Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1973)
house plants everything foi^the tnbooR. gardener. pots-soils-fcooK£ -f-e^ulizers * growing lights • auze infhrrn&tion 1195 high st. D6L. 342-2735 The Great Northwest \ \ Art Supply Company \ 720 EAST 13 th -2 blocks from campus OPEN: MON.-THUR. 9-9 FRI. & SAT. till 6 SUN. 12-5 asuo ana me emerald and me University administration The rate ef these subscriptions is appreximately t2.ee par year. <I1) Special subscriptions ter persans not included in catupery (1) are available at a rate at Slt.OO per year. se.ee per academic vaar and S3.M per term. U aid. Bill Bucy Editer Al Phelps General Me neper | On Campos ] Map Library given atlas The University Map Library has been given a copy of the National Atlas of Guatemala, Central America as a token of appreciation for collaboration provided by the University’s Geography Department faculty and students. The Atlas, which is largely a product of the University Geography Department, has recently been published by the Institute Geografico Nacional of Guatemala. Gene E. Martin, University professor of geography, did the original planning for the Atlas. Mi chad W Donley, now with the Department of Landscape Architecture, and Bruce Bechtol, of the faculty of Chico State College, Calif., did much of the work, with graduate students contributing sections. Both Donley and Bechtol received their doctorates in geography from the University. Peace fellowship awarded to student David Morrissey, senior in political science from Boise, Idaho, is one of ten students in the United States to be awarded a fellowship by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Morrissey is the only student from the State of Oregon to receive a fellowship, and only one other was awarded to a West Coast student The awards are for a five-month period of study in Washington, D C. Fellows will spend from early January through May 1973 in Washington, where they will do intensive research on United States foreign policy, focusing on U.S. actions in the United Nations against Rhodesia. The results of their research will be incorporated in a published report. Women invited to tour sororities Open house tours will be held by sororities at the University of Oregon on four days in January. Women students may sign up for two of the evenings, which are scheduled for January 17 and 18, and January 24 and 25. Each woman will visit six houses each night. The tours will leave from the Erb Memorial at 6:15 each of the evenings. Transportation to the houses will be provided. Women students who are interested may sign up for the tours by calling the Panhellenic Office at 686-3888 or writing University of Oregon Panhellenic, Room 203, Emerald Hall, Eugene, Oregon 97403. ( Community ] Japan summer study offered Applications for the fourth summer study session at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan are now available, according to Sapporo program director Dr. Robert Dodge, professor of business ad ministration at Portland State University. Through the program, a limited number of students will have the opportunity to spend 77days for study and travel in Japan. While at tending Hokkaido University in Portland’s sister city of Sapporo, students will live in Japanese homes. Hie session runs from June 10 to August 25. Students will receive PSU credit for courses taken. Dodge said command of the Japanese language is not required of applicants but students are required to take a course in conversational Japanese while attending Hokkaido. For application blanks and further details, contact Dr. Robert Dodge at the PSU School of Business Administration, P.O. Box 751, Portland, Oregon, 97207. Consumer insurance advice available Help for consumers with insurance problems will be provided for residents of this area on January 9 when officials of the State In surance Division will be in Eugene, announced State Insurance Commissioner, Lester L. Rawls, Salem. Quentin D. Isham and Ollie Williams, Deputy Insurance Com missioners, will be available for personal dinpiiMiww at Eugene City Hall, Council Chambers, during the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon and 2 00 to 5:00 p.m. Tlieir one-day local assignment is part of the state-wide “Circuit Rider” program designed to bring the problem assistance facilities of the Insurance Division closer to citizens in all sections of Oregon who need information or help with insurance matters. 0 State of the City’ message tonight Mayor Les Anderson’s annual “state of the city” message will highlight tonight’s city council meeting. Tonight’s meeting is the first regular meeting of the new year. Also on the council’s agenda is the election of couvcil president A pubBc hiring on an ordinance which would I^rmit the city to expand the use of the vehicle-immobilizing traffic Parked on unmetered city lots. ” w°ufd he uaed to enforce the collection of delinquent payments for rental parking The council meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. in the council chambers.