Save The Side' Sabin Releases Minority Reoort Ily TIIOHA WILLIAMS Emerald Feature Editor A minority report recommend ini' that the Willcox building be preserved and restorer! was re leased Monday by Vic Sabin. He was minority member of the Co-op Hoard committee to study restora tion costs, possible uses and ex pected revenue of the building Sabin said that he was unaware that the committee was submit, ling its report for publication in Monday's Emerald "1 do not wish to be identified with the commit tee’s report, as I feel that it does not give accurate figures for res toration. They are too low and only include structural restora tion," he wrote Sabin holds that it is possible for the building to be readily re stored, He mentioned the iinpor tance of the building "because of its prime location at the entrance to campus anil because of its architectural character." For spe elite uses, he referred to Cather ine Miller Lauds' letter addressed to the Co-op Hoard last spring Kent Increase Okey To show "an experienced busi nessman is willing to operate his business in the building.” Sabin recalled the managers of the Col lege Side Inn told former Co-op president Walt Evans III "they would be happy to have an ex tended lease to continue operating and would of course take a reason able increase in rent if improve ments were made in the building " He recommended that the Hoard consider renting to opera tions that "would provide steady income in rents while simultan eously providing the services and facilities students and the campus would enjoy." lie said the estimation for total repairs is $2fi,300 structural res torations estimated at $14,300 In Eugene Schudt, Eugene engineer, and additional costs (roofing, (louring, additional exits, painting, gutters and downspouts, window repairs, and electrical and plumb mg repairs) estimated at $12,000 by Hhil Gilmore, Eugene archs teet. Council Appeal Asked Me said an appeal should tie made to the Eugene City Council CAMPUS BRIEFS Thctr will b« an important meeting of 111 • cut tve council <>i ( * lub .1? 4 pm Unlay ill (irtlmgri Petition* are being called for for talent j -t tin I ).».«> Variety ’•It--* Petit im. HI . 1m- pn. krd tip "li the the <1 ll'»d "• lh« SI’, rill* should not l*c confused with tin \S 111•» i Carnival "1 .»lrnt Sh--* I r •*" •«*«* iliflcrml. All petitions for Senior Weekend and Junior Prom mutt l»r iu by 5 dto p m. i ur«ia {n the "'I For < • ■ ibi ••■.Hint Jr ( la* CtHiin.il nirmltcr m K«m ( .win rat 400. Student* intcreated in participating in the l Tiivci »ity'* Mexico Project attend ,i meet ing 1J:e posted. Theta Sigma Phi meeting tonight. 7 00 l> m Allen seminar room. Gymnastic* Club will practice Thuraday. 7 oo p n*. in apparatus room i*t Men’* PI building. University YWCA will meet Wednesday noon in (icrliuger. Student Union Movie Committee’* Clan *i« F ilm Sri ie* present* “Hamlet” starting I iuiiriu'i' Olivier and Jean Simmon*. Tun allowing*, 7:00 and 9:00 p.in. riiursday. 150 Science. $.50 admission. Petitions arc now being taken for A.W.S mine* office 8 tt> be filled arc: president vice president, secretary, treasurer, hi*tori an, am! editor. They may be picked up anil returned to the third floor of the SI*. The SU noon forum has been cancelled foi today. for variance to avoid the arbi trary requirements of the Uni form Building Code, should Co-op members decide at the meeting Wednesday to keep the building. "The Uniform Code, by its very nature, cannot take into account that the? new buildings adjoining the College Side Building are vir tually enclosing it in a chamber of incombustible materials,” he wrote. "Nor can the Code take into consideration the architectural im portance of this building—the City Council can," he said. Annual Revenue (9,000 He said that the building in recent years has earned approxi mately $9,000 annually in rental revenue, "and the rents have been quite nominal in consideration of the location and the size of the spaces in the building ” He said, "The building’s rev enue can easily pay for the $2t>, 300 restoration in a three-year period and also meet the addition al expenses of taxes, depreciation, insurance and maintenance " Correspondent Sets Luncheon, Class Lecture A former foreign correspon dent for the Associated