University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO)

 - Class of 1930

Page 21 of 502

 

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 21 of 502
Page 21 of 502



University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE OFFICERS Jack Powell . Gene Baim . Margaret Morgan Robert Ellis F. M.TlSDEL . President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Dean THE hub of the various professional schools in the University is the College of Arts and Science which draws most of the students who enter Missouri as freshmen. Preliminary training in this school is necessary for the entrance to the schools of Law, Medicine, Education, Journalism, and Business and Public Administration. This prepara- tory work is one of the main purposes of the college. To students with the requisite ability and energy it offers a liberal education in the arts and sciences as well as giving them an intelligent familiarity with modern civilization. The object of the school is to prepare its students for service in the world and to give them resources that make for success and happiness. The various departments give training for careers in Chemistry, Sociology, Literature, or any of the allied subjects. They train for leadership in any of the lines that may be followed after a student leaves school. The resources of the college are very broad and if a person takes advantage of them, he has an outlook on life that will help him no matter where he takes up his life work. Our civilization is rapidly becoming more and more complex and the person who has a diversified knowledge and is able to put it to practical use is quickly coming into his own. Many business men prefer to hire an unspecialized college graduate, who is capable of thinking and who can be trained after he leaves school. The College of Arts and Sciences turns out many such students each year, who find their posi- tion in the world of afTairs. Page 17

Page 20 text:

COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary . . Treasurer Chaplain ' T HE College of Agriculture is one of the best known schools of its ■ kind in the United States. Its enrollment is from all parts of the country and it has done a great deal to improve the knowledge and the efficiency of the farmers, particularly those in the Mississippi Valley. The object of its in- struction is to train men and women for success in the vocation of agriculture. It aims to educate farmers, farm managers, fruit growers, dairymen, poultrymen, and stockmen. One of the features of the College is the Experiment Station, established in 1887 for investigation in agriculture, and it is able to diffuse this research by means of the extension service. Its courses comprise all phases of rural education, from Practical Agriculture to Rural Journalism. The Women ' s Division of the school is taken up largely with the Home Economics Department which pre- pares women for positions as food or clothing specialists. It has trained many Hospital Dietitians, and laboratory research workers who have found a welcome field open. There are several short courses offered during periods of the year which draw a number of progressive farmers who wish to increase the value of their farms. They are practical, and highly specialized and come at times when actual farm work is rather slack. Pate 16



Page 22 text:

SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION . President Vice-President . Secretary Treasurer while to submit themselves to such a rigorous disci- pline preparatory to their life work. Two principal facts in my judgment have wrought this change. The first is the reaction from the frontier spirit which was a spirit of inde- pendence and self-sufificiency. The material conditions under which the frontiersman labored further developed this spirit in him. He had to be a jack-of-all-trades. He was proud of the ability he displayed, and justly so. The second factor is the tremendously complicated development in modern times of our whole social system in which the jack-of-all-trades has little if any place. It is no longer a question of doing a passably workmanlike job. Society of the twentieth century demands specialized training and scientific perfection, as well as techni- cal skill, and this not only in the fields of medicine and engineering, but in law, education, journalism, agriculture, business, and government. Therefore, more thorough preparation is required and the University has established these provisions to provide the types of training found necessary. Page IS

Suggestions in the University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) collection:

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

University of Missouri - Savitar Yearbook (Columbia, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933


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