DAILY NEBRASKAN AWS Board Revises Rules for Women Sunday, October 5, 1941 Speech Improvement Lab Headed by Lunsc Offers Help to Students The Speech Improvement Lab oratory at the university goes in to action for its second year this semester in order to render serv ice to all university students who desire help in speech development. Dr. Leroy T. Laase, acting chair man of the speech department, who organized the speech im provement laboratory a year ago, will serve as director of the lab oratory which is located in the Temple building. The speech laboratory was opened in order to give diagnosis and remedial help to all univer sity students who seeked this aid. The services are also available to adults and public school children who have registered thru the ex tension division. After the examination of 138 in dividuals last year a great va riety of speech problems were en countered, ranging in difficulty from slightly unpleasant voices and indistinct speech to compli cated instances or stuttering, de layed speech development, and di aletic speech. Plan Lessons. The re-training program involv ed going to the laboratory two or three times a week, re-training the speech mechanism thru the lesson plans worked out for each individual, and carrying over into life situations the new meth ods of speaking learned in the lab oratory. Out of 138 individuals who took this course, only sixty were university students. Co-operating with the speech department and giving valuable aid were the department of ed ucational psychology, the depart ment of psychology, the university health service, the university den tal clinic, the state vocational ed ucation and rehabilitation depart ment, the state child welfare bu reau, and various local physicians. Assisting Dr. Laase in the speech laboratory this year will be John Gaeth, graduate student in clinical psychology and assist- ; r i ) Dr. L. T. Laase. . . . Re-trains Voices. ant in public speaking, Mrs. Alta H. Reade, graduate assistant, and Miss Lucile Cypreansen, clinician for the extension work. In addition there will be several senior and graduate student teachers who will receive clinic training while assisting in the laboratory. The speech laboratory will be under the auspices of the depart ment of speech, school of fine arts, and the department of educational psychology, teachers college. Arline Fruhauf . . Clever New York Caricaturist Exhibits Work of Notables By Helen Meyers. Clever caricatures of famous figures of stage, screen, fine arts, and American public life are now on display in Gallery B of Mor rill hall. Miss Arline Fruhauf, prominent New York artist is re sponsible for the exhibtion. Miss Fruhauf has exhibited her work thruout the east and her caricatures of fashion designers recently appeared in Vogue maga zine. Her figures ar characterized by unusually human qualities with actual depiction of human strength and weakness in facial and body positions. Most unusual part of her dis play being shown in Lincoln for the next two weeks is the group portrait and caricatures of the "nine old men" of the United States Supreme court. This is a view of the nine justices in iden tical costumes but with excellent display of individual differences in facial expression, shoulder slope, poses and shapes of hands. This exhibit is of considerable historic and political significance. Caricatures of Paintings. The artists presented in the col lection are well-known to Lin coln gallery visitors. Paintings and oil portraits of such persons as Reginald Marsh, Peggy Bacon, Arnold Blanch, Lucille Blanch, Eugene Speicher, and Doris Lee which are included in university collections are shown in carica ture by Miss Fruhauf. Miss Fruhaufs caricatures of dancers, musicians and artists particularly well-known in this city thru recent public appear ances here include Charles Weid man and Eva LaGallinenne. Others shown are Stravinsky, Mischa El man, Rachmaninoff, Walter Pach, and Harry Gottieb. Works from Actual Sittings. Penetrating reviews of such fa mous personalities as Helen Hayes, Alexander Wolcott, Law rence Tibbctt, have been done by the artist with unusual dexterity. Her remarkable results are due mostly to the fact that she works from actual sittings rather than from ohotocranhs. as do most caricaturists. Typical color ... In Morrill Galleries schemes and other minute details are achieved in this manner. Miss Fruhauf received her training at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts at the Arts Students League, where she studied under Kenneth Hayes Mil ler, Broadman Robinson, and Charles Locke. Outstanding pieces of her work have been reproduced in Musical America, The New Re public, Mademoiselle, Theature Arts Monthly, and New York pap ers. She says that she can offer little advice to aspiring carica turists because the art seems to have just naturally come to her. She confesses to having done work in production of living figures ever since she could hold a pencil and record her observations in carica tures. Pharmacists In Demand, Says Lyman Olher States Pay High Wages for Nebraska Men Paralleling the general short age of men with specialized train ing' throughout the country, is a shortage of pharmacists in Ne- brasKa, accoruing to ur. n. n. lay man, dean of the college of phar macy. This shortaee is due in part to the defense progrum and also to higner eaucaiionai ana Jegai requirements than formerly re quired, he stated. Nebraska in particular is suf fering from the lack of pharma cists because her men are in great demand by other states, and al most invariably graduate students are nlaccd outside Nebraska, tempted by higher salaries. A call for men has recently been tele graphed to Dr. Lyman from Texas, which he Is unable to iii A safety conference for farmers was recently conducted at tne uni versity of Minnesota, Regulations for Women I. Residence Government .. 1. The house president and three or more additional members constitute a house committee which has jurisdiction pertaining to discipline, social regulations and scholarship of the residence. The house chaperon shall be consulted when necessary and may call a meeting of the house committee. 2. The house committee enforces AWS regulations and penalties. Repetition of an offense is reported to the AWS court by the house committee or house chaperon. Failure to answer summons to AWS court will result in double penalty. 