Page Title and Date 1 Table of Contents 2

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Minorities in the Barometer, 1981
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Title and Date
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
"Talent show will dedicate Culture Center, needs director" January 01, 1981
"Group offers women support" January 09, 1981
"Exchange offers unique experience" January 12, 1981
"Proposed budget cuts International Ed fund" January 14, 1981
"Ehrlich illegal aliens still crucial national issue" January 15, 1981
"Foreign students deserve senate voice" January 16, 1981
"Students vote for ISO representation" January 20, 1981
"Culture week" January 26, 1981
"OSU to dedicate cultural center rooms" January 26, 1981
"Foreign students to advise Model U.N." January 28, 1981
"Lawyer to discuss Indian fishing rights bill" January 28, 1981
"Jamaican to speak of native land" February 09, 1981
"Black History month focuses on past, present, future of blacks" February 11, 1981
"Speaker dispels negative image of black colleges" February 13 1981
"Teach-in features Latin America crisis" February 17 1981
"Culture Center awarded $10,000 for audio-visual equipment" February 18, 1981
"Women's building faces name change" February 18, 1981
"OSU starts Mexican exchange" February 23, 1981
"OSU starts Mexican exchange pt.2" February 23 1981
"Dissident's 'failure' allows Jews to Succeed" February 25, 1981
"Media obscures true Salvadoran conflict" February 26, 1981
"Indian traditions highlight pow-wow" April 06, 1981
"Killings of Atlanta black children represents more than death" April 08, 1981
"Oregon Pops helps dedicate Cultural Center" April 09, 1981
"Yemenese to learn English, management" April 10, 1981
"OSU celebrates grand opening of cultural center" April 13, 1981
"Budget approval could help foreign students" April 16, 1981
"Black Cultural Center celebrates birthday" April 24, 1981
"Hui O Hawaii Presents Traditional Island Luau" April 24, 1981
"Conference Prepares Exchange Program Participants" April 28, 1981
"Black Center hosts reception" May 01 , 1981
"International Night offers foreign dances, fashions" May 06 , 1981
"International students plan vote" May 15 , 1981
"International Exchange starts scholarships fund" May 19 , 1981
"Spray-painted slogans childish" May 19 , 1981
"New ISO officers express goals Part. 1" May 21 , 1981
"New ISO officers express goals Part. 2" May 21 , 1981
"Faculty Women Set Class Action Suit Date" May 22 , 1981
"Chinese language course to be offered in fall" June 01 , 1981
"Cultural Center receives rare piano" June 02 , 1981
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64
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66
67
"Student leaves small country for OSU" July 14 , 1981
"Vu leaves Vietnam; starts over in U.S." July 28 , 1981
"Honduran stays for forestry program" August 04 , 1981
Korean faculty seek ideas at OSU
"S.African hopes to go home some day" August 11 , 1981
"African students dispute story" September 29 , 1981
"Foreign Students Need Housing" September 29 , 1981
"Open house greets foreign students" October 16 , 1981
"Foreign Students Confront Perils" October 19 , 1981
"Foreign enrollment may drop Part. 1" October 26 , 1981
"Foreign enrollment may drop Part.2" October 26 , 1981
"Racism is basic issue in Thomas suit" October 27 , 1981
"Taiwan hires no student 'spies' or 'secret police'" October 27 , 1981
"Israeli consul to speak" October 30 , 1981
"OSU Nigerians Innocent of Fraud" October 08 , 1981
"MU flags represent students" November 02 , 1981
"Negotiation essential to Mideast peace" November 03 , 1981
"'The Island' explores freedom" November 17 , 1981
"White wrestlers added to black misery" November 19 , 1981
"Location doesn't preclude racism" November 21 , 1981
"Location doesn't preclude racism" continued
"Journalist relates apartheid life" November 23 , 1981
Journalist relates continued
"Students explore Chinese culture in class" November 23 , 1981
"Film benefits Sweathouse Lodge" December 09 , 1981
•
Talent show ·will dedicate
Culture Center,.needs director
..
By LAURIE BORENSTEIN Of'l'bt BaraiDetlet­
•
Students, atatf, faculty 8Dd altunni can put tbeir beat foot
forward by pmicipating rn the variety abow for the new <m1
Cultural aDd Coaference ~.
"OSU Review" is the title of this pieaentatioo, aet(ll'dini to
George Stevena, '"'n•fe dean m ahdent actlvH!es and
directcr of the Memorial Union.
...'
. Stevena said tbe talent show is a pwgxam to dedicate tbe
center, whicb wu fmodf"i by the OSU Fmrvtatioo.
Evoing perfwm•rw:et are •:twtnJed em Apr.lO IDd U ill tbe
center. A matlna will run If there 1s a c)e, ••nd, S&e9eal aieL ,
'"lblJ preacctation abonld geoeaate eotbm!esn wblle ~
voMnc students, .faculty, -m" aoet,JM•"NJ•bmmt,". ~
- said.
.
­
An. adviJory cunmtUee CC«Dp!ll ed « MU and Stud •t· Ac­
tivities Center officl•la, aloag witb stevq, are aenHng a
director for ~.~llctloo. Tbe carvtfdate alfou1d ..ft I"W'If
_exaii!S'ience 1o dk'ectinc,
1be c,wnm!Uee wD18elect tbe finaHR, SteftDIIIicl.
Tbe :aztpnlnH dbedCi' will be f!TP"'riNe, lkq ~ tbe
committee, fCI' deueJoplng and arTaJitPng tbe t.J1ent lbow, said
Stev~, adding tbe job will be th• e cmpuning u 1well u
_ mwtt1nc
~
.
-
-·-
Tbe dlrectcnbip wUl be a paid politloo and IIIP'icltiooa are
pow avaD•ble.
- _­
After tbe direc:tor-11--rlvlua' t~•"'"'•-will be aet for~D•nc
ln1el tllh IIJD perlwmlng for tbe review, steveullicl.
.
FormoreiDfouua&iw wst....-t~ a~'I5WJJ'I_.. . .. •
IDijadq
fl
llo
=0.
• .,.
..... ..
plft.
tiDe. 'l'lle..IIIIIHIIW~ ttlel
top.wlme....., l*..~tbe
lllt.re allbe eoar.. piQce 1D
'""""'
oa Jll'lldical wi~
s­
pertence coadlrreDt
ltadfa, Da1tGa nplalged
Whereas osu operates Oil ~
quarterly academic: ealeDdor,
.a.e IONSemle rear at NSVIlT
II divided IDto ArO 17-week
lelllel&!rl.
LairtoDsaJd tbe cocmlry.Jia
9f osu deeply coo­ . truta tbe urban locatioo of
NSWrl'.
"NSWIT is riglit ill~ heart
of SyclDey, a dty rl oveitbtee
mf1lloa people," 1le stated. ('It
is' a very metropolitan area
ldtiDg
witb a strong econoinie
sftaatioa.
...
" The situation can be
compared somewhat with
students atteDding Pchlaiid
State University. But Sydney
is .m_ore populated, the
government is different and
values are different;' '
"There is DO doubt tbe U•
change will be 8n ·educational
08U
s.•
reeeiiiJ ......... U
e.............
will
~
New
Wlleslldtll&e t1 Te r••lrD .. s,dleJ, All1nla.
and worthwb.Ue experience for 1)e lint AMnJJa a.iea te ftllt OSV 1ft'(* 't1&,Wt tl
an tbe students involved," dP*) Pal Patte~-, Daile ~..............
Lawtooaaid.
· SeatedareT•Seeea..tDe.bu
_
-- •
..
.
.r
i
l 1; _
i • · w1re':i#
BJLAVIIBIICIIRNBIBIH
Of. .. . .n
awarenea oa ampu,''
Npllllllt tbe .......,,DIIaJ" allobe....S.
llatleaiekt.
ethnlel on C•14* wbo­
-At IIO!Il. I lllde lbow,
•
GraaPe partldpMiDg ·to­ prmat)Jfaadecl.
· "adlclna of ilawall," wm be
ostra aecoad a11111111 clade tbe Blac:t StaCiem Tbe II'OIIIJI blft daMied
decl two timet iD MU,
-· Clbln Week wiD nm t.odly Ualon, Bulo().8awail. Native tnm·
Stadalb of roamll5.
tbroalb JPridl1 on •• ,~. · America Clab ancl tbe OSU lpODIOI'Ibtp to tbe - JU I p.m., tbe II'QIIP,
I 8C?C*clml to Dill ......
111iono~
lfemoria1 Ualan PrccriiD ' 'IIIaad Wne," wUl play
:"Ettmk Committee cbalr~ - '"TbeeeJI'O'IIIIplitidpaliDg ~Council becuu_.of­ eoatemporary Bawallan
.,._.
are nat tbe aa1J eCbalc II'OGPI procrammbJg foc:al.
Dillie 1D tbe MULoange.
"Tbe pwpca of CbJtare on c.".."•IQI," DOted llatleD,
Actt.itiea aaeb u art
111URSDAY··
_ NIUft
Week it to pramote caJtaral addinl tbat . these g~uups eUihtta, etbnlc looda and
Club
·
entert1lcment w_UI be will featire "Sweatboaae
Dr
1tnoon iD tbe MU
prueated ~week. .
. lUted bdow ia ~ ca1mdar of Lounge and • art dilplay
eveatafcrCaltanwea:
. tbeMU CCIDOOIHe.
•
. -At 7 p.m., I fUm. ~Winter
~AY~
Hawk," wUl be sbown iD MU,
n.e amount of nat year'a tuition mcr.te mnaiM
~ Blact Stadeat Union will ~roam.._
_
ankDown foUowiag I cleeisim clefelral at Fridly'a 0regcm
feature • abDit iD tbe MU
nuDAY:
­
SID Bolrd of Hi11M1' Edacaticll nwtJnc in Portland.
eoocOaaltaB day.
- OicaDO Studeat tmroa
- At DOell, Jimmy WiDten,
wctbc to oewalepGIU. •
will
prel(flt an abibit oa tbe
QWIE ~ben repartediJ delayed I dedlkJD after
8SU president, and Ami
MU
cmcoune and at noon,
a1eat leldm fnlm ~. tbe Unlv«<lty of Oregon,
Sowell, Blact Cultural Ceuter
Rosa
Elperanza and Mario
Portland State University .and Oregoa College of
fadlities coontinator, _will
Cordoba
wiD speak. Food such
Edacltioll eqnaed dilsatilfaction with the board's
pr:eside ewer question and
u
an
avacado
dip and i
three propoa1•.
answer aessloos IDa MU rocm·
cboeclate
drink
wiD
beserved.
