Performing Arts FRIENDS OF CHAMBER MUSIC 8 pm. Lincoln Hall Aud. Call 2 2 ~ 0 7 6 'Of Info. Od. 10 Prague Suing Quartet Nov. 20 Mill'Court Trio PSU GUITAR SERIES 4 Pili, Lincoln Hall Aud. Call 229-3105 for admission info Oct. 14 Bryan }ohansoo DANa PERFORMANCE lincoln Hall Aud. Call 229-3105 for information Oct. 12, 1 Ji The Company We Keoep 19-21 PIANO ROCITAl SERIES 8 pm. lincoln Hall Aud. Cilll229·JlOS for admission info. Oct. 22 Howard Shclll'Y COASTER THEATER Wed·Sat 8 ~ 1 0 pm; Sunday 7;30 pm All seal5 Si 50 Box Office open 11 am-4 pm Tues.-Sun. & 90 minute<. bcior(' eitCh performance. Telephone c h a r g ~ MSA. ~ 1 a s l ( ! f C a r d l call 503-436- T241 , Cannon Beach. Children 6-12 must be attompamed by adult. Children umk>t" 6 not admll1ed '""- 15-19, "The Good DoctOf" - Wilh vaudevillian 22-26 humor. Nell Simon pro\',de:. a parade oi droll skt'tche'< & affecllofl<lte portraits based on shOTt stones of Anton Chckhov. DRAMA Lincoln I"tall Aud Call 229-4612 for further details. N ~ . 9, 10; "Uncle Vanya" by Anton Chekhm' (a new 15-17 translation by Irina Cheprasova & William M Tate), directed by Wm. Tale BROWN BAG CONCERTS Noon. 75 Lincoln Hall, Fret' s.,t. 1S Unco[n Hall C ~ m b e r Players IPSU Facuhy) ~ . 27 Portland Opera AssociatiOfl previews "The Barber of Seville" (Portland Opera S('3§On lickets avartable for p u r c h a ~ ) Oct. 2 David Ji merson, baritone. & Sylvia Killman, pianist. feaMing "Dover Beach" by Samuel Sarber with string quartet Oct. 18 Portland Opera A ~ i a t J O f l p r e Y ~ "Carmen" Nov. 6 PSU Guitar Ensemble (Tentalive) New. 8 University Orchestra wilh PSU Voice faculty (Cordon Solie directing) Noy.1S PSU Chamber Cholr (Bruce Browne conducting) Special Events TlANSFER STUDENT ORIENTATION A\II- 27-28 Transfer students to meeI VIoith PSU faculty adviSOf') to evaluate their academic credits. CaU 229-3406. US Smith Center. Aug. 27: 9 am-2 pm (tour of campu'l & library); Aug 28. 6:3().9 pm (tour of campus onlYI. Dee Dee Van lyl in "The Good Doclor" CONFERENCE ON fiTNESS IN BUSINESS 7:30 am-2:45 pm, Lloyd Center Red lion Hotel. On-site registrlltlan, SSS. Advance rf'gistr3tlon, SSO (call P S U ' ~ School of Business Administration , 229-37' 2) Oct. 18 Purpose To bring to Portland internationally recognized expertS in Health Fitness &: Employee Program ~ o p m e n t . Speakers: Kennelh Cooper, M.D., The Aerobics Center, Dallas. Texas; Hideyuki Suwa, Cen'1 Mgs., Employee Welfare ~ .• & Kuma Okada. M.D. M4!1:llciill Mgr" Health Services Centerboth oPOsaka Gas Co, ltd., Osaka, tapan. f 1984--85 DANCE SERIES 8 pm, Shattuck Studio Theafer lroom 212). Single tickets: 56 general. IS students, sr adults Series tkkets. $30. Call 229·3131 for information; 229·4440 for tickets. 0cL 4-6 Judith Hamer, Dans Solo Lectures fOREIGN lANGUAGE DEPT. COLLOQUIUM SERIES Wednesdays, 1 pm, 461 Neuberger Hall, Free. Sept 26 Capt. Richard Steinke, ROTC Oct. 1 Michael Goold, Asst. Prof., French Oct. 10 Kazem Tehrani, Assoc. Prof., Persian Language & Literature Oct. 17 Sandra Rosengrant, Asst. Prof.. Russian Oct. 14 Frank Wesley, Prof., Psychology Oct. 31 Laurence Konunz, Asst_ Prof., J a p a ~ New. 7 Earl Rees, Assoc. Prof.. Spanish Noy. 14 Louis [heto, Assoc. Prof., German & Hungarian, & Head, Dept of Foreign Languages Campus Notes ..... 3 ..... 7 ~ t . 2 1 Se91. 