3. Any residence may make these rules more rigid, but may not make them more lenient. II. General Residence Rules 1. The residence of men and women in the same lodging house is not permitted unless the circumstances are unusual. In this case permission must be secured from the dean of women. 2. Residences of women students shall be provided with reception rooms for student use. These and all entrance ways shall be well lighted until 10:30 p. m. on Sundays and week nights and until 12:30 p. m. on Friday and Saturday nights. 3. During college vacations chaperonage must be provided in residences for women students. 4. AWS regulations are observed by all individuals living in a sorority house, dormitory, room ing house, or private home; also by alumnae and other guests. III. Quiet Hours 1. Quiet hours are observed in women's residences during the day and week-ends by individ ual house regulations; evening in all residences beginning at 8 p. m. Monday through Thurs day. IV. Social Engagements 1. University women may be received in men's lodging or fraternity houses when a house chaperon is present to receive them. 2. Women students in residence may receive gentlemen callers in the reception rooms dur ing the following hours: Monday through Thursday, 5 p. m. to 7:45 p. m.; Friday, 3 p. m. to 12:30 a. m.; Saturday, 12 noon until 12:30 a. m.; and Sunday, 12 noon until 10:30 p. m. V. Delinquencies ' 1. The Dean of Women will send notice of scholastic delinquencies to the president of the house. University women who are reported delinquent in any subject shall forfeit their right to week night engagements. 2. Notice of the removal of delinquencies must be: a. Procured personally from the instructor, b. Taken to the office of tbt Dean of Student Affairs, c. Taken to the Dean of Women . d. Taken to the house chaperon. VI. Signing Out 1. All evening and out-of-town engagements must be recorded personally on the registration record before leaving the house and upon returning. 2. Permission must be obtained for all out-of-town engagements from the house chaperon and a record of permission from parents or guardian had on file. VII. Closing Hours and Termination of Engagements 1. Residence doors are locked at 10:30 p. m. Sunday through Thursday nights when followed by classes; 12:30 a. m. Friday and Saturday nights and any night not followed by classes. 2. Freshman engagements on Monday nights must terminate at 8:30 p. m. Tuesday through Thursday, Freshman engagements must terminate at 8:00 p. m. Sophomores shall be per mitted to be out of the house one week night each week until 10:30 p. in. Freshman having a weighted 80 average and no delinquencies at the end of the first semester may be granted one 10:30 night a week for the remainder of the second semester, if a high average is maintained ad no delinquencies occur. All other freshman must abide by the 8:00 and 8:30 p. m. rules. House chaperons may grant special permission for the following events only: choir prac i tice, symphony concerts, basketball games, and university theatre. 3. Week-ends begin at 3 p. m. Friday and end at 10:20 p. m. Sunday. 4. Late permission may be granted by the house chaperon for 11 p. m. on 10:30 nights. Over night and out-of-town permission must be obtained from the house chaperons. Engage ments which detain women students later than these hours must have the permission of the house chaperon and the AWS president before 5 p. m. of that day. Late permission may be granted by the house chaperon for 1:00 o'clock on 12:30 nights for the Military Ball, Mortar Board party, Board party, Junior-Senior prom, Interfraternity Ball and two (2) other occasions each semester. J It is expected that every woman student being a member of AWS share in the responsibility of maintaining these rules formulated by their representatives for the advancement of the highest social standards on the campus of the university. Changes in rules regarding stu-i dent government of university women were announced today by the AWS board and the dean of women's office. Chief revisions in the rules concern freshmen and have been made in co-operation with the university ruling con cerning freshman residence. Other ASME Prepares For Membership Smoker at Union American Society of Mechanical Engineers will hold a smoker Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. in the Student Union, parlors Y and Z. Purpose of the smoker is to get acquainted with new members and to aid the membership drive. There will be a fifteen cents charge for the evening. Dean Ferguson Attends Meeting in Washington Dean O. J. Ferguson of the col lege of engineering will go to Washington, D. C, this week for a meeting of the executive com mittee of the Association of Land Grant Colleges and Universities Oct. 6 and 7. While in the national capital, he will look up data on desirable national defense training courses which might be instituted here. Hobby of John G. Tatum, French instructor at Loa Angeles City coi lege, is ceramics, the art of model ing vessels and figures in clay. On the theory that colleges should teach students to use their hands as well as their heads, Dart mouth colleee has established a student workshop. changes were made in order to clarify and unify the rules. One of the new rulings, added in order to allow sorority pledges living in the dorm time to attend Monday night pledge meetings in their respective houses, grants permission to freshmen to be ab sent from the residence halls until 8:30 on Monday nights. Tuesday thru Thursday, freshmen engage ments must terminate at the usual hour, 8 p. m. A new leniency inserted in the AWS rule list allows freshmen having a weighted 80 average and no delinquencies at the end of the first semester to be granted one 10:30 night a week dunng the second semester, if they maintain the 80 average and acquire no de linquencies. The revised rule on late permis sions gives house chaperons au thority to grant 1 o'clock permis sion on 12:30 nights for the Mili tary ball, Mortar Board party, Junior-Senior Piom, Interfraternity ball, and two other occasions each semester. "The aim of the rules for wom en is to encourage high scholar ship and to give every girl an equal opportunity for recreation," says the announcement from the dean of women's office. "It is ex pected that every woman, being a member of AWS, share in the re sponsibility of maintaining these rules formulated by their repre sentatives. It is only thru the co operation of all individuals and or ganizations concerned that these aims may be attained." The new rules go into effect Monday. A a J