Tbe prtlplaJuange from Gov. Vic Atiyeb'a two-year 30
to be &DDOUDCed.
_percent btftlcm fnc:reaw to a WJrivelt.plpen:!IX'cent:edJDcra~~e--l---1'lJESI).U.:.· __.....__
_ _ _ __
tbat iDclodes afl2S per ltPW aarcbarge.
-No events ICbeduled.
_..._..
Student di111tfsfaetioa with tbe pr0f10M1s c:eatered oa
WEDNDDAY:
fear of university eorollmeat Jolles ancl decrealea in tbe
- llaH).Bawaii CJub will
namber of gndaate "'nda;ta retamblg to tbe ltate'a ejgbt
bave an art display consisting
il'lllllutioaaof)Jigba'edacatioa, repcirtaindicatecl
of Hawaiian cWbfqg, rnnaieaJ
~-and OSBHE rep e• riativea were unavailable
instruments and coral oa the
for «tllllerl Sunday aftemooa.
.
MU coocourae. A COOOilllt .
padcting caDed "Baapi'.' wiJ1
-'lllldlted
pr••
up
American
'"""l!ft'l"
,. BOard delays lldtion decision on
Semiriar9 feature criticism .
Bolqu.iJt lw publl&bed
arUclel iD tbe
llteip11oe ofSiavic stuaies acd
iD ~ biltory. Bil boc*
DUDJen)UI
·~..;.--a....
__.... ......_ . ,_
,,,
----------------
.­
~
La~ to .tfismss Indian
fishing tights Jill ,
•
Dall JlomroltefD, I 1ft
at•!& ntc111eUul•eralb of
-Will ....It • iiDIU' OD tbe Jepl wt ••• MI"Jed down
., 1be u.s. .,..... QJUtt
totbelblteof
·'
tbe
,II a
•
a.em­
•
I
'
tblt tbe
stale their bub
...,.,.. bJ m•w:tcc tbe
of :flsb tfleJ CIJIQid
fnal 1be llq1latic
IIJII!Iillt
l'lle ewmdkll wiD &eus ia
iMI••d• Ulie denqr
.. m-mta(£ernh ' Jt1t 1•), . .! ebadew•••uu»tty wcat.
IIIIID ad fw:alb who wilb to
•
•
lwiJitat,
A later
by tbe
court Aid Jandowm
pni9e ill
tblt
'tiJelr,lllalk.els
DOt' banu­
,
.
. fill to the ·aqt•Uc en­
vimtmc•lll
•
.
~.
Jamaican to ·s ...of. native· land
•
•
lrlfltllf .rr .1
1Ql IJ~il~~~! .-fi'B_I lj I~ ll"' t.l1 1 i,
•• ~ sn.lff
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"n
B'-- j §•i~•J.hi. J a. -,~, f'"i~··: It~!!'~~~~~~~ .:~· . ­
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wi'1
~1
I th .. '~ d"'~!':.~~-' 1 1 ,f ~'~II !r;t l.tl · ~J.'t>r.:·
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.... jat a.t .,•••• ...,.
1D . . it .Cl! aJ•," Ilk[
.......,,..,... ta...._t. '"We41*61!•e1111
11 twecalll.
· '
~."-~
..ADd a.e·•• .,... t
J"-....,
tlere...., be.
lt. Tlin 1rt mea'•
· " - Ia tile bqfMI. aad
ef- male
line tDiiJ me I m • • tblm
rhp
,.,...pee
. . 1*1Wdlticll I . . be
•
wowed~.tile Ot\cQl State
Boald a(BipMw•••··
fllelltze r
buie • alioe
Ia
tbe · - · ·
Imnhertllit
, BafJdiac,"
.
t
Emphasizes agriadture
•
•
OSll starts Mexican exchailge
~." Kronstad said, He added
tbat arWber exchange prerequisite may
be attaining f1hency in Spanish
~
students may 10011 have tbe
~
P91 tuuity to participate ill ID agrkdural
!lexican n:rtwnge program.
·
1'!lis a:cbange may be slfcbtly ctiffereat
from most ol tbe Sdml cl Agriallture's
intematkmal agrkalbnl dejiWi
'''*'''
activities, acte~diug to Warred Kmet&d,
<m1 IIJ'••••IJprHW.
AltM'Cb acrnJure is
ill
tbe prccram Cl'pPJ •tioa, it is bDped tblt
1 brCIICI raDge ol D1lf ?Jtic.11tt.al majan
wD1 be able to putidpate Ia tbe .........
be llid,
llat tbe e.vtwtce wUI also
be a uaree ol edM wme• ..t cdaaal
a••,..••
addj"'
'J
nprnsion ..
''Reprdlea tl tbe st&wta4'a major, tbe
~mill. wiD 1M bimlber. Old .... ol
ftll I II . . . 1
aad tbe IM h) fl 1111 wcdd
nrtd pot+ ••
eaiUitl
today -
lbe erNiinge wu developediiSt~
as a result tl OSU's 1.2-year •uod•tiaa
wftb tbe Merican-beted International
Maize and Wbeat I.mprovauent Center
(CIMMYT) and .the Natiooal Research
Center (OOA) in Obregaa, Mexico.
A cootratt, signed last April by Ernest
Briskey,_ QW dean ~ agriculture,
ltroastad, aro COIMYT project leader,
aad Mexican governmental officials at the
INIA raearcb ceater formalized the
exchnnce.
INIA l(tivities at the Obregaa center
i~~<la* wl at breedlnc lftd .. geoetics,
pr~. proc• . , , and marteting.
1'be proaam bu receutJv been extended
to tnchn poattryand Uvelloct bru tine.
Bn•e aldie recetd npnka aliNIA
II
ICJi:abrt,'' L
lid a·
plltned.
lbe plOCIIID il relatitelJ r fF ktbr­
free beciW! I ia Dat I 1J 'sri ' ~
a• tw .,, •
m
d
caJ a­
s1
•twncn. aa:ilcllc to •'afi"'C•illlr.
QW dbedlllr aUnt ri?Nsnel¥11 11 e.
NoD srirnJure majcn 'l
'ed ia
pu1idpatiag Ia tbe aclw r ay .be
requlrecl to take two « aae bilk
agriculture CW ! I
.
"A basic _. . ,. t~lhll tl Cli<!albu'e
will enable tbem to .,., ItaM tbe iJD.
portaDc:e t1 acrnltvre aad
tbeir
particular field
a.r
interacts with
m.rdl ldftliea., I pater variety ~
IC(.aalh•al alr1entl wtD be able to
patidpale in tbe prosram, Kronstad
apl•laed
monT iJ a private, uoo-pro61,
Uffc: lr•lt•dloa c:bar1ered under
•.. '"'" .... 1'be orpnlptinn abo seeks
ID impaowe WCI?idolride !Nitre aod wheat
11oca1ioD witb *"'oMait on developing
•
I
..
(Oiilb "n,llidltralltld.
~
~
wt.tl
.;·;;:;celcbauge
111
.;;,
betw«D <SJ aad Melican spec!alist.s,
Lariltldaail
..
(See "EXCBANGt;" JIICe It)
•
EXCHANGE, mot. fniD ,._ 8.- - · ---~-----1
....,. . . p'ld
oa Gin
FfDal dctaO. ~ tbe ~ aMqe will
be drawn ap late[ tblltprilc. amri!DI to
~~~.
., .
lfedia ~e fi tbe c:rilllln El tbe mWtary into tiM! countryside
Salvador is deCeiving the Aioeriean to eradicate any opposition to tbe
people.
·
gOveJIUiad.
Tbe U.S. State Department bas
According to a U.S. State
manipulated mucb the media to Department "Dissent Paper'" these
drum up congressiooal and public tactics liave "failed to neutralize the
.support for tbe Reagan ad- peasant population."
ministration's foreign policy in the
Coutinued popular ~tion to
small Central American netioo.
tbe junta bas resulted in the violent
Tbe news media leads us to deatbs of more tban 9,000 people
believe that the United States is during 191). Among the dead are
supporting a "moderate" priests, doctors, teachers, jour­
Salvadorangovernment (junta) that nalists, students, farmers; peasanb,
is interested in implementing social four American missionaries and
._ and land reforms to improve tbe two ~can laJiQreform adviJors.
· lives of the people.
~
Irr an etfort to fight this' brutal
The opposition is labeled regime, thousands of Salvadorans
"communist guerrillas," allegedly have joined the Revolutionary
supported by Cuba and tbe Soviet Democratic Front, a coalition of tbe
Uni~ in a, conspiracy to impose a
majoropposition groups who are
communist regime in Central now dQbbed by the American press,
America.
' 'communist-ledinsurgenb."
This type of news coverage
The Reagan administration
diverts attention from tbe real issue. assumes the revolution is part of a
Tbe revolution in El Salvador is "communist plot" which threatens
not a creation mtbe Soviets or tbe the United States' national security
Cubans. Rather,. the people
El interests and its historic domination
·Salvador are protesting 50 years of of El Salvador and other Central
institutiooaliUd violence and in. American countries.
justice.
Although Reagan insists tbe
Military dictatorsbips since 1932
States. has "no intentiontt of
have perpetuated sta"ation, ":/ . · involved in a Vietnam-like
i11iteracy and poverty. And only 2 '\
~ct in El Salvador, his actions
percent of tbe population maintains prove otherwise. A , defense
control over 60 percent the arable department spokesman disclosed
land, so a few can live in luxury Feb. 24, ·that tbe administration is
while the majority live in poverty.
actively considering sending adAlthough tbe junta . initiated ditional military advisors to El
agrarian land reforms, it brought Salvador to train government
•
m
«
re·
m
troops.
focus away from the real problems
Meanwhile, Secretary of State in El Salvador.
Aleunder Baig, Jr. says the ad­
United States military aid is only
ministration's "most urgent ob­
perpetuating bloodshed in that
jective" is to stop a large Dow of country. And support of ., the
arms from COD1munist natkm to repressive government will only
guerrillas in El Salvador.
further aUenate tbe rest of Latin
Reagan seems all too eager to 1\111erica from the UnitedStates.
lrftited States mWtary advisors
confront tbe Soviet Union, and is not
acluding tbe possible use of and ~ulpment will not btay peace in
military force in preventing the · El Salvador.
The Salvadorans need to solve
shipment of arms through Cuba.
