Brigham Young University - Banyan Yearbook (Provo, UT)

 - Class of 1932

Page 14 of 104

 

Brigham Young University - Banyan Yearbook (Provo, UT) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 14 of 104
Page 14 of 104



Brigham Young University - Banyan Yearbook (Provo, UT) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

In the Words of the Professors:— (Continued ) In giving do we get the most ; in mourning do we love the most; in working do we rest the most .— A. C Lambert. hi years to come this book of accumulated experiences in picture and in story will provide a wonderful opportunity for a check up on what one ' s ideas and ambitions once were.— Thomas L. Martin. A well-balanced and practical education includes a knowl- edge and appreciation of the Fine Arts.- Franklin Mad sen. It is gratifying to find, as one travels about, our Brigham Voung University .--Indents doing such excellent work. -Florence Jepperson Madsen. If I were to give advice to students, it would be, under- stand the calculus, then start your education. - Milton Mar- shall. Giving assails the citadel of human selfishness, the energy lit spiritual growth.- Chas. E. Maw. K ven u it bout the accustomed record may our friendships and ioy.ul memories continue to live.— Elmer Miller. In tins fascinating play called ' life , whether on the stage or off, play your parts with that sincerity, exuberance of spirit and flare, with carries courage, iov and the love oi living into the hearts of men.- Alonzo Morley. Life holds but few satisfactions that equals the iov of suc- cessful self-directed work.— Mary J. ( Morton. Fact and fancy should unite In defense of truth and right. — Alfred Osmond. Your character is revealed by your voice, your intelligence by your vocabulary.- T. Karl Pardoe. It is our privilege to work with the children — To wdiom is given So much oi earth So much of heaven. — Hermese Peterson. May you have many happy memories of this wonderful yeai at Brigham Voung University. — M. W ' ilford Poulson. To appreciate the best that has been thought and felt has always been one of the objectives of literature.- Alice Louise: Reynolds. The growing attitude at the L ' niversity toward better music is encouraging. — LeRoy J, Robertson. I find that some people waste most of their time when they are busiest.— Robert Sauer. The Y Scrapbook is another evidence that 1931-32 offers the best education for the least money in the memory of man — let ' s increase our capital in education at these bargain prices.— Kiefer B. Sauls. A trained mind plus a trained hand makes for a fuller life. — W. H. Snell. History broadens one ' s sympathies and increases one ' s ap- preciation of one ' s heritage from the past.— William J. Snow. The main aim of the zoological work at B. Y. U. is to lead the students into an acquaintance with the fauna of this region and establish in them an abiding love for nature.— Vasco M. Tanner. Homes of the future will be judged not by houses and fur- nishings but by the quality of the individuals it sends forth to meet the problems of life.— Effie Warnick. 6 Page Ten

Page 13 text:

