Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 13, 1968, Page Three, Image 3

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    House Imposes
Monetary Control
On Activists
WASHINGTON — House
members have shown their dis
pleasure over continuing fer
ment on college campuses by
voting to deny federal loans,
scholarships and grants to stu
dents participating in serious
campus uprisings.
The recent student - adminis
tration power struggle at Co
lumbia University was mention
ed repeatedly Thursday as the
House voted 306 to 54 for an
amendment to prevent federal
financial aid from benefiting stu
dents joining in disorders that
disrupt a college's operations.
Sponsored by Rep. Louis Wy
man. R-N.H., the amendment
would bar federal assistance
funds from going to any student
who refuses to obey a lawful
order of the college authori
ties and is determined by those
authorities to have taken part
in activities that lead to a dis
ruption of operations at the
college.
The amendment would not
affect participants in disorders
occurring before final enact
actment. The proposal has not
been voted on yet by the Senate.
The Oregon Dally Emerald is pub
lished Monday thru Friday, Septem
ber to May, except during exam and
vacation periods. Bi-weekly June thru
the first week of August, once a week
the last three weeks of August, by the
Publications Board of the University
of Oregon.
Second-class postage paid at Eu
gene, Oregon 97403. Subscription rates
$8 per year, $3 per term.
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world’s
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car.”
Lyle Engel,
Executive Editor,
^American Rodding Magazine
Peugeot cruises off
with first place in the
East African Safari Rally
Ninety percent of
the cars that started
this year's rally didn't
make it. Peugeot came
through first, just
like last year, and
the year before.
It’s very simple. Peugeot Is
built like a jungle animal: lean,
rugged, and graceful. No
chromium frills. No excess
weight No needless
horsepower.
Yet, underneath all that tough
ness is a lifetime friend.
PEUGEOT^
Win a 1968
PEUGEOT
See Your
Mayfair Store
S-L Motors, Inc.
9th & Main St.
Springfield
Open Evenings till 10 p.m.
Nobel Laureate Outlines Problems
Facing Next American President
By CHRIS HOUGLUM
Of the Emerald
"Senator Eugene McCarthy
represents a need for responsible
leadership in strange times,”
said Harvard professor George
Wald. 1967 Nobel laureate in
medicine and physiology, in de
livering an ASUO-sponsored lec
ture on “Science, Politics and
Conscience” Sunday night.
"His honesty, integrity, and
directness make him most like
ly not to be talking for a party,
a machine, or for himself, but
rather for the American peo
ple,” Wal
Address proximately 100
people in 1 ence. Wald, who
has received recognition from
Time Magazine as one of the
nation's ten best educators, dis
cussed the national and inter
national problems to be faced
by a new chief executive.
He outlined the issues McCar
thy and other prospective can
didates must face, categorizing
them as "frightfully big, mod
erate and immediate.”
“Immediate problems include
the Vietnam war,” he said. “So
far as the issues in the present
contest are concerned, the war
is almost trifling in the bal
ance.
"Moderate-sized problems are
those which deal with Ameri
can life and American way of
life.
“And the largest problems
are those which involve the hu
man condition itself, and, in a
very real sense, the fate of
man.”
The large-problem picture is
twofold, Wald said, with the
first problem being “the need
to gain control of the popula
tion. We’re embarrassed by our
capacity for reproduction.
Senate Says Additions
Upset Search Group
Editor’s note: Deadline pres
sures Thursday night prevented
complete coverage of the ASUO
Senate meeting. The following
is a report of the rest of the
action taken at that meeting.
The ASUO Senate passed a
resolution concerning the Presi
dential Search Committee which
stated that the addition of three
more members to the commit
tee upset the balance agreed
upon with Chancellor Lieuallen.
The Senate felt this action
should not have been taken with
out the addition to the commit
tee of another student member.
It was also agreed that there
should be no alumni on the
committee.
In other action, the Senate
passed a bill abolishing the
oath of office. The contention
was “the filing of a petition for
office and subsequent election
is a defacto affirmation of an in
dividual’s interest in student
government.”
A bill introduced by Paul
Newman proposing a recorded
telephone newsletter to keep
ofl'-campus students informed of
the actions of the ASUO was
also passed.
The Senate passed a recom
mendation that “the Student
Administration Board (SAB)
transfer the function of choos
ing a performer for a Special
Attraction to the Social Division
of the ASUO Program Council.”
Tom Fagan’s bill setting up
guidelines for the ASUO Aids
Commission also was passed by
the Senate. According to the
provisions of the bill, the fund
will be administered by seven
students appointed by the ASUO
president. These seven students
will be responsible for estab
lishing policy on loans and
grants to be given from the
fund.
The Senate also passed a reso
lution appropriating $50 to the
Office of the Minority Group
Advisor.
A by-law amendment, intro
duced by Bob Winger and pass
ed by the Senate, called for
the Committee on Public Affairs
to broaden its scope. Instead of
dealing solely with “state, na
tional, and international affairs
and issues concerning students,”
it will now be concerned with
state, national and international
issues.” Winger’s bill also es
tablished a Committee on Off
Campus Students.
A massive revamping of Sen
ate by-laws proposed by Bill
Kerlee was postponed until the
next meeting.
SENIORS:
SUDS!
(All you can drink!)
FOOD!
(All you can eat!)
Senior Picnic
Armitage Park
1-6 P.M. MAY 18
* Student body cards and I.D. will be checked
“Our other problem is that
of nuclear war, one of the
many insanities forced upon us
as ’practical’ and real,’ the de
structive potential of which is
maintained only through a bal
ance of terror.
"The frightening thing about
these problems is that we have
so little time to deal with them
—they were upon us almost be
fore we realized it,’’ Wald said.
Two problems are of devas
tating import, Wald said, the
first being race, the second be
ing “the degree to which the
U.S. has become something of
a military state, prey to the
military - industrial complex’
Eisenhower warned us about.’’
Wald criticized national ex
penditures for military might
to the neglect of domestic is
sues, and predicted “a real night
mare” in the possible future
clash of government military
personnel with rioting Negroes.
“In a sense,” he said, “Black
Power is a fine idea, in its at
tempt to solve problems and ob
tain representation. But the
idea of violence could have ter
rifying repercussions, particu
larly if the army moves into our
cities to maintain law and or
der. Violence and civil diso<
bedience are dangerous tools,
and people must recognize how
dangerous they are.”
Wald ended his talk on the
encouraging note, “There is
still a chance for us to sur
mount these problems — in
fighting for the side we believe
right. It’s a time in which no
one can stand aside. History
doesn’t happen—it is made. And
so it is made by us.”
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