Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 13, 1963, Page Eight, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Role Conflict of Sexes
Discussed at Dialogue
By LINDA GIBBONS
Emerald Staff Writer
“Men hunt and fish to get
away from women," explained
Raymond Lowe, professor of edu
cation. speaking on the “Role
Conflicts in the Sexes" at a
YMCA Dialogue session Tuesday.
Maxine Schoggen, research as
sociate in psychology and the
second member of the panel, said
this shouldn’t be the case. The
sexes should be able to work to
gether in all fields.
Childbearing Only Definite Role
The two agreed that “women
should seek their place in the
world as people, not women.” Mrs.
Schoggen went on to say that
the only role "definitely mascu
line or feminine is childbearing.”
Qadummi Resigns
Senate Position
ASUO Senator-at-Large Mike
Qadummi resigned his position
Tuesday due to “circumstances
beyond my immediate control.”
Qadummi, who has been unable
to attend any Senate meetings
this year, is working nights at a
sawmill in Springfield. He was
elected to his position last spring
According to ASUO President
Phil Sherburne, petitions will be
called for soon and interviews
will be conducted for the posi
tion.
CAMPUS BRIEFS
Mortar Board will meet at 7:30 tonight
in the SI'. Members are reminded to bring
ink. paper and pen. Guests may be invited- ,
White Caps will meet at noon today in
Susan Campbell lounge. Bring dues of j
$1.50. Please be on time—you can bring a i
sack lunch.
Petitions are due for those interested in
working on Duck Preview committees no
later than 5 p.m. Monday on third floor
SI*. People are needed for registration, pub
licity. special tours, general tours, informa
tion booths and luncheon. If there are any
questions contact Kathy Fitzpatrick. Ext.
1491.
Charles O. Porter will speak to Dames
interest group on ‘ Contemporary Topics''
Thursday. The lecture will be held at the
home of Mrs. Douglas Card. 534 E. 14th
Street, at 7 :30 p.m.
Frosh 200 dorm chairmen will meet at 5
this evening in the SU.
The Faculty Club will hold a membership
meeting tonight at 4 p.m in the Faculty
Club. New faculty member- are eligible to 1
attend.
The YWCA General Meeting will be
held on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in Gerlinger
Lounge rather than today.
Alpine Club will meet Thursday in 30
Science at 6:45. John Liudstrom will show
his Teton slides.
There will be a Keg Hunt Dance Wed
nesday, Nov. 20, from 8 to 10:30 p.m. in
the SLT Ballroom. The sounds of the Check
mates will be featured. Admission is 25 cents ;
for upperclassmen; all freshmen are admit- |
ted free.
Winter Carnival chairmanship petitions
are due at 5 p.m. Thursday. Standard
ASUO petitions are to be used. These are
available on the third floor of the SU. Posi
tions are open for general chairman, queen
selection and publicity. Call Steve Mun
son at ext. 478 for more information.
K warn a will meet today at noon in the
SU. Room number will be posted. Members
who have not paid their dues must do so
at this meeting.
Old and new I EC staff members will
meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the SU. Peace
Corps members are included, and attend
ance is compulsory.
Theta Sigma Phi will hold its initiation
today at 7 p.m. in 307 Allen.
Ideally, she said, “men and
women should be able to choose
even the married role they want
ed to play,” that of provider or
homemaker.
Lowe said he thinks it is in
evitable that women will be work
ing with men in all fields and
that the girls are going to have i
to be ready to accept their role
as equals.
Competition Discussed
Women will have to expect
to open their own doors, stand
up in trains and take care of
themselves, he said.
In the discussion that follow
ed. Lowe said that “men and wom
en don’t need to compete. It is
a false notion that people must
compete to get ahead,” he said.
Broadcast Panel
Appearance Dated
Students of the Fundamen
tals of Broadcasting class (Speech
241) will appear as a panel on
the “Too Early” television pro
gram presented by KVAL-TV
(Channel 13) Thursday at 8 a m.
Some questions that may be
asked by the panel are: “Why
does a local television station
choose to present feature movies
in place of network programs?”
and “Do program ratings accur
ately reflect what the public wants
in the way of television pro
gramming?”
Martin Jacobsen, KVAL - TV
Program Director, and Beverly
Green, “Too Early” hostess, will
be questioned on a wide range of
topics relating to the duties and
social responsibilities of broad
casters.
Fundamentals of Broadcasting
is taught by Dale Wile, instruc
tor in speech.
