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Page 31 text:
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Tofrow, left to right: J. L. Henderson ' C. T. Gray, C. F. Arrowood, Clara M. Parker, James Knight, Robt. A. Law. ' Nfxt to top row. James O. Marberrv.J. E. Pearce, T. S. Painter, O. B. Douglas, Annie W. Blanton, F.J. Adams, E. O. Wood. MidiU row: B. F. Holland, T. H. Shelby, D. K. Brace, Lula Marie Jenkins, Mary S. Kirkpatrick, 1. 1. Nelson. Bottom row. H. T. Manuel, Hilda Molesworth, Fred C. Ayer, B. F. Pittenger, Rosemary Walling, James W. Baldwin. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION m ' i The School of Education was created in 1905 when the Department of Education, which originated in the College of Arts and Sciences in 1891, was transformed into a distinct division of the University. The present organization was completed in 1920, and since that time the School has shown such a marked growth that it is known to be one of the best in the South today. The University possesses exceptional facilities for the study of educa- tion. Sutton Hal l, the name recently assigned to the Education Build- ing, is one of the best equipped buildmgs in the country. The Austin public school system has co-operated with the School of Education in providing student-teaching under supervision, and the eleemosynary institutions located in Austin offer an ex- cellent opportunity for the study of educational psychology and for practice in experimental and test work. Research work in education is done by the advanced students of the School. Besides the modern works of value on education which the University Library contains, much legal and historical material is available in the State Library and the State Department of Education which are also located in Austin. These rare facilities have drawn a large number of students from other states to the University of Texas. A. B. Michigan Normal, 1908. M. A. Texas, 1912. Ph. D. University of Chicago, 1916. Became Dean of School of Education in 1926. The Cactus IQSI ii k m i P iK g - Page 2}
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Page 30 text:
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m m r i 1 ! Toj ' roiv, left to nglit — John Arch White; Henry Albert Handrick; Robert V. Shirley; Mildred Disch, Mrs. Martha Ann Zivelev; Leo Cecil Haynes; Carl A. Rehm. Middle row — Elmer Harrison Johnson; Charles Aubrey Smith; Henry Rehm; William Paxton Boyd; Herschel Chester Walling; Everett G. Smith. Bottom roiv — George Hillis Newlove; Carroll Day Simmons; Edward Karl McGinnis; Dorothy Ayres; J. Anderson Fitzgerald; AiONZO B. Cox; Ambrose P. Winston. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION The School of Business Administration was founded as a department of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1912. In 1917 a distinctive degree was first offered, and in 1922 the department had shown such an increase in enrollment that a separate school was created. Work in business administra- tion is now offered which leads to the degrees of Master of Business Administration and Doctor of Philosophy. The School, which has been confined to the shacks and Brackenridge Hall since its establishment, will move into Waggener Hall, the new classroom building, in the fall of 1931. The School of Business Aministration presents a group of courses which are concerned with those business facts and situations having a comparative- ly direct bearing on the efficient conduct of business. The chief purpose of the School is to train men and women for executive and professional positions in business. All of the subjects are re- lated to some phase of the administration of private business or v ith the business side of the conduct of public affairs. Three to six months of actual business experience is required of every student before he finishes his last semester of work. The increased enrollment of the recent years assures the School a high rank in the w ork of business ad- ministration in the future. Dr. J. A. Fitzgerald A. B., Georgetown Col- lege 1901. A. M., Univeristy of Chicago, 1907. Ph. D., Marshall College, West Virginia, 1925. Became Dean of School of Business Adminis- tration in 1926. iiiie Cactus 1Q31 Page 2!
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Page 32 text:
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n 1 K l ' ' K U •M Dr. W. F. Gidley B. S. in Phar., University of Michigan, 1908. Ph. C, University of Michigan, 1908. Became Dean of College of Pharmacy in 1925. Top row, left to n ' (;l)l — Schleuse; Rigles; Hardwicke; Neville; Norton. Bottom row — Henze; Gidley; Albers. COLLEGE OF PHARMACY The College of Pharmacy was established in connection with the School of Medicine at Galveston in 1893. In 1927 the faculty and equipment of the College was moved to Aus- tin in order that use of the Physics and Chemistry departments of the main University might be obtained. There has been a constant increase in the enrollment of the College, and this year a record attendance has been reached. The College will leave the shacks in which it has been housed during the four years that it has been in Austin, and will move into the new Chemistry Building upon its com- pletion. A number of laboratories will remain in the Biological Building, which is one of the most completely equipped laboratory buildings in the South. The curriculum of the College of Pharmacy is designed to take elegible high school graduates and give them a thorough fundamental work in the science of pharmacy with the aim of producing professional pharmacists and not life clerks. The College has recognized the tendency through- out the country to demand graduation from col- leges of pharmacy, and fully meets the requirements of the thirty-three states and Alaska, Porto Rico, and the Philippine Islands where there are laws prohibiting the practice of pharmacy without a college education. The Cactus IQ31 Page U
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