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Page 27 text:
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Bernard Gavit Dean School of Law 1838 In 1838 a statute was passed in this state which transformed the then existing Indiana college into Indiana university. This statute provided that one of the purposes of the state university should be to educate students in the science of law. The Indiana University Law school, however, was not opened formally until 1842. The Indiana University School of Law prospered for thirty years. Several times between 1870 and 1877 the Law graduates equaled or outnumbered the graduates of the College of Liberal Arts. In 1877, because of the legislature cutting down the salaries of the instructors to such an extent that competent instructors were unobtainable, the Law school was forced to close its doors. This suspension, which lasted over the short period of twelve years, is the only intermission in the continuous operation of the school from the time it was founded to the present. — R. A. C. [23]
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Page 26 text:
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David A. Rothrock Dean S. E. Stout Dean College of Arts and Sciences 1820 The College of Arts and Sciences, around which the professional schools of Indiana university have been constructed, takes its origin from the State seminary, which was established early in 1820. In 1828 this seminary was transformed into Indiana college, and ten years later into Indiana university. At this time the College of Arts and Sciences was known as the College of Liberal Arts, under which name it continued until 1921, when it was given its present title. The departmental organization under which it now operates was introduced into the College in 1887. Since that time the number of departments has increased steadily and considerably until at the present there are twenty-six separate departments. The faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences numbers 182 members at the present. — R. A. C. [22]
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Page 28 text:
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w 27 Frederick R. Henshaw Dean School of Dentistry 1879 The Indiana Dental college was established in 1879 as a private institution by a group of members of the State Dental association in accordance with an agreement with the General Assembly of that year which had passed the first dental law governing the practices of dentistry in Indiana. It was the tenth dental school to be organized in America. On March 9, 1925, the governor of Indiana signed the bill providing that the State of Indiana should take over the Indiana Dental college and make it a part of Indiana university. On June 1 of that year the school was purchased by the state and became the Indiana University School of Dentistry. — R. A. G. [24]
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