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Page 30 text:
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H . f = 5rn ?w , C: Xgl-::g - Hi 9i I i JUSTUS F. SOULE, A. M. Dean of the College of Liberal Arts College of Liberal Arts The principal objective of the College of Liberal Arts is the enlargement of the student ' s powers and of his understanding of the world ; to give him an intellectual grasp on human experience. It is not a mere collection of departments grouped for convenience and offering a wide range of courses that are mainly, but not exclusively, theoretical. It is not chiefly a service institution furnishing fundamental courses to be built upon in other schools, and making concessions also to the needs of the many for a wide variety of pre-occupational training. It is not primarily seeking to prepare men and women for research in the tech- nical sense, but it does seek to equip them with that broadness of vision and that depth of discernment that will enaljle them, as opportunity offers, to assume leader- ship in human affairs, and that will inspire them with the desire to advance knowl- edge. It agrees to three propositions : First, a certain amount of specialization is really essential in a liberal education in order not to sacrifice depth to breadth. Second, a certain amount of specialization may properly, though not necessar- ily, be determined by a vocational motive, but such studies should be restricted to a fourth or less of the student ' s time, in order that he may not lose sight of the prin- cipal end of liberal education, that is enlargement of his powers and of his under- standing of the world for its own sake. Third, specialized studies determined by a vocational motive should be taken, if at all, at the latter end of the arts cvtrriculum in order to insure sufficient prelimi- nary grounding in principles and an approach to such subjects in a spirit that is scientific, rather than merely utilitarian. I i):i -li . -.:-:: :£ : :S :Si :: 3
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Page 31 text:
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:-m ' ' p M r-?: NT ; :(TS :: - -: - ; .v 4 = 2rn G SSESSS n Department of Botany Ave;n Nelson, A. M., Ph. D., President Emeritus; Head of the Department of Botany. Edwin B. Payson, M. A., Ph. D., Associate Professor of Botany. Department of Chemistry P. T. Miller, M. A., Head of the Department of Chemistry. Frank E. Hepner,, M. S., Associate Professor. Ernest R. Schierz, Ph. D., Assistant Professor. L. E. Walter, M. S., Instructor in Chemistry.
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