24 NoY.12 Nev. 12·25 Labor Day observed. PSU closed. Fall term advance registration ends General registr<ltiOfl begins lor Fall Tenn Day & evening classes begin. Also, Sr. Adult registration beams on a space-available, tuition-free, no-oedit basis; contact lhe Sr. Adull Learning Center, 137 Neuberger Hall, 229-4739. Veterans' Day observed. PSU closed. Thank.sglVI!lg Holiday. PSU offices dosed Nov. 23. Library & Compuling Services open limited Murs. Sports FOOTBALL Home games (. j al Ci\·ic St.ldium, caU 229-4000 lor ticket Info. Stpt. 1 ·So. Dakota Slat(> 1 pm Sept. 8 Idaho, 7:30 pm Sept. 14 wMoolana, 7:30 pm Sept. 22 'Weber State. 7 pm Sept. 29 Humbol1 State, 7:)0 pm Oct. 6 Sacramenta Stale. 7:30 pm Oct. 13 "Cal Poly. 7 pm Oct. 20 Montana State, 2 pm Oct. 17 ' Wisconsin-Stoot, 7 pm Nov. 10 "Santa Clara, 7 pm Nov. 17 Cal St.-Northridge. 7 pm VOlLfYBAll Home games (0) at PSU's Main Gym at 7:30 pm lexcepl as ...... , Sept. 7-8 Sept. ,. Sept. 20-22 S.. lS SIrpt. 18 ....... - Oct.4 Oct • • Oct • • Oct. 11 Oct. 13 Oct. 17 Oct. 19 Oct. 20 Oct. 2l Oct. 2' Oct. 27 Oct. 30 _ .2 _ .3 -. NoY.l0 NoY. 1J New. 16-17 Nov. 20 Nov, 30 IlK. 1 0«.7-8 Tourney at U C - O a v i ~ o"lumnl ( T e n t a t l ~ ) [nvilalional al Brigham Voong ' Uni ve rsity of Pmtland weber State Idaho State "Montana State · U n i ~ i l y of Montana Boise State 'wtern Washington ' U n i ~ i l y of Idaho 12:)0 pm) "Boise State "China Jr. National Team Ponlaoo · Unive6ity of Washington Montana Montana Stille Oregon State "Idaho State °Webe!"Stale Idaho Eastern Wadlingwn "Oregon State M.W.A.C. Champianships (TBA.) OreOoo N.C.A.A. Regionals (TBA) N.C.AA RegionOlils (TBAI "N.CA.A. final four David Duncan balances humanity, seclusion Continued from p. 10 A priva.te and rather shy man, Duncan has survived public. recognition with characteristic irreverence. "People lIeat you differently when you have a book published. It sort of irks me that ... to have a publicly acknowledged symbol of SUCCl'S5 like books on a bookstand jusl means so much to people." Some people'.; reactions were Important to him, however "M) f : ! n ~ f f . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ d ~ O a ~ d ~ t ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ i ~ ; ~ ; : : ~ ~ ~ e found Paul Plnlitrich's ('651 reVIew (in The> Oregonian) and started crying again for the opposite reason. She was so proud." Living in Neskowin with his wife Alice, who is also a writer, and their toddler Thomas, Duncan has chosen a life at once apart and engaged - away from the city ("every ti me I get into rush·hour I get enraged") and yet in the middle of a "human community" he values ("I'm a tribal writer"). It is a writer's dream, because with the success of The River Why, he doesn't need 10 work and can write for hours every day. " I was like a kid in a candy store when I got all the time to write," says Duncan, embarrassed to list all his works underway. But like Gus, Duncan has found some pitfalls in his Ideal Schedule. While he was writing The River Why, he mowed lawns and drove a cardboard recycling truck. " I Ihought I'd write a lot faster if I didn't na\le that job sapping energy. I'm convinced now thai I wouldn't You only have so much creative energy. "In fact, I'm tempted to start mowing some lawns." 15
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