Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX)

 - Class of 1956

Page 26 of 550

 

Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 26 of 550
Page 26 of 550



Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 25
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Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 27
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Page 26 text:

1 ete ' iirt ' ' Kf ' ‘TftecUcctte J. Cunningham and Eugene Skidmore find a very reluc¬ tant patient in this cocker spaniel pup. This new Veterinary Hospital houses some of the most modern equipment in the country The School of Veterinary Medicine at the A M College of Texas was established in 1916 as an outgrowth of the old Department of Veterinary Science which had existed for many years. During 1954-55 the School was moved into new quarters on a 275 acre tract at the northwest corner of the A M College campus. Included in the veterinary campus is a research farm where investigations are conducted into the diseases of live¬ stock, including poultry. The School ol Veterinary Medicine is composed of the Departments of Veterinary Anatomy, Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, Veterinary Bacteriology and Hygiene, Vet¬ erinary Parasitology, Veterinary Pathology, and Veterinary Physiology and Pharmacology. The Department of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery operates the Veterinary Hospital and ambulatory clinics. A large proportion of the faculty of 32 is actively engaged in research. In addition to undergraduate instruction, each department offers courses at the graduate level leading to the degree Master of Science and in some cases, to the degree Doctor of Philosophy. Training is such that graduates of the School of Veterinary Medicine are well qualified to deal with problems of disease and disease prevention in domestic farm animals, poultry, pet animals, zoo animals, furbearing animals, and wildlife. Graduates also are well quali¬ fied to administer and advise in the public health problems arising from intertransmission of diseases between man and the lower animals. Instruction and practical training are given in milk and meat hygiene and in the inspection of food processing plants. The School is accredited by the Council of Education of American Veterinary Medical Associ¬ ation and by the United States Department of Agriculture. It is the only School of Vet¬ erinary Medicine in Texas and one of only 17 accredited schools in the United States. The Veterinary Building is a part of the new Veterinary School west of the college. 24 Dr. Trevino performs surgery as members of the veterinary class look on.

Page 25 text:

Sc6 oi £ t cetee ' U t classrooms for the Aeros, Ch. E.’s, and I.E.’s. The School of Engineering consists of 11 schools under its immediate supervision, and one, Agricultural Engineering, jointly supervised bv the schools of Agriculture and Engi¬ neering. The 11 schools include Aeronautical, Architectural, Chemical, Civil, Electrical, Geological, Geology, Industrial, Industrial Education, Mechanical and Petroleum. All Schools offer four-year curricula with the Schools of Architecture, Chemical, Geology, Industrial, and Petroleum offering five-year curricula. All Schools grant Bachelor of Science degrees. Since the breadth of Engineering is so large, it is undesirable to have extensive special¬ ization in anv one field while a student is an undergraduate. Therefore the School of Engi¬ neering offers a broad and fundamental amount of work the first two years, with a gradual narrowing of field during a student’s Junior and Senior years. The scope of the depart¬ ment is broad enough to include such courses as English, public speaking, economics, government, and other courses which give the student a broader education. The School of Engineering originally consisted of only the School of Civil Engineering, and in the first graduating class there were two engineer¬ ing students. Engineering has the largest enrollment of anv school in the college at the present time, as well as the largest enrollment in Texas, the Southwest, and the second largest in the South. At the present time there are over 115 professors in the various engineering de¬ partments. The field of engineering is unlimited and will con¬ tinue to expand greatly during the next decade with no decline visualized in the near future. In the Texas Engineers Library the student has access to all major scientific periodicals and books. Lari Wester looks on as James Cooper works on an Architecture project. Dan Rambo and Charles Orsak learn the fundamentals of surveying in a C.E. lab.



Page 27 text:

' i dcc te Setlo t Dean Abbot and Dr. Brooks discuss a new proposal in the Graduate School. The first graduate degrees were offered by Departments within the Col¬ lege beginning in 1890, when two Master of Science degrees and two Pro¬ fessional degrees in Engineering were conferred. A Graduate School was formally organized in 1924. In 1936 the Doctor of Philosophy degree was authorized, the first one being conferred in 1940. Between 30 and 40 Ph. D. degrees have been conferred annually since 1954. Currently the Graduate School offers seven different degrees. For the various Masters degrees there are 68 possible major fields. At the Ph. D. level there are 34. In the Spring Semester of 1956 a total of 574 were registered in the Graduate School, an incr ease over the previous year of 31 percent. Alter careful deliberation on the part of college officials, who were concerned with the many common problems faced by students entering college and with ways of giving intelli¬ gent assistance with these problems, the Basic Division was started in the fall of 1950. All new students, regardless of major field, are enrolled in this Division for their first year. The Testing and Counseling Services of the Basic Divi¬ sion help many students toward a better understanding of themselves and a fuller recognition of their abilities and limitations. The fundamental philosophy of the Basic Division is guidance. It helps the new student help himself through close personal relationship with professional counselors on decisions relative to educational planning, vocational de¬ cisions and personal problems. It affords him opportunity to correct discovered weaknesses and assists in bis adjust¬ ment to college life. Fish Sherard and Mr. Ransdell talk it over in tin- Basic Division offices. 25

Suggestions in the Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) collection:

Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Texas A and M University - Aggieland Yearbook (College Station, TX) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959


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