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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1966)
Campus Grades Fall Te rm 1965 UO Women’* Kank Mens Organizations 6PA Hank Organizations Rank 2 855 2 780 1 Campbell Club 2 723 2715 2 Parsons 2709 2896 2883 2674 2 869 2.860 2.058 3 Boynton 2.653 2.600 2 847 2 645 2 642 2 636 2.632 2 626 2622 4 Theta Chi 2 605 5 Sigma Phi Kpsilon 2.593 2 588 2 585 2 585 2.560 2 554 6 Philadelphia 2.552 2 550 7 Chi Phi 2 545 2 544 Upperelass Dorms 2 538 2 534 2 522 8 Pi Kappa Phi 2 520 2.513 9 Watson 2 513 10 Burgess 2 500 2 497 11 Phi Delta Theta 2 490 12 Delta t psilon 2 488 2 488 1 Highland 1 2 Kappa Kappa Gamma 2 3 4 Sigma Kappa 3 5 6 Orides 4 7 University House 5 8 Pi Beta Phi 6 9 Cloran 7 10 Delta Gamma 8 11 Delta Delta Delta 9 12 13 Bean West 10 14 Alpha Delta Pi 11 Off Campus 15 Chi Omega 12 18 Alpha Phi 13 17 Kappa Alpha Theta 14 All Sorority 18 Collier 15 19 20 21 Alpha Omicron Pi 16 22 Alpha Chi Omega 17 Upperelass Dorms 23 Alpha Xi Delta 18 All Women 24 25 Tingle 19 26 27 Gamma Phi Beta 20 28 Delta Zeta 21 29 Laurel 22 30 31 Zeta Tau Alpha 23 32 33 34 McClain 24 35 36 All Sorority Pledge ALL UNIVERSITY 2.183 ALL UNIVERSITY Off Campus 13 Phi Kappa Psi 14 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 15 Gamma 16 Chi l’si 17 Ganoe All Men 18 Henderson All Fraternity 19 Alpha Tau Omega 20 Sigma Nu 21 DeCou 22 Delta Chi 23 Clark 24 Robbins 25 Tau Kappa Epsilon 26 Kappa Sigma 27 Pi Kappa Alpha 28 Debu.sk 29 Delta Tau Delta 30 Beta Theta Pi 31 McAllister All Fraternity Pledge 32 Adams Freshmen Dorms 33 Douglas 34 Phi Gamma Delta 35 Phi Sigma Kappa 36 Thornton 37 Sigma Chi 38 Spiller 39 Stafford 40 Young 41 Dyment 42 Omega 43 Sherry Ross 44 Alpha 37 38 Carson 5 25 39 Carson 3 26 40 Carson 2 27 41 42 43 Alpha Gamma Delta 28 44 45 Willcox 29 46 AnnJudson 30 47 48 49 Hale Kane 31 50 Morton 32 51 52 Dunn 33 53 Schafer 34 54 Carson 4 35 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 Rebec 36 62 63 Freshmen Dorms 64 65 Hawthorne 37 66 Moore 38 67 68 69 Casw'ell 39 70 71 72 Sweetser 40 73 74 75 76 Smith 41 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 Sheldon 42 84 85 McClure 43 86 87 Barrister 44 88 2475 2 470 2 460 2 451 2 451 2 450 2 447 2 442 2435 2433 2429 2 426 2 425 2 420 2417 2414 2412 2 408 2 403 2391 2 388 2 387 2 378 2 371 2 366 2362 2 354 2 346 2 342 2335 2 332 2 306 2301 2300 2 299 2 298 2 297 2 293 2 288 2.280 2275 2.270 2 242 2212 2.210 2 205 2 198 2.181 2 180 2 173 2 153 2.140 2.137 2 133 2.110 2.007 2.002 1.833 Improves Your Study Habits! Resolution Burger 64c HASTY HOUSE Broadway & Hilyard—Eugene 343-3387 Anti-War Group Plans Meeting On Organization The Faculty-Student Commit tee to Stop the War in Viet Nam will hold an organizational meet ing at 8 p.m. today in 150 Sci ence. The purpose of the meeting will be to take a final vote on the pro posed principles of organization distributed at the last meeting and to complete plans to bring to the campus Felix Green, au thor of China and Curtain of Ig norance, who has recently re turned from North Viet Nam. Joseph Jorgensen, assistant professor of anthropology, was elected faculty co-chairman last Thursday and Mary Hamilton, graduate in psychology, was se lected to be student co - chairman. Continuing as treasurer is Rob ert Leeper of the psychology de partment. Laura Beck, under graduate student in English, is secretary. The following standing com mittees were formed: communi cations, public relations, fund raising, speakers bureau, infor mation assimilation, peace lob by, and action. The steering com mittee will consist of the co - chairmen, treasurer, chairmen of the standing committees, and rep resentatives at large, invited by the co-chairmen. The committee will also con duct a community poll on the at titudes of 1,000 Eugene residents with regard to their views of the war in Viet Nam. Help is needed in conducting the poll and assim ilating the data. Interested per sons may contact A1 Gribben at 343-4449. 