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Page 21 text:
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new assignment in 1912. Professor Edwin C. Hutman, who became the Director of the Pharmaceutical Laboratory in 1903 and later Professor of Pharmacy, was a member of the Faculty until his death in 1937. In 1906 William A. Larkin was made instructor in physics and some years later Professor of Chemistry, which posi- tion he held until his retirement in 1937. Other faculty members included Garrett Vander Veer Dillenback who succeeded Gustavus Michaelis in 1903 and remained as Professor of Pharmacy until 1918, and many others—Warren Brack, Manser Stone, LeRoy Matthews, Harry Baker, William W. Gibson, Clarence Ostrander— who filled various teaching posts during the years. Some of the present faculty members have given many years of service. Professor Dewell was first appointed in 1924, Professor Hanmer in 1930, and Professor Reed in 1935. Miss Katherine Glavin, the Registrar, has been with the College since 1918. Dr. Tucker resigned as Dean in 1918 and was followed by Dean William Mansfield who served until his retirement in 1943. Dr. Hugh G. Muldoon, Pro- fessor of Chemistry, who was later to become one of the foremost pharmaceutical educators of modern times, served as Acting Dean during the illness of Dr. Mans- field during the session 1918-19. Following the retirement of Dr. Mansfield in 1943, Dr. Francis J. O’Brien, who had been on the staff since 1920, was appointed as Dean of the College and Professor of Pharmacy. From its very beginning, the College, although a Department of LInion Uni- versity, lias been controlled by its own Board of Trustees. Following the death of the first president, Joseph W. Russell, in 1899, William J. Walker was elected to the office and served until his death in 1904. Charles Newman followed and at his death in 1916 was succeeded by Charles Gibson under whose direction the present college building on New Scotland Avenue was constructed. The new build- ing was not fully completed when Mr. Gibson died in 1928 and was succeeded by Warren L. Bradt who had been Secretary of the New York State Board of Phar- macy for many years. At his death in 1939, Dr. Arthur S. Wardle was elected President arid still holds that office. Dr. Wardle was graduated from the Albany College of Pharmacy in 1900 and many years later was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Science by Union University for his long and devoted service to pharmacy and to the field of education in general. In the early years of the College there were but few organized student activities. The first recorded social functions were the annual graduation dinners, the first of which was held in 1882 at the Windsor Restaurant “w'here a dinner was served and social festivity prevailed” for trustees, faculty, graduates and guests. Later came the Junior Prom, which has remained an annual custom to this day. The first organized sports activity was basketball, introduced on a grand scale in 1922, when the schedule included such teams as Hobart, Niagara, Queens University, St. Bonaventure, Middlcbury and others of equal rank. Although never mentioned among the top teams of the East, there was a surprising modicum of success as measured by the won and lost column. In 1925 a student council was formed and more activities were inaugurated. A glee club, orchestra, debating and dramatics club provided recreational and cultural activities; bowling and baseball were added to the sports schedule and in recent years a golf team has represented the college. In 1910, Beta Delta Chapter of Kappa Psi Fraternity was founded, followed by Epsilon Phi in 1916, Lambda Kappa Sigma Sorority in 1919, and Rho Pi Phi in 1921. Epsilon Phi merged with Phi Delta Chi, a National pharmaceutical fraternity, in 1931 and became the Alpha Theta Chapter. Social activities have, changed, some of these organizations have ceased to exist and others have been added, but the fraternal organizations remained constant and strong during the years except for a brief wartime period. Today the Albany College of Pharmacy stands financially and educationally strong. The present adequate building and facilities were provided in 1927. It is recognized as a Class A College by the American Council on Pharmaceutical Educa- tion and is a member of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. Its sons and daughters occupy some of the highest positions in the pharmaceutical in- dustry and many serve their communities in official capacities. A strong alumni association supports the college and many friends have cooperated in helping it to assume its present position. The City of Albany, which provided the land on which the present college is built, has been proud to have it among its institutions of learn- ing and the present Mayor, Erastus Corning, 2nd, is a member of the Board of Trustees. It stands as a living monument to the many men and women, students, faculty, trustees, and friends who contributed so much of their strength and sus- tenance that it might not falter. « 20 »
