Liberal Arts UKUI. . I U OF IIKFOXVKIKSIOX MOST EVIDENT IX THIS SI'HOOL Anyone who wants to know tin story of a school year must look to the College of Liberal Arts, the center of every university. At Miami the College of Liberal Arts this year was an excellent index to all the activities and change' of the whole I niversity. With the end of the war almost within sight, plans were already maturing for reconversion to a peacetime schedule. The lirst outward and unmistakable sign was the announcement that the I niversity will abandon the trimester system come July, shifting hack to the semester plan that was followed in more leisurely days. So. instead of students and professors sweating out a July trimester in 1945, they ill sweat out two of the (radiiional summer sessions. pre-war model. But let there he no illusion about it; college life after the war will never he quite the same as before—anyway, not for a long time. If you |)r. Jay F. W. I’nrtuti, Dean of the Faculty. '» . Phvrical Science, Furuliy. Sralnl: C«-or|ir Glcaron, Mr . Georgia Del Franco. Mr . Melanie Ro bor«U|th. Miw Mar-Karel Mu»tard, Evan T. I.imi,trom. Slamlinii: Dr. Herman Meyer. Philip Carter. Dr. Elmer lljort. Dr. Maurice llolmr., Warren Longenedter. Ilotium, Eiifcl»»l Faculty. Stated: Paul Harm,. Mr . Natalie Lawrence. Mr,. Lucy Hau er. Mr». Nina Durkin,. J. Ralph Murray. Stan linf: Simon Horh-berpr, Dr. Charle. Doren Tharp, Frederick Koch. Jr.. K. Malcolm Real. John I- Rou»e. want to get technical, maybe we can put the changes down here, with or without footnotes. The infiltration of about a hundred seventy war veterans this year has not gone unnoticed. For the most part these are fellows whose experiences in uniform have given them a more rounded and often a more mature slant on Gilford V »! t • H
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into DUmuko the Liberal agriculture, transportation, real estate, education, and recreation. An outgrowth of its work was a book called Miami: Economic Pattern of a Resort Area. by Dr. Reinhold P. Wolff, associate professor of economics. The war reached deeply Arts staff but a half-dozen faculty members came back this year after war service, in or out of uniform. I)r. Jay F. W. Pearson, dean of the faculty, returned in August after serving as a major in the Air Corps. Others returning were Dr. Robert E. McNicoll, professor of Latin American history and institutions, who for about a year was with the State Department in Washington; J. Ralph Murray, assistant professor of English, formerly an ensign; Frederick II. Koch, Jr., assistant professor of drama, from the Miami Air Depot; and Dr. Chari- Borrott ton W. Tehran, assistant professor of history, from his farm in k'Gawja. ' New members of the Liberal Arts faculty who came to the University in answer to an expanding enrollment were Dr. Julian D. Corrington, associate professor of zoology; Social Sciences Faculty: I)r. H. Franklin William . Dr. Harold E. Brigg . Dr. Charlton W. Trheau. To t. Biological Science Faculty, .Seated: Dr. Jay Pearson. Dr. Walton Smith. Mr . Doroth) Morse. Dr. Taylor Alexander. Standing: Dr. Leon Slater, Dr. Nelson Marshall, Dr. Robert William , Dr. Julian Corrington. Iloltom, Foreign Language Faculty: Pedro Hiriharne. Sidne) Maynard, Mr-. Melanie Ro borough. Dr. William Dismuke . Leonard Muller. Paid W. Harms and John L. Rouse, assistant professors of English: Mrs. Dorothy C. Andrews, lecturer in psychology; Dr. Leon H. Slater, visiting professor of psychology; George S. Gleason, assistant professor of engineering drafting; and Mrs. Nina M. Harkins and Mrs. Lucy B. Hauser, instructors in English. A faculty change of major importance was the promotion of Dr. Harold E. Briggs, professor of history, to dean of the College. Dr. Briggs replaces Dr. J. Riis Owre, professor of Spanish, who is now in Cairo. Egypt, as a lieutenant in the Navy. Unless the approach of spring in Coral Gables has dazed ns, we’d say that 1944-45 has been a decisive year. « at .V • I I
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