Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 21, 1966, Page Eight, Image 8

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    Experimental College Unlike
Other ’Free Universities'
Editor’s Note: This is the
second in a series describing
the Experimental College at
San Francisco State College.
The student-run and initiated
Experimental College is spon
soring 75 classes for over 1,506
students.
By NOMI BORENSTEIN
Emerald Associate Editor
The Experimental College run
by a group of students at San
Francisco State is different from
most other “free university" at
tempts.
Church News
Editor's Note: The Emerald
invites all campus religious
groups to submit a brief re
port of their coming weekend
activities for Church News. All
activity briefs must be deposit
ed in 301 Allen before 4 p.m.
Wednesday.
f irst Church 01 twist. scientist
At noon tod-ay at the Fox
Theatre, 969 Willamette, Otto
Bertschi. will speak on ‘The
meaning of Reformation.”
Christian House
Each Wednesday at 5:15 p.m.
a dinner-seminar meets at Chris
tian House. Guests and new mem
bers are welcome. Dinner is 40
cents.
At T p.m. today at 736 E. 16th
The Great Thanksgiving will be
celebrated.
Those wishing to attend the
bayride on October 28 should sign
up at the house.
1st Baptist Church
There will be a talk on “The
Burden of the Apostle” at 9:45
a.m. Sunday in the Harlow
Chapel.
At 8:30 p.m. at the Ann Jud
son House. Dr. Norman Pott will
speak on “Perspective on the
Ecumenical Movement” to Col
lege Hour.
Following the New Folk Sing
ers concert on October 28. at the
Harlow Lodge there will be a
Halloween party.
Emerald Baptist Church
At 6 p.m. Sunday the Roger
Williams Fellowship will meet
at- the church. 19th and Patter
son. to discuss “Is Man Dead?”
There is- also a class at 9:45 a.m.
Westminster House
“Del’s Dinner” will be held at
6 p.m. Sunday at the Westmin
ster House. Cost is 25 cents.
Channing-Club
The Chanmng Club, a Univer
sity discussion group composed
of Unitarians and other religious
liberals will meet at 8 p.m. Sun
day in the Student Union for a
general discussion about relation
ships and communication. The
official topic of the meeting will
be “Authenticity versus the Need
for Security, or Vertical or Hori
zontal Components of Interper
sonal Relationship.” All students
interested in this type of mean
ingful discussion are invited to
attend.
Blood Bank
The Lane Memorial Blood Bank needs
thfc following types of blood for its
special account which serves the fac
ulty, students, and staff of the Univer
sity.
Donor hours are 1:30 to 4 p.m. Mon
day, Tuesday and THursday, and by
appointment from 3 to 7 p.m. Friday.
Tile Blood Bank is located at 790 E.
llth Ave., next to the Mayflower
Theatre. Phone 345-0336 for further
Information.
Units Needed
6
3
8
3
O
0
Type
A Positive
A Negative
O Positive
O Negative
B Positive
AB Positive
FIRST FREE
METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday Worship Service
11:00 a.m.
Sunday School.
9:45 a.m.
Mid-Week Prayer Service
Wednesday—7:00 p.m.
Pastor Rev. Carl Olsen
Asst. Ronley Bedard
Corner of 18th & Polk
343-3655
Most free universities, like the
! Free University of New York, are
1 organized outside of institutions,
i Not only is the EC part of an in
istitution of higher education, but
i it has the support of the institu
tion.
Therefore, college credit is
available in most seminars for
those students who wish it.
However, the Experimental Col
i lege, itself, does not give credit
l for those classes which it organ
j izes.
Credit Arranged
Those wishing credit can ar
'range for it through several
methods.
The newest of these is the "77,
177, 277” series, passed by the
Academic Senate last spring.
Through these course numbers
| in each department, a professor
' may form a new course, get the
1 department's approval, and offer
! it through the regular college
catalog or through the Experi
mental College.
Students Develop Course
Thus one person or a group of
students may conceive of a course
he or they wish to have offered,
find a prof willing to sponsor it.
and stick it in the regular catalog.
Professors have co-sponsored
courses with the Experimental
College, and the whole class has
received credit for the course.
There are also many options
open for students through SF
State's independent study pro
gram.
i Last spring SF State's Academic
i Senate, where students have vot
! ing power, also instituted two
more possibilities tor experi
| mental education.
The first of these possibilities
are experimental sections of
multi-eection courses, which would
apply, for example to the dis
| cussion section of a Western Civ
' or English literature course.
Teaching Departures Provided
Experimental departures in the
teaching of courses currently in
the catalog are also provided for.
Here the only requirement is that
the department chairman and the
school dean be kept informed and
that a record be kept.
There are many possibilities
j for student initiation and exclu
sive registration under this sys
j tern.
Through special arrangement
with the professors, students are;
also able to get credit through j
regular classes.
After registering in the regu
lar class, the student usually
makes an informal agreement
with the professor that the stu
dent will fulfill some specified
requirements without attending
or doing the work regularly in
volved with that class.
With this method, a student'
may do outside work and receive !
credit for the course he is regis- j
tered in.
Statewide Exhibit
Given bv Museum
“Have Art, Will Travel — by
land or air" might be the new
slogan of the University Art Mu
seum, Now in its second year of
operation, the University’s pro
gram of circulating exhibits is
drawing enthusiastic response
from all over the state.
Last year about 10,000 persons
viewed 24 exhibitions in 14
Oregon communities. This year,
plans are to nearly double the
number of exhibitions, and to use
an airplane for delivery of exhib
its to outlying cities, according to
Dennis Gould, graduate student
in painting and manager of the
program. '
Formerly, many local communi
ties were unable to provide art
shows because they could not af
ford to pay for exhibits. Last year,
with the inauguration of the
federally-assisted work-study pro
gram at the University, a way
was found. Friends of the Mu
seum Association of the Univer
sity Art Museum, agreed to pay
expenses for the shows, and the
program would be staffed by stu
dents who could qualify for em
ployment under work-study.
Truck Delivers Art
A panel truck, purchased for
the museum’s circulating exhibit
by the Oregon State System of
Higher Education, traveled a to
tal of 15/100 miles last year in
order to deliver and recover art
shows in communities in the
western section of the state.
Communities which are farther
away will soon be able to have the
exhibits flown in by a private air
plane loaned by one of the
Friends of the Museum, Gould
said.
The main source of the shows!
is the University Museum of Art, j
which also provides the over
head and the experience neces- j
sary for implementation of the!
traveling exhibit.
Three circulating exhibits have
been shown to date this year, and
a fourth is now in progress at
Mt. Hood Community College in
Gresham, titled “Recent Acquisi
tion of the Haseltine Collection.” |
New exhibitions which will be
available to local communities
the remainder of the year in
clude: “Portland State College
Faculty Show,” (tentative); Uni
versity of Oregon Faculty,” (ten
tative); “A New Look at Dante’s
Inferno,” “Pacific Northwest Ar
chitects;” “The Architecture of
Pietro Belluschi;” “Northwest
Craftsmen;” “Potters at Oregon,”
(tentative); “Painting With Silk,”
“Collages by Masatsugu Nagasa
ka” and “Fabrics by Jane Gehr
ing.”
What comes next? Possibly a
somewhat more ambitious out-of
state program of shows and ex- i
changes. “We’ve already had some
requests,” Gould said.
Girls' Pool Lessons
Will Begin Sunday
The SU Games Committee is
sponsoring girls’ lessons in pool
in the bottom of the Student
Union beginning Sunday.
The lessons, which are free,
will continue for approximately
six weeks. All girls interested
are invited to come to the first
meeting at 4 p.m. Sunday.
Emerald Baptist Church
19th and Patterson
An American Baptist Church
Worship at 8:30 a.m., 11 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Roger Williams Class (University) at 9:45 a.m.
Roger Williams Fellowship at 6:00 p.m.
Member of the Cooperative Christian Ministry
Jay W. Rea, Campus Minister
First Congregational Church
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
23rd Avenue Beat and Potter
convenient to campua
SUNDAY SERVICES
9:00 a.m. and ll'.OO a.m.
Ministers, Lloyd Stamp and
Wesley Goodson Nicholson
For TVansportation call 340-8741
Grace Lutheran Church
(Missouri Synod)
17th and Hilyard Street 344-2361
Sunday Worship Services: 8:30 and 11 a.m.
Bible Class: 9:45 a.m.
Harold J. Gieseke, Pastor Darrell Reinke. Vicar
■ ^ ~ i
First Baotist Church
Broadway at High
345-0341
i
9:45 a.m
COS Cluuk
with Duncan Keraunon
11 *.m. Service
••Victors' Over thr World"
Dr. Wobater
7:00 p.m. Service
“Revival in F.thlopU"
Rev. Kerry Atkin*
0:30 p.m. College Hour at
Ann Jttdnon Iluu*e, 1332 Kincaid
All College Students Welcome
Christian Science Services
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
Pearl Street at 14th Avenue Eugene, Oregoa
A Branch of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ
Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts
Sunday Services and Sunday School
at 9:30 and 11:00 a m.
Wednesday Evening Testimonial 8:00 p.m.
READING ROOM 84 EAST 10th AVENUE
Open week days from 8:30 a m. to 6 p.m. and
on Sundays and Holidays from 2 to 3 p.m
First Methodist Church
1185 Willamette 343 8764
8:55 AND 11 A.M. SERVICES
Norman L. Conard, Minister
WESLEY FOUNDATION
Next to Co-op Bookstore—1236 Kincaid
Robert Peters — University Pastor
Orthodox
Presbyterian
Church
(a Reformed church)
Sunday Worship Services
11:00 and 7:00 p.m.
Sunday School—all ages—0:45
For information or transportation
call 345-3638
Reverend Glenn T. Black, pastor
3350 Willamette Street
Eugene Friends
Meeting (Quaker)
Sunday Worship
11 a.m.
8 Blocks South of S.U.
Call 349-3962
2274 Onyx St.
Central Lutheran Starch
(The American Lutheran Church)
18th and Potter 340-2053
SERVICE OF WORSHIP—9:30 and 11:00 a.m.
CHURCH SCHOOL CLASSES—9:30 a.m.
Olaf A. Anderson, Pastor
Eric Ottum, Director, Youth and Parish Education
LUTHER HOUSE
Kenneth Wieg, Campus Pastor
1824 University
Newman Catholic Student Center
Sunday Masses: 9:00, 11:00, 12:00 evenings at 5:30 p.m.
Confessions—30-5 Minutes before Mass
Daily Mass at 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Confessions 4:00-4:25
INQUIRY INTO CATHOLICISM
Wednesday Evenings, beginning Oct. 5 from 7:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m.
1850 Emerald Phone 343-7021