Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1947)
- Reserve Corps - Signs Over 700 Over 700 students are now en - rolled in the reserve officers train | ing corps at the University of Ore gon, Colonel Frank R. Maerdian, professor of military science and ' tactics has announced. . A total of 625 lower division students composed of 460 fresh men and 165 sophomores are now taking the required elementary courses for non-veterans while 57 junior and 35 senior cadet officers - are now studying for reserve in fantry and air corps commissions. A substantial number of fresh men veterans have also indicated their desire to elect advanced mili “ tary science upon attaining the prerequisite academic standing, Colonel Maerdian said. - Chess Club Plans Opening Meeting The University chess club will hold its first meeting of the year in 207 Commerce, 7 p.m. Thurs day. Girls are especially welcome, and a class in the fundamentals of chess will be taught for the benefit of all interested in learn ing the royal game. The University chess team will again be formed for inter-college competition. Last year’s ten man team played two tournaments, de feating a strong Eugene chess club, and swamping a weak Ore gon State organization 18 to 2. Hawaiian Club to Meet Hui O Kamaaina, club for stu dents fro mHawaii, will meet to night at 7 :30 p.m. at the Side. Election of officers will take place and a discussion of the club’s activ ities for the term. All members are asked to be present. The autumn hunting season shoots up the firearms death rate. Firearms deaths in September, Oc tober, and November total about 35 per cent of the yearly total. Scheming Barristers Mapping plans for the 1947-48 Oregon Law Review are (seated) ..William Moshofsky, left, and William Gonong, Jr.; (standing) Pro fessor Charles G. Howard, B. J. Goddard, and Robert Davis. Mo shofsky was appointed last week to head this year’s review. Oregon School of Architecture Termed Finest in Northwest Pointirig out that the University of Oregon school of architecture is the only one in the nation where eight major curriculae are inte grated into one, Sidney Little,dean of the school, told Rotarians Tues day noon that graduates of this school are being offered opportuni ties in excellent positions. The dean said that the Oregon architecture school strikes a happy medium between the extremes of fuctionalism and expression in its teaching of the profession. He em phasized that it is rapidly be coming the finest school of its kind in the Northwest. Dean Little explained that the usual education sequence followed at the school consists of five to eight years in school for comple tion of minimum requirements and earning a degree. After graduation You re the man most likely to succeed! AH the right people want to go places with you and your Van Heusen Shirt. You’ll like the smart sewmanship, the low-set collar models, the action-tailoring, the figure-fit. Sanforized fabrics, laboratory-tested 1500 times a month. Get your money’s worth—always say Van Heusen Shirts. §3.25, 83.95, $4.50. Phillips-Jones Coup., New Yop.k 1, N. Y. a two to five years apprenticeship is served under some licensed ar chitect and finally the prospective architect takes the state board ex aminations which require about four years. Not all licensed architects enter the cosmopolitan field of the pro fession and many are never li censed but work all their profes sional lives in small jobs, stated Little. He said that the state law demanded the examination in the case of cosmopolitan architects for reasons of public health and safety. In explaining further the Ore gon school's concept of teaching, the dean said, "Architectuite is first concerned with utility and ex ” piession, and desires to design stiuctures to accommodate man's physical and spiritual needs. In teaching, the two fundamentals must be balanced.” He added that an unusual feature of the Oregon school is that creative work is not graded. Dean Little traced the future of 200 students entering the architec ture school. He predicted that 25 per-cent would drop after the first term and that only 100 would be left at the end of the first year. Twenty - of this group would re main long enough to graduate, the dean stated. Of the graduates, four would probably be women and would never practice, said Little.. Many of the others would never be li censed but at the end of ten years, two of the licensed group might stated that if these two did a have offices of their own. The dean good job in the profession the school would consider its work well done. Dean Little was a practicing ar chitect for 20 years and said that he was interested both in profes sional procedure and educational aspects of architecture. He said that present enrollment at the University of Oregon school of architecture was 615, second largest total in the nation. But, ho . added, the scnool is only equip ped to be tenth largest. --—--, * About 2,145,000 passenger autoS were produced in the United States last year, together with 633,000 trucks and buses. s F O R B E T T E R H A IRCUTS.... ELLIOT'S BARBER SHOP 3239 Alder St. Close to the Campus HEY!! We're giving records away again this year Oil SWING SOIREE (This show is emceed by Don Porter (boy sorority) who is sort of a disc-jockey—kinda) and G RAVES MUSIC T I M E 10:00 p.m. — KASH — 1600 Monday — Wednesday.— Friday MUSIC f & ART Phone 4407 . 1198 Willamette 1 I HOW TO MAKE 1 1 j ON BROADWAY ( * Where did Oscar Hammerstein, II, get the inspiration for writing 1000 pub lished songs, including the hits for a & dozen movies and lyrics for such shows as Oklahoma!, Carousel and Carmen Jones? His formula for success on Broadway: stay out of nightclubs and gossip columns... never raise your voice .. .don’t keep any race horses, yachts, mistresses, pet lions or snakes... lead a "disgustingly normal” life! You won’t want to miss the first of two enlight ening articles m today s Post about America’s top lyricist: How to Make $4,000,000 on Broadway by David G. Wittels.