1948 Graduate Killed in Action EUGENE (AP)—Maj. Selwin Wisdom, a 1948 graduate of the University and a former Lane county resident, has been kill ed in action with the 1st Cav alry Division in Viet Nam. Wisdom, 43, was raised in Florence and Junction City. His widow is living in Colora do Springs, Colo. Official to Discuss Science, Politics E. M. J. Kretzmann, fonner act ing director of Internat'ional Scientific and Technological Af fairs in the Department of State, will speak at 3 p.m. today in the World Affairs Briefing Center. The topic will be the role of the science advisor in foreign af fairs. Kretzmann received his B.A. degree from Ohio State Univer sity in 1930, his M A. in 1932 from Brown University and his Ph.D. in 1936 from the University of Alberta. Kretzmann has had experience in higher education and in the field of foreign affairs within the Department of State and has been deputy assistant secretary of State for Public Affairs. Dodd Wins $100 For Political Work Dan Dodd, senior in politi- ! cal science, has won a $100 award from the National Cen ter for Education in Politics. Dodd won the award for a report on his work as an in tern in the Oregon capital. He worked with legislators for two weeks, then for several weeks with State Treasurer Robert Straub. Dodd is one of 10 winners out of 382 who participated in the program. University President Arthur S. Flemming is a former chair- 1 man of the center and is still a member of the board. Color Serigraphs On Exhibit in SU An exhibition of color-seri graphs by Nancy Nemec of Hast ings on Hudson, New York, is being featured this month in the Student Union Art Gallery. The exhibition, circulated by the Old Bergen Art Guild, is spon sored by the SU Arts Committee. It will be on view through Sat urday. Nancy Nemec is a well-known artist, particularly in the New England states. She is a graduate of Colby Junior College, New Hampshire, and attended Vesper George School of Art, Boston, Mass. Her works have received nu merous awards in recent years, including the Washington Water color Association’s Hecht Co. '< Award, the first prize in graphics at the Texas-Oklahoma Art Festi val, and the M. Grumbacher Award for Watercolor of the Na tional Association of Wromen Artists. She has exhibited in a number of one-man shows in New York state, Massachusetts, Michigan. Pennsylvania, Kansas, Texas, Ok lahoma, and in Seattle, Washing ton; in group shows throughout the country, and her works are in collections such as the Library of Congress, the New York Pub lic Library and the Print Club of Philadelphia. Senator Seeks Men for Work With Children lua raiieimm ocnwi is m «* “poverty pocket” in Eugene. Many of the children there have little home life. Many of them have brothers and sisters with differ ent fathers. Some have mothers with two or three boy friends. One little boy goes home from school to a motel every night. For the past few weeks a pair of ASUO senators, Chuck Pruitt and Gene Sokolski, have been out to Ida Patterson to talk to those kids and the teachers. They went out there as part of an effort by ASUO President Steve Gold schmidt to get University stu dents involved in the problems of the Eugene community. Now Pruitt is looking for male University students who want to A’ork with those children, mainly teaching them how to play games like football, baseball, and so on. [da Patterson has only one man teacher. Students interested should contact Pruitt at Ext. 1584 >r in room 301 in the Student Un on from 11 a m. to 1 p.m. on ruesdays. “We’re not planning a big pro gram,” says Pruitt. “Only about 10 people will probably be in t'olved to start with, but we hope this will be the first of a series of ictivities like this.” Want to really get results?— Use Emerald Classified Ads— Phone 342-1411, Ext. 1818. VAN DYKE flowers if Corsages if Flowers for dances S & H GREEN STAMPS 742 24th Ave. E. Phone 344 8411 EWRDI Will Cover These Subjects: if Reading more than one word at a time if Seeing words out of order if How to read down the page if How to preview a book if How to read without hearing or saying words if Reading with a planned purpose if How to remember what you read if How to study for a test if How to read text books if How to read newspapers and magazines if How to make permanent recall records if How to read classics and conceptional material if Stabilizing speed and comprehension— Tonight 7:30 p.m. PHI DELTA THETA 1472 Kincaid (across from library) Hurry—Ask That Date To The FROSH SNOBALL "Silver Skates' Sharpest, Slickest, Smoothest, Coolest Dance of the Year SATURDAY, 29th 9-12 SEMI-FORMAL LIVE MUSIC Free • Free • Free • Free • Free