Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 10, 1955, Page Seven, Image 7

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    College Teacher Lack
Seen Within 70 Years
A serious shortage of colleg
iate faculty mtmb«is will be
facet! by Oregon In the next 10
years, according to Charles D.
Byrne, retiring chancellor of the
state system of higher education.
Byrne stated this opinion at
the weekly luncheon meeting of
the City club Friday.
To keep the present student
teacher ration, Byrne said. Am
J-Schoo! Gets
Approval From
National Council
The University of Oregon
school of journalism has been re
accredited in both Its advertis
ing-management and news-edi
torial sequences. the American
Council on Education for Jour
nalism announced May 9.
A charier member of the Am
erican Association of Schools and
Departments of Journalism, coin-:
posed of the nation's major Jour
nalism teaching units, the school
first was accredited ir 1948 in
the initial ACKJ program. It has
been the only journalism instruc
tion in the state to Vie so recog
nized. and one of only five on the
West Coast and only 39 in the
nation.
The ACKJ accrediting program
includes an inspection by u team ,
of visiting experts representing
both education and national jour
nalism professional organiza
tions. That group visited the Ore
gon school in eai ly March.
The national Journalism ac
crediting pattern calls for a re
examination of each approved
school every few years to make
certain that high standards of
curriculum and faculty are being
maintained.
Approval by the ACKJ means;
that the Oregon journalism
school has received approval also j
from the American Newspaper j
Publishers association, the Am- j
erica n Society of Newspaper
Editors, the Inland Daily Press |
association, the National Asso
ciation of Radio and Television
Broadcasters, the Newspaper
Editorial association, and the
South Newspaper Publishers as
sociation, all of whom have in
dustry representatives on the
ACKJ.
OSC to Get
Model UN
SAN FRANCISCO 1AP1 For
the first time since the collegiate
staged "Model United Nations"
was instituted five years ago, it
will be held next year outside of
California at Corvallis, Ore.
At Saturday night's closing
banquet for 1200 students, the
gavel of authority for the sixth
conference was handed to Terrell
Paul Robinson, chairman of the
delegation from Oregon State
college. The date will be an
nounced.
The delegates, from more than
100 colleges in eight western
states, Canada and Mexico, ap
proved recommendations for use
of the Marshall Islands in future
nuclear tests. These called for
precautionary measures in be
half* of the inhabitants.
Monroe Deutsch. provost
emeritus of the University of
California, told the delegates
Saturday night:
"In the United Nations lies
the greatest hope mankind has
ever had. Maintain it. Guard it.
Defend it.”
erica nends to turn out an aver
age of 12,000 ataff members a
year for its institutions of high
er learning. It is falling far
whorl of that need, with only
about 4000 being produced an
nually now.
In Oregon the problem becomea
particularly acute, he indicated,
because it will be one of the four
highest wtatew in percentage in
creawe in collegiate enrollment.
KnroHments Increasing
Oregon* college student w will
increase from 15,000 to 23,000
by 1063, according to Byrne.
Byrne noted in his speech that
some persona contend ‘‘possibly
we arc educating too many in
our colleges. He replied to this
argument:
"Certainly we know now' that
in many professional and scien
tific fields, there is a terrific
shortage . ..
"Maybe a well-devised Junior
college will be the final answer
in Oregon aw it has -been in Cali
fornia.
Ford Fellowships
Go to 3 Professors
Throe more University faculty i
members have been awarded fel
lowships from the Ford Founda
tion's Fund for the Advancement
of Education.
The three are Ivan M. Niven,
professor of mathematics; Perry
J. Powers, assistant professor
of romance languages, and Don- j
aid 8. Willis, assistant profes
sor of Oriental languages.
Powers will spend the next
academic year at Harvard uni
versity and will take courses in
Greek an<l comparative litera
ture.
Niven will do post-doctoral
work in mathematics at the Uni
versity of California in Berkeley,
and Willis will spend the year at
Kyoto university in Japan, do
ing research work.
