Sonoma County Commis
sion on the Status of Women in California.
In 1982, a Congressional resolution pro
claimed it a national observance. The week
always includes March 8. which also has
American origins in a mass demonstration by gar
ment workers on New York’s Lower East Side in
1908.
There will be a series of hour-long events
beginning at noon each day next week in the
Forum Room, EMU. All of the week-long events
are free and open to the public:
•Today: The film “Emerging Woman” will
chronicle the history of American women;
•Tuesday: Sharon Claeyssens will speak on
“And Still I Rise: A History of Black Women in
the U.S.”;
•Wednesday: Mary Jo Wagner will talk about
the lives of Oregon's notable women;
•Thursday: The short films “Quilts in
Women’s Lives” and “Susan B. Anthony” will
be shown;
• Friday: “The Willar 8,” a film about the
bank clerks who carried on an 18-month strike
against their employer in a small Minnesota
town, will conclude the lunchtime forums.
There will also be a late afternoon event
every day at 3:30 p.m.:
•Monday: A film about American women in
the 20th century. "She’s Nobody's Baby,” will be
shown in the Forum Room;
•Tuesday: Two films on the lives of impor
tant women authors, “Lorraine Hansberry” and
“May Sarton,” will be shown in the Forum
Room;
•Wednesday: “Good Work Sister," a slide
tape show about the Northwest’s women
shipyard workers during World War II, will be
shown in Studio A of the IMC at the Main Library;
•Thursday: Pope will present a slide lecture
in the Forum Room on the revival of Mary and
pilgrimages in 19th century Catholic Europe en
titled “Immaculate and Powerful.”
The celebration of International Women’s
Day will continue into the weekend, with several
benefits for the Rape Crisis Network. Friday, the
Women’s Referral and Resource Service will
sponsor a dance in the University Faculty Club.
The cost is $1.50.
The play “La Chicana” will be performed by
a Seattle-based company at 1:30 and 8 p.m. Satur
day in the EMU. Tickets are $3 each.
The Rape Crisis Network is organizing a
number of diverse fund-raising activities to be
held at the Central Presbyterian Church, 1475
Ferry St., Saturday from 3 to 8 p.m.
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On Campus South Willamette
1231 Alder, 683-2500 * 2805 Willamette, 344-1224
I
THOUGHT
FOR FOOD
Are you terrified of becoming fat? Do you often feel
out of control around food? Are you continually trying to
restrict your food intake, only to “blow it” by binging on
your favorite "forbidden” foods? Are these binges usually
followed by self-induced vomiting, use of laxatives,
feelings of guilt, depression? Are your binge-purge
episodes becoming more and more habitual, perhaps a
central aspect of your day-to-day life?
If your answer is "yes” to many of these questions, you
are invited to participate in a research project at the
University of Oregon Psychology Department designed to
better understand the special problems of persons with
eating disorders. Complete confidentiality is assured;
participants will be paid. This is not a treatment program,
however this research may help you to better understand
your eating behaviors. If interested, please call Garth
McKay at 686-4954 extension 34 between 9:00 a m.
and noon or 1:00 p.m to 4:00 p.m. weekdays
DON’T GET
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Find out the FACTS about
FREE LEGAL SERVICES
FACT 0 Legal Services handles a wide range of legal problems
from Personal Injury Claims to Landlord Tenant Disputes.
FACT 0 There is never a consultation or settlement fee.
FACT 0 Legal Services staff members are experienced, qualified
professionals.
FACT 0 All legal services are FREE to U/O students through
ASUO funds.
ALSO: The Office of Student Advocacy offers non litigatory services
including, but not limited to:
• Veterans Issues • Sexual Harassment • University Housing Disputes
Contact Legal Service, EMU, Room 334 (Third Floor Above the Fish Bowl).
Or call 686-4273 to set up an appointment.
DON’T SETTLE FOR LESS!