University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID)

 - Class of 1935

Page 26 of 360

 

University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 26 of 360
Page 26 of 360



University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 25
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University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 27
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Page 26 text:

School of Forestry Rrowaro E, McArove Since 1909 the students of Idaho have se- cured adequate preparation in forestry, and have entered the lumbering industry prepared for positions of leadership. The school is with- in a short distance of dense forests and some of the largest sawmills and logging camps in the United States. Excursions are made at all seasons of the year to sawmills, logging camps and various forests in order that practical field work in all branches of the science may be had. The University has approximately 10,000 acres of experimental forest land, complete arboretum and nursery, and well- equipped laboratories for instruction in all branches of forestry. Foresters at Idaho are allowed to choose either General Forestry, Logging Engineering, or Range Management. Employment of the nineteen graduates prom- ises to be good, many of the men going direct- ly into the Forest Service, and others entering the service of private firms. Dean Richard E. McArdle, installed Dean of the School of Forestry in September, 1934, comes to us with his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. from the University of Michigan. Since 1924 he has been with the Forest Service, recently as Associate Silviculturist of the Pacific Northwest Forest Experiment Station at Portland, Oregon. Junior College Tuomas Stone Kerr Ir 1s the aim of the Junior College to offer the new student two years of general and cultural subjects, arranged so that he will have a good preparation for any field of advanced study which he may decide to enter, and planned to give him an adequate basis for making an intelligent selection of a profession or vocation. The increasing de- pendence being placed by the average stu- dent in the services and the opportunities for consultation and advice offered by the Junior College is shown by the increase in enrollment of over forty-five per cent over the figure of last year. The total enrollment of six hundred and thirteen includes all freshmen and sopho- mores who will enter the School of Business Administration and the College of Letters and Science. Thomas Stone Kerr, Dean of the Junior College, was superintendent of schools at Bonners F ‘erry before coming here in 1924, and since that time has written a book on business law which is now being used as a college text. Dean Kerr won his B.A. degree in Political Science at Indiana Univer- sity, and his LL.B. from the University of Michigan. His time in Moscow has been well spent, for he has guided thousands of stu- dents through their first years, and was presi- dent of the Moscow Chamber of Commerce. Page 22

Page 25 text:

School of Hducation James Franxuin Messencer Ar tHE time the School of Education was first established, only two superintendents of Idaho’s schools had been graduated from the University of Idaho; at the present time nearly all superintendents are graduates of the University. The School of Education keeps in intimate contact with every school in the state, and offers courses fitted to the needs of the schools. During the summer session the School of Education is nearly as busy as it is during the regular session, since a state law requires that all persons who teach in Idaho shall have spent one session in residence at an Idaho college or university. Enrollment during the summer of 1934 was nearly six hundred, and will probably show another great increase during 1935 James Branklin Messenger, Dean of the School of Education and Director of the Sum- mer Session, received his A.B. from the Uni- versity of Kansas, his A.M. from Harvard, and his Ph.D. from Columbia. After his graduation he taught successively in the University of New Mexico, Harvard Univer- sity, Columbia, Virginia State Teachers’ Col- lege, and the University of Vermont. Since 1920 he has been affiliated with the Univer- sity of Idaho, and has written considerable work on the history of education. Page 21 College of Engineering Ivan Cuances Crawrorp SeEPTEMBER, 1934, brought an increase of a hundred per cent in the enrollment of the freshmen in the College of Engineering; a thirty per cent increase in the enrollment of the whole college brings the total to three hundred and twenty-six. The present period of building and development offers consider- able encouragement to the forty men who will be graduated in civil, electrical, chemical, mechanical, and agricultural engineering this spring. Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the College of Engineering has had a most colorful and interesting career. After taking his degree from Colorado, he was graduated from the War College at Washington, D.C., and dur- ing the World War completed the course of training at the Army School of the Line, at Langres, France. He was chief of the Building Section of the Belgian Mission, and finally a member of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace. At present Dean Crawford is one of the University’s best-known men; in state circles he is known as the State Engineer for the Federal Public Works Administration; in national circles he is known as one of the directors of the American Society of Civil KE ingineers, and one of a committee of seven to accredit engineering schools throughout the United States.



Page 27 text:

College of Law Penpteton Howarp For six successive years the College of Law has shown substantial increases, and fifty- three students are now registered in the law curriculum. In addition, many more are tak- ing the combined Arts-Law six-year course, and still others are combining Business and Law in a six-year curriculum. Pendleton Howard, newly-installed Dean of the College of Law, received his LL.B. from the University of Texas, his A.B., A.M., and Ph.D. in Public Law and Jurisprudence from Columbia University. Since 192g he has served on the staff of the University of Idaho, and has written a text, “Criminal Justice in England,” published in 1931. In December, 1934, Dean Howard, with Professors Harding and Pittman, attended the thirty-second meeting of the Association of American Law Schools in Chicago. Dean Howard spoke on the subject, “What, if any- thing, should be done by the law schosts to acquaint law students with the so-called New Deal legislation and its workings?’ While at Northwestern U Iniversity last year as visiting profes ssor of law, Dean Howard gave a course in which acts of the New Deal Congress, in- cluding the NRA, the Banking Act, the Se- curities Act, and the Tennessee Valley Au- thority were studied. Page 23 College of Letters and Science Joux Axton Kostatex THe CoLtece or Letrers AND SCIENCE, which includes the junior and senior years of the four-year curriculum, offers service to those who desire a non-professional training, those laying a broad foundation for profes- sional studies, and those desiring technical training in professional or vocational curric- ula for which special schools or colleges have not been established. Doctors and chemists, physicists, scientists, journalists, and many others receive their training in the College of Letters and Science. John Anton Kostalek, Dean of the College of Letters and Science, received his B.A. from the University of Illinois. From 1912 to 1918 he served as Research Chemist for the Good- rich Rubber C ompany, and in igi8 he turned his technical training to patriotic use in the Chemical Warfare Division of the Ubited States Army. In 1g1g Doctor Kostalek en- tered the Chemistry Department of the Uni- versity; since that time he has risen to the position of dean of his college, carrying with him all of the accuracy and thoroughness of manner which he acquired in his years of scientific experience. He was President of the Northwest Science Association during 1930, and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi.

Suggestions in the University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) collection:

University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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