University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL)

 - Class of 1937

Page 30 of 550

 

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 30 of 550
Page 30 of 550



University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 29
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University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 31
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Page 30 text:

THE COLLEGE OF COMMERCE AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Dean Charles Manfred Thompson This college, in common with the other colleges and schools on the campus, has as its chief aim the development of young men and women foT normal, happy lives. A secondary aim is their training for successful careers in busi- ness. Our objective is a sound understanding of basic social and economic principles attended by some grasp of the de- tails involved in operating these principles in everyday life, and of the consequences such operations entail on society in general. Someone on the faculty has said that the College of Com- merce attempts to educate its students to become tool makers and not tool sharpeners. The meaning is, of course, that we are but little concerned in our students acquiring immediate facility in handling routine; what we seek is ultimate power. Some notion may be had of the nature of our educational ideals from an oft-repeated statement heard among the faculty: This College is little more than a College of Arts and Sciences where the students are given a general educa- tion with a bias toward business. The test of our work is not to be had during the first few months out of college, but rather after years as a useful member of society. Charles Manfred Thompson '09, Dean of the College of Commerce, was born in Fairfield, Illinois, November 10, 1877. After receiving his A.B. and A.M. degrees here, he went to Harvard University for more extensive study. He returned to the University in 1911 and since then has served on the faculty. He received his Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1913. Six years later he was promoted to the rank of professor and, at the same time, was appointed Dean of the College of Commerce. When the Bureau of Business Research was established in 1921, Dean Thompson was made Director. He holds two honorary degrees, an LL.D., from Muskingum College and a D.Litt. from McKendree College. In March, 1934, the Urbana Association of Commerce conferred on Dean Thompson its Distinguished Citizenship Award for Meritorius Public Service. 937 Page 28

Page 29 text:

■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



Page 31 text:

MTMTrmjIfimnllllllil THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE Dean Herbert Windsor Mum ford ill till Herbert Windsor Mumford, Dean of the College of Agriculture, and Director of the Agricultural Experiment S tation and the Agricultural Extension Service since 1922, was born in Moscow, Michigan, February 26, 1871. He attended Albion College and then Michigan State College, where he received the Bachelor of Science degree and the honorary degree of Doctor of Agriculture. He served on the faculty of Michigan State College from 1895 to 1901 when he came to the University of Illinois as professor of Animal Husbandry and chief of Animal Husbandry in the Agricultural Experiment Station. Dean Mumford is a member of numerous agricultural and scientific organiza- tions. He received noteworthy recognition while he was a member of the American Study Commission for German Agriculture in 1928 and a member of the Mexican Agricultural Commission in 1930. In addition to being the author of two books on agriculture, he has contributed material to the Cyclopedia Americana and the Cyclo- pedia of American Agriculture. The College of Agriculture had its beginning in a course in agriculture and horticulture which was one of two offered when the University of Illinois began instruction on March 2, 1-868, as the Illinois Industrial University. There were but three instructors and only fifty men students in the en- tire institution. Today the College of Agriculture has a staff of approximately 235, and an enrollment of more than 1,200 students in agriculture and home economics. From its thousands of graduates come leaders in farming and homemaking, in the teaching and extension service of agriculture and home economics, and in technical positions and public service closely allied to these two fields. Out of its Experiment Station issue new facts upon which a more stable agriculture, a happier rural life, and greater consumer satisfactions are built. Through its Extension Service farm- ers, homemakers, and consumers everywhere get the teach- ings and findings of the University. There is perhaps no better reflection of the College's wide range of service than the fact that some 18,000 people annually attend its con- ferences, meetings, and short courses. 937 Page 29

Suggestions in the University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) collection:

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940


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