n n n o n n U n r L n N JUlnJUULriJ VOL. 51 No. 84 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Friday, February 15, 1952 1 j i ykIS fll Ml' N IllPPnPpr $m$jL .. ..4 t v v"?- -li v 'Vtfl a: I iFTHteil 1 o PHARMACY HALL . . . second bnildin on campus, reared its ' f ??VK4 " I "Hf ktXi 1 head in 1885, at a cost of ? 69,625. (Daily Nebraskan Photo.) M J - $M 'b0Hl li L4'tlx l'4 fr'Mt'ii Ml. ISV n fr " v 4J5f mSrlWS'-gA 1 X-r. FERGUSOX HALL . . . newest addition to the family of buildings ' ioseiraloff Sees fSli u4M fT AT ' n . f .,r&F tenfel niBy Observes. Improvements iW B . r a real recog- are Indeed today University, rightly to be nized among the foremost univer sities of the United States," Dr. George W. Rosenlof, dean of ad missions, declared Thursday. ' Commenting on the 83rd anni versary of the founding of the University, Rosenlof compared to day's University with the Univer sity he knew hi 1921 as a student and in 1922 as a member of the faculty. ""I've seen extensive changes in flie University of Nebraska," he declared, "physically, socially, spiritually, athletically and in its curricula." Rosenlof predicted, however, that even greater days are ahead for the University. The fac ulty, student body and citizens of Nebraska are all pledged to Insure its greatness, he added. "Physically," he said, "the cam pus is revolutionized with the ad dition of such units as the sta dium, coliseum, Morrill hall, An drews hall, Burnett hall. Student Union, Love library, and more re cently, the Military and Naval Dr. Ro we Recalls NU Life In '97 Chapel Monday through Friday at 10 a.m. This was part of University life la 1897, Dr. E. W. Rowe, Lincoln physician, recalls. Speaking of life on the campus before the turn of the century, he said almost every student went to the services con ducted in University halL From 10 to 10:20 the chan cellor, who was an ordained minister, gave a regular church service. Announcements were made and hymns were sung. The most heated controversy In '97 was the demand on the part of the state legislature to move the entire University to Ag cam pus, Dr. Rowe said. He remem bers that in the spring show, one of the class skits was centered on this theme. Students satirizing the chan cellor and college deans pushed wheelbarrows across the stage which supposedly contained pieces of the University in the process of being moved to Ag. Extra-curricular activities cen tered about debating and oratory when Dr. Rowe ws in school. The literary societies were the most prominent of the few student or ganizations. Whenever outstanding persons visited Lincoln, i n e y spoke in Palladian society hall in University hall. Ellen Smith was an active fac ulty member and not just the name of a University building, Dr. Rowe said. She first was a Latin teacher and then served as regis trar and recorder. "She had a sharp tongue and quite a personality," he recalled, "but she had a big heart." She was a friend of almost every student, he said. The present Music building was a private conservatory in lovi. However, it had a dining room where many University students ate their meals. Sciences building, Ferguson hall and the proposed new physical education building to the north. Similar changes have taken place on the College of Agriculture campus." He estimated that the Univer sitys physical plant has more than doubled in its capacity dur ing the thirty years he has been at Nebraska. The faculty has practically dou bled, as Rosenlof recalls it, while "the quality of instruction has been a source of the greatest sat isfaction to all of us who love the University." In terms of student personal services, the University has made "most remarkable" prog ress, the dean said. "Witness the beautiful women'i residence halls, men's dormitories, sorori ties and fraternities. The health department and the medical care now provided are a far cry from the days when I was a student on this campus." Rosenlof declared that one of the most important features has been the growth of religious cen ters under the supervision 01 ae nominational groups. Where there was one prominent religious lead er on the campus in 1921, there are now some 15, he said. "I cannot help but believe that the moral and spiritual are in deed greater concerns of all of our people," he reflected. In the past 30 years, Rosenlof said, the University has grown ia ternationally. To the school are coming young men and women from all parts of