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Page 32 text:
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lUmiirsilu Cfjc College of $fjarmac? Dean Washburn The College of Pharmacy, established in 1 11 as a division of the School of Medicine, was separated there- from in 1913 and made an integral part of the Univer- sity. From its beginning the College of Pharmacy has stood for high standards of scholarship, sound ethical principles in the profession of pharmacy and for the co- operation and correlation of its curriculum with that of other schools and colleges of the University, to the end that its students may go forth from its lecture halls and its laboratories as broadly educated men and women in truest sense of the word. Its material growth has kept pace with its educa- tional development, and today its graduates are reflect- ing credit and honor on their alma mater by rendering invaluable service in the profession of pharmacy and as teachers in the institutions of higher learning of this and other states, and as manufacturing and analytical chemists in the laboratories of manufacturers of chem- ical and pharmaceutical products and of the Federal Government. Homes C. Washburn, Dean. 22
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Page 31 text:
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College of 3rt6 anb Sciences Dean Hellems The new name officially presented at the head of this notice records the passing of the old College of Liberal Arts; for the Plan of Organization recently adopted by the Board of Regents provides that it shall be known henceforth as the College of Arts and Sciences. It is not to be expected, nor is it to be desired, that the old ideals will be dimmed or lost to view. Under any name, this department must offer every opportunity for the acquir- ing of a liberal education in the most enlightened sense of the word; it must continue to discover young men and young women to themselves and fit them for the service of mankind. The Seniors who leave this year and the Juniors who take their places will watch the College ever entering into new fields and broadening its horizons; they will see it occupying new and beautiful buildings; they will see it grow in numbers from the thirteen hundred and thirty at present on its rolls to figures one dare not conjecture; but at the centre of it all we hope and trust they will ever find the same spirit that called winningly and helpfully to their hearts in their undergraduate days. Fred B. R. Hellems, Dean. 21
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Page 33 text:
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iiuivcrsity College of engineering Dean Evans A brief lance at the attendance record of the College of Engineering shows a sharp increase in the fall of 1918, due to the formation of the Student Army Train- ing Corps. A vigorous campaign had been carried on to secure technicallv trained men for the Army and Xavy through the establishment of these units in Amer- ican colleges and universities. The College of Engineering is offering vocational training to disabled ex-service men who are detailed here by the Federal Board for Vocational Education. The new engineering building was occupied in the fall of 1919. The old engineering building has been com- pletely remodeled and is used for freshman and sopho- more work. The engineering shops building has been remodeled in part and made available for junior and senior classes. Two wooden buildings, each 40 x 90 feet, have been constructed in the rear of the shops and are now fully occupied. The increased enrollment has made class rooms, laboratories and drawing rooms almost as crowded as thev were before re-construction was started, and sufficient space and equipment to properly conduct the work will be a real problem within another year. H. S. Evans, Dean. 23
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