Several faculty members
receive new appointments
Seven University faculty
members have been named to
new appointments as
department heads and
directors in the College of
Liberal Arts.
New to the campus among
the appointees are Lilian
Furst, director of the
Graduate Program in Com
parative Literature for 1973
74. and George Mills, director
of the University’s new Ethnic
Studies Program.
Lilian Furst is a
distinguished scholar in
comparative literature from
Manchester, England. She
organized the Department of
Comparative Literary Studies
at Manchester University,
w'here she has been on the
faculty since 1966. At the
University, she will also chair
the Comparative Literature
Committee.
Mills came to the University
earlier this month. He comes
from the Spokane public
schools, where he taught
mentally retarded children
and was involved in Indian
education programs for the
past several years. He will
administer the University’s
two* new.ethnic studies cer
tificate program.
Daniel Goldrich, member of
the University political
science faculty since 1963, is
new chairman of the depart
ment. He is a specialist in
political development, both
American and third world.
Fred Andrews is new
chairman of the Mathematics
Department. He joined the
University faculty in 1959. For
nine years, until September,
1969, he was director of the
University’s Statistical
Laboratory and Computing
Center. For two years he was
an associate dean of the
Graduate School.
Jack Sanders has been
named chairman of the
Department of Religious
Studies. A member of the
faculty since 1969. Sanders is a
scholar of Biblical studies.
Richard Desroches has been
appointed acting director of
the Department of Romance
Languages while Perry
Powers is chi sabbatical leave
in Europe during 1973-74. Dr.
Powers will be studying the
contemporary theatre in
Spain and Norway, primarily.
Desroches. who came to the
University in 1957, is a scholar
of the 18th-century French
novel.
Laurence Kittleman, Jr.,
associate professor of
sedimentology in the Museum
of Natural History and curator
of geology for the Museum
since 1963. has been named
acting director of the
Museum. David Cole, who has
served as acting director for
the past two years, will be on
sabbatical leave during 1973
74 to continue research and
writing on a ten-year ar
chaeology project in nor
theastern Oregon.
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EOS names
men to fill
appointments
Two appointments, in the
University offices of Admissions
and Student Financial Aid, have
been made specifically to provide
admissions, financial aid, and
student employment services for
low income, disadvantaged
students who come under the
aegis of Educational Opportunity
Services (EOS), according to
Dean Donald Rhoades of Student
Administrative Services.
Robert Campillo, 35-year old
Mexican-American, has been
named Associate Director of
Admissions and Financial Aid
(including employment).
Christopher Munoz, age 25, will
become counselor in Admissions
Financial Aid. Munoz is also a
Mexican-American.
Campillo, who has already
arrived on the University
campus, comes from California
State College at Sonoma, where
he has been an Admissions
Counselor Intern while working
on his master’s degree. He
received the degree in counseling
this past June.
As an intern, (Jampiuo was
involved in community relations,
academic counseling. financial
aids, and placement.
In his position at Oregon,
Campillo will be responsible for
coordinating the recruitment
process for ethnic minorities and
disadvantaged white students.
He will be responsible for
packaging the financial aid and
employment of these students
and assisting them with their
admission to the University.
Campillo is married and the
father of three children.
Munoz has received an
Associate of Arts degree from
San Bernardino Valley College
and a Bachelor of Arts degree
from California State University
at Fullerton.
From June, i»7i 10 January,
1972, Munoz was a financial aids
counselor at the University of
California at Irvine, and then was
named Assistant Director of
Financial Aids. In the latter
position he has been responsible
for the Health Profession
Program for the College of
Medicine, and for the ad
ministration of the financial
assistance portion of the
Educational Opportunity
Program.
Campillo and Munoz will be
administratively responsible to
Admissions Director Vernon
Barkhurst and Director of
Financial Aid Walter Freauff
To expedite the work of the two
new EOS appointees, Emmett
Williams, Assistant Director of
Student Financial Aid, has been
named general coordinator to
serve in a liaison position be
tween admissions, financial aid,
and employment.
