Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, August 04, 1977, Page 2, Image 2

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    State rep to give address
State Representative David Frohnmayer of Eugene will deliver the
commencement address at the University’s summer graduation cere
mony August 13.
The ceremony, to be held in Memorial Quadrangle, located in front
of the University Library, will begin at 10 a.m. There are some 1,232
summer degree candidates, including 592 candidates for bachelor’s
degrees and 640 candidates for advanced and law degrees.
Frohnmayer, 37, who represents District 40 in the Oregon House of
Representatives, has served as a professor of law and special assistant
to the University president since 1971.
Prior to joining the University faculty, Frohnmayer practiced law
with a San Francisco firm and later served as Special Assistant to
former U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) Elliot
Richardson.
He is two-time winner of the Samuel Pool Weaver Constitutional
Law Essay Contest and has served as chairperson of the American
Council on Education Equal Employment Opportunity Task Force,
headquartered in Washington, D.C.
A Medford native, Frohnmayer holds a bachelor’s degree in gov
ernment from Harvard College (magna cum laude), bachelor’s and
master’s degrees from Oxford University, where he studied philosophy,
economics and politics as a Rhodes Scholar, and a law degree from the
University of California at Berkeley.
Women’s theater slated
A women's theater group from Philadelphia, Rites of Women, will
perform Saturday at the WOW Hall, 8th Avenue and Lincoln Street.
Beginning at 7 p.m. is a show for the general public and a show for
women only begins at 9 p.m.
Advance tickets are $2 each and are available at Mother Kali's
Books and Book and Tea stores. Tickets at the door are $2.25. Child
care is available.
Rites of Women is a group committed to the struggle of ending
racism, dassism and sexism.
r
i
BOOK
BUYERS
Will be at
U of O Bookstore
AUG 11 & 12
(Thursday & Friday only)
CASH
FOR
BOOKS
We will pay:
■r 1/2 selling price for texts which will be
used on our campus in future terms.
ar used book dealers catalog price for
texts in demand elsewhere.
Note that we buy books at any time but, for convenience,
see us on the above dates.
U of O Bookstore
13th & Kincaid
686-4331
...et al
College of Arts
and Sciences
gets new dean
Robert Berdahl, a University
associate professor of history, has
been named associate dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences.
Berdahl, 40, replaces Stoddard
Malarky, who has served in the
capacity as associate dean for the
past three years. Malarkey is re
turning to full time teaching.
The new associate dean has
been a member of the faculty
since 1967. He earned his BA.
degree from Augustana (III.) Col
lege, his MA. from the University
of Illinois and his Ph.D. from the
University of Minnesota. Before
joining the University faculty, he
taught at the University of Mas
sachusetts.
In 1972, he studied at the Insti
tute for Advance Study at Prince
ton and in 1975 he was a resident
scholar at the Max Planck Institute
of Historical Studies at the Univer
sity of Gottingen, West Germany.
Annual salary for the new posi
tion is $26,348.
Good neighbor
seminar slated
The Good Neighbor Project is
presenting a basic weekend
seminar beginning Friday. The
focus of this seminar is on per
sonal responsibility, dear com
munication and increasing self
awareness.
Cost is $20 per person. The
seminar will be held at the Ama
zon Community Center, 2700
Hilyard Street. For more informa
tion call 342-3051 or 342-2551.
Mistakes in
two stories
Tuesday’s story on IFC alloca
tion to Amazon tenants contained
an error. The $225, and $95
funded to ACT coordinator and
tenant advocate, came from the
Office of Student Advocacy
budget, and executive budget re
spectively. In addition, Don
Chalmers has not yet acted as of
ficial legal representative of ACT.
Tuesday’s article about the
state board meeting also con
tained an error. Ray Hawk’s
comment should have read,
“Sally Smith is a faculty wife who
was hired about three years ago to
assist John Thorpe in the man
agement of the married student
housing. She is a very nice lady. I
have no way to judge her compe
tence on matters of plumbing and
electrical repairs.”
Oregon Daily Emerald
The Oregon Daily Emerald a published Monday through Friday except durng exam week*
and vacations, by tie Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co . Inc . at the University ot Oregon.
