KESTER SVENDSEN Cancer Claims Department Head Funeral Services Set For Svendsen Today Memorial services for Kester Svendsen, late head of the Uni versity’s English Department, will be held today at 1 p.m. in the Poole-Larson Funeral Home in Eugene. The 56-year-old authority on writer John Milton and Eng lish poetry, died Saturday of cancer after having been ill for several months. Svendsen had taught at the University of Oklahoma, Uni versity of North Carolina, Cen tral State College (Oklahoma) and the University of Texas, be fore coming to the University. In the years he was head of the University's English De - partment, the English faculty tripled. He also originated a weekly series carried by educa tional television known as “The Poet’s Eye.” Svendsen had been president of the Milton Society of Amer ica, a fellow of the Royal So ciety of Arts, and had been listed in “Who’s Who in Amer ica” since 1952. In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate contributions to the Kester Svendsen Memo rial Fund, care of the Univer sity’s Development Fund. 'Student as Nigger' Controversy Follows Professor's Essay "The Student as Nigger,” a California professor’s essay on the state of American higher ed ucation distributed during fall term registration on the Ore gon campus, has become the center of continued controver sy at a number of universities across the nation. The most recent controversy flared at the University of Min nesota where six English pro fessors were temporarily pro hibited from including the es say on required reading lists. The essay was written by Gerald Farber, professor at Cal ifornia State College in Los Angeles, and equates the posi tion of American students with that of the Negro prior to the civil rights movement. Six instructors of freshman English at Minnesota were pro hibited from including the arti cle on course reading lists. English department chairman J. W. Clark, fearing adverse reac tion from students and parents, gin.. Index Campus Happenings .page 3 Editorials .pages 4, 5 Sports .Page 6 Campus Briefs .page 7 Classifieds .page 7 TODAY’S WEATHER Fair through Tuesday with morning fog. High 65, low 35 with frost No chance of rain. ■cniumiiiimii;niii)iiiniiiinininiimiiiniiiiimiiumniiuinniiiifliiiaiBinHnuw banned the essay, calling its language “impudent.” Reaction on campus was one of dismay at Clark’s alleged at tempt to censor the activities of the six teachers. After a week of sporadic picketing and news paper condemnation, Clark re moved the ban. The essay caused less commo (Continued on page 2) Associated Press Survey Reveals 50 Senators Back Bombing Halt WASHINGTON (AP) — At least half the Sen ate favors one plan or another to halt U.S. bomb ing of North Vietnam. Twenty-seven senators of the 85 who responded to an Associated Press survey said they favor an unconditional bombing halt. They are opposed by 18 senators who said there should be no further bombing reduction in the current stage of the war. In between were 23 senators who said they would insist on some matching action by Hanoi, either in reducing the level of the fighting or in compromises at the bargaining table in Paris. The 18 who oppose any reduction of the air predicted that a bombing halt would result in wholesale military infiltration from the North and stepped up, costly ground action in the South by Communist units taking advantage of a toothless American air dragon. The senators who said they want the bombing halted unconditionally—at least on an experimen tal basis—maintained it would be an acceptable risk in an all-out attempt to end the fighting. The AP survey was conducted after the flurry of congressional and political debate sparked by Vice President Hubert Humphrey’s Sept. 30 Viet nam policy speech. Humphrey said that as president he would con sider stopping all bombing “as an acceptable risk for peace.” He said that before acting he would “place key importance on evidence — direct or indirect, by deed or word — of Communist will ingness to restore the demilitarized zone between North and South Vietnam.” He said that should the Hanoi government “show bad faith, I would reserve the right to re sume the bombing.” All senators contacted were asked: "Do you presently favor a halt in the bombing of North Vietnam, either unconditionally or predicated on Hanoi’s advance assurances of a reciprocal ges ture?” Seventeen of those contacted declined to com ment. Fifteen others — many of them on the campaign trail — could not be reached. Seven Northwest senators supported a bombing halt in one form or another. Those 27 senators who said they favor an un conditional end to all bombing, at least on a wait-and-see basis, included Frank Church, D-Ida ho; Ernest Gruening, D-Alaska; Mark ifatlield, R Ore.; Warren G. Magnuson, D-Wash., and Wayne Morse, D-Ore. A group of 23 senators who said they favored a bombing halt if reciprocal action could be won from the Hanoi regime included E.L. Bob Bart lett, D-AIaska, and Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash. Draft Hearing Ponders Full Time Qualifications By LAURIE PADILLA Of the Emerald The University’s definition of a full-time student was question ed Monday at an ASUO Senate hearing on the University’s draft policy. Donald DuShane, University dean of students, said the Uni versity administration was con cerned over its position wherein they "certify student informa tion which is misleading” to the draft boards. Since Selective Service law states that a student is eligible for draft deferment as long as he is a full