Campus Happenings
Today
AFRICAN EXPERT, Lao Ku
per of Ihe department of socio
logy at UCLA will apeak on
"Theories of Plural Societies and
Pluralism” at 3 pin today in
the Uruduale Canter.
THE Oregon community col
lege system will be discussed
by Arbie D. MacDonald, at 7:30
tonight in the EMU. MacDonald,
a Democratic candidate for the
Oregon legislature, is sponsor
ed by the Young Democrats.
lie will discuss, under the
general heading of community
college expansion: the direction
the community colleges are
headed: their role in the over •
all educational system, and the
possibility of the colleges re
placing universities as under
graduate schools.
YOUNG AMERICANS for
Freedom will meet at 7:30 p.m.
tonight in the EMU to con
sider plans for a Buckley for
Mayor of New York demonstra
tion during John Lindsay’s visit
to the University.
THE ASUO University Con
duct Committee will hold a pub
lic hearing on Dormitory Court
systems at 4 p.m. today. All
interested persons arc encour
aged to attend
ALI AKBAR KAHN, noted
Indian virtuoso of the sarod,
will present a concert at 8 p.m.
today at the School of Music Re
cital Mall.
W. DWAINF KICHINS, asso
ciate dean of the graduate
school at the University and also
an associate professor of busi
ness economics, will discuss
today "The Conflict of Quan
titative and Normative Science
in Graduate Studies."
I.ARRY AUSTIN, members of
the New Music Ensemble and
professor of music at the Univer
sity of California at Davis, will
participate in an open session
at the University on Tuesday.
The discussion which is pre
sented in conjunction with the
Festival of Arte, will be held
at noon in room 202 music. One
topic for discussion will be the
concert presented by the New
Music ensemble tonight.
The public is invited free
or charge to both the concert
and the open discussion session.
Future
A BAROQUE music concert
featuring music from t h e
period 1850-1750 will be per
formed by the seven member
Baroque Ensemble Wednesday
at 8 p.m. in the School of Mu
sic Recital Hall.
The concert is free of charge
to the public.
ROGER HARRISON will
speak on “The Social Architec
ture of Experiential Learning”
at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the
EMU. Harrison is an assistant
professor in the department of
Industrial Administration and
psychology at Yale University.
The speech is sponsored by
C'ASEA and the School of Com
munity Service and Public Af
fairs.
LEADING Art Critic, An
thony Emery will give a pub
lic lecture and participate in
an open discussion at the Uni
versity in connection with this
year’s Festival of Arts.
Emery, who is director of the
Vancouver Art Gallery in Van
couver, B.C., will lecture on "The
Vancouver Explosion,” at 8 p.m.
today in ISO Science.
The open discussion will be
held at 4 p.m. Wednesday in
the Museum of Art.
ART EDUCATION majors
should attend an advisement
meeting from 12 to 1 p.m. Wed
nesday in room 234 Lawrence
Hall. Information on art edu
cation programs will be dis
cussed.
THE BEERS family singers,
“traditional folk singers,” will
perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday
in the EMU Ballroom Their
repertoire includes old ballads
and fiddle tunes of early Amer
ica. Admission is $1 per person.
THE CHANGING political
scene in India will be the
subject of the Browsing Room
Lecture at 7 p.m. Wednesday
in the EMU.
Charles P. Schleicher, profes
sor of political science at the
University, will give the 7 p.m.
lecture. Schleicher was in India
in 1686 under a Fulbright award
to work in India.
“WHY A BAHA’I?” will be
tl|e topic of Kim Kimmcrling. a
Eugene junior high school in
structor. at the Baha’i discus
sion meeting at 8 p.m Wednes
day in the Oridcs Lounge.
WALTER L. CREESE, dean
of the School of Architecture
and Allied Arts at the Univer
sity, will give a gallery talk
Wednesday at 4 p.m. on “Ar
chitecture and the Olmsted Ex
hibit." The public is invited to
anenu
Dean Creese has done consid
erable research on Olmsted who
was a noted 19th Century con
servationist and a founder of
the landscape architecture pro
fession. An exhibit of Olmsted
mcmorabillia is on exhibit in
the Lawrence Hall Gallery
through Feb. 24.