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subsequent years have followed, almost to the letter, the format of that first exer- cise, except for the addition of the Valedictory address in 1883 and thereafter. In 1883, there were ten graduates including Frank J. Smith Sr. and Louis Sautter Jr. who were destined for long and active pharmaceutical careers in the Citv of Albany. Two of the class, however, did not receive diplomas because they had not completed their four years of apprenticeship. It was during the year of 1883 that Dr. Mosher died, and Dr. Willis Gaylord Tucker was appointed President and Dean of the Faculty. Dr. Alfred B. Huested was appointed Professor of Botany and Materia Medica. Both of these appointees were to render long and honorable service to the College for a period of thirty- five years until their retirement in 1918. The catalogue of the College that year stated that either a college diploma or a license from an examining board would soon be a legal necessity for those engaged in the practice of pharmacy in this state. One year later such a law was passed and the college enrollment began to increase steadily. By the year of 1899 there were 323 graduates on the alumni roll and the number of Colleges of Pharmacy had increased to fifty-one. It was during the year of 1899 that the profession of pharmacy suffered a severe blow to its onward progress. The Board of Regents of the State of New York wished to place the Ph.G. degree on the same plane as any other degree pro- tected by the Regents and to require the same preliminary education as the student of medicine, together with a four-year college course. Pharmacy objected to this program as too severe for its needs at the time and because no other state had a similar program. By the time this program was adopted in 1937, thirty-eight years later, medicine and the other professions had left pharmacy far behind in scholastic requirements. Thus pharmacy was dealt a blow from which it has never fully recovered. During the intervening years, however, slow but steady progress was made and educational requirements gradually increased but not without serious opposition by those who were determined that the business interests of pharmacy should prevail. In 1905, New York was the first state to require that all candidates for license to practice pharmacy “shall be graduates of a College of Pharmacy registered by the Board of Regents, and which requires not less than 12 Regent’s counts or their equivalent as a condition for entrance.” This was the equivalent of one year of High School preparation. In 1918, the requirement was extended to two years of High School, in 1923 to three years and in 1925 to four years. In 1927 three years of College preparation became a minimum; in 1937 this was extended to four years. Thus in a period of less than fifty years, reejuirements for licensure in- creased from an uncontrolled two years of College without previous secondary edu- cation to a full four-year High School course followed by four years of College. It is interesting to note that practically every step of the advance was initiated by the colleges themselves in spite of heavy opposition from nearly all other branches of the profession. As the educational qualifications gradually increased, the curriculum became more and more diversified and intensified. In 1890, a six-hour per week Pharmacy Laboratory Course was added for a period of ten weeks each year. The Medical College did not have a suitable laboratory so one was equipped in a loft on Beaver Street and three years later was moved to the loft of the Van Heusen-Charles Build- ing on Broadway. A course in Microscopy was added in 1895 and recitations in all courses were added to the lecture hours. In 1903, pharmaceutical mathematics and physics were recognized as separate courses and in 1908 Latin and Physiology were added to the program. By this time the course had been lengthened from its beginning in 1881 when each year consisted of five hours a week for 21 weeks to twenty-seven weeks of 22 hours each. In 1910 a course in Jurisprudence and Com- mercial Pharmacy was added to the program and in 1918 the course in chemistry was divided into essentially the same divisions as now' prevail, Inorganic, Organic and Analytical. Additional space to provide the necessary rooms for the added classes was made possible in 1915 when the college moved to 43 Eagle Street across from the Medical College. This was rented space and was to serve as a temporary home until the erection of the new' building in 1927. The lengthening of the Course required many additions to the Faculty, many of whom were to give lengthy service to the College. Professor Theodore J. Brad- ley, who was later to found the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy, was appointed Lecturer in Pharmacy in 1896 and remained with the College until called to his « 19 »
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