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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1988)
.Entertainment_ Calendar Continued from Page 11 plane. Big Brother & the Hold ing Company and other 1960s bands. 9:30 p.m., WOW Hall. Tickets $7 advance. $8 DOS at EMU Main Desk. Record Gar den, House of Records. Ballad eer Music and the WOW Hall office. THEATRE/DANCE Friday, Oct. 21 Oregon Repertory Theatre — “Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf,” 7:30 p.m., Hult Center Soreng Theatre. Tickets $9.50 and $12.50 at most Hult Center outlets. Also showing Satur day, Oct. 22 at 7:30 p.m.; Sun day, Oct. 23 at 2 p.m.; and Wednesday, Oct. 26 at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29 Oslund and Company Dance — "Entry,” a dance based on the writings in a young girl's The great 1989 BlUDGESTOnE preseason sale Last year many models of Bridgestone ATB were sold out early in the season. They were such a great deal that Bridgestone couldn't make enough to satisfy the customer demand. And the 1989 bikes - THEY ARE AMAZING! This year we want to deliver Bridgestones to all our customers. PRE-SEASON DEAL * PRIORITY DELIVERY * SPECIAL PRICES Call PAUL'S BICYCLE SHOP at 342-6155 for details about how you can reserve a 1989 BRIDGESTONE BICYCLE. TODAY is THE DAY OPEN HOUSE Samples & Drawing for Prizes EMU MAIN DESK STORE 10:00-4:00 ★ Drawings will be held at 4:00 pm ★ You could win 3 days &2 nights for 2 at the Pier Point Inn, etc. Just deposit this entry form and get a free sample popcorn and much more. Come in and join us! EMU Main Desk Store Open House Drawing October 21, 1988 Name:__ Address:._ City:_Phone:_ One Trize ‘Per Customer diary, 8 p.m., Dougherty Dance Theatre, 3rd floor of Gerlinger Annex, Tickets $3 students, $5 general public at the door. VISUAL ARTS Ending today: Faculty Art Show — a showcase of work by faculty in Department of Fine and Applied Arts, at Gallery 141 in Lawrence Hall Monday Friday. Free. Now through Nov. 6: Feld* stein Photographic Imagery Exhibit — displaying the pre impressionist process of Cliche Verre, in the Photography at Oregon Gallery of the Universi ty Museum of Art noon-5 p.m. Wednesday-Sunday. Free. Court**y phitlo “Entry, ” a modern dance production about the writings of a young girl as she enters the mys teries of adulthood, will be performed Saturday, Oct. 29 at 8:00 p.m. at the Dougherty Dante Theatre in Gerlinger Annex. Films more enjoyable in EMU Ballroom By David Nagle Emerald Contributor “A Clockwork Orange” is scheduled for two showings this Saturday in the EMU Ball room. This is the third of six Stanley Kubrick films showing in a series celebrating his ac complishments as a director. The expressive audio and visual elements of the film will have a greater impact in the Ballroom than can be achieved in classrooms. Technical Ser vices Director Mike Kraiman sets up a comfortable atmos phere in the Ballroom that pre pares the viewers for the Bee thoven’s N’nth Symphony 6n the film’s concert-like sound track and an excellent clarity of picture. Because of the high-tech equipment and the help need ed, it is more expensive to show a film in the Ballroom than in a classroom. Last week, more than four hundred people attended "Koyaanisqatsi” in the Ball room. Sting’s “Bring on the Night" is the third of the films shown in the Ballroom this year. Like "A Clockwork Orange,” it was selected for the Ballroom be cause of the importance of a loud and clear sound accompa niment. Promotional posters of the film have been on frequent re quest at the Cultural Forum, and extras have been ordered to give away at the showing on the 11th of November. The rest of the films in the Cultural Forum program are be ing shown by the Instructional Media Center. The film selec tions are made by the same committee that selected the Ballroom films, with emphasis on the cultural value as well as the film popularity. The equipment used by the IMC is not inadequate, but no tably aging and in need of re pair, and the IMC is "not well funded” for a non-academic budget, Doug Pyle of the Cul tural Forum said. Despite the fact that the IMC’s equipment is used for classos as well as the Cultural Forum, the separation of quali ty cinema from the education offered by the University is short-sighted, Pyle said. The Cultural Forum is con sidering asking for voluntary contributions to maintain the IMC's equipment. "We’d be spending student money on something that the state should be responsible for, but we're losing the opportuni ty to show films.” Pyle said. 686 E. 13th (AT HILYAHD) OPEN OAiLY TIL' 1 AM FAST FREE DELIVERY! USE THIS COUPON FOR 251 OFF ANY SLICE OR s100 OFF ANY 12” PIZZA OR s150 OFF ANY 16” PIZZA OR $2°o OFF ANY 20” PIZZA HUNGRY? CALL 343-3300 NOW! Mnfyues EXPRESSIONS _Atom/ THE ( OMfLLTL SALON Briny in This Ad and Receive $2.00 OFF Shampoo, Cut, & Style —with Jan or Janet— CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT! 343-8084 388 West Tenth Ave. |^Opi*ik Tuesday through Saturday