Two other faculty members <
who have been awarded Ford
Foundation giants were an
nounced earlier. They ai-e How
ard Dean, assistant professor of
political science, and William A.
Williams, assistant professor of
history.
May Banquet Planned
For Foreign Students
The annual May banquet hon
oring foreign students was
planned at the Thursday meet
ing of the steering committee
of Foreign Student Friendship
Foundation. The banquet will be
held May 26 at 6:30 p.m. in the
S.U.
The foundation also elected of- j
ficers at this meeting who are:
Mrs. Milton Walker of Pleasant
Hill and Kugene. president of the
steering committee; Russell
Walker, vice-president; Mrs. F..
G. Havemann. recording secre
tary; Mrs. Byron Waite, corres
ponding secretary, and Theodore
Stern, treasurer.
The chief speaker at the ban
quet to which the public will is
Ostrom to Speak
At Psi Chi Meeting
Vincent Ostrom, associate pro
fessor of political science and
associate director of the North
west Cooperative Program in
Educational Administration, will
speak at the Psi Chi meeting to
day at noon.
Oatrom's topic will be ‘ Time
and Motion Study of Social Pro
cess.” The meeting will be held
in the Student Union.
invited will be Kenneth Lindsay,
a former member of the British
Parliament. Other speakers in
clude Miss Lisolotte Geoi giades
of Austria, Miss Leonor Sala- '
zar of Peru, Manakkal Vcnka
taramani of India, and Bob Sum
mers, forme!- ASUO president.
Audrey Mistretta will be vo
cal soloist on the program.
Foreign students will be guests
and anyone wishing to partici
pate may invite a foreign stu
dent. or may pay for the dinner
of a student. Reservations may
be made with the office of D. M.
Dougherty, ext. 506.
Anyone wishing to honor a |
student, or to assist in the pro- i
gram, may send his contribution
to (his office, specifying for!
which student it is intended.
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COURTSHIP, P. O. Box J914, Seattle 71. Washington
Ebbighausen Picked for Internship
In Carnegie Foundation Program
K. G. Ebbighausen, associate
professor of physics, has been
selected as one of 12 professors
in the United States to partici
pate in the Carnegie Eottnda-1
tion’s internship program next
j year.
The program, which is now' in
in it/» fifth year, allows those who
are interested in teaching to at
tend Harvard, Yale, Columbia or
Chicago universities for one year.
The professors chosen spend one
third of their time teaching and
the remainder in pursuit of their
own field of interest.
Ebbighausen will attend Har
vard next year, participating in
the institution's general educa
tion program in the physical
1 sciences. His teaching work will
be closely connected with a new
Frye Is New Law
School President
William F. Frye, fifth year
student in law. has been elected
; president of the Oregon law
‘school student body for the com
ing year. He succeeds James
Given.
Frye has been president of
the Oregon chapter of Delta The
ta Phi, national law fraternity.
! during the past year.
Vice-president of the law
’ school group is James Oram,
fifth year student in law. The
secretary-treasurer is Kdwm J.
Peterson, fifth year law student.
Peterson was also chosen pres
j ident of Phi Alpha Delta, legal
I fraternity, and William Hurley,
fifth year law student was elect
■ ed president of Phi Delta Phi.
also a legal fraternity.
course, which is a synthesis of
geology and agronomy. His t tie
will be visiting fellow in general
education.
During the five years in which
the internship program has been
operating, only four Pacific
Coast professors have been cho
sen to participate in the pro
gram.
Kbbighausen joined the phy
sics department in 1946. coming
here from the Westinghouse Re
search Laboratories. At the Uni
versity he has also directed ac
tivities connected with the new
telescope, which is mounted on
top of the science building.
Today's Staff
Make-up Editor: Sam Vahey.
Copy Desk: Carole Beech, Bob
Turley.
News Desk: Anne Hill, Carol
Craig. Bob Robinson.
Night Staff: Cay Mundorff,
Bev Chamberlain.
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Phone 4-3532
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