THE NEW YORK JOURNAL OF PHARMACY 



REPORTERS 



J. Cairoli. '15. 



B. E. Graystone, '15. 

 J. J. Rampulla, '15. 



Jt ^ 



Edited by Leo 

 Miss M. A. O'Connor, M. A. Associate 



WORDS OF WELCOME FROM 

 THE FACULTY. 



Beginning the year with a record reg- 

 istration, C. U. C. P. opens its doors to 

 admit hundreds of new students, who 

 coming for the first time to the College, 

 are eager and ready to learn of what 

 Columbia can give them and what they 

 can give her. 



The Dean, the Professors of Phar- 

 macy and Chemistry in the letters ap- 

 pended express the sentiment of the re- 

 mainder of the faculty in extending a 

 hand in welcome to the incoming classes: 



To THE Students : 



As the oldest active member of the 

 Faculty, I have lived to see many and 

 profound changes in the College ; in its 

 organization, management and finances, 

 as well as in its student body and the 

 training which they here undergo. In 

 almost all respects, the conditions are 

 marvellously improved. Twenty-five 

 years ago, and to a still greater extent in 

 the earlier periods, the equipment of the 

 College was very inadequate and the 

 methods of instruction necessarily the 

 same. Now. there is no place in the 

 world where the pharmacy student re- 



REPORTERS 



Miss V. Kleppner, '17. 

 H. A. Cohen. '17. 

 W. H. Levitt, '16. 



RooN, Ph. Ch 



Editors: Lewis N. Brown, Ph. Ch. 



ceives greater or more practical assist- 

 ance in his efforts to gain knowdedge and 

 training. . At that time there were numer- 

 ous fake schools which were unrestrained 

 in their efforts to entice the student away 

 to the mere gaining of an unearned 

 diploma. Now such schools are very few 

 and they are obliged to struggle against 

 ])oth professional and legal condemna- 



DR. H. H. RUSBY, Dean 



tion and restraint. Then there was lack 

 of co-operation and often of harmony, 

 in College membership, Board manage- 

 ment, or educational administration. 

 Xow everyone is interested in promoting 

 the highest welfare of the College, with 

 all selfish considerations trodden under 

 foot. The greatest change of all has 



