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Page 30 text:
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i gii, itsert College of Mines and Engineering Every convenience that the modern world enjoys is tlte result of painstaking effort on tl e | art of some engineer, no matter how seemingly insignificant the device or comfort may he. It is a matter for pride that our own University is doing much toward the development of men such as these, who will devote their lives to the effort of making the world more livable for their fellow human beings, by means of the College of Engineering. This is truly a vocational department and only those Students who are ready and willing to engage in hard work may enroll in its courses. The faculty in this college is necessarily carefully selected as training is put to the severest tests when the graduate students arc forced to prove the quality of their educations by-success or failure in the hard after life that follows the learning period of the University. Dean Gordon Montague I’.utler, a very capable and thoroughly business-like man. leads the Arizona group in its work. With his faculty and well equipped lalntra-tories and instruments he is able to keep the standards of teaching on a continual upward trend. Proof of his worth in instruction is given by the constant stream of letters that he receives making requests for graduates of the school. Dean Butler ai«I KikginccrtniC Keculty Twenty-four
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Page 29 text:
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Agriculture F i iilt College of Agriculture 'Pherc will always lie agriculturists. Imt even now men have ceased to l e of the soil, for of all vocations, agriculture has passed most distinctly through succeeding stages of evolution, until today it is doubtful that the primitive man would recognize his vocational brother. Agriculture is the oldest of professions, for it satisfied man’s greatest primitive need, and every early man had to combat the problems concerning the tillage and cultivation of natural products. As land is the basis of human and animal existence, knowledge of its productivity is of major im|M rtancc and cannot Ik stressed too much in the minds of the youth of today. Since land follows the law of diminishing returns, and since the human race multiplies every year, it will always be a problem to find new ways of increasing the yearly production of food stuffs. Therefore new scientific methods must constantly he sought out. and for this purpose a good fundamental course in the secrets of the soil is necessary for those who have decided to enter Agriculture. Dean llurgess has done much to increase the source of agricultural knowledge since his short stay here in the College of Agriculture. Perhaps his efforts have I teen successful because he is so personally interested in this great economic problem. Dean Bury ess Twenty-three
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Page 31 text:
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Mimic faculty College of Music Among the Colleges in Arizona which may be listed under the name of pure art. perhaps the outstanding is the College of Music which, though comparatively new, having heen organized during the Fall term of 1924-25, lias proved one of the. most successful. It has grown with the proverbial leaps and bounds from a tiny department, managed by only two instructors, to a large college under the management of nine instructors and a capable Dean, and student enrollment lias increased steadily, year by year. The college now includes instruction in voice, piano, violin, all string instruments, and a good course in the teaching of music in the public schools. Students may enroll merely for their own enjoyment, for the sake of obtaining a pleasant cultural accomplishment, or for training in music later to be utilized as a profession. In some instances students have enrolled in order to learn singing later to be utilized as a vocation. It is small wonder that today many students register as Music majors and spend most of their time in the. I fall of Music. At the head of the College, enthusiastic and capable, stands the Dean, Charles F. Rogers, who lias directed the work since the department was organized. Dean Royers Twenty-five
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