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Page 39 text:
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FACULTY COLLEGE OF PHARMACY DEAN TOWNES R. LEIGH Iuka College, '01 CB.S., A.M., Ph,.D.J The College of Pharmacy was established in the University in 1923 as the School of Pharmacy. Fos- tered by the druggists of Florida, to whom the school owed its inception, and aided by liberal support of the Legislature, the school grew to a point where it was l recognized as the College of Pharmacy in 1925. All Work Offered in the College of Pharmacy meets the highest requirements of pharmaceutical instructions in this country. As a member of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, the College receives due recognition for its courses from all state boards requiring attendance in a school of pharmacy as a prerequisite for examination and registration. The curriculum is designed to provide a broad scientific education, to train retail phar- macists, and, through the Wise selection of approved electives, to provide an Opportunity for specialization either in Commercial Pharmacy, in Pharmaceutical Chemistry, or in Pharmacology and Pharmacognosy. The Work in Pharmaceutical Chemistry is designed to train men for positions in food and drug laboratories, or as manufacturing pharmacists. The completion of the Work of the fourth year in Pharmacognosy Or Pharmacology should qualify one to act in the capacity of a pharmacognocist, or inspector of crude drugs, or as a pharmacologist for manufacturing houses or hospitals. The classrooms, laboratories, and oflices of the College of Pharmacy are located in the Pharmacy-Chemistry building. A ten-acre tract has been allotted to the College for use as a medicinal plant garden. The garden is used as a teaching adjunct and as a source of supply for fresh material for study investigation, and classroom illustration. The Phar- macy-Chemistry branch of the main library is housed in the Pharmacy-Chemistry building. The library includes text and reference books and several of the American and foreign periodicals on chemical and pharmaceutical subjects. DEAN LEIGH TOWNES RANDOLPH LEIGH, M.A., Ph.D. fChicagOJ, Head Professor of Chemistry ALVIN PERCY BLACK, B.A., Professor of Agricultural Chemistry WALTER HERMAN BEISLER, M.S., D.Sc. fPrincetOnJ, Pro- fessor of Chemical Engineering FREDLH. HEATH, B.S., Ph.D. fYaleJ, Professor of Chemis- try VESTUS T. JACKSON, M.S., Ph.D. fChicagoJ, Associate Pro- fessor of Chemistry CASH BLAIR POLLARD, M.S., Ph.D. fPurdueJ, Assistant Professor of Chemistry BURTON J. OTTE, B.A., M.S., Curator of Chemistry GEORGE A. HAWKINS, B.S.E., Fellow in Chemistry - HARVEY A. MAST, B.S., Fellow in Agricultural Chemistry MAURICE L. MOORE, B.S., Fellow in Chemistry SILAS M. THRONSON, A.B., Fellow in Chemistry WOODSON C. TUCKER, JR., M.S., Fellow in Chemical Engi- neering CHILES E. SPARKS, B.S., Fellow in Chemistry DAVE ADELSON, Student Assistant in Chemistry ROBERT B. BENNETT, Student Assistant in Chemistry WILLARD B. BIGGERS, Student Assistant in Chemistry JAMES DAVID, Student Assistant in Chemistry CARL KAZARIAN, Student Assistant in Chemistry ARTHUR E. KROWER, Student Assistant in Chemistry LOUIS G. MCDOWELL, Student Assistant in Chemistry ANDREW P. MCLEAN, Student Assistant in Chemistry LOUIS MAGID, Student Assistant in Chemistry JOHN A. ROBERTS, Student Assistant in Chemistry WIIJLIAM E. ROBINSON, Student Assistant in Chemistry WALTER E. SANSBURY, Student Assistant in Chemistry G. A. BARBER, Assistant to Curator BERNARD V. CHRISTENSEN, M.S., Ph.D. fWisconsinJ, Pro- fessor of Pharmacognosy and Pharmacology HAROLD W. WERNER, B.S. fPharm.J, M.S., Assistant Pro- fessor of Pharmacognosy and Pharmacology LOVELL D. HINER, B.S. fPharm.J, Half-time Instructor in Pharmacognosy and Pharmacology CLAUDE L. CONWAY, Student Assistant in Pharmacognosy and Pharmacology F. B. PLEMMONS, Drug Gardener WILLIAM J. HUSA, Ph.C., M.A., Ph.D. flowaj, Head Pro- fessor of Pharmacy PERRY A. FOOTE, M.S., Ph.D. fWisconsinJ, Professor of Pharmacy PAUL S. SHATTUCK, B.S. fPharm.J, Half-time Instructor in Pharmacy JOSEPH M. CARTER, Student Assistant in Pharmacy Page 39
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Page 38 text:
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l CCJMMERCE AND JOURNALISM DEAN WALTER J. MATHERLY William Jewel College, '13 QAB., M..4.p The College of Commerce and Journalism had its beginning in 1925, when it was established as a I school in the College of Arts and Sciences. Out of J this unit was created the present separate college in 1927. Walter J. Matherly was named dean, and DEAN MATHERLY under his capable leadership it has grown to be the second largest unit of the University. The College offers instruction in two distinct fields, business administration and jour- nalism. The former is designed to provide analysis of the basic principles of business. Those who enter this field must understand the economic organization of society and the fundamental elements of management, must develop facility in the use of quantitative in- struments in the determination of policy and recognize the relationships between business leadership and social well-being. The business administration curriculum is designed to direct attention to these phases. Instruction in journalism proceeds upon the belief that the press is a social institution, and that the increasing appreciation of its functions creates a demand for thorough prep- aration, educationally, ethically and technically, for journalistic endeavor. The purpose of this instruction is to help develop such abilities of future newspaper workers as may lend assistance to solving