January 30, 1996

MINUTES OF THE UNIVERSITY ASSEMBLY MEETING JANUARY 10, 1996
APPROVAL OF MINUTES The January 10, 1996 meeting of the University Assembly was called to order by President David Frohnmayer at 3:15 p.m. in Columbia 150. The minutes of the September 27, 1996 meeting of the University Assembly were approved as distributed. ANNOUNCEMENT/MEMORIALS The President reminded the Assembly members that the "new" University Senate would meet on January 17, 1996. This new Senate is a product of the change in governance approved by the Assembly on May 17, 1995. Mr. Richard Heinzkill, Library Systems, was recognized to read a memorial for Professor Emerita S. Elizabeth Findly. Professor Findly joined the University of Oregon faculty as a reference librarian in 1934. She taught in the UO School of Library Science and served one year as Dean prior to her retirement in 1974. Professor Findly passed away in Denton, Texas on May 23, 1995. The memorial can be found on pp 4-5 of these minutes. Mr. James Mohr, History, was recognized to read a memorial for Professor Emeritus Robert G. Lang. Professor Lang taught history at the University of Oregon for thirty years having joined the faculty in 1964. He passed away in Eugene on November 23, 1995. The memorial can be found on pp 5-7 of these minutes. Mr. James Lemert, Journalism and Communications, presented a memorial for Professor Emeritus Willis L. Winter. From 1964 until his retirement in 1994 Professor Winter was a member of the faculty in the School of Journalism. He passed away in Eugene on December 14, 1995. The memorial can be found on pp 7-8 in these minutes. A memorial for Assistant Professor Emerita Lois Schreiner has been received by the Secretary for inclusion with these minutes. Mr. Thomas Stave, Library Systems, prepared this memorial. Ms Schreiner was a member of the faculty in the University Library from 1969 until her retirement in 1983. She passed away on September 16, 1995 in Eugene. The memorial for Ms. Schreiner can be found on pp 8-9 in these minutes. Professor Kenneth Ramsing, Lundquist College of Business, has submitted a memorial for Professor Emeritus Arthur E. Mace. Retiring in 1976 after 12 years as a Professor of Business Statistics, Mr. Mace resided in Eugene until his death on July 27, 1995. This memorial can be found on pp 9-10 in these minutes. OLD BUSINESS None. STATE OF THE UNIVERSITY President Frohnmayer used this period to discuss with the Assembly the proposals that have been put forward separately by the OSSHE Board and the Governor on the future of higher education and public education in Oregon. The President referred to this discussion as a dialogue as a necessary re-investment in higher education. The concern expressed by the President was that each faculty member had to be fully aware of what has been proposed, what will be discussed, how the discussions will develop, who will do the discussing and how the University of Oregon will be involved in all of what is being proposed and discussed. No faculty member should ignor what is going on at this time. The facts are clear that demographics strongly suggest higher education will boom within the next five years. The growth rate is presently pegged at an increase of 30% over the number presently enrolled in Oregon higher education. This number could increase appreciably if the new plan for public high schools are as successful as some predict. Continuing the President pointed out that the marketplace for employment has changed dramatically within the last decade and will change even more in the immediate future. Changing jobs will become more and more a reality than it has been--even more so than it has been in the last few years. Higher Education will be instrumental in this area as education will be on a continuing basis and not one that will draw to a close with a B. A. or B. S. Gearing up for the future will be a never ending endeavor for each individual. The President pointed out that continued disinvestment in higher education in Oregon must cease. Since the dawn of Measure 5 public higher education has seen its funding sunset as a dramatic drop in state support has brought us to the present level of about 17%. Higher education was not a projected target of Measure 5, but it has become one. The Governor sees education as one continuing stream--from K through graduate School and beyond. If higher education is to be part of this stream, higher education will need to be funded at an appropriate level to carry out its expected assignment. At present the OSSHE Board has several tasks forces working on the future of higher education in Oregon. The Task Forces will cover the following areas: a. Undergraduate education b. Graduate education and research c. Community and economic development d. Lifelong learning--"continuous education" It is possible that another task will be added and this would be an intersection task force consisting of the provosts from each of the universities and colleges. Their assignment would be to bridge each of the other task forces so that all of it can be brought together, coordinated and implemented. The entire work schedule for all of this is extremely tight. Everything must be concluded by the end of June 1996. In conjunction, the Governor has a group working on his vision for education and this group will commence work the first week of February. They too will be under a tight deadline. OSSHE will also take part in the Governor's discussions. At this point the President discussed how the UO will deal with all of this. Fortunately the UO has done much since Measure 5 was implemented and with accreditation coming in 1997 the UO is geared to take an even closer look at itself. What the UO has done since 1990 and will do in the accreditation study should result in the UO being poised to accomplish great things