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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1915)
Twenty Pago East Qrcgonian Round-Up Souvenir Edition Pendleton, Oregon, Thursday, September 23, 1915 Page Thrre OREGON AGRICULTURE COLLEGE J)PEINS MOST PROMISING YEAR OF WORK Entrance Requirements Raised to Full Four Years High School Course. Entrance Applications Indicates Record Creaking Attendance. I he Oregon Agricultural College Is 'Beginning the mont promising year, In point of uttendance and service to the tate, that it has jet known. An in crease in enrollment of at least 12 per cent was Indicated by the admis sion credentials on file at the itegis trar's office ax early as September t, two weeks before the rcgulur open ing of college. Subsequent duta, col lected both at the office of the regis trar and at the offices of the various deans. promise even greater advances in student enrollment. In addition to a larger student body than form erly, and In addition also to the Im proved personnel of the student body, due chiefly to Improved stand ards of scholarship throughout the entire Institution, the College is bet ter prepared this year than in any Previous year to carry out a sym metrical college program. Its cours es of utiidy have been definitely set tled, thereby banishing the doubts and discouragements that hurrassed Its efforts when the board of higher curriculum was debating tha problem of Its peculiar field. Its depart ments, moreover, are headed by men -exceptionally trained in their sped altles, and experienced in the pecu liar field that they serve, while their associates and assistants are men who t have not only demonstrated their competence as experts, but are add ing, month by month, frexh evidences of their scholarship and their power to serve the cause of science in In dustry. Its extension service, pio neering a new field, like other pro gressive colleges of the country, is steadily approaching a more severely efficient method of getting the ser vices of the college out to the people and at the same time reaching a wider constituency In a more Inti mate, practical way. The student body, finally, through Its own Inltl atlve, or through Improvements i In college administration, is now on a splendid bunls for conducting the business of ntudent activities (urn ountlng to thousands of dollars), for managing student discipline, and for developing Ideals of community re sponsibility and social Integrity. Not the leunt factor In this scheme of ef ficiency and service is the work of the new dean of women. A word about some of these fac tors that are yearly attracting more tudents to the college and Improv ing the quality of Its service to the state, may be of Interest Just now to readers of the East Oregonian. The Advance In Scholarship. Beginning this year the college Is on a full four-years' basis of high school entrance requirements. Tills, as a matter of couse, advances the standard of the degree courses throughout. Graduate of the col lege from now on will stand on a par with those of the best land-grunt col legos of the country. Those entering the teaching profession will experi ence no hardship over the grnduntes of other colleges and universities as heretofore, when they were eligible. In the field of secondary education, to teach their specialty only. The vocational courses also, while they are open to any student who Is of mature years and qualified oth erwise to profit by the Instruction of fered, are appealing to a class of stu dents who usually have a severely purposeful motive and some experi ence with their chosen vocation be fore coming to the college. As a con aequence, the student body that comes to the college Is not only better pre pared on entrance but Is capable of more rapid and complete develop ment.. Another evidence of the advanced .standard of the scholarship of the College Is the demand for special work in Its technical departments, particularly In the higher years of study. Thirty-four students of other colleges and universities are already .enrolled as O. A. C. students this fall. Many of these come from the east, where the college Is recognized as a leader In many lines of scientific In . structlon. Itivognltlon of Faculty Iirailwslilpx Perhaps the most pointed testl- mony to the leadership of the fac ulty of O. A. C. is the wide-spread ef fort on the part of other colleges many among the best in the land to "lift" our experts. Some of these ef forts have recently been successful; Utttiy have not. A great eastern uni versity and several western universi ties have made surprisingly attractive offers to members of our horticultu ral factulty, In some Instances offer pg to double salaries. None of the heads of departments In this division of the college have left, though one of the Instructors accepted a lucra tive appointment In the University of California. A land-grant college In New England offered a deanshlp to 'one of our heads of departments at a greatly augmented salary It waa re fused. Various offers carrying sal aries a third higher than our facnlty men and women are receiving at O. A. C. have come to our workers dur ing the past six months and have been cheerfully declined. The motives are obvious: a secure faith in the future of Oregon and her leading technical college, and a confident outlook for fflclent service In an Institution .wisely and Impartially administered. Among the factulty men und wom en who have accepted splendid offers , from other colleges, a few Instances mny be mentioned to show the respect that the college commands among similar Institutions throughout the ' rnuntrv. The head of our department of botany and plant pathology goes to Furdue University, Indiana, to occu py the same kind of position at an Increased salary. The head of our department of entomology goes to the . iTnir!tv of Wisconsin under the same conditions. The man who hae ! been associate professor In the school of mines during the past two years ' goes to Arliona M dean of the col . lege of mines and engineering. A de partment head In the division of ex- 7Z7T t y-. l it v sV." . J ' 7 9 t ... x). "i V 1 " FT n w '-.! I It l."''ff ' ii