University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA)

 - Class of 1954

Page 13 of 388

 

University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 13 of 388
Page 13 of 388



University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 12
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Page 13 text:

. dy ide lorediafenlf building and equipment and ff5295,800 for an exchange and improvement of facilities between pediatrics and isolation, with particular emphasis upon the care and rehabilitation of victims of poliomyelitis. As a result of legislative action, our faculty and staff were brought within the federal social security system and were given the option to elect either a state or private supplementary retirement program in addition. FP Pk if A number of significant appointments and honors should be noted. William J. Simon, D.D.S., of the University of Minnesota, assumed the deanship of the College of Dentistry in january, 1953. Norman B. Nelson, M.D., formerly assistant dean, University of California at Los Angeles, and Dean of Medicine, American Uni- versity of Beirut, assumed the deanship of the College of Medicine on july 1, 1953. Dr. Robert S. Michael- sen of the Yale Divinity School became the second Director of the School of Religion, in succession to Dr. M. Willard Lampe, retired, on December 1, 1953. Professor Edmund de Chasca became Professor of Spanish and Chairman of the Department of Romance Languages, September 1953. Pl' FF lk Professor joseph Bodine, Head of the Department of Zoology, was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. Professor Harold W. Beams, Department of Zool- ogy, became the first Iowan to achieve membership in Britain's 115-year-old Royal Microscopic Society. Professor Baldwin Maxwell, Head of the Depart- ment of English, was a Foyle Fellow in the Shakespeare Institute CStratsford-upon-Avonj of the University of Birmingham. Professor Kenneth W. Spence, Head of the Depart- ment of Psychology, was awarded the highest honor of the Society of Experimental Psychologists, the War- ren Medal for 1953, in recognition of his persistent and rigorous theoretical and experimental work on fundamental problems of learning. Pk ill lk On November 11, 1953, in Carnegie Hall, New York, the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, con- ducted by Dimitri Mitropoulos, gave the premiere per- formance of a concerto for piano and orchestra com- posed by Dr. Philip Bezanson, of the Department of Music. Professor john Simms of the department was the piano soloist. FF if FF For the future, the University's needs are: C11 an increased emphasis upon quality both in faculty and student body C21 sufficient operating funds and sufficient freedom in utilizing them to assure a first-rate University C31 sufficient capital improvements Cal to eliminate the use of temporary struc- tures for classrooms and offices,and Cbj to provide additional permanent struc- tures for classrooms and offices, and student body that are inevitable during the next decade , C41 elimination of actual and potential threats of political domination and control of our educa- tional institutions C51 reaffirmation by our people of the belief that this is the last, best hope of earth and a rededi- cation to the ideals of a free and open societyf, to the ideals of The American Dream.

Page 12 text:

This is a new venture. It is the first of what I hope will be a series of brief annual reports on the State of the University and the University of the State. The ideal period to be covered would be the current academic year, 1953-54, but that would re- quire a crystal ball because the year, 1953-54, is far from finished, as this is written, and an account of the academic year 1952-53 would be almost a year old by the time this Hawkeye appears in print. I have settled on the calendar year 1953, therefore, as the best available compromise. I wish that this report might be one of unqualified optimism and good cheer. Unfortunately that would be misleading because the most significant develop- ments in 1953 for the University and the other five institutions under the Iowa State Board of Education were political ones. The year 1953 brought into sharp focus the dominance, or at least potential dominance, of partisan political control over our state institutions in contrast to the bi-partisan, non-political exercise of authority by the State Board of Education. In january 1953 the Board and its institutions were informed that for the first time in twenty years the reversion pro- visions of the Budget and Financial Control Act would be invoked against them at the end of the biennium, then less than six months away. Similarly they were informed that no longer would the institutions get one- twelfth of their appropriations monthly, but they would receive only such funds as the pre-auditor and the Comptroller would approve as necessary. The pre-audit of expenditures, authorized in 1951, was fully opera- tive in 1953. Appropriations for the first time were earmarked so that lapsed items in the budgets could not be made available for repairs, replacements, alter- ations, books or equipment, a clear departure from the historic development of the RRSA Fund and from its operation up to 1953. And, in Section 12 of the Ap- propriations Act, budget ceilings were set beyond ,Quia of ffte Uniuerdify which the institutions could not go except on a showing of emergency or necessity. What has happened in Iowa to the University, the State College and the State Teachers College is symptomatic of what is hap- pening in other states. In my judgment it is part of a general movement which will weaken and may destroy American public education. The time has come when our country must decide once again whether it is to be the hope of the world as it was in Colonial days, in the days of the Revolu- tion, in Lincoln's days, and in Wilson's days, or whether The American Dream was merely the idealism and naivete of youth which must give way to old age's cynical and selfish love of money and ease and plutocratic power. FK 31 PF Within the University the situation was never better. During 1953 the University's academic program pro- gressed in good order. Approximately 1900 students earned degrees. Approximately 47,835 ambulatory and in-patients were examined or treated in our hos- pitals. Grants for research totaled f5791,201 and were divided among 136 different research projects. At the request of a Conference on the Problems of Aging, the University, with Board approval, has organized the Iowa Institute of Gerontology. Une hundred iive con- ferences were held in the Iowa Center for Continuat- tion Study, with over 9,000 participants in public health, business and industry, labor, education, journal- ism, public service, engineering, law and religion. In October 1953, Professor E. F. Lindquist announced a new electronic test scoring machine which seems des- tined to have profound effects upon educational testing. Two buildings, a unit of the Communications Center for journalism, and the Hospital School for Severely Handicapped Children, were completed and occupied. Among other things, the 55th General Assembly 119531 appropriated S900,000 for a medical research



Page 14 text:

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Suggestions in the University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) collection:

University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

University of Iowa - Hawkeye Yearbook (Iowa City, IA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957


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