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Page 31 text:
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BLUE GOLD AER receiving his Ph. D. degree from the University of California in 1890, and his LL. B. in 1893, Orrin K. McMurray, Dean of the School of Jurisprudence, prac- ticed law in San Francisco for several years. Later he taught law at Hastings College of Law and in 1904 he became a mem- ber of the faculty here. Since then he has at different times been professor of law at the University of Michigan and again at Columbia University. In 1923 he was appointed Dean of the School of Jurisprudence at California. The School of Jurisprudence was established by an order of the Board of Regents in 1912. It offers a complete profes- sional course in law, as well as an opportunity to study the cultural aspects of our legal system. Opportunities for stu- dents are exceptional in both respects in this school. The school has a life of its own, centering in Boalt Hall, a hand- some building containing a law r library of more than 35,000 volumes, a large reading room, lecture rooms, offices, and rooms for students. Legal fraternities and similar associa- tions tend to foster the cooperative spirit which is so marked a feature of the school. The interest of the graduates is main- tained after leaving the school through the Alumni Association of the School of Jurisprudence, which has done much for its progress. The student body is at present almost entirely composed of graduates of the college of Letters and Science, or some other colleges whose degrees are recognized by this University. The maturity of the students and the standard of general education possessed by them make the School, it is believed, one of the strongest in the United States. The interest of the people of the State in the work which the school performs in educating the future leaders of our bench and bar is indicated by t he generosity of the endowments made by benefactors. The most recent is that made by Mrs. Clara Hellman Heller, who, during the past year, established the Emanuel S. Heller Chair of Law in honor of her husband. O K McMciRAY DEAN- OF THE SCHOOL or JUKISPKVDENCE EOALT HALL STEPS
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Page 30 text:
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BLUEC GOLD W! ILLIAM w. KEMP came to the University in 1923 as Professor of Education and Dean of the School of Education. Dean Kemp received his B. A. degree from Stanford University in 1898, after which he spent several years in study, part of which time was devoted to research in the Archives of London. In 1912 he was granted a Ph. D. from Columbia University. Since that time the Dean has held numerous positions such as Professor of Education at the University of Montana from 1912 to 1915; Professor of School administration at the University of California from 1915 to 1920; and President of the San Jose State Teachers ' College from 1920 until 1923 at which time he left there to take up his position with us. During summer sessions he has lectured at several uni- versities, including Stanford, University of California at Los Angeles, and Brigham Young University in Utah. During the next summer session he will lecture at the Territorial Normal School and University of Hawaii at Honolulu. Educationally speaking, Dean Kemp has been called the father of the new Hawaii. As a member of a committee for a survey of the standards of elementary and secondary education in the Hawaiian Islands, Dean Kemp had, as his special duty the investiga- tion of the teachers ' training school. Here he found the standards very low, but, due to political opposition, it was difficult to raise them. It was said that higher standards would cause fewer natives to train and hence be detrimental. However, Dean Kemp, in his survey report, stood firmly behind his plea for raising the standards and finally he succeeded in winning the point. As a result the Nor- mal School in Hawaii has advanced until it is now a modern training school. As Dean of the School of Education, Dr. Kemp also supervises the professional training of school executives of all kinds. He has been very influential in organizing the Men ' s and Women ' s Education Clubs. WILLIAM W. KEMP DEAN OF THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION HAVILAND HALL 26
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Page 32 text:
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BLUEd GOLD H AVING received his degree at the University of Maine, Elmer D. Merrill, present Dean of the College of Agriculture, attended George Washington University for a year. There he studied in the Department of Medicine. He was assistant in the natural sciences at the University of Maine for a year. After that, in 1902, he went to the Philip- pine Islands where he spent twenty-two years in botanical investigation. While there he was connected with the Bureau of Agriculture, and later he held a professorship at the Uni- versity of the Philippine Islands. During the last four years of his stay he was Director of the Bureau of Science in Manila, the institution in which all the scientific work of the Philip- pines is centralized. Dean Merrill is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the Deutsche Botanische Geselschaft. This latter organization is a botanical society of high rank, and but four or five American botanists have had the honor of being elected to it. Merrill has written numerous articles on botany among these is a book on the Flora of the Philip- pine Islands, and an Enumeration of Bornean Plants. He was also editor of the Philippine Journal of Science. As Dean of the College of Agriculture and Director of the University experiment station, which positions Merrill accepted in 1923 upon his return from the tropics, he is responsible for the administra- tion of the entire College of Agriculture. This consists of the department of Berkeley, the branch at Davis and the University Experiment Station at Riverside, besides the Agr iculture Extension service. One of the most interesting of the recent developments at the experimental station, according to the Dean, is the culmination of the investigation on the reclaiming of alkaline soil. Experiment in this line has been carried on for many years and it has now been demonstrated that certain types of alkaline soil may be reclaimed. This fact will be found of great value to all agricultural interests, says Dean Merrill, and will probably result in the reclaiming of much land which is now useless. ELMER D. MERRILL DEAN OF THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE UNIVERSITY BOTANICAL GARDENS 28
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