in the future. But it must be emphasized that OSSHE has $135 million less than it did in 1990 and this is not a figure adjusted for inflation. Reinvestment is necessary if higher education is to survived. The growth of industry in Oregon is the type that is geared toward degree holding employees. Employees will need continuous eduction. If these degrees are to originate in Oregon and the continuous education is to be Oregon based this reinvestment is basic to the future of this state. And Oregon higher education must be involved in the process of continuous education. Doing nothing about the plight of higher education funding in Oregon is not, in reality, an option. Enterprise will import educated employees if the state does not reinvest so Oregon higher education can produce the needed employees. Without reinvestment Oregonians will be left behind in what is becoming a major part of the new economic platter in this state. More erosion of public higher education in this state has alarmed private enterprise and many legislators. Reinvestment must be high on any future agenda for Oregon. Mr. Charles R. B. Wright, Mathematics, asked what would be the product of the task forces or the governor's appointed group. The President said that it was not possible to guess at an outcome as this would discourage discussion and free exchange of ideas. Conclusions must not be pre-determined. In response to a question concerning the "flagship" quality of the UO within higher education in Oregon, the President noted that we are still the flagship and that this flag is still strongly held by the UO. What has been done since 1990, though initiative and innovation, has positioned the UO well for the changing future we all face. With reinvestment the UO will be able to continue moving forward in service to the people of this state. ADJOURNMENT The business of the meeting having concluded the meeting adjourned at 3:54 p.m. Keith Richard Secretary


S. ELIZABETH FINDLY April 2, 1908 - May 23, 1995 For decades Elizabeth Findly practiced information retrieval before that term became a catchword and the designation of information specialist began to supplant librarian. Her career encompassed the publication of monumental printed bibliographies and library catalogs to the inception of microforms and other machine readable resources. Her expertise in perfecting search strategies influenced several generations of embryo librarians and scholars. She was born Sarah Elizabeth Findly on April 2, 1908 in Winfield, Kansas. She died May 23, 1995 in Denton, Texas. She earned a B. A. degree in History from Drake University (1929), a B. S. in Library Science from the University of Illinois (1934), and an M.A. in Library Science from the University of Michigan (1945). Between 1929 and 1933 she was a high school teacher and principal in Geneva, Iowa. In 1934 she was appointed a reference assistant in the University of Oregon Library and in 1947 became head reference librarian. In 1968 she joined the faculty of the new School of the Librarianship at the University of Oregon, teaching courses in government documents and reference work. During her final academic year she was interim Dean of the school, retiring in 1974. She was active in professional library organizations, serving as president of the Oregon Library Association, as the Oregon representative on the American Library Association Council, and chaired the Board of Managers of the Pacific Northwest Library Association's Bibliographic Center during a crucial period. Miss Findly was known as an astute reference librarian, with a remarkable memory of the contents of key reference works. Her strong emphasis was on the role of librarians as teachers. She combined a no nonsense approach with a graciousness borne out in natural dignity. The writer recalls her melodious chuckle when he advised her that an undergraduate, trying to recall which librarian had assisted him, said "the lady built like a fullback." Former students and retired faculty have remarked on her unfailing cordiality even when besieged with repetitious directional questions at the information desk. She was never desk-bound, sitting and pointing, but actively assisted users in locating and understanding reference works. Her persistence was responsible for the location of back files of many obscure Oregon newspapers. She travelled many miles during her vacations to pick up the files for preservation microfilm in the University Library, resulting in a definitive collection of Oregon newspapers which continues today. When student athletes were assigned to her department to earn their stipend, she insisted, to their chagrin, that real work be done, and utilized the musclemen to shift bound volumes of newspapers and journals. Beginning in 1950, she spent considerable time acquiring and organizing international and federal documents--a field in which she took particular delight. To her regret, she was unable to complete the full serial set of federal documents. Her reference courses were enlivened with real problems, drawn from her experience, e. g. Who notified the British government "I have Sind"? The library profession was enriched by her example of service and the scholarly community by her provision of resources and assistance in research. Prepared by Robert McCollough Professor Emeirtus, University Library Read by Thomas Stave Professor, University Library ROBERT GUY LANG June 22, 1933 - November 23, 1995 Robert Guy Lang, born June 22, 1933 in Portland and raised in Eugene, was a member of the Department of History since his appointment to the University in 1964. He received his degrees from Columbia University (A. B. 1955) and the University of Oxford, Oriel College (D. Phil. in Modern History, 1963), where he wrote his frequently-cited dissertation on "The Greater Merchants of London in the