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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1963)
Senate Debates Salary Increases SALEM (AP)—The Senate Ed ucation Committee heard conflict ing; testimony recently on a bill to raise the minimum salaries for teachers in the state. The proposal would raise the minimum for teachers with bach elor’s degrees from the present $3,700 to $4,400. MERLIN SMITH, a teacher at Douglas High School in Portland and a member of the Oregon Edu cation Association, testified that the bill would affect only about 112 teachers in the entire state, since most school districts now pay well above the proposed mini mum. But he said it is important to "put a floor under the salaries.” Cecil Posey, executive secretary of the Oregon Education Associa tion. said the state's minimum sal ary law for teachers is put in all recruiting literature that goes to other states. Although it would directly affect very few teachers, Posey said, it might make a great deal of difference in whether new Music Students To Present Recital A recital of harpsichord, flute, organ and saxphone music will be presented by University students at 8 p m. Monday, in the School of Music Auditorium. THE PUBLIC recital will open with Bach’s "giant” fugue: "We All Believe in One God.” Other numbers to be performed are Do menico Scarlatti’s "Partita 5 in G: Praeambuium" and “Concerto 3” for two keyboard instruments by Padre Antonio Soler. Students participating will be David Farr, Barbara Possman, Kristine Goplen and Paul Hay mond, organ; Lotti Schuh, Kath lene McIntosh, and Kathy Stock man, harpsichord. SAXOPHONISTS will be Ran dall Moore, Howard Oshiro, Betty Varmen, and Barbara Bender Maryann English, Rosemary Sie vers, Vickie Fedor, Maryjim Stockton, and Lawrence Beach will play the flute. Homer Keller, associate profes sor of music, will accompany Beach on the piano. Job Opportunities Lake Oswego Public Schools will interview teaching applicants Tuesday. The Oregon Tax Commission is offering a job located on the West Coast to accounting majors or business administration majors with 18 term hours of Accounting. Interviews will be on Tuesday. Colgate-Palmolive Co. offers a West Coast job to majors in busi ness administration, liberal arts, marketing, and other related fields. Interviews will be Tuesday. Bachelor of arts degree candid ates from all academic fields who the interested in preparing for a career in international affairs will be interviewed by the American Institute for Foreign Trade for a Phoenix, Arizona, job. Interviews will be conducted Wednesday. Representatives from the Syl vania Electronics Systems will be here Wednesday to interview can didates for jobs in Mountain View, Calif., Waltham, Mass., and Buf falo, N.Y. Majors desired, math ematics and physics. Representatives from Milwau kie Public Schools will interview elementary and junior high teach ers on March 7. REA Express will interview business administration majors interested in a west coast job. In terviews will be held Wednesday. Students interested in elemen tary teaching at Salem, Oregon, should attend a March 7 inter view. Use Emerald Classified Ads— P.O. Box 32033. Los Angeles, California teachers would decide to start in Oregon. Tom Rigby of the Oregon School Boards Association said his organization was opposed to the measure as it has been in past sessions. He said the minimum salary law has had little effect in determining teachers’ salaries in Oregon He said the bill might af fect salaries more than Posey and Smith said. Jr. IFC To Clear Storm Damage Junior Inter-Fraternity Council will join the citizens of Eugene Saturdax in a joint work project to clear storm damage on Skin ner’s Butte. Workers from all freshman fra ternity nledge classes are invited to heir on the project. Approxi mutely 100 people are expected in 1 both the morning and afternoon sessions, according to Larry Derr, Junior IFC treasurer. Box lunch es will be suonlied for workers by ! Junior Panhellenic. Honors College To Discuss Society Scientific and technologic?! problems in transitional societies will be discussed at the Honors College panel discussion at 8 p m Monday. The panel members are Homer "Barnett, professor of anthropolo gy; Francis Dart, associate pro fessor of physics; John Gange, director of the Institute of Inter national Studies. Questions to be raised include the teaching of science, health problems, population growth, and the political consequences of a transition in society. Dinner Tickets Now Available Tickets for the annual dinner meeting of the Association of Patrons and Friends of the Uni versity Library, which will be held at 6:30 p.m. today in the Stu dent Union, are available to mem bers, prospective members, and others interested. Guest speaker will be Bradford P. Millar, president of Portland State College. He will discuss “Georgian Nightingales: English Broadsides and Ballad-Mongers of the Eighteenth Century,” an area in which he is a scholar. MEMBERSHIP in the Associa tion, which was formed to pro mote the interests and acquisi tions of the Library, is open to all interested persons. Information may be obtained from the Library office or from the Board of Direc tors, which is headed by James H. Gilbert. Tickets are available in the Uni versity Librarian’s Office. Singers To Offer Winter Concert The University Singers will feature “Avodath Hakodesh” (Sacred Service) by Ernest Block at the winter choral concert at 8 p in, Tuesday in the School of Music Auditorium. On the same program, the Uni versity