The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, November 15, 1968 Page: 1 of 28
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168
55th Year, No. 49
NORMAN, OKLAHOMA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1968
AP—UPI Wire Services
Regents OK Law Center,
Plan Constitution Committee
Hollomon Explains Deferred Rush,
/
I
Project Needs
To Critics
i
a
opt,
Consult Committee
Parking Problems?
ex-
Betty Friedan
54th Homecoming
Festivities Slated
fl
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The Oklahoma daily
A Student Newspaper Serving the University of Oklahoma
Teacher Rating
a
Convention
10-1 which is considered com-
f VjZ Ijy"O Parablc to ’be best law schools
Believing that American men
are not the cause, but the fel-
Queen will appear with finalists
and Norman Jaycees’ “Junior
Miss" contestants. Shriners from
Norman, Oklahoma City, Dun-
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cles of the constitution
with ratification,
implementation,
be considered.
“Whatever structure we ad-
all of these additional ar-
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i [
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High school bands from Semi-
nole, Purcell and Norman will
perform along with the OU band
during the parade. Band judges
will be Gary Stollsteimer, assist-
ant professor of music and assis-
tant director of the OU Band;
Robert W. Ross, associate pro-
fessor of music, and Carl Lobitz,
graduate assistant in music.
Other parade entries include
drill teams from Navy ROTC,
Air Force ROTC, Angel Flight,
Pershing Rifles and Capers. OU
cheerleaders w'll appear with
CU's Mascot, Sooner Schooner,
Ruf-Neks, UAB Calliope, PE-ET
and Mortar Board. Homecoming
a solution to the question would
be found “as soon as is practical
and reasonable.” Later he said
it is up to students when this will
be discussed and resolved. He
said it was the duty of those in-
volved to take a serious look and
come up with their own notions
for solution.
Constitution
As recommended in the Hollo-
mon Report a drafting committee
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STUFFY JOB—Lyn Laughlin, Gainesville, Texas, senior, stuffs
crepe paper into a chicken wire frame which will soon become the
ATO-SDT homecoming float. (Photo by John Hockridge)
A group studying campus parking problems will have its first
meeting at 3 p.m. Friday in dining room 4 of the Union.
Verne C. Kennedy Jr., vice president for operations, who ap-
pointed the standing committee, said that anyone in the university
community with suggestions or complaints about parking should
pass them on to members of the group.
The committee, which is chaired by Dr. Richard D. Bauman,
professor of civil engineering, has been charged with making a
broad study of parking problems on the campus, including registra-
tion, fees, locations of lots and new parking lots. The final recom-
mendations will be submitted to the Council on Planning and Dev-
elopment and to President J. Herbert Hollomon.
Members of the committee include Steve Raulerson, admini-
strative assistant to the vice president for operations, secretary;
William R. Campbell Jr., director of facilities planning; Dr. O.D.
Johns, assistant dean and professor of education; Leonard H. Haug,
professor of music education; Dr. John B. Bruce, professor of phar-
macy; Robert L. Lehr, associate professor of planning and geog-
raphy; David A. Whitney, associate professor of sociology; Jean-
nette Tadlock, senior accounting clerk, and Dorothy Young, assis-
tant to the dean of the College of Engineering.
Others are Ann Partner, Wheat Ridge, Conn., graduate stu-
dent; Larry Green. Ardmore junior; Larry Joplin, Oklahoma City
law student; Sandy Kinney, Oklahoma City junior; Elisa Knowles,
Wynnewood freshman; Kevin Scott Peters, Ponca City freshman;
Fred Purcell, Oklahoma City freshman, and Kalynne Tuck, Fort
Worth sophomore.
71
' $
'Feminine Mystique'------
Hear Betty Friedan
Social critic Betty Friedan,
author of the controversial best
seller "The Feminine Mysti-
que," will speak on campus
Thursday, Nov. 21.
Third in the Inaugural Year
Speakers Series sponsored by
the OU Speakers Bureau, she
will appear at 8 p.m. in Meach-
am auditorium. There will be
no admission charge.
Student Help
Curriculum Reform Task Group
of Student Action will not be able
to prepare a teacher evaluation
booklet unless more students vol-
unteer to help.
The evaluation “cannot happen
without a larger number of students
working on it,” Rozzie Katz, Fort
Worth senior and chairman of the
committee, said.
A meeting has been scheduled
for anyone interested at 1:30 p.m.
Sunday at the U.C.C.F. (1017 Elm).
Interested students who can’t at-
tend the meeting should call Stu-
dent Action office *325-3830) or
Rozzie Katz (364-0646).
Task group members feel the
teacher evaluation booklet will be
beneficial to all students, but are
hurt and disillusioned at the lack
of response from students.
Last week a forum was held to
answer questions about the teach-
er evaluation task group, and only
20 students came. Miss Katz said
“we are disheartened, but don’t
want to give up the project be-
cause we believe that this is a good
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Noble Field Property Sold to IBM
By ANN LONG
News Editor
OU Board of Regents acted
Thursday to establish a Law Cen-
ter which will rank along side
top law schools in the country.
Regents’ meeting also included
creation of a commission to draft
a constitution for the university
and discussion of recommenda-
tion of a study on deferred frater-
nity and sorority pledging.
