DEVELOP & PRINT • 3” COLOR PRINTS "exp ■ exp w set ■ ■ I coupon must accompany order • add $1 for 4* * 6" color prints I I CAMPUS 1 HR PHOTO ■ 1231 ALDER • 683-4693 School of MUSIC & Department of DANCE MARCH CONCERTS Clip and save this calendar! For information on any School of Music event, caR 346-5678. or call the Music Hotline at 346-3764 for a taped message. Tbes. THE RIDER-SHAPIRO DUO 3/2 Vanguard Serin Celist Rhonda Rider, pans* Lois Snapeo (Free lecture at 4 pjm.. Gertnger Lounge) • pjn. Beal Hal $6.50 General Admission. $3.50 Students I Sartor Citizens Wed. OREGON PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE 3/3 UOEneemUe • pm. Baal Hal $4 General Admission. $2 Students A Senior Citizens Thu. UNIVERSITY SINGERS, UO CHAMBER CHOIR 3/4 UO Choral Ensembles IpjaBaHHH $4 General Admisaion, $2 Students* Senior Ciiiene Fri. FRIDAY AFTERNOON MUSIC FORUM 3/5 Student Rectats 3 JO pm. Baal Hal FREE Admission Fri. OREGON JAZZ ENSEMBLE 3/5 UO Ensemble Ipjn. Batfi Hal $4 General Admission, $2 Students 6 Senior Cifiens Mar. DANCEABUTY WORKSHOP 5-7 Designed lor able-toded or dsafaled parsons waning to experience Contact knprovisalon. 74 p.m Fit, 114 Sat, 114 Sun, Gertnger Annex. Cal 346-3386 tor into too* Sat. "MUSIC FROM FAR-AWAY LANDS" 3/6 ChUren 's Concert Series 10 JO am Beal Hal $3 Aduls. $2 Students / CNdren, or $S tor a Family ttdiat Sat. STEVE PAXTON, Joint Fore#* Dm Co. 3/6 Guest Art# Dance Concert 8:30 pm Dougherty Theatre $4 General Admission, $2 Students Sun. VICTOR STEINHARDT, Piano 3/7 Faculty Mist Series ipmBeeiHal $5 General Admission. S3 Students & Sartor Ciizens Mon. OREGON VOCALJAZZ ENSEMBLE 3/8 UO Ensemble ap.rn.BMl Hal $4 General Admission, $2 Students & Senior Citizens Tbos. COLLEGIUM MUSICUM 3/9 UO Ensemble 330 pm Room 198, Music Music of tw Baroque period FREE Admission. Tbos. OREGON WWD ENSEMBLE, SYMPHONY BAND 3/9 UO Ensembles I pm Baal Hal $4 General Admission, $2 Students & Senior Gtiwns Wad. UO MEN’S A WOMEN'S CHORUS 3/10 UO Ensembles 1p.m. Baal Hal FREE Admission Thur. DA CAPO CHAMBER PLAYERS 3/11 Chamber UusicSeries Music by Debussy. Martnu and Messiaen. Free lecture, 7:15 pm. I pm Beall Hal Reserved Seats J7.50-S17.50 (687-5000) Student rush tickets $4. $7 at the door. Fri. UO CAMPUS BAND 3/12 UO Ensemble 1230 p.m. BmNHsII FREE Admission Fri. JAZZ LAB BANDS IA IN 3/12 UO Ensembles lp.rn.BMl HU FREE Admission Sun. EDWARD KAMMERER, Horn 3/14 Faculty Mist Series 4p.m.BMRHal $5 General Admission, S3 Students 4 Senior Citizens Leader’s mother says he called CHANDLER. Texas CAP) — The mother of the cult leader at the center of a deadly confronta tion with authorities says she lielieves he's in touch with Ck>d and that she had a premonition something would bring him wide attention. "I didn't know when or what, hut I knew something would happen that would make the message go out to the world," Bonnie Haldeman said Monday. Sunday the religious sect headed by her 33-year-old son, David Koresh. had engaged in two deadly gun battles with fed - eral agents trying to arrest Kore sh Four agents and two cult members were killed. As Mrs Haldeman spoke, she and Koresh's stepfather, Roy. were preparing to drive from this small east Texas town to Waco, where police and federal agents had the sect's isolated compound surrounded Koresh. who said he was wounded in the gun battle, was still inside, along with several followers The group had released several children. Mrs. Haldeman spoke rever ently of how her son memorized the New Testament when he was 12. "He would come home and go out to the barn and pray for hours." she said A former Seventh-day Adven tist. Mrs Haldeman joined her son's Branch Davidian sect sev eral years ago when she lived in Waco Although she later left the group, she said she still believes in her son "I really think he is inspired of God," she said. "I may