Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 15, 1983, Page 3, Image 3

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    minutes
EMU BOARD
HOUSE COMMITTEE
The EMU House Committee Wednesday focused
on allocating building space and voted to inform all
interested parties that it is working on establishing
guidelines for charging rent to non-profit student
corporations.
The Nutritional Outreach program, formerly the
Food-Op Outreach, had its office space in Suite 1
revoked because of lack of use.
Students Opposing Registration and the Draft
was granted one of the desks and the Inter-Varsity
Christian Fellowship received the other.
The committee voted to terminate the building
lease with Baskin-Robbins when the EMU food ser
vice is ready take over the space. The food service
plans to supplement the sale of ice cream with
specialty coffees and pastries.
Another group, the College Republicans, also
met the requirements to receive space, but none is
now available.
ASUO OPEN MEETING
An apology from an Incidental Fee Committee
member and the announcement of the first issue of
the ASUO newspaper, Off the Record, topped the
agenda for the second open meeting of the ASUO
Tuesday night.
The paper is due to hit campus this week with a
circulation of 8,000, said editor Jim Middaugh. The
paper will be distributed next to Oregon Daily
Emerald boxes and will be available in Suite 4 of the
EMU, he said.
Marc Spence, an IFC and EMU Board member, at
tended the meeting and apologized to the ASUO
because members of the EMU Board held a meeting
Nov. 6 and two students, including ASUO director of
programs and finance Bill Hallmark, were diverted
from the meeting.
Tess Brasser, the director of the Minority Task
Force, announced the study of recruitment and
placement of minorities and the possibility of ethnic
studies entering into the University's cluster system
is moving along well. The ethnic student unions also
fear budget cuts, she said.
INCIDENTAL FEE
COMMITTEE
The Incidental Fee Committee voted Thursday to
loan $9,750 in surplus money to the Sports Club Sail
ing Team for the purchase of sailing boats. The loan
is to be repaid in four years.
The boats will also be used by the physical educa
tion department or the SEARCH program, according
to members of the club.
Tag assignments were made to seven new pro
gams that submitted goal statements and Sheila
Schain was assigned as OSPIRC's tag. OSPIRC had
requested Spence be removed as their tag.
Schain was also elected to the three-member
Credit Committee.
Chair Julie Davis distributed new copies of the
IFC’s resolutions, minus an original resolution giving
the IFC power to freeze program's funds. The resolu
tion was challenged by the ASUO Executive as un
constitutional, and the Constitution Court ruled in
favor of the ASUO.
The IFC formally voted to strike the resolution.
In other money matters, the committee released
$1,250 to the Amazon Child Care Center for its direc
tor and moved $60.33 from surplus to People and the
Oregon Coast.
Lecture looks at women in fiction
A lecture at 8 p.m. today by
University English professor
lames Boren will be a take-off on
the notion of real men not eating
quiche.
Boren's topic, female images in
American detective fiction, is part
of the ongoing University Forum
Lecture Series. His speech is titled
r
"Real Men Don't Like Women:
The Male World-View in the Fic
tion of Dashiell Hammett and Ray
mond Chandler."
"The derogatory portrayal of
women is a persistent element in
the works of these authors, typify
ing the ali^en^tion and emotional
deprivation of the detective
hero," Boren says. "A study of this
element reveals a bleak and tragic
vision within a literary tradition
superficially comic and
philosophically optimistic."
Boren's lecture will be at the
Eugene Community Conference
Center, 7th Avenue and Oak
Street.
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