Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 21, 1967, SPRING FASHION AND BRIDAL EDITION, Page Two, Image 2

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    Off-Campus Livinq Option
• • •
< Continued from page 1)
by “people playing spy games. . . . It’s got so you
don’t know who you can trust around here."
McCloskey said investigations for the recent
marijuana raids have included the planting of
spies disguised as students and has been "harm
ful to the atmosphere of open interaction and
trust a campus should have.”
A bill allowing the Senate to place bills be
fore the faculty was to facilitate more efficient
presentation of student-sponsored ideas before
the faculty for consideration.
The Summers Motion, which gave instructors
the option of not allowing results of course sur
veys to be published in the survey bulletin, was
flatly rejected by the student senators as "not
being in the best interests of the student body
and the University."
In other business, the Senate heard a short
report from Student Body President Lee Bollin
ger recommending work in the area of educa
tional innovation.
Bollinger suggested a plan of “student tenure,"
which would allow a student who had fulfilled
ISO hours of study to finish out his remaining
36 hours under a flexible, ungraded program.
Legislation to be considered next week include
a recommendation that a student be sent with
President Flemming to all State Board of Higher
Education meetings, consideration of ROTC’s
status on this campus, defense contracts, and
exemptions from the health class requirement.
Thursday's meeting lasted one hour.
Husband Search Exhausts Coed
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Eliza
beth Freedman says she isn’t ac
cepting any more marriage pro
posals. She already has more than
300 of them.
The 19-year-old sophomore at
the University of Pennsylvania
also says she has given up the
idea of getting married as a
means of getting out of a dormi
tory which she shares with
some 150 other girls.
Miss Freedman placed an ad
in the college newspaper last
week seeking a husband as the
only means to get out of the
dorm. She claimed the girls were
a distraction to her studies.
Applications Due
Students planning to student
teach in elementary junior high
or secondary schools during fall
term 1967 must turn in their
applications by today.
Graduate Center
Opens in May
Headquarters for the Univer
sity Graduate School have been
moved to a new campus location
which contains four times as much
space as the offices occupied by
the Graduate School for the past
several years.
The Graduate School offices,
formerly housed in two different
buildings, now occupy a newly
renovated area on the first floor
of Chapman Hall.
The new quarters contain 4,000
square feet of floor space, com
pared to the 1,000 square feet in
cluded in the former offices in
Johnson and Susan Campbell
Halls.
The old home of the Co-op
store has been remodeled to in
clude six private offices, a large
central reception room, a confer
ence room and space for a Gradu
ate Student Center for the 3,100
graduate students on campus.
The center space will be used
for a study room, a seminar room
for student inter-disciplinary dis
cussions or for lectures on a small
scale. Other plans for its use
are still being reviewed.
Furnishings for the center are
expected to arrive the first of
May.
Other space on the ground floor
and old mezzanine area of Chap
man Hall is now occupied by part
of the staff of the Oregon State
System of Higher Education.
Official dedication ceremonies in
May for the new graduate center
will feature Allan Cartter, chan
cellor and vice-president of New
York University, as the principal
speaker.
Architect for the Chapman Hall
remodeling was Richard Clark
of Eugene. The construction was
done by Lee-Built Construction
Company of Springfield.
NEED
A
BREAK?
9 to 2 Mon.-Thurs.
S.U. Ballroom
Only married coeds or seniors
are allowed to live outside the
dorm.
A college spokesman Monday
described Miss Freedman as 'an
exhausted girl" and said she is
in seclusion and not accepting
any more phone calls.
The spokesman, however, re
layed this comment from her:
“I thing we can work out a solu
tion less drastic than marriage.”
Russian Tour
Offered Students
A four week tour in the Soviet
Union at student rates is being
offered by the Student Division
of the National Council of Ameri
can-Soviet Friendship.
The purpose of the tour is to
promote encounter and discussion
between American and Soviet
young people.
The trip features five days in
a Soviet youth resort, travel
through the Baltic Sea by Soviet
ship and visits to four Soviet Re
publics.
Also included in the program
is Moscow University, Pioneer
Palace and Pioneer Summer
| Camp, a Soviet state or collective
| farm, a Soviet industrial estab
j lishment and many other excur
! sions.
Complete round trip transpor-1
tation from New York City and
all expenses will be approximate
ly $825. The return trip ticket
will allow students to remain in
Europe and fly back to the Unit
ed State independently.
