Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 29, 1951, Page Seven, Image 7

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    SIFIED
at the .Student
man desk or at the
l.'n (Arson or phone ext.
I watn 2 and 4 p.m.
!• Friday.
into Insertion 4c per
’ >#|iM-nt Insertions 2c
1
SELLA neous
"Thtoes typed at rens
vprfAes. Richards Secre
'tervice, 14th and Will
Pit!, 5-0845. 38
(-'need Auto Insurance?
’(Torn Barry, Hoorn 109,
''»rn l-lall. Phone 5-9491.
w § . 30
tl
Lessons Set
.Ictoons will begin Tues
,\0- jp.rn. in the Student
■atli.ii area, with Louis
tatutager of the SU rec
tttonent, as the instruc
‘i *
t
t.s for the bowling
' P0“ted at each living
n And at the SU recrea
. signing up is Sat
' I
’ Placement
t Tuesday
,ive teachers who will
■ Services of the Univer- j
meiit Service In obtuin
ng positions within the j
will meet at 3:30 p m. I
i the auditorium of Uni
;h school.
i tereBted are asked to t
records as soon as pos- I
the placement service '
‘tUSe enrollment should |
ed before Thanksgiving !
>US CALENDAR
i«k School 315 St;
ally Women 110 St/
n Men’s Uninge tier
hlleity Comm
111 SU
•lining I’mtn Comm
iiostr
'O Cabinet 831 SU
d* of Houses 315MU
I Comm 313 SU
[Mcoming I’mtn Comm
110 MU
>men Men's Iaiungc tier
F 111 SU
itrioming Queen
nm 112 SU
Mu Alpha 334 SIT
How to Carry 28 Hours and Work
Discussed by Political Science Major
By Ward Lindbeck
Four yearn of college and h M;ik
ter'a degree In three years In pos
sible. Bill Lees Ik doing it.
"It's a lot of work," he said, "but
I think I can do It by the end of
rummer Herndon. I’ll graduate at
the end of thin term."
Leea, a third term Henlor in po
litical Hclence, Ik carrying 28 hours
thiH quarter to aceomphah hi.s goal.
All but five bourn are upper divi
Hlon courses. The ten couraea be’n
studying range from an 8 a.m.
MWF to a 7-10 p.m. on Wednes
day.
Bealdes thin load, the 250-lb,
6'3" student in a member of the
USA Steering committee and a
bouncer 12 hours a week at Pilu
ao'a.
Lcch’ accumulative CIPA Is ap
proximately 2.5, which is "decep
tive," he said. He played football
during his freshman year and his
| accum wan 1.85. But his second
year’s accum was 3.1.
Texts Are Interesting
"I didn’t study much during my
first year,” the dark-haired stu
dent commented. "But at the end
of spring term, I opened one of my
texts and began reading. It sur*
prised me to find how interesting
it was, and since then, I read all
my texts."
One of tlje courses he's taking
this term is Political Science 430,
an incomplete from spring term.
Though he doesn’t have to attend
any lectures, he has six 500-word
papers to write. The incomplete
was caused by a two-week trip to
Chicago at the beginning of spring
term. He was a delegate to the
Delta .Sigma Kho honorary.
"I work hard," the 24-year-old
senior declared. “I do most of my
studying between 11 x>.m. and 3
a.m., even though I have an 8
Browsing Room Lecture Series
To Feature Discussion of Arnold
Alburoy Castcll, head of the de
partment of philosophy, will pre
sent the fifth in the Browsing room
lecture series when he talks on
"Don't Underestimate Matthew
Arnold" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the Browsing room of the Student
Union.
Castell will discuss Arnold and
the humanities, stressing Arnold's
England, and his ideas of critis
ism, culture and literature. He will
also discuss Arnold's feeling about
Oregon Mothers
Plan Fund Drive
Plans to raise $2500 for scholar
ships were made at the regular fall
exeeutivc hoard meeting of the
Oregon Mothers club in Portland
recently.
The group maintains a loan
fund, which now contains more
than $15,000, in addition to award
ing scholarships. Methods of add
ing to the fund were also discussed
at the meeting.
Proposed plans for raising
money include card parties, rum
mage sales, direct contributions
and the sale of life. memberships,
according to Karl W. Onthank, ex
ecutive secretary and chairman of
the club's scholarship committee.
the Rible as literature, his thoughts
about poetry as literature, and the
arguments Arnold has aroused
since his time.
Castcl! came to the University
oX Oregon in 1949 from the Uni
versity of Michigan. Previously he
had taught at the University of
Toronto, Columbia, University of
Washington and Purdue.
Arnold was an English poet, lit
erary critic and classical scholar
who lived in England from 1882 to
1888. He wrote "Essays in Critic
ism," “God and the Bible," "Tris
tram and Iseult" and “Sohrab and
Rust ram."
Carlisle Moore, associate pro
fessor of Knglish, will lead the dis
cussion.
The Browsing room lecture series
is free and open to the public. The
series is sponsored by the Univer
sity library, Browsing room com
mittee and house librarians.
Rally Planned Friday
There will be a rally for the
Idaho game at 6:30 p.m. Friday
in McArthur Court. Ron Symons,
rally board chairman, has an
nounced. Details on the rally will
be revealed later this week.
Fyou want
REAL RESULTS
EMERALD CLASSIFIEDS
Place your classified ads at the Main desk
Student Union or the Emerald "Shack"
Rates- 4c per word-First Insertion.
2c per word-Every Insertion thereafter.
o’clock Monday, Wednesday and
Friday. I spent five years in th
Navy and learned thal sleep is of
little consequence.”
Owning a 700-volume library is
a big aid to his late study hours,
he said. The school library is used
infrequently because his books,
dealing mostly with political sci
ence, cover all of his needs.
Work as a Bouncer
"Working at Piluso's is often
amusing,” he said. "Most people
think that bouncers and football
players are stupid. And that's the
way a lot of them treat me."
Lees' plans aren't definite yet.
He might enter Law school next
year and he estimates it would
take two or two-and-a-half years
to complete the work. But he's ap
plied fot a commission in Naval
Intelligence and if that comes
through, he'll accept it.
The courses Lees is taking this
term are Political Science 490 (the |
incomplete i; Far East Govern- j
ments. 8 MWF; Family Relations, j
11 TuTh; International Orgamza-I
tion, 10 MWF; Political Theory, 11 :
MWF; British Government, 1 ,
MWF; World Politics, 3-4:15 MTu;
Seminar in Liberalism. 3-5 Th; De
bate, 7-9 Tu; American History of
Government, 7-10 p.m.
Exceptional Study Load
Clifford L. Constance, registrar,
said that Lees' case is exceptional
because the average study load s
15'/fe hours.
"Students must realize they a-e
responsible for the hours they reg
ister for," he cautioned. "Seme
grade will be given them for eve y
class."
The University abolished its pol
icy of having a maximum and
minimum load last year, he said.
Many students petitioned for more
or less than the requirements for
various reasons, and there was r o
adequate basis on which to judge
each case.
“The Academic Requirements
committee. " the Registrar said,
which approved or rejected the
student's petitions, had to base
their judgment on information
given them by the student’s ad
visor, his instructors, and the stu
dent. As these are the same people
who make out the schedule, t
seemed wholly logical to eliminate
the petitioning and let the number
of hours fee decided during the reg
istration process.”
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