University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL)

 - Class of 1924

Page 15 of 534

 

University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 15 of 534
Page 15 of 534



University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 14
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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

The graduate departments were organized with a well defined purpose. They were not only to provide instruction in advance studies, but each of them was to be a center of research. The present boundaries of knowledge are limited and these departments are ceaselessly seeking to pass those limits and to give to mankind the inestimable treasures that lie beyond. From the begin- ning there have been high ideals of what a University professor should be. He must indeed be a teacher, but he must also be a scholar, in love with learning and with a passion for research. I-le must be an investigator who will, indeed. give his results to his students in the class room, but will also give them to the world in print. And our professors have not only done distinguished service in original investigations and in publication, but they have inspired with the same passion for research and for giving their results to the World, many students who have rivalled their instructors in this service to mankin-d. The idealson which the University was founded have continued to dom- inate it. Patient experiments conducted through a series of years in the elementary and high schools have demonstrated that two or more years can be saved in preparing for college. It was the conviction of President Judson, under Whom these experiments began to be worked out, that the sixteen years traditionally required for elementary, secondary and college work could, not only without detriment, but with profit to the student, be cut down to twelve or at the most thirteen years, thus adding three or four years to his pro-duc- tive life. Students and Faculty! They ought to be a family of scholars bound together in a unique solidarity. President Burton has taken a most significant step toward bringing the undergraduates and the faculty into closer and more sympathetic relations. The number of college deans has been multiplied and will be still further increased so that every student may have a faculty friend and advisor whom he knows and to whom he can go for guidance and assist- ance at any time. The deans are men and women of character, sympathy, intelligence, and understanding, whose controlling desire is to know and help the student. The Undergraduate Council and the Honor Commission are a part of this unifying policy. Perhaps the most recent illustration of it is the invitation of the dean of the Colleges to the stu-dents to suggest methods of University improvement. These suggestions have been submitted to student- faculty committees for consideration and report. Thus, while the body-the physical equipment of the University-grows, its inner life also develops. All material resources, endowments, buildings, libraries, equipment of every sort, exist only for the intellectual, social, moral and spiritual life of the institution. That will continue to develop and be fruitful only through the high ideals, fidelity, and zeal of teachers and stu- dents alike. Page Seventeen

Page 14 text:

4 A-,W I 5 ll . 1 1 I l Ii . Sums Utlnibersitp Zlheals By Thomas Wakeheld Goodspeed HEN in September, l890, Dr. William R. Harper was elected presi- -dent of the new University of Chicago, the first task that confronted him was the making of the educational plan on which it should be organized and conducted. He said to Mr. Tufts, now a vice-presi- dent of the University, lf the proposal were simply to go to Chicago and organize another University just like others which are already in existence, l would not think of it for a moment. It is the opportunity to do something new and different which appeals to me. The ideal that inspired and con- trolled him was service. Not that this was new, for it is the ideal of all institutions of learning. What was new in it was this, that it contemplated a larger and Wider service to the community. Hitherto American Universities had concentrated and confined their work within their own precincts. The new institution was to give the students within its walls larger and better oppor- tunities, and to extend these opportunities in every way possible to the com- munity at large. The basic principle was to be a double service-to the student in residence first, but also to the public, to mankind. With this ideal for the student in mind, the four quarter system was insti- tuted, keeping the institution open the year round and making the summer quarter, not an unrelated extra term, but a regular part of the educational Work, of the same length an-d the same value as any other quarter. The four quarter system.was a radical departure from tradition. It made possible for many stu- dents to finish their college course in three instead of four years. It gave them the liberty of taking any one of the four quarters for their vacation. It opened the advantages of the University to great numbers of teachers and others, who welcomed the summer-quarter as a gift from heaven and have thronged the University in the summer in increasing thousands. It has been an incalculable boon to pastors of churches, college professors, an-d high school teachers, as well as to the regular student body. It was this ideal of wide service that made the Extension Work a Uni- versity Division. ln it was recognized a duty to that larger number who cannot come to the University even in the summer, but who are eager to learn. Let the University, then, go to them. It has gone to them in lecture courses, in very widely extended correspondence lessons, and also, in University College which gives instruction of University grade to some thousands of eager stu- dents every year in every afternoon and evening class in the business center of the city. 1 It was the sarne idea that made the Press also a regular Division of the University with its printing, bookstore, and publication department of con- tinually widening influence. Page Sixfccn



Page 16 text:

Orator: Subject: Chaplain: Degrees: Chaplain: Degrees: 'f' ' ' H ' ' ' Qiunhunatiuns THE ONE HUNDRED TWENTY-EIGHTH CONVOCATION Leon Mandel Assembly Hall March 20, l923 Henry Clinton Morrison, L.L.D., Professor of Education, and Superintendent of the Laboratory Schools. The Readjustment of Our Fundamental Schools. The Reverend Charles Whitney Gilkey, Hyde Park Baptist Church, Chicago. There were one hundred and sixty-nine candidates for degrees and titles. Of these, fifty-four were for Bachelor of Philosophy: thirty-eight for Bachelor of Science: nine for Bachelor of Philosophy in Education: elevenx for Bachelor of Philosophy in the College of Commerce and Administration: twenty-three for Master of Arts: seven for Master of Science: one for Bachelor of Divinity: four for Bachelor of Laws: eight for Doctor of Law: six for Doctor of Phi- losophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Literature: eight for Doctor of Philosophy in the Odgen Graduate School of Science. THE ONE HUNDRED TVVENTY-NINTH CONVOCATION Hutchinson Court june IZ, 1923 The Reverend William Chalmers Covert, D.D., L.L.D., First Presbyterian Church, Chicago. There were six hundred and forty-three candidates for degrees and titles. Of these, one was for the Certificate in the College of Education: five for Bache- lor of Arts: two hundred and forty-six for Bachelor of Philosophy: one hun- dred and two for Bachelor of Science: forty for Bachelor of Philosophy in Education: one for Batchelor of Science in Education: fifty-nine for Bachelor of Philosophy in the college of Commerce and Administration: eight for Bachelor of Philosophy in the College of Social Service Administration: forty- two for Master of Arts in the Graduate School of Arts and Literature: three for Master of Arts in the Ogden Graduate School of Science: fourteen for Master of Arts in the Graduate Divinity School: six for Master of Arts in the School of Commerce and Administration: one for Master of Arts in the Graduate School of Social Service Administration: twenty-three for Master of Science in the Ogden Graduate School of Science: live for Bachelor of Divinity: twelve for Bachelor of Laws: forty for Doctor of Law: eight fOr Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Literature: twenty- three for Doctor of Philosophy in the Ogden Graduate School of Science: four for Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate Divinity School. Page Eighteen

Suggestions in the University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) collection:

University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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