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Challenging the Land-Grant Mission; Cornell's Class of 1939, Part II

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Abstract

The second story in a series about Cornell's Class of 1939 which was admitted in 1935 during the Depression and was at variance with the traditional land-grant culture and priorities of the era. Interviews with remaining class members provide an insight into one of the great transition periods in veterinary medicine supported by the land-grant mission. The class members were older, more urban, and better educated than the college preferred at the time. It also was a very diverse class, with three women, an African-American man, eight Jewish students, and one Chinese man. Part II describes how the initial employment opportunities for the graduates also challenged the land-grant mission.

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2013-12-19

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Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine

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History of Veterinary Medicine; Cornell University; Great Depression; Land-Grant University; Beckley, Elizabeth (Gundlach); O’Connor, Patricia (Halloran); von Decken-Luers, Rikki; Bell, William Bryan; Fagan, Raymond; Ferber, Robert; Potter, Lyndon Wainwright; Sasmore, Dan; Skelton, Daniel; Sunderville, Edwin Joseph

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