r mi -nsn Lid mil lr,l -"r r 1 r i .... . J r Top picture, left, Vo cational Students in Ma chine Shops, 0. A. C Top at right, Mecha nical Hall, Oregon Agricultural College. Lower on right, School of Mines, 0. A. C. BOTTOM PICTURE RIGHT. MEN'S GYMNA SIUM INCOMPLETE. JrtlW" tension becomes head of extension service In the University of t'olorado. And so on, all testifying to the same dies her pupils with a view to know ing what tliey can do, bow they can do it, and how best she, as their substantial fact; namely, that Presi-1 preceptor, can stimulate thtm to do dent Kerr has gathered around him it; and thuse of a social, leader, who men and women who are recugnUed I seeks, on the one hand, to avoid all uiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii illinium imiiimiiiii iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiu iiiiiuitiiniiutiiiiMniiMiiiiMtfOTHiiiiimmiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiMirmniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiu throughout the country as among the first in their fields. Extension. The Kxtenslon Service, as already Indicated, is taking on a more scien tific, more immediately practical method of distributing the benefits of the college, in cooperation with the state department of public in struction, on the one hand, and with O A C 2 the V. S. department of agriculture, on the other, it Is carrying on a num ber of comprehensive projects In the public schools, on the farms, In the orchards and forests, in the dairies and cheese factories, in the shops and In the homes that are exerting an immediately practical influence on the Industries and living conditions of the rural population. Student-body progress. Student self government at the college, established four years ago, is proving not only a satisfactory means of Improving student discipline, but a constructive factor In welding to gether all the varied Interests of the college. It has Joined the hands, for Instance, of athletics and forenslcs. publications and music, supplies anil entertainment, In a cooperative scheme of management and sharing of funds. It has successfully con ducted a cooperative stor for a year. It has organised and operated a ly ceum course; run a aeml-wekly newspaper, and assisted In financing a student loan fund. It has aroused a splendid spirit of responsibility am ong all students. It has cooperated with the faculty In establishing a body of student traditions, and a code of principles for the guidance of clubs and fraternleles. It Is an adminis trative nswt. In short, which the In stitution values highly. Pran at Women. The work of the new Dean of Wom en, Mrs. Mary K. Fawcett, who form erly served as dean of women at the University of Illinois, and has had administrative experience In other leadlng'colleges of the east, promises to be a sterling factor In the life of the college community, as well as In the efficiency of Its service to the state. A woman with a wealth of humanity holding an even place with her scholarship and her professional skill, she has noble alms and defi nite plans for attaining them In the work of caring for the Interests of all the college girls. She regards her du ties as threefold those of adminis tration, giving direction and purpose to the work and play of the college women; those of a teacher, who im possible dissipation or disaster in the exercise of the social resources of'z youth, und. on the other, to beautify ts and Idealize those resources into a wholesome community helpfilness happy yet sune, innocent but purpose- ful. ARDWA RE . . 1 i The Indian War of 1855-$. Told By a Survivor of the Struggle 5 Every pari !s ; juav perfection-: Tried and tested past correctionr (Continued from pg two.) charged. After our fischaige trie thirty-fourth jongress ordewd tie jreretary of viar to appoint a cumnus ion of three to examine Into and r port the expenses ncurreJ for the pay and malntenunce of tha voluateer force of 1S35 and 1856. Such com mission was appointed asd car(ulty examined Into the matter, aad re ported. XTen th thirty-sixth con grew ordered the third auditor of the treasurer to examine and audit the claims ot the. vciunteew, there waa a difference of asout o half between the ameunts dne in commissions re port, atd that ot that third auditor and since thst time the Indian war veU?rin hare been striving to get what Is Justly due them but unsuc cessfully ttH far. W hav had many promises nose deey the Justice- of our claims ut congress. Is stow too much red tape. Forty years have passed, and but lit tle over 1,0 fM ot the 7.000 or over who went Into service to save the state are now living. Few of them are In easy circumstances. They were not of a generation of money savers, a few more years and the grand old government of the United States, so proud of Its record In the treatment of those who fought Its battles shall have lost the opportun ity of paying a debt It doubly owes to those who conquered Its wilderness and Its savages. A few more years and the aged Oregon volunteer of 1855 will no longer be here to envy Uncle Sam's Indian wards the care and protection given them for skill ful manner In which their ancestors killed and scalped the pioneers of thli treat northwest. t WHOLESALE AND RETAIL WE carry everything in the hardware line ..that is carried by any other store in the city or country. An immense general line of shelf and heavy hardware. If cools ij our ft To suH uourtooc ' W ml our mood 3 S ijua i vuu LiiniK it 3 worm while fn a 4, . , .. ." ""fiC uiaiwm cocuc and Dolce vnur fmvi urfW,lfn..i. Trill give you good, hoiusi tenia every day ia the year. THE oRcAT MAJESTIC SKSSKK RANGE 1 will do evervthin vou couM atlr f a not only for a day or a week or a year, but every day ia the year lor years to come. Thb Majestic is made right and ol the right kind of maltrial all parts are riveted towther u an engine Doner; it's practically air-tight; holds the ,ly uule IUCI; ncaa plenty ol water quickly and lint? KLM t. 'i J i USTS A UFCTIMC tJi and we can mrn'm yrm If oo win e-n .4 , tote and see lie Ifutmc We will m m... f.... . v. ... . ... ,. 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