Russia and tbe United States' their own problems if they ever hope
military posturing has taken the toattain long tenn peace. (SD)
Indian .traditions highlight ·
poW-wow
to joiD iD tbe danciqg, with Cl' tbele tind ci ..,., par­
witboatculwtw
&ipltial in trlditiooaJ ac­
''Tbla Ia a IOCial daDCe," tivid-."
said 8Gb Tcm, mu&er ~
Qab members passed out
tel&iliiJIIIel ·~~jet gtf1a ol toya and billa to young
sodableaad~"
'l
Clildren at tbe pow-wow.
Tbe crowd tlidteoed in tbe
''Oar mooey comes· frun
biUroam u lbe I'OII'iDC souDd our club ac:couDt," Qplained
brqbt carioal spectatoq to ~WaD, "We bave bad maney
leetbe~neat.
donated to tbe club tbrougbout
A roaad daDce coali.Dued tbe year aad bave also bad
with mea aad wamea peeling adivitiea to~ money...
eacb other clariD8 &be daDci
C1ub members also worted
'"l'racfWontDy, lbe rouDd with Culture Week beld at
daDce aed to go boy.girl aad osu in January.
meo-womm, but f t don~ do
"Our pow-wow 1s the biggest
tbat anymore," said Tom. event for oiU' club," said
"lfa just a c:baDce to get to RusaeD. "We were mucb more
know each oCber."
prepared. and I lot JPOft
A blanket dance was people attendlct thai\ list
~another Indian tradition to year.
show appreciation to the
•'11Wlgs just generally went
rnuskians, according to Tom. smoother, and we felt It turned
Young dancers moved around out raJ weD." sbe added.
tbe ballroom with I cupped
blanket to bold donations !rom
spectators.
Ranging frun young infants
to distinguisbed grand­
LSAT • MCAT • GRL
parents, everyone gotlnto ttie
PSYCH • GR£ 810 • f!'AT
act diuinl tbe social dances.
GMAT • OAT · OCAT • PCAT
"Tbe traditional way for our
VAT • SAT • CPA • TOE n
social daDees 1s women's
MSKP • NAT'L MED BDS
cboice,"saJdTom.J 'Women,"
ECFMG • FlEX • VOE
be said directly to tbe dancen,
NOB • NPB I • NlE
" get close to tbe one you want
Dat'dq Ia faD eereaaemal dress na tae put cl the
foar111 ~ NMift Ameriraapew1tw beld Ia tile Memertal
UU. BIDr..a SatudaylllPt.
""
By NANCY BVUE
university and tbe people wbo
Of'fttBaroaltta'
attended our pow-wow,"
Russell said. ' 'W1tboul the to pick. ~
support ci everyone, our event
People lined the Ooor as the
wouldn'tbesuccessful.''
student
members of tbe OSU
Traditional Indian war
Handmade Indian arts and Native Ame r ica n Clu_b
~ music and costumes
hlib}lghted the Fourtb ADnual craft booths were set up for presented gifts to suppbrters
~ative American pow-wow prospective buyers, wbo of their organization.
"Tbe pow­wow was held in a
Sa~y night in the mingled around tbe· arena
moretraditionalwaythisyear
before
the
po
w-wo
w
MeniorialUnioD Ballroom.
than we've bad before," said
A JOdal diDner was beld festiiilies.
Tbe heartbeat of Indian J oyce Greiner, NAC advisor.
before tbe ceraDOO)' so tbat
men and women could drums filled the ballro<m as • "We just want to honor the
acqlllint themseiYes with dnlm.mm began warming up. suppor:ttrs ci our club."
A sbort prayer was said, in
"Tbe university itself bas
eacb oCbtr, ICalr'diDg to the
Diane RuaeD. ~ Native the Indian tradition to the taken a major role in Oregon
Great Spi.rit, u the pow-wow •ssist.ing our lndiJn people,"
American Club praideat.
Tom said. " I like to do
"lt gives everyone tlQ)e to cificially opened.
Indian
I'Ofalty,
dressed
in
everything
I can for the
r~" sbe ald. "We bave
dinners for tbe people wbo full outfits mfeathers , bells 'stUdents. There's a good
bert tonight, and I'm
drive 1oog ...,. to atteod our and Indian .beads, began
pow-wow. For us, we do it for circling tbe ballroom nooc~.
~
part ci tbe GraDd Entry, ·an
tbe people.''
" It's good our Indian ·
Robert MacVicar, OSU qeat tbat traditionally opeDs
studenta are learning. math
president, atteuded tbe dinner each pow-wow.
As drums and chanting and English stills,, , be c:oo­
with bis wife, Clarice.
"We appreciate an the continued t~ increase, tinued. "But It's alJo just as
support f t get frciit the bystanders were encouraged UDportant to them to ltam
~.ftMPl1111
ED UC A TIONAL CE NT£A
ftt l PrtOI I1hO~ So"< t, lo \U
~Jnt f 19~
Cotxse 1'1 Eugene
415-5181
... .,
-I
In accordanc
Family Aigtits ar
amendeq, ORS ~
State· Board-of t
Oregon State U
information about
The student's n
telephone numb€
. \:j.l_,. .
'--
.
-
Killings of Ntlanta blark rhildren represents mote than death By CELESTINE BAIL
1bete are oow Zl black cbildreo dead in Atlanta, Ga. Another
cbDd iJmissiDg.
'Ibm are 21 very young dead bamln beings and ooe wbidl
most of as don't espectto be feand alive. No ooe knows why.
Tbey were too yoaag to have knOwn oreven cared about their
first snm date, tbelr ftnt car, the riliDg cost ofgu. Ne!tber will
•they Joee lleep O'm' wbetber tbey wiD trip on stage during their
first graduation, bleb ICboolOr collele.
1bey are DOt aemJIII about their first job interview, tbey
have been deprived that oppodwiity.
I realize that you are aware ol tbele things. But Jet me take
you a little further tbaD •
aware. It isn't some yo~ black
I
young, veey young, lmp'Overtshed, bript eyed, milchievous,
peaky Uttle sisttn, brothers, daugbten, and 10n1 you've never
had the joy rl knowing or the sorrow rlloslng.
..
It's me asking you to be a UtUe IDOI'e oompeiSiooate, a little
more .conc:bned. Not beaUR these are dlildren. or black, or
young or comparatively Innocent. But that they are human
beingsasyouandlare.
Be concerned that they ire children of!God; whatever you
Rocbel. 100 Michael.
~
.......c~~tve him to be or not to be. Tbey have a right to be here; 45 home from his or her paper
~
themOWJtalns,tbunow,adeer,youandl.
r grftn In honor of life, black in mourning for the awful .
lf'OCUY store.
My point l!s it can happen to anyone. Be concerned while it waste rl it. Be a little concerned; that b what makes us aU a
llttlemore hiunan.
isn' t you.
Green and black ribbons are bemg worn on the OSU campus
It's me writing to you, asking ,you to be concerned about 22
by ~ human beings. They will be on sale for $1 today
and tomorrow at one of the Memorial Union dlstribution cen­
ters.
The money obtained will be sent to AUanta along with a card
of sincere sympathy expressing the concern and support d the
.
OSU conununity. AU are invited to purdlase and wear them.
Jfetpt I..IUJI& like uy active curdle, increases the
OOQations of more than $1 will be appreciated but not solicited.
need for, carbohydrate and lowers the need for fat. Daily
For more infonnation concerning ribbons please see the
carbohydrate requirement~ are &G-90 grams, or three t~
classified section of the Daily Barometer. •
four servings, while thoee pbysicaDy active may add 3G-90
· (Since this was written the mbsing boy has been found
additiooal gnmia, aboutone to four extra servngs.
dead. )
•
·
Good IOal'etl el Deeded carbobydratea are wbole­
(Celestine Hall b a senior in teChnical writing).
...t ~ ..........rut 1-nnvc in Ati.­
cbild in Atlanta killed aemelessly, it isn' t some American
oveneas.
lnltead, its your mother crying, acnaming into the
telepbone, telling you that your brother Andy bas been found
dead. Tbe dismal bope that maybe be ran away from borne and
lut.ayiog with friends, or foes, vanisbes.
~ 1.5 a llrle unswa.llowable knot in your throat and a
sickerdng boUcxnJesanew to
stomach. It's your niece
Weightlifters need calories, no! proteitJ . -
CGidrary to popalar bdtd, weightlifters do not need
more ~ in their diets. 5tre.tuous muscle use in·
creases the needfor calories, not protein.
To calCIIate bow much protein is needed, lifters should
4ft -=-...a --'- ..
.Oregon Pops bel~ dedDte Cultural center .
aloaC tl
Gecqe M. Cobin
~ bJ ~
alllftenee
"I think yop 've got I winner memben Jollied la old
bYoritel ... u 'tyankee
here folbl" ·
1bat ... tbe opUdan tl Doodle DladJ" IDd 'IQtn My
C4IDductor Normaa LeJden Reprda to Blwdway."
Geelt IIDCer Brace BowleU
wben tbe Onion SJmpllaaJ
Popa opened Dedlcaticm Week performed I Bini CrolbJ
at tbe OSU Cultara1 aad medleJ, lndocHnc . "Pieue"
Conference Center cm Taelday and "SmaU Fry," tbat
nigllt.
inWated I attend applallle
Approlimately 550 people from audience members
gathered ill tbe newly opened rememberlag the once·
OSU CUltural and Conference popular tuDes.
Center to bear the Pbpl play
After a 20-mlnute in·
acme of America's ID08t termJIIion, wben desaetti
popular music from the put· were provided by the
century.
AWetuce Lague of C«·
Jim Schupp, usistant vallll, sympbony memben
director tl tbe eeater. saJd tbe ntaa ued to p&ay some bits
maln pW poee tl the week "Is from tbe ltml, lDcludlng
to dedicate tbe Caltaral aad " Five Foot Two" and
Conference eeater aac1 lbow •'Cbarleltaa.••
the diversity of what goes on
Tbe concert stage wu
here."
transformed into a " Big
Official
dedication BaDd'' platform u Leyden
ceremanlet wiD beclD at 4 dlsmJued woodwind and
p.m. FridaJ at tbe «:enter wWl JtrlQg ledionl .saying, "Set
a visit ftoai Oreccm Gov. you cm tbe baa."
Victor A&iyeh, OSU President ' Five trampetJ, fQur
Robert MacViear aad Orecon tromboael, Ove sa1opbcoes
State Board of Higher aad LeJdea's dariDet com­
Educatioo <llanceDor Roy
priled tbe DeW lfOIP, c:reatiDg everyoae will be happy, •f
IOIIDdl ........... tl tbe Plep•wlersakl.
diJioftbe BICBIIDdl.