the increasingly difficult problems encountered by the press. FACULTY HOWARD DYKMAN, B.A., LL.B., Assistant Dean and Professor of Insurance and Economics NANNIE BELLE WHITAKER, B.A., Secretary to the Dean JOE BASS, B.S.B.A., Assistant Secretary WALTER JEFFRIES MATHERLY, M.A., Head of the Department and Professor of Economics MONTGOMERY DRUMMOND ANDERSON, Ph.D. lRobert Brookingsl, Professor of Business Statistics and Economics HOWARD WILLIAM GRAY, M.S., C.P.A. flllinoisl, Professorof Accounting' TRUMAN C. BIGHAM, Ph.D. lStanfordJ, Professor of Economics CLIFFORD AUSTIN CURTIS, Ph.D. lChicagoJ, Visiting Professor of Finance HARWOOD BURROWS DOLBEARE, B.A., Associate Professor of Finance JOHN GRADY ELDRIDGE, M.A., Associate Professor of Economics HUBER CHRISTIAN HURST, B.A., LL.B. fFloridaJ, Associate Professor of Business Law and Economics ROLLIN SALISBURY Arwoon, Ph.D. lClarkD, Associate Professor of Economic Geography, and Acting Director of Institute Inter-American AHairs ARCHER STUART CAMPBELL, Ph.D. lVirginiaJ, Associate Professor of Economics and Foreign Trade and Director of the Bureau of Economic and Business Research JOSEPH PORTER WILSON, M.B.A., Assistant Professor of Marketing and Salesmanship JAMES EDWARD CHACE, JR., M.B.A., Assistant Professor of Economics and Business Management WILLIAM TROTTER HICKS, M.S., Instructor in Economics and Economic Geography GEORGE NUNEZ, B.S.B.A., Instructor in Accounting' PETER C. SCAGLIONE, B.S.B.A., Instructor in Ofiice Management and Economic History SIGISMOND DE RUDESHEIM DIETTRICH, Ph.D. fClarkJ, Instructor in Economic Geography ERNEST M. MCCRACKEN, B.A., Research Assistant ROBERT C. UNKRICI-I, Research Assistant FRED S. JAHN, B.S.B.A., Graduate Assistant HOWARD L. PUTMAN, B.S.B.A., Graduate Assistant JOHN L. FISHER, Student Assistant WILLIAM H. JOUBERT, Student Assistant MARK W. EASTLAND, Student Assistant ELMER JACOB EMIG, M.A., Head of the Department and Professor of, Journalism BUFORD O. BROWN, B.A., Acting Head of the Department and Acting Professor of Journalism WILLIAM LEONARD LOWRY, B.A., Assistant Professor of Journalism HOWARD M. NORTON, Student Assistant Page 38
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Page 40 text:
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. ng fam 'n. xl me 'I . 2,4 . lil Fir-12 192:-Q' IMI I-tri YQ IMI 1 lil 5 I fw 21:4 ffl lie: ...I 'vu if liar 2 MCI Eis' It tl itll K . J., . Q : il I I f 1 . 4 SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE and ALLIED ARTS DIRECTOR RUDOLPH WEAVER Drexel Institute fB.S., A.1.A.1 The School of Architecture was established in the fall of 1925, and it offered for the first time in Flor- ida a four-year curriculum leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Architecture. Later there was I a growing demand for additional courses in drawing, design, painting and other related subjects, so the scope of the work was enlarged. On May 15, 1929, the name was changed to The School of Architecture and Allied Arts, which was organized as an independent branch of instruction, with a Director, Professor Rudolph Weaver, who has built the school into one of the most important units in the University. The course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Fine Arts was first offered in September, 1929, and in 1932 the course leading to the degree of Bach- elor of Commercial Art was added. The School of Architecture and Allied Arts offers instruction in three fields: architec- ture, painting and commercial art. In each of these fields drawing and design are a funda- mental part of the curriculum. The courses in Architecture are for those students who de- sire to become architects, or who wish to enter some related field. The increasing complex- ity in construction that accompanies gain in population and a higher scale of civilization causes a need for a continuous supply of trained designers and craftsmen in the art of build- ing, and it is the aim of this course to prepare students for careers as draftsmen, designers, inspectors and superintendents of construction, and in general to prepare them for positions of leadership in their chosen field. There is a four-year curriculum leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Architecture, and special courses are arranged for advanced students. The object of the courses in painting is not only to develop the student's technical ability, but to give him as broad a cultural education as possible, because the profession that he will ultimately follow requires such a combination of technical and cultural training. The cur- riculum begins with the fundamentals of drawing, design and color, and develops into a highly specialized study of pictorial art, including mural decoration, figure, landscape and portrait painting. To prepare designers for the field of commercial art, a four-year curric- ulum is offered which gives the beginner an opportunity to learn something about various branches of this art, and to decide which line he wants to take up for his life work. In addi- tion to work in drawing, design and color, a sound foundation is laid in the fundamentals of business practice. DIRECTOR WEAVER FACULTY RUDOLPH WEAVER, B.S., A.I.A., Director, and Head Professor of Architecture HENRY NORTON JUNE, B.S., A.I.A., Professor of Architecture O. C. R. STAGEBERG, B.S. Arch., Assistant Professor of Architecture FRED T. HANNAFORD, B.A., Instructor in Architecture ROBERT CLossoN SPENCER, B.M.E., F.A.I.A., Instructor in Architecture CARL E. MITTELL, B.F.A., Instructor in Drawing and Painting WILLIAM T. ARNETT, M.A. Arch., Graduate Assistant Page 1,0
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