Ohio archæological and historical quarterly . five buildings on the campus. Now there are there was a faculty of twenty-two, now there are sixty-seven. Then there was a yearly enrollment of four hundredstudents, now there is one of fifteen hundred. The wholeamount expended by the state in the way of permanent im-provements and maintenancein this period is over a mil-lion an 1 a quarter dollars. The coming of the StateNormal College to the OhioUniversity was a distinctgain to the opinions may ex-ist as to the placing of aprofessional school forteachers alongside


Ohio archæological and historical quarterly . five buildings on the campus. Now there are there was a faculty of twenty-two, now there are sixty-seven. Then there was a yearly enrollment of four hundredstudents, now there is one of fifteen hundred. The wholeamount expended by the state in the way of permanent im-provements and maintenancein this period is over a mil-lion an 1 a quarter dollars. The coming of the StateNormal College to the OhioUniversity was a distinctgain to the opinions may ex-ist as to the placing of aprofessional school forteachers alongside of aLiberal Arts College, thereis but one, when the experi-ence of Ohio Universityalong this line is idea that a Normal Col-lege deteriorates a LiberalArts College has been ex-ploded at Athens. There isno more reason why thesetwo colleges can not be co-ordinate than there is to say that a law school or agriculturalcollege can not be connected within the same university. The Normal College of Ohio University was established bv. President, Rev. Isaac Crook. 444 Ohio Arch, and Hist. Society Publications. statute March 12, 1902. The state levies by taxation one andone-half one hundredths of one mill upon every dollar of taxableproperty of the state for its support. This yields about thirty-three thousand dollars annually. The law that has meant moreto the Ohio University is the one passed April 1906, in whichthe State of Ohio, outlined its policy regarding the placed it among the wards of the state and thus retrieved it-self for the years of neglect. No friend of the old college hasany reason to complain of the recent action of the state. Thestate as trustee is doing well by its ward and the college is doingwell by the people of the state. Today its work is more to what its founders wished it to be than ever before. Itsfield of usefulness is found in its College of Liberal Arts, theState Normal College, the College of Music, the School of


Size: 1291px × 1936px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1800, booksubjectarchaeology, booksubjecthistory