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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1968)
Campus Happenings Today “THE DILEMMA of Develop ment: the Indian Case,” will be the topic of a lecture by author Margaret Cormack at noon to day in the World Affairs Cen ter. Miss Cormack is the au thor of the books “The Hindu Women” and “She Who Rides a Peacock.” “UNDERGRADUATE Achieve ment and the Institutional Ex cellence” will be examined at 4 p.m. today in the EMU by Al exander Astin. research direc tor for the American Council on Education. Astin is on leave this year from Stanford University. AN ART EXHIBIT entitled “League of Present Day Ar tists,” is on display today through May 21 in the EMU Art Gallery. CLASSICIST Harry Caplan will lecture on “The Classical Tradition: Rhetoric and Oratory” at 8 p.m. today in 180 Prince Lucien Campbell. Caplan is currently a professor at the University of Washington. He is the translator of “Rhetoric ad Herennium.” Future “PSYCHOLOGY in Drama” will he discussed by Robert Ziller, social psychologist and educational researcher at the University, at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Honors College Lounge. Ziller will center his lecture on the modern German docu mentary drama. “The Investi gation” by Peter Weiss. “The In vestigation” opens Friday at the University Theatre. INFORMATION on graduate study abroad and financial aids will be presented at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the World Affairs Briefing Center. “THE IPCRESS FILE” and "The House of Dracula” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 150 Science. Admission is 50 cents, with proceeds going to Ihe American Cancer Society. “PALESTINE DAY” will be sponsored Wednesday by the Arab Student Organization at the University. An information table will be manned all day, and two free films will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in 150 Science. Wed nesday is the twentieth anniver sary1 of the establishment of Is rael. The first film is a press con ference with the United Na tions delegate from Kuwait. The other film is about the “June War” between Israel and the Arab states. Petitions PETITIONS for Kwama and Phi Theta scholarships are due today. Women who will be soph omores and juniors next school year and who need financial help are eligible. SOPHOMORE class council petitions are available in 301 EMU. Petitions for sophomore class secretary are also avail able. They are due by noon next Monday. SECOND AND third year law students may apply for the po sition of student defender. Peti tions are available in 301 EMU and are due Wednesday. TWO LIBERAL ARTS gradu ate positions and one member at-large position are open on the Student Administrative Board. Petitions are available in 301 EMU and are due Friday. Mostly General STUDENTS ENROLLED in Richard Rankin's fall term Edu cation 315 Human Development and Learning class have been ranked in the 83rd national per centile of the Educations Test ing Standardizing Service. Twenty-seven thousand stu dents from 20 schools were test ed. and University students were compared with the ratings of students at the State University of New York, Indiana Univer sity, schools in the Caliiornia state system and Oregon State University. PHOTOGRAPHS by Harry Gross concerning racial unrest are on exhibit at the Taylor Lounge of the Erb Memorial Union tiirough May 17. In Student Court Two Members Resign; Beal Attends Meetings By JOHN JUNKJNS Of the Emerald Two members of Student Court recently resigned. One resigned because of disattisfac tion with Student Conduct Com mittee decisions. At the same time Philip Beal, associate dean of students, has begun attending Conduct Com mittee meetings since he stopped attending early Febru ary. Ted Matthes. faculty mem ber of the court who sent his letter of resignation to Univer sity President Arthur S. Flem ming in early May, said the committee and the court appar ently do not have the same philosophy, since all court de cisions appealed to the commit tee have been overruled. He said this was possibly be cause not all members of the court have a legal background. ‘'The court is unable to fol low the wishes of the commit tee," he said. He indicated there was either a need for more lawyers on the court or a different criteria to judge cases. Matthes also objected to the way academic offenses are han dled by the court systems. • The Student Conduct Code is ineffective in academic inter ests,” he said. He said that he told Flem ming in his letter of resignation he had respect for judgment of student members of the court and felt the faculty should par ticiate in court decisions only in academic offenses. The other member of the court to resign is Jim Farrell, a law student who v/as court chairman. He explained it is tra ditional for the law student on the court to resign in the mid dle of spring term because of the convenience for the stu dent. It also allows the new chairman to “break-in.” he said. Wade Gano is the new chair man. Beal said he has returned to the Conduct Committee “at the specific and personal re quest of the new chairman,” Scott Nobles, professor of speech. Nobles began his chair manship Wednesday, May 1. Don Van Rossen, swimming coach, was former chairman. Beal said he had not been