EleiW' Otwell. I pal
VirtullJ aD tbe ICIIIP were gradate of OSU IDd aow a
~lybie to tbe ......... CorviDII raldn, allo llld
of llie ndieDce. Toes bepD abe ea)oJed tbe Oregoa
tAPIIPic IDd flllcera IWted SympbaaJ Papa.
lftlppiiJC daring many tl tbe
'1t WU I great CCIIIefirt."
readWonl. .
abe saki. ''Wbat tbe world
Soap sacb u ''In Tbe needs ID08t is more IDUIIic like
Mood" IDd ''Uttle Brown . tbll...
Jiag" iDcluded auopboDe, • Otber events ICbeduJed for
trumpet add dariDet IOiol Dedicatioa Weet are tbe
tbat were .apedaUy ap­ Concert tl Celebration at I :IXJ
plauded. Bind memben allo p. m . today , "riday' a
joined iD, clapping and dedication c;ettiDODfiDd tbe
swiDgingtotbemasic.
OSU Revue beginning at I :IXJ
Tbe band received a stan· p.m.FridayiDd~y.
played an encore ol an "oldies
but goodi~" medley.
.
Readton to tbe concert was
favorable.
Karen Pieprbeier. yaduate
student In educational media,
said abe thougbt tbe concert
was aceUent.
' 'I tboagbt the. conductor
was woodet fal. It was a good
way t9 ~ aae ol tbe
Cultural Center, and if it's any
indication of what's to come,
Ton
'
.
lADII
At the-Craz'.
25• BEER-
5~
HAl
i
TONITEt
·
TRIG
Sunday Aprill
medley, Including such
.favorites as "Camptown
IUces " and " BeauUful
Drealner. ''
Blcbd by the symphony.
singer
----~-·
ding ontioQ
end tl
tbe · •.....
show,
and Inat atberare
event
Ueuallen.
Tuelday nlgbt'a concert
begaD with a Stepben FOiter
featured
,
Ardytb
Sliapiro later jomed l.eJden ­
on the clarinet - In a duet of
" Alexander's Rlctfme Baod ..
by lnfoc BerUD.
1bls ... foJ)owed by •
World War I medley of BerUn
marcbel,lDcludine ' l()b. How
I Hate to Get Up In tbe Mor·
nlng' ~ and olher lelltimental
SOI14IS sunc bJ Sbaplro.
One tl blgbUgbta tl tbe
concert~ the' audience sing­
&ery Tun.- I Thurs .
1110 N.E. 2nd
eBJTl
aa.,.,.
Deplrtment. 'Qie prGinJD, befan we (ElJ) eaa COftf a
Coalortlam f« IDterDitlaDal
prcpam that wUI
Repn~entatinl fram tbe Development, Ja eampriled of meet lbelr lanpage needs."
OSU EncJilb l..upqe ID- 11 laad IJ'Ut UUDivenWes, saJd Morray.
' stitute and School of Buslnen. Jncl•""n'<mf.
"Ilia apected tbat if tbe
are asllsttnc tn a uUonal
AJtbouch IDidl of their time overaD procnm II to toDtinue
effort to Improve agricultural . at OSU will be_pnt studying .the ltudenta wiD have to be .
programs lD North Yea;nen, a EJ11)!1h, tbe JIMbLY~ able to convene adequately In
developing Arab country studenta are apeded to learn Engllah." she said. And
neartheGuUol Aden.
"mudJ.needed management · because ol .the language
Eight Yemeneae men methods," erplaJDed Morray. difference, the ~emen
arrived In Corva.IUs last week
" Ymen is a ~eloping studenta wiD not be'enrolled in
to begin a llx-montb OSU country with agrfc&Jtural management courses with
program designed to 1nc1:ease potential, but In order to be ., OSU students, added Morray.
their Engli.sb proficiency and more productive, it .needs
OWing a trip • to North
agricultural management better
'management Yemen last winter, Morray
• skUll, reported Marjorie methods," Morray said.
said abe found several
' ' Agriculture is the most "satisfactory " English
Morray, ELI C,!lfriculum
coordlnator.
.
important economic actiVity . teaching programs avalllble
Seven of the men areiJliddle in Yemen,'' she added, " and there·. But many of the inmanagement personnel from the eight Yemenese who are · tenstve English programs are
the Yemen Ministry of here will be moving into jobs held at tQes when,..&tudents
Agriculture in Sana'a. - tiM! ol agricultural iqlportance.
are unable 'to leave their folis,
country's capital city. ' Tbe
"For tbat reason. it is sheexplalned.
other selected reprisentative necessary thlt they learn the . "The Yemen Ministry (of
from North Yemen is em- principles of management," Ag.riculture) needs to allow
ployed by the Yemen Grain sheadded.
the workers more time to
Corporation In San'a , Morray
The Yemen students ' attend the intensive English
said.
course! wiD combine. field
programs," she said. '
The men will ~y English experience and extension
"ln the future, we would like
~ at the.. EU for approximately methods with their areas of the ( CJl)) program to be set
four months and £ben rectlve _spedallty, such aa. in ac- up so tbat the studel\t!!.can
training in agricultural counting, finance, marketing ream Engli.sb In Yeriien and
BJ TOM DBIARDIN
Of'fte...,.._.
management coocep11 for tWo
months thrwgh the OSU
and fisberte3 management,
she said.
receive their professional
training in America.•
But a problem facing the
OSU'a involvement with Yemenese visitors, Morray
North Yemen Ia the result ol conUnued, Is learning English
an interutfooal ald program
"None of tbem speak any
set up by the U.S. State English, so It will take a while
students live iD apartments iD
downtown Corvallis and attend individualiudinstruction
~olBIJiinea .
The
eight
Yemenese
tbe rha. lD tancnage, tbe
Gdel•ta nported DOCidng
RYeral other differenees
betweea tJJeir eowdr) IDd tbe
Ualted States, aecordiDg to
Morray.
"Tile cUfference In food i.s"a
big problem as wen· as the
climltt," Morray llid ad­
ding tbat Yemen is a very
arid country, 10 many ol the
men did not briJg rain gear or
warm clod)f.ng.
uODe ol the main ad­
justmenta for them bas simply
been tbe change to a highly
i.ndustriaJ.ize society,'' she
added.
o<l
Loneliness will atso be a
major problem for the
Yemenese students,· Morray
said. Tbe · eight men, who
Jterage 35 years in age,."bave
left their families in North
Yemen for the duration of the
aix·monthCIDprogram.
Despite the adjustments
posedbytheprogram,Morray
said she believes the training
~ons will be beneficial to
bOtb ..North Yemen and the
United States.
uTbe program will ·in­
troduce modem management
methods to a very important
brancb . of tbe Yemeoese
government , and should
pi"'ODDte favorable ecooomic
relationships between the two .
daily at the EU. In addition to countries," sbe said.
.-c
GeY. VIc Aa,a. OSU pMideld IWiert MacVIear ud eUler tflk:a1l etiiiiiiMd .. cat Gae rllboa awtll& Gae
tl die aewc.I...J..s c.r~ cater lilt Frtllay. r•I'W'iiC lite cWicaU. c:enmeales, a.el..terori ll&eMd toS~ Baxter (rfPt) ... eUler perftnDen dllplay tOm diJUc die osu Rene. osurrelebrates grantt-openi~g of cultural renter
ByJEFFMA.RCOE
Tbe ~P
or
Atiyeb.
' 'Tbis building and this
room in tbe yurs to come will
" We come today to be significant in the eyes of
celebrate ... " said OSU thousands and then hundreds
President Robert MacVicar, of thousands of people," be
and celebrate they did as said.
approxlmately 650 friends,
AUyeh was one of several
students and faculty of OOU officials present to help
gathered to attend the official dedlcatethenewcenter.
dedlcation of the new Culturaf
Lyman Seely, chairman of
and Conferen ce Center the OOU Foundation Board of
Friday.
officially presented
The ce remony was · a Trustees,
thecentertotheOOBHE.
celebration of a $4.5 million
Robert Ingalls, vice
gift to oSU and the Oregon chainnan or the OOBHE and
State Board of Higher pilblisber ot the Corvallis
Education made possible Gazette-Times, accepted the
through individual donations gift on btha1f ofOSBHE.
" You that have labored and
by thousands or Oregonians.
" I want to thank the planned and given or your
volunteers of Oregon who energy most certainly must be
devoted so much of their time enjoying an exhilarating
to the service or our state... moment," Seely said.
said Oregon Gov. Vict'or
The Cultural and Con-
rerenee Center was built
entirely with dooations to tbt
OSU Foundation, be noted,
with no~ dollars involved.
"W~ didn't ask the state (of
Oregon) to build it, we asked
the sta~ to let us build it,"
SeelySIJd.
"The OOU Foundation was
the vehicle that brought this
building Into being," stated
Seely.
The ceremony began with
the presentation of the colors
by the OSU Navy ROTC color
guard. Bob Kingsbury of the
westrl\inister House gave the
i nvocati on , which was
roDowed by the osu Choir's
rendition o( the national anthem.
The Cultural and Con·
rerence Center, situated at the.
comer or Western Boulevard
and 26th Street. contailis a
1,200-se.t. a~d1torium, a attract high qulity en·
smaller ~~usembly bal1 terta.i.nmenl When the rest of
IDd six. ~ coo- Oregon becomes aware of this
rereuce rooms.
facility, tbey ubdoubtedly will
Music festivals and concerts be sure to make good ~ of
1l(ill be among future activities it," Atiyeh said.
planned in the center. which is
.The words on tbe certificate
also e quipped to ac· gmn to Ingalls to comcommodate seminars, con· memorate tbe dooation or the
ferenc u and committee centertotheOSBHEsummed
meetings.
~deJa~~in ~terial'
· ~ the center is now
a~v •
Center is uniquely OregOIIian
- . cooceived, built and paid
for by private citizens and
organizltiom and dedicated to
the enbiDcement ~. ~
and academic activities. We
a~~ to pment ~ $4.5
milliongifttoOregoo.
CollmibIa• b~- ts IlL
Constructi be
· J
1979 and ~~~an~ba~
used b bad
tber labor •
.:U
uptbesplritofthededicatioo:
·osu CUlturalllld Coafereuce
n~
oln
·aenvenlu
'
-
~'
1
mnr
Vlrtuallycomplete.