Early Seventeenth Century." In his scholarship and teaching, Professor Lang specialized in English history of the Tudor and Stuart periods. Professor Lang devoted his scholarly career to the study of Tudor commercial life, taxation, and wealth distribution, especially as recorded in the Tudor assessment rolls for the city of London. His critical edition of these sources, Two Tudor Subsidy Assessment Rolls for the City of London: 1541 and 1582, was published in 1993 by the prestigious London Record Society. This definitive edition provides tax and wealth indicators for more than 11,000 individual, with extensive analytical tables and detailed index. These are accompanied by a meticulous introduction to the principles and procedures by which taxes were assessed and wealth recorded int he Tudor period. This work is a valuable research instrument for a broad range of scholars of Tudor social and economic history, and has already influenced the conclusions of specialists in the field. Professor Lang taught early English history and advanced courses on the Tudor and Stuart periods. He was regarded as an exceptionally conscientious teacher. His lectures were outstanding scholarly syntheses in their own right. He continually revised lectures on the same subject to represent the most recent scholarship, such that graduate students attending a course two years in succession commented that he never gave the same lecture twice. Moreover, he gave close individual attention to both undergraduate and graduate students, and taught extensively outside of load in response to student need. He served as department head, director of graduate studies, and undergraduate director, in which capacity he established the department's peer advising service. Within the University, he served numerous functions, notably chair of the Committee on Committees. Professor Lang was regarded by colleagues and students alike as the embodiment of professional excellence and deep humanity. Personally devoted to the University as institution and community, he was an outstanding citizen. The total attention he gave to the study of Tudor-Stuart England and to the students entrusted to his mentoring witnessed a vocational commitment dutifully and lovingly pursued. His peaceful passing in Eugene on the morning of Thanksgiving Day, 23 November 1995, terminated a long illness. It also deprived the University of Oregon of an exemplar cultivated in the best of its traditions. Written by George Sheridan Professor, Department of History Read by James Mohr Professor, Department of History WILLIS L. "BILL" WINTER 1926 - 1995 With the death of Professor Willis L. Winter December 14, 1995 in Eugene, the School of Journalism and Communication lost a beloved teacher and a lifelong mentor to its advertising graduates. As one of his colleagues put it, Dr. Winter was "... devoted to his students, before class, in class, [and] after class." During his career here, it would have been impossible for any of his colleagues in the School not to see the evidence that his students and his graduates were, in turn, equally devoted to him. If he was in his office, you simply couldn't pass his door without seeing students gathered around him. Bill was a treasured career resource for many hundreds of his students, both as they entered the field and as they themselves began to become prominent in it. As one heartfelt letter to Bill's family from a former student put it, "Your father still lives today. He lives in all the people he's helped...I know I speak for all of them when I say he made us better thinkers...and better people." Bill Winter was born in San Francisco on January 15, 1926. He received his B. S. degree in Marketing from the University of California at Berkeley, his M. S. degree in Journalism from the University of Oregon and his Ph.D. in 1968 from the University of Illinois in Communications. Bill actually had two University of Oregon teaching careers, one as an instructor from 1955 to 1957 while he was a graduate student in the Journalism Masters Degree program and the second as an associate and then a full professor from the Fall of 1968 until his retirement in 1994, when he was named a Professor Emeritus of Journalism. In addition to teaching here, Bill also taught at the University of Minnesota, the University of Illinois and the University of Washington. His teaching skills and genuine interest in his students, long apparent to his colleagues in the School and to his current students, were more formally recognized in 1987 with the presentation of the Burlington Northern Outstanding Teacher award to Bill. During his active teaching and consulting career, Bill also was an author of the most widely adopted basic advertising text in the country, a book that has been published in seven languages and in several editions. He was voted "Advertising Man of the Year" by the American Advertising Federation in 1972 and probably was the single person most responsible for putting Oregon on the national map in the field of advertising education. A chain smoker ever since he enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1944, Bill had managed to kick the habit almost 51 years later. Alas, that was just a couple of months before his death. Bill is survived by a sister, Carol, of Talent, Oregon, three daughters, Mary Ann, Katherine, and Jane, and five grandchildren. Each of the daughters, along with her respective husband and children, live in Eugene. Bill's wife Barbara, like him a warm and welcoming person, died in 1994. James B. Lemert Professor, School of Journalism & Communication