time student carry ing a normal load throughout the year. DuShane said the Uni versity was afraid it would be misleading the draft boards in cases where students are taking less than the normal load the first term, but plan to catch up in the next two terms. According to University regu lations, a full time student is one who is enrolled for a minimum Percy fo Make Packwood Stop Senator Charles Percy of Il linois will be making an appear ance at the University Thurs day on his whirlwind Oregon tour in support of Senatorial hopeful Robert Packwood. Percy and Packwood will ap pear jointly at a symposium in the EMU ballroom Thursday morning at 10 a.m. Both will open the discussion with gen eral remarks followed by a question and answer session. Percy’s campus appearance will follow an early morning organizational breakfast and press conference at the Eugene Hotel . Packwood compares his cam paign to unseat veteran Sena tor Wayne Morse with Percy’s successful campaign against older rival Paul Douglas in 1966. After the University sympo sium, Percy and Packwood will leave Eugene to continue their campaigning with afternoon ap pearances in Portland. A fund-raising dinner at Port land’s Memorial Coliseum will climax Percy’s Oregon tour. of 12 credit hours. Most Univer sities consider 15 hours as the normal load per term. “The University still backs these students before their draft boards on the assumption that they will pick up (the needed hours) in the next two terms,” DuShane said. Questions arose on the point that some students take more than the normal load each term and consequently are eligible for degrees in less than four years. DuShane said this was a mat ter which was up to the student and his draft board. “Students do not get their degrees until they apply for it. And we’ve had students who do not apply for degrees — even if they have completed the required number of hours — and choose to stay in school and complete the four years,” he said. Special consideration is also given to students who transfer to the University from junior and community colleges, Du Shane said. When students lose some hours in the transfer, the University takes this into con sideration and starts counting the hours taken here, The hours lost by the transfer student are not counted against him when the total number of hours he has taken is brought up by his draft board, DuShane said. Dave Gwyther, acting director of the ASUO Draft Information Center, also questioned the Uni versity’s policy which authorizes the registrar’s office to enter in the "remarks” section of the in formation released by the Uni versity the present study load of the student if it is less than 12 term hours for undergradu ates or nine hours for graduate students. Gwyther said that at a meet ing in acting President Charles Johnson’s office late September, it was agreed among those pre sent that the specific number of hours would not be mentioned. However, DuShane said there was no agreement made to that ell'ect. Gwyther also suggested that the hearings look into how close ly tied the University is with the selective service system. He said the advisers to registrants are appointed by the Selective Service System, with the recom mendation of the University. The advisers, who are Bob Bow lin, dean of men and Walter Freauff, associate dean of stu dents, are listed as general per sonnel of the Selective Service System. Committee Discusses Graduated Tuition A tuition proposal outlined in an Oregonian editorial during September came under discus sion of the ASUO Committee on Higher Education Monday. Randy Farleigh, chairman of the group, outlined a proposal for a graduated tuition charge that would lower costs for stu dents who must take less than a full course load in order to work and pay for their educa tion. The tuition which appear ed in the Sept. 16 Orego nian would place a per term hour charge on each credit hour up to 15 hours so that the charge for 15 hours would be $123, regular tuition. Hours over 15 would not cost extra. In this way, Farleigh ex - plained, students who must take only 12 hours a term so they can work would not have to pay the full tuition and thus be penalized if they must con tinue in school for extra terms. The Oregonian editorial point ed out if a student takes few er hours a term, he must ex tend his studies over seven years rather than the regular four, he must also pay $2,583 in tuition rather than $1,476 as four-year students do. The Committee also discuss ed further work with the State Board of Higher Education and the State Legislature to get the state to take over some of the funding of the University Health Service. Presently the Health Serv ice is financed out of student Incidental Fees and due to the rising costs of medical care the Health Service has been taking increasing percentages of the money from the fees, ac cording to Farleigh. The committee also decided to set up tiles on the voting rec ords of legislators so “we can tell who our friends are.” Draft Symposium OpensWednesday Draft resister David Harris, husband of folksinger Joan Baez, will open a three-day sym posium on draft resistance Wed nesday, Oct. 9, at 8 p.m. in the EMU ballroom. Harris, a founder of The Resistance and former Stanford University student body presi dent, is facing a three-year jail term for refusing induction. He will speak on The Resistance and its role in American soci ety. Joan Baez Harris will per - form at a benefit concert Fri day at 8 p.m. in McArthur Court. Proceeds will go for support of The Resistance.