DAILY NEBRASKA PAGE 5 In usfry nginearing high Grads Students in the University Col lege of Engineering will have no worries in finding a job, because the demand for competent a n qualifed engineers is at its great est peak at the present time, and there is no prospect that the regis- iration in colleges ot engineering will supply industry with sufficient manpower for several years. Since the demand exceeds the supply in all fields of engineering, the stu dent should select the field which satisfies his own personal inter ests and ability to succeed. If one has no high school defi ciencies and rates high in place ment tests, he can earn a degree in Agricultural Engineering in eight semesters. Chemical Engin eering will require an extra sum mer school session, and a degree in Architecture requires a ten-se mester course. However, if a student works Ag College Features Varied Fields On the busy but peaceful Agri culture .Campus of the University, 6tudents can learn how to feed cattle, which grasses to grow where, or how to cook and sew and at the same time they can take courses in English, physical education, political science, and so on. On Ag Campus there is an Ag Student Union, an Ag edition of the Nebraskan, and an Ag branch of the University of Nebraska Builders. On this campus students can learn how to rope a steer or feed a chicken. Founded la I860 The College of Agriculture was founded in I860 when the Uni versity was - established by the State Legislature under an act providing for such a college. In 1872 the Regents ordered the col lege to be opened. Students here may do research for teaching. On graduating from the College of Agriculture one re ceives . a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture or Home Economics degree after successfully complet ing four years of work. In home economics, courses are offered in food and nutrition, child care and development, clothing and textiles, institutional manage ment, dietetics, economics, and housing and equipment. Recently becoming a field full of opportunities is a combination of home economics and journalism, Publications demand nutrition and fashion experts and advisers. Students Select Courses in physical and biolog ical sciences, English, and the arts are required. Students select sequences that prepare them for the occupation they desire to en ter. . " The Agriculture Experiment Sta tion is a branch of the College of Agriculture and is a research or fact-finding bureau. It serves the families of Nebraska, a val uable service in a primarily agri cultural state, as well as numer ous industries that are closely re lated to agriculture. The function of taking new facts and methods developed at the Ex periment Station to the farm peo ple is carried out by another branch of Ag College the Exten sion Service. This is a state agency and there are extension agents throughout the state. In formation gathered in research laboratories in other states is also extended to the farm people by the Extension Service. more than ten or twelve hours per week, if he has high school defi on the -mathematics or English iciencies, if he does not score high placement tests, or if he wishes to earn a commission Id the armed forces, he usually plans to take an extra semester to complete his" de gree. Deficiencies can be made uo by taking special, non-credit cours es. Engineering College has three honoraries for its students. These are Sigma Tau, Pi Tau Sigma, and Eta Kappa Nu. Sigma Tau is a national honorary engineering society that was found ed at the University of Nebraska in 1904. Selection to membership is made from junior and senior students on the basis of scholarship and other qualifications indicating future promise in - the field. The Pi Chapter of Pi Tau Sig ma was installed at Nebraska in 1938. This is a national honorary society whose membership is lim ited to junior and senior mechanical engineering students. Election to membership is based upon high -scholastic standing and personal ity characteristics as judged by taculty and fellow students. In 1949, Eta Kappa Nu installed its Beta Psi Chapter at the Uni versity of Nebraska. It is a na tional honorary open only to elec trical engineering students, and membership is based on high schol astic standing and personal char acteristics. The publication of the Engineer ing College is the Nebraska Blue print Magazine. Members of the college edit this magazine which contains articles of interest to as piring engineers in all phases of the field. It features a humor page and stories concerning the activities of the University's Col lege" of Engineering. The Blue print office is the first floor of Stout Hall. Every spring the college pre sents Engineering Week, or "E Week." This year the week was climaxed by a banquet for all en gineering' students.- Members of the different schools engineering plan and present displays which are open to the public during E Week. Such displays include features on modern electronics, television, etc. E Week displays are open during the day and in the evening. . : . . , '(. :-. ,. I ; ?t-:A'X--4.-x-r-ifr:-. - '7 4f t V 2fr. ia irx .... . - . "-"aoft6:: ' : -i v iff . was uLjfVi. - ! r- " :jrt c-i :;- i T THE OLD PHARMACY BUILDING faces its last days on the campu pending the erecting of a new, modern Pharmacy Hall. Locate NU Med Colleae d in Omaha The University's College of Medi cine, which has operated in Oma ha since 1902, had an enrollment last season of 34C medics, 85 new students and a full and part-time staff of 209. The entire four-year- course has been given in Omaha since 1913. In order to enter the College of Medicine, a student must have at least three years of college work, or 90 semester hours in an ac credited college. For the first two years of study, the med student at tends lectures and labs and learns the basic fundamentals of his chos en career. As a junior and senior, he has his first opportunity to observe the effects of disease, the treatment and the subsequent progress of in dividual patients. His chance to apply his gathered knowledge comes in the following two years of internship. The young med student who re- Dent Students Practice Drilling in Andrews Hall Nebraska's College of Dentistry is fully approved by the Council on Dental Education of the American Dental Association and