Soochow University - Annual Yearbook (Taipei, Taiwan)

 - Class of 1963

Page 26 of 274

 

Soochow University - Annual Yearbook (Taipei, Taiwan) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 26 of 274
Page 26 of 274



Soochow University - Annual Yearbook (Taipei, Taiwan) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 25
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Page 26 text:

Several years earlier,' Soochow University came into the group that received supplementary promotional benefits from the United Board for Christian Colleges in China, known as the UBCCC. This organization assumed certain responsibilities for promoting the welfare of Sooohow along with the twelve other Christian colleges and universities on the mainland. QThe board is now ,known as the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia. Renewed affiliations with Soochow, in' an- associated relationship, will provide continuity with the mainland past.J ' The Communist rebellion of 1949 brought a temlzorary end to .Soochow in all i'ts'departmen'ts, as it did to all other Christian institutions in mainland China, except those -operated by local congregations. The Soochow campus in Soochow is now occupied by the South Kiangsu College of Education . V But Soochow had not come to an end. In 1951 Soochow was reactivated in Taipei, the capital of the Republic of China, and opened its doors in rented quarters in the mid-town business section at No. 15 Hankow Street. Section l. It became an unregistered school known as the Soochow University school. In 1954 this school was recognized as the Soochow University Law College, thanks to the active interest of many alumni lawyers in Taipei and other Taiwan cities who had fled the mainland and who were resuming their practice and their old lives ofrusefulness and influence. A constitution was drawn up for Soochow Universiw and submitted by the Board of Trustees to the Ministry of Educatiou. This constitution was approved by the ministry. In 1956, largely through the influence and hard work of the late Methodist Bishop Ralph A. Ward, the Board of Missions of the Methodist Church in New York, N. Y., U. S. A., voted an arrangement whereby.Methodist funds -could be contributed' to the work of Soochow University. The J board also appropriated US315,000.00 which was used to help purchase a new campus north of Taipei. Since the old days in Soochow and Shanghai, there has been a merger of three principal 'Methodist bodies in the 'United 'States so that there is no longer a Methodist Episcopal-Church,'South. That body has been merged with the others into 'the new Methodist Church and it is this latter body Whose mission .board has now expressed a renewed interest in Soochow University. In 1957 the university acquired a' new 3745 acre campus in Shih Lin, in Wai Shuang Hsi, a beautiful valley that has since been designated for development into 'a cultural center for the Taipei area. In the fall of 1958 the institution was able to transfer all day classes to the new campus, using the first building, the academic building, for both administrative . and .instructional purposes. The

Page 25 text:

Protestant groups in Nanking for both medical and theological studiesg W The Law School 'of Soochow University was organized September 3, 1915, in a building of the Second Middle School on Quinsan Road, Shanghai. Charles W. Rankin, an American lawyer and a 'teacher of political science who had become a member of the faculty in Soochow in 1912, went to Shanghai, and became -.the first dean of the law school. ' , ' ln 1915, the first year, there were more than ten lecturers and fewer 'than ten students in the Law College. Classes were held in the' evening. The faculty were well-equipped lawyers and judges of the American, British, and international courts in Shanghai. In 1918 the LL. B. degree was conferred upon the first graduating class of seven. ' ' - Soochow University, thus, continued in two cities, the college in Soochow and the law school in Shanghai. The latter was known as the Comparative Law School- of China. A high percentage of its graduates went to the United- States and won doctorates in jurisprudence at leading universities. ' ' A A r The college in Soochow grew uninterruptedly, 'with especially strong work in the natural sciences. New buildings and a power plan't were erected, mostly with funds from the southern part 'of the United States. - Q P '- ' After the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, Soochow teachers and students were scattered, but eventually made their way back to the International Settlement- in Shanghai. The Japanese still observed the neutrality' of this area. Various departments of the university were established and A operated subrosa, with some degree of co-operation. The Comparative Law School was opened again. This name had previously been used only in the English language. It was now translated into mandarin and the mandarin equivalent became the name of the re-established school. It was possible thus to escape notice -by the Japanese and their collaborators. A site was prepared for the Law School also in Chungking, Szechuan Province, the war-time capital of China, so as to provide for the large number' of staff and students who 'had fled from Shanghai into the interior. The Dean of the school moved to Chungking, and instruction continued there' for the duration 'of the war. A . After the Japanese surrender, all the units of Soochow University got back home and resumed their normal functioning under a' revived and enlarged Board of Trustees. A 'commencement was held June 28, 1946, in the Metropole Theater, Shanghai. On this occasion 458 degrees were conferred as follows: B.A., 1575 B.S., 883 'LL. B., 213. The enrollment at this time was 1310. ' ' A .



Page 27 text:

Hankow Street property was retained 'temporarily for the exclusive use of the evening classes in law. - , , The new academic- buildin.g is a large three-storied structure of reinforced concrete, containing sixteen large classrooms, six small classrooms, and twelve rooms for adzcninistrative and business offices. In front of this building andon the 'lower main level portion of the valley are the athletic grounds: a large soccer field, volley ball court, baseball diamond, and eight tennis courts. A second building, the student center, was completed in 1959. financed entirely by -funds contributed by alumni and friends and Well-wishers ing Taiwan, HongiKong, and other centers of Chinese population. the last two years three other buildings have appeared on the campus: a men's dormitory of 36 rooms and a womenfs donnitory of 40 rooms, with a -combined capacity for 380 studentsg and a small though very commodious structure known as Kwang Tao Ting to be used as a center for religious activities. Attached to the west end of this building is the new clinic room, which is staffed by the Water of Life,Clinic of the Taipei Methodist Church. During the stunmer of 1961, residences were constructed for the president of the university, pluslan initial six families among the faculty and administrative staff. At present an architect is working on plans for a new building which will be a memorial to the late Bishop Ralph A. Ward whose latter years were devoted so tirelessly and with such vision and faithfor the transplanted university which was evolving so hopefully here in its new island home. This building, to be called, very probably, Ward Hall, will contain as the main unit, a beautiful chapel with a seating, capacity of about 450 to ,500 persons, and as the secondary unit, about ten additional rooms for library purposes. It will be located on the eas side of the campus in direct line with the front gate, so that it can greet all teachers and students and visitorswith the simple beauty of its architecture and the Christian symbols of the purposes of the university. The development program for the future will make provision for additional buildings appropriate to the needs of a growing instiution. Soochow University has been fortunate in obtaining the services of leading scholars to teach all branches of Chinese and comparative law, and such other subjects as economics, political science, accounting, Chinese language and literature, and foreign language and literature. ' Also in the summer of 1961, a major change in the operation of the university was effected by the removal of the Law Department from Hankow Street, the original location in Taipei, to the suburban campus in Shih Lin, thus concentrating all administrative and academic work in one place. The most noticeable ,outward

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