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Page 14 text:
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Page 13 text:
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Page 15 text:
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00 HOW UN VERSITY A -I-list0ricaI Sketch The history of Soochow University is an ongoing story that is of lively interest and concern to friends on several continents: to former visiting teachers from England, West Pakistan, India and Switzerland.: to former university neighbors now in Japan, Brazil, South Africa, Singapore . , I A Y - S' -- i - .-' If and Sarawaks to former Trustees now in Hong Kong? to teachers and staff now in the United Statess and, most of all, to countless numbersg ' of ex-students and alumni szattered throughout the world. To these are added the growing consttuency of this present period here in Taiwan. The history of Soochow University is a significant part of the story of Christian education in China: its separate share through its own sponsoring Methodist Church, and its joint share through the United Board for Christian Colleges in China. The history of Soochow University Law College, as reactivated nowQin Taiwan, is a new chapter in the life and in the service of the parent institution as it ministers to the young people of a nation that has the determination to be free. lt is in the light of this new situation that the past has a new significance and a new relevance. The sketch which follows touches briefly on the two niaill phases of the University's history. The first, or mainland phase, has been dealt with rather fully in book form by Dr. W. B. Nance, the third president of the University, who was connected intimately and continuously with the institution during its fifty years, 1900-1949, on the mainland. The ceeond, or Taiwan phase which began in 1951, has been covered in several published articles by Dr. Miron A. Morrill, Professor of English Literature, and Administrative Assistant to Dr. Stone. This composite account here will refresh the memories of old friends, and will inspi1'e the confidence of new friends of Soochow University. Soochow University was established in the City of Soochgw in Kiangsu Province in November, 1900, and opened for class work in March 1901. lt received a charter from the State of Tennessee in the United States of America. The new University gained resources and personnel from several institutio ns which had been founded and were being operated by missionaries of the American Methodist Episcopal Church, South. These were Tsung Yung Yuan Shu YHRD, 1-TUIG1' Buffingtou l11Si9i17Hf0, Of SOOGHOWS U19 Ang-lo!Chinese College of Shanghai? and the Kung Hang Kchool of Soochow. Soochow University, first college was the College of Arts and Sciences. For a time the University operated a medical school and a school of theology, but these proved unnecessary when union colleges were established by American Protestant groups in Nanking for both medical and theological- studies. The Law School of Soochow University was organized September 3, 1915, in 3 building of the Second Middle School on Quinsan Road, Shanghai. Charles W. Rankin, an American lawyer and a teacher of political szience, who had besome a member of the faculty in Soochow in 1912, went to Shanghai, and became the first dean of the law school. ' f ' ln 1915, the first year, there were more than ten lecturflrs and fewer than ten students in the Law College. Classes were held in the evening. The faculty were welleequipped lawyers and judges of the American, British, and international courts in Shanghai. ln 1918 the LL. B. degree was conferred upon the first graduating class of seven. L 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. I ' The college in Soochow grew uninterruptedly, with especially strong work in the natural sciences. New buildings and a power plant were erected, 'mostly with funds from the southern part of the United States. ' Af-ter the outbreak of the 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 operated sub-rosa, with some degree of co-operation. The Comparative Law School was opened again. 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