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Page 29 text:
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1 SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM SCHOOL OFFICERS Rodney Hull President Lois Mitchell Vice-President Margaret Davidson Secretary- Treasurer JOURNALISM is a pro- Jl fession that leads — and should be even more so. It leads by furnishing light that we call news and interpreting the light through editoria izing. That it may furnish more light and do larger public service, those who engage upon this fascinating and important profession need the cultivation of mind, the sureness of judgment, the skill of technique, the stimu- lation of vision, which may best be obtained through adequate professional educa- tion in preparation for jour- nalism. This is the WHY of the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri. In 1929 the School will complete its twenty-first year. Graduates and former students are to be found on every continent, in every American state, and in practically every country in the world, engaged in some phase of journalism, as editors, publishers and owners of news- papers, reporters, advertising representatives, artists, correspondents, copy readers, executives, special staff and feature writers, editors of special departments, and in every other branch of the profession of journalism. p jQ 3::x AjXJlS2-Cfii..i. - Jay H. Neff Hall Page 21
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Page 28 text:
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W,1 I -i ! GRADUATE SCHOOL SCHOOL OFFICERS Willis Bray President EVERETTE C. BUCKNER Vice-President Winifred Weatherman Secretary-Treasurer THE watchword of our Graduate School, as of any graduate school, should be research — original investi- gations in the various fields of art, science, and literature. Even before our Graduate School was organized with a separate faculty in 1910- 1 9 11 , it had already gained so conspicuous a place of leader- ship in pushing forward the bounds of knowledge through the researches of its faculty and of its students, that it was invited in 1907 to be- come a member of the Asso- ciation of American Universities, which sets the standards for graduate work in all the universities of America. The Graduate Bulletin contains each year a list of from 1 50 to 200 works of scholarship published by the members of the various departments of the University during the preceding academic year. To encourage the production of leaders in scholar- ship, the University of Missouri offers each year a limited number of fellowships, bearing each an annual stipend of $600, and of scholarships, bearing each an annual stipend of $300, to young men and young women, college gradu- ates, of the highest scholarly ability and promise of future service, irrespective of the branch of knowledge that they wish to pursue. Applications for these must be in the hands of the dean by the first of March in order to receive consideration for award for the following academic year. The Columns Page 20
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Page 30 text:
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■ ] tl i U Is J SCHOOL OF LAW SCHOOL OFFICERS Randall Kitt President James H. Hall Vice-President Herbert Records Secretary-Treasurer .1 ' ip HE Law School was es- »k 1 tablished in 1872. At |fl that time it had a faculty HA composed of three men and HH there were five members of Hl the first graduating class. Hl Today the School occupies nV its own new fire-proof build- Hv ing, Lee H. Tate Hall. It has a faculty of seven full- time men and one part-time instructor. The student body numbers one hundred and forty-nine, of whom thirty-nine are Seniors. This is the largest graduating class since before the war. The library is the laboratory of a law school, and we are justly proud of ours. We have a collection of some twenty- nine thousand volumes and it is planned to add sub- stantially to this number during the coming year. Two years of college work are required of all students before they are eligible for admission to the School, and it is hoped that before very long conditions will make it possible to require three years as a prerequisite. Many students, realizing the value of such work, voluntarily take this extra year. A student should be as mature as possible to study law. HI Lee H. Tate Hall Page ZZ
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