Perhaps one the ~est
I ' I I W&
benefits of tbe center will be
thi arrival of high quality -._CAPE CANAVERAL, F1a.
en~rtainment In Corvallis, (UPI)- Astronauts John W.
Young and Robert L. Crippen,
AUyeb said.
" Whenever you have a good starting the' maiden voyage of
center, you are then able to their orbital freighter
l".n1nmhi o
tha
_
....,...
•
t"O
I (I
1
.;th
•
· · ... ~"'-:
and Crippe11 were in orbit ­
Crippen for the first time,
Young for the fifth - and
beaded for a Tuesday landing
on the Mojave Desert in
r ttHI"""io
_
...
Budget apprOval could
.
.
Board ~ Higher Education, uchange and special
and Joyce Benjamin, chair­ students, " Van de Water said.
woman ~ ·the state Board ~ " It's not as if the OSBHE is
Despite eariler budget cut Education, met witb Atiyeb to ask.lng for additional state
threat! from the governor's dlacussmeprogram'srllnds.
funding. The funds will be a
office, Oregon's foreign
According to .Ueuallen, be part of the total budget," be
student scholarship program and Benjamin met witb Atiye.b added.
" It (tbe funding) Is not just
fWlds may be not be com- to encourage the governor's
plelely eliminated. if the support of international a cost \0 Oregon," Ueuallen
By lAURA BARBER
Of 'The Barvmeter
p~nr higher education
budget gains legi!laUve approvaJ.
In his state . budget submitted in December to the
Oregon State Leglslatun,
Gov. Victor AUyeh proposed
to cut approximately ·11.75
million in foreign ' s~nt
scholarship program R1nds
from the 1981-33 higher
education budgeL
Wedne3day, Roy Ueuallen,
chancellor of the Oregon State
student programs and to
• propose a rationale for
Atiyeh'ssupport.
Rather than eliminate the
entire budget· for foreign
student scbolanbips, ~HE
members suggested cutting
the fund In half and allocating
approximatelY $720,000 for the
budget, said Jack Van de
Water, OSU International
education director.
"The OSBHE ls committed
to continue. supporting " the
said. ••Foreign students
contribute by enriching tbe
educational experience of our
own students."
Under tbe proposed OSBHE
provision, scholarships for
foreign students attending
Oregon public colleges aJid
universities wiD continue, said
Ueuallen.
But acconlng to Van de
Water, future funding will be
discontinued for financially
needy foreign students.
h~rp·
foreign students Only foreign exchange and
special students sponsored
tbrougb agencies will be
eligible to participate in the
foreign student scholarship
progr~ be said.
''The money is necessary t.O
support the two groups . of
exchanges," Van de Water
said. "(Oregon colleges and
universities ) can't afford to
bring in a new group or
! inancially needy students ...
we fel1 we needed to dosomething to prevent the
program r~?m disappearing
completely·
Ueuallen said he believes
1he governor will approve the
$720,000 proposal for tbe
foreign student scholarship
fund. "(Atiyeh's) staff is
recommending that be approve it," Lieuallen said.
" Higher education in
Oregon is a high priority for
the governor, however be is
dealing with limited
resources," said a spokesman
at the capitol.
"He (Atiyeb) dicm't have
money iD his budget for the
program. However, I doo't
think be bas ever wavered in
his support," UeuaDeo added.
"It's a question ~ foreign
students
students."
over
Oregon
r
.
~
·· · · ~~~
Senate wfflbiiietgroups;
f"t"O(l les
new task.force
\,1
{;;I
Ll
.By KRlS BUXTON
OfTbe Barometer
In addition to the Volunteer
Task Force bill, senatL
membtrs passed • bllJJ
A bill term.inating the creating a new Academic
Volunteer Services Task Affairs Ta!k Force.
Force and· combining it witb
Paula Fiblerald, ASOSU
the Student Affairs Task· second vi~ praideut, said the .
emohasis behind the bill Was
BJack CUltural Center
.Celebrates birthday
......, ....rn.uer.." . . .W.IIDB•Aw..la
Cllt!J ''il II IIIIa . .
....._ ... tilt ftllll
..,Ntllam
IIi«' lrt far 7p.IIL
t
•
•
waii pr~ents
.traditon:atisland>luau
•
­
>
•
'
•
•
astra Hili 0 Banli Qub will bold i1a amiuaJ
(cocoautpndding).
·
iuaaS.~yintt.elileiQOI'ialU~hlnrocm.
Uve Di'ltlc: will be provided by a group ct
lfft•thers « tbe cla.b have pt!l'~ced . mrnfdans wbo will accoropeD)' the dancers u
IJIIwliijn liDd TIMtiiD dlocessha JIDUiry, welluplay, andslngaonpfluntbels'•nds .
to be perfaimed at a
lbow at .4:30 p.m.
Tictda are availabJe at the MU ticket office
I.Dd.• ~
~atap.m. between 11:30 a.m. .and 1:30 p.m. weekdays.
'lbl- ~_Mer. tenid in tbe Merno1ial Union Dimer sbow tickets are sa. Admission for the
lbllroolu, 1riD
d bllditlaaal BllnHan sbow oo11 11 p.
·
foOds wbidl inciDcle poi <••~ taro peste), ~
·
.
h""! pig (fOisted IIDClRcl pork), Jomi nlpm
Proceeds from tb'e event support the Hui 0 (nlted flab piicitJed
wJtb oaiona) IDd. baupia Hawaif'sscbolanbipfund. ·•
·
'
.
·Conference prepares exchange progqun participants students partJdpate in"" the ju.stments faced by students
progttms each (mn, Van de studying overseas and ' ' bow
Water said.
.
students can get be most out
Preparing OOU students and
All courses taken by ~the experience," be said.
faculty members for overseas
ADlerian students studying
Janet and Milton Bennett.
exchange programs was the
at the three European spedaUsts in cross-adtural
focus of the annual Northwest
universities are instructed in communications, cond~
Inter-institutional Councll on
English and primarily by the all-day wo~.
pniessors from Northwest
Study Abroad conference held
Nl~A's six committees,
colleges, he added.
last Wednesday through
including the Program
1be annual Nl~A con- Development Committee. met
Saturday in the Memorial
.
Union Board Room.
ference is designed as a Thursday.
Representa~ves from 12
training and orientation
In addition to hearing
Northwest JMt61fc coUeges and
session for student advisors reports from administrators
universities attended the fourand faculty participating in and s tudents from the
dayconference.
schoolsinvolvedinNl~A.
the programs, Van de Water programs in Cologne, West
The representatives mef in
Each tenn, approximately noted. Last Wednesday, a Gennany, and Avlgnon,
various sessions to discuss 150 students from the Nor- workshop was held for France, councll members
policies about Nl~A's three thwest enroll at NI~A's campus advisors who prepa re
European
exchange university program sites in students for oversea~ ex-~
programs, said Jack Van de London, England, France and change.
~ater. OSU Office of In- West'Gennany. The campus advisors
On the average, 50 OSU discussed cultural adternational
Education
-~TOMDEJARDIN
Of Tbe Barometer
director and newly appointed
NICSAchairtnaJ{" , - - .
Begun in 1964, NlCSA is a
consortiwn ci colleges from
Oregon. Wa.shington. Idaho.
Montana, Utah and Wyoming.
Through a coope rative
agreement, the colleges "pool
their resources" to offer
overseas acbange programs
on a OllHenn basis, explained
van-de Water.
OOU, the University of
• Oregon ~d Portland State
University are the Oregon
I
d1scuaed the possibility Of
estabUahing a fourth NI~A
program at a university where
Spanish Is lhe predominant
language.
Rob Phllllps. osu jour­
nalism prolessor, and Marian
Carlson, OSU assistant music
professor, were two ci the
featured speakers at a faculty
orientation session last
Friday.
1be two instructors, who
taught in London through the
N l~A system. explained
their overseas teaching ex­
periences and hel~ prepare
selected faculty members for
UJ)COIIlinc NI~ excbang~.
OSU atldenta may enroU in
the NICSA exchlnees fer faD,
winter or sprtnc tenn. They
may alao cunblne ICidemic
tenns at tJie three European
univeniUes, said Van de '
Water. He added that students
are not required to speak a
foreign language.
''The one-term programs
complement the academJc­
year programs," Van de
Water Slid. "Tbey an set up
so students who want to study
abroad can do so without ~
having to team the native
language there."
MONDAY
&TUESDAY NITES
·
M
Rlf!IlNTnN
AT _ .
.A~~
~D~M
il
Black center hosts r~ception
An open boaJe is ICbedaled frOm 3 to 5 p.m.
• SundaJ at tbe Blad: Qalbul Cerda', mD
N.W. Monroe Ave.
'lbe Cemler his bern peinted aad, sl~
remodeled, saJd Arnie SoweD ~ tbe BCC. 'lbe
open house 1riD feature lla1 talh by local
speakers. Refr .. Its will be :Jei ted.
For a $1 donatioo, Mcwns will be able to
pan: haw gJ ceo rib~»'~~ to ('(IIUIV rmrate &be
pligN ~ the 21 bWtl children in AtJaata,..Gt.
wbo bave beta mmdaed by• an UDDIO'I
penon 01' pei'IOIII.
I' ,,
Proceeds from tbe rihboils will be :Jel'lt to
•
United Negro Co1Je1e F1md. said Sowell,~
specially earmarbd,to be sent to tbe Atlanta
TIS Force to bdp find tbe murderer.
~·
International Night off~rs
.foreign d.Brices;fashioris­
•
•
llmdrect
JtJSAMKDJDN
.·· "fd ay a couple
Of'ftt.a.-ter
. are ICtiYely imolved," be
·aid. "We'd like to 1ee tbat
munblrincreue."
The big eveat for .ISO acb
year Ia lntemaUonat Njpt,
eacb of tbe eCfJDic
orpnllatioas is invited to
perform naUve soap and
dances In a beoefit affair,
ODe out of every 15 OSU
atudenta coma from a forelp
country.
.
'For tbe Jut ·ten yean, ·
members ot tbe lntemaUoall
.Student .Orpnlutionl (ISO)
have eoeo~~r~ged cultural
ucbange between · all
stndenb, and ... beeu I
abowcae for tbe t'VItiJrm and
lorea of tbe various
utlooaUUa repre.ated OD
Clql'll, aecording to Babreh
~
Na.enbarit,ISO pmi~. . .
