Arts grants to be awarded.Byline: Performance notes by The Register-Guard Lane County arts projects and a Eugene sculptor will receive Oregon Arts Commission grants in a public ceremony at 11 a.m. Monday at the Jacobs Gallery at the Hult Center, Seventh and Willamette streets. The grants are among $110,000 in monetary awards to 26 Oregon projects under the Arts Build Communities program, which is designed to broaden the impact of the arts in the community and to foster community partnerships. Receiving awards: Lane Arts Council An arts council is a government or private, non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the arts mainly by funding local artists, awarding prizes, and organizing events at home and abroad. and BRING Recycling - a $5,000 grant to support "ReUse for Art," a project led by artist Betsy Wolfston to create a plan for making and installing artworks as a key component of BRING's new 3-acre Glenwood recycling facility. Hult Center for the Performing Arts The Hult Center for the Performing Arts is a performing arts facility in Eugene, Oregon, opened in 1982. 27 architectural firms competed for the opportunity to design the Center, but in the end the Eugene City Council awarded the contract to the New York firm of Hardy and Adelante Si Hispanic Organization of Lane County - a $5,900 grant to support performances and a community residency in April and May with Mexican puppeteers Titiri-Tatara. Elkton Community Education Center - a $1,000 grant to help continue its artist-in-residence program. Justin Novak of Eugene - a $3,000 artist fellowship for his work in ceramic sculpture. NORTH EUGENE High School North Eugene High School is a public high school of about 1,200 students in Eugene, Oregon, United States. It is located at 200 Silver Lane near the Santa Clara area of Eugene.[1] North Eugene's mascot is the Highlander. students will present scenes from their upcoming production of "The 1940s Radio Hour" in a free SHOcase concert at 12:15 p.m. Thursday in the Hult Center lobby. Walton Jones' musical, directed by Al Villanueva, reflects the spirit of a bygone by·gone adj. Gone by; past: bygone days. n. One, especially a grievance, that is past: Let bygones be bygones. era, when the world was at war and when pop music included "The Chattanooga Choo-Choo" and "Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy Bugle Boy is a brand of pants popular in the 1980s founded by Dr. William Mow in 1977. It declared bankruptcy in 2001. Bugle Boy featured men's and boys' clothing, often with a denim theme. ." For more information, call 682-5733. ED RAGOZZINO'S "Celebrate," a revue revue, a stage presentation that originated in the early 19th cent. as a light, satirical commentary on current events. It was rapidly developed, particularly in England and the United States, into an amorphous musical entertainment, retaining a small amount of of six decades of America's greatest hits, will be presented at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Elsinore Theatre The Elsinore Theatre is a theatre located in Salem, Oregon, United States, that first opened on May 28, 1926. Construction and early years Owner George Guthrie enlisted the firm of Lawrence and Holford to design the theatre in a Tudor Gothic style meant to resemble the , 170 High St. S.E., Salem. Written, produced and directed by Ragozzino, the show involves six singers and four musicians. Tickets range from $10 to $54. Tickets are available through Fastixx outlets, (800) 992-8499, and at the door. Information: (503) 375-3574. VIOLINIST Fritz Gearhart and pianist Victor Steinhardt of the UO School of Music will be featured along with the Oregon Children's Choir Girlchoir and the Byrd Song recorder ensemble in a "Sweet Music Showcase" at 7 p.m. Friday at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Eugene, 477 E. 40th Ave. Admission is $15 per person and $25 per couple; tickets will be sold at the door. Proceeds benefit Ridgeline ridge·line n. See ridge. Noun 1. ridgeline - a long narrow range of hills ridge arete - a sharp narrow ridge found in rugged mountains Montessori Public Charter School. Information: 681-9662. "THE QUICK FIX," billed as "a revolutionary merger of theater and learning," will be presented at 7 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Erb Memorial Union ballroom, 1222 E. 13th Ave. Admission is $10 for adults, $5 for faculty and staff and free for UO students. Tickets are available through the EMU ticket office, 346-4363. |
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