University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX)

 - Class of 1920

Page 28 of 520

 

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 28 of 520
Page 28 of 520



University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 27
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Page 28 text:

• c-y rc CACTUS • i Board of Regents C. E. KEI.LEV i-RED W. COOK L. J. WORTH AM LUTCHER STARK W. R. BRENTS 1. A. KEMP W. H. DOUGHERTY H. A. WROE icaleo RALPH STEINER

Page 27 text:

• c-7 rc r ACTUS • To All Students of the University S ' E draw near to another Commencement my mind is running upon the rapidly recurring years and the ever-flowing yet con- stanth- renewed stream of students whose lives are touching ours, and then going out. What have you gotten here? We have had a message for you, a message with many sides, presented from many angles, viewed from many standpoints, yet essentially one. Have we made it clear to you so that you have been able to see it and, more than that, to make it your own? After all that is the important thing, that you have made it your own. The process of the college is necessarily analytical. Things are here broken up into their constituent parts so that you may see each part for what it is. But if the process is an anah ' tical one, yet the object is wholly s} ' nthetic, for it is not enough that you should know the con- stituent elements of things but you must also see them in their relations. When you have taken the clock to pieces to see what makes the wheels go round, you must not lose sight of the faCt that it must all be put together again, for the purpose of the clock is to keep time and nothing else. Down at the bottom that represents just what we have been trying to do for you here. Our ultimate purpose is not to store your memories with certain forms of knowledge, nor to acquaint you with any certain body of facts, nor to give you a facility either great or small in any particular line of endeavor, so that you may consider yourself a master therein. Our effort is to bring you into contact with stores of knowledge, with the accumulations of world experience, with conditions and theories and problems, so that your powers may be aroused, all your spiritual powers, and that they may try themselves, may be exercised and strengthened, so that you may afterwards be able to set your own lessons and do them, and bring to all of you problems after college life not the rules but the abilit)- which college life affords. If you have in any sort gotten this ability to see into the heart of things, to think straightly and thoroughly, to analyse and to put together, to see life thoroughly and to see it whole, then we are glad. If you haven ' t, then your time and our efforts have been wasted, for the trial by iire of } ' Our after life will reveal no costly stones but only wood, hay and stubble of four years thrown away. -»r J? Ka o •



Page 29 text:

• c r . CACTUS • i ' ' ' •c,- Officers of University HARRY YANDELL BENEDICT Projessor of Applied Mathematics and Dean of the College of Arts B. S., University of Texas. 1892; M. A., ibid., 1893; Ph. D.. Harvard, 1898; Instructor of Pure Mathematics and Astron- omy, University of Texas, 1899-1900; Adjunct Professor, ibid., 1900-1902; Associate Professor, ibid., 1902-1907; Professor of Applied Mathematics, ibid., 1907 — ; Director of the Department of Extension, ibid., 1909-1911; Dean of the College of Arts, ibid., 1911—; Dean of Men. ibid., 1914— JOHN CHARLES TOWNES Professor of Law and Dean of the Department of Lam LL. D., Bavlor Universitv, 1897; Admitted to the Bar, 1872; Judge of the Thirty third Judicial District, 1882-1885; Judge Twentv-sixth Judicial District, 1888. Author of Townes on Torts, Townes American Elementary Law, Townes on Texas Pleadings, Civil Government and Law Books and How to Use Them. Professor of Law, Universitv of Texas, 1896—; Dean of the Department of Law, ibid ' ., 1907—; President of Association of Law Schools, 1909-1910. THOMAS ULVAN TAYLOR Professor of Civil Engineering and Dean of the Department of Engineering C. E. University of Virginia, 188. ; M. C. E., Cornell Univers.ty, 1S95; Professor of Physics and Engineering, Miller Institute, Virginia, 1883-1888; Adjunct Professor of .Applied Mathematics. University of Texas, 1888-1891; .Associate Professor of .Applied NIathematics, ibid., 1904; Dean of Department of Engineering, ibid., 1907 — t

Suggestions in the University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) collection:

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923


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