University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL)

 - Class of 1942

Page 24 of 359

 

University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 24 of 359
Page 24 of 359



University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 23
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Page 24 text:

W, H, WILSON G. B, SIMMONS Fl. ll, l-'IUME OCtateDeanottheCollegeotArtsandSciences Dean ot the College ot Education Dean ot the College ot Agriculture hensive courses pushing general concepts typily the General College, proving ground for aspirants to the upper divisions and eye-opener for collegiate neophytes. The College ot Agriculture, commonly classified, Cow College , hands out degrees in Agricultural Chemistry, Agricul- tural Economics, Agricultural Education, Agricultural Engineering, Agronomy, Animal lndustry, Botany, Entomology, l'lorticulture, and Soils, Progressive, practical, and positive are adjectives keynoting Ag College training, Students in the College ol Arts and Sciences, scorn ol I3 us Ad men, take degrees in Bible, Biology, Geology, Chemistry, Flistory and Political Science, Journalism, Languages and l.it'erature, Mathematics, Philosophy, Physics, Psychology, Sociology, Speech, and Geography. Broad, brimming, and blending is A and S training in Gatorland. Slaves in the College oi Business Administration, objects ot derision 'tor Arts and Sciences majors, work in two lieldsi Business Administration and Public Administration. lnlormation bulletin objectives ol this college arei tll to produce business executives, l2l to turn out men capable ot assuming increasing responsibilities ol business ownership, and tll to turn college men into business specialists. A three-word picture ol lius Ad training under the Orange and llluei Work, Work, and More Work. Teachers busy propagating tor their prolession is the Work of the College ot Education, With its main purpose being The cleveloprnent' and improvement ot teaching in all its branches, this College uses little Gainesvillians ol kindergarten, grade, and high school ages as human guinea pigs tor its students to put theory into prac- tice. Football players, tastidiousness, and the tellowship that's the College ol Education, With no curricular punches pulled the College ol Engineering runs its students ragged for tour, tive, or six years ol brain-racking and then slips sheep-skins to tip-top COL.Ps,Aji, HOPKINS engineers who promptly gain all sorts ol recognition lor themselves and their college. -G ' 'S' T' Granting degrees in Chemical, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical, and industrial Engineer- ing, this College never marks time, is continually progressing. Solid, substantial, and stitl so it goes tor the Engineers. ln the Graduate Division, the College ol Law stands top outtit, Set up to impart a thorough, practical, and sciontitic knowledge ot the law, you may see the Law College more clearly when you think ot: ill passing the bull, t2l passing the buck, and til passing the bar. Florida curricular activity is pliable, bending to the times, Currently, the Administra- tion has turned its attention to revising and increasing courses to assist in the all-out tight to train Americans tor elticient participation in the tight to shove the Japanese and associated snakes back in their respective holes, Courses in meteorology, radio, tele- vision, astronomy, navigation, etc., instigated in increasing numbers, continually help to swell the schedule ot courses as Florida trains brains.

Page 23 text:

WALTER J, MATHERLY TOWNES R, l.ElGl-l Dean ot the College ot Business Administration Dean ot the College ot Arts and Sciences on the colleges .... The University ot Florida stands today an educational institution at considerable size, boasting a general college, upper division, six colleges, three schools, a graduate school, a general extension division, a college-wide R,O,T,C, training unit, and more than CO departments ot instruction ranging all the way from Aeronautical Engineering to Veterinary Science, A radio station, WRUF, vast acreage under cultivation by agricultural students, stock herds, e hydraulics laboratory, a clairy operated by students supplying ice cream, millc, and other dairy products to the campus cateteria and soda fountain, e new wood-processing lah, a four story library with 7 lloors ot books, tung-oil experimental station, a medium-sized forest all at this, and lots more, is utilized in the collegiate training ot Florida men. Florida otiers tive major classifications ot degrees: Associate ot Arts CA. Al awarded tor completion ot trash and sophomore vyorlc in the General College, Bachelor ot Arts tBt A.l, Bachelor ot Science CB, Sl, Master ot Arts CM A.l, and, tinally, Doctors' Degrees ll3h, Dl. Streamlined education tor tirst and second year men is the Gatorland Way. Successful and ettectiye is the General College, tirst leg of the educational journey at Florida. Learn ing man's place in the social, physical, literary, philosophical, psychological, mathematical, cultural, and biological worlds is the lot at Gator lrosh and sophs. Wide,-sweeping compre- H, S, NEWINS lol, D. WINGATE PERCY M, BEARD VV. L. SCl-lOCI-'l Director, School at Forestry Auditor Director at Athletics Director ot Maintenance



Page 25 text:

W. We LITTLE T, lvl, SIMPSON I3. C. RILEY Dean ol thrr General College Dean ol the Graduate School Dean ol' the General Extension Division The University ot Florida, like the proverbial oak tree, sprang from a tiny beginning. Today's 300 laculty members, 320 acres ot beautilul campus, 4,855 acres ol University land, 30 buildings, and a total investment ot 258,000,000 stock as signilicant testimony ol Orange and Blue progress 'lrom the days when our Alma lvIater's grand ancestor, the East Florida Independent Institute, vvas tounded in Ocala in H352 vvith six teachers East Florida Independent Institute was taken over in the following year by the State, being moved to Gainesville in H366 and renamed the East Florida Seminary. Then other state schools sprang up like so many mushrooms: Florida Agricultural College, ISS3, Lake City, State Normal School lor White Students, I887, De Funiak Springs, St, Petersburg Normal Industrial School, l90l, St. Petersburg, South Florida lvlilitary and Educational Institute at Bartow, IFEQS, and the Agricultural Institute, l905, Gsceola County, Weak, small, and inevitably short on tunds, these institutions, iq, 5, JQHNSQN rg, Q Tllll-MAN nevertheless, served their respec- RGQISIVOV UHIVGVSIW PIWSICIOV1 tive purposes, although Florida's higher educational record on the national scene was puny. Then came the Buckman Act, l905, re- sulting in the establishment ot three substantial state schools, one ot which was the University al Florida in Gainesville. Beginning vvith 'two buildings, Buckman and Thomas Halls, and a shop, Florida's state school tor men got under vvay.

Suggestions in the University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) collection:

University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

University of Florida - Tower / Seminole Yearbook (Gainesville, FL) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


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