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Page 19 text:
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Page 18 text:
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Old K mn Cited for excellency in the fields of archaeology, astronomy, dry- climate agriculture, mining engineering, and inter-American rela- tions, the University of Arizona offers these as leading study advan- tages. Numerous members of its faculty and research staff have received national and international acclaim. Outstanding reputations are vested in Dr. A. E. Douglass, inventor of the tree-ring method of determining climatic cycles, and Dr. Margaret Cammack Smith, who discovered- the cause and removal of mottling in the enamel of human teeth. Outdoor Arizona provides out-of-classroom fields of study for the Universityas students. Arizona copper mines provide finished labo- ratories for students in mining, great irrigation project dams are near-by study projects for agricultural and engineering students, and the nationis finest research has been done in dry-climate agriculture at the Arizona Agricultural Experiment Station, where agricultural students study and aid in the development of irrigation projects for the fertile valleys of the state. Courses in Latin-American cultures are complete, and national observances of the near-by republics are marked in the activities of students of Spanish and Portuguese, their programs filled with the national and native songs and dances of Mexico.. The University of Arizona has the most cosmopolitan student body in the Southwest. In the current year it represents nearly every state of the nation, the District of Columbia, and thirty foreign lands. This factor has prompted the interchange of ideas between students throughout the United States and those of foreign countries. Gen- erally, the Arizona student body runs twenty per cent out-of-Arizona residents. in the e buildings M ain . 2 2 2 Ls ' is H Ms A is .-a'- P -Wa, L flmpm.. gaming align saw' - xmas magma E M, ,, M . M. U .,.M ., M M W ,M , H.. H M . .Mi . -.M .M.,., ,M Sa ,MW ,W M s I iss! wt si. -. -figs. fz...Jfm,,rK, Cffwafi amg,,f..M , H, gggwmvg ,H ,ra T if .1 1 is a zo, rm it Bam I sms Huw if ,X xx-si is fNa was sawn i. E s H - - - as . . ..,,f is Maman M- ss? as-vga: m5.:fiXma,,,m--i-fx - E XE F E F W fl uiffwms mega ma Hikes 'Mass s Kewl For E Wi- - ---is m--is fa a N war E mn. ,, .M. H tif ,Q N .M . . E gk .im N . .M,..-Hug, W E E .W W, AH, wsu an -M is ups-an Tm vi E Wgmam wages n M B ' ' Ni' me af-if -sm H af Nm. . S, .. K si? in ii.. ww - ss 1 is-in 5 W. E Meigs. - -- 1 -,.- -mea as ZW... .. W . Y . :J gms is is ,Na X ' H-f-M111 -1 ,.:B - :M EW ww- --. .2 in-mea a as s . QW SH.. wit H W- E ka an , sg gim- 1' may swam -, 1 fait A . Mi S . -4 V , . is- Hw X E na Hamm gags -E in :f -s ark H is-X - if B: 5 s if 2 B f B ,m 55 ,W E M W is H 'Sm S E H if if Z3 2 as E . sf , r zum H V1 C3133-mf H .sjE? ?qg..5,w 2 si V IEEE? .Q E4 ' ,. N f is s wb. . Q- r 1-WM 1 wggfw 5 lim'-,. 'N' fsgzhlbq- I H . 'Qt if FQ. W M ' if ... - N ' - Y ' N it 555591 f - , ai g M ms: B. . my B V E r ... , at H ag ,2 E . 5 N H N Ea.-. W 'H-'E'-gc' .file-jf' . W H E it s E 5 .ar'3:e... ,E i.:f.:.,g E W- s E an as--in E. shy- w. -ya, F, iff.. f, H is gps a mba m yn.. -Q gg.. . V ,I ..--M tgsmisamf Wm - at s? .s'gsB - WEEK agus 'mmm--Jifggfrr ff -'XB W K E 1 4-saggy at -F H. . W. is Q? 'at' iim ws Q KM - ' :.: ... ' H- S ' 'E gg- 'ips I-fra:-' H ' an- :F s H as sf tu- :': f,-1-i:'1 ':s- W. E ,,-:.:1:'i1ig.-':':t- . '- V 'E .- if - -, -.-... sg if , 13:2 .:. z.: ,. ,,,..., M K, ...ali I ,.,,, , , 1- -5, , , fa de, iw.--A ,E .- ' ,ep . -1 , .. -7 Y . ,Y e ---- - B M , As s, .H ms.. .- ..s,. i .,g,,,,,.s, H .F.sa.:..x.r.,.aae-.f '24
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Page 20 text:
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., ,mach .' ,1. af 2 H L 1 - 'Azz if at-A -i vu. f . H, ,, we5,w .4v,,.fg. all ., awimi The University of Arizona committee on scholarships and awards has an ideal concerning scholarships - to reach a point where no able high school graduate in Arizona is denied an education for lack of funds to attend college, and the university has gone a long way toward reaching this goal. The cash value of these awards for the 330 scholarship holders attending the university this year amounted approximately to S100,000. Over the past several years with the establishment of new funds from which scholarships are derived, the scholarship potential has been greatly enhanced, and several individual grants now reach as high as 81,200 plus tuition and fees annually. Two of the most recent scholar- ship additions include the James Baird account, which annually provides for twenty-five new scholarships of S400 for students with exceedingly high grades in high school, and the Standard Oil Company donation, which offers four schol- arships at 35500 each. An increasing number of the outstanding high school graduates are taking advan- tage of these scholarships. Last fall more than 100 high school seniors were given non-athletic awards. Every county and most of the civic communities of the state are represented by scholarship students. The committee on scholarships still Wants more applications, every year they inform high school principals and other school leaders and alumni of the scholarship possibilities at the University of Arizona. Widespread are the fields in which scholarships are offered. In fact, no academic field of the Universityis curricula is overlooked in the distribution of these study funds. Aid is also given undergraduate and graduate students: grants of' 31,000 each for eight undergraduate students, and 31,200 plus tuition and fees for two graduate students are provided annually by the Phelps Dodge Corporation. Other awards range from registration fees up to as much as 8300, grouped as miscel- laneous and grants of assistance to students. Through its scholarships, the University of Arizona offers an open road to school- ing to the state's high school graduates who have made high records among their fellows in scholarship, leadership, character, and service. Chemistry - Physics Building 1.-.Q K 'FZ' . . Wamm ' Front Gate to live
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