Building plans underway
By Will Halbert
(M Ik* tmn»M
The builder* of Heady Hall
and 10 to 15 other halls
forgot about students in
wheelchair*. For architec
ture union, chances lire
good they will spend a term
hiking out to classes in Con
don School. And residents of
the Walton or Hamilton dor
mitories might lie interested
to know the basement* have
become an impromptu solu
tion to a Ixiok storage crisis at
the Main University Library.
Three projects designed to
solve these problems have
been stalled since 1079
because the legislature has
refused to allocate funds But
since the legislature approv
ed $f>4 million from the
state's general fund last fune
to finance higher education
construction across Oregon,
the University can move
ahead with plans to improve
the campus. Another $78.5
million from non tax based
funds will give the state a
total of $141 million for im
proving col leges and
universities
The new money will
finance three projects at the
University at an estimated
total cost of $10.18 million.
The library expansion pro
ject will receive $780,000 to
start the planning process,
according to figures released
by Hill Noland, the associate
vice chancellor for facilities
at the Oregon State System of
Higher Education.
Access for the handicap
ped will undergo improve
ment, Lawrence Hall will he
renovated, the Sc hool of Ar
chituclure and Alliect Arts
will gain a new building,
and a new floor or a new
wing may tie added to the
main library.
"We're ready to go and
we re moving now.” said
University Planner David
Rowe.
The handicapped access
construction will begin early
this winter and continue
throughout the next two
years, according to Rowe.
Johnson. Heady. Villard.
Chapman, and the Gerlinger
Annex are a few of the
buildings that will be made
handicapped-accessible.
Most of the work will involve
Installing elevators. Rowe
said.
"The architecture building
will be one of the top
priorities.'' said William E.
Davis, chancellor of the
Oregon State System of
Higher Education.
The lads of classroom
space has plagued the AAA
school for many years, caus
ing sticky (piestious to arise
Turn to Building, Page 8
Museum receives Japanese art
By |nhn Wayland
(N tK*» frmrr*td
An internationally renowned
(apanese artist presented one of
his pamtiiiKs to the University
at a reception in the Museum of
Art on Friday.
Master sumi-e artist Tatsuo
Saito. who recently
demonstrated and exhibited his
art in the Ashmotean Museum
at Oxford, presented "The
Sound of the Creek at Shinshu"
to museum officials and Univer
sity President Paul Olum at a
reception attended by more
than thirty people.
Saito expressed "much
pleasure and happiness" after
receiving a statement of
acknowledgement for the gift
from President Olum ami a
catalog of press clippings from
Michael Whitcnack, supervisor
of Visual Arts Resources
The catalog contains articles
written in reaction to a traveling
exhibition of Saito’s work,
which opened at the University
of Oregon Museum of Art in
IHttO and subsequently toured
:tl sites in six states. The pain
ting is from this exhibition.
"I am (apanese tradi
tionalist." Saito said There are
"not so many (traditionalists)
because after the war. Western
culture came to my country."
he said.
Sumi-e is {apanese ink pain
ting which has been practiced
for more than seven hundred
years. Brush, ink. and paper,
combined with a "very deep
Photo by Du*ty Elzal
University President Paul Olum was on hand to receive a
gift from lapaneese artist Tatsuo Saito on Friday at the
University Museum of Art. The gilt, one of Saito‘s tradi
tional fapaneese paintings, is titled “The Sound of the
creek at Shinshu. ”
has** in Zen" yield the complex
simplicity of the sumi-e pain
ting. VVhitenack said.
“What you're painting is
energy—not objectivity,” he
said. The emphasis is placed on
the space between things. A
painting is not completed in
detail so you can put yourself
into the work, he said.
Although sumi-e artists
usually paint landscapes,
animals or flowers, "everything
on earth is good for painting."
Saito explained in “Sumi-E
Spirit in the Hand of Tatsuo
Saito." a catalog of Salto's 1980
traveling exhibition.
“The painting may take five
minuets,’ Whitenack said. "He
may throw out a hundred pain
tings to get just one right." The
paper is quite thin, so if the
brush remains upon it too long
the ink spreads and the image
may not match the feeling tbe
artist is attempting to express.
Whitenack explained.
Tatsuo Saito. who recently
turned 74. has become a
cultural ambassador for |apan
through his exhibitions.
"Each country has a special
culture so we should exchange
our culture." he said at the
reception. "It's very important
for making world more peaceful
— more understanding.”
