OREGON
DAILY
VoL LXVII
E mer aid
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1966
EXPERIMENTAL
COLLEGE
UNLIKE OTHERS
Page 8
No. 20
By Planning Committee
Parking Crisis
Said Possible
By JEAN SNIDER
Kmrritid Stair Writer
A definite parking crisis could
hit the University in the future
according to opinions expressed
at the Campus Planning Com
mittee meeting Thursday.
"Although at this time we do
not have a crisis in the parking
spare situation on campus,” said
George Andrews, professor of ar
chitecture, "spaces are being re
placed by prospective buildings
while the number of people who
will be driving to campus is in
creasing.”
The Campus Planning Commit
tee discussed the long-range traf
fic problems at length in their
regular meeting Thursday morn
ing in Johnson Hall.
The committee heard a report
of the subcommittee to study
the possibility of charging for
parking in order to alleviate the
problem of limited on-campus
space for automobiles. This com
mittee was unanimous in its rec
ommendation that the Univer
sity should not institute a charge
at this time.
This sub-committee distributed
a questionnaire to some 140 uni
versities and colleges similar in
si/e to the University. They found
that some 68 per cent of those
responding do charge for park
ing space on campus.
Also, the report stated “Appre
ciably more schools charged stu
dents than charged faculty and
staff.” Two yean ago this Uni
versity abolished the student
Index
Sports . pages 4-51
Editorials .. page 101
Classifieds page 9
Campus Briefs page 3
Entertainment pages 6 7
Today's Events .page 8 ;
PL-3 Schedule page 91
charge for parking on the grounds
that it was an inequality to a
certain segment of the Univer
sity community.
The problem facing the plan
ning committee now is to facili
tate the movement of traffic
through and about the campus.
The situation is becoming serious
on those streets which are city
owned, such as University Ave.
A long-range plan which the
committee has been working on
is the closing ofT of 13th Street
and extending 18th Street through
to Vlllard Ave. This would stop
the flow of traffic through the
center of campus.
(L onttnued on l>(iae 11)
IMilWWHlfflfllMNiWh
OSU Sets RFK
f Speech Monday
CORVALLIS—Senator Rob
ert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.) will
speak at Oregon State Univer
sity Monday, according to OSU
student body president Housnu
Ozyegin.
Congressman Robert B. Dun
can, a candidate for the United
States Senate, helped arrange
the speech and will also speak
at the event, according to the
OSU Daily Barometer.
Kennedy is scheduled to
speak at 3:30 p.m. in Gill Coli
seum.
The Senator is also scheduled
to appear in the Labor Temple
in Portland at 8 p.m. Monday.
He was invited to speak in
Oregon by Representative Edith
Green, as the head speaker at
a fund-raising dinner and rally
for Democratic candidates.
Viet Nam Future
Conclave Theme
"Where do we go from here?"
is the central theme of the ASUO
sponsored Viet Nam Conference
to be held Monday afternoon in
the Student Union.
"We want to stimulate people’s
thinking," says Bill Allen, chair
man of the ASUO department of
speeches and debate, “particular
ly with regard to the Hatfield
Duncan rivalry." „
Allen said tfie ASUO sought
an early fall term date for the
conference in order to assure a
tie-in between the conference and
the November 8 election, in which
Viet Nam is a key issue.
"We want to get students in
volved.”
The conference, set up by
ASUO President Henry Drum
monds and co-ordinated by Allen,
is modeled on last winter's Pov
erty Conference, and will host
three well-known experts on for-1
eign policy in an all-afternoon
conference beginning at 3 p.m.
Robert Scalapino, director of
the Political Science Department
at Stanford University; Mark
Raskin, director of the Institute
for Policy Study in Washington,
D C.; and Sanford Gottlieb, poli
tical action director of the Com
mittee for a Sane Nuclear Policy
(SANE) will each deliver speech
es on their individual position
concerning the Viet Nam ques
tion, and answer questions follow
ing their speeches.
The three men will meet for
a panel discussion at the condo
sion of the speeches.
Raskin, considered an ‘'all-out
opponent" of the Johnson ad
ministration on Viet Nam, will
open the conference with his
speech at 3 p.m.
Gottlieb, who has been describ
ed as being pacifist in philosophy,
will speak following Raskin. Gott
lieb was part of a fact-finding
mission which visited Viet Nam
in 1965, and has met with officials
of both the North and South Viet
namese National Liberation
Fronts.
Scalapino, known as a Johnson
administration spokesman, will
(Continued on f1nnc II)
Senate Asks
Universal'
Course Survey
By LARRY LANGE
Emerald Newt Editor
"Resolved: That the Senate of the Associated Students recom
mends to the general meeting of the faculty that a Course Reaction
Survey be adopted on a universal basis throughout the University
in the school year 1966-67.”
That’s the conclusion of a bill that was the last item of business
on the Senate’s agenda Thursday night. It provided a rather lengthy
conclusion to the Senate session, as well.
The bill, written by Senator-at-large Roger Leo— who was also
director of the ASUO Course Reaction Survey project—is a recom
mendation to the senate of the University faculty that the faculty
consider the recommendation at its next meeting on November 2.
For a while it appeared that the bill might not have made it
through the student Senate, although the Senate barelv reached a
quorum Thursday.
Leo admitted that the book was not as successful as he and others
had hoped it to be, but presented his bill as a means -of "making
the Senate's position clear.”
CONTRADICTORY PHRASE
Seizing upon one of the criticisms of the survey, Senator-at-large
■ Greg Foote asked Leo to reconcile the apparently contradictory
; phrase “voluntary universal.”
Leo replied that there was a strong but vocal minority among the
i faculty that was very much opposed to the survey—and to making
it universal. He said he was interested primarily in getting genera?
faculty approval right now.
Chuck Stout, senator-at-large, then asked Leo about how the
project would be financed.
Leo replied that the administration would finance the project.
“This is its proper locus,” he said. “This is where it should be,
because as students, we don’t have any business sending out infor
mation to faculty.”
He pointed out than an increased printing of the Course Survey
Bulletin next year would lower the break-even point to where the
project would get itself out of the red.
MAY PAY STAPP
“We may even be able to pay staff members out of the receipts.”
“A professor can be outstanding and yet not affect the majority,”
said Marvin Feuerberg, also a senator-at-large. He said the survey
was “a good thing to have, but we’re missing a lot in this particular
i vehicle.
i “We’ve been forced into a position where we say ’We’ve got this
bulletin and we want you teachers to get in line.’ ”
He said he thought that the format of the survey should be
changed, to “make up for the deficiency—that on the whole,
people (faculty) rated in the survey came out better than average.”
Leo replied: "The evaluation form itself is not very acceptable.
But, in comparison with other forms I’ve seen—and I’m speaking
in the realm of about 50—this survey had more detailed informa
tion than any other program in the country.”
He assured the Senate that a new format was in the works for
| the survey, and that the publication would eventually have an edi
| torial board to more closely supervise the composition of the
<Continued on page 2)
Earth-Moving Begins On Stadium
Photo by John Wrigant
CONSTRUCTION has begun oil the Autzen
Stadium, scheduled to be completed in the
fall ol' 1967. The $2.3 million stadium will
seat 40,000 people. Excavation is in prog
ress on the north bank of the Willamette,
and bids for the next stage of construction
will be let on November 10. The stadium is
being financed through Athletic fund re
serves and contributions.