Art School Celebrates 25th Anniversary Varied Program Slated; Open House Scheduled Today By PAX ERICKSON Today and Wednesday the Uni versity art school is celebrating its 25th birthday with a full activity schedule. Dean William Emerson of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology will arrive this morning and as honor guest of the festivities will first attend a faculty lunch eon this noon at the Anchorage. From 2 o’clock until 4 o'clock there will be. an open house at the art school, with exhibits of student and faculty work. Emerson to Speak At 4 o'clock Dean Emerson will speak at Chapman on “Why Not Beauty?” The anniversary banquet is set for 6 o’clock at the Osburn hotel. Speakers will include Mrs. Beatrice Walton Sackett, for the state board of higher education; Chancellor Hunter; President Erb; Tom Pot ter, president of the Allied Arts league; A. Glenn Stanton, presi dent of the Oregon chapter of the American Institute of Architects; Dean Lawrence of the art school, and Dean Emerson. Burke Morden, president of the alumni art league, will be toastmaster. The banquet is open to any who want to come. Tickets are available at the art , school office. Trip to Follow After the banquet a trip is planned to the Campbell Memorial Art museum, where visitors will be shown the night light in the court, as well as the Murray-Warner col lection. Wednesday’s activities include group luncheons at noon. At 2 o’ clock Dean Emerson will confer with architecture majors, and at 7:30 the regular Willcox Wednes day night open house will be held at the art school library instead of at Professor Willcox’s home, as had originally been planned. Portland Man Buys Local Biding School, Makes Spring Plans The Eugene Riding academy was recently purchased by Milton Rhone, who owned the Highland academy of Portland. He is well known in that city for his horse manship and many of the students of the University have taken in structions from him there. Spring term plans by Mr. Rhone include many delightful rides into the hills. Longer rides and other activities have also been planned for students who delight in horseback riding. Oregon Professor's Painiing Wallace Haydon, assistant professor of architecture at the Univer sity, here views with Miss Brownell Frasier, associate professor of interior design, a watercolor painting he made of Viipuri, Finland, be fore the bombs hit that city. National Prominence Gained By Art School An inscription is being carved for the entrance to the art build ing. It reads: “We want this school to be a happy home where the student is helped to educate himself.—Saari nen. “Here is the minimum of re straint and the maximum sense of responsibility.—Prince Campbell." First organized in 1914, the art school of the University of Oregon is this year celebrating its 25th an niversary. Nationally Prominent During the 25 years of its ex istence, the school has achieved national prominence and has come to be known as one of the finest training centers in the whole na tion. The school became a member school of the Association of Col legiate Schools of Architecture in 1920, thus becoming the 15th of approved schools of architecture and was accepted as such by the American Institute of Architects and the state board of architectur al examiners, according to infor mation from a report compiled by Ellis F. Lawrence, dean. Non-Competitive System Honors, prizes, and awards have been dispensed with in the art school. A non-competitive system has been worked out, and the school is the first in the country, Dean Lawrence believes, to aban don the so-called Beaux Arts sys tem. Each student is treated as an individual, the student body is largely self-governing. During the past 10 years the school has been the recipient of grants amounting to $55,425 from Carnegie funds, through the Amer ican Institute of Architects, for summer art sessions for art teach ers. 23 on Art Staff .With a staff of 23, the art school is divided into eight departments. Major enrollment stays at around 300, while there are many non major students, particularly those interested in advertising. Between 1919 and 1922 the art enrollment doubled, and from 1922 to 1925 it redoubled. Since then it has in creased 25 per cent. Dean Gawrence has been for many years serving on the educa tion committee of the American Institute of Architects, has been director and president of the As sociation of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, and is at present chairman of the National Advisory committee on Preparation for Practise. Students have registered in the school from Massachusetts and Maine to Honolulu, from Okla homa and Florida to Alaska. Grad uates include architects practising far and wide, teachers, and those practising interior design and oth er professions. Visitors Attend Art School Meet Called to the University by the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the art school will be a number of out-of-town guests, according to information from Ellis F. Law rence, dean of the school. Among those expected for the two-day festivities are Mrs. H. C. Wortman, organizer and former president of the Portland art class; Miss Bertha Stewart, inte rior decorator; Miss Nan Wiley, head of the art department at Cheyney; Constance Fowler, head of the art department at Willam ette; Robert Tyler Davis, curator of the Portland art museum; Walt Pritchard, head of the sculpture department of Washington State; Burke Morden, Portland architect and president of the alumni art league, and a sizable delegation from the Oregon chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Congratulatory telegrams have been arriving in considerable num ber, says Dean Ellis F. Lawrence, They included one from Japan. Call for Air Corps Recruits Issued by War Department A call for mid-year graduates or second year men has been issued by the army air corps as recruits to meet present training require ments, according to a release from the department of military science. The war department is conducting an extensive campaign to contact qualified students. The military department stated that probably this week an exam ing board will visit the campus to interview interested students. It is not a government policy to encour age students to drop college to en roll in the air corps. On the preferred list are men with two or more years of college holding a junior certificate. Other applicants will be required to pass a mental exam in addition to the regular air service physical check-up. Campus Calendar Ye Tabard Inn will meet Wed nesday night at 7:30 in room 105, Journalism, for a short but im portant meeting. Important Ski club meeting to night at 7:30 in 207 Chapman. Please be prompt. Motion pictures will be shown. The Life Philosophy commission of the University YMCA will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight at Dr. James R. Branton's home. The meeting is open to anyone interested. Gamma Alpha Chi will meet at Alphi Phi at 4. Communion for Episcopal stu dents will be held Wednesday morning at 7 o’clock in the men’s lounge, Gerlinger. Heads of houses will hold an in formal luncheon at the Chi Omega house from 4 to 5 p.m. today. A business meeting will be held at 4:45. Both old and new heads are invited. Dean Schwering will pour. There will be a Theta Sig meet ing at 7 p.m. in the Chi Omega house for formal pledging. Miss Adele Baron, senior in Ro mance languages, attended! the na tional convention of the French honorary, Pi Delta Phi, held in San Francisco last Saturday, as representative of the local chapter. COSTUME JEWELRY for Your Spring Dresses • PLASTIC NECKLACES • PEARLS twisted or plain synthetic Lovely necklaces in the new shades of dusty pink . . . turquoise . . . shell styles . . . carved bone . .. carved synthentic coral and jade necklaces. BRISTOWS JEWELRY C20 Willamette If it’s a ’’Racket” to have the finest line of RACKETS ever shown in Eugene — well we’re guilty Blit Whut Q. Showing! There are Rackets by: ... WRIGHT & DITSON - SPALDING — LEADER — HALL — ALEXANDER — BANCROFT — WILSON, ALL REASONABLY PRICED. 1940 TENNIS BALLS ARE THE BEST EVER. WE HAVE WRIGHT & DITSON, WILSON, SPALDING, AND MARSDEN. REX APPLEGATE WILL STRING A FRAME TO SUIT YOUR GAME. TENNIS OXFORDS FOR BEEN AND WOMEN Unioersity ?CO-OP’ TENNIS SOX FOR MEN AND WOMEN i