The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, March 13, 1935, Special Edition, Page Page Two, Image 2
Law Bi
Law Building, housing many hundre
courses. Law classes are conducted in t
Law School H
Rating 1
Only 80 Out Of. 200 Such Schools
Belonging To 'Appr
Associj
The Law School is a member of the (
Association of American Law Schools <
and is also on the list of Law Schools 1
which are "Approved" by the Amer- 1
ican Bar Association. Out of nearly i
200 degree-conferring Law Schools in ;
the United States, only about 80 (or (
less) are members of the Association (
of American Law Schools, and only
about 83 are on the list of "Approved" "
Schools of the American Bar Associa- ^
tion. t
This Law School, while requiring
only the minimum of two years sue- j
A CAR
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u 5 FOR 25c
Checker Cab Co.
" The White Cars
i
BUCK'S
BARBER SHOP
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1205 Lady Street
Just Ba?'k of Coggins'
i
Business Training
is Essential to Everyone, Particularly
College Men and
Women. Day, Night, and
Special Classes.
Draughon's
Business College
1218 Sumter Street
Telephones 5951 and 6317 >'
DUPRE
: PRINTING
!: COMPANY
Book And Job Printers
"Since 1899" Phone 7044 1
(
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j| You Will Find Here Quality a
P. H. LACHICOI
? J E W E ]
'jji 1424 Main Street
(Hjtfjt ??; >( H K)tt M.H H )( M H !un(!l?,)l UK)
CAROLINA DRY ft#
Phone 8156
"If It Can Be Cleaned, We *' ml
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"IXCLUt
WesiJbtTst
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uilding
mam
\ .
ds of volumes supplementary to law
his building exclusively.
as High
Tn Association
In America Have Distinction Of
oved' List Of Bar
ition
:essfully completed work in an ac- j
rrcdited college, for admission, does
not encourage applicants to enter the
Law School with only the minimum
requirements of two years, but urges
ill applicants to obtain their college
legrecs before commencing the study
)f law, or at any rate to complete three
years of academic work in college, heore
making application for entry ^in:o
the Law School.
Out of the 72 graduates in law during
the past three years, 52 have secured
their A. B. degrees at the time
of their graduation in law. Law has
always been considered one of the
learned professions, and at no time in
he history of our country has the need
of thoroughly trained lawyers, with
their professional training erected upon
a broad and deep foundation of a
thorough academic training, been
more needed than in this complex
machine age.
?c. s. c.?
Teachers Held
In High Esteem
By Various School Heads
School Of Education Seeks To
Enable Graduates To Surpass
Required Standards
The training of competent high
school teachers has been the major
aim of the School of Education for a
number of years. The success of its
graduates is attested by the high esteem
school superintendents hold for
the product of this important division
of the University.
The School of Education, housed in
a modern building with modern equipment,
provides courses for undergraduate
and gradute students in both
the regular session and the summer
school. Its facilities arc freely used
by students and by tlie teachers of the
state.
The University High School, operated
in the Education building,
makes possible the study and practice
of modern methods of teaching. Its
observation and demonstration features
arc open to teachers generally.
Opportunity for research and study
of educational methods and problems
is afforded by the Education library,
which contains a large collection of
professional books, pamphlets and
magazines. A rental library service
makes easily available, with little cost
to the teacher, recent discussions of
the problems and difficulties of teachers
and superintendents. The rental
list includes also books of interest to
those who like to read generally on
durational topics.
An additional library service to
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nd Style?Gifts From $1 Up
FTE & CO., Inc. 8
LERS ?
Columbia, S, C. N
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?
L CLEANING CO.
1608 Barnwell St.
The Canteen and Gamecock
Our Agents
?^
Columbia. S C
LIBERAL ARTS S
OFFERS Ml
Curricula Of Modern Colleges Ha
Recent Years To Meet N<
Must
The late Doctor Carlisle used to say
that if a farmer boy learned Greek,
even tho he went back to the farm,
he could plow a better furrow. This
statement incorporates the ideal of the
traditional liberal arts college. Mental
training is in itself good for the individual,
and will express itself beneficiently,
both in the acts of the individual,
and in his more abundant
participation in, and enjoyment of life.
