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Page 27 text:
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COLLEGE OF PHARMACY The College of Pharmacy at the University of Toledo holds a membership in the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, is recognized as an institution in good standing by the State Board of Pharmacy of Ohio and is accredited by the American Council on Pharmaceutical Education. The curriculum prepares students for employment as pharmacists Cafter passing the State Board of Pharmacyb in hospitals and drug stores, as pharmaceutical chemists for pharmaceutical manufacturers, as representatives of these companies, as employees in the manufacture of pharmaceu- ticals and for graduate work in pharmacy. There are some openings for pharmacists in the federal government in the army, navy, food and drug administration or in other de- partments. There are also a few jobs open with publishers of pharmaceutical journals. Jobs for women in the Held are increasing. The college has four well equipped laboratories, offices, a research laboratory and a dispensing laboratory all designed especially for the study of pharmacy. In the dispensary, each student has an individual desk fully equipped with apparatus and materials. Beautiful and functional displays of current materials are constructed by students to increase their familiarity with certain fields. A chapter of the international honorary pharmaceutical fraternity, Kappa Psi, is maintained on campus. The local Chapter, Beta Lambda, was organized in 1925. There is also a local woman's honorary society, Kappa Gamma, WhiCl1 WHS established in 1945. DR. CHARLES H. LARWOOD Dr. Charles H. Larwood, dean of the College of Pharmacy, was born in Arkansas. In 1925 he received the B.S. degree from the University of Oklahoma, he was awarded the M.S. degree from Oklahoma A. and M. and the Ph.D. degree from Michigan State University. He was profi-ISSOI' Of pharmacy at Ferris Institute and dean of pharm- acy at the University of Grand Rapids. Dean Larwood served in the army during the second world war. He is a member of many pro' fessional associations including Kappa Psi, So- ciety of American Bacteriologists and American Pharmacy Association. P ..,, M
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Page 26 text:
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DR. CHARLES W. FORNOFF Dr. Charles W. Fornoif, dean of the College of Law, received the B.A. degree with highest honors from the University of Illinois. He was granted the M.A. degree, the Ph.D. and the ID. degrees from the same university. Before coming to the University of Toledo, he became an associate pro- fessor of law at the University of Idaho. He received the Phi Beta Kappa key in 1921. Dean Fornoff is president of and is active in the League of Ohio Law Schools, an accrediting agency of the Supreme Court of the state of Ohio. COLLEGE OF LAW The College of Law produces not only good practicing lawyers, but also good executives in business and industry. For many students it is a good general and specialized edu- cation for other jobs. The law curriculum here is scheduled for about eight hours a semester, three nights a week and covering a period of about four years. This system permits students to do a thorough job on each course as they go along. It also permits students to have full-time jobs during the daytime. The majority of students are 25 years of age or older, are serious, mature and ambitious. The University of Toledo was one of the first law schools with students attending on a part-time basis to get tentative approval by the American Bar Association. This was done in 1939, full approval was given in 1941. The law college is a charter member of the League of Ohio Law Schools, or- ganized in 1934. The College has a carefully selected library of 18,000 volumes which is growing steadily with purchases and many gifts. The students also have access to the Toledo Law Association library of 25,000 volumes, to which they are in- vited by special action of the Association. E 'M-M fs 'J' YW, H. - W, , - 1iif '!WY
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Page 28 text:
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DR. PAUL W. STANSBURY Dr. Paul W. Stansbury, director of graduate study, is a native of Philadelphia. He received the B.S. degree from Wesleyan University, Middle- town, Conn., the A.M. degree from Ohio State University and the Ph.D. from Ohio State University. Before coming to the University of Toledo in 1927, Dr. Stansbury taught in a high school in Pippapass, Ky., at Pikeville College and Eastern Illinois State Teachers College. In 1930 he was appointed director of graduate study here and in 1945 was made head of the psychology department. GRADUATE STUDY The Graduate Division was organized in 1912 upon recom- mendation of the Board of Directors. ln June, 1913, the de- gree of master of arts was first conferred. As the increased need for graduate programs became more evident, the faculty has provided more facilities for advancement work, aca- demically sound and professionally practical, in a wide variety of fields. The Division does not strive for a large enrollment, but for a select group of well-qualified students for individual attention. There are now eighteen fields of graduate study which lead to master7s degrees: accounting, biology, chemistry, com- merce, economics, education Celementary, secondary, voca- tionalj, English, finance, foreign language, glass technology, history, management Cindustrial and personnelb, marketing, mathematics, philosophy, political science, psychology and sociology. Work on a graduate level gives the student specialization in a field of knowledge beyond the limits of the undergraduate major. The student gains a maturity in thought and attitude in his field and has a command of his field that will be evident in increased eHiciency in the professional and cultural life of the individual.
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