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