Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 02, 1974, Section one, Page 16, Image 16

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    CHURCH GUIDE
Celebratin'; *5v Sharing Good ’Ntnvs
Central Presbyterian Church
15th Ave. at Patterson <3 blocks west of the U of O Library)
Sunday Celebration. 10a.m.
Elective Study Groups. 11 a.m.
Pastors: Norman D Pott. Walter H Gray
R. Whitfield Bass
First Church of Christ. Scientist
1390 Pearl Street
Sunday Service & Sunday School 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday Testimony Meeting 8:00 p.m.
Child Care Provided
All Are Welcome
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Mass Schedule
WEEKDAYS: 12:30 at Wesley
4:30 at New man
SATURDAY: Vigil Mass 5:00 pm
SUNDAY: 8:30 am. 10 am. 11:30 am.
8:00 pm
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K
omas More University Parish
iversity of Oregon
NEWMAN
CENTER
Central Lutheran Church
(A L C.)
18th and Potter
345-0395
Sunday worship 8:30 and 11:00 a m
Education Hour 9 40
11 a.m. service:
KORE: 93.1 FM; 1060 AM
Philip L. Natwick & Richard W. Rouse, pastors
CAMPUS MINISTRY
342-4876
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
SUNDAY
campus group—9.30 am a> 6.00 pm
WORSHIP. t OO AM 10 45 AM * 7: 00 PM
CARLTON BUCK PASTOR
SHERYL A YDELOTT. CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE
PHONE—344-1425
1166 OAK STREET
BAPTIST CHURCH
868 High St.
Church Services: Morning 9 & 10:30
Evening 6:00
(Study on Christian Evidences)
Morning College Hours: 10:30 (Study on Love,
Sex & Marriage)
Bible Study at The Way In, 1332 Kincaid
Tues. 7:30 p.m. Study on Prophecy
Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Study on the Book of Romans
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History
Imperialist outpost
South Africa history
a study in racism
History of South Africa
HST 199
By TRISH WEISMAN
Of the Emerald
South Africa is a country
where a white minority rules a
black majority. South Africa and
Rhodesia hold out defiantly at the
tip of the emerging dark con
tinent as outposts of blatant
racist imperialism
If you want to learn how this
country was developed and how
its various peoples came into
their present relationships, a
course on the history of South
Africa is being offered this term,
taught by Robert Smith.
Offered as a 19B-level course,
it is more specific than most
lower division history courses
“It seems to me that we ought to
offer alternatives to the Western
Civilization course at the lower
division level,” Smith said
“It’s aimed at people who
have some interest in Africa, but
they don’t have to have any
previous knowledge about it.”
The course has no prerequisites.
The history of South Africa
and neighboring areas will be
studied from the 16th century,
Smith said. Imperialism in the
rest of Africa will be compared to
the European settlement of South
Africa.
The course will concentrate
on “the historical background
and the present social, economic
and political situation in South
Africa and Rhodesia.” The
growth of political and other
institutions will be studied, as
well as the African resistance
movement of the 20th century.
Among the three required
texts for the course is an
autobiography by Albert Luthuli.
Luthuli was a president of the
African National Congress, a
group long since outlawed, a
Nobel Prize winner and a victim
of savage repression by the South
African government.
Students will be asked to read
a book of their choice from the
library and write a review on it,
and take “one or two one-hour
exams and a final,” Smith said.
Physics
Watch Kohoutek's comet in evening sky