Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN)

 - Class of 1940

Page 26 of 190

 

Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 26 of 190
Page 26 of 190



Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 25
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Page 26 text:

JOHN W. MORLAND Dean It's a small school, bute-J It's the quality and not the quantity that counts, as the saying goes, and the School of Law of Valparaiso University is not to be underestimated because of its small enroll- ment. 1f the alumni of a school are the best evidence of the character of work it is doing, the graduates of the V. U. law school have furnished ample evidence of the worth of the school and the excellent training it gives its students. For years the percentage of graduates passing the bar examinations has compared favorably to that of any large law school in the country, and it is generally greater than that of many state law schools. SCHOOL OF LAW VIRGIL E. BERRY Professor of Law

Page 25 text:

ful that it was soon decided to establish pharmacy as a regular department. The first class of sixteen students was graduated in the summer of I893. The course was then one of fifty weeks' duration, and practically no previous educational requirements were necessary for enrollment. In I894 Mr. J. N. Roe took over the teach- ing of the pharmacy courses and later became Dean of the College. Under Dean Roe the College grew, and soon new quarters were needed. Science Hall was erected in I900 to become a home of pharmacy, chemistry, and physics. During this period the enrollment went as high as I54 students with a graduat- ing class of 85. In I906 a two-year course of 72 weeks and a threevyear course of I08 weeks were inaugurated to give graduates a Bachelor of Science degree. An additional year of post-graduate work was offered. En- trance requirements for the under-graduate work consisted only of a certificate indicating a minimum of two years of attendance in high school. After I9I5 a four-year high school degree was required for entrance. In I9II the Valparaiso Pharmaceutical Association was organized; this group held regular meetings, sponsored guest speakers prominent in pharmacy and medicine, and annuaIIy arranged a field trip to one of the larger Pharmaceutical Manufacturing com- panies. This group was in continuous exis- tence untiI school closed last spring. In I920 Dr. Hugh C. MuIdoon became Dean of the College of Pharmacy. Through his efforts the College was accredited by the American As- sociation of CoIIeges and Pharmacy in I925. Since I930 a four-year course granting the degree of Bachelor of Science has been of- fered. State Pharmacy board requirements have been steadily becoming more stringent, and four years of pharmacy courses were then required for graduation. Dean Fredrick V. Lofgren came to VaIpo in I929, and Dr. A. A. Harwood arrived at about the same time. Early in I939, Dean Lofgren, forced to take a leave of absence because of an infection in his ear, following a lingering attack of influenza, Dr. Harwood was appointed acting Dean, and Mr. R. E. Williamson, recently graduated from Purdue University, took over Dr. Lofgren's classes. On November 29, I938, Acting President W. G. Friedrich announced that, by resolution of the board of directors, the College of ABRAHAM SLESSOR Pharmacy was to be discontinued, as soon as the class of I940 had graduated. Freshman and sophomore students then enroIIed were to be transferred to Purdue. This step was believed necessary because pharmacy require- ments were continually being increased, while the Pharmacy enrollment was steadily de- creasing. Dr. Harwood accepted a position at the In- dianapolis College of Pharmacy before the beginning of the current school year. Dean Lofgren had planned to return and had reestablished his residence in Valparaiso. Only a short time previous to registration, how- ever, he was given a release to accept a posi- tion in the College of Pharmacy of the University of Florida, one of the largest and best known pharmacy schools in the country. A new pharmacy instructor came to VaIpo this year. Dr. A. SIessor received his degree at Purdue in June, I939. Dr. Fred Kaufman is now acting Dean. Five seniors are i ' their degrees this year. They are RoIan bach, Harold Eddy, James Doty, and Louis Jacobs. SmaII classes, friendly coopera . strong determination to pass l -tiva'W-ise e examinations have characte ifd-thHest-i year. As seniors, we regret thi losing of the I I school, but feel that this Ias year has been our best. We wistfuIIy hope Hat VaIpo will miss her friendly Pharmics.e UIS JACOBS. Page Twenty-one



Page 27 text:

MARSHALL J. JOX LOUIS ALBERT WEHING Instructor in Law Instructor in Law Modern American law is a composite of the common law and legislative and consti- tutional enactments. This law is the fruit of hundreds of years of development, in England and later in America, toward the establish- ment of a system of law which would ade- quately protect the rights, powers, privileges, and immunities of individuals, and suppress personal and public wrongs. The School of Law seeks to acquaint its students with the principles and rules that have thus been established, attempting, meanwhile, not to overlook the many outstanding local peculiari- ties of the law as it exists in the various states of the United States in the federal jurisdiction. A practical balance between theory and practice is attained by training the student in the operative functions such as drawing legal papers, pleading, and trial practice, as well as by discipline in the methods of legal reasoning and analysis. A practice court is maintained, in which the student must take all the steps required in the preparation and trial of a case. Professional interest of the students is stimulated through lectures by practicing attorneys and judges. The Valparaiso School of Law is fully approved by the American Bar Association; its degree of Bachelor of Laws is approved by the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York; and it is a mem- ber of the Association of American Law Schools, an organization of approximately 88 law schools in the United States and Canada. Dean John W. Morland has been head of the School of Law since 1928. He came to Valparaiso in l925. In his office one finds many things: lots of fountain pens, all sizes, colors, and shapes; colored inks, espe cially green and purple; pictures of his family, per- haps a couple of clocks and some tools: all these besides stacks of books and papers. LAW Ll BRARY

Suggestions in the Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) collection:

Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Valparaiso University - Beacon / Record Yearbook (Valparaiso, IN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943


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