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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1965)
For Spring Term Men's Group Leads Grades UNDERGRADUATE GRADE POINT AVERAGES BY TERM Spring Term 1964-65 Men's Rank Organizations GPA 1 Bean East 3.0555 2.9763 2.9702 2 9155 2.8957 2.8564 2 Collier Hall 2.8465 2.8457 3 Hale Kane 2.8407 4 Campbell Club 2.8375 2.8240 2.8131 2.8050 2.7967 5 Parsons Hall 2.7949 6 Phi Kappa Sigma 2 7769 2.7747 2.7700 2.7661 2.7535 2.7476 7 Delta Chi 2.7449 8 Spiller Hall 2.7419 9 Theta Chi 2.7345 2.7338 10 Burgess Hall 2.7307 2.7232 2.7197 2.7093 2.7015 11 Sigma Phi Epsilon 2 7009 2.6944 2.6919 2.6891 2.6890 Upperclass Dorms 2.6842 26759 12 Phi Sigma Kappa 2 6688 2.6605 26523 2.6507 2.64679 2.64675 13 Phi Kappa Psi 2.6417 2.6408 14 Boynton Hall 2.6360 2.6339 All University 2.6332 15 Alpha Tau Omega 2.6297 16 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 2.6276 17 Off-Campus 26272 18 Douglas Hall 2.6255 2.6241 19 Watson Hall 2.6218 26192 20 Chi Psi 2.6122 21 Chi Phi 2 6078 All Fraternity 2.6038 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 All Men 2.5997 2.5966 2.5965 2.5850 2.5811 Adams Hall 2.5744 Kappa Sigma 2.5731 2.5705 2 5662 Phi Delta Theta 2.5635 McClure Hall 2.5560 Philadelphia House 2.5538 Pi Kappa Phi 2.5506 Beta Theta Pi 2.5479 Sigma Chi 2.5422 2.5352 Delta Upsilon 2.5341 2.5317 Gamma Hall 2.5251 Pi Kappa Alpha 2.5169 Ganoe Hall 2.5121 2.5065 Delta Tau Delta 2.5022 Tau Kappa Epsilon 2.4993 Clark Hall 2.4950 Young Hail 2.4917 Phi Gamma Delta 2.4897 DeBusk Hall 2.4801 2.4780 Dyment Hall 2.4764 Freshman Dorms 2.4756 Sheldon Hall 2.4736 Morton Hall 2.4650 2 4549 Thornton Hall 2.4199 Stafford Hall 2.4067 DeCou Hall 2.3784 All Frat. Pledge 2.3643 Henderson Hall 2.2819 UO Women’s Rank Organizations Rank 1 2 Kappa Kappa Gamma 1 3 Highland 2 4 University House 3 5 Rebec Annex 4 6 Alpha Phi 5 7 8 Orides 6 9 10 11 McClain Hall 7 12 Off-Campus 8 13 Dunn Hall 9 14 Zeta Tau Alpha 10 15 16 17 Cloran Hall 11 18 Alpha Chi Omega 12 19 Kappa Alpha Theta 13 20 McAlister 14 21 Delta Gamma 15 22 23 24 25 Pi Beta Phi 16 26 27 Sigma Kappa 17 All Sorority All Sorority Pledge 28 Alpha Delta Pi 18 29 30 Laurel 19 31 All Women Upperclass Dorms 32 Smith Hall 20 33 Willcox Hall 21 34 35 Carson Hall 22 36 Rebec 23 37 Ann Judson 24 38 Delta Delta Delta 25 39 Gamma Phi Beta 26 40 41 Delta Zeta 27 42 43 Omega Hall 28 All University 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 87 38 39 40 Alpha Xi Delta Freshman Dorms Alpha Omicron Pi Tingle Hall Schaffer Hall Chi Omega Caswell Hall Hawthorne Bean West Alpha Gamma Delta Robbins Hall Moore Hall Sweetser Hall 3 Frosh Enter On ROTC Grants Two high school graduates from Oregon and one from Ohio will enter the University as fresh men this fall under four-year scholarships awarded by the U. S. Army. Winners of the grants are Leon A. Dahl of Fairview, Oregon, Don ald N. Gail of Goldhill, Oregon and John T. Davis of Brookville, Ohio. They are among 400 high school graduates and 600 college stu dents from throughout the coun try to receive scholarships au thorized by the ROTC Vitalization Act signed by President Johnson last October. These are the first such scholar ships to be given students in the Army Officers Training Corps (ROTC). Student Activities, Union Need $860,000 Budget A great portion of the programs and service offered students at the University is financed and operated under the Student Un ion and Educational Activities Budget, a complex schedule of funding which reveals that near ly $800,000 will he spent this year in providing offerings rang ! ing from bridge lessons to edu j cational films to a cup of SU coffee. About one-fourth of the budg et’s income, some $228,000 this i year, comes from student fees, a portion of each student’s tuition payment. About $20 per term of every student’s tuition goes into : University activities, such