the world. Outside of a limited number of students from the Philippines, China, Hawaii and Puerto Rico, he said, "we now have students from no less than 46 different countries." In commenting on the present faculty, the dean declared that one of the finest things about n nas been its genuine loyalty to the University. Many have had op portunities to go elsewhere at greatly increased salaries, he said, but "we have managed to Keep on our faculty many times more who love, the University and who choose to remain here." He paid tribute to Chancellor Gustavson for his "vision for the institution and his determina tion that the University shall continue to plow new furrows In the fields of scholarship, re search' and public service." The University Foundation also received praise from Rosenlof fori its strides in endowment lunds and special contributions as well as for development of research programs. The Alumni association, he said, is today the largest it has ever been in the history, of the lnsti tution. Today there are chapters all over the country. Services of the University to the United States government "In terms not only of agricul ture and home economics but in the sciences and military sci ences have been very noticeably Increased" daring the 30-year period, he said. "Our leadership in every phase of university life has been recog nized all over the world. Many of our staff and administrative per sonnel now occupy positions of na tional recognition, and national if not international leadership," Ros enlof declared. i SOMETHING NEW HAS BEEN ADDED . . . Bearing completion is this new Agronomy building (top center) which will house the agronomy department of the University and the U.S. department of agriculture. Below is Nebraska Hall which is non-existant now. (Daily Nebraskan Photos.) University Shorn 83 Years Of Progress Through Continual Building Expansion The University has, in the last 83 years, pro- house and Love library have been added to the gressed from a small prairie crossroads overrun campus. Love library was built for $800,000 over by grazing cattle to a modern well organized insti tution of higher education. A symbol of this growth has been the continual building expansion of the University. In 1870, University hall, the University's first building, was erected at the cost of $146,700. Cattle grazing on the campus created such a problem that an iron fence was erected to keep them out. Pharmacy hall, built in 1885, was the second building to appear on the campus and in 1887 Nebraska hall, Grant Memorial and the first power plant were completed. The old library building was opened in 1891. Ag college was born in 1896, with Poultry Hus- five times the cost of University hall Last April, Ferguson hall, the newest addi tion to the family of buildings, was dedicated, and on the Ag campus the new Agronomy build ing is nearing completion. The Agronomy build ing, costing $175,000, is U-shaped and three stories high. It will house the Agronomy de partment of the University and the U.S. Depart ment of Agriculture. The University is now on a 10 year building program, of which there is approximately 5 years left Among new buildings which will be seen in the near future are: Swine research building; In- sectary building; reconstruction of the Temple, .T, n j . , , ,, . , wu.j1.5t; "iisii oiuuui, Ajenicu college ouua- bandry hall, followed in 1899 by the Experiment in. tHonf Wooitv,. xvr,' u u- r, Sftinn KniMino A.it,i ,.. ..., . !ng' student Health. Pharmacy building; Bacter- inlnirv hlllilrtinrf Mann rstU i 1 j: . .. . ""t,j i.ioi.j uuicis, jiiLiuuiiig new Duila station building. Agricultural hall was built 1904 and the Home Economics building was fin ished in 1908. Downtown the halls of learning again clustered up after the turn of the century. Administration hall was erected in 1905 and the Temple building and the former museum building followed the next year. In the past two decades, Love and Carrie Belle Raymond dormitories along with the field ings for the Medical college, will be seen being constructed. These buildings, which outlined the horizon of the last generation of students, have increased in sentimental value where they have decreased in monetary value and are expected to pass out of sight in the coming decades, replaced by the campus of the future. Legislature Unanimously Passed Act To Establish University Feb. 15, 1869 By KATHY RADAKER Feature Editor Today The