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Page 27 text:
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JUNIORS Fm»r Ro» Murocb. Mui Dolxity, Rin . Pathnx. ) Millet. L)iku, Fermtrom, |)rnc$-Lamp. Hcckcr. Slto.ND Ro : Hiitnj, l.utt cluk, Suchowiki. Pettit . Glatow. V. Mil let. Mirfut. Voxel. Rcv-in. Punier business experience to enable them to pursue courses with profitable understanding. By means of its personnel department, the College maintains a service bureau for the benefit of the nation's business firms as well as the student. The committee in charge files a record of the student's scholastic work, his University activities, business experience, and other information which will aid its chairman and the prospective employer in determining the ability of the student and his business possibilities. The Commerce Club, under the leadership of Bruce Harrison, Milwaukee, offers students an excellent medium for becoming acquainted with the practical problems of the profession. Speeches by Milwaukee and nationally prominent business men have made the organization one of the most popular in school. One of the most notable activities of the Commerce (dub is the semi-annual publication of the Business Ad Digest. This departmental publication reviews the activities of the Business College and contains articles and discussions of business trends and prospects written by students attending Marquette University and by business men in the city. The Robert A. Johnston College of Business Administration was organized as a separate division of Marquette University in 1910. Its primary aim was fixed at training men and women for effective and efficient business management. SOPHOMORES Fiw Ko» Otountki, Caldwell, Duty. Jcttaoo. Doherty. Schwarl . Bnirowininn. Ixnnift, Stctbenk, J. Taylor. Kicffcr. MciimiRov Millet. Djritnnik. Reynold . Motet. McClain, Schmidt, llcinunn. Taylor. Iithcnt. Koehn, Sc her I iiihii Ho : Boyle. Ki til Sailer St'hrikcnhjch. Ward. Zilber. Blcckct. Pace 11
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Page 26 text:
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The Rev Joseph A. Ormshy. S.J.. Regent. and John Freeman Pyle Ph D Dean of the GiIIcrc of Business Administration. The College of Business Administration supplies scientific business training to future business men comparable to University training in engineering, law and medicine. The College prepares students for the business profession by offering courses which systematize the experiences of the many commercial organizations. This plan of education does not dispense practical experience, but supplements and strengthens it by shortening the period of apprenticeship otherwise necessary. The first two years' training in the College gives students a broad foundation upon which to base the more technical courses offered in the last two years. To study the individual student and to provide the training and guidance that will best serve his capacity and needs is the policy of the College. Under the supervision of Dean J. Freeman Pyle, head of the College for the last twelve years, a faculty recruited from men of long experience in every branch of industry and finance-keeps the curriculum in step with the trends and new developments of the business world. In addition, the faculty aims at instilling in students the qualities of leadership and regard for the ethics of business. The livening Division of the College of Business Administration is conducted to give those students who are unable to attend day classes an opportunity to supplement their practical experience and to broaden their education in general. These classes are conducted for the benefit of four groups, graduates of the professional colleges who wish to supplement their training by courses in business administration; school teachers in the vicinity of Milwaukee who wish to increase the scope of their knowledge; high school graduates who find it necessary to go directly from school into the business world, and special students who are not high school graduates, but who have sufficient COLLEGE OF BUSINESS FRESHMEN Ihm Rn» DoiIkv Mem , l..li) Kolilcf, lliruitn, Bantitrl. MiU, Cixmcy. C.eimtt. MiAlrin, Ivin . Kiciiii. Kalla kom Row-Mictr, IXCIiant. Slow. K»wr. OX Minx . Oant»cll. Dirkwnttcr. IXHut. Kraniak. Kotcik Fon . VantVik. Cillvoan l imn Rotr: Huiwitf Muinpunikv O'Leary Pcimiuin. Duct net, Murray. Millet. Filipowitr. Kanr. Ru cttv Jordan, Dutton, ftaht, Vjdkli. tk'ittijc. Keller. 1‘ac.f: io
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Page 28 text:
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SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY Dentistry is one of the most inviting of all life occupations for the young man who wants to make the fullest use of his talents and opportunities and who desires to devote his career to a life of service in the interest of health and society. Early recognizing the need for instruction in the dental field, the Marquette Dental School was opened in 189-1 as a department of the Milwaukee Medical College. When the College of Medicine was reorganized in 1913 the Dental School became an integral part of the University. From that time, the School has maintained Henry I.. Banzluf. D.D.S., I.L.D., F.A.C.D., Dean, and the Rev. Anthony F. Berms, S.J.. Regent of the School of Dentistry. a very high reputation among similar educational institutions in the country. In 1017, when dental schools were first rated by the Dental Educational Council of America, the Marquette Dental School was one of the original eleven schools to receive the class A rating. It has retained this position ever since. With the opening of the 1936-1937 session, the dental course at Marquette was increased to four years following the two years of prescribed pre-dental courses in the College of Liberal Arts. A lengthening of the course was necessary because of the increased importance of the dental profession. Imperative need for the most thorough kind of training for the dentist of the future is realized by the Dental School teachers. Class and laboratory work is done in the dental section of the Dental-Medical building. The clinic, which is the largest of its kind in the country, is visited annually by thousands of patients. The dental wing was erected in 1922 and the medical wing was added in 1932. Both units are therefore really housed advantageously in one building. Among the laboratories in the medical wing of the building that are used by dental and medical students are the anatomical laboratory, physiological laboratory, the surgical- FRKSHMtN Fi w Row; Cihliraer. Stcwi»t; Bain. Burnt. Kcmmetmucller. Kotin, Kuln. Ben , Pimento. SttoNP Ko»: Alexander. Sd»«r-fci. Vcfjnth. Sin Drrtlo, Kotlv, Pfeifer. Kniul. Page 12
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