Four-day survival teach-in begins tonight
A four-day University environ
mental teach-in gets under way
tonight in McArthur Court with
three presentations introducing
the teach-in’s theme of “Life
Styles For Survival.”
Tonight’s kickoff activities be
gin at 7 p.m. with a multi-media
presentation, “Where Are You
At?” by University Sociology Prof.
John MacGregor.
An 8 p.m. talk on “A Case
Against Affluence” by Willy Un
soeld, national executive vice
president of Outward Bound, fol
lows MacGregor's show. The
evening’s final event is a 9 p.m.
presentation by Cheyenne - Crow
Indian Chuck Storm who will
show rituals in harmony with
nature.
Some 17 additional activities
will be staged in the Time Out
For Survival (teach-in) program
on campus Wednesday through
Friday, including talks, panels,
workshops and films related to as
pects of environmental aware
ness.
A Survival Faire will be held
on campus Wednesday through
Friday in addition to the Time
Out For Survival activities. It
will include booths, arts, crafts,
displays, music, dramatic skits
and bike and bus tours.
Thirteenth Avenue will be
closed between Kincaid and Onyx
streets during the Survival Faire.
According to University teach
in coordinator Bob Greene, to
night's McArthur Court events
are designed “to project an over
flow of what the ecology issue is
all about.”
MacGregor’s presentation fea
tures as many as five slides sim
ultaneously projected on a 40-by
60-foot screen by local media de
signer Bruce Bittle, along with
oral commentary and tapes. It
links today’s environmental cri
sis to basic social values which
have fostered despoliation of the
environment.
“Where Are You At?” was pre
sented on campus twice in Feb
ruary, and has since been shown
six times to high schools through
out the state. Widespread favor
able reaction to the show has
prompted many more requests
for its use. MacGregor and Bit
tie will be making the presenta
tion another half dozen times this
week around the state.
“This presentation should serve
as a good introduction to what
the whole teach-in is trying to
do,” says MacGregor. “It views
the environmental crisis as some
thing which can’t be solved by
just passing a few laws and spend
ing more money here and there,
but as something which will re
quire major changes in our at
titudes and life-styles in order to
be effectively dealt with,” he
added.
Unsoeld is flying from h i s
home in Andover, Mass., to take
part in teach-in activities at the
University and Oregon State and
Portland State Universities.
In 1963 Unsoeld became the
first man to scale the western
Rally, benefit scheduled
Group seeks bail for protesters
A 12:30 p.m. rally on the EMU
Terrace and a march to the ROTC
drilling grounds are scheduled for
today by the “April 15 move -
ment,” a group formed by partici
pants in last week’s anti-ROTC ac
tivities.
According to the group, the
rally will center upon efforts to
raise bail money for four Univer
sity students arrested last week
in the aftermath of Wednesday’s
demonstration and rock-throwing
incidents.
The four were released from
City-County Jail late Monday aft
ernoon after posting $300 bail
each.
The march, scheduled to follow
the rally early in the afternoon,
will culminate in a “christening
ceremony” in which, the group
indicated, the property used by
the ROTC for drilling purposes
will be renamed “Ho Chi Minh
Field.”
A benefit will be held today
and Thursday in an effort to raise
bail money. At 7:30 p.m. to
night a band will perform on the
EMU Terrace. From there partici
pants will go to 123 Science for
three films scheduled to begin at
8:30 p.m.
The “April 15 movement” an
Reseacher plans
to attend hearing
A faculty conduct hearing will
resume at 9 a.m. today in t h e
Johnson Hall conference room
for a University research associ
ate charged by the administra
tion with “conduct flagrantly un
becoming a faculty member.”
The session’s primary partici
pant, defendant Irving Wainer,
told the Emerald Monday that he
does plan to be present at the pro
ceedings along with his counsel.
Wainer and his student de
fender Jeffrey Freed walked out
of the committee’s first meeting
last Monday in a protest against
what they called unfair adminis
tration of justice.
Contacted Monday, however,
Wainer told the Emerald that he
would be present at today’s ses
sion primarily because University
President Robert Clark had indi
cated to students last week that
he would have charges against
ROTC instructors who didn’t al
low students to audit military
science courses, investigated if
they were submitted to him in
written form.
The Oregon Dally Emerald is pub
lished Monday thru Friday, September
»o May, except during exam and vaca
tion periods. Semi-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 Eugene.
Oregon 97403. Subscription rates $10
ner year. $3.50 per term.
Paul Brainerd Editor
Robb Miller Business manager
nounced its plans at a noon rally
Monday on the EMU Terrace
which included a series of speak
ers and appeals for contributions
to the bail fund.
The nearly 100 individuals in
attendance first heard sophomore
Howard Kimeldorf, arrested last
week in front of the ROTC build
ing for assault and battery, inter
terring with a police officer, and
isorderly conduct, describe the
conditions he saw in the down
town jail.
Kimeldorf said that Ralph
Nussbaum, a University senior
charged with the felony offense
of “inciting a riot” and still in
custody, was placed in isolation
in “the most barbaric cell I’ve
ever seen.”
He said that over-all “the sani
tation conditions are like from
the 19th century,” that the food
and treatment of prisoners was
very bad, and that they were al
lowed little information about
what was occurring in the out
side world.
Kimeldorf described the atmos
phere in the jail as one of “con
stant psychological pressures,”
which he said were part of the
“process of dehumanizing the in
dividual and making him more
like an animal.”
face of Mt. Everest as a part of
the American Mt. Everest Expe
dition. On that expedition a fel
low OSU graduate, Jake Breiten
bach was killed and Unsoeld will
be dedicating a memorial to his
former comrade in Corvallis
Wednesday.
He was also director of the
Peace Corps program in Nepal in
1964 and ’65.
Unsoeld’s talk tonight will sug
gest that our society’s level of
affluence is not improving the
quality of life throughout the
world, but rather is detracting
from this quality by triggering
widespread environmental de
generation.
“Indian Medicine Wheel Sym
bolism’’ is the topic of Storm’s
I.-- ~ ™ -
9 p.m. address. He will show
slides and explain the spiritual
integration of American Indians
with nature through such things
as the Cheyenne sundial dance
and the Medicine Wheel.
Storm, whose Indian name is
Hyemeyhosts, has recently been
touring the West to speak with
groups on concept of nature-relat
ed styles which is much differ
ent from the one held by the
dominant American culture.
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