Daily Nebraskan commemorates the 83rd birthday of the University, in which we not only look back at this institu been? a member of the family since 1926, when he was appointed pro fessor of ancient history. He be came dean in 1932. . . Earl S. Fullbrook, dean of the College of Business Administra tion's notable past but also for- tion, has been on the staff since ward to a promising and hopeful' 1920 and became dean in 1946. future. Bert L. Hooper, dean of the Col- A statute, later to become the lege of Dentistry, graduated from Charter of the University of Ne-J College View high school in 1911 braska, was enacted in 1869, less and received his doctor's degree than two years after the state be- in dentistry from the University, came a member of the union, and Roy M. Green, dean of the Col four years after the Civil war and lege of Engineering and Archi Lincoln's assassination. The citytecture, graduated from the Uni of Lincoln had been designated as versity in 1914. the capital only two years before, Robert W. Goss, dean of the a time when Lincoln had a popu- Graduate College, has been as lation of 1,000, only well water,' sociated witl the University since few or no sidewalks and thej 1920, becoming Dean of the grad- present campus was raw prairie, uate college in 1941. Observance of the anniver sary of the founding of the Uni versity, the annual Charter Day banquet, will be held Wed nesday, Feb. 20, at the Union. Nineteen deans and deans emer itus will be the guests of honor at the banquet. The Nebraska Builders Award, Edmund O. Belsheim, dean of the College of Law, came here in 1949. Frank E. Henzlik, dean of the Teachers College, joined the fac ulty in 1924 and was appointed dean in 1931. Harold C. Lueth, dean of the College of Medicine, has been as- highest non-academic honor con- sociated with the medical schools f erred by the Board of Regents, 0f Northwestern university and will be presented. It is given to the University of California. From an individual who has made an! 1942 to 1945 he was the sureeon outstanding contribution to the'general's liaison officer to the life and progress or nis state. American Medical association. He The deans being honored are: lis leaving the University after Carl W. Borgmann, dean of this year. faculties, joined staff in 1947. George E. Condra is director of George W. Rosenlof, dean of ad-conservation and survey division missions and inter-institutional re-!wjth the rank of Dean. lationships. became a professor of. o. J. Ferruson is dean emeritus secondary education in 1934 and 0f the College of Engineering and was appointed director of admis sions and registrar in 1940 Architecture. G. A. Grubb is dean emeritus of The University eounts Feb, 15 as its birthday, for it was on that day, back in 1869, that the Ne braska legislature passed the act which established the University. There were no students around to help the University celebrate its first birthday, though. Classes didn't start until the fall of 1871, when 20 students five freshmen, two sophomores, one junior and 12 "irregulars" were enrolled. On Charter Day in 1881 (Just a decade, lacking a few months, after the institution first opened its doors to students), Dr. Samuel Aughey, first professor of natural sciences, delivered an address on "The Ideas and the Men that Created the University of Nebraska." He pointed out that the settlers of Nebraska were by no means unanimous in their desire to es tablish a university. Some argued that the state was too poor to af ford such an institution. Others pointed to the lack of preparatory schools and argued that the build ing of a university should follow the growth of a system of second ary schools. Still others believed that it should be wholly under the control of the churches as it had been in the eastern states. Against these arguments, men came forward to urge that a new state could not too early estab lish institutions of higher learn ing. Others felt that the time had come for the establishment of a university controlled by the people for the benefit of all. Many, while realizing that the prairies had to be subdued, appre ciated the fact that there were other interests besides that of the dollar. There was a recognition that culture was something desir able lor its own sake and that a university would be a good adver tisement for the new state and would serve to induce settlers to locate in Nebraska. Though there was much ar gument over the