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