One can best occupy his position in
society, when he best understands the
social organization in which he is to
take his place. Subjects, courses,
curricula have been ordered, therefore,
not with a view to immediate utilization,
but rather to giving the student
useful information about himself and
about the social and physical world
around him, and training him to make
combinative use of data in the process
of reasoning.
A slow but steady evolution has
been going on for a number of decades
in the direction of altering and adjusting
curricula to a closer correspondence
with modern conditions.
This change has shown itself in a
wider latitude for exact and social
sciences. It is also manifested in the
making of textbooks. Thirty years
ago, a typical textbook would have
questions based on the text, in which
the answer to each question would be
found. Now the questions cannot as
a rule be answered verbatim from the
text but require some powers of deduction
and reasoning in the process
of answering. In spite of these
changes, however, the liberal arts college
of today insists upon the imparting
of basic knowledge about ourselves
and about our civilization and
the ability to see the relation between
one and another set of facts.
Hence our educational system is a
tremendously conservative force in
modern life. The present relative conservatism
of America is based, more
than is generally realized, on the
breadth of education and educational
opportunity.
The school of arts and science of
the University represents the ideal of
Y's Handbook
To Come Out
Will Appear Next Month
Will Elect Editorial Board This
Week; To Print 5,000
Copies
The )".s Bird, handbook of the University
for high school graduates will
be released some time next month, instead
of during the summer months,
according to R. G. Bell, executive secretary
of the University Y. M. C. A.
A11 editorial board for the handbook
will be chosen some time this week
and it will proceed immediately in getting
out 5,000 copies. Every high
school graduate in the state will receive
a copy. In past years, only 500
copies have been printed but this year
Mr. Hell has decided that 5,000 shall
be printed.
The handbook will be without advertisements.
It will be made possible
by Columbia merchants.
A dummy has already been compiled
by Mr. Bell. The different sections
will be placed in somewhat the
following order:
Greetings from the President, Freshman
camp, Important dates, Information
about the University, As one
freshman to another (random remarks
of a freshman), How to apply for a
degree, courses offered, University
scenes, directions to freshmen, graduates
and jobs, activities, advantages
of Columbia as a school home, How
much it will cost, literary societies,
V. M. C. A., Freshman council, Carolina
Christian Science Club, Glee Club,
Carolina traditions, Can a Girl Attend?
Y. \V. C. A., Co-ed athletics, and
student athletics.
r. H. c.
teachers is the compilation of bibliographies
and the collection of material
on vital school subjects. Booklets
recently prepared include such titles
as "Cheating," "Waste of Illiteracy,"
and "Teaching of Special Classes and
Problem Children."
The curriculum of the School of
Education is designed to prepare intelligent
young men and women with
the teaching personality for effective
service in the schoolroom. Practice
teaching is an integral part of the program
of instruction.
Of especial interest to Education
I
Davis
Davis College which contains th<
Romance Languages Departments of tl
Study Of Moth
Basic L
Two Years Of English Required ]
Department Is Ls
Univ<
The study of the mother tongue
both as a language and the literature of
two great nations is basic in the curriculum
of the College of Arts and
Sciences, two years being required for
all academic degrees. The department
of English is naturally the largest in
the University, with an enrollment this
year of 551 young men and 352 young
women, a total of 903 students.
The English staff consists of twelve
experienced instructors, two of whom
arc women. Six hold the Ph. D. degree,
and three others have completed
the residence requirements for it. One,
the venerable Doctor Currell, for
many years professor at Washington
and Lee, and later president of the
University of South Carolina, has an
honorary L. L. D., and Professors
Wauchope, head of the department,
and Babcock possess Litt. D. S. Doctor
Smith is dean of the Graduate
School and Doctor Elliot is dean of
Women. Doctor Babcock is Director
of University Extcntion. Mr. Epting
and Mr. Brown are members of the
legislature. These twelve men and
women hold degrees from Oxford,
Harvard, Yale, Chicago, Washington
and Lee, Davidson, Randolph-Macon,
and other institutions. They have
been members of the summer quarter
faculties of Vitginis, Peabody, LelandStanford,
etc., and have published several
hundred books, monographs, bulletins,
and book reviews.
