Dean
of Science Francois Gilfillan teaching Russian, ca. 1943.
In
1943, OSC was one of the first of seven colleges and universities
to participate in the Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP),
which was designed to give military personnel advanced training
in engineering, communications and foreign languages. Gilfillan,
who had introduced Russian language study to the college's foreign
languages curriculum a few years prior, taught it as part of
the ASTP curriculum. Other languages taught in the ASTP program
included Chinese, Portugese, Spanish, French and German. [OSU
Archives #935.]
Frank
Llewellyn Ballard, B.S., (July 1, 1940-September 10, 1941),
appointed by the Oregon State Board of Higher Education as the eighth
president of Oregon State College (the first graduate of Oregon
State College to become president -- Class of 1916) following the
retirement of President Peavy. Ballard had a long career with the
Oregon State College Extension Service. He served just over one
year as president because of illness. Associate Director of Extension
Service 1945-1961; Associate Director Emeritus 1961-1971.
Population in Corvallis: 8,392; in Benton County: 18,629; in Oregon: 1,089,684.
Francois
Archibald Gilfillan, B.S., Ph.G., Ph.C., Ph.D. (September 10,
1941-October 14, 1942), Dean of the School of Science, appointed
acting president. Gilfillan's career at OSC spanned more than 60
years, as a student (B.S. in Pharmacy, 1918), Professor of Chemistry
(1927-1939) Dean
of Science (1939-1962), and Dean Emeritus (1962-1983).
Major in Mining Engineering restored on January 27.
August
Leroy Strand, B.S., M.S., Ph.D., LL.D. (October 15, 1942-August
22, 1961), appointed by the Oregon State Board of Higher Education
as the ninth president of Oregon State College. Strand came to Oregon
State College from Montana State College where he had been president
for five years. President Emeritus, 1961-1980.
Pacific Coast Conference's 1941 football champion Oregon State
College upset Duke 20-16 in the Rose
Bowl, played on January 1, 1942 in Durham, North Carolina instead
of Pasadena, California, because of the outbreak of war with Japan.
It has been Oregon State's only Rose Bowl victory to date.
KOAC celebrated its enlargement to 5,000 watts of daytime service and twenty
years on the air on October 16.
Dean of Administration (E.B.
Lemon, Dean, 1943-1959) established in July.
Instruction in Army
Specialized Training Program (ASTP) begun on March 29. First
graduates (11 certificates of completion) on September 29.
In its 75th year after dedication as a state college: enrollment--4,743 (summer-660);
degrees conferred--611; library collection--193,479 volumes.
Division of Business and Industry established (in 1945 the name changed to the
School of Business and Technology). A new business major and secretarial science
major organized.
Faculty Council met for first time on March 9 (became the Faculty Senate in
1956).
A. D. Taylor's second campus plan presented.
Veterans Testing Bureau organized by Dr.
Robert R. Reichart (predecessor of the Counseling Center).
Naval ROTC established.
CH2M engineering company founded by OSC engineering professor Fred Merryfield
and three of his former OSC students -- Holly Cornell, Thomas Hayes, and Jim
Howland. Now known as CH2M HILL, it is the largest environmental engineering
company in the U.S.
Oregon State College Foundation incorporated on October 15 as a nonprofit
corporation.
Adair Tract (6200 acres) acquired for research and teaching by the Schools of
Forestry and Agriculture. This later became known as the Dunn Forest.
Summer school session reduced to eight weeks.
Air Force ROTC established on July 1 (today, OSU is one of only 33 universities
in the United States that offer officer training in all the major
branches of military service).