as ath tetics, towel fees, or the Student Health Service. The Student Un ion & Ed Act Budget now gets $6.50 of the $20 to operate on. The Student Union is, in it self, a big business — $679,(KK) , worth next year. The SU’s big ; gest budget item is, as would be | expected, foods, amounting to $351,000. In addition to food and recreation services offered by the ■ SU, another $27,000 is spent on special programs such as assem biles, sponsoring the forensic ☆ Fees Rentals Miscellaneous Print Shop Vending Main Desk Games Area Foods Administration House SU Board ASUO 1EC Emerald Oregana Student Directory Orienter Next Assembly Forensics MUN EUC'MA Music Arts Festival Canoe Fete Equip Fund ☆ Income Expense $ $228,710 7.900 9,420 3,200 9.660 65,530 54,520 366,993 17,375 250 44,675 39,573 5,210 300 5,620 2,770 62,260 49,710 351,382 114 791 70,918 38,809 7,156 1,665 64,967 37,940 3,000 700 2.557 2,750 8,990 1,500 8.475 4,450 2,119 5.620 16,500 $585,936 $859,227 team, the EugeneUniversity Civic Music Association concerts, Uni versity band and choral pro grams, and a Women s Kecrea tion Association (WHA). Many of the St) programs are sponsored by the Student Union Board Its $38,000 budget pro vides for special attractions and exhibits as well as dancing, mov ies, talent shows, forum discus sions and programs in eight sports activities Educational activities outside the SU are also financed by the SU & Ed Act Budget. The ASUO (student government) plans to spend $8,000 this year on active ties including participation in the National Student Association, dis semination of information con cerning issues in higher cduca tion, programs of the Interna tional Education Center and the annuul Winter Carnival in Bend. AIm> financed under the budg et arc the live student publica tions of the University, costing some $108,000. The publications arc the Emerald, the Oregano, year hook; digger's Guide, the student faculty directory; Orb enter, a magazine sen*, to fresh men; and Next, student literary magazine. The KU & Educational Activi ties Budget is drawn up and voted upon by the HU & Ed Act Budget Board each spring term The Board is composed of eight mem bers, four students and four fac ulty, appointed by the president of the University. Two Professors Win Book Award A book written by two Univer-j sity professors anti a Sarah Lawr ence College professor has been announced one of the winners of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award for 1965 Co-authors of the ‘The Hulers and the Ruled” are Robert E. Agger, professor of political sci ence, and Daniel Goidrich, asso ciate professor of political sci ence, both of the University, and Dr. Bert E. Swanson, professor of political science at Sarah Lawr ence College, New York. Agger is currently on sabbati cal leave to conduct a study of aspects of the British political system while stationed at the new University of Essex in England Swanson received his doctoral degree from the University in 1059 The winning book is ■ compari son of the political systems of four United States communities and deals with power structures, sanctions and leadership ideolo gies. It was published in 1904 in New York by John Wiley. "The Rulers and the Ruled" was selected to share the $1,000 1905 award with the book ''Politi cal Parties A Behaviors! Anal ysis" by Samuel J Eldersveld The Woodrow Wilson Founda tion Award was presented Sep tember H. at the sixty first annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, in Washing ton, I) C. V "Overcome Those Wwhdiy Blues" we have SINGLE, DOUBLE ft TRIPLE LOAD WASHERS Laundry ft Ironing Service on weekdays 13th Avc. Laundromat 365 E. 13th AVOID THOSE BOOK LINES CAMPUS BOOKSTORE Has All THE TEXTS You Need For Your Courses. Supplies Too. Discount On All Books and Supplies OPEN 'TILL 7 P.M. DURING FIRST WEEK OF SCHOOL Campus Bookstore 877 E. 13th Next to Campus 343-4082