University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1942

Page 18 of 249

 

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 18 of 249
Page 18 of 249



University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 17
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University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

I -4 r... y . . x..-1 ,- a-G-.wl - ' if . I L .nw .., , . ag . sl SP xo Q. ft WCG Q06 x OK oct A XNO Qfgio x09 SC OUT' Qlwi eh .X we 0 X092 and - e QQ' fx 'N 0 new XF' Oxycl-3-Q off' C wx 'X Q0 We N. l 'Q O OX THE WHARTON SCHOOL Renowned as one of the finest business schools in the country, the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce can well be proud of its outstanding reputation. Founded in 1881 by joseph Wharton, one-time President of Beth- lehem Steel, and a man with immense practical ability, the popularity of the school grew quickly. The student body jumped from only a handful to more than a hundred at the end of ten years. I The Wharton School was originally begun as the Eco- nomic Department of the University of Pennsylvania, but, due to the rising range of subjects devoted to the study of all fields of practical endeavour, emerged in 1912 as a separate department of the University, with its own admin- istrators and ofhcers. The present Dean is Dr. C. Canby Balderston, who was selected for this honored position by the University upon the resignation of Dr. Alfred H. Wil- liams, who is now President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. The four year course of the Wharton School, inaugu- rated in the late 189O's, has proven to be a popular institu- tion with students. Alumni believe, just as Joseph Wharton did, that the community needs trained men 3 and the Whar- ton School has proved admirably that its course of business education gives a proper background for the economic life. THE COLLEGE The College may well boast of being one of the oldest schools in all North America, having been founded in 1740. Merged with the Old Charity School in 1749 by Benjamin Franklin, the College has been sending out educated youth ever since. Due to the expansion of the City of Philadelphia, the University has moved three times, its first home at Fourth and Arch being abandoned at the close of the eigh- teenth century, its second at Ninth and Chestnut in 1870, while the present site has been officially the home of the University since 1871. In the history of American education, it is a special distinction of the College that Provost William Smith in 1756 outlined the first liberal curriculum of higher learning in the western world. This new method departed from the traditional, narrowly theological aims, offering various prac- tical courses such as surveying, navigation, accounting, com- merce, government, it also established the first chair of Chemistry in America and was the only University to make formal inclusion of modern languages in its curriculum. Following its tradition to appoint progressive leaders to the revered position of Dean, the University picked Dr. John M. Fogg as the new Dean of the College, in place of Dr. William E. Linglebach who had resigned. 4

Page 17 text:

selections, and has changed them from matters in which only a comparatively few men were inter- ested into affairs' of great importance in which a large majority of matriculates of the respective de- partments vote. Not only the actual elections but also the meetings at which the parties put forth their platforms, are directly in the control of the body. It has the supervision of all class and interclass matters, such as dances, and of the financial matters of any body which is not under graduate control. Through its members, it maintains contact with all the campus activities, and, if need be, acts as an advisory board to them. Each year the Council arranges for the election of permanent class officers for the Senior class. One man from each of the six undergraduate schools is elected and, from these, a permanent presi- dent, vice-president, and secretary are selected to be the official representatives of their class at all future gatherings and in all alumni matters. In cooperation with the administration, this organization assists in the planning and running of the Freshman Week activities. The various affairs which occur during the week are designed to help the incoming class in becoming familiar with the University, the opportunities afforded by campus bodies, and, chiefly, to see that the freshmen become acquainted with their classmates. More than almost any other single organization the Undergraduate Council gives responsible students an oppor- tunity to exercise their executive abilities, and in doing so, increases the relationship between the administration and student body. OFFICERS Chairman ...... .... W arren G. Hirt Vice Chairman ..... .... R ichard Havens Secretary-Treasurer . . . .... Robert Schaefer MEMBERS Edward McCaskey john Welsh, Jr. James C. Stretch Stuart McCash Charles Masland Frank Lee Gary III T. James Fernley II William Peters Charles P. Gyllenhall William Levering , George Dixon Gordon Bodek Chairman X'Yarren Hirt addresses ll football r tlly



Page 19 text:

THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS Although the School of Fine Arts was officially estab- lished in 1920, instruction in Architecture has been given at the University since 1873. With the growing expansion of the field and the increased enrollmenit of students, the School has been divided into four branches: those of Archi-- tecture, Music, Landscape Architecture, and Fine Arts. There is no school on the campus which can boast of a closer bond and personal relationship between faculty and students. This is mainly due to the very na.ture of the work in which constant cooperation is essential. The School of Fine Arts contains exhibition material on a wide range of subjects. In the library are over 11,000 volumes on the practical and aesthetic, supported by the famous Godfrey Singer Memorial Collection of recorded music and speech which contains over 8,000 discs. All these are available to any University student. Also owned by the Fine Arts School are 190,000 mounted photographs, 16,000 lantern slides, many plates and illustraltions, and subscrip- tions to 73 American and European periodicals. An important aspect of the work of the faculty of Music has been the development of the Choral Society, composed of the Men and Women Glee Clubs. The Society has fre- quently sung with the Philadelphia Orchestra in Phila- delphia, New Y ork, Baltimore, and Washington. THE MOORE SCHOOL In 1923 the Department of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering received a generous bequest through the late Alfred Fitler Moore which actually created the Moore School. Although courses in engineering were available previously for thirty years, the bequest amounting to more than 31,500,000 set up a fund which not only is responsible for the present building, but also creates an endowment for both undergraduate and graduate instruction in electrical engineering and research on the part of fthe faculty and students. The Moore School is exceptionally well equipped for modern electrical research. The library contains nearly all the published books on electrical engineering and many journals. Not only does the school have its own short-wave radio set, but it possesses equipment for research in the basic theories of all co-related fields. -To aid the actual research, there is an extensive ma- chinery laboratory, of which there are only three in the country. The under-graduate curriculum is marked by a two- option course. The Research Option is designed primarily for students interested in the technical side of engineering. The second option, the Industrial Option, is designed for students preparing for less technical positions. oeah X .. ' ir. Of CZ? we Of? Ira CQ CIUSP 0125?-df '56 Af S06 ff oof O O pl: f fi. G K1 his Off JI? f ' r E FQ XGCIIYIQI, 'QU Of P . . G 1 4110660 'XOWY 1 6 ,'1f'C.2,I0'o . . 1 I 1, 0 . Qs omni! J Of

Suggestions in the University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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