Mostly General
FOLK and classical guitar
classes can now be registered
for at the office of the YWCA,
room 15, EMU. Instruction will
continue on a weekly basis for
a 12 week period through spring
term. Classes are limited to 12
students a class
A NATIONAL Science Foun
dation (NSF) grant of $41,040
has been made to the University
for renovation of the Volcan
ology building.
The grant will enable the Uni
versity, which will supply match
ing funds, to complete conver
sion of the old Student Health
Service building to an academ
ic building.
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NS A Seeks New Role...
(C on turned front page 1)
NSA has also been encourag
ing students to use the courts to
obtain their rights, when other
efforts (aii. Working with the
American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU), NSA has filed several
briefs in behalf of students and
has been providing advice to
students on how to use the
courts.
• Educational Reform —
Schwartz says the experimental
colleges which are springing up
all over the country provide a
model for what can be done.
There are five of the people
who helped start San Francisco
State’s highly regarded experi
mental college on the NSA
staff. One of their jobs is to
find out which are the best
experimental colleges and have
available greater information on
them. Schwartz says NSA has
had many requests from stu
dents for advice on how to re
form education, requests which
it can’t always fill because it
lacks funds and staff.
In order to get those re
sources, the education staff is
asking several foundations to
fund a “center for educational
reform” to begin with a pilot
program this spring and full
operation next fall. One of its
goals will be to develop new
curriculum programs. One NSA
staff member, Karen Duncan,
has already developed one which
would give credit to students
for community action work in
the ghettoes.
Schwartz says to use course
and teacher evaluation as the
first effort to develop “hard
issues” in educational reform.
A program funded by the U.S.
Office of Education and run by
NSA’s Greg Movsesyan, is aid
ing 10 pilot campuses in de
veloping course evaluation pro
grams.
• Responding to issues —
NSA, working with three other
student groups and 15 student
body presidents, has filed a
suit asking for an injunction to
halt draft boards from follow
ing Hershey's recommendation
that they draft anti-war pro
r
testers as soon as possible. The
suit is expected to come to trial
shortly.
The other two issues which
NSA will center on are drugs
and Vietnam. NSA has publish
ed a book on drugs and ran a
major drug conference last year.
Schwartz says proudly that stu
dents at Stony Brook, after the
arrest of 33 on marijuana
charges, called the ACLU first
for legal help, then NSA.
• International — Relevant
NSA action on another issue,
Vietnam, is tied up in the whole
effort to develop an entirely
new international program.
When the CIA funding was end
ed, there was no money for in
ternational programs.
This fall NSA’s international
staff has so far been supported
wholly by internal funds such
as overhead from other grants
and membership dues. The staff
totals four, compared to as
many as 15 in the old CIA days.
International Affairs vice
president Dan McIntosh wants
to run an entirely different kind
of program than NSA had be
fore—and not just because the
old programs were funded by
the CIA. “We want to have pro
grams that deal with students’
concerns over foreign policy,”
he says. “We don’t want to just
work with international student
groups like NSA did before.
And we don’t want to run lead
ership workshops.” Unfortun
ately, those are the kind of pro
grams that are easier to fund.
“Foundations would rather give
you money to send a student to
a meeting in some other coun
try,” McIntosh says, “which
might be fine for that person,
but doesn’t have much rele
vance for American students.”
What McIntosh would like to
do is run a series of seminars
for students on American for
eign policy problems. One goal
of such seminars would be to
develop ways of improving uni
versities’ international cur
ricula. “Students want programs
with potential influence,” he
says. “Changing university cur
ricula seems to me one place
where students might have an
impact on foreign policy,” he
adds, “since we obviously have
to change the way Americans
look at the world.” Such an
impact would also meet the
NSA goal of having its inter
national activities relate to do
mestic efforts such as educa
tional reform.
Next: The obstacles facing
NSA.
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