attending the meetings because of his “concern with the po sition taken by the committee relative to my role as associ ate dean.” Issues he raised relative to his role with the committee in cluded the supervisory author ity of the committee over staff relationships within his office, policies for working with tense situations and demands upon his office and the commit tee. He said, “As a result of what happened. I felt I could not work with the committee short of steps being taken to change the situation.” He said with the appointment of a new chairman there was “some hope improvements can be made" in his rclatior.s with the committee. "This p?ovides an opportunity for moving ahead in a cooperative man ner,” he said. While he did not attend the meetings, he said he had con tinued to handle all other of his committee functions, such as compiling minutes and agen da for the meetings and admin istering the court. He said he also attends Stu dent Court hearings, which he did not do prior to the misun derstanding with the commit tee in early February. BOY, WILL SHE EVER LOVE ME! thanks to One Hour “Mortinizing ” ^ the most in DRY CLEANING LAUNDRY in by 10:00 out by 4:00 Alterations and Repairs 1338 Hilyard Also 66 West 29th WEEKLY CALENDAR OF EVENTS All meetings held in the Student Union unless otherwise indicated. MONDAY Varsity Golf: Portland State—Eugene 8:00—Fire & Arson Seminar May 13 - May 17 9:00—United States Marine Corps May 13 - May 17 9:30—News Bureau Stall Mtg. 12:00 Noon—CSPA — Armstrong Discussion Group—-Uses of Leisure Time Faculty Seminar—Faculty Club Spanish Language Table Speech and Hearing Clinic — Faculty Club Mr. Van den Broek C’lBS—Faculty Club Fine and Applied Arts Faculty Meet ing The Dilemma of Development the Indian Case” Dr. Margaret Com stock WABC 4:00—Astin Lecture CSPA Student Faculty Council 0:30 -Counselor orientation 7:00—(hides Business Meeting — Gerl. 1st fir. Op Cit Tutorials Meet the Eugene Draft Board Plan ning Meeting (hades Mothers Meeting—Gerl. 2nd fir. 7:30 -Folk Dance--Gerl. Anx. Prof. Harry Caplan- -180 PLC 8:00 -Campus Draft Committee TUESDAY 12:00 Noon- University Theatre Stall University Theatre Student Board Architecture—Faculty Club OSEA Emerald Chap. No. 88 Regular Meeting Chinese Language Table Courtesy of Your TUESDAY Japanese Language Table Pacific Northwest Personnel Manage ment Assoc. 12:15-—Graduate School—Graduate Stu dent Council Informal Lectureship Series Mr. Eugene Hogan “The Ore gon Primary”—Grad. Center 3:00—Varsity Baseball: Oregon Frosh— Eugene 3:30—SAB House Council—337 EMU 4:00—Y-Dialogue 4:30—Mortar Board 7:00—Drakes Meeting Student Recital: Dan Bochard, Trom bone; James Parcel, Trombone—Re cital Hall 7:30—Psi Chi Initiation WEDNESDAY 10:00—E. C Brown Trust Meeting — Faculty Club 11:00—Youth for Reagan 12.00 Noon—Academic Requirements Comm. Professor Stuart Rich—Faculty Club 1:00—Frosh Baseball: Portland State JV—Eugene 2:00—EMU Stair Meeting 4:00—Meeting of the College Faculty— 180 PLC 6:30—IEC Banquet COS Cabinet Meeting 7:00—Bridge Club—Faculty Club Ayn Rand Society 7:30—Semper Fidelis Pi Mu Epsilon Initiation—Gerl. 2nd fir. Browsing Room Lecture: Dr. Edwin Beal, "Oregon Pioneers in the Netherlands" THURSDAY 9:00—Second Annual Conference Com munity Service & Public Affairs May 16 - May 18 12:00—Martin Jacobsen — Portland In ternational Airport Faculty Librarianship—Faculty Club Molecular Biology Noon Seminar — 314 Science German Language Table 3:00—Mrs. Werdna Wyatt C. S. 4:00—Opportunities in International Business—231 Comm. Phi Beta Kappa—272 Comm. International Coffee Hour—Gerl. 1st fir. Student Administrative Board 6:30—Chess Club Baptist Student Union Special Feature: ‘To Die in Madrid" also 9:00—150 Science 7:00—Student Publications Board The University Symphonic Band. Rob ert Vagner. Conductor and student soloists—Recital Hail 7:30—Lecture Thomas F. O’Dea 8:00—S. Chandrasekhar Physics Dept. Lecture—138 Comm. Assoc, of University of Oregon Wom en 8:30—Mortar Board Initiation — Gerl 2nd fir. 9:00—Black Student Union FRIDAY 12:00 Noon—Russian Language Table Portuguese Language Table O'Dea Lunch—Faculty Club Prof. Berger Luncheon Dept, of Sociology—Faculty Club 3:00—Varsity Baseball: Univ. of Cali fornia—Eugene CO-OP STORE FRIDAY 3:30—Frosh Baseball: Oregon State Rooks—Eugene 4:00—Friday at 4 — Quad 6:00—Outdoor Program No-Host Din ner 7:00—Student Recital: Gerald Farmer, Clairnet—Recital Hall 7:30—Russian Film: "Summer to Re member” "A Ballad of Love” 8:00—Symposium on Mountaineering Natural History Society Meeting: Jim Hickman "Natural History of West ern Cascades"—123 Science The Investigation—Univ. Theatre American Chemical Society Meeting— 16 Science SATURDAY D00—Varsity Baseball: Stanford — Eugene Frosh Tennis: Oregon State—Eugene 2:00—Kenedy Lecture: Second Annual Conf. Community Service & Public Affairs—Hayward Field Tea University of Oregon Dames Club —Gerl. 2nd fir. 7;00—The University Chamber Chorus James Miller Director—Recital Hall 8:00—The Investigation—Univ. Theatre SUNDAY 2:30 & 8:00—Sunday Feature Movie: "Two Women’’ 4:00—Mu Phi Patroness' Solo Contest— Recital Hall 7:00 & 9:15—University Film Society: Une Femme Est Une Femme (A Woman is a Woman) — Univ. Th. All items must be turned in to M101 of the EMU by 9 a m. Thurs day to be included in this calendar.