The NebrasI Official Summer Session Newspaper. FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1933. LINCOLN NEB. VOLUME IV, NO. 1. t A J. J- if I I ! I s I . SPECIAL LECTURERS AND TEACHERS WILL SUPPLEMENT STAFF Thirteen Nationally Known Educators Are Guest Instructors. Supplementing the regular uni versity teaching staff for the sum mer session are thirteen men and women of national prominence in the educational field who have been invited to offer courses in specialized field or to supplement the regular work by special lec tures. Dr. Frederick M. Hunter, Chan cellor of the University of Denver one of the guest lecturers, is ar alumnus of the University. He ia former superintendent of the Lin coin schools and of Oakland, Calif. He is a former president of the National Educational association and for a number of years has been instructor in the summer ses sions of Columbia and the Univer sity of California. Dr. Hunter, who was a Corn- husker football player while in school here, visited Lincoln twice this year. Last fall he attended tne installation of Alpha Theta Chi. local fraternity of whih he was a member, into Chi Phi national fraternity. This spring he ad dressed the annual Honors convo cation here. Other truest instructors and lec turers for the summer are: Frank J. Bruno, chairman of the department of social work at Washington university, St Louis, who is president of the National Conference of Social Work. He is (Continued en Page S.) Tennis, Dancing and Playground Offered Classes in tennis, folk dancing and playground will be offered during the summer session by the department of women's physical education. Tennis classes will be held at f, 8 and 9 o'clock during the short session only. Folk dancing at 11 'clock and playground at 10 'clock will be held throughout the nine weeks' session. OFFICIAL BULLETIN. SUMMER CALENDAR. June Friday Registration. June 10 Saturday Registration until noon. June IS Monday Classes begin. June 11 Monday Registration for Parent-Teachers association. Teachers college, room SOS. June 17 Saturday Graduate registration closes. July 4 Tuesday Intermtasfcm. Juty 21 Friday Cloae of abort session. Aug. 4 Friday Cloae of long session. REGISTRATION Registration for the Summer Session will be held Friday, June 9. from 8 to 12 and 2 to 5 and Saturday, June 10, from 8 to 12, in the University Coliseum at Thirteenth and Vine Streets. An additional fee of $3 will be charged student registering after the regular registration days and a fee of SI for each additional week after classes have begun. Graduate students register until June 17 without additional charge. Students registering after June 16 may do so only with the written permission of Instructors and of the director of the Summer Session. No registrations will be accepted for credit after June 26. The following gives the number of hours for which a student may register during the Summer Session: Long session, 9 hours; short session, 6 hours. v A student will be permitted to select courses from both the long and the short session provided the total number of recitation hours for which he registers does not exceed eighteen per week, three hours of laboratory being equivalent to one recitation hour. CREDIT. Student may carry a maximum of nine hours of college work during Hie long session, or six hours during the short session. All courses in the Summer Session carry college credit and may be changed to entrance credit on the basis of one entrance unit for two three-hour courses. Courses offered la the Teachers College High School give entrance credit only. GRADUATE WORK. All graduate student must submit their credits to the office of the Sn of the Graduate College for evaluation before registering. Dr. Cliff 8. k i i . m . . u4i. .-J mi rw If C RimuHv for . - N ation graduates, will he aovlsors. I Chancellor Point Advantages Offered In Summer Session Planned to meet the con stantly changing requirements in the field of education, the University of Nebraska sum mer session for which registra tion started today affords an excellent opportunity for edu cational advancement. Supplementing our regular faculty, we have added about twenty men and women of equal caliber who will give stu dents the benefit of their expe rience. All the regular facili ties of our libraries, labora tories, and classroom buildings are at the disposal of our sum mer students. I hope that the several thou sand young men and young wo men who have come to the Uni versity of Nebraska for this summer session will take ad vantage of these facilities and will leave the campus at the end of the session better quali fied to meet their several prob lems. E. A. BURNETT, Chancellor. BULLETIN DESCRIBES EXTENSION DIVISION C.nrrvsnondence Course Study Open in 25 Departments. The university print shop has just completed the printing of 5.000 copies of the new 1933 cor resoondence study bulletin, pub lished by the university extension division. The new Duneun usus aUasm AiiroAa In twentv-five dif- ferent departments of study which are available for correspondence instruction. Th iiHn noints out that since this type of instruction has been offered by the university m w brasfca, 6,815 students have com nfetAd courses carrying 32,086 hmira A total of 2.381 per sons were enrolled with the exten sion division during the year 1932 33. Copies of the bulletin may be had without charge by calling at the extension division on the sec ond floor of Former Museum building. The extension division is co-operating with the summer school session by offering work to com plete courses carried In the short session for an additional hour credit. Moritz Greets Students; Urges Reading Nebraskan Announcements Greetings to Summer 8ession Students: The university extends to you a most cordial welcome ith the assurance that every effort will be made to make your stay during the summer session both pleasant and profitable. It is most com mendable that during this pe riod of reconstruction your foith in the need for educa tional growth