Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1919)
mxm& FOR Sim Ameriea, DEGREES MADE BY me -a 110 0.0. SENIORS Four million American-born children never learned to read and write . ... . - , t; - t! , .. .. . ' What kind of an education is YOUR child getting ? ff" V rHtl) I Bachelor of Arts Degree Sought ..By 92 Prospective Graduates; Three Ask Masters Degree. ONE FINISHES IN COMMERCE Dozen Complete Course jn Sci ences and One in 'vLaw j Chi- nese Among Graduates. ; University at Oregon, Eugene, April ' 2 J. A total of 110 members of the Benior clara of the university have filed appli cation.) for decrees to be sained by grad- : uaUon this sprm. Of , this number z .... aiVlnr fur haehelor of arts de- 12 for bachelor of science, one for commerce, one for law and three for master of arts. The incomplete list of those students representing: the various departments is as follows: Seven, Jour . nalUm ; four, commerce ; one, law ; six, economics; mix. history ; nine, - English literature: even, rhetoric ; eight, edu cation ; eight, romance language ; one, German ; six, .physical education ; two. psychology ; -one, public speaxmg ; live, mathematics ; two. architecture ; 12, nat- unl HrlnrpR. The students applying for a degree, their address and major subjects, are '" as follows : ' - ' ,-.--... runiini AWiukr. Portland. romance las - .m M.in AniiMHin. Portland, rhetoric ; Eliza bU. Aamiller, Yakima, Wash., iournaltom ; Nana AxUll. Uoro, botany. Maria Ridnn. Portland. German: France E lUstr. Hood Hirer, phynical education; Guortte Raney, Eugene, eeonomict: Ames Basler, iJon hcldinf, Grants Pane, commerce; Mr. Laura Pck (Portland), Joseph Boyd (lodi. Cat). Helen Brenton (Kusene). Journalisms James l:urg. Lakeriew. literature; Tracy Byers, Eu ' ser.e. Journalism. Helen Campbell, Portland, romance lansuaces; U.rW Can-obeli. Portland. Kncttah literature; locic Giro. HUanft-So. China, eeonocalea; Marion fnffe. Portland, Dhraieal edncation: Bos Col- man, Portland, Journalism: Charles. Comfort, tUorkton, CaL, education; Theresas. Cox. Ontario, Knclisfi literature; I'earl Craine, Manhfield, Jour nalism. - - Vera Derfinrer (Enene), Ella Dews (Klam ath Falls), physical education: Catherine Dobie, Hunerior. Wis.. Enalish litrrature. ; Bufu Eckerson, Portland, commerce; Msrra ret EdmonUson. Eugene, psychology; Henry Eni lUh, Kusene, history; Dorothy Fief el, Portland, history: iYances inter, Kiddle, history. -tirace Gilmore. Junction City, botany: Dor- rtliy Graham, Portland, history; Kutu 4irabam, Portland, public apeakinc; Edna Gray. Portland, reman ce language; Ruth Green, CreeweU, rhet oric; Harold Grey. Medford, mathematics; Helen Guttery, Hood Hirer, psychology. Helen Hair (Grant Pass), Virginia Hales (Eugene), physical education; Ala Hall. Eugene, oology; Daisy Hallock, Newport, education; Hal ite Hart, Portland, education: Kathryn Hartley, Hood Hirer, English literature; Marion Hays, Eu gene, education; Marrin Holland, Eugene, law; Kieta Hough. Eugene, chemistry; Morieta How . arri, Portland, chemistry; Sophia Hunter, ,Port - lnd. physical education; Heater Hard, Florence. r (ran Jenkins, Albany, architecture; Wilford Jeiikina, Eugene, literature; Katuryn Johnson, 1'crtland, romance language. . ' Buth Kaye, Portland, English literature; Geor- guma Kesri, Harlan. English litrrature. Mabel I-sIng, Corrallis. mathematics; Erma Tird, Pleasant Hill, English literature; Eunice Ianuon, Palo Alto, Cat, natural science : JLoIa I.aueuUn, Canton, rhetoric ; - Eloine Leiffhton, KJem. rhetorio; Maud Lombard. Eugene), physical ednaation. - . : . -. rhellie McClur. Eugene, -education; Tens MoCully, Eugene; Helen McDonald, La Grande, jcHrnansm. y y. . . .-. Kssie Meg-litre, Portland, economics : Clyde Ma son, Eugene, chemistry ilsry Mattley. Oregon i icy. matnemauce; ciisUe Meek. Coburg;- Ber nice Miller, Portland, history: Buth Montgonv ary, Eugene, rhetoric: Kenneth Moores. Kalrm. Haze) Rankin, Eugene: Mabel Rankin, Eu gene; in eu lie kit. Portland, romance languages; l.eta Rhodes, Astoria, rhetoric. Dorothy Sanford, Portland, economics; Jamea Bheehy, Portland, commerce; Donald Smyth, Ku- gene. maujeroa tics : Paul Spangler. Eugene, nat ural science: Emily 8pulak, Canby. education; Glen Stanton, Humbolt. Iowa, architecture: Ijj- cille Stanton, ilumbolt, Iowa, economics; Emma, oiepnenson, f-ugene. - t. George Taylor,, Tale, physics; Uoyd Tegart. Portland, edncation: Krnet Thnm nit. mathematics: Mary Elixabeth Townsend. PorU tana, romance languages; Harold Tregilgaa. Port land. - . . . i Annette JTaughan,- Rugene, rhetoric; Ethel "Site. Sutherlin. English literature; Claire War ner, Eugene, history; Wayne Wells, Edna, Whip ple. BeUingham, Wash., education: Marguerite . nmon; r.ugene, economics: Francea Stiles, Eu gene1, education; Melba Williams, Eugene, phy sical eaucatton; Dwight Wilson, The Dalles; Louise- Wilson, Eugene, romance language. ; Jennie1 Toder. Eogene. rhetoric ; Erma, Zim- anioitn. jcugeue. journalism. . UNIVERSITY OF OREGON VETERANS NUMBER 1352 Untverslty of Oregon. Eugene. Aoril 21. A total