Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1931

Page 22 of 162

 

Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 22 of 162
Page 22 of 162



Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 21
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Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 23
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Page 22 text:

A.: L , . l l 'W'l'1-K 2 o 0 o l O ' I E o c qlulmwsumll VV 0 d ty 'lflHllE :Da bio , -1 ag? an ega gf: II nm llvnnnnnl 1EumnumH gf 1, Q Q O 30533, tk 45 X 4 A4 fiat X 4 Hlillllllll lillllllll lllllllllllllllllll ll lllllllllllllllllllll 5 5 5 2 El 5' E M: I IIIIHIEIM. ILIFUE. I s E- 5 i ii r '- -' -e IllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIEIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIIEEEF A Message To the University Graduates N BEHALF of the Chemistry Laboratory Staff, I wish to take this oppor- tunity of extending greetings and good wishes to those members of the University Classes who are graduating this year. As you leave college you stand at the threshold of life with opportunities opening out before youg some of you will enter manufacturing pharmaceutical houses. some will go into food and clrug laboratories, some may become teachers in schools of pharmacy and others may establish themselves as retail pharmacists. In whatever branch of pharmacy you find your life-work, may you never forget that the sick require the best medicines that pharmaceutical chemists, pharma- cologists and physicians can produceg the public today is alive to the discovery of new remedies and the reinvestigation of the properties of our time-tested drugs and their standardization. lt is hoped that pharmaceutical chemists will help to impress upon their neighborhood physicians the value of prescribing known remedies such as U. S. P. and N. F. preparations, and will lead in the movement to do away with secret or patent medicines the formulas of which are not known and the ingredients of which are not subject to the rigid investigation and con- trol of the State Boards of Pharmacy. The elimination of quack proprietary nostrums and the substitution of only medicines of known composition are just as important for the safety of the public health as the expulsion of quack physi- cians from the medical profession. The pharmacist has often been referred to as the scientist on the corner, and though this title can be justly applied to certain members of our calling, yet at the present time the average retail pharmacist is not as scientincally-minded as he should be if he had the best interests of his profession and the public health at heart. There is a dennite tendency today to stress once again the professional side of pharmacyg this is seen in the establishment of three and four year courses in pharmacy throughout the country. ' Special privileges that are given to pharmacists by reason of their passing the State Board Examinations and the protection of pharmacists by the enact- ment of laws brought about by the State Boards of Pharmacy and pharmaceu- tical associations are constantly being attacked by non-qualified persons: hence it is necessary that all engaged in pharmacy, in whatever branch, Work for the protection of the pharmacist, for upon him depends the whole superstructure of pharmacy. Since you have received the advantages of the longer university courses we trust that you will in return take more seriously your obligations of future ser- vice to your Alma Mater and to your profession, and we hope that your success inpharmacy will reward your efforts. HERBERT C. KASSNER. PFMACYO Twenty oz: 2132432012-Q au g 03054: mio: 'gif 'Jo ow O 0 -WILL 59' -ll NK 'Z' 'av 0 . H Q56 X ngowozroqihr aio X J E Q QE:i 'dgAio4:o:5x9oi0! Xie X . .. Ib. Qi-2533 4 Y X it 1?'f 29 V 0 fi Qs

Page 21 text:

fo az ozjgggrkzr of.-4: ox adv .Ir IH' IE 05:0 fo C: 0 cafgziia O? ulqmyn qw .:,,.:...:...:,.,.:.-.. IHIIIUIIJVITIHIIEIKIFIIINIH gg oagzorlomo :ziggy i t o I 0 vv V1 9 X as I A. is V X is III-lll!lIll llllllllllllljllll I llllllllllll llllllllll llI!ll!IlIlIll! 2 : lnlnltnmrmrmr - IIII llllll lllll HI E I l - lllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllll Illlllllll llllllllllllllplvll E Prom the Chemical Laboratory HAVE been asked to write a few words of greeting and of farewell to the one hundredth class of the New York College of Pharmacy, the Class of 1931. This I do with a great deal of pleasu.re, not only as an individual, but I am sure also as a spokesman for the entire laboratory staff. For a consid- erable number of years I have seen classes come and go with somewhat tiresome regularity. In the early days of my teaching experience a class simply repre- sented a group of students who had to be prepared for tests, examinations and for graduation. As time went on however I again came in contact with many of these same men who, by then, had become successful in a professional and business way. At every pharmaceutical association meeting that I attend one or more former students remind me oftheir days at College and of incidents that occurred during those days. Many of my close friends are successful pharma- cists or active association workers whom I Hrst met as students in my classes, A And so today my viewpoint of the student body has changed considerably from those earlier days. I now see a group of men whom I am helping to prepare in a modest way for their life's work and who, when they finally reach the point at which the Class of 1931 now stands, will go out into the world and do their best. No longer do I think that with graduation a class becomes merely a matter of history, for I firmly expect and anticipate meeting many of its members time and time again. After three years of contact with the Class of 1931 it is my firm belief that it numbers among its members more than the .usual number who will make their mark in pharmacy and I am looking forward to meeting these men in after years. To every student of this class the laboratory staff and myself offer sincere congratulations, good luck and best wishes for a successful and happy life. HUGO H. SCHAEPER. Nineteen 'fx mmcyio oiqiviucaoijq U g, oicrzoioioz Q, we 31-IL 59' E31 is A Q af 'affix N gg wi Kar:-vmfgijfof'-1 l e i LE : , XOQOQQQQCQOJ i oh ' ,so - . v 5 fx X12 , oe fy v I. V 1 i I s I 1 X fx .Q



Page 23 text:

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Suggestions in the Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Columbia University College of Pharmacy - Apothekan Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934


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