Eugene. Ore . 97403 It appears twice-weekly during summer cl Mas a
The Oregon Daily Emerald operates independently of the University with offices on the third
floor of tie Erb Memorial Union and s a member of Associated Press
Emerald subscriptions ate $7 per term. $20 per year
News and Editorial
Display Advertising and Busine
Classified Advertising
Production
Editor
Managing Editor/News Editor
Graphics Editor
Stale System. Departments and Schools
Potties and Community
Features. ASUO
Night Editor
Production Manager
Advertising Manager
Accountant
686-5611
686-3712
666-4343
686-4381
WMIy Benson
Tom Wofle
Erich Boekefftelde
Melody Ward
Kevin Harden
Jock Kxffletd
Becky Young
Kate Seigal
Cert Bryant
T—J Inhnsln.
I eo JonrtMon
Festival entries sought
i ne women s oommunicauon
Coalition of San Francisco State
University, a feminist-oriented
production group, is sponsoring a
West Coast Women s Video Fes
tival to be held November 17-20,
1977, at that University. The
Video Festival is to be a celebra
tion of women.
Presently being accepted are
half inch and three-quarter inch
video tapes. The tapes may be on
any subject, black and white or
color, although black and white
monitors will be used. The Coali
Gay Rap to be held
Gay Rap offers open, informal
discussion for women and men
concerned with sexual orientation
issues at 7:30 Wednesdays at 341
East 12th Ave. For more informa
tion call the Gay People's Alliance
at 686-3360.
lion win noi exauae tapes in wnicn
men have participated. However,
it is crucial that women piay the
leading role in the production and
direction of the tapes.
Tapes must be submitted by
August 15 to the following loca
tion: Rubin Citrin, 169 Purdue Av
enue, Berkeley, California, 94706.
Please do not submit master
tapes and please do insure all
tape submissions. Mail all tapes in
a lead pouch dearly labeled “Do
Not X-Ray.”
Women whose tapes have
been selected will be notified by
October 1, 1977; all other tapes
will be returned at this time.
For more information and entry
forms, write the above address or
call (415) 526-3954 or (415)
647-8116.
Waves link to weather?
What can infrared waves tell us about the weather?
A University scientist says they may one day be used in an early
detection system for atmospheric disturbances which can form without
a doud in the sky, such as tornadoes and the “dear air turbulence"
which occasionally jolts commercial airliners.
Beginning in September, University physicist and astronomer Ira
Nolt will spend a year at a federal laboratory in Boulder, Colo. — the
National and Atmospheric Administration’s Environmental Research
Laboratories — studying possible applications of a technique of
analysis scientists call “multiple band atmospheric radiometry."
Nott s objectrve in the project, sponsored by a $20,000 Senior
Resident Research Associate fellowship from the National Research
Council (NRC), the research arm of the National Academy of Sciences,
is to determine if the infrared measuring technique can be used to
identify and pinpoint atmospheric disturbances.
Nolt says his research is based on the fad that water vapor
molecules in the atmosphere ad as “little radio transmitters," radiating
energy mostly in the form of infrared waves.
“In areas where you have turbulence or storms,” he says, "the
amount of water vapor, and thus the infrared radiation, is changinq
rapidly."
An instrument called a radiometer, and other equipment fitted into
an airplane, will be used to measure and analyze changes in intensity
and other radiation characteristics which retted weather conditions.
In the Colorado projed, initial measurements will be taken at high
altitudes (around 30,(XX) feet), where commercial airliners often fly.
Nolt says many types of atmospheric disturbances form in clear air
In the case of a tornado, for example, the vortex frequently becomes
visible only when it dips near the earth and collects dust partides.
Several of the methods which Nolt will use to trace weather
phenomena are similar to techniques he has used the past seven years
in an ongoing study of the atmosphere of the planet Saturn.
"It’s the same physics and technology, for the most part," he says,
“except in the Saturn projed we are looking at radiation from hydrogen
molecules instead of water vapor, and of course we use a telescope to
get the measurements.”
Modern dance show set
An “Open Showing” of Modem
dance works will be presented
Friday at 3:00 p.m. in Gertinger
Annex, Room 353. Lynn Dally,
who has taught a two-week dance
workshop at the University is a
Los Angeles based choreo
grapher and performer.
Dally has performed with her
company in California, Ohio and in
New York City. She has taught as
a guest artist at a number of uni
versities and is presently a guest
artist at UCLA. The "Open Show
ing” will be a presentation of stu
dents' original dance composi
tions, examples of technique
phrases and improvisations which
have been learned during the
workshop. The one-and-a-half
hour program is free to the public.