Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 01, 1966, Page Two, Image 2

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    From the University
Nine Faculty Named
To Arts Committee
Nine University faculty mem
bers have been appointed by Gov.
Mark Hatfield to serve on the
advisory committee on the Arts
and Humanities.
The committee will serve as an
advisory' body to the Governor’s
Planning Council on the Arts and
Humanities, which was recently
organized to develop a plan for
the creation of a permanent state
agency to encourage the arts and
■ ■ ■
PL-3
(Continued from pitfte 1)
that originate on campus rather
than “canned” shows borrowed
from other sources.
For instance, the University’s
College Bowl, the intramural ver
sion of NBC’s College Bowl which
pits teams from dorms and other
living units against each other.
There is also, “Seven Days.”
aired every Friday, a round-up
of news, and campus events.
PL-3 also airs classes—Princi
ples of economics, children's Lit,
and others—as well as showing
famous motion pictures. “Cat on
a Hot Tin Roof’ has been shown
this year. ^
Or when it's time for the Ore
gon-Oregon State game coach Len
Casanova can go on PL-3 and
show and explain films of last
year's game.
Or PL-3 may run a seminar on
seminars so viewers in Eugene
have an opportunity to see what
a seminar’s really like.
“It’s the most exciting thing
I’ve come up against,” Willing
ham, says, “It’s like the off-Broad
way stage, where you have a
chance to attempt things without
being afraid of falling flat on
your face. We have nothing to
sell, so we can try anything.”
Willingham repeated, as do
most of the students involved
with the project, that PL-3 is not
an educational television station.
It’s something entirely different.
It’s the first system which di
rectly links a university with the
people living around it.
When you can't
afford to be dull,
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humanities in Oregon.
Appointed to the advisory com
mittee from the University were
Wallace Baldinger. director of the
Museum of Art; Walter Creese,
dean of the School of Architec
ture and Allied Arts; Luther
Cressman, professor emeritus of
anthropology;
Bertram Jessup, professor of
philosophy; Charles E. Johnson,
dean of the College of Liberal
Arts; June McFee, director of a
program in art education at the
School of Architecture and Al
lied Arts;
Horace W. Robinson, profes
sor of speech and theatre and
I University Theatre director; Al
bert Spaulding, head of the de
partment of anthropology; and
Robert Trotter, dean of the
School of Music.
Jarold A. Kieffer, assistant to
the president of the University,
is a member of the planning
council on the Arts and Humani
ties.
—
Correction
Students receiving traffic tick
ets on campus may appeal the
decision to district courts only.
The decisions may not be ap
pealed to Eugene municipal
! courts, as was reported in Mon
day's Emerald.
Co-ed...
(Continued from pope 1)
so they called the police,” the
girl said.
She said she refused to go hack
inside "because 1 really didn't
want all those people around.”
She said police told her she
had to go to Sacred Heart hos
pital “which I didn’t really want
to do.” But she went anyway.
“I had the feeling they would
drag me if 1 didn’t,” she said.
Monday morning she asked a
doctor if she could leave and he
said "no, absolutely not.” Police
said she was being held for a
psychiatric examination.
“My clothes were in the room
so I just put them on and left,"
she explained. "1 saw no rea
son why I had to stay there.”
She said she talked to a doc
tor at the University Health Serv
ice Monday afternoon. She said
she didn’t want to, but she was
afraid her housemother would
get in trouble if she didn’t.
Latin Students Elect
The Latin American Students
Association elected 19(56 officers
during its annual General As
sembly Feb. 7.
The officers are president, Ser
gio Granados; secretary, Flora
Bannuet; and treasurer, Gloria
Marchiori.
Oregon Daily Emerald
The Oregon Daily Emerald is published
five times in September and five days a week
during the academic year, except during
examination periods, by the Student I’ubli
cations Board of the University of Oregon.
Second-class postage paid at Eugene, Ore
gon 97403. Subscription rates $5 per year.
12 per term.
ROTC Students At Area Meet
Last weekend, thirty-four Uni
versity ROTC students pnrtici
pated in the Area Conclave meet
ing of the Arnold Air Society and
Angel Flight, held at the Uni
versity of Puget Sound in Ta
coma, Washington.
The regional meeting was at
tended by schools from Oregon,
Washington, Idaho, and Montana
The business session Saturday
j was concerned with the selec
tion of a Little General Candi
date to represent the Northwest
j at the National Conclave, which
will be held the first week of
! Spring term in Dallas, Texas
Saturday afternoon the Oregon
students were taken out to Mc
Cord Air Force Base on a visi
tation.
Lt. Colonel John Kreitz, pro
fessor of Aerospace studies at the
University, and his wife hosted
the Angel’s and the Arnold Air
members at a dinner in the Offi
cer's club. Later in the evening,
the Oregon delegation were the
Bursts of thr University of Puget
Sound’s ROTC detachment at
their military hall.
Stadium...
(Conlimn'd /rum pa<lf I)
cept” of whnt the stadium will
include and some cost estimates.
These are presently being re
vised. One set of estimates will
be for a stadium with u track,
another for one without u track.
The University’s Campus Plan
ning Commnttec requested this
additional estimate, with the
track, fall term.
Work on the stadia ra will
probably start this spring It is
planned for completion for the
fall UWi7 football season Flem
ming has said the University
will hold all its football games,
in Kugene once the stadium is
built. At present two or three
games are always played in Port
land’s Multnomah Stadium.
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