Regents also voted to sell
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By SUZANNE ROBBEN
Staff Writer
Homecoming activities will be-
gin in earnest Friday when alum-
ni and friends of the university
converge on the Norman campus
to observe the 54th annual OU
Homecoming.
Festivities planned include
dance, queen coronation, all-
night powwow, parade, a series
of alumni events, and last but
most important, the OU-Missourl
football game.
Homecoming dance, featuring
"The Rose Garden,” a folk-rock
band from California, will get
underway at 9 p.m. Friday in
the Union Ballroom. Homecom-
ing Queen will be announced and
crowned at the dance. Tickets
will be sold Friday in the Union
and at the door Friday night.
Price is $1.25 per person.
All-Night Drums
At 7:30 p.m. Friday, members
of OU’s Sequoyah Indian Club
begin their traditional powwow.
In Wilson Center Cafeteria Se-
quoyah members will beat their
tom-toms until dawn. legend has
it that drummers must not miss
a beat to insure a Big Red victory
over Missouri’s Tigers in Satur-
day’s game.
Saturday's activities will begin
at 9 a m. with the 1968 Inaugural
Homecoming parade, which will
start at the corner of Main and
Porter, continue down Main to
Webster to Asp past the Union,
then go down Brooks Street to
the old eolf course where it will
break up. Theme for the parade
is “Tame the Tigers on a Hol-
lomon Homecoming.”
Twelve floats have been enter-
ed in the parade representing 14
Greek houses and 12 dorms.
Floats will be judged by Elton
Davis, director of financial aids
and chairman of the scholarship
committee; Robert Blackstock
of Bristow, president of the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma Association,
alumni organization; Joe Hobbs,
assistant professor of art and di-
rector of the School of Art; Nor-
man McNabb. Norman business-
man. and Robert Thompson,
manager of the Norman Cham-
ber of Commerce.
in the United States and salaries
in competition with national
averages.
A library which would be one
of the leading sources for re-
search and study of law techni-
ques is also planned for the cen-
ter. The library will support re-
search for the state legislature,
public, law and science, space
law and law enforcement.
Construction of the facility to
house the law center will be giv-
en priority for funding by state
regents from funds received
pending passage of the Decem-
ber 10 bond issue.
OU regents adopted a reso-
lution to urge the people of Ok-
lahoma to pass the bond issue.
Deferred Pledging
President Hollomon explained
a study which will be made for
deferred pledging of Greek fra-
ternities and sororities. Effect of
deferred pledging would be to de-
lay freshman rush.
A decision on this matter will
be made only after hearing both
sides of the issue through open
discussion, the president told
regents. He laso said the study of
deferred pledging was not an
attack on anyone but an attempt
to improve the whole university.
Dr. Hollomon told the regents
K’e’jspaper Department
Oklahoma Historical Society
Oklahoma City 5, Okla, 73105
By SUSAN HARRIS
Staff Writer
Constitutional convention dele-
gates will hold an open session
at 1 p.m. Sunday in 255 Adams
Hall to hear from convention
critics and consider unfinished
business.
Bob White, convention chair-
i man, said that from 1:30 p.m.
to 3:30 p.m. the convention will
be open to anyone who would
like to appear before the con-
vention. Anyone who comes may
either make statements of opin-
ions or ask questions.
“This will probably be the on-
ly time that anyone will be able
to talk directly to the conven-
tion as a body,” White said.
White asked persons wishing
to speak Sunday to the conven-
tion to call 235-5471 and give
their name. Names will be con-
sidered in the order that they
call. The convention reserves
the right to arbitrarily limit the
time allocated t o individual
speakers, he said.
Additional Articles
After the convention has heard
these speakers, additional arti-
concern i
ed with ratification, reve-
nue, implementation, amend-
ment, and a bill of rights will
tract of land to IBM company
and to purchase additional fur-
niture for the library.
A proposal to reorganize the
departments of the Medical Cen-
ter, located in Oklahoma City,
was approved.
Law Center
Establishment of the new Law
Center will become effective July
1, 1969, but will not be budgeted
separately from the university.
A modern building will house
the center.
Purpose of the law center is
to perform teaching, research
and public service functions.
Goals set down for the center in-
clude a student-faculty ratio of
10-1 which is considered
! ■> i d
low sufferers of the “entrapment
of women by the feminine mys-
tique," she will discuss "The
American Male and the Femi-
nine Mystique.”
Distorted Image
In her book Mrs. Friedan__
plores the distorted image of fe-
mininity in our culture which
she feels has arrested women’s
intellectual growth, threatened
the stability of their marriages
and remains the major barrier
to the realization of their poten-
tial as complete human beings.
She defines the “feminine my-
stique" as the influence under
which women believe they can
find happiness only by confining
themselves to their “feminine"
roles as wives and mothers. Un-
der this influence since World
War II, she explains, women
have married at earlier ages,
have had "unprecedented" num-
bers of children, and housework
has become virtually their only
career.
"T h e Feminine Mystique,"
which was excerpted by both
McCall’s and Ladies* Home
Journal magazines, which with
other women’s magazines are
the main targets of her attack,
is the result of nearly five years
of research and thought. She
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Chilnick, Larry. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, November 15, 1968, newspaper, November 15, 1968; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1829291/m1/1/: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.