Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 12, 1984, Page 6, Image 6

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The Perfect Way To Start
Eugene hosts regional meeting
of student exchange association
By Patrick Low
Of the Emerald
The Northwest chapter of the National
Association for Foreign Student Affairs conclud
ed its fall conference at the Eugene Conference
Center on Saturday after three days of workshops
and exhibitions. NAFSA members from Alaska.
Northern Idaho, Oregon and Washington govern
ment and educational institutes attended the
conference.
NAFSA is the nation's leading organization
in the area of international education exchange.
Founded in 1948 with 88 members, NAFSA now
serves some 5,000 professionals involved in stu
dent exchange programs. The organization holds
annual national and regional conferences to pro
vide training and information for its members.
This is the first year NAFSA has held a regional
conference in Eugene.
A total of 50 workshops were presented dur
ing the three-day conference.
Soviet emigre to talk
on Marxist takeover
Dr. Joseph Ioffe, a professor of economics
and political science, will discuss the
possibility of a Marxist takeover of the
United States at the Black Angus
Restaurant. 2133 Franklin Blvd., Wednes
day night.
Ioffe, a Soviet emigre, is a member of an
influential Communist family. Ioffe was on
both the Kruschev and Brezhnev Commit
tees on Economic Reform. His father was
one of the leaders of the Soviet farm collec
tivization movement.
Cocktail hour begins at 6:30 p.m., dinner
at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 for dinner, $2
for those not eating.
Anyone interested in attending should
call 345-3989 or 485-6501. Reservations
must be made by 8 p.m. tonight.
Dr. Ioffe’s appearance is co-sponsored by
the Defense Education Committee and the
Willamette World Affairs Council.
Workshops and exhibitions on teaching
English to foreign students presented new ways
to use computers in language programs. One
workshop entitled “1 Learn You Learn Cha Cha
Cha” discussed a “kinetic” approach to
teaching, focusing on the relationship between
physical activity and acquiring language skills.
Several workshops discussed educational
and political trends in countries like Malaysia,
China, the Soviet Union. Saudi Arabia and I^atin
America, while other presentations involved im
migration policy and procedures and preparing
refugees for employment.
Two workshops dealt with problems female
students encounter studying abroad. One, called
“Preparing Women for the Study Abroad Ex
perience,” discussed the myth of promiscuous
American women traveling abroad and offered
survival strategies for females.
At a noon luncheon, held in the Eugene
O’Neill Room oh Friday, NAFSA Vice President
John F. Re'ichard gave an audience of about 120
members a brief summary of important issues and
problems that NAFSA was facing.
Reichard said that the rate of foreign students
coming into the .country is in decline for the first
time in two decades, after phenomenal growth
over the last 10 years.
“If there isn’t going to be new growth, this
could have a lot to do with the kind of support we
will be getting.” he said. “A lot of the argument
for international education that we have been
making has related io economic considerations —
that people are bringing money into the United
States.”
University President Paul Olum, who was
guest speaker at the luncheon, told the audience
that NAFSA was doing a terribly important
business.
“Americans tend to be astonishingly in
sular,” Olum said. "We may be the most insular
people in the world. Americans tend to believe
not just that the American way of doing things is
the right one but almost the only one. They are
unaware of how other cultures live and what they
do, and we learn an enormous amount from our
(foreign) students.”
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342-2912
2025 Franklin Blvd.
Eugene, Ore 97403
TEACHER EDUCATION STUDENTS PLANNING
TO COMPLETE REQUIREMENTS AND APPLY
FOR OREGON CERTIFICATION AT THE END OF
FALL TERM 1984.
If you have not already done so, please come
immediately to the Office of Certification in the College of
Education, Room 117, to check on what paper work and
procedures will be needed to be eligible and apply for
Oregon certification this current term.
This applies to students finishing this term and seeking
initial Oregon Certification of any type, i.e., Teaching,
Administration or Personnel Service.
OFFICE OF TEACHER CERTIFICATION
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION, 117,
TELEPHONE NUMBERS: 686-3538, 3529 or 3526.
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