In addlUon, ISO is. a
governmental body that
orpntw tbe 14 DltfODIIity
. groups and voices tbe1r
ISO Presidenl
CODCel'1ll to tbe achlnlatratlco 'Only foreign ltudenta are·
and .\S()SU, Naaenbadf aid elilfble to run for oftlce and
Oil tbe'ne ot tbe deNfllne for voteintbeeleCtioo.
· ISO Eledlon nomtnaticm
:·we're an active and
.Oftlcer e:lectla wiD be beld valuable · organization,"
May 20, from I
to 4 p.m. N~ aid. "We·try to­
in tbe library and tbe iDcreue cempu awareness of
Memorial Union, Nuaer­ international Audents and
lbirtf· aid. The offices of tbetr cultures u. well as
·president, vice president, establ.lab atrq chains With
tr:eaaurer. secretary and · ASnW."
ASaiU Senate represeotaUve
T'bere are roughly
Lm:
are Open.
Today is tbe deadline for
· ISO applications., wbicb are
due in tbe StDdent ActivitieS
Center, MU East, by 5 p.m.
*"'
tbebeltforiSOinaeaeral"
Naaenbartf nieaU.ed tbe
aueceu of_ International
Night, a $1.500 budget iD- 1
creue and tlie acceptance of
. an ISO r.-aeotatfve IDto tbe
ASOSU SeDate u major ac- •
compllshiJ'euta this year.
"~u and tbe ad­
ministration bive .beeu very
npportive," Nauenharif
said. "Now it'• up' to us to
abow bow lerioas ­we are by
·
'lbiJ year'albow, ftatu.rtng
twelve ot tbe gnq~~, wu beld
May P in tbe .Cultural and
Conference Center to a
atanding-rocmooly crOwd of having good putidpatioa in
1300.
·
tbeelecUGal" •
·osu· Preatdent Robert.
McVIcar, Judy
of undergraduate
JldtVan.de.Water;
.
international edtM..tlm, 8pOte
on tbe value of int.ernatiODa1
relationa and education.
Na.nbarif saki.
In. addiUoo, awards were_
presented to outgoing ISO
.otficena during tbe ~
Nuaerabarif, Ephraim
Go9ere, ~ehdi Sadri, ~
Sandra Ramos, Joeepb M,
Cousins and Anne Fergv.soo
were aD bonored.
·
intemaUODal studenta at~,
"About 200 ISO Audents
and each ODe iJ.a member ol parUdpated.And most ot tbe
ISO, whether they kD6w it or people in the audieoce 'Were
not, according to Nauer-­ non-internatiortal,"
said
sbarif.
Nuaersbarif. "It wa.s tbe best
',D)
Naaenbarif aid.
lbolr we've ever bad, in my .
•aklo,aad tiJia year wu allo
Kul
..,a,=.
14 1·
.. Sp~y~paint~ .
Jmogans·.childisl(
~irs&~ ~ uJraniaM Go Home." Crudely
~~in black 00 campus buildings,
sidew~Jktand walls, tbe
did little but
messate
. disgust agood many <m1 students and waste
tbe time fi tbe physical plant WOlters wbo bad
to ~e the derogatory messages from
canipqs property.
Now it's ''Nuke Iran," tbe same crude
lettering, this time in .~and illustrated with
w~t is.apparently S1}PPOSed to tie a JMml?•
.If ooly:the perpetuators of these chjldish
. pranks could see 'their own hypocrisy. The
messages· are obviously aiined at anti­
American factioll$ in Iran. The people spray­
painting public property are showing their
disapproval of hate . by exp~ing · hate
~lves, to the g~no one. .
. F-o~ign cotmtriesorily point to this·
cru~e l;>eha~.r as one mb e reason for ~eir
anti-~.s. feelings. .
Maybe if the till)e and energy Uiatwent into
the libelous comments defacing our walls and
. walkways were put to some positive ~. the
j>ombof hate could be defused faster. (PO)
r
.
New ISO offi~~s express goals
.
BymiAJ)AMS
Of'l'be~
president; Farzin f.ananpa
treasurer; Nayereh Olyai,
secretary;. and F~j A.
Witb a .voter-turnout 440 Tarbini, senate repre!en­
. percent· ~ter than last tative,
/
year's, ~ foreign students
1be new officers will serve
·Wednesday elected tbeir 1981­ ·from July 1, 1981 until July 1,
·a 'olficers Of tbe International 1982, said Nassersbarif.
Student Otganization, said
Of the 1,100 foreign ~ents
Babrem
Nassersharif, on~ 207 'voted in the
outgoing JSO presidenL
New officers are Matar S.
Al·Romaitbi,
president ;
Nader Gbodoosian, .vice
election, an increase from. 47
voters last year. "We had the
lalgest percent participation
(this year) <i any organization
on· campus," Nassersha.rif
said.
"I feel just great," said AI·
Romaithi, a junior in
engineering, after he was told
he had bee!) elected presidenL
Al·Romaithi sald be was too
excited too talk about his
plans, but according to
Haytbam Elzaym, former ISO
president and AJ·Romaitbi' s
campaign manager, · Al·
Romaitbi's main g~JWill be
to gain more influence for ISO
,,,
on campus.
Specifically. Al-Romaithi
wants to bring speakers to
6su to mUe students more
a~
of international con­
cerns. and he wants to en­
courage more interaction
between f~ students and
other OSU students, according
toEtzaym. •
"We.dein' t want ISO to be
juSt a partyiDg group," he
(See "ELEcnoN,''Ja&e 8)
.. .
,
.~.
,
.. ..
'
­
~tb
but it is a big jump per­
,._....tal - wise,••
'"fL .
feel . tty good, an~ l
--..-_- caD
Ill
tog '· . . year'·~ said
I
cl osu.
•_ udiDg a, votiDg •. . rmWI
and a -er orienta
I
foreign· Fanin Farzaopay, junior m­
~u~~lll!!iill' an! .
important. - ·· eering, afte bearing of
IDs e~- ' . ... treasure ' • He
ISO~ I~ Elzaymsaid.
' e repre ent
100 said·one of bis goals · be to
stude~ nts,
but act _ally "'"""""'~ organizati - funds as -.
orientation is poor, stude ts efficiently as possible~ an~ in_a
nlture sboc way that will benefit sblde_ts.
~ g it, ' be ex- . . I'm very.bapp~, and I hope·
I caD se _e ISO~ and OSU as
much as· pOssible,'' said
ayereb Olyai1 .~homo e in
science ,and nut year's ISO
p
·- ­
I
I
1
w
,
I
secretary.
;
ul pJan to~ be a very good .
goiJJg lo _ ~for ·JD9re par· ­ __ _and to wo very·
tiopation. '
bard '" · ~ - said
.. ..
Ghod . dted this year',
Faraj A. Tarhini, 1981-82
vote
t as evid
of senate rep
tati.ve, was ot
increased interest m tbe ISO~ ava · able for comment.
''Tw~o bUDdred ,aDd
en out Tarbini is a ) ni~or in
,of 1.1.00 ·- stm p Uy small, . engineering. t~
.
ted)~ .
As in pas
_ · • e're
..
•
· ·Faculty women set ....·
action
. ·Suit date .
·'-
"
..
Met$tnafr.cilll)WCIIDIII dedalld10 liE...._.
far lqd) ,....elld paplw ~ eoiM fiJI lilt tbe ,--. flf I
IDd llllc:qr...t dill to G· · Mar Jl ........ bi wllldl
plaiD 1 pollibll +'~M tdloa OSBHE npn11 "•••:• . . .
~ .......tile Onpa . . . to bate prelelltedcllta rel•tld
• Board af JICber £6t •tkl' at. to tile M" I II tkJn Elw1 J!l
. ID An•lcan A atkll af Buttbe)iearilll... pllllt
~
UDinrtitJ
Profeaaort qniiiJaelt. .
. . ·
me ellllg l1indaJ.
,._ a.ria8 . . npill'tedl.J
. 'lbe AAUP mrzling wu · p 111 ~ beet• 1 OSJ!HE
·
·f"1orrection
V
reprm ut.tlYn were DOt
prepued to pr ennt 1111
material, ezplalaed ADD
BrodJe,FWEmeneber.
At ~he--June 1t beariD& a
In ·Thursday's , Daily judge will itec'cte wbetber the•
artide. about ~ use warrants ella action
' Barometer
.
ternational
Student Jtahn' "
~Uen dtcw••. then · A claa• action suit is 1011ght
were tWo a acas.
·
because
indi~idual
According to · Bahram dlJcrimlnatioilc:alel were
Nauersbarif, new ISO •'not ·. accompJiabing
president, i7o studi1rts voted uytblag," said Anne Deeney,
...
in the election C'OIDpal'e(l to a ·FWE member. .
turnout oil$ voters ~year.
. In her pr esentitlon. Deeney
.
.
. year.
ezp1ained tbat FWE is a
. The Barometer regrets the alaiJIOI1 group for tbe cla•a
earora. ' .
• action auil
'
'
.
·. With sufficient enrollment
>
:·emnese language course to Dtr offered ifi.fall
.
.
resouree serviee for due to .a lack of fuDda and a
:rbe QW UliDele aeriel Ia
boncritiDC materiiJa socb IS need for more imenlted oftered tbroa8b tbe DepartUteratare, ' fDma, sUdes and students, Suen salcl. Sbe llid meat ft. Foreign Llnpage
she bopes to receive an 'and Uterature in tl\e CoDege
01ine1e c:ostumes, abe Slid.
Students in tbe 1r1'NO. enrolbbeot ft at least 25 ft lJbera1 Arts. \
aunese c:oar-. Uled tideo shadenCJ to teadl adnele StudeDta take Ollneae to
acquire eredits In a aeccnd
t.apiDg IS IDCitber dusrOCID again In 1tll.C.
&ien, bas a .baekground in language, or · for personal
·media, wbii:b Suen piiDs to
Odnese Uterature and is
lntereS In travel or wort.
. .qain.
OSU d,octora1 student In Suen Slid. "Most studenta
~~bid~~~ educatioo.
·.
want to uae tbe language In
suen sai...
.. addiug, ' 'I like , Sbe also teaches . CUnese
travels to Hong Kong, Taiwan
OOUIWII'I:
~
peopletoenjoytbecllss."
through tbe adult edueafioo or anna. .
abe hopes~ be enjoylble for
Chinese eou:rses were extension of Llnn·BeDton
''We need language In
an.
discontinued 1ut year at osu
( . ~ to begin to develop a
~
. IC:bedaled to be~ qain
It <aJ dariDC ~ 1911-1:2
Offte 1111'· · ­
scboolyai.
