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

 - Class of 1937

Page 32 of 550

 

University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 32 of 550
Page 32 of 550



University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 31
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University of Illinois - Illio Yearbook (Urbana Champaign, IL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 33
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Page 32 text:

THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Dean Thomas Eliot Benner Thomas Eliot Benner, Dean of the College of Education, was born in Danvers, Massachusetts, February 11, 1894. He received his first degree from Harvard in 1914 and, in 1924, the degree of Doctor of Education. After serving as statistician and editor for the Alabama State Department of Education, he became the acting dean of the College of Education at the Alabama Polytechnic Institute. He was also Chan- cellor of the University of Puerto Rico (1924-29) and visiting professor at Columbia University (1929-31). Since 1931 he has been the Dean of the College of Education at the University of Illinois. He has served on a committee of the state legislature which investigated vocational education in Illinois, and as chairman of the advisory committee to the Educational Commission of the 1935 legislature. Among his activities are Phi Delta Kappa, Kappa Delta Pi, and offices in several national professional organizations. One of the major functions of the College of Education is to contribute to the building up of better relationships between the University of Illinois and the public schools of the State in the interests of the million and one-half pupils in the public schools of the State. The more effec- tively the University performs in its relationship to the public schools, the more certainly it can count upon the kind of good will which will result in bringing to the University the most promising of their graduates. The College of Education, which is in a sense a liaison office between the public schools and the University, had its origin in 1893 in the influence of Charles de Garmo, Professor of Psychology. This resulted in the creation of a chair of Pedagogics and the selection of Dr. Frank Martin McMurray as its first occupant. In 1900 a Department of Education was set up which became, in 1907, the School of Education and later, in 1918, received its present title, the College of Education. At the same time, the Bureau of Educational Research was established. The College contributes to the preparation of teachers, supervisors, principals, superintendents, and teachers of education in colleges and universities. 1937

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



Page 33 text:

HHHHHH ■■ wmKM THE COLLEGE OF LAW Dean Albert James Harno Legal education has undergone some rapid changes since the last century. Even in the beginning of the present cen- tury, preparation for the bar was still largely through the apprenticeship method. Today the modern law school, with its staff of instructors, has almost completely taken over the field, and the period of required study has been substantially lengthened. This period may be divided into two stages, the pre-legal, which involves from two to four years of college work, and the professional, which covers three years of in- tensive work in an approved law school. Also bar examina- tions, which at one time were but pro forma institutions, have become hazardous occupations. All these, beyond their significance as educational agencies, are effective screening devices through which only the finer materials are permitted to pass. The College of Law of the University of Illinois is one of the recognized and approved law schools of the country. It requires for entrance a minimum of three years of college work at the University (for those entering from other col- leges and universities, the requirement is a degree) of a stated quality. Albert James Harno, Dean of the College of Law, is now serving his seventh year as Provost of the ijniversity. He was born January 30, 1889 in Holabird, South Dakota. After his graduation from Dakota Wesleyan University in 1911, Dean Harno went to Yale where the Bachelor of Laws degree, Magna Cum Laude, was conferred upon him in 1914. He practiced law in Los Angeles until 1917, when he went to Topeka, Kansas to become the Dean of Washburn College of Law. Two years later he went to the Uni- versity of Kansas, where he served as Professor of Law. He came to the University of Illinois in 1921 to fill the position of Professor of Law. He was appointed Dean of his college in 1922. 1931 Page 31

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

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

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

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

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

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

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