University in the early years of Its operation, there was a great unanimity in the legislature when the Insti tution was chartered. The char ter bill Introduced In the Senate by E. E. Cunningham did not receive a single negative vote in either house of the legisla ture. Dr. Aughey also called atten tion to the fact that many of Ne braska's leading citizens' were young men, and that many of them had the benefit of college education in the East before com ing to Nebraska. They saw clearly the need for a university and worked vigorously to bring it into being. T. J. Thompson, dean of student the Colleee of Dentistrv. affairs, came in 1919 and was ap- r. a. Lvman Is dean emeritus pointed Dean of Student Affairs 0f the College of Pharmacy. in 1927. i James E. LeRossingnol is dean Miss Marjorle Johnston, dean of emeritus of the College of Busi- women was appointed to her of fice in 1946 after having served two years as assistant dean ness Administration. Across the nation alumni chap ters in most major cities will W. Vincent Lambert, dean of commemorate the foundine of the the College of Agriculture, was university. administrator of the agricultural j Observance in New York City research administration in the 0f charter Day, actually Jeb. 15, us Jjcpann.em 01 jsriuuuuic uc-,wm not be held until April. Chi- fore coming to the university. C. II. Oldfalher, dean of the cago held its meeting Feb. 8. Observance of Charter Day will Madrigal Singers To Perform At NU Charter Day Banquet At the Charter day banquetlHcre" (19th century); and "This Wednesday the University madri- Little Rose" (20th century), gal singers will present a program The madrigal, directed by Da of five numbers ranging from the vid Foltz, includes: Peggy Bayer, fifteenth century to present day. Nancy Norman, Gwen Grosshans, The music will be presented Pat Laflin, Jo Smith, Gladys No ln the close, intimate madrigal votny, Rosemary Castner, Mar manner, with the singers seated jorie Danly, Nancy Button, Vir around a table. glnia Cummihgs, Jan Wagner, The numbers to be presented Janice Fullerton, Bob VanVoorhis, are "O Softly Singing Lute" (15th Milford Myhre. Bob Brown. Jack century); "In Delightful, Pleasant 'Anderson, Jack Wells, John Mo Groves" (16th century); "Comejran, Dan Rrsdal, Jerry Colling, Away, Death" (17 Century); "0 Vaughn Jaenike, Warren Rasmus What a Lovely Magic Hath Been .'sen and Earl Jenkins. College and Arts and Sciences, has be held in the following 20 cities: Cleveland, Ohio, Dr. Waltjr K Special Issue The Daily Nebraskan Is pub lishing this special edition in observance of Charter Day, the University's 83rd birthday. Therefore, stories which would have appeared on the front page will be found on the back page of today's issue. News appearing on page four, in brief, is: First leadership conference sponsored by the Mortar Boards and Innocents will be held Saturday. Open to all University students, it will pro vide discussion periods led by representatives of campus ac tivities and faculty members. First Universal Day of Prayer for students will be held Sun day evening with T. V. Koo as principal speaker. Bob LaShelle was elected president of the Red Cross Col lege Unit for the coming year. Other officers are Joyce John son, Pat Llndgren and Nancy Whltmore. WAVE officers will be on campus Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday to explain the re serve training program to Uni versity women. Beggs, chairman of the board of Inter-Collegiate Athletics, speaker, Feb. 27. I Denver, Colo., Feb. 15. I Detroit, Mich., Chancellor Gus tavson will speak Feb. 18. ; Clinton, Tenn., movies of the , Iowa State game were shown Feb. 13. Indianapolis, Ind., Dr. - Juul 1 Nielsen, graduate of the Univer sity and superintendent and di rector of Indiana Council ,;of Mental Health, ijeaks. Kansas City, Kan., Bill Glassford will speak Feb. 15. Long Beach, Calif., Paul Zim merman, graduate of the Univer sity and sports editor of the Los Angeles Times, speaker. Washington, D.C., Dean Green of the College of Engineering will speak Feb. 15. Portland, Ore., Perry Branch, secretary-director of the Univer sity Foundation spoke Feb. 13. Seattle, Wash., Branch will apeak Feb. 16. . - Sioux City, la.; Dean Fullbrook of the College of Business Admin istration will speak .Feb, 21. Los Angeles, Schnectady, N.Y.; Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Houston aftd St Louis also will pay special attention to Charter Day.