·After a diseoatbluUoa · Aad it prom1aes to be more
beci~LW ft budget redDctloal,· tbiD 1 foretp LIDgulge ex­
· ~ .m, 11111111 183 perieDce,SIIclMiag.QnaSuen,
-----~~--~ instra1:tor
·
. Tbe' · ~ llnguage
series Ia deslped to bielp
ibdeutspia a IWiftDeSS of
tbe aiiDae people and their
......in a fOI"'DDt ~.,_J said
1J LINDAD.\VIION
The course content will ·
include basics in the "bello"
and ' 'thank you" of d&ily
conversation and social in­
teraction
conversation.
Students will also receive an .
orientation to the Eastern
culture through ·plays, poems
and involvement in play­
acting, complete with aunese
c:ustwnes, saidSuen.
Mlq.Qu,SaeD
The Northwest cult\ll'al
.'.Course teaches more · · Coordination Office in SeaWe
than.foretgn language ·
provides Suen ' with free
an
·
relailoalbip witb people in tbe
aw-e
~." abe ex·
preaeiL
· · JOUl"DDlllm students with an
1nt'e rea t · j n forel g n
CICIIT~. bave taken
SueQ's daael,lbe added.
And buiiDea students ln­
terested In inttmaUonal
business would benefit fniD
teaming aw-, she ex·
plalned . "Knowing the
language belpl people in tbe
West wbo do bwdness with
mainland OIJDI....
•
. • PNI!o IIY Gr.tchen H~tmUtll
,
'l'be OSU Clblnl c.fele.ee Celder II ... ~~~me fer • $t5,• &.eaWfer pUao, dla&ed 'io die ceater by die IMiwd family.
World aebiw..SIIiailt.DaleiW. pafermed • die ~d«fercllatag a CC*~
. at die ester Ia April
Cultllral ·center receives ·rare·pianO
.
. .
By WENDY DOBBINS
aeveril piaDos. Tben we bad an opportunity t.o get a Boleodorfer
OfTbeBarometer
,
· andwewerelntoUlagnwmrnt, " said&ye.
,
Tbe iultruiilelltl are made in limited numbers and comTbe ~ ~ Coafermce Ceatet bas acquired a Boe,en- para.tively few bave been imported t.o tbe United States, so they
darfer, tbe "CdDr" rl piiDal, accordiDg t.o Jim Scbupp, arebardtofiDd;said)Jr)'e.
.
·
ces""'ltntclredor.
lll1IIUal f~ rl tbi.l niDHoot'coo.cut 'grand plano il er, worth (45.000, was dOnated t.o OSU a.y tbe tbe aMWon ofloat keys to tbe low JeCtion, Bry~ uJd. llidSdqJp.
·
. Tbil idditfon, with tbe four Joncer strlnga added, pmtdes
. ."!Iii
1bot_ _ _ ·_ .. sold Sdmpp; " ...... _II! u..~ _ _ _ U..-quallty
· dlepiiDo
ia.ApdliDtlmdartbe<lWRmew.
oftbebua,explafnedBrye.
·
IJaad.a:lftecl ·
A111tria siDce liZI.· Bclmdorfen
Tbe piano is cblrlcterized by rich sooority in tbe bUs without
bave been . . _ ~ ri nvcai pianists~ bt«inning witb Franz .lcJa of darity, ·aDd by a flate.Uke treble. Tbe .tone ~eem~ to
1J.sJtIDd lDcladiDg B
aDf:1 Straua, Slid Joeepb Brye, cm1 suhltaiq IC!Dier without 1011 of volume, said one piano com­
musieprofiJJDr.
.
- .
•
mitteeoftidal. .
.
. After leamiDg of three available Boseudorfera, Brye said be. Two well-bown pianiU, Lincoln Mayorga. and Daniel .
traveled t.o lrwfiaM, wbere tbe sole U.S. distributor of tbe pianos • PoUact. who played in the movie, .'"'be Competition, played
illocated.
·· · ·
·
the Bosendorfer iD concert at tbe coofereoce center May 29,
~·r was on tbe C
CJSU? piano committee. and we bad a c~ of said SCbppp. "They thoroughly enjoyed it," be added.
m
5
one
E'"•"·
'Singapore is a big
.
.
city. and as i~ any_
big city, peopl_
e are
t_oo busy to smile..'
"\"
~~~~
·-Kwok Kwong ·~ · ,
.....- -
Woflg
·:s
quarters. "Most people live in
"You Jean) to speak your
Of Tile Banmder
three- . or (our-room Oats; . own language, altbougb there
. .
paying about $20 to _$:i0 a are- fo~ officlallaDguages in
Kwok,Kwong Wong, 24-y.ear· · month fllr mtt,"said Wong.
Singapore: ~alay, tbe
old·· Juhlor In electrical . ' ' An average monthly rent national language; English,
-~
·
·,comes from·one forafamllylsabout.,.a."
· the common language ;
•
countries In the · • Wong comes from a Ohinese..../ Olinese and Tim.ail. ·
.-r
·
·
.. f~y. He ~u born In
~ 'There are. also four major
· . • The nation of SingApore is a Singapore, .but .lti! father, a !'tlig!ons,~· Wong said,
·
· ped island ap­ retired food hawker, came " Ouistian, both Catholic and
. pro
ly 22 miles long ·by frOm mainland Olina before Prostestant, Hindu, BUddhism
11 miles
. The 2.3 mililon . wwn. Wong ~ two older and Islam. Other faiths are
residents ·~ . oil ap­ brothers, j>oth living· in toleratedwithnoproblem.But
proximately
square miles Singapore. ·
·.
to ~e four faiths and four
of land.
"There are different ethnic languages work in harmOnY.
''The actual square mileage origins in· Singa~~...- said takes a lotofwortc.
depends on the tides," said Wong. "Approximately 75
"S:,gapore is a very clean
Wong. ·• · ·
· percent are Ch}nese and the city," said Wong. " There' are
Because of Ul~ density of the rest are Malay, India n or "'-h~vy fines fo~ littering and
Island, people live in close some other' natio~ty .
the laws eire strictly enforced.
Bys.p1WESIERN
~~nt vi~i_ts Zair~; .
studi~s. aguaculture
By DONNAS'l'ROBEL Of 'l1le 8analder . . Helping.put~ cap OQ world bunger: is the -goal of Becky
Lent. an nw doctot'al C8Ddidate in resource ecouomics.
. $Je bope8 to iee Lbis ·adieved tbroagb the use of
• acjuacultbrein ~eocaibies,sbesai~
.
Aquaculture is
metbod used to increase food
~on .from marine ancl fresh waters. Lent and a
team Of researcbers spent 21 days last ~ in Africa
• studyirig aquacal'ture SJBtemi in use in the countries of
Ruwanda, 8unmdi IDd Zaire.
.
''O!Ir goal was to take a loot at ~ that were
already set up and then get t& prograul underway to
·provide~ to tbe Africans;" said LeDt,"wbo sald •
believes tbe program could ~ tbe.beginning of~
~ve fish fanning programs fOI' Africa.
. The idea is _to teach tbe people of these counbies to .
:a
,--...;,.;.-..:....:--....:..;~__.;;::....---"""'"":-~--.,......"""'-~:----.::~__;~ ~ lleiiiiN It that l'lf1llte
811)1 .._," llld Va..''So
aaup. we. were n.ted very
weD,"llldVIL.
. •
tie . Collect IIIII llldled CGIJII)Iiaer
IUdeaiOIIIGr.......,we .
repair. Be IIIW Warb for a ,
nald Cll*l lbllr .,_, we eledrolllcltlnDIDlftwbera. .
After l&leDdiDI GDeiiiGIIIb in nald lbolr llaa'llllt we are · Vu
to
Pewi)lvauU Vu IIIII ber . DOdllftnatlbuiiiiJan. We fortwo,.-.lleloreeamlllcto
family ~ to IIi. Aagel, ,. dlda't eome bert for'tbt food · OSU: After fiDIIblac .coDece,
Ore. '\'111 IIIler waated tO go or tbe maoey,.we.c:ame bere sbelllda·naldllketoltiet
to tbe c:oa9ent tbere and my ~~eca.... c:aaldD't Uve .in arouad Orecaa. "' rean, like
piJ'IIItl libel Oregon, 10 we VleCDam aa,man. We bad to it tiere, IIICIJ nald like to "'
came,'-'saidVIL"
be8iD ·from aero and work dole to 1111 family. But my
Not, aD o1 Vu's ~--nw made hardto plu tbeir rapect."
boyfriend, u eledricil
·
.......q
·
·
easlaeer, ·miCbt move to
itoatoiVIeCnam. "OUtolfour .'Vu'a fatber went to Califonlla· or 111111e plaee. I
sistersandftvebrothera,htill Cbemeketal · Community wllljl.tbavetonltllldaee."
bave GDe brotber and two
·
*'Willi ,.,_.eta
'We planned for ­weeks for
the trip.but we didn't tell any­
one.
found
. If'".)the authorities
.
;
out yoo were planmng to
leave the country; they
would come-ar:td throw you in . sald
llilteHHiws
in VIetnam,:"
'Vu. Up until
two years .. .-~--1111!1111----•-----.
ar wir
-Jiv .
.a....,.
. ago, Vu.bad two briJtbers in .
ne nere a
~
& earl ft6V
jail.'
· Vletnim, but one ·escapec~.by
AWIDBellereTomorrow ·
-Trinh·Vu bOat
· ·
· \·
. • "ToWorkForYOU."
;•a.iy brother was going·to
escape with his famlly,.but at
•the last minute, they didn't
sbow up so be bad. to go
alone " sbe said. He was
...
.
.
· picked
up by a Norwegw .
freighter and broUght 'to
Singapore. There be made
ContactS with' tbe Unjted
States and his family. .
By SAM WEfi'BRN
ibe, !bot this marl my faiber . . "So; my fatber decided ·that
wortechritb," said Vu.
.C?f Tile Blrlllleta',
we better go home becauSe the
·
.
' ·Vu said · ber sister was a last J?lace you ~ to be
It was tbe monimg of Aprjl meu:lber of 80 international when tbe Viet q,ng came.was
29, ~975., tbe day bc!fore. the cooveut.
order that bad in the airpOrt. We knew that
During her first :year in
Vi~ Coag took Saig~ When ·nWIS from D:JIDY different· ~ the Viet Coog ••took America, Vu attended high
TriDh-Vu, a jllllior m home couu ·
"The mother Saigon, ~Y would come out scb90l at Sacred Heart
economlcs, and ber family
· fi.om America ;, to tbe airport- and cbop Academy in· Salem and then
boarded a ~.S. Army tran-...
u, "and sbe a.rrang~ ~erybody into a. 1million went on to graduate from ·
· ~plane. /.