The Department offers five courses
for freshmen and sophomores in written
and spoken English, and survey
classes in American and British literaAUSE
:RESHES
^wyMI bett
lilis# *or e
> c A - c o L A IS EVE RY
BE IN YOUR FAMILY
TTLING iff
JSr 5=>V * ? I
I l Coca-Colt
Af 00 01
^^sBJ? ing wWh J
'CHOOL
WTAL TRAINING
is Been Slowly Changing- During
bw Conditions Graduates
Face
the traditional liberal arts college, as
adapted by slow changes to modern
conditions. It is the gateway to all
learned professions. It is generally
conceded that the more training in the
liberal arts a student can get, the better
doctor, lawyer, minister, teacher "lie
will be?for that matter, the better
merchant, farmer, business man, engineer,
artist, etc., and certainly the
better citizen.
Economic pressure has played its
part in the development of curricula.
Subject matter of courses has been
therefore adjusted as far as possible
to the requirements of special training.
The student preparing for the
practice of medicine is given the scientific
and linguistic training best suited
to his future needs. So with the
courses leading to the study of commerce,
education, engineering, journalism,
law, pharmacy, all of which
courses in the University of South
Carolina represent a basic training in
non-technical, cultural subjects such as
mathematics, English, foreign languages,
literature, history, exact and social
sciences, art, etc., plus technical
and specialized training in these various
fields.
The typical Freshman is not certain
in his own mind whether or not he
wants to enter into any special field
of training during his college course.
He encounters problems of various
kinds on which lie would willingly
seek advice. To meet this condition
the University has a system of counseling
by which each Freshman is assigned
to some member of the faculty.
He is here encouraged to make known
all of his difficulties, and is aided in
fitting himself into his environment
and in maknig his choices and adjustments.
In the higher classes this
function is performed by the major
professor; that is, by the professor
under whom the student does his most
intensive work. Not only in the school
of arts and science, but throughout
all schools and departments of the institution,
the closest liaison between
the instructor and student is cultivated.
?T?
students and graduates is the Bureau
of Appointments, an employment service
operated by the School of Education
to furnish confidential information
to school superintendents in
search of good teachers. The methods
of the bureau have met with the approval
of superintendents and have
produced excellent results for graduates.
THE P
THAT REF
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IT OUGHT TO
COLUMBIA COCA-COLA BO
COMPANY
???*otfu
College "
" English, History, Philosophy, and
ie University.
er Tongue
n Curriculum
For Degree In Arts And Scienceirgest
Of Any At '
)rsity
ture. Juniors and seniors have a
choicc of twenty-three courses covering
the English language, AngloSaxon,
the short story, drama, novel
Shakespeare, Chaucer, literary criticism,
Southern literature, South Carolina
literature, and teaching of English
in high school.
Twelve courses arc offered to graduate
students pursuing work for. the
M. A. and Ph. D. degrees, and involves
research in Old English
Gothic, drama, novel, ballads, romanticism,
contemporary poetry, essays,
Brown,ng and the great epics of
world literature.
Sixty-five under graduates arc majoring
in English this year. They are
required to take one course in the
language, and from twelve to eighteen
electives, in addition to the twelve
hours laid down to freshmen and
sophomores. Fifteen graduates are
candidates for the higher degrees, one
of whom expects to come up for the
Doctorate 111 June. Master of Arts
students take four courses, one of
which may he selected from some
other department such as Education,
Sociology, Philosophy, English Bible,
or languages, with thesis and oral examination.
For those desiring instruction
in Dramatic Art and Play
roduction, an arrangement has been
made with the accomplished director
of the Town Theatre, Belford Forrest,
a play right of national distinction.
Three handsome gold medals, one
of the value of $r,0, arc awarded annually
under the direction of the English
Department for literary productions
of merit.
" =na
&
is a /
er break
everybody
/
j The seat of the trouble, when
you let yourself get wrought up
about small matters/ usually is
that you've sagged below par.
Pausel Smack your lips instead
and put yourself back into
shape with an ice-cold CocaCola.
Winter or Summer this pure
drink of natural flavors helps you
be-yourself ? keeps you feeling
fit for what's ahead.
place else ?
refrigerator
ie ?ur? It |? pure and wholMoe*.
11? a pur* drink ?# natural product*
rttfldol flavor or coloring. Comply
>ure food laws all over lt?e wodd.