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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1972)
ASUO senate candidates listed Residence—Off Campus: Position no. 1—Cliff Zukin; Position no. 2—Howard Svigals, Tom Purtzer, Donald MacGillivray, Jean Baker; Position no. 3—Paul Konka, Keith Parrish, Richard Gem meel; Position no. 4—Nick Kerns, Bernice A. Hansen, Joe Driggers, Ed Haney, Teunis Wyers, Raoul David Lambert. Residence—Dorm: Bean position—Michael Ignatius. Rob Solomon. Pat Callahan. Class: Freshman position— Dean Nolan, Bryce Zabel, Jerry Thomas, Trudy E. Nutter, Jane E. Marr, Cole D. Timberman, James Edward Tinker; Junior position—Darrell Paul Murray, Harley Leiber, Tim Mabry, Stephen Alfred Maizels; Graduate position—Douglas Marshall, C. Elane MacGillivray. Academic Division, Liberal Arts—Humanities; Anne Holt, Betty Jean Harris, Steve Ar mitage, Dan “Buster” Heims, and M. Keith Hamner. Liberal Arts—Social Science; Richard Sanchez, Sandy Gordon and William Kirkpatrick. Liberal Arts—Natural Science; Cathy Ralston, Gary L. Ball, Pat Bonner, David Bussman and Leo A. Simmons. Journalism; David J. Bushnell and James W. Russell Law; Clayton H. Brant and Steve Joseph. Business; Robert C. Beattie, Bryce C. Bankert, Ross M. Lienhart and Peter M. Feibleman. Education; Barbara Woodside and Marty La Pointe. Music-Library; Thomas Bonner, David Bartel and William Randolph Bourne. CSPA-International Studies; O. Elizabeth Lapping and Douglas C. Chambers. Supportive Services; Rosa Maria Solano and Daphne L. Woods. • Ethinic-At-Large Division, Black Student; Johnnie Mae Parks. Chicano Student; Gloria Gonzalez. Foreign Student; David Cheng. Native American Student; Vici Partsafas. At-Large No. l; Jim Beraau, Hank Itkin, Thomas J. Hartfield, Randy Roach and Dottie Flores. At-Large No. 2; Kevin Lin ^Jgren, J. Dennis Grubbs, Dan Barkovic, Ann Olson and Bill Beardsley. At-Large No. 3; Roger W. Wyatt, F. Patrick Barry, Larry Taylor, Christine Chisholm. At-Large No. 4; David Lynn Wimmer, Gail Hoffnagle, Andy Holcomb, Lance Lee Herrington. S$f'Z&i Free Clinic Bring your amplifier, receiver, and preamplifier for free testing. ARE YOU Monday Nov. 20th 12 to 8 Tuesday Nov. 21st 12 to 7 GETTING WHAT YOU PAID FOR? Have your amplifier and receiver checked at Oregon Typewriter & Recorder, any make or model, no matter where you bought it. CLINIC SPECIALS SCOTCH RECORDING TAPE SCOTCH 150-1800ft.lmil. Reg. $5.55 Sale $2.35 SCOTCH 203-1800 ft. 1 m i I. Low Noise Reg. $6.85 Sale $3.50 p—-COU PON | KOSS Headphones j 20% off -COUPON -COUPON— TDK Cassette low noise $1*00 with trade in ■-COU PON C-6(fj *.v I 55: STEREO LOFT OREGON TYPEWRITER and RECORDER Co. 30 E. 11th Ave. 342-2463 The Oregon Daily Emerald is pihliriwi Monday through Friday during the school year, except during exam and vacation periods, and (our times weekly during summer session by the Emerald Board of Directors at the University of Oregon. Second class postage paid at Eugene. Oregon, 97403. Subscription rates: (1) University of Oregon student and faculty staff subscription rates are based on annual contracts between the Emerald and the ASUO and the Emerald and the University ad ministration The rate of these subscriptions is approximately $2.00 per year. til) Special subscriptions for persons not included in category 111 are available at a rate of *10 00 per year. Suoo per academic year and *3.50 per term Bill Bucy Editor Al Pheln6 General Manager On Campus New student union to be considered There will be a meeting today at 1:30 p.m. in 31S EMU for all in terested representatives from undergraduate departmental student unions. This is concerning the feasibility of and potential for the formation of an interdepartmental student union. Contact Teunis Wyers (Sociology) 686-3803 or Douglas Rake (Anthropology) 343-5804. Candidate's ballot slogan omitted ASUO vice-president Fred Loveys has announced that a ballot slogan for Thomas Hartfield, running for at-large senator number 1 in the ASUO elections today and Tuesday, was inadvertently (Knitted from the ballot. The slogan, according to Loveys, should read, “Legalize beer and marijuana on campus, get concerts back to Mac