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

 - Class of 1935

Page 22 of 378

 

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 22 of 378
Page 22 of 378



University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

■HH EJ THE GRADUATE SCHOOL BHlS h -■ • Dean H. W. Harper Mol: ' fHE BIOLOGY BUILDING In June, 1910, the Board of Regents realized the necessity of graduate teaching and research in a school the size of The University of Texas. This realization was the beginning of a Graduate School which has helped place the University in its position of prominence with other educational institutions in the United States. Established first as a separate school under the administration of a committee composed of members of the General Faculty appointed by the President, the Graduate School did not become a completely organized unit until January, 1926. At the request of the Board of Regents, the Thirty-ninth Legislature was asked to make possible the organization of a Graduate Faculty. Sanction and financial support was obtained in June, 1925, and at a meeting in November of the members appointed to the Graduate Faculty, a committee was named to draw up a plan for a Graduate School. The plan was officially approved in 1926. Since 1913, Dr. Henry Winston Harper has been at the head of the Graduate School. He is assisted by Dr. Albert P. Brogan. Under their direction, 2,285 graduate degrees have been conferred, including ninety-eight doctor of philosophy degrees. It was chiefly through the efforts of this school that The University of Texas became a member of the Association of American Universities. THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES GARRISON HALL Ranking as the sixth largest College of Arts and Sciences in the United States, this division of The University of Texas continues to remain the largest division in the University. In this country it is the second largest College of Arts not located in a big city, and figures for the long session of 1933-34 show that its registration was twice that of the grand total of all other colleges and schools of the Main University. The College began in 1883 as the Academic Department and received its present name in 1920. Today it has 25 departments and includes 28 subjects covered by over 600 courses. Dean H. T. Parlin heads a faculty of 280 members. Dean Parlin has been a professor of English for 25 years in the University and was made Assistant Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1914, and Dean in the fall of 1928. In this College six degrees are conferred. A total of 468 was conferred in 1933-34, with the enrollment for that year being 4172. With general culture as the main object, this College also gives courses in vocational and professional training. One of the new projects is the liberalization of the freshman year. Page H

Page 21 text:

THE COMPTROLLER John William Calhoun Proud of the progress of the University with which he has been connected for twenty-six years. . . .sensitive to the extent that he tries to please everyone. . . .attempting to do the work of three ordinary men — J. W. Calhoun, graduate of the Class of ' 05, still finds time to make friends among the students. Born in Manchester, Tennessee, in 1871. from Harvard. ... is author of two books and . . . .still teaches. . . .and today is Comptroller o . . .has a Master ' s Degree several magazine articles The University of Texas. Insert: Calhoun. Top row: Stephens, Calhoun, Simmons. Bottom row: Sparenberg, Doss, Long. This is the building that Jack built ' ' — or rather John, since John W. Calhoun, Comptroller, has been responsible to the Board of Regents for all buildings constructed on the campus since 1925. Last year this department, besides it ' s regular duties, was burdened with the task of overseeing the construction of the nine new university buildings. This year only the demolition of old Main Building and the construction of the new Library-Administration Building and two new dormitories, one for men and one for women, have occupied the Comptroller ' s Office. This department was created by the Board of Regents in 1925 as a result of the increasing amount of work necessary to operate The University of Texas. The Comptroller was charged by the Regents to be the direct representative of the President in all strictly business operations not specifically designated to some other officer. All property and all money spent for the operation of the physical plant of the University is under the control of the Comptroller and his assistants. The Regents outlined the duties of this department into three divisions: endowment estates, physical plant, and accounting. Asked to prepare a list of his official duties as Comptroller, Mr. Calhoun said that the information would be forth- coming just as soon as he decided where to move a half-dozen houses, sign several hundred vouchers, see a committee Worn the Chamber of Commerce, show the tree surgeon which of the three hundred live oak trees to treat, decide what automobile to buy for use in the oil fields, dictate six letters on as many different subjects to the President, prepare a speech for a luncheon club, grade a set of quiz papers, attend a meeting of the building committee, and attend to a few other things on his docket. But the compiler decided the information could be found elsewhere and left the busy Comp- troller to his numerous duties. Page 13



Page 23 text:

THE SCHOOL OF LAW Dean I. P. Hildebrand THE LAW BUILDING With a registration of 573 students last fall, the School of Law at The University of Texas became the largest state university law school in the United States. In its requirements of two years of college work before admission to the school and a C average in all college work, the school has far surpassed the formal requirements of the Association of American Law Schools or the recommendations of the American Bar Association. And in general courses, curriculum, faculty personnel, and graduates, the School of Law is one of the five highest ranking law schools in the country. The Department of Law was a part of the University when it was founded fifty-two years ago. It had only two professors in the begin- ing: Governor O. M. Roberts and Judge Gould. In 1908 the school was moved from the old Main Building to the present Law Building. Ira P. Hildebrand entered the University as an associate professor in 1907 and in 1924 became Dean of the Law School. The faculty has increased from two to ten members. Five times each year the students, assisted by the faculty, publish the Texas Law Review which is widely recognized among law schools, writers of texts and law review articles, and compilers of case books. THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Dean T. U. Taylor THE ENGINEERING BUILDING With the first class in engineering in 1888 being composed of twenty-two students, the College of Engineering has an enrollment at the present time of nine hundred ninety-six. Courses in engineering were first given in the Department of Mathematics, and it was not until 1894 that the Department of Engineering became separately organized. The engineers called the old Main Building their home until 1904, the time of their move to the present Journalism Building. The Col- lege of Engineering was organized in 1922. In 1933 the engineers moved into a new, modernly equipped and spacious building across Speedway from the original Forty Acres. A total of 1,416 students have received degrees in e ngineering,- of this number 125 master ' s degrees have been conferred. Heading a faculty of thirty-two members is Dean T. U. Taylor who has been connected with the University for forty-seven years, having served as Dean for the past twenty-nine years. The aim of the College of Engineering is to train the student both on the practical and theoretical sides, so that he may obtain a job after graduation without serving an apprenticeship. Page 15

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

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

University of Texas Austin - Cactus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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