University of Missouri at Kansas City - Kangaroo Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)

 - Class of 1936

Page 16 of 136

 

University of Missouri at Kansas City - Kangaroo Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 16 of 136
Page 16 of 136



University of Missouri at Kansas City - Kangaroo Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 15
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University of Missouri at Kansas City - Kangaroo Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 17
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Page 16 text:

HILE the organization and cle- velopment of the University of Kansas City has loeen an important civic movement gaining momentum as the years have passed, the worli of one man has heen singularly outstanding in its growth. Ernest l-lenry Newcomh was among the first to sense the need and visualize the possibilities of a Uni- versity in this locality. Born in Virginia and educated in Missouri, he loegan an educational career at a very early age. At eighteen he hegan teaching in the rural schools of southern Missouri. Soon thereafter he hecame principal of the grade puh- lic schools of Neosho, Missouri, and later was graduated from Springfield State Teachers College and the Uni- versity of Missouri. At the age ol: twenty-four he was elected Superin- tendent of Schools of Newton County, Missouri. l'le was the organizer of the r The Executive Secretary K By HORACE KIMBRFLL lVlissouri Methodist Foundation, Co- lumloia, Missouri, and is a former president of Central College for Women. ln 1925 he is found in the midst of activities to estahlish a Uni- versity for Kansas City, and for three years thereafter served as Executive Secretary and outstanding leader ol The Lincoln and Lee movement. ln 1928 he was chosen Executive Secre- tary of the University of Kansas City movement in which capacity he served through its period of organization and continues to the present time. His capacity lor Worlc and construc- tive planning amazes all who lcnow him. A veritalole dynamo of human energy, his leadership permeates every phase of University activity. The Uni- versity of Kansas City exists today a splendid trihute to a man who has dedicated his life to a dream now heing fulfilled. Page 12

Page 15 text:

A Woird from ur President-Elect HIS A annual, published by the first class to graduate from the Uni- versity of Kansas City, is an account of the life' and activities of the Uni- versity by the students themselves. They are the charter members of what will some day constitute a large and influ- ential body of loyal alumni of the College of Liberal Arts, the first unit of the University to be fully estab- lished. At the invitation of the editors, I am happy to contribute a few words by way of commending it to all who are interested in the University which, like Kansas City,s Orchestra, its Nelson Gallery of Art and its art schools, is of, for, and by Kansas City. 1. It is of Kansas City. Cities, like countries and like individuals, have their own character. Kansas City is not just another city. Its geographical position, its trade connections with east and west, and north and south, its history, its civic spirit, give it a peculiar and unique position among the cities ot the Union. The University of Kan- sas City is not to be just another uni- versity, but will foster, develop and express on the background of our com- mon national and cultural heritage what is best and most worthy in the spirit of the city and the region of which it is the commercial and in- tellectual center. 2. The University is for Kansas City, primarily and immediately for the young men and women of Kansas City and its contiguous region, to give to them the opportunities and train them in the responsibilities that a university education affords, without compelling them to seek these advantages at a dis- tance and weakening the ties that bind them to their community. Local and national universities both have their place in our educational life. Both are necessary to a healthy and normal de- velopment of all our faculties as a peo- ple and a nation. But educational standards and the ideals of scholar- ship, among students and teachers, can be and must be as high in a local as in a national university, if it is to be worthy of its name. The University is not only for the undergraduates, but for all the citizens who wish to avail themselves of its opportunities. We be- lieve in University Extension and Adult Education and shall, so far as our means and standards permit, offer opportunities for advancement to all who are willing to work and capable of profiting by the instruction offered. The University of Kansas City will be for Kansas City because as it continues it will in increasing numbers send into the professional and business circles of the community, citizens not only skilled in their vocations, but trained to recog- nize those deeper human values on which all enduring social and indi- vidual welfare depends. 3. The University is by Kansas City. It is voluntarily supported, de- pending on the tuition fees of its stu- dents, and the free gifts of its weli- wishers. As its service is directly local fContinued on Page 202 Page 11 A



Page 17 text:

Dean anford By HORACE KIMBRELL N THE formation of the College of Liberal Arts in the University of Kansas City, no greater decision pre- sented itself to the Board of Trustees than the choice of a dean to huild and lead the college. A careful study was conducted to consider qualifications, experiences and personalities of many educators. Among these, the record of Grin Grover Sanford was outstanding, and he was asked to become the first dean of the University of Kansas City. Dean Sanford is a native of Missouri and a graduate of the Kirksvilie State Teachers College and the University of Missouri. After concluding further graduate study at the University of Colorado, he hegan a long and hrii- liant career as an educator which led him to the highest offices in the State Department of Education of Missouri., and to the place of Assistant State Superintendent of Public Schools of Missouri under the subsidy of the Gen- eral Education Board in New York City. From this work he was called in 1953 to his present position, where he took over his new duties hy help- ing in the selection of the first faculty. His career at the University of Kan- sas City has more than justified the faith and responsibility placed in him hy the Board of Trustees, for the steady growth of the University presented many problems which required vital decisions. His pedagogical soundness, his practical progressive nature, and his power of cooperation have helped to establish firmly a full four-year Col- lege of Liheral Arts. Page 13

Suggestions in the University of Missouri at Kansas City - Kangaroo Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) collection:

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