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New Hours Special
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Now Open ’TH 6:00 p.m. Monday - Friday
Peace Corps comes to EMU
Peace Corps recruiters will be at the Universi
ty today through Wednesday, taking applications
for volunteer assignments.
Since 1961. more than 120,000 Americans
have server! as Peace Corps volunteers around the
world, 778 of them University graduates.
“Many volunteers see the Peace Corps as two
years oversea career experience,“ said Ann
Trutner, recruiting representative from Seattle,
"Employers are impressed and many volunteers
return home to find international jobs or work for
the government. Ten percent of last year’s State
Department class consisted of former Peace Corps
volunteers. “
Volunteers are given a monthly living
allowance, medical and insurance coverage,
cross-cultural and language training, transporta
tion costs to and from their country of assignment
and a $4,200 cash eadjustmimt allowance paid In
a lump sum at the end of two years of service.
Recruiters will be located at an information
booth in the EMI! lobby from 9 a.m. to 3 p m.
Two film seminars are open to the public.
Interviews will be conducted on Nov. 5 and 0
in the Career Planning and Placement Office at
Hendricks Hall.
JL Continued from Page It
as an entertainer to get the au
dience going and bring them to
a level where we can all have
fun."
Price and her band's reper
toire ranges from pop tunes to
"the deepest country classics."
says her father, Shelby Price.
However, their half-hour McAr
thur Court performance will in
clude mostly country-pop
crossover numbers backed by a
24-piece orchestra.
Price says this will be the first
time she and her band have per
formed with an orchestra. She
| believes this added bonus to
their show will make their per
formance easier and "enhance
whatever we re doing,"
Price's show will be followed
by a performance from stand-up
comedian Carl Woifson. who
Little discovered in a Los
Angeles club for aspiring com
ics called ''TheComedy Store.”
Little says he enjoys giving
fresh, new talent a chance to
make it because he realizes how
difficult it is to get a break in the
world of show business. Little's
discovery of Woifson has been
profitable for both parties
because the young comedian
has since written the material
for a Home Box Office special to
UO Bookstore
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air in November tilled "Night of
42 Stars." in which Little im
personates 42 personalities.
Wolfson also has written the
material for a forthcoming
album from Little. Much of this
material can be seen live in Lit
tle’s McArthur Court ap
pearance. including an imper
sonation of jack Nicholson
discussing what he’d do if he
were president, and a Trivial
Pursuit game hosted by Don
Rickies with Ronald Reagan and
Jimmy Carter on the list of
players.
The search for an opening act
for Little's McArthur Court
show also has been profitable
for both sides "It’s good hype
for us. and it gives my show a
personal touch with the au
dience by using local talent,"
Little says.
Little says because the audi
tions here were so successful.
Rich Little Productions is con
sidering trying talent searches
in other states. Pepsi-Cola,
which is sponsoring Little for
the first time in his Oregon ap
pearance, also is supportive of
the talent search idea
If Price's McArthur Court per
formance is a hit, Little says
he's considering scheduling her
act to open for him in Lake
Tahoe. Price says this would be
"another giant step" toward her
goal of becoming a recording ar
tist and traveling to places such
as Nashville and Los Angeles.
For the time being, Price,
who is an honor roll student,
says she is concentrating on
finishing high school. Music is
never far from her mind,
though, as she intends to con
tinue her studies with a double
college major in business and
music. Price already has won a
scholarship from the Southern
Oregon Science and Humanities
Symposium for an original
composition.
"Through my studies in
music: theory. 1 discovered that
the more you know about
music, the more you realize
there is to learn." Price says.
She adds that by studying
business in combination with
music, she hopes to be able to
maintain control of her own
career if she lands a recording
contract. "If I'm going to make
it as a recording artist. I want to
know what's going on around
me."
Price and her band already
have begun recording demo
tapes at Suncrest Sound Studios
tinder the guidance of Greg
Hayes with the hope of landing
a recording contract. Although
Price's career has been managed
by her parents and two older
sisters so far. she is unsure as to
whether they will continue
handling her affairs if she rises
to fame.
One thing she is sure of.
however "My family will
always be supportive of me
wherever I am. and always he
with me whatever I do," she
says.
You can bet the Price family
will he sitting proudly in their
seats at McArthur Court when
she takes ihe stage.
"An Evening with Rich Little
and Friends” begins this Friday
at 8 p.m. Tickets are $8. $10.50,
$11.50 and $12.50 and are
available at the FMU Main Desk
and Everybody's Records and
Tapes in downtown Eugene
The event is co-sponsored by °
the EMU Cultural Forum
OPEN HOUSE!
Join Us In Our Now Office
The Eugene office of the Automobile
Club of Oregon has moved to new, larger,
more convenient quarters to provide better
service to our members. If you're not a
member already, drop in and see how we can
help with travel, insurance and road service
needs.
AAA
AUTOMOBILE CLUB
OF OREGON
484-0661