not have always agreed with everything, but I’ve never heard anyone teach like he does. I want to believe that God s working through him." Mrs Haldeman. who works as a nurse, said her son telephoned after Sunday's shootouts and left a message on her answering machine. "Hello, mama It's your l>oy." Koresh said "They shot me and I'm dying, all right7 But I'll bo back real soon, OK?” ‘He’s not the monster experts soy he Is. He loves children — Bonnie Haldeman, Davidian seel cult leader 's mother She said the children at his cult compound include three of her grandchildren: Cyrus. 7; Star, 5; and Bobhie Layne, 14 months. Koresh claimed in tele* phone interviews that his youngest child diod in Sunday's gun battle and many of the chil dren at the compound were his. Mrs. Haldeman said she was confident reports that her son was a child abuser were false, and she said she didn't believe he precipitated Sunday's shoot ing "He is not a vicious person." she said. "He's not the monster experts say he is. He loves chil dren." New York, other cities fear wave of terrorism NEW YORK (AP) — Even the hardiest New Yorkers, not to men tion jittery tourists, admitted to a frightening new vulnerability after the World Trade Center explosion. Murders and muggings may be common in New York. Bombings are not. "This is something totally new." said Carlo Deleon. 25. who works at the World Trade Center. "It’s something I never thought would happen here Now we re thinking, how soon until it happens again?" Private and public patrols were beefed up around the city. Visitors' bags were chocked at the Empire State Building. Uniformed security guards began inspecting trucks entering buildings at Rockefeller lCen ter Deleon's friend Ruth Palacio. a 27-year-old cable TV producer, was even more worried about the city's latest — and most ominous — urban woe Even though investigators don't know if Friday's bomb was an art of terrorism, many fear it was “All of a sudden it's terrorism in our back yard.” said Palacio. "You get used to hearing about it in Europe but not here You can’t help but wonder if it'll entice other nuts into trying the same thing ” Bill Garrity. 27, an actor from Philadelphia, said: "This is all 1 need. My grandmother hears about this and she panics She's always telling me. 'All the crazies are there, why don’t you come home'? She really panicked ufter this." But not only New Yorkers were stunned by the explosion. Since Friday, cities around the country have increased safety at business hubs and airports. Security has been stopped up at Chicago’s 110-story Sears Tower, the world's tallest building, where more than 5.000 people work dai ly. said Perry Chian, a spokesman for Sears. Roebuck and Co. He declined to provide specifics. Security was also tightened at the Chicago Board of Trade and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the world's largest commodities futures exchanges Court lets libel suit stand WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court let stand a S375.000 libel award against a Charleston, W.Va.. news paper Monday but refused to reinstate a Si million libel award against a Battle Creek. Mich., newspaper In the West Virginia case, the court turned away arguments that the libel award violated the Charleston Gazette's free press rights, lawyers for the newspaper said the editorial which provoked the suit was never proved to be substantially false In the Michigan case, only two justices voted to review a ruling that threw out a libel |udgment because the contested article in the Enquirer and News of Battle Creek about a man's arrest "was not materially false." March is National Nutrition Month EMU NUTRITION TABLE In tho Main Lobby, outside the Fishbowl - Wednesday, March 3rd - • Free food • Recipes • Information on healthy eating Sponsored by the UotO Student Health Center