I Board approves institute for gifted students By Michael Hosmar Of the Kmtrralfi The University will soon have a new institute on its campus aimed at talented and gifted students. The State Board of Higher Education unanimously ap proved a request for the Talented and Gifted Students Institute for the Development of Educational Achievements on Friday in its meeting at Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls. The institute will provide an administrative identity for a number of public services that the college of education spon sors as an outreach of its educa tion and research programs, says board member Edward Harms. “It will give it (the In stitute) the visibility that a name provides,” he says. The .institute's activities in . elude summer enrichment pro grams for. talented and gifted . students- in • kindergarten through 12th grade: in-service . trainjng for- teachers,. . workshops and seminars, and consultation services. The - board .also .approved a. . $20; million budget request for : the. Oregon Health Sciences University..' These additional General’ Fund .dollars will help fund extraordinary costs that ' are-.usually paid for by patient . fees-, -.-This . will reduce the . 1984-85 patients fees arid may increase, the number of patients . that the hospital serves, accord ^ ing to a report by the board’s Committee on Finance. Ad Food program will distribute food Tuesday Members of the Student Food Assistance Program and Students for a Progressive Agenda will be distributing food Tuesday from 9:30 a.m. through 4:30 p.m. in EMU Room 167. Food items to be given out are butter, cheese and honey. Students and area residents are asked to bring proof of residence and student or non student status to the distribution. The student groups are work ing in conjunction with the State Food Bank on this distribution. Food give-aways like this may be held monthly upon the bank's approval, says Jon Wood, a coordinator of Tuesday's distribution. Volunteers are needed to help with the project. Interested per sons should contact Wood, Con nie Nelmes or Andy Crane at 345-2032. OREflt nnr«jRceRS 244b Httya.a SI Cugene Otvqon 97405 342 2206 Enjoy nine varieties of gourmet ham burgers Including the Only Oregon Burger and the Original Button Burger Bring this ad In and receive a chocolate velvet or Cherry Coke on ministration, and Physical Plant. “It’s vital to the institution that they have patients. Hospitals are in marketing, they have to be,” says board member Harriett Flanagan. In his report to the board. Bud Davis, chancellor of higher education, says he is pleased with the latest figures on enroll ment. He says there has been less than a 2 percent drop in enrollment since the beginning of the year. “It’s a very positive change in direction, and it reflects the tuition freeze,” says Davis. Davis also said he is concern ed about a new test that graduating students in the Col lege of Education will be re quired to take this year to become licenced: The .Teaching Standards and Practice Com mission has decided to use the California Basic- Education Skills..Test as a condition for licencing. The College of Education is' now iising. the. California Acheivement Test hut only as an extrance exam in to the school, not as a condition for licencing, says Clarethel Kahananui, acting chancellor for academic affairs. “It's causing great consterna tion and concern in the College of Education,” says Davis. “It’s not a professional test like the bar exam. It's more like the Law School Aptitude Test,” he says. "I’m prepared to request they (the teaching standards com mission) defer it. I don’t like it as an addition,” says Davis. “What shakes you up about it is that some people .who have taken it say it’s easy enough that an eighth-grader could pass it. If it’s so easy, why did 20 to 30 percent at Berkeley fail it?” Alvin Batiste, board vice president, says minority students would, .be greatly af fected* by the California skills test: “We should-request-that' the'test be advisory in, nature or defer it,” he says. . • Davjs also told board Bud Davis members to urge.legislators not to vote for Ballot Measure 2. “I . have opposed Ballot Measure 2. It would be ' disastrous : to already inadequate- facilities,” he says-. ‘ • -" • In other business, the board heard a report from the Interna tional Trade and Commerce In stitute at Portland State Univer sity. Dr. James Manning, who prepared the report, told the board that some of the in stitute’s new programs will in crease Oregon’s exports into the international market. He says in some of the programs, students become familiar with the inter national market, and the inter national market gets a chance to look at Oregon. The board also voted unanimously to discontinue three centers at PSU. None of the centers are currently opterating, and PSU recom mended that they be officially discontinued, according to a report by the board's Committee on Instruction, Research, and 'Public Services Programs. Two of the centers; the North west Race and Desegregation Assistance Center arid the Latin American Studies Center, will be temporarily discontinued, according to the report. 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