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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1969)
Campus happenings Today FOREIGN STUDENTS will feature and show their countries’ traditions at an international coffee hour at 7 p.m. at Delta Zeta, 1883 University St. THE PHYSICS Department will present “Colloquium,” fea turing “Alpha Scattering and the Rotational Model,” a lecture by David Hendrie of the Uni versity of California, Berkeley, at 3:30 p.m. in 16 Science. Cof fee and doughnuts will be serv ed in Rm. 122 at 3:15 p.m. THE FINAL raku workshop in the 1969 Festival of Arts program will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. today in the ceramics studio of Lawrence Hall. Raku, the art of pottery making, will be demonstrated by Philip Eagle, instructor at the Port land Museum Art School. Any one is invited to attend but par ticipation is limited to 20. Future THE SAN FRANCISCO Mime Troup will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday in the EMU Ballroom. There will be a 50 cents admis sion charge for the performance which is sponsored by the Speakers and Debates Bureau. ERWIN CANHAM, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, will be principal speaker at the 50th annual Oregon Press Con ference to be held at the Uni versity Friday and Saturday. He will deliver the 23rd annual Allen Memorial Lecture at the Friday luncheon in the EMU. Canham served as vice chair man of the U.S. delegation to the U N. Conference on .Free dom of Information at Geneva in 1948 and a year later was picked as alternate U.S. dele gate to the U.N. General As sembly. The press conference is jointly sponsored by the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Associ ation and the University’s School of Journalism. NIYOKO NAKAYA, pianist from New York City, will be presented in a piano recital at 8 p.m. Feb. 22 in the Recital Hall by the Nu Chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, an international professional music sorority. Miss Nakaya has appeared in concert in Tokyo, Chiba, Osaka, and Mito, Japan as prize winner in the labZ-biS disi mi-japan Mainichi Music Competition. Tickets are available at the School of Music office, $1.50 adults, $1 students. THE GRADUATE History Club will show “Seventh Seal" starring Ingrid Bergman from 7-9:15 p.m. Friday in 150 Sci ence. Admission is 50 cents. DEMOCRATIC MEMBERS of the Legislature will be present to discuss the current status of the sales tax proposal and other legislation when the central committee of the Democratic Party meets at 1:30 p.m. Sat urday in Harris Hall. THE INDIA STUDENTS’ As sociation have scheduled a fea ture film in Hindi with English subtitles at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in 180 PCL. Tickets are 50 cents each. DONALD TREADGOLD, his tory professor at the University of Washington, will speak on “Stages of Western Intellectual Influence on Russia and China” at 3:30 p.m. Friday in the EMU. His talk here is sponsored by the Russian and East European Studies Committee and the As ian Studies Committee. IT'S A VALENTINE TIME IN '69 with the Tom Jacobus Quartet FRIDAY, Feb. 14th — 8:30-11:30 P.M. $1.50 for Couples or $1.00 for Singles WESTMORELAND COMMUNITY CENTER 1545 W. 22nd Free Refreshments ASUO Speakers & Debates presents : "SF" MIME TROUP SATURDAY, February 15 EMU Ballroom 8:00 P.M. 50c per Person SIX PEOPLE CAN'T TAKE OVER A UNIVERSITY —but maybe 14,000 can Two, or three, or four, or sometimes as many as six students assemble in an office on the third floor of the EMU . . . Eating lunch, doing homework, talking over last week's crises, answering the phone, or handing out course proposal forms to students and faculty members, willing to devote a few hours to making a "maybe" course a reality. . . Sending and receiving letters; communi cating ideas north, east and south; informing moms, dads, faculties, departments, taxpay ers, legislators, et. al about the workings of their organization. Letting everyone . . . but the students on their campus . . . know what and why they are. Six active students form the core of the SEARCH program at the University of Ore gon. Six active students have direct recourse to a channel, a viable, working channel to educational policy and curriculum change within the University structure. At SEARCH, we are in a position to place legitimate, student initiated reforms in front of members of the faculty, administration, or members of the various departments on cam pus. We are, in short, prepared to give any student the opportunity to have something to say about the education he is receiving. So how about it? Are you game for legitimate revolt? (If you have an idea about a new course, ex pansion of pass/no pass grading, or anything else relevant to your education, bring it to the SEARCH Office, Room 305, Erb Memorial Union.)