Press will ' lx* on campus Thursday to at tend a journalism faculty lunch eon in the Student Union. Alvin J. Steinkopf, winner of special Pulitzer Award in 1941 for his coverage of the outbreak of World War II, was a European correspondent for more than 30 years and was chief of the A P’s Vienna bureau when the war broke out. Later he served in Germany with Glen Stadler, another corre spondent who is now president of radio station KEED in Spring field and a member of the Ore gon Senate. Members of Sigma Delta Chi, men's professional journalism so ciety, and Theta Sigma, women’s professional journalism society, have been invited to attend the luncheon. Steinkopf will also speak to an Introduction to Journalism class that morning. In Browsing Room Communist's SE Asia Design Lecture Topic Charles P. Schleicher, professor of political science and associate director of the University's Insti tute of International Studies and Overseas Adminstration. will talk on "The Communists’ Grand De sign for Southern Asia" in the Browsing Room Wednesday at 7:30 pm Francis E. Dart, associate pro fessor of physics, vs ill lead the discussion Schleicher, who has traveled ex tensively in Asia, has taught at Theta Sigma Phi Meeting Tonight University chapter of Theta Sigma Phi will hear Mary Jan Waldo, professional free-lance writer, tonight at 7 in the Eric Allen room, Allen Hall. All mem bers of the honorary for women in journalism are invited. Miss Waldo is president of the Oregon Women's free-lance writer group in Portland and presently works for the Oregonian The author of a story in the recent issue of Good Housekeeping, Miss Waldo will speak on free-lance writing for women Accompanying the speaker will be Mrs. Wesley Richards, presi dent of the Portland Theta Sigma Phi chapter. A short question and answer period will follow the speech. KWAX-FM 91.1 Me. 4:59—Sign on 5:00— Dateline London (NAEB) 5:30—Over the Back Fence 5:45—World, nat'l and local news 5:55— Books in the news 6:00—KWAX Record Rack 7:00—Accent on Jazz 'til 10 10:00—Evening Concert (classic) 12:00—Sign off Infirmary Safe in ilu- infirmary from the rutting element** « Oregon’*"* dimute Tnrw.lay were Satld> IV11, Sandra Ile.uli, Dick 1-apstad, Phillip Pra^r, and Ali Alum O-many. PUT FOOD IN YOUR TUMMY-TUM TUM TUMMY-TUM TUMMY-TUM TUMMY TUMMY-TUM TUM IF YOU AIN'T GOT NO TEETH ABOVE OR BENEATH YOU CAN GUM IT WITH YOUR GUMMY-GUM GUMS! Put Food in Your Tummy-Tum Turn at Tummy's . . . er . . that's TOMMY'S IN 13th and Alder "open 25 hours!" the University since 1947. He has also taught at the University of Hawaii and Eastern Washing ton College and been a Fulbright Lecturer in political science at Allahabad University in India. For two years just prior to his coming to Oregon, he served as chief of the Committee Coordin ating Section of the U.S. State Department. He has written two books: “In troduction to International Rela tions” in 1954, and "International Relations: Cooperation and Con flict” in 1962. Schleicher is a member of the American Political Association, the Board of Editors of the West ern Political Science Quarterly, the International Studies Associa tion, the Oregon State Commis sion of the International Relations League and the Executive Com mittee of the Utah Association for United Nations. ADPi Chooses New Officer Slate Alpha Delta Pi has elected win ter term officers. The sorority's new president is Barbara Finch. Other officers are Barbara Boohar, vice president; Mary Ann Rice, treasurer; Candy Morrill, stand ards chairman; Donna Sayler, scholarship chairman; Frances Kroll, house manager. SU Calendar Wednesday, January 22 7 :30 a.m. to 11 :00 p.m. S :00 llrhrew Class 319 SI" l".S. Coast Guard OCS Int\» TV Room SI* 9:«»o Peace Corps Placement Tests 101 SI* 9:15 Deans and Dept Heads Coffee Hour Faculty Club 11:00 Dad’s Comm Meeting; 109 SC Rugby Club 308 SI Noon—French Table ISC Soccer Club (>rg Meeting 108 SC OSEA ( hap MS 110 SC WRA Reps 112 SC 12:15 Gov Hatfield Faculty Luncheon Ballroom SI' 12:30- Haptist SC 334 SC 4:00 Health, PE, and Rec Club lit) SC Gov Hatfield Coffee Hour 1 >ad> Room S l ’ Rockefeller Comm 334 SC SC Board 337 SC 5:00 Jr. Pauhellenic 108 SC <• :30 Scabbard ami Blaile 110 SC VMCA Cabinet 319 SC SC Games Comm 308 SC ASl’O Sen-at-large Interviews 315 SC 6:45 Panhellenic Pres ('ouncil 108 SI’ l^ee Schuster Sec. Interviews 308 SC ! 