Mixed Chorus will sing three Hungarian folksongs by Matyas Seiber: “The Handsome Butcher”, "Apple, Apple”, and “The Old Woman," and four psalms based on old Norwegian church melodies: “How Fair Is Thy Face,” “God's Son Hath Set Me Free,” “Jesus Christ Our Lord Is Risen," and "In Heav’n Above.” The University Chorale will present two motets by Bruckner for mixed voices and three trom bones. Four folk songs by Brahms and the Bach motet. “Praise the Lord, AH Ye Nations" also will be j presented. Max Risingcr, associate profes- ] sor of music and acting dean of the. School of Music, will direct the Singers while Neil Wilson, assistant professor of voice, will direct the Mixed Chorus and the Chorale. Mayer To Talk At Assembly Milton Mayer, educator and au thor, will discuss “What Can A Man Do?” at the 1 p.m. assembly Tuesday, in the Student Union ballroom. Mayer, affiliated with the Amer ican Friends Service Committee, has had articles in Life, Reader's Digest, Christian Century, and Harper’s Magazine and has been a lecturer and representative at the Christian Peace Conference in Prague. Czechoslovakia, 1958 82. A UNIVERSITY of Chicago graduate and newspaper and mag azine writer, he has taught as an assistant professor of adult edu cation and tutor for the Commit tee on Social Thought. Ife has been a visiting professor of religion at William Penn Col lege, a member of the faculty of the Institute for Social Research of Frankfort University, Germany He has taught at Ecole d'Hum anite in Switzerland, and has been a guest professor in the Comenius Theological faculty in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Business School... (Continued Jrotn page 1) dergraduate program was accred ited in 1923. Lindholm, who has written a number of books on public finance and banking, said the majority of the professors in the school are authors of several books being used by colleges. Although the school plans to enlarge its faculty and attract more students, it does not intend to add any new programs in the foreseeable future, said Lindholm. “We will try to do better what we are doing now,” he said. Stanford Prof To Speak in SU Lewis Spitz, assistant profes sor of history at Stanford, will speak at the Graduate History Club luncheon today at noon in the Student Union. “Hsitory in a Metaphysical Key" will be the theme of his talk. At 8 pm. in the SU, Spitz, whose interest is Renaissance humanism in relation to the re formers, will also lecture on the "Course of Christian Humanism." THE HISTORIAN received his A B. from Concordia College, his M.A. from the University of Mis souri and his Ph D. at Harvard. He also studied at the Univer sities of Chicago, Washington and Vienna. Spitz has also boon a Fulbright Scholar, Guggenheim Follow and Hunting Library Follow and taught as a Fulbright at the Uni versity of Mainz. He is presently on the editorial board of the "Journal of Modern History.” Among his several publication, his most important are "Conrad Celtis; The German Arch Hu manist,” 1957, and "The Religious Renaissance of the German Hu manists," 1963. 'Village Form' Subject of Lecture Earl Moursund, assistant profes sor of architecture, will speak on the "Medieval Village Form” at 4 p.m. today in 106 Lawrence. Moursund’s lecture is a part of a series sponsored by the School of Architecture and Allied Arts Moursund graduated from the University of Texas in 1949 He received his masters degree in 1951 from Cranbook Academy and has been at the University since 1955 Classes In Drama To Give Programs Two University acting classes will present portions of plays Monday and Tuesday at Vtllard Hall’s laboratory theatre Horace Robinson's Technique of Acting class will enact scenes from "Ail the Way Home", ‘ lied da Garber”, "The Captain’s Para dise” and “Antigone" at 4 and 8 p in. Tuesday. At 4 and 8 p m. Monday the Elements of Acting class, with Jean Cutler as instructor, will pre sent portions of "The Intruder", "Amedeo", "A Doll’s Mouse", "The Glass Menagerie”, "Tobacco Road”, “He Who Gets Slapped" and "How He Lied to Her Hus band." Job Manager To Talk Tuesday Robert F. McCain, manager of Employee Development. Hy.ster Company, will speak at an open meeting sponsored by Alpha Kap pa l\si, business fraternity at noon Tuesday in the Student Union. Mis topic will be "The Consult ing Psychologist: His Contribu tion in Improving Managerial Ef ficiency.” McCAIN JOINED the Ilyster I firm in January of this year after | six years as it’s consulting psy chologist lie was employed with Humber, Mundie & McClary in Milwaukee, Wisconsin from 1936 to 1962 and prior to that, he was personnel psychologist for Kroger Company of Cincinnati He has also taught courses in industrial ami personnel psychology at the University of Wisconsin JOB OPPORTUNITIES Interviews will Ik? held March 8 for positions as elementary and secondary teachers in The Dalles. Interviews will be held March 8 for positions as elementary teachers in Castro Valley, Califor nia. -i „ rrZZA PARLOR mlty (ji* pablit l[oa:e You are cordially invited to visit our two Pizza Parlors W. 6th at Grant in Eugene -or 15th and So. A in Springfield Your campus coupon discount is good at both parlors. Delivery on orders of $5 or more, only IBM +3nvite3 ^t)earee (Candidates Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry to meet Dr. J. It. Werning Representative of IBM Research and Development Laboratories on March 8, 1963 For information, please call or visit the Campus Placement Office for appointment IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer