Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 21, 1966, Page Two, Image 2

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    State Board to Consider
Policy on Co-op Housing
PORTLAND (Special) — The
State Board of Higher Education
will probably adopt a policy on
co-operative housing that will
have the institution select the
students who live in such hous
ing.
The board will also consider
liberalizing of its policies on mar
ried students at its next meet
ing, December 12 and 13.
A special committee of the
board adopted a nine-page pol
icy statement on student housing
Friday. Hie policies will not be
final until the full board votes on
them in December.
The policy on co-operative hous-1
ing would:
• Have the institutions select ■
the students.
• Require the rental contracts |
to be between the institution and j
the student, not with any group;
or organizations.
• Require the units to pay for 1
their own construction and oper
ating costs through the fees paid
by students to live there.
The committee also voted 3-1
to eliminate another policy rec- j
ommendation which would have i
withheld any further co-operative I
housing (except the project plan
ned at the University, until after,
the operation of the present i
housing is evaluated.
Board President Charles Hol
loway pointed out that any addi
tional housing will have to come
to the board anyway.
The committee also recom
mended to the full board the abo
lition of several policies on mar
ried student housing.
The two policies which will be
abolished if the board follows
the committee’s recommenda
tions:
• A requirement that the
board review an occupancy pol
icy for all new married student
housing.
• A general policy that insti
tutions build a single student
housing first: then other types
of auxiliary projects, such as stu
Final Emerald
Schedule Set
Only two issues of the Em
erald will be published this
week, today and Tuesday, due
to the Thanksgiving holiday.
Publication will resume No
vember 29 and continue through
Friday of that week. Only
three papers will be publish
ed the next week, on Decem
ber 6, 7, and 8.
Law School Site...
(Continued from page 1)
Franklin—the School of Architec
ture addition—was postponed.
The proposed building has
aroused a good deal of controver
sy between the department of ar
chitecture and the department of
fine arts within the school.
Flemming has taken over the
handling of the matter, at least
for the time being.
Architecture School Dean
Walter Creese opposed putting
the question off.
Saturday the Planning Commit
tee toured the site first, then re
turned to the Johnson Hall con
ference room for discussion.
Dean of Administration Wil
liam C. Jones pointed out that a
decision to keep teaching facil
ities on the present campus will
force high rise construction on
the campus.
William Simpson, professor of
chemistry, suggested that present
athletic fields might be moved
across Franklin, freeing that
space for academic uses.
J. O. Lindstrom, director of fis
cal affairs and the committee
chairman, said construction on
the pioneer cemetery area would
increase the educational plant
greatly, but Jones pointed out
that no legislative action on that
is planned for the 1967 Legisla
ture.
In other committee business:
• The committee recommend
ed to Flemming that the parking
lot at 15th Avenue and Moss
Street, near Bean Hall, be open
ed up to dormitory residents.
• The committee appointed
Lutes and Amundson, Springfield
architects, to study the develop
ment of property owned by the
Eugene Sand and Gravel Com
pany.
| The University is now negoti
i ating for purchase of the land,
I which is on the south bank of
' the Willamette River. There is
8200,000 in the State System of
Higher Education’s capital con
struction budget for 1967-69 for
development of the area for park
ing.
• In response to a recommen
dation made Thursday by the
ASUO Senate, Lindstrom said the
new computer center, now under
construction north of Common
wealth Hall will be more than
one level. It is only in its first
stage. The Senate “condemned”
the site.
• Lindstrom ruled a letter by
Fred Mohr, assistant to the dean
of Graduate School,out of order
because it wasn’t on the agenda.
The letter was in response to an
editorial in Friday’s Emerald
about the architecture building
question.
Coming This Week
DIGGER'S GUIDE
1966-67
A Totally New Format
For This Years Student
Directory
50c
' Will be on sale at
S.U. MAIN DESK
dent unions; and then married
student housing.
Holloway called both policies
“repugnant.”
He added. "Wc have gone be
yond the preview of the board
in dictating a day-to-day policy on
the use of married student hous
ing.”
University President Arthur
S. Flemming pointed out that any
time the University decides to
build married student housing,
such proposals will have to
come to the board.
"We must be flexible to work
toward meeting our needs,” he
said.
The motion passed 3-1.
On both 3-1 votes the lone dis
senter was Mrs. Elizabeth John
son, board member from Red
mond.
HC Talk Centers
On Blake College
The topic of discussion at the
Honors College Discussion at 8
p.m. today will be Blake College,
which founder-director Raymond
Peat decided to move to Eugene
this fall after live years in Mex
ico.
Blake has been from its con
ception an experimental or “free”
institution offering a general
rather than a specialized, type of
education. Designed to be small,
there are presently five teachers
and four students. There arc no
formal subjects and no grades or
hours. Diplomas are granted by
examination.
Directions, goals and philoso
phies vary greatly within the
college. The structure is oriented
more toward a “Community of
Scholars” than toward a tcach
er-administration-student trichot
omy. The viewpoint of the col
lege is that all members of the
community are teacher-students.
NOW AT
HULING BUICK
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
We want your busineti and
we are willing to pay for itl
DICKGANZ
Mgr. Student Fleet Division
All University student personnel are entitled to special
discounts which may be obtained after completion of
purchase. Call me, Dick Ganz for details.
THANKSGIVING SPECIAL
1963 MGB ROADSTER, Red with White Top. Top condition
throughout.
$1,299
No Finance Problems at Huling.
You Pick Your Own Way to Pay.
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