Porter Speaks...
(Continued from pa<ic 1)
"Kennedy has done better in
encouraging democratic leader
ship among nations and in ignor
ing dictatorships,” he said
He commented that Castro
seems to support the basic ideas
of the Alliance for Progress. The
Alliance calls for co-operation in
achieving social and economic
freedoms of all people and in
assuring the "basic human free
doms" of those involved.
Solve U.S. Pro'/iems First
Earlier in his speech. Porter
said that the U.S must "solve
the problems of suffering and
poverty within our own country"
and that we must relate these
problems to those of Latin Amer
icans.
A lively question and answer
period followed the formal speech,
although the audience was approx
imately 200 Students seemed to
be in a minority in the audi
ence. with the bulk of those at
tending being professors, other
staff members and townspeople
Porter listened while one man
cited evidence that problems
similar to those in Cuba exist in
Colombia.
Statement Challenged
Another audience participant
challenged a statement that the
U.S. had been exclusively respon
sible for a wall being built be
tween the two countries. Porter
explained that he had quoted
Castro as making this statement
He added that while Castro
seems to be willing to re-estab
lish communications between the
two countries, the U.S. is hesi
tant.
Another listener questioned
whether there were groups in
Latin America willing to sup
port the Alliance For Progress
Porter cited various labor and
national groups which he saitl
seemed willing to support such
a program
Use Emerald Classified Ads—
Phone 342-1411, Ext. 1818.
NOW SHOWING
McDonald H
TIME IS RUNNING OUT
FOR THE RUNNING MAN...
COLUMBIA PICTURES I
pretexts A CAROL REED I
LAURENCE LEE ALAN
HARVEY REMICK BATES
THE
RUNNING
Famed director Carol Reed
focuses on naked fear!
Soeenpbybf JOHN MORTIMER • Laccate Producer JOH* A SLOAN
Based on tie me! krSHQLO SMITH • Produced aid Directed by CAROL REED' PANAMSION*- BWIH1AW6 COLOR
WARNING! CATCH "THE RUNNING MAN"..FROM THE BEGINNING!
-CO - ATTRACTION
COLUMBIA PICTURES
• »wnu-guuit inux • • u>mu cot*
Pancake Restaurant
(6 blocks from Campus)
The Best in Pancakes
served all day
also . . .
Hamburgers
Steaks • Chicken - Shrimp - Salads
Open 6 a.m. till 9 p.m., also on Sun.
652 E. Broadway
two fine locations
and Parkside Lounge
Quiet, relaxing dining . . . the finest food in
town. Why not make Stanley’s a part of
your evening’s entertainment. Drop in for
dinner before the show or a snack after
wards.
Open 6:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Open Sundays
845 Willamette
GOP Outlines Tax Cut Program
SALEM (UPI)—-Oregon House
Republicans met in a caucus in
Salem late Tuesday and laid out
a six-point stop-gap program to
fill a $00 million gap in the
state's budget.
The action was taken during
the second day of a special ses
sion of the Oregon Legislature
The gap was created when Ore
gon voters last month turned
down a $60 milium tax program
passed by the Legislature earlier
this year.
A majority of the GOP recoin
mended no increase in total taxes
at the session, a speed-up in turn
over of withholding taxes to the
state, legislative establishment of
guidelines and priorities for the
uovrrnor s ihuikpi cuuiuk. »•
i duct ion in the salaries of legis
lators and state officials, a short
session and fundamental tax re
form in 1965.
Homecoming
Sketches Due
Fach Homecoming sign con
test representative must turn
in a sketch of his organization's
proposed sign by 6 p.m. Thurs
day. Sketches may be left In
313 SU.
FOR THAT TRIM LOOK -
S. U. BARBER SHOP
Basement Level of S.U. Building
5 Barbers to Serve You
Penneys
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
I Iff
One suit that's four parts smart!
GENTRY QUAD' SUITS
Wear it a dozen ways. Versatile suit is tradition
ally styled with blazer jacket and plain front
trousers. Eminently correct for all your dress
up activities. Matching vest reverses to solid
contrasting color ... for more casual occasions.
Extra pair of plaid trousers styled in the
‘Campus taper’ model doubles your wardrobe
power. In fall’s collegiate-correct colors. Count
on Penney’s to come up with a suit that’s . . .
a wardrobe wonder. Charge it!
Shop 9:30 a m. to 5:30 p.m.