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Page 32 text:
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dmifiistration SCHOOL OF LAW T HE primary purpose of the Law School is to equip men and women for the practice of the law. The demand for finely trained, competent, and ethical lawyers is great and it is this type that interests the School. For this reason, the School does not seek merely a large number of students, and its entrance requirements and scholastic standards are such as to attract to the student body only those whose maturity, education, ability, and character fit them for serious study. However, graduates of the School are to be found in all parts of the state and there are included in their ranks leaders in the profession and in public life. Vv ' hile the School ' s first duty is to train lawyers, many University students who do not intend to practice law, take the law course because they consider it good training either for a business or public career. The School is a charter member of the Association of American Law Schools, an organization composed of the leading law schools of the United States and Canada, whose purpose is to further the cause of legal education and promote better legal scholarship. The School has always been given the highest classification by the Council on Legal Education of the American Bar Association. It is the only school in the state outside of the city of St. Louis that is endorsed by the Association. In addition to the everyday work of preparing students for the legal profession, the Faculty of Law is engaged in various research projects. The results of these investigations are made available in published form in the Law Series of the Lhiiversity of Missouri Rulletin, a quarterly. William E. Masterson Dean Lee H. Tate Hall VVILLLA.M R. COLLINSON OFFICERS ILLL M R. COLLINSO.N ' President iLLL M E. Masterson Den n Page 32
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Page 31 text:
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■ Administration SCHOOL OF JOURNALISiM Qhall the press he the useful, yet uidivitlual, servant of an enlightened Democracy; or shall it become the s!a e ol usurpers occupying positions ot power? To this most pressing world-wide journalistic problem of today the Missouri School of Journalism has devoted earnest study. From a pul)lic address of Associate Dean Frank L. Martin comes clear statement of the challenge: Four- fifths of the world ' s population today is under a censored or controlled press. This censorship is real, not fancierl. It is a censorship of detailed instruction of what to print and how it shall he displayed in the paper. It is absolute and complete regimentation of public news-opinion .... Let us he watchful of our own course and helpful to others less fortunate than ourselves. Censorship means the end of Democracy. An excerpt from an address by Dean Walter Williams supplies the answerof good journalism : The good journalist is chronicler, commentator, and crusader. He tells the truth. Facts to him are sacred things. Only the scale of justice, free from weight of prejudice, sways his decisions. He makes righteousness readable and seeks to make righteousness, right living, the more abundant life, obtainable by all people everywhere. It is a noble succession upon which today ' s Missouri journalists enter, a succession which includes names revered by all. To carry on requires courage and conscience, righteous education and unselfish ambition, the gift of the spirit, to become beacons of light and hope to the under- privileged everywhere. The newspaper is the uni ' ersity of the people. That it may l)e directed to the highest and noisiest uses is your privilege and mine. Frank L. M. rtin Dean Jay H. Neff Hall DON.ALD ThURM. N OFFICERS Donald Thurman President Lettie Miller Vice-President Marl nna Bluchek Secretary- Treasurer Frank L. Martin Dean Page U
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Page 33 text:
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A Administration SCHOOL OF MEDICINE npHE School of Aledicine was established in 1872 and since ■ - then has been an integral part of the University of Missouri. Its pirimary purposes are the thorough training of its students in the fundamental branches of the medical sciences, and the promotion of research activities along lines which pertain to medicine. In fact, constructive research by the clinical and pre-clinical staiTs and their graduate students have constantly received national recog- nition. The rating of the School of Medicine is of the highest, and for many years membership has been held in the Association of American Medical Colleges. The clinical members of the faculty care for the health of the student body. The University Hospitals with the large dispensary provide adequately for the prevention of diseases and for the care of the students when sick. Dudley S. Conley Dea i The State Crippled Children ' s Service for the rehabilitation of indigent crippled children in the University Hospitals has had its field of usefulness greatly augmented by the acquisition of the Georgia Brown Blosser Home for Crippled Children at Marshall. This convalescent home has been open since January first and is proving of great aid to us, both in the number of cases of crippled children which can be cared for and the convalescent care they are recei ' ing. The School of Nursing offers professional training combined with cultural study in the College of Arts and Science, a happy combination offering many advantages of academic educa- tion in addition to profes sional training. McAlester Hall Kenneth E. Kerby OFFICERS Kenneth E. Kerby President C. S. Johnson 1 ' ice-President Jean Hibbard Secretary- Treasurer DiDLEY S. Conley Dean Page 3i
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