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Page 17 text:
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years are eligible for election. Any person of sufiicient distinction and ac- . nn complrshment may be chosen, whether , statesman, soldier, author, scientist, . preacher, actor, educator, inventor, or orator. New York University enters upon its second century of existence and the Heights Colleges upon their fifth dec- EX N t i My i ff'-if , ade. May both continue to render their educational service as defined by their new Chancellor, Harry Woodburn Chase : f- YEL- u- - .c. ,,...-1, ,? I believe that universities must train for leadership, but I do not believe their task is done when they have said this thing. They must also strive to raise the level of enlightenment and un- derstanding of the average rnan and woman. The campus is no longer a cloisterg nor is the university any more a retreat from the world. It is in the world and of the world. It must constantly rededicate itself to the high purposes for which it stands. So far asthe teaching functions of universities are concerned, they must do whatever is wise to bring about fuller understanding and larger ,kim ,IL :Q it ii R 1'- 1 mi 1 f lll uu A ' 4- I4 -za- i ni il il '.A TQ- ll 2 wisdom as regards the complex civiliza- tion of yesterday and tomorrow. They must draw upon the past for its illumi- nation, but they must do this as a means to the understanding of life today. CZ?
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Page 16 text:
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.NW .J is given by the Reserve Oihcers' Training 3 Corps. ,.. 'nf' ' wi . . . ' RWE One building had been erected in 1915, F- . the Hall of Philosophy. It was the gift of 113- , v Mrs. john Stewart Kennedy in memory of her father, Cornelius Baker, who had been ' ' ' '- -. a member of the University Council from 5? in i ' P 1832 to 1838. Since 1915, three new build- ? U m lllh ings have been acquired. In 1924, the 2,3 - former residence of Chancellor MacCracken f AEE was obtained by the University, and is now , , ,j,jg....-.,.,e,..-- -- . U I n 'E known as Graduate Hall. Two years later, '- .... - .. --A' rw the Chemistry Laboratory was erected through the generosity of William H. Nichols of the class of 1870. The latest addition to the Heights campus was made last year on the retirement of Elmer Ellsworth Brown from the Chancel- lorship of the University, when the Heights Colleges acquired his former E.C. residence, which will be utilized as an English hall. Although the Hall of Fame is not, strictly speaking, a unit of the Heights colleges, yet its world wide renown merits its inclusion among the views at the Heights. It was in 1899 that Miss Helen Miller Gould, who also gave the college 5-XX its library and its dormitory, presented 6 -I N ,X the Heights with the Hall of Fame for great Americans. It is interesting to .El note that the Hall was erected for two 3761 1 purposes. It was designed not only to I commemorate the leaders of American in progress, but also, and this was more 7' HH U iv, 3 5 ,IF . immediately utilitarian, to conceal the gs: . H ii' lln min 'eu 1 I .? I Ldllllllllllllllllftl rather unattractive western facade of selected in 1900 and five more are being added at each five year interval :Q '- the Gould Library. Fifty names were dred and fifty names 'will be listed. A until the year 2000, when one hun- .iv 42 -1- 1 ' Only persons dead at least twenty-five
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Page 18 text:
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A History of the College of Engineering HEN the University College moved uptown from its former home at Wfashington Square, the Engineering College followed it. At that time it was headed by Professors Charles H. Snow, Daniel W. Hering, and john J. Stevenson, who had the extremely difiicult task of building up the school with practically no equipment or funds at their disposal. The gift of a large Riehle testing machine in 1896 by Frank Gould was almost revo- lutionary, and the presentation by his sister, Miss Helen Miller Gould, of a two hundred thousand dollar endowment for the College of Engineering in 1898 was invaluable in establishing the College permanently. In the next year, 1899, the Engineering faculty separated completely from that of the Arts College, under the name of the School of Applied Sciences. Three years later the future Dean, Collins Pechin Bliss, was ap- pointed the first professor of Mechanical Engineering. The growth of the College was at first very slow. At the turn of the
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