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Show Sterling M. McMurrin Dean of the Graduate School Graduate School A graduate school has unique demands and challenges, and it must meet them in unique ways. The students it accepts have completed four years of college in the upper fourth of their classes and have demonstrated an eagerness to pursue a subject to full comprehension. The graduate school must foster advanced intellectual development in these students and successfully stimulate them to the significant contributions to knowledge of which they are capable. The Graduate School at the University, with esteemed educator Sterling AA. McMurrin in his first year as dean, has competently fulfilled its responsibility on this campus. Seventeen distinguished members of the faculty, a broad program including research, legal theory and actual courtroom experience, and 300 carefully selected students constitute the College of Law in 1967 Increased selectivity and additions to the faculty guarantee small classes and plentiful personal interchange between a student and his teacher. The well-stocked Law Library presents him with sufficient resources to attack almost any legal issue that might arise. The college strives to equip its students with the skills to practice law successfully and to promote their scholarly research in fields contributing to law enforcement and the realization of justice. Samuel D. Thurman Dean of the College of Law L aw 41 |