Editor
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Photo Editor
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Editorial Assistant
General Manager
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Torrie McAllister
Cynthia Spinelli
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Peggy McMullen
Steve Twedt
Merlin Mann
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The Oregon Daily Emerald is published Monday through
Friday during the school year, except during exam and
vacation periods, and four times weekly during summer
session by the Emerald Board of Directors at the University
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Second class postage paid at Eugene, Oregon, 97403
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scription rates are based on annual contracts between the
Emerald and the ASUO and the Emerald and the University
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proximately $2.00 per year
(II) Special subscriptions for persons not included in
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per academic year and $3.SO per term.
f On Campus
Artist’s work on display in Lawrence
Judith Anderson will be exhibiting her work in 141 Lawrence from
July 30 to August 3. The show includes recent paintings, monotypes,
drawings, and anatomy studies.
Two Law School students receive awards
Awards of $1000 and $250 were recently awarded to two University
law students.
Matthew Chapman of Portland is the winner of the 1973-74 Paul
Patterson Memorial Fellowship and Pamela Finley of Eugene, a
third-year student at the University School of Law, has won first prize
of $250 in the 1973 Nathan Burkan Memorial competition at the School.
The Paul Patterson Memorial Fellowship, of approximately $1000,
is given annually to a student completing the second year at the
University Law School who best exemplifies the qualities of integrity,
leadership and dedication to public service which characterized the
late Governor of Oregon, Paul Patterson.
This year’s winner of the award, Chapman, graduated with a B.A.
degree in economics in 1971 from the University of Portland, where he
was valedictorian of his class, president of the student senate, and
managing editor of the student newspaper. Chapman currently ranks
first in his class at the Law School and is editor-in-chief of the
University Law Review. He was a member of the School’s moot court
team during 1972-73. ,
The Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition, won by Finley, is
sponsored by the American Society of Composers, Authors, and
Publishers. It encourages law student writing and interest in the field
of copyright law. . ..
Her winning essay, “Parody, Piracy and fTee speecn, analyzes
the application of the law of copyright to the art of parody, which by its
very nature involves a degree of copying or imitating of serious works
for the purpose of adapting them to humorous treatment or to a
ridiculous subject.
Finley notes that a good deal of parody material is developed as
social criticism and thus there may be justification for giving this
literary art form favored treatment, in order to protect the right of
citizens to speak out on societal problems.
She is a graduate of the University of California at Berkeley
Committee to picket in Thien’s support
Ngo Chi Thien, the Vietnamese x-ray technician faced with
deportation to Saigon, has an appeal today at the Immigration Ap
peals Court in Washington D C. In his support, the Ngo Chi Thien
Support Committee will picket the comer of 7th and Oak, between 4
and 5:30 p.m. Everyone interested in supporting Thien’s right to go to
the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam, is urged
to come, or contact the Ngo Chi Thien Support Committee through
Pauline Lasse, 747-0654.
Geology booklets available for 25 cents
The booklets by University geologist Ernest Lund about the
geology of the Oregon coast are 25 cents each, rather than 10 cents, the
price announced in an earlier news story. Copies of the booklets, which
are written for the layman, may be obtained by writing “The Ore
Bin,” 1069 State Office Building, Portland, Oregon, 97201. They are
also available at the University Bookstore. The four titles are “Oregon
Coastal Dunes between Coos Bay and Sea Lion Point,” “Coastal
Landforms between Florence and Yachats,” “Coastal Landforms
between Yachats and Newport,” and “Coastal Landforms between
Tillamook Bay and the Columbia River.”
| Comnunity
Saturday Market Committee meeting set
There will be a general meeting of the Saturday Market at 7:30
p.m. tonight at Harris Hall. The main topic will be methods of limiting
the size of the Market. Also on the agenda will be discussion of
guidelines for food vendors. All interested persons are welcome.
Some registered voters to get new cards
Registered voters with addresses on Eugene Route 1 through 8 will
be receiving new precinct memorandum cards this week from the
Lane County Elections Department. The cards will show the new route
and box numbers assigned by the post office in a recent change.
Law requires that when individuals change their address they
must re-register. Since the change is being made by the po6t office, the
County Elections Department has initiated the change of records so
that these residents need not re-register unless the address on the new
precinct memorandum card is incorrect. New cards will be going out
to 1086 registered voters. Any person who receives a card bearing an
address that does not match his new route and box number should
either call 342-1311, Ext. 217, or come to the Elections Department on
the first floor of the Courthouse, to have a correction made.
THE GRADUATE
TUES.7ULy3l, 74ND9 R*\. 190 PiCHOO
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