for professional advancement has not been im paired. Our responsibility to re-establish public faith in an edu cational philosophy which will meet the needs of our present changing social order and will exert a positive influence upon those fundamental principles essential to good government, challenges our best efforts and attention. Let us accept this challenge with courage and a firm belief that both our so cial and economic problems can be solved only by the preservation of our system of public education. As part of our program for the summer session, the Ne braskan will be published twice weekly as the newspa per and official bulletin of the university. All official an nouncements of importance to to the student body will be printed in The Summer Ne- POOL TO BE POPULAR SUMMER RECREATION Classes for Credit Swimming Will Be Limited, Use of one of the largest Indoor swimming pools in the country will constitute one of the moot pop ular forms of recreation during summer school session if interest in the tank this summer holds up to that of last summer when swimming classes drew the largest enrollment in the school. Regular swimming classes for credit will be held daily for both men and women and will be limited according to Director R. D. Moritz. Men's swimming classes will be held at 11 o'clock daily with wom en's classes at 8, 9, 10, 2 and 3. The 2 o'clock class, for beginning women, will be held only during the short session. Women's classes are divided beginning and inter mediate. Recreational swimming hours are 12 to 2 and 4 to 6 daily. Admittance to the pool requires swimming perMits which will be issued after examination by the student health service in Pharmacy hall, second floor. OFFICIAL BULLETIN. All summer school students who traveled to Lincoln by rail road are asked te turn in their receipts at Director Moritz' of fice Immediately. Returns for one-third fare will be obtained, if 100 receipts are turned In. , The class In schooi adminis tration 353 will meet In Teach ers college, room 303, Instead of in Social Science, room 3'$, as listed In the summer school bulletin. ' t.f The class i school adm -tration 256 wlH meet V H o'clock daily Instead of 9 o'clock during the short session. The following musio, ceurse which was not announce.' 4A the bulletin will be offer ea during the summer session: r. A. 99 concert band Open to men and women upon try-out. Credit 1 hour, 11 daily. West Art Gal lery In Morrill hall. Mr. Quick. V ' f Prof. R. D. I.loriU braskan. It will serve not only as a news co'hveyer but also as a general university bulletin. Students will be held respon sible for announcements ap pearing therein. R. D. MORITZ, v Director of Summer Session. FOUR OFFICERS LEAVE CiTY Military Instructors Are Sent to Conservation Corps in West. Four officers of instruction in the University R. O. T. 9. recently left Lincoln for assignment to the Civil Conservation Corps, Presi dent Roosevelt's new reforestation organization. Majors Charles K. Speer and C. A. Bishop and Captain G. W. Spoerry left Lincoln May 31 for Fort Crook where they were given their C. C. C. assignments, the lat ter two going to Eugene, Ore., Wednesday this week and Major Speer proceeding to Sacramento, Calif. Captain John W. Crissy, the other officer leaving the univer sity, left Lincoln May 27 for Fort Lincoln, N. D., and expected to be sent on to California. Women's Residence Open for V Li j"rzK ' J Carrie Belle Raymond hall, Nebraska's new residence for women which opened last fall, will be used during the summer session as a residence for women students. Rooms and meals are available. The modem, fire-proof hall provides accommoda tions for 170 women with reception rooms, lounges, dining room and ballroom. Built during the summer of 1932 the hall is named after the late Mrs. Carrie Belle. Raymond, long teacher in music and chorus director in the university. The building is located or "sorority row" on the east side of Sixteenth street north of R. 2,500 STUDENTS ARE EXPECTED TO ENROLL SUMMER SESSION Dual Long-Short Term Plan Continued; Classes Start Monday. Registration beginning at 8 o'clock this morning in the colis eum opens the thirty-ninth an nual summer session of the Uni versity of Nebraska which is ex pected to draw some 2,500 students from Nebraska and nearby states for the dual six and nine week pe riods. Registration continues un til noon Saturday and classes be gin at 7 o'clock Monday morning. R. D. Moritz, director of the summer session, declined Thursday to make an advance estimate of the effect of the depression on en rollment this summer, but pointed out that the "pinch" operates in two directions in regard to sum mer school attendance. While many teachers have taken salary cuts and some are out of work, the tendency might be to reduce en rollment. On the other hand, he ex planed, further training increases the teacher's chance in the compe titions for positions and this may bring some back to school. Teaching staff of the summer session is composed of 150 from the regular staff of the university and thirteen guests teachers who will offer courses in specialized fields or supplement regular work by special lectures. Following the plan used during the past two summers, the term will combine both short and long sessions, the first ending July 21 and the second August 4. Courses in forty-three departments will be offered during the long session and in thirty departments during the short session. Student may take work in both sessions, completing the work in certain six-week classes by extension for an addi tional hour of credit. Greatest stress during the sum mer is being placed on courses in education, since a large part of the student body win be teachers from out in the field returning for both graduate and undergraduate work. A nine-weeks summer session of teachers college high school, run ning concurrently with the long session of university work, will provide practice teaching oppor ( Continued on Page 2.) Hall Is Summer Students m h' 1 " E1-