LOIS M. SCHREINER February 3, 1920 - September 6, 1995 Lois Schreiner, Assistant Professor Emerita in the University Library, died of leukemia, in Eugene, on September 16, 1995. She was 75 years of age. Lois was born in Newcastle, Pennsylvania, in 1920, and moved with her family to a homestead east of Roseburg in 1922. Her family later relocated to Eugene, where she attended school, graduating from Santa Clara High School in 1938. This made Lois nearly a lifelong Oregonian, a fact in which she took some pleasure, as she developed a strong identification with the State, especially it mountains and wilderness area. When Lois joined the University of Oregon in 1958 as a classified staff member, she was a single parent with four children and with little formal education. While working full time for most of this period, she earned her Bachelor of Science degree from the UO Geography Department in 1968, and in 1969 her Master of Library Science. Her single-minded pursuit of these goals was a characteristic trait, which marked her service to the University as well. She raised her four children alone. One daughter, two months after Lois' death, was elected to a seat on the Fairfax County, Virginia, Board of Supervisors. Lois joined the University of Oregon faculty as a librarian in 1969, and for the next 13 years served in the Library's Reference Department and Government Documents Section. She worked in many areas, as her department never enjoyed luxuriant staffing levels. but her passion was to penetrate the intrigue and esoterica of foreign and international documents. The documentation of the League of Nations, the UN, and what was then called the European Economic Community were like her backyard. She showed a generation of students how to trace a General Assembly resolution or track down a British Command Paper, or whatever the arcane pursuit happened to be. She worked hard for causes she cared about. In the early 1980s she was treasurer of Faculty Women for Equity, and a named plaintiff in the famous case of Penk et al v. Oregon State Board of Higher Education. She was President of the Friends of the Three Sisters Wilderness, a group that played a critical role in the eventual designation of the Three Sisters Wilderness Area. An long-time member of the Obsidians, a local hiking and climbing club, she edited that group's newsletter for 20 years. This was a chore most of us who live in a word-processed environment, or who do not share Lois' concern for the details of task, cannot appreciate: until she automated the project, she would type each issue, manually justifying every margin. She earned the distinction "Obsidian Princess" by climbing each of the ten highest mountain peaks in Oregon, and continued her climbing and hiking well into her retirement. Her &kquot;Princess" name, by the way, was "Monadnock", which is a geological term denoting a residual mountain standing well above a surrounding peneplain, not connected to any other chain or mountains. She enjoyed that identification, and displayed a version of the name on her license plate. Her adventuresome spirit carried her to other parts of the world than Oregon. She spent a semester as ship's librarian for World Campus Afloat. One wy or another she got to Egypt, Australia, New Zealand, the Caribbean, and most parts of North America. Lois is survived by her husband, Clair Cooley; three daughters, Penny Gross of Alexandria, Virginia, Renee Armon of Springfield, and Christine McKinnon of Eugene; a son, John of Eugene; seven grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Thomas Stave Professor, University Library ARTHUR E. MACE June 14, 1916 - July 26, 1995 Professor Arthur Mace joined the University of Oregon faculty of Business Administration in 1964 from the Battelle Memorial Institute in Columbus, Ohio where he had been a Research Associate in Statistics. Art joined our then small statistics department with the desire to teach after being in a research capacity at Battelle, and earlier at Case Western Reserve, Ohio State, Cornell, and MIT. Mr. Mace received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1938 from Amerst College in Economics with a PhD from the University of Chicago in economics and statistics in 1947. Prior to coming to the University of Oregon, Professor Mace taught at Western Reserve University, the University of California at Los Angeles, and at Duke University. Art was a diligent teacher of statistics at the undergraduate and graduate levels, serving on several doctoral dissertations. One of his greatest goals was to write the definitive technical book covering statistical regression analysis applied to problems in management and social sciences. Although he did take a sabbatical leave to write in 1970-71, his book never came to fruition. Without being published but instead being used as a monograph in the College, Art revised the material numerous times to achieve perfection. Yet, the material never reached the level of excellence which he perceived it should and thus it was never submitted to a publisher as a completed document. Art mace retired from the University of Oregon on June 30, 1976 after being diagnosed with cancer. However, the cancer was kept in remission until his death. In the mean time, Art became the informal tax consultant for members of the Ya-Po-Wa Terrace and Campbell Center retirement community. In addition, he regularly audited the retirement community store and in other ways helped the community in which he lived. Art was an avid walker, never owning a car. He could be seen walking miles each day until shortly before his death. He was member of the Central Presbyterian Church which occupied his time when he was not working with members of his retirement home. He also took two visually impaired children "under his wing" and helped them extensively with their elementary education as well as providing for them after his death with financial support for school through the university level. Kenneth Ramsing Professor, Lundquist College of Business




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