Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 21, 1983, Page 7, Image 7

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    minutes
INCIDENTAL FEE
COMMITTEE
A decision to pay $2,000 to a
Eugene law firm so it can continue
a 5-year-old legal battle and
another vote overriding an ASUO
Executive veto highlighted the In
cidental Fee Committee meeting
Tuesday.
lames Campbell, representing
the law firm of Goldstein and
Campbell, presented a letter to
the IFC outlining the firm's work
since 1978 in a lawsuit against the
Oregon Investment Council and
the State Board of Higher
Education.
The ASUO is the main plaintiff
in the suit, which attempts to
force the divestiture of higher
education investment funds that
are invested in companies doing
business with South Africa.
Campbell, with the support of
ASUO Pres. Mary Hotchkiss, ask
ed the IFC for $1,500 to pay for
legal fees and another $500 for air
fare to bring expert witnesses to
court if necessary.
After agreeing with the ASUO
Executive on the lawsuit issue, the
IFC overrode an executive veto of
an IFC vote at their Nov. 2
meeting.
At that meeting the commitee
voted to put $120 on reserve for
the purchase of a camera to aid
students producing The Dissent,
the law school newspaper. The
money will be released when the
students match the $120.
However, the executive vetoed
the vote because it feared the
possibility of setting a precedent.
The vote to override the veto
carried by a 6-1 margin. Vice-Chair
Sheila Schain, who voted against
putting the money on reserve
Nov. 2, voted to uphold the veto.
It takes at least five votes from the
seven-member committee to over
turn a veto.
In other matters, the IFC moved
$550 from the ASUO's winter sym
posium account to its speakers
bureau account and moved
money from the surplus account
to the Repertory Dancers account.
EMU BOARD
The EMU Board Wednesday
voted to add three members, settl
ed some questions about space in
the building, discussed articles
and editorials concerning its
House Committee that recently
appeared in the Oregon Daily
Emerald and attempted to elect a
chair to its Budget Committee.
Paul Curtis and Sandra Lewis
were unanimously elected to the
board as EMU representatives and
Mike Sauerwein as ASUO
representative.
The board voted to give tem
porary space in Suite 1 to the Col
lege Republicans, Students Op
posed to the Registration and the
Draft and the Inter-Varsity Chris
tian Fellowship.
The temporary status will last
until the first House Committee
meeting of winter term, at which
time the situation will be review
ed. If other space becomes
available before then, the groups
have the option to move.
Also, the board approved a stan
dard EMU contract drawn up by
EMU Director Adell McMillan for
the Oregon Commentator to rent
room 203 in the building.
A lengthy discussion of the
Emerald stories and editorials
featured Chair Dan Cohen ex
pressing his displeasure of the
coverage and calling for a vote of
confidence from the board.
However, board members Lisa
Nuss and Frank Celtner convinc
ed Cohen that such a vote was not
necessary.
With only six of the 10 members
of the Budget Committee present,
the vote for chair of the commit
tee ended win a tie and Cohen
decided to hold the vote again at
the next Budget Committee
meeting rather than cast the
deciding vote.
In other business, the board
formed a Food Committee to act
in an advisory capacity regarding
use of the Baskin-Robbin space.
Cohen, Curtis and Bill Hallmark
were appointed to the committee
and Celtner suggested adding
food service director Jim Cov
ington and EMU House Commit
tee Chair Maria Neese.
Neither Covington nor Neese
were present Wednesday.
The board also decided to hold
its retreat dinner at 6 p.m. Mon
day. The next meeting will be Dec.
1 at 8 a.m.
Music school concerts slated
me university tsympnony or
chestra's fall concert will highlight
the beginning of the holiday
music school performances.
The concert is tonight at 8 p.m.
in Beall Concert Hall. The sym
phony, directed by Marsha
Mabrey, will present Bedrich
Smentana's "The Moldau,"
Brahms' "Variations on a Theme
by Hadyn, Op. 560" and Leos
Janacek's "Sinfonietta."
In addition, a 45-minute dress
rehearsal featuring selections
from the evening concert will also
be held in Beall Concert Hall at
noon Monday. Both events are
free.
The University )azz Lab Bands
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at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Beall hall. The
Jazz Lab Band I program will in
clude Frank Mantooth's “Council
Grove Groove," Sammy Nestico's
"After the Rain," Gerry Mulligan's
"42nd and Broadway," Don
Sebesky's "Blue Moan," and
Strayhorn and Sebesky's "Take
the 'A' Train." The band is
directed by Jeff Williams.
The Jazz Lab II Band will per
form Tom Garvin's "Kumquat,"
Sammy Nestico's "That Warm
Feeling," Garner and LaBarbera's
"Up in Errol's Room" and Steve
Ragwitz' "Samba These Days."
Graduate student David Blescoe
directs the band.
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$2 for the general public and $1
for students and senior citizen's.
Other music school events in
the near future include a student
chamber ensemble concert, coor
dinated by doctoral student Cary
Corrin. The free concert is at 8
p.m., Nov. 29, in Beall Concert
Hall.
Also scheduled is a concert by
the University Sinfonietta,
directed by Lawrence Maves, Dec.
1, at 8 p.m, in Beall Concert Hall.
Among the works to be perform
ed are Telemann's Suite in G Ma
jor, Michael Tippett's “Little
Music for Strings" and Haydn's
Symphony No. 97 in C Major.
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