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Page 28 text:
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THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Dean Melvin L. Enger Melvin L. Enger, Dean of the College of Engineering, will complete his thirtieth year on the University faculty this spring. He was born in Decorah, Iowa, in 1881. He began his undergraduate work at the University of Minnesota and later transferred to the University of Illinois, receiving three degrees from the University; the Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering in 1906, the professional degree of Civil Engineer in 1911, and the Master of Science degree in 1919. When Professor A. N. Talbot retired as the head of the department of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics in 1926, Dean Enger succeeded him in this position. Later when Acting Dean Willard was appointed president of the University in 1934, Professor Enger was advanced to deanship of the College of Engineer- in . He is a member of many engineering societies and honorary fraternities, including the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Water Works Association, American So- ciety for Testing Materials, Western Society of Engineers, Chicago Engineers Club, Tau Beta Pi, Phi Kappa Phi, Chi Epsilon, Sigma Xi, Sigma Tau, and Mu San. The College of Engineering was organized in 1870 to provide for courses in Mechanical Science and Art, Civil Engineering, Mining Engineering, Metallurgy, and Architec- ture and Fine Arts. Four-year curricula were published in 1871-1872 for Architecture, Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Mining Engineering. Instruction in the University (then Illinois Industrial University) began in March, 1868. The Department of Physics was established as an inde- pendent department of the College in 1890. In 1892, cur- ricula were added in Electrical Engineering, Municipal and Sanitary Engineering, and Architectural Engineering. Then followed the curricula in Railway Engineering in 1906, Ceramics and Ceramic Engineering in 1915, General En- gineering and Engineering Physics in 1920, Architectural Engineering and Metallurgical Engineering in 1933. The Department of Architecture was transferred to become a part of the newly organized College of Fine and Applied Arts in 1931. The Engineering Experimental Station was created in 1903 as a part of the College of Engineering. Its purpose is to stimulate engineering education and to investigate problems of importance to professional engineers and in- dustry. Vv . . w C v. Page 26 957
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Page 27 text:
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aSJsK? ■ ■ BOARD OF TRUSTEES Superintendent of Public Instruction Hon. John A. Wieland Springfield TTnirv gtTujminJjImil] OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Orville M. Karraker, Harrisburg . .President Harrison E. Cunningham, Urbana Secretary Frank M. Gordon, Chicago Treasurer Lloyd Morey, Urbana Comptroller Louis C. Moschel Pekin Mrs. Marie C. Plumb Chicago Mayer Gordon Plumb Cunningham Freeman Meyer 1937 Page 25
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Page 29 text:
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■HI ■ THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES Dean Matthew T. McClure The largest college in the University attained its present status in 1913, when the College of Literature and Arts and the College of Sciences were combined to form the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences with the late Kendric C. Babcock as Dean. Since then the College has endeavored to integrate instruction in both the humanities and the sci- ences. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has two par- ticular functions. First, it enrolls students in specialized and pre-professional curricula; for instance, pre-medical, pre- law, pre-journalism, chemistry, and chemical engineering. Second, it provides the resources for a liberal education. Liberal means a program leading to a well-rounded per- sonal development; that is, a program in which the studies emphasize i actors that contribute to a general knowledge and interpretation of the forces, tendencies, conflicts, and problems of life, rather than lead to specific individual career. The College is at present considering means of offering greater opportunities and fewer obstacles to the better stu- dent, and more help and guidance to the student who has not yet found himself. To allow the better students to ad- vance as rapidly as they wish, the tutorial system has been put into use. Matthew Thompson McClure, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was born at Spottsford, Virginia, April 27, 1883. A bachelor's degree was awarded him at Washington and Lee University in 1904, where he did his undergraduate work, a mas- ter's degree at the University of Virginia in 1907, and a doctor's degree at Columbia in 1912. Before coming to Illinois, Mr. McClure was an instructor in Philosophy at Columbia and from 1915 to 1921 a professor of Philosophy at Tulane. He began his career at Illinois in 1921 as Associate Professor in Philosophy. In 1922 he became Professor of Philosophy and in 1926 he was appointed head of that department. The deanship was awarded him in 1934 after serving a year as Acting Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Dean McClure is a member- of Phi Beta Kappa, the American Philosophical Association, and other honorary organizations. Page 27
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