• . for
evacuation of families pteces.
hig1l school m Mt.
We ~ !10 1dea where "'e ofall
· ,.
..
. '"nlere was a big feflce, Angel
· .
.
were gotng, we just mew we ·
.._.. tbe · rt " sbe 581'd
·
· etting
of Vietnam "
"We
or weeks for aro...,..
llrpo •
Wben Vu .firSt started high
•
~U: .,.;:- ~ was ;., tbe trip, but w ""ilrdn't 'tell "The only w~y to get out was • school in Salem, sbe was
crowded that
.U 00 1UIYGDII," said V .• "U the through a big gate that Wl\5 v,lewed a:' 'SOillewhat of an
place to .sit doWn. We flew to authorities foWld out you were locked,lotsoof my fatberto
babadthatot aoomaly ui tbe'student body. .
Guam...
plarming to leave the CQUDtry pay a
m011ey
ve
·
·
·
•
v
lain'ed that b
they would come ·and ~ gate opened.
"I heard people talking
~ ~to leave Vi~· youin~Sowebad1o\eepit · "Butjustasmy ~rafld abou~ me in tbe ~:· ~d·
beca!e ber taiher was an . a secret.,.
:.
. father were counting the y u, ~Y were . whispenng
•. · ·
said
ber •-.:.a
· money we beard that a
~are
tbey,food,
did sbe· come
y
official. ·m the police .orce
·m · u
I<IUWY went to
•
·
he
f tbe
the
Saigon.
·
· 'theairport tbe night before tbe ~rt plane was coming . ~ or
are
y
. ''Wbea we bad gotten to this f1igbt, liut tbe Viet Coilg were m, ~we got to-go out on that bere..~eca~se they are . ·····-~lllillil
colintry, we received a letter sbelliri& tilt .airport sb planes plane.
·
· hWlgry · ~Y ~~t we •
from tbe family of. one of the couldQ't land. "We silent the · . Vu .aDd her family 'spent were dumb animals. ·
men my father Worted with. night tbete and by the mor- about ·One month on · Guam "I .tallted to my brother· ..
They told us that .when the Ding-we bad given up"all bOpe then went on to a refugee about what I bad heard in the
Viet .Coog. came. to Sai,gon, ofgetting~:'saidVu.
.· . camp in Pennsylvania. "It halls, and he bad heard the . •
=
pubuc
J:ere
t·
..
llli!ii.illiiliii!llil
.·THE.·.
&ua D&KY.···
Honduran s~ays .·for ~~!!~ryJ!~t~~-·~~
·one of the· reasons that
cnclll ,.._ lbe r.rilby ...._"lllltllllbe.......
....... ....... DoaiiD.....,.IDOSU.
.Amertea .,.. ......, ~ ~ to cae lllettoOSUIll a few
_,~at at lid 11a11e mec~care. Alii ,_.. r.. ........- ICbDoL
OIUwllklll•bandla,-=b· tfcllt DDW, liMit ollbe..... "Bit if I . . , CIIIM
to
u c:bemlllry, matb ·ad
~~
1
urwe..
'**
............
clllll't..,.-•...,...
we have less social unrest
lild .......... "' - a t tiiOCIII reiGna.lt
·-~·-r.m
than in neighb9f'ing ~n: .,..,..,"
haft ..... Ill .... tbiDp ... IIGCiac .. do •
CGID­ ti.WRtiDIIIJ ,.,.,~"
.............
tries, . like El Salvador or befan, bit I IDIIIt like IIJem ......._"
RepJado IIIII liD wife,
"'''Dft!IIJJioc*laiiGnird
Nicaragua, is that we have toatllfytbenwpdt...a:"
RepJado added 1b1t be na Glaria, plaD to go beck to to. . .._.,"
"'"ft
more space and 'resources
dlaes by ~ at lbe ead tl faD · beeD nlliiiC to go fit alclag
..
~· RepWo llld be ame...
·
·- -bot I don't kriow how long ·m=RepJado .dacribed BeG­
clara u "oae t1 tbe larger
that is going to last.'
·•=­ .
coaatrtea ID Celfral America,
and one' of tbe least
-Noe Perez Regalado
L--- - - - - - -- - - - - -- - - - - - ­
program bere ia very good so I
By IWI WiBJI!RH
dedded to stay.•:
.
Of'nle~
·
,
·
----J
tO the United States three
years ago, be found It to be an
"organlzedlociety with lots tl
rules." But be · tblnb "that
For Noe l»eres' Regalado, a
Regalado graduated from
sen~or·fn forest management · the National ~bool of most tl tbe ruleS make
from Santa BlrWa, J:ioo. Forestry ScleDce In Hooduru · sense "
~.the time be originally before be came to osu, and - Re8mdo also found the
planned tol.stay In this country bad worked for private tiniber weather to be a little advene.
waubart.
~·
·
" It was mowing when I flnt
"Wbell
tame ,for the
Regalado's family oWn5 an ·gottoPortlandudalllhadon
~~~~~~'7':e Institute," ~coffee plantation. "We · _niy feet .U tbeae Honduran
sat
do, '"I was plan- inner-plant banana trees In ~
said tbe '17·
Just to stay here for two betWeen the
kauae It ydr~ld' Regalado: "I'm
·~then go to North n~ tbe s hade," said · telling you right now, my feet
· te Unlvmdty ln. Regilado.
got eeld.·I bad never been that
Raleigh.
forestry
When Regalado ftrSt came coldlnmyllfe.".
coffee
moe.,"
' t ie ·Koreartfaculty s·eek ideas at.OSU By JOHN D. CURRY
Of'nle~
They came from the land of the morning
calm - a country about the size tl Oregon ­
and ltriYed In the Land tl red, ~.and blue,
. . _ --L- . ..... ___ _
_ _ _,
-
_ _ .... __
--~ ~
...
~ --L..-tt
our curriculum materials for Instruction,"
Kuipers Said. ''Th..--y took a number of our
cu:rricubmi guicles t!loog witb them. sucb as
Cooperative Ed!D~oo (OIHhe-job practical
experience), and~ Humanistic Deftfopment
Program.
populated "
"One t1 tbe reaiGIIII tbat we
have lea IOCiallllnlt tban in
~ nelgbboring coaalries,
like ElSaJudor or Nicaragua
is that we have more space
and resources," said .
Replado, "but I doa't m:iw
bow long tbat II going-to lut.
Many refugees m CUDilig
into Hoaduru frOm naticas
that have IOdal problems like
Gua~ andEI'Salavdclr.
"I am not IIJiDg we doa't
ha've social problems in
Hooduru, they are just less
tban nelgbboring count:ries...
~ aid . tbat tbe
media In America doesn't
accurately portray what is
going on In Ceutral America.
" U tbUe is oae thing that
really botbea me about
America, is the way. the media
treats social change back.
home.
"To them, every bit'of social
movement is a I'Mm!unist
moveinent. That is ridiculous!
1be uiedia is bnimrasbed. We
bate commun£!1tt! in Ceutral ·
America."
lie-
..
su­
PI~Siam
SAU ·
~
Fantastic Savings on Photo-Stereo
·equipment and Accessories
·
SAlE Starts MOn.·Aug.10
:.
Ends Fri. Aug.14
9:00-5:00
SPECIAL EVENTS AREA
·osu BOOK sTORES.
INC•
.
.
.
, K~rea'rtiaCulty
s9ek ideaS at.OSU .
.
.
By JOHN D. CURRY ·
Of 1)e~~- . .
our
..
.
.
cutriculum materiali for i.nstnlction,"
Kuipers said. ' ''Ibc.i' toot a number of our
curriculum gui~ @long wifh them, such as
.
,..me fl.u n the 1imd of the morning : eooperath:e ~oa (oo-tbe-JOb practical
. a,lm - a country about the Size of Oregon_­
expai~ ), and~ Humanistic Devefopment
· and arrived in the lirvt of red. whf~.ana blue, Program.
.
~. ~ ~a nation wide !'&seball · !'One .of the problems with K~ Univer­
.
They
=:·
Fiv~ K~ faculty ~~repreSenting -~~!~O:U~e clasvs ~must con.tend
Qtungbuk Unlve:rslty visited OSU in niichJuly as · part. of a University' Development Ex-
The KoreaM viaited a numbef of areas .oa ·
camou . includqlg clusrooms, athletic .~
c~~~~. dean ·of undergraduate facilities and the opera at the conference
studies, acted as the group's Hasan; · Tbe center. ·
.
,
· .J:Coreans were liou.sed !n the McNary·r¢dence · But the Korean visit lf8.S not all w , as ·
ball · •
cited by Kuiperi. The visitors took ~
. oSu was ~ nrst of..flve 'model - ·verstties trip to Newport,'Ore., scoring 2o sea ba.S$.
that the1KOI'WJS ~visit ln tbe ·Uni
·
Kuipersonlycaugbtone.
Kuipers saJd the Koreans 1~ the
oos
"~Y..(Ko~) ~Y enjoy
· and
of a land granttnstitutioo in tbeiiQSU visit.
eating the different kinds of fish we ba e ln the
· · ' "We, found the Koreans most lnte~ lri Notthwest waters," she saJd.
. ·.. .. -
...
I
I
'The· problems lie within ·
the coun~~ .' No oUtside
rlatiori can ·solve our prob- ·.
lerns. " . . But things wftl.
change, there is no way out
·of it.'
-JanBotha
)
NtM!y 150 ldeDtiiU from
aroaDd tbe world plan to at­
teud tbe 14th 111111111 medin&
of ~ Society for tbe Study of
Repr,oductloa to diJcuu
-~ f1Ddlnp oo buman
and animal reprocluctioo Aug.
10.13.
ldeDee wrtfen ... bdd
Mooday by tbe IOCiety at tbe
Cultliral and Conference
Center. ,SclentiJta wbo
adresled t&e writers Included
Wayne Bardin, &ctefeDer
Univeralty,·. "Update on
Contraception," Ro.ger
Gorski, ucu Scb9ol of
-· ........ . - .MM_._ ,_ Baek·to·sehool
shoppi•g w·a s ·
a ever
.this .e asy!
~ free parldag
. - - -­
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