Court.” Ombudsman sessions start today The University chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) will hold ombudsman sessions for students and faculty of the University starting Monday, Nov. 13. Volunteer members of the AAUP chapter will take daily shifts from 2 to 5 p.m. in 117 EMU to attempt to solve some of the problems faced by individuals in a growing university. Grace Graham, professor of education, is coordinator of the ex perimental project. Both the Associated Students of the University and the EMU are cooperating in the project, she said. Grants offered for Chinese majors Five scholarships at $100 each will be available for students majoring or intending to major in Chinese. Selections will be made by the end of the Fall term. Judgment will be based on scholastic distinction and financial need. Interested persons may contact Prof. Palandri at the Department of Classics and of Chinese and Japanese. The grantor is Roger Hong (class ’65) of Portland, and was Prof. Palandri’s student of Chinese ten years ago. Ecology topic of talk Rezneat Darnell, coordinator for the United States of the Task Force for the Conservation of Fresh-water Ecosystems, set up as part of the International Biological Program, will speak today at 4:30 p.m. in Room 123 Science on the topic “Natural Area Preservation”. The public is invited. Darnell is Professor of Oceanography and Biology at Texas A. A M. University. OSPIRG seeks directors Applications are now available in the O.S.P.I.R.G. office, EMU Room M-lll, for those students interested in a position on the O.S.P.I.R.G. local board of directors. The positions are open to all students and shall be decided in a general election concurrent with the A.S.U.O. elections, Nov. 20-21. The deadline for receiving the applications is Wednesday, Nov. 15, 1972. ‘Floating Campus' lecture slated Experiences as teachers on “World Campus Afloat” and ob servations on the state of education and communications processes in places visited while on cruise will be related by Thomas and Joy Ballinger in a public lecture Monday, Nov. 13, at the University. The informal lecture, which will be illustrated with slides, will be at 2:30 p.m. in Studio B of the Audio-Visual Media Center, basement level, University Library. The Ballingers will discuss their experiences as members of the Africa-Asia cruise of World Campus Afloat during Spring Semester, 1972. World Campus Afloat is a project of Chapman College and Orange County, California. On the cruise, Professor Ballinger, acting head of the Department of Art Education of the University’s School of Architecture and Allied Arts, taught art history. Mrs. Ballinger taught linguistics and served on the library staff of the shipboard university. Part of their dialogue will concern the libraries visited on the cruise and the challenge of library service on board a ship. The program is sponsored by the Seminar on Libraries Abroad of the School of Librarianship. Freshmen hopefuls must file Freshmen wishing to run for Freshman class president and vice president must file with the ASUO Secretary in 306 EMU by 2 p.m. Wednesday. Vacant class office positions will be filled during the general election on Nov. 20 and 21. Shuttle bus confusion clarified in statement A recent article in the Emerald described a shuttle bus service operated by the State of Oregon’s Department of General Services A limited schedule of service is available between Eugene, Salem and Portland. Confusion has arisen over who, may use the shuttle buses. The following is an excerpt from a General Services Division memo regarding travel methods. “Travel on buses is limited to of ficial use. Tickets are available at all motor pools in books of ten or twenty. Each ticket is good for a single one-way trip and costs $1. Ticket purchases must be made or approved by authorized agency personnel. All purchases will be billed to using agency on a monthly basis.” Official business is defined as “any program that has been ap proved by the legislature.” Individual students may not use the shuttle buses. ASUO organizations may purchase ticket books for use by individual organization members on state business.