In the ten years since Enryō founded the school he had met with the two disasters of storm and fire, but he remained steadfast in his goal of developing the Philosophy Academy from a private school into a university. And, despite shouldering many responsibilites, he contin-ued to give lectures throughout Japan. Philosophy Academy instruc-tor KANAE Gikyō spoke on Enryō’s management of the school. or construct new buildings, and he would never borrow any before taking a step. There were some things that were necessary in order to turn the pri-vate school into a university. The first of these was deferring military conscription. In order for the school to obtain permission to postpone conscription for cur-rently-enrolled students it needed official authorization. The Philos-ophy Academy obtained the privilege of deferring conscription in 1900 but before this in 1889 the following schools obtained authori-zation: Tokyo Vocational College (today’s Waseda University), Meiji Law School (Meiji University), Specialized Training School (Senshu University), Japanese and French Law School (Hosei University), and Japan Law School (Nihon University). Following in succession were Keiō Academy (Keio University) and Society of Shared Aspirations V. The Philosophy Academy Era (3) Conscription Deferment and the Issuance of Teacher Certification He would only use the donations he collected to purchase land money. It was always his policy to carefully check his footing 117
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