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Page 23 text:
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to buy three textbooks and two pamphlets. Our instructor, Sigfried Muller was a quiet chap with an accent as heavy as heavy magnesium carbonate. His daily five minute quiz was a race by all to see who could copy the fastest in the class. Pete Britsakis flunked all these quizzes because he sat between Salvucci and Hooi. Salvucci never came until nine-thirty A.M. and Hooi wrote in Chinese. All in all, the course was liked by all, that is, all who attended class. When the freshmen came back in Sept. 1939 as sophomores, we hit the toughest year in school. Physics knocked the stuff out of everybody. With Professor Farwell, physics prof., yelling about the two humped exam curve and Mr. Liberman begging us to hand in our analytical samples, we became a little groggy. The class attended two physics lectures weekly at Pupin labs. The lecture hall was divided in two sections. The pharmacists in the marihuana section and the lawyers, engineers, pre-meds in the other. J. Tarrington Buckley was the most brilliant student in the class ... he consistently got over 38% in his exams. In the lab section of the course we carried out experiments described in the lectures. We then wrote up the experiments and handed them in to be checked. When Peckerman handed in his report it looked like the Rosetta Stone and Schein ' s appeared to be an Ethiopian translation. Freitag ' s and Coller ' s were usually duplicates. This course ended in havoc for many. After two or three tries Peckerman, Coller and Mancuso finally made the grade. The final liberal arts course taken was Math. Our class received instruction under Mr. Sole who has since left the College. Instruction is now given by Mr. Levi. We started off with trigonometry and ended up with calculus. Probabil- ities were discussed in the course and this started Sternberg off on Little Joe. Since then many more athletes have joined in the game of African Dominoes. Through the very capable teaching of Mr. Sole a Phi Beta Kappa man, we all passed the MU exam. Upon completion of the liberal arts courses offered, this class seriously be- lieves them to be of great value for future use in our practice of pharmacy. We consider ourselves fortunate to have been tutored under so capable and learned a group of men. Mr. R. H. Luthin. Mr. J. L. Harlan, Mr. A. H. Ingenhuett, Mr. H. Levi
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Page 22 text:
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FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT The curriculum of the College has been so de- signed to offer the profes- sional pharmacist not only an education in pure science courses, but also as wide a cultural background in liberal arts courses as is possible. Thus, not limiting the scope of education along one track. Today the graduate in his establishment as a profes- sional man must come in contact wiih all types of people. His knowledge must contain a basic training for his understanding of worldly problems. The University has endeavored to provide this education in the form of five liberal arts Courses required for the B. S. in Pharmacy. When we neophyte phar- macists entered the Phar- macy School in September 1938, everything was looked upon with a serious attitude — this lasted two weeks. The third week saw us hiding the desk from the instructor and entering the C.C class twenty minutes lale via the windows! The vast set of notes that we took in this course was found to be the best ever written — they made the most heat in the furnace down in the basement. The following term the Board of Trustees elected to keep the course another year. When C.C. mid-year rolled around back in ' 38, crib sheets were starting to come into style. The outcome of the exam was that Wozniak was the only one receiving a mark lower than ninety-five percent. So good was Sol Leder- man ' s sheet, that Luthin threw away his notes and forever after used Sol ' s crib sheet. The course in English turned out to be a bleeder — commonly called hemo- pheliac or strictly 86. Every Friday we were required to write a five hundred word essay on some topic of the day in the newspapers. Everything was run- ning along swell until we picked on Boner ' s daily periodical. However, the course wasn ' t too tough and even Klein and Schein made it after only one make-up exam. The other course taken during the freshman year was German. This was a very comprehensive — we mean expensive course in that we were required
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Page 24 text:
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Miss E. Kerker Mr. W. Hardy Miss B. Tarta Miss P. Mogavero ADMINISTRATION An office of administration is one of the things a college student takes for granted and does not think about except when he needs advice or assistance. He rushes in, excitedly explains his problem, and always leaves satisfied with the thought that things will be properly cared for — and they al- ways are. This year, our office of administration has as its registrar, Miss Eleanor Kerker, a most gracious and capable person whose in- valuable assistance has earned the grati- tude of the faculty and entire student body. Miss Kerker succeeds Mr. W. B. Simpson, who retired last summer after thirty years of service as registrar. We wish to thank Mr. Simpson for his untiring assistance and sympathetic understanding of our financial problems. Also assisting in the office is Mr. Wilfred Hardy. We welcome Mr. Hardy into our ranks and hope his stay at the Col- lege will be most successful and enjoyable. Formerly employed at this office, was Miss Estelle Haines. Miss Haines is now working in a similar capacity at t he Heights. We wish to extend our sincere de- sire for her success. As a result, Miss Betty Tarta comes into the picture, and more recently, Miss Josephine LaBarbera. Al- though both women have only been here a short time, they have already become one of us. We hope they enjoy being with us as much as we enjoy having them here. Completing the office of administration is Miss Nancy Mogavero, assistant librarian. Nancy, petite, cheerful, and always willing to offer information, is well known to all. One will often find our librarian attempting to translate a foreign prescription and try- ing to squelch the clamor of the students at the same time. This is our Office of Administration. The combination of these people, their work, their time, their effort, has resulted in a harmonious plan for the administration of our school affairs. They have helped make our college life a more pleasant one.
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