of 1352 University of Oregon men ana women served In the war, ac cording to a service record. Just com pie ted by Emma Wootton Hall., secre tary of military affairs on the cammia. Thirteen ranks are represented in the list, which la headed by two colonels and three lieutenant colonels, v Th colonels are Creed Hammond,, a graduate of the class of 1893, and Calvin U. Gantenbein, a graduate of 1891. The three lieutenant colonels are Frank Reid Mount, who received his A. B. degree in 1908 and his M. D. In 1912 ; Condon C. . McCornack, 1910; and John R. Barber, 1899. All three were in the medical ' corps. ' ' . . : ' The total number of commissioned of ficers is 490. of . whbm 446 are" lft-the army, 24 In the navy, nine in the marines and 11 in the T. M. C. A. and Red Cross service. . Eighty-two candidates for commissions were In training- when the armistice was signed. There -. are 173 former .university men in- the list of non-commissioned : officers and- 38 are petty officers In the navy. The "list of ' commissioned officers tn- cludea-421 majors, ,0 captains, 193 first lieutenants, 177 second lieutenants, one - lieutenant commander, three senior lieu tenants, three Junior lieutenants, 17 ensigns- one Red - Cross colonel, six Red Cross lieutenants and f our T. M. C A. lieutenants. Of privates and rank tin known are 643 men and 28 women. Forty-one men died In the service. More than (00 men enlisted while mem bers of the student body and more than 600 saw service overseas. Employment Agency. Courses Are Opened Professor Ira B. Cross of the XJnlver- slty of California began a series of lec tures on labor economics Monday after noon In the Chamber of Commerce rooms, the opening session of the Reed college part-time course in employment management" The lectures will continue every afternoon this . week, and next week the sessions will -be from 3:30 to 8:00 p. m. Tuesdays and ,FTidays. The purpose of the course Is to present the material -fon -personnel management which has been collected by the . war Industries boards throughout the coun try. 1 1U continue until July, 1, 11 wfmr femrUts tf tuU-firt, singing the Marseillaise, the little Frenth tkildrrn, mil through the war, mttnt eUily tt 'thtir tthnl Do you know that 100,000 of our public school teachers are only 19 years old? 50,000 of them are without high school education? The salary of a graduate teacher is no more than that of a milliner's apprentice While she is learning her trade? - The minimum wage for a teacher in New York City is $20 less than the wage of a city eroJbenuui ? . ... Does Every Woman . 'Want a Master? r IT true that most women like to be bossed by a man? That they don't want to be taken too seriously? That it flatters them to have a man order their lives for them, tell them what they should eat, wear, Would you commit a cringe to save a friend? When it came to the test, how far would you go for your best friend? Lend him money get him a job stand by him when he is down-and-out, yes. But would you go out and commit a crime, if well, read "A IDouble-Barrelled Friendship" by Edward S. 0'ReiHv. and see what you rP would have done in this man's place. vw la I Four Full-page Pictures in Full Colors The Fight in .the. Argon ne Forest." Tangled undergrowth as high as a man's head. Machine guns raining down fire from the tops of trees. It was a death trap yet our men pushed on. Here the Lost Battalion cut "off held against ovemhelming odds. Painted by Charles S. Chapman. The Charge atSedan." Our boys in action driving the Germans back with that dash and valor that turned the tide qf war at Chateau - Thierry, and gave new hope to the Allies. Painted by J. Scott Williams; iflf tkasa pictures in full ettUr ami ready fmr framing Wanted men and women living in small towns and country districts to renew and secure , new subscriptions ' for Pictorial Review. Write fordetails, endosingreference. Address 231 W. 39th Strt, New York City. THINK of it 700,000 men In our . first army draft who could not read . or write I Four million Americans in the country today who areilliterate! Grown-up menarid women in every state in the Union not newly arrived foreigners; but native-born Americans! who can not read a newspaper I cannot write a letter I cannot even read the safety signs in the streets or factories! Hundreds of thousands -millions of children today . who are getting no education whatever! V You the women of the country is this America's great free school system of which you are so proud? The helpless children have you forgotten them under .the press and strain of war? Is America to lag behind uugiuuu unu r ranee r Do you realize that America is behind England in the education of its children behind France behind Sweden? That educationally we are becoming a second class power? While these countries are lengthening the school age, thousands of our children under 14 are being thrown into the mills and factories. At the very moment when our Supreme Court was deciding that the Federal Government could not act to pre FIVE SPLENDID Love-making