SOAK YOUR BODY
(Not Your Pocketbook)
$1 OFF
PER GROUP
one coupon per group
Good through 9.M&97
1883 Gorden Ave
(off Fionhlin Divd.) 345-V048
J
Classifieds
Policy
CLASSIFIED ADS
CAN BE
PLACED AT
ODE Otficr 300 EMU
UO Books Iocs Stamp Countar
EMU Main datk
PAYMENT All ad» must ba paid lor m
advama uniat* a tnllmq m#nl
has baan For btllmg tn
rwgtmtnl) plaasa call US414] or
Stop by lb* E mar aid Ctassitrad ofbca
300CMU
RATES t 7 cant* par «ord for tha brat
day and 14 cants par word for con
sacutfva days tn« ad is run without
chanpa
Personals
PROBLEMS?
Crttift C+ntftf U Of O hotlmv
24 hour* 7 day* St nelly confutoniiaf
UHAM44M 144 ttn
PRIVATE HELP FROM FRIENOS » -«•.
pdQnancy Inltng B»rthngfil 3162 U
Lost a Found
FOUND WOMEN'S 10 SPEED
tutu S OKot C«ll 3*4 7844 lo idan
Hty 7 21
FOUNO WOMAN'S WATCH on Hilywd
Call 343 8400 lo KMntilt 7 23
Clothing
WANTED
Quality «omm • clothing
Make oitra mon#y FAST at
SECOND THOUGHTS
77 W IHh
Fat appt call 443-4801
104 Mon Sal
__7701U
LIKE NEW SEATTLE SLUES Joan.
IS S 18 S1VEACM BLOUSES
SUES " 4 up Mtoac* 344 1874 a«on
■mpL”
Books
100.000 BOOKS IN STOCK
Alt Selling 40 50% off tt»l pncet
• T«alboofc»*CtiU Nole*»MeQa/tr»e**
USED BOOKS BOUGHT AND SOLD
SMITH FAMILY BOOKSTORE
788 Em I 13th
4973 t«n
TAKING SPANISH'*
Buy ill boo** needed lor firti end »e
cond ye#r from me 120 344 1874 even
Cars a Cycles
ft HONDA M0 Molotcyct* Call Nail
6636317 awning* and *aafcand»_ 7 26
•1 HONDA tftOCB • Motoicycl#
Good condition tWIndaciaan B/O
464 9832 TjJl
76 VW Wf str ALIA CAMPER Auto
ttan* naw Ilia*. 63700 3453815 r 23
Bicycles
21 INCH CMTANE T#n iptwf T«c*nlly
mnhaulM »*> OBO M7 9340 7 21
Typing
WOAO PftOCfftStMOSTYPtNO
Di*h £ d<1tnaKT.onv«r«iont
Apple ibm CPrtd
m t ittti
Su Blocks t*om Campus
the
Wo»U Processing Specialists
Typing
GRADUATE APPROVED TYPIST U»»no
IBM Satactrtc III Call Minn twtwaan 5
am and 10p m at 342 ?0M 4956 u
RUTH WESTIUND TYPING SERVICES
Tam* papafs Transcription taitai*
345-5614
96051 tn
< »S» OUAUTY TYPING
^ MK)
WO NO
PPOCfSSINQ
Cafoly~ns
■Specialties
EASY AD FORM
Oregon Daily Emerald
686-4343
JHEMl!
EMU Main Desk
l O Bookstore
CLASSIFIEDS
n rv* R*ad
IW f «k«mk •*-*> lo'Al <M *4**** -»*-’*»
IV IVf* IVt. ImimM h» jjg»
A*. . «|<«NM KH"*« If if ^fNI*
•«B M»iU< lw*OT I p.« *- .«••"«* m 4m mu 4m* ' mmm
| *»« |V i«M ■•> 4V i »*»»*■ lrm*« *» >4 wr
4»nnnM *41 V nif *4
IWUMIWMII
M U.sflfnnn N*
III »<.•«» mumilTlN,
DEADLINE: 1:00 PM
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
R«r* M IT **'•* Rf •»*4 **» ‘*^4 <b| *1 II **«•* R1
w««4 fc« wl •!>> * a« » n* »***
•,«|NMv»,l4p AB «* hr |mvI K- • •*«*«
i i
I min V» I im\ Ml »i M < nun * l»»
Ik - k ik land —k
NAME
ADDRESS
PHONE
DATE _
Crntfry_
Dm* ad Mart*
Art#
fc.xcd? Yn
»l «•*««