The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 18, 1948, SUMMER EDITION, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    THE SUMMER NEBRASKAN
Friday, June, 18, 1948
Page 2
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Intercollegiate Press
FOHTf-atXTB TtZAM
Sabarrlptloa rntw ara fl.M par MnmMer, ft.M par pwrartw mnUea, N tl.H W
the eolltce year. 3.0 mailed. 8lnrte eopy aa, PabUahMl aally dnrtna tna achool yew
except Moiidaji and Satordaya, vacatioaa and examination partada, bj tn UalYaralty
of Nebraika aadcr the tupervtaioa cf the Pnbilcatloa Board. Entered aa tfeoand
'lasa Matter at the roe Olflce hi Uneola. Nrbranha, onder act el Ceacreaa, March
S. I87S. and at (pedal rate ef paatac prbvlded tor t section 1103, Act ef October
. 1917. autborlied hepteower M. ml.
Hi Dally Nebraakaa te pabUahed by the ttadeote et the OnlTenlty at Nebraika at
aa expression of atadenta aewa and opinion only, aeeordtnr to article II et the By
Uwi tovemlni etadeat pabnoatloni and administered by the Board PabUeationai
"It It the declared policy et the Board that pabUcaUona node tta JartedteUoa ehaa
be tree from editorial eenaorahlp on the part of the Board, or ea the part ef aav
aaemaer et the tneelty ef the nnlveraltyi bat members ef the ataff ef The DwJl
Nebraska are peraonally rcapeialble for what they any er e er eaaae to be printed."
Editor Jeanne Kerrigan
Business Manager Irwin Chesen
Clinic . . .
jCettenpe
Editor Daily Nebraskan:
Our group will bring to the campus this election year some
desirable political activity.. The rising tide of interest in local and
national politics is already evidenced by our unusually large mem
bership of over 330 students. This is more than twice the figure of
our Lancaster County group.
You will hear our candidate for Congress from the first district,
Mr. Frank Morrison; the Democratic paty's choice for the U.S.
Senate. M. Carpenter, and many others this fall.
We think that the student body will find the humanitarian
philosophy of the Democratic party a safe, desirable highway be
tween the marshes of Wall Street animated Republicanism and Quix
otic, Moscow apologizing Wallacism.
We Young Democrats believe that the minute a student enters
the University he should cast off the shackles of his father's and
his grandfather's politics and begin an objective and analytical
search for first, a philosophy of government and economics most
compatable with the principles of Christianity and humanitarianism,
and second, the means or the party that will best effect that phil
osophy in government.
We cordially invite the student body to attend our meetings
and hear our candidates so that they will be more able to fojmulate
a logical conclusion as to party affiliation.
D. E. MORROW, President,
U. of N. Young Democrats.
ROTC . . .
(Continued from Page l.)
Marshall, Minn.; Sam E. Lesher,
Akron, Colo.; Donald E. Maunder,
Hastings; Paul G. Mulhern,
Cheyenne, Wyo.; Ralph O.
Nicholas, Grand Island; Jimmie
G. Peterson, Centerville, S. D.;
Robert D. Phelps, Lincoln;
Rogers S. Ritter, Kearney; Rich
ard E. Rockwell, Edinboro, Pa.;
Robert C. Rogers, Sioux City, la.
Robert P. Rogers, Albuquerque,
N. M.; Edward A. Saffel, Pierre,
S. D.; Harold R. Schreiber, Au
rora, Colo.; Robert L. Shuler, St.
Paul, Minn.; Paul L. Siegmund,
White River, S. D.; David L.
Slusher, Kansas City, Mo.; Har
vey L. Smith, Missouri Valley,
la.;; David F. Snyder, Hastings;
Robert E. Stake, Adams; Lee D.
Stauffer, Wakefield; Norman A.
Strand, Centerville, S. D.; Gerald
E. Thomas, Natick, Mass.; Rich
ard T. Thomas, Chamberlain, S.
(Continued from Page 1.)
partment of Speech and Dramatic
Art. The laboratory facilities have
grown from nothing but a desk
in the corner of Room 205 in the
Temple Building to the present
more modern type of clinical serv
ices, including the use of pure
tone audiometers for the testing
of hearing, of portable record re
corders and tape and wire record
ers for the making of voice re
cordings, and the use of graduate
and senior clinicians lor retrain
ing services.
Cooperating with the laborator
ies in offering more adequate
services are the department of
speech and hearing retraining
health, the department of educa
tional psychology, and the depart
ment of psychology. With this co
operation more adequate diagnosis
can be made and more successrui
therapy can be applied.
Future plans of the laboratories
are not necessarily those of an
expansive nature. It is more the
desire of the laboratories to im
prove upon the quality of services
offered whenever and wherever
possible. While the limited staff
and limited working facilities
make it necessary to maintain a
waiting list of "off campus" cases,
every effort is made to service the
university students who came in
or who are referred to the labora
tories. At times, even these stu
dents must wait their turn.
D.; Warren R. Wilson, Orange,
N. J.; Robert L. Swartt( Omaha.
Fourteen students will attend
the cruise aboard the carrier
USS Princeton which embarks
June 26 and disembarks August
21 both at San -Francisco and
which includes a major port of
call at Pearl Harbor, T. H. The
students are: Robert H. Berk
shire, Omaha; Robert P.Chaney,
Falls City; Walter D. Chaney,
Doniphan; Lawrence E. Donegan,
Lincoln; Don A. Finstrom, Kear
ney; Harold L. Gerhart, Newman
Grove; James T. Godfrey, Cozad;
Robert W. Hackbart, Seward.
Kenneth D. Hornbacher, Ne
vada, la.; Robert W. Jensen, Fre
mont; Bruce M. Johnson, Hold
rege; Douglas T. Kielty, Madison;
Gordon L. Pauley, Lincoln and
Richard R. Schleiger, Omaha.
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Speech Clinic Scenes .
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A GROUP OF HARD-OF-IIEARING children work in the chil
dren's room with the graduate assistant at the speech and hearing
laboratory located in the Temple building.
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A GROUP OF FOREIGN students at the University learn better
use of English through a phonetic approach. Instructing is Cora
Ann Didrickson, senior clinician at the speech and hearing laboratory.
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MISS LUCILE CYPREANSEN, supervisor of the speech' and hear
ing laboratories, teaches a group of hard of hearing students in
lip-reading window technique.
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