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Page 28 text:
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THE ILLIO OF 1929, New Commerce Building THE COLLEGE OF COMMERCE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION CHARLES MANFRED TEIOMPSON, '09, Dean of tlre College of Commerce and Director of the Bureau of Business Research, was born in Fairfield, Illinois, on November 10, 1877. On completing his undergraduate Work here, Ire Went to Harvard University, Where he studied in 1910-11, returning to the University of Illinois in 1912 as an instructor in economics. He continued his graduate work here, receiving his Plr.D. the next year. Since that time he has been serving continuously on the faculty, accepting his present position in 1919. DEAN CHARLES M. THOMPSON I I-IE aim of the College of Commerce is to develop power in sound thinking rather than facility in technique. The College is not interested in teaching students how to sharpen their business toolsg it is interested, however, in teaching them how to malce tools when, after they leave Col- lege, they meet up with tasks for which they have no tools. To put the matter in yet another way, the aim of the College of Com- merce is to give its students a liberal education with a bias toward business. This it cloes by requiring them to major in economics, accounting, business administration, and business law, by offering a variety of subject groups from which students may select according to their individual needs, and by permitting a rather liberal choice of elective courses. QL! P77 J iii!
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Page 27 text:
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UIHE ILLIQ OF IQQQI MERLE J. TREES TO 'THE STUDENTS OF ILLINOIS I-IE EDITOR of the ILLIO has asked me to extend a word of greeting to the students of the University on behalf of the Board of Trustees. Sixty years ago, in March of 1868, the University of Illinois, with a faculty consisting of Regent Gregory and two professors, opened its doors to fifty young men. During the first term, another instruc- tor was added, and twenty-seven more students. It would have been an easy matter, if one had been there, to have extended greetings to the whole student body individually. Now, the registration approaches thirteen thousand. As I cannot greet you all in person, much as I should like to, I am glad of this opportunity to write a word of greeting to you. 'V The University of Illinois is peculiarly an experiment 'in democ- racy. It is an opportunity given by the people to the people of the state. It is not interested in making any person to be or to appear better or wiser than any other person--but if it shall have made a few of its thousands better and wiser than they were before, it will have been a success. President, Board of Trustees pm KW! PAGE 23
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Page 29 text:
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THE ILLIC CF IQZQI Clrernistry Building THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES Kanmuc CHARLES Brmcocx, Dean of flue College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was born in South Brookfield, New York, on September 8, 1864. He studied at tlve University of Mirxrzesota and at Harvard, completing lvis worlc tlrere in 1896. On leaving Harvard, lve became an assistant professor at the University of California, 'rvlriclv position lve left to accept tlre presidency of the University of Arizona in 1903. From 1910 to 1913 he served as a specialist in lviglver education on tlve United States Bureau of Education, accepting DEAN KENDRIC C. BABCOCK lris present position at tlre end of tlrat time. HE College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was founded in 1913 by the union of the former College of Liberal Arts with the contemporary College of Science. Since that time the Colleges of Commerce and Education and the School of Journalism have arisen from former departments of this College. It is still the largest of the Colleges, not only in the number of its students, but also in the size of its faculty. Its nineteen separate depart- ments and its afliliation with the other Colleges, and Schools of the Uni- versity oiler the student a general education. The College offers special curricula in Chemistry and in Chemical Engi- neering, as well as pre-professional courses in preparation for journalism, law, and medicine. The College provides, moreover, instruction in its several departments for students registered in other Colleges to such an extent that it may well be considered the general service school of the University. J 1 I pm Hifi PAGE 25
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