7 :00 Swahili Class 204 Chap Badminton Club Gerl outside gym 1 7 :3t| Philosophy Club 109 Sl’ International Student Coun Org Mtg 11 SC Duplicate Bridge 112 SC Browsing Rm Lecture Schleicher, spkr 201 SC 8:00 Co-op Membership Meeting Ballroom SC 9:00 ASl’O Service Proj Comm 315 SC 10:00 Gamma Delta 334 SC English Educator Back From Ghana (Editor's Note: This is the third in a series of four articles on Peace Corps representatives on campus for Peace Corps Week.) By DICK RICHARDSON Emerald Associate Editor ‘‘An education in Ghana is the key to social mobility,” said Georgianna Shiner a returned Peace Corps volunteer who taught high school English in the town of Tema. Ghana. Although Ghanians receive an education equivalent to a high school education in the United States, Ghanian students differ in one big respect from Ameri can students, Miss Shiner said. “Ghanaian students are moti vated,” she said They consider it a privilege to be in school.” Miss Shiner said many students would often ask for extra home work. Boarding School An English graduate of Cen tral Connecticut State College, Miss Shiner taught three classes of English in a secondary, co educational boarding school in Ghana. Each students, she said, had to spend ten hours in class each week studying English. The school where she taught from August, 1961, to August. 1963, was new, and for the first six months Miss Shiner had to teach without textbooks. The books were in Ghana, but there was a dock strike at the time, and the workers would not unload the books, she said. Only One Text Miss Shiner had a copy of the text and spent her time typing copies of the lessons to be dis tributed to students. “This did not give me time to correct any homework,” she said Finally the Peace Corps gave her a ditto machine on which the daily les sons could be printed until the books arrived. As librarian. Miss Shiner es tablished and obtained many books for the new school, which now has about 1,000 volumes, she said. Another duty of hers was to grade composition exams of the West African Examinations Coun cil. Five-Year High School A student had to pass the Council's exams to get credit for his five years of high school work. Miss Shiner stated. And she also was the track coach. “Ghanaians,” she said, “con sider Ghana the center of the world, just like Americans con sider America the center of the world.” Ghanaians are not interested in philosophical ideas like capi YWCA Announces Service Project Nancy Wolford, University YWCA president, announces the start of a teacher’s aide program as a service project. This pro gram will take place at Roose velt junior high and at Wilson junior high. Aides will assist the teachers in all aspects of their jobs. Students interested in applying for this service project may pick up petitions in the YWCA office in Gerlinger or the YMCA office in the SU. Petitions are due Monday. The teacher’s aide program starts the week of Jan. 27. talism or communism, she com mented. “They are interested in what will work best in Ghana.’' A Communal Society Miss Shiner said she thought I Ghana, a communal society, would continue to rely upon its own tra ditional system of running the country. Ghana is like the little boy watching the two big boys (the U.S. and Russia) fighting across the street and then running and grabbing the marbles from the big boys while there is the chance, she said. One reason Miss Shiner joined the Corps was because Africa i “intrigued me,” she said. She learned much about Africa from her college roommate who was from Sierra Leone. “Altruism and Guilt” She also joined out of a feel-1 ing of a “altruism and guilt.” “I was aware of what needed to be done. And she said she had been living luxuriously and could af-; ford to give up two of her years. Presently Miss Shiner is a re cruiting officer for the Peace Corps and spends a lot of her time traveling, explaining what she will go to study for her mas the Corps is really like. Next year ters’ degree in English at Yale. HOWARD m TOURS THE ORIGINAL STUDY TOUR IN THE PACIFIC HAWAII TOUR SIX UNIVERSITY CREDITS 57 DAYS.$549 STL. 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