St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1937

Page 23 of 284

 

St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 23 of 284
Page 23 of 284



St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

objectives. In the past thirty years phenomenal progress has been made in the fields of science and education. By profiting from the experience of others, by testing each new educational discovery in the crucible of time, St. Louis University has been able to keep pace with the times without sacrificing her efforts on unworthy enterprises. At the head of the University is the president, in whose hands is centered the direct governing power of the entire institution. He is head of the Board of Trustees, the body which sits in judgment on all matters of policy which supersede intra-school interests. The University Council, composed of the deans and regents of the various schools which com- prise the University, is the foremost advisory body of the University, and regulates internal affairs. In those schools where a layman is dean, a regent is appointed by the provincial as the official representa- tive of the Society of Jesus. Within recent years a greater premium has been placed upon specialization; hence increasing emphasis has been placed upon the Graduate School where the student already possessed of a degree is afforded the opportunity of intensive training in the field of his particular interests. The College of Arts and Sciences offers its students a liberal education along broad cultural lines, and also serves as a preparatory school for those who intend to pursue their studies in the professional schools. The School of Medicine, by increasing the per- sonnel of its faculty and procuring up-to-date equip- ment, has achieved the highest possible rating given medical schools. The School of Nursing, of an almost equally wide-spread fame, boasts of both educational and practical facilities which are virtually unequalled c W ' - v in any other institution of its type in this section of } ' the country. The School of Dentistry, by depart- ' i ' y mentahzing its courses and installing modern dental machinery, enjoys a similar position ol eminence. UNIVERSITY FORMAL Page Three

Page 22 text:

Very Reverend Harry B. Cnmmins, S.J., twenty-fifth president of St. Louis University, was appointed late in December to that office. JTol .OLDING up to the educational world the ideals of Catholic principles as applied to the training of its students, St. Louis University has maintained a rigid standard of excellence in the one hundred and nineteen years of her existence. From the tiny academy founded by Bishop Du Bourg in 1818, she has developed by easy stages to the position oi eminence she occupies today as a complex, metropolitan institution, one of the outstanding universities of the Middle West and, in many respects, of the country. As conditions in the outside world change, a university must keep pace by meeting the new obligations imposed upon her by these changes or fall by the wayside. St. Louis University has met these new demands by altering her courses, modifying her methods of administration, while still holding fast to her fundamental UNIVERSITY FORMAL ♦ Page Two



Page 24 text:

A meeting of the Board ot Deans and Regents which determines the administrative policies of the schools ot the University. The imparting to its students ot a knowledge ot ethical business practices and the building ol a firm foundation in the principles of business administration are the objectives ol the School ot Commerce and Finance. Similarly, students in the School ot Education are inculcated with the principles of true Catholic education, tor it will be only through the well-educated Catholic teachers of tomorrow that much of the impending social chaos can be averted. Instituted to fill the very definite need lor Catholic social work training, the School of Social Service is now recognized as the most outstanding school of its kind in the Middle West. The School of Philosophy and Science provides advanced training for scholastics and conforms to the standards of the Arts College and Graduate School. Administered in a similar manner is the School ot Divinity, located at St. Mary ' s, Kansas, where candidates for the priesthood receive their theological training. The School ot Law has been expanded in recent years to meet the increased demands placed upon it by the growing complexity ol legislation. Administered by a dean and regent, it interprets for its students Christian jurisprudence, a matter which the present-day world is prone to ignore. St. Louis University would appear to be in many respects a physically dis- united organism. But despite this apparent distinction, all have one common bond of allegiance and a common end in view — to develop the intellectual, physical, and moral well-being of the students, and to promote the greater good of the University. UNIVERSITY FORMAL Page Four

Suggestions in the St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

St Louis University - Archive Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940


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