For further information or ap
plication, contact Miss Duna Penn,
655 West Kirby, Detroit, Michi
gan 48202.
Note That Time!
The Righteous Brothers will
appear at 7:30 on April 29 for
the Prom Concert. A printing
mistake on the posters adver
tising the concert said it would
begin at 8 p.m.
Graduate Students
Given Fellowships
■ Lome Render and Eric Mc
Cready, University graduate stu
dents in art history, have been
awarded summer fellowships for
the Ninth Annual Seminar for
Historical Administrators.
Only 12 fellowships were given
to outstanding students through
out the country for the seminar,
which will be held in Williams
burg, Virginia, June 18 to July
28, according to the School of
Architecture and Allied Arts.
Render and McCready will re
ceive an intensive review of the
work done by administrators of
historic houses, museums, restora
tions, historical societies, national
and state historic sites and parks,
and other historical agencies.
There will also be laboratory
training using the facilities pro
vided by the Williamsburg Resto
ration, and field trips will be made
to nearby museums and historic
houses.
Oregon Daily Emerald
Tbe Oregon Dally Emerald la pub
.lshed five times In September and five
days a week during the academic year,
except during examinations periods, by
tbe Student Publications Board of the
University of Oregon.
Second-class postage paid at Eugene
Oregon 97403. Subscription rates $5 per
year, $2 per term.
English Courses
Praised in Study
A national study of college
freshman English courses cites
the course at the University as
“a model of flexibility and so
phistication.”
The study was made by an
English professor at Harvard Uni
versity, Harrison Hoblitzelle. in
cooperation with the Harvard Ex
pository Writing Program.
The University's program in
freshman composition is headed
by Glen A. Love, director of Eng
lish composition.
“Oregon is certainly to be con
gratulated for in effect setting
an example for the other state
universities,” Hoblitzelle wrote.
“Oregon is especially thorough
in keeping the focus upon the
problems of writing.”
In the graduate field, “The Uni
versity presents the best example
af an integrated training program
for graduate students,” the re
port found.
Want to really get results?
Use Emerald Classified Ads
Black Students
Discuss Survey
The possibility of a research
team on the academic survival of
Negroes on campus was discuss
ed at a Black Students Associa
tion meeting Wednesday
The survey could include such
items as the total population of
Negroes on campus, their grades,
years, social life, und academic
attitudes.
Old business included a mem
bership drive. The goal of the
association is “to get our peo
ple together and keep t h e m
hexe.” stressed President Oliver
OTerrall.
Open membership was encour
aged “Anyone that ran relate
to the black man’s problems and
work to alleviate them can join,"
said OTerrall.
Study tables on Sundays and
Mondays from ft-8 p.m were then
set up.
The coalition of the Black Stu
dents Association with the Stu
dents for Democratic Society as
was stated in the recent “chalk
in” article in the Emerald was
denied. It was emphasised that
the group is not utfiltalcd with
SDS.
UO Prof Elected VP
By Health Association
Miriam L Tuck. University pro
fessor of health education, lias
been elected vice president for
health of the American Associa
tion of Health, Physical Educa
tion and Recreation
Miss Tuck has previously serv
ed as vice president of the Ore
gon Association of Health, Phy
sical Education and Recreation.
Business Lecture Set
On Consumers
"Socio-economic Characteristics,
Interaction, and Consumer Inno
vativeness” is the topic of the
Ttusincss Administration lecture
to be held at noon today at the
IrandinR Iron Restaurant in Hu
ge ne.
The speaker will be Ray An
drus, associate professor of mar
keting at the University. The
lecture is open to the public
Airllnr
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APPLY IN PERSON
Mrs. Jan Gormley
Thursday — April 27
tv UU ajn.-ft.'UU p.m.
Susan Campbell Hall
University of Oregon
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Ye« you’ll be proud to »ay,
It Came from Carl Grcvcu
jjr THE ^
f INTERNATIONAL
SILVER COMPANY
BEAlhlFUL
§DESIGN
Ml CIRCLE A
You Are Invited . . . During Our
GRAND OPENING
To come in and select the International Pattern of your choice
on the large circle clock display. If the clock stops at your
selection you will win a prize. Please select by Sat,, April 29th.
Also
In Portland
Your
BankAmericard
welcome here
342-5597
Open Fridays
till 9 p.m.