The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 27, 1942, Page 7, Image 7

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    DAILY NEBRASKAN
New Professor . . .
Yesliiva College Plans
In Case of Air Raid
NEW YORK, N. Y. (ACP).
Plans for protecting- its 40,000
books and manuscripts in event of
air raids have been formulated by
Yeshiva college.
The Yeshiva library possesses a
number of rare manuscripts and
valuable sixteenth-century books
which, with certain important
documents, will be placed in a
special steel vault.
An original painting, "Talmud
Students," by Leopold Pilichow
sky, which was valued at $20,000,
and other paintings also will be
placed in the vault
Dr. Pross Directs Speech
Activities of All Freshmen
Sunday, September 27, 1942.
. . . For Coming Year
Coming to Nebraska from Iowa
university, where he served as a
graduate assistant in speech for
two years. Dr. E. L. Pross has
been named to head freshman
speech annd dramatics activities
for the coming year.
Dr. Pross received both his MA
and PhD degrees in speech at
Iowa, ranked among the foremost
speech schools in the country. Be
fore going to Iowa, he received an
MA degree in history at Ohio uni
versity, also serving as graduate
assistant in speech there.
Under his supervision, an exten
sive speech and dramatics pro
gram has been planned and is now
open to freshmen. Diagnostic tests
in speech required of freshmen as
part of their physical examinations
were designed to discover speech
defects and special talents to sim
plify work of placing students in
classes which will aid in correcting
faults and developing talents.
Arranges Clinics.
All ireshman and sophomore
speecn ciasses win De under tne
direction of Dr. Pross, with indi
vidual clinics arranged for stu
dents requiring special attention.
In addition to the clinic and reg
ular classes, a dramatics organ
ization open to freshman only will
be organized for underclassmen in
terested in extra-curricular activi
ties.
Members will present olavs.
open to he public in the studio
theater er lempie, in me nope
that this organization will help to
arouse more interest in dramatic
activities.
Pross has also outlined clans
calling for freshman speech com
petition on a purely extra-curricular
basis.
Curtis Aggies
Complete
Boys Dorm
Completion, of a new boys dor
mitory at the Curtis high school
of agriculture and home economics
is announced by L. F. Seatdn, uni
versity operating superintendent.
The secondary school at Curtis,
Neb., with 3G0 students, is under
the control of W. W. Burr, dean
of agriculture,' and the university
regents.
Students, who had been living in
a gym, are moved in but formal
dedication of the building will take
place Oct. 9. Dean Burr will at
tend, but the dedicatory ceremony
has not been planned.
Cadet vIIorvay
Made College
Officials Wonder
CINCINNATI, O. (ACP). Ordi
narily the University of Cincinnati
wouldn't make much of a to-do
about a cadet named Horvay be
ing promoted to first lieutenant
in the ROTC.
But with Cadet Horvay it's dif
ferent. First, he is Dr. Gabriel
Horvav. instructor in engineering
mathematics, the first faculty
member in the Cincinnati, unit's
cadet ranks.
Second, he has ver been a sec
ond lieutenant. ne hasn't even
been a sergeant or a corporal. He
took the 1umD from cadet private,
first class, to cadet first lieutenant
in one hop.
And it was a short hop, at that.
Enrolling only last year, Dr. Hor
vay, by doubling up on his ROTC
courses, has gained in a little more
than one year what the average
cadet takes three or four years to
attain. All this, and a full teach
ing load, too.
Struggles between Greek and
Barb, meetings of the "faction"
where class officers, student coun
cil members are nominated, weeks
before election time, make campus
politics a fascinating but danger
ous business.
Knox College
Tailor-makes
Education
GALESBURG, 111. (ACP). Blan
ket graduation requirements are
a thing of the past at Knox col-
Ippp where the facultv has adopt
ed a system of all-out individual
ism in which each student's course
of study will be tailor made to fit
his own professional aims and
aptitudes.
Designed to acrueve at last mai
high degree of personalized atten
tion which has long been the boast
of small colleges, the new plan
took effect with the summer ses
sion. '
In abandoning the traditional
requirements Knox is thoroughly
aware of the new and vital impor
tance it thereby attaches to the
adviser system. In fact, the fac
ulty adviser, no longer able to
write out a student's curriculum
simply by consulting the catalog
for a list of required courses, must
now make a careful ana conscien
tious analysis of the students ob
jectives and abilities.
"The student tells us what he
wants to do, and then we tell him
what he has to do," explains Dean
Charles J. Adamec.
A freshman's program at Knox
i rfptprmined on a basis of his
announced professional aim, on his
aptitudes as revealed in vocational
guidance tests or in terms of his
major departmental interest.
Far from relaxing requirements
for the individual student, the new
Knox plan in fact intensifies them,
Dean Adamec points out, in tnat
once he has decided on a profes
sional or scholarly objective the
course of study he must pursue
during his four years may be very
rigidly outlined.
The only general requirements
retained are rhetoric, physical ed
ucation and the widely discussed
survey course, in which Knox
freshmen approach the problems
of living and learning through a
study of the middle west, their
own environment.
LSU Prof Ponders v
Legal Education
Problem in War
BATON ROUGE, La. (ACP).
The student at Louisiana State
university can live cheaper than he
could at home, according to f resi
dent C B. Hodcres.
' He pointed to bureau of labor
statistics that said living costs
hnd Increased IS percent in three
years, and asserted the rise at the
university had been only 8-10ths
of 1 percent.
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