based on efficiency methods With the shadow of Flanders in his i eyes And his empty sleeve he wasn't the same gay, splendid lad she had sent away to France. Life would never be the same again for either of them. And yet wasn't that wonderful thing he brought back worth the price? This thrilling, moving story,"What They Brought Out'by Norma Patterson, will grip your heart. It is one of the really great stories that has come out of the war. Blunderingly, with hopeless In efficiency, the average man makes love. But this man was an excep tion. Read how with brilliant busi ness acumen he attacked the com plex problems that every lover must face. "Pleasure and Business Mixed" is one of Clarence Buding ton Kelland's most delightful stories. "m "'ssssssse as sssa saesBsssssssssssBBSa BBSBSsssssssa Bsssssa ''sssssassssssssssBsssssssssssaMssssssasBssssssss "News From Home." His mother his wife his little son he never knew what their letters could mean until, in some French vil lage 3,000 miles overseas, he waited anxiously while the mail was handed aroundJThe moving, human side of war. Painted by S. J. Woolf. ''The Attack on the Base Hospital." The roof in flames. Wounded men who themselves could hardly walk, struggling to drag out their helpless comrades. The Red Cross nurses working on under fire. F. Luis Mora has painted here a great dramatic picture. " are included tm Pictorial Review far May. for Ma i - . ' - 1 , ' i : . - i- . vent child labor; England was totally prohibiting the employment in industry of all children of school age. , America' is 1 rich;, enough to' give Sts -children as good' an education as any nation in the: world. And yet . Not only are thousands upon thousands of American children growing up illiterate blind to every kind of print or writing But V The grea t bulk of American chil dren in school right now today are getting an education that ia miser ably inadequate. ..... m Are 20 million mothers sleeping? ' Are America's twenty million mothers asleep? i Who is responsible for the chil dren of the country if not the mothers of the country? Rheta Childe Dorr, in her stirring article, "The Shame of America" sounds the clarion call to every mother, every father, every educator in the country. She tears the veil aside and reveals the farce of our educational system that does nor educate She goes further than mere criticism. She shows the remedy. ( Read this great constructive article in the May number of Pictorial Review. read, think and know? Or and kept up by romantic a... 11.- a.1 . . w iJbLUjr uivur wivcsr READ "A Fair Field in Sex" by ex-State Senator Helen Ring Robinson in this number of Pictorial Review. It is daring stimulating pro vocative. It will awaken self-questioning in every woman's mind it is a witty challenge to every man. The first article in a delightful new series. "What the Women Want." - ssssaeaaaaaaaaaasssssassssssBssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssMMssMMSsssaas SHORT STORIES A girl doesn't have to be pretty T. : With her thin little face, her big wistful gray eyes, no one would have looked twice at her. And yet do you think life couldn't have thrill ing, wonderful adventures in store for her? Read "Love's Labor" by Agnes Mary Brownell one of those unexpected romances that lie in wait for people just around the corner. Are You Getting YOU the woman shut up in a little city apartment, nursing your babies and strug gling with the high cost of living; you the woman fighting for a livelihood ; youthe woman smothered under wealth . and conventional sur roundings do you feel that life is as interesting, as worth while, as full of freedom and oppor tunity as it should be? How can you get more out of life?. In a re markable special article in the May Pictorial Review, Ida Clyde Clarke opens a great new horizon for American women. . - i - 1 - . ' .f "' - . . ' ls s Hundred! tf turgrvwn-up tolditrt were t illiterate, mnd hr.d tt bt taught their letters ia the Y. .f. C. A. uus behind the battle-Una Do you know that For years there have been country school throughout the West in which the English language was barred out? Many of our public school teachers can hardly make themselves understood in English? p Thousands of teachers are leaving the chools to enter other professions? In New York City alone 32,097 children of chool age are receiving no instruction? is a lot of this a tradition that has been made novelists and by the kind' of men who like What was the secret she hid from him? The dancer on the beach, with ' her sea-blue eyes, her light, laughter loving nature what was the secret she was strong enough to hide, even while they were-facing death to gether? Rosa Mundi is a wonderful picture of a woman, in the grip of a strong feeling. - Ethel M. Dell has written here one of the finest love stones of the year. Enough Out of Life ? m It there is no Pictorial Review Pattern Agent or newsdealer in your town, send 20c for a copy or $2.00 for a whole year's sub scription to Pictorial Review, 231 Wect 3 9th Street, New York City. ? i . . mi, tt. a '