In the Words of the Professors: — DEAN OF WOMEN— Prospcts never were better for the best social, scholastic and spiritual year in our history. The attitude of the students has thru a little skimping tended toward a more democratic student body. The students are showing a pronounced earnest- ness and wholesome seriousness in obtaining everything that college life has to offer.— Nettie Neff Smart. THE COLLEGE OF APPLIED SCIENCE— The College of Applied Science will celebrate its tenth birth- day on January 25, 1932. During this period, over 200 men and women have undertaken the bachelor ' s degree, most of whom have found places of prominence in their respective fields. This year the College can celebrate its ten years of service with the satisfaction of continued growth. The faculty is strengthened this year by the addition of a new member to the staff, Mr. Seth Shaw, to teach horticulture during the winter quarter, and the return from leave of ab- sence of Miss Vilate Elliott, who went around the world with the Floating University. We are looking forward next year to the return of Professor Laval S. Morris, head of the department of horticulture, who has been at Harvard for the two years past.— Dr Lowry Nelson. Dean. THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES— In his later years Sir Isaac Newton wrote: I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only a boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother or prettier shell than ordi- nary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered be- fore me. My wish for the students of the College of Arts and Sci- ences is that they shall preserve a youthful curiosity in class- room, laboratory, library and shop; and that out of the ro- mantic search for truth they shall find elements which will aid in the successful integration of their personalities. — Dr. Carl F. Eyring, Dean. THE COLLEGE OF COMMERCE— Although just entering upon its eleventh year, the College of Commerce is second largest in enrollment at Brigham Young University. Its growth has been steady and continuous. The aim of the College is to instill into the lives of its stu- dents high standards of business integrity and to train them technically to meet the complex standards of modern commer- cial life. A large percentage of its graduates has gone into ad- vanced fields of study at Eastern and Western institutions. The showing made by its students has been very credible.— Herald R. Clark. Acting Dean. THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION— Brigham Young University is known far and near as the great training center for teachers in the inter -mountain West. The responsibility for this work centers in the College of Edu- cation. Its faculty administers all the professional work offered to qualify for teaching service. The training received in this college qualifies for various types of educational work, as teaching on the elementary, Junior and Senior high school levels, supervision and administration. Since prospective high school teachers must qualify in the subject matter in the various lines, it is obvious that students may major in any of the departments of the University. But no matter what the major line, in the training schools of this college they receive their practical teaching and from this col- lege they are recommended for and obtain placement in the teaching service. The College of Education has become one of the leading professional schools of the University. — Dr. Amos N. Merrill, Dean. THE COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS— The College of Fine Arts is carrvine on as well as it possi- bly can, considering the handicap of Dean de Jong ' s absence. He is at Stanford University enjoying a year of graduate study, far removed from the manv cares of his office in the College Building. The morale of the College was never better In the various departments of instruction, art, music and dramatic art, the number and spirit of the students was never better. The repu- tation of the V as a center of art is growing from year to year. — Dr. Lowrv Nelson, Acting Dean. GRADUATE SCHOOL— Some 260 graduate courses are offered— manv more than last year, with better library and laboratory facilities and a more scholarly faculty than ever before. — Dr. Christen Jensen, Dean. SUMMER SESSION— The Summer Session of the Brigham Young University rep- resents a full quarter. Because of the type of student body it is one continuous social and intellectual feast. The efficient home faculty is always supplemented and enriched by visiting professors. The lecture course on world problems proves always to be instructive and entertaining. Every department of the Univer- sity is represented with a fine offering of courses. Special at- tention is given to the preparation of a rich curriculum for graduate students. The Summer quarter is a time for meeting friends and ac- quaintances of other years. Nothing is left undone to make it both instructive and pleasant. The second term at Aspen Grove behind Mt. Timpanogos has become a symbol of a perfect Al- pine vacation. The administration welcomes all who desire a pleasant and profitable summer to attend. — Dr. Hugh M. Woodward. Dean. Religion up to date and enduring consists in helping God to build human character. — Dr. George H. Brimhall. A crooked road is always longer than a straight one. — W. H. Boyle. Meeting each day ' s obligations with courage and fortitude leads to happiness.— Emma Brown. Chas. W. Eliot said there is in each of us a spirit dull or bright, pure or foul, petty or grand, that looks out of the eyes, sounds in the voice, and appears in the manners of each of us: it is our personality. — C. S. Boyle. Home is a domestic sanctuary — Wrought out of desire— Built into memory — Where kindred bonds unite the family In sharing labors. Leisure, Joy and Sorrow. — FLUENE WILLIAMS — Elizabeth Cannon. There is another way to do it that vou haven ' t vet tried. — Benjamin F. Cummings. A book becomes a masterpiece in so far as it has the fine art qualities of creative expression written in and illuminated with a sort of home-made finishing touch of individuality. — E. H. Eastmond. Live to learn, and learn to live If you want to give men knowledge, Y ' ou must get it, ere you give. —Vilate Elliott. There is no cash better than good credifs ; if you will al- ways keep one or the other you will never be broke. — John E. Hayes. Few experiences develop industry, power and self-reliance like the successful mastery of a difficult problem.— Wayne B Hales. The rock pages of Nature ' s History Book unfolds many beautiful romances of the past. — George H. Hansen. And from here we would start, where she pledged me her heart, on the trail, on the trail of the ' Y ' . — William F. Hanson. Life ' s iournev would be limited and troublesome if there were no service stations on the highways. — E. H. Holt. The wisdom of age in vouth gives the energy of youth in age. — J. M. Jensen. It ' s good to have money and the things that money can buy, but it ' s good, too, to check up once in a while and make sure you haven ' t lost the things that money can ' t buy. — Wilma Jeppson. The pictures throughout the school buildings and the work in the art classes are primarily for the purpose of increasing the joy of living, stimulating a love for beauty in nature, and creating a desire for the finer and more worthy products of man. — Bent F. La r sen. Page Nine



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Autumn Quarter ATHLETICS : Football, (Varsity and Frosh) Baseball, (Intramural) Tennis, (Intramural) DRAMA: Departmental Play Senior Play High School Play Mask Club One-Act Plays DEBATING— PUBLIC SPEAKIXG: Irvine Oratorical Contest MUSIC: Band Orchestra Glee Clubs SOCIAL Handshake Hallowe ' en Ball Homecoming Dance Loan Fund Ball Frosh Ball Christmas Carnival Class Parties OTHER ACTIVITIES: Page Eleven

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