is a mem ber of the American Association of Dental schools. Admission to the College is on selective basis. The choosing of the number admitted is based on the quality of the applicant's work in liberal arts college, his charac ter, his personality and his apti tude for and interest n the study of dentistry. , In recent years, a large per centage of applicants for the Col- ege necessitates presenting a pre- dental program that will provide This enables the student to com plete bis specific pre -dental re quirements within a two-year pe riod and if he desires, submit his application to the College of Dent istry at the end of that time. Re quirements include 60 semester hours exclusive of physical educa tion and military science. AU stu dents are required to take the ap titude tests if applying for admittance. After receiving a notke of ac ceptance for admission, the stu dent Is required to make a de posit of $25 which will be applied as part payment of tuition' for the following academic session. It will be forfeited if he fails to reg ister for that session. Each student who enrolls in the College of Dentistry pays a fee of $355 each semester which cov ers the major school expenses for that period. All required textbooks, dental instruments and materials are loaned for the student's use during his four-year dental training. Upon completion of the dental course and the conferring of the D.D.S. degree, all textbooks and instruments then become the prop erty of the student. An honor society of the Dental College is Omicron Kappa Up silon. Alpha Alpha chapter was chartered at the University of Ne braska in May, 1929. Election to this honor society is based upon scholarship, conduct and date gath ered by the faculty and recorded on a character analysis chart. Degrees that may be received from the Dental College are Doc tor of Dental Surgery, Bachelor of Science In Dentistry, and Doc tor of Dental Surgery Bachelor of Arts of Bachelor of Science, and Doctor of Dental Surgery Master of Science la Dentistry. ceives his degree from the College of Medicine will leave behind him four years of intensive medical study. However, he will be direct ing the information and experience gleaned from these four years to ward four more years of post-graduate preparation. The degree of Doctor of Medi cine is granted only under the fol lowing conditions: 1. The candi date must be at least 21 years of age. 2. He must possess a good moral reputation. 3. He must have complied with ail the requirements 9i admission. 4. He must have pur sued the study of medicine for at least four years and must have passed all required courses and examinations of the College of medicine. The last two years of work must have been taken in res idence. 5. He must hare written an acceptable paper on an examina tion posed by the Examination Committee at the end of the senior year, 6. He must have written and presented an acceptable, typed sen ior thesis. 7. He must have dis charged all indebtedness to the University of Nebraska. The University College of Medi cine is growing with the addition of a new, $25 million medical cen ter. This center will include nine buildings when completed. Part of these buildings will be financed by the University and the rest by pri vate firms. This building program will put the University's medica facilities on a par with those of other leading schools in the Mid west. The degree of Doctor of Medi cine cum laude may be conferred upon a student who has made high scolastic record and who, in addition, has in the course of his medical studies performed some original research that has been published or is in preparation for publication. Such a student must be recommended by the depart ment in which the original work was done. Usually he must stand in the upper 10 per cent of his class. Alpha Omega Alpha is a medi cal college honorary society in which membership is based upon scholarship and moral qualifica tions. Elections are made from the students who have completed nine or more quarter of the four year medical curriculum and are made by unanimous vote of the active members of the chapter. Not more than one-sixth of any class may be elected to member ship, j Nurses' Work Requires 4-Year Study The University pf Nebraska School of Nursing is situated on the College of Medicine campus, located in a residential section of Omaha. The campus covers ap proximately a four-block area and includes the two-wing University Hospital, two large laboratory buildings and Conkling Hall, the student nurses' residence. Chil dren's Memorial Hospital and the Child Saving Institute adjoin the campus. . The School of Nursing offers to qualified candidates a four-year program leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Nursing. This program replaces the three year program and provides gradu ates with a Diploma in Nursing as well as the Bachelor of Science degree. The first year of the degree pro gram may be taken at the Univer sity where the freshman courses are geared to the entrance re quirements of the School of Nurs ing. During this time students will learn to study on a collegiate level and make the necessary adjust ments. Self-confidence and mature judg ment gained through the basic col lege courses during the freshman year will lay the foundation on which to build the professional nurse during the next three years at the University School of Nurs ing. Since the October of 1917 the University of Nebraska School of Nursing has been doing its part in. providing professional training for modern counter-parts of Florence Nightengale, Clara Barton, Edith Cavel, and the countless others who have contributed their lives toward developing nursing from its early characterization as a house hold art to the very pinnacle of professionalism upon which it stands today. Grading System Reveals Standing The grading system at the Uni versity of Nebraska is somewhat different from the grading systems used by most high schools. Instead of the conventional one through five, or its equivalent, "A" through "F" systems, the University has set up its grading system on a one through nine basis. The following chart represents the percentage and its equivalent grade according to the one through nine system of grading: I 85 100 8 90 95 7 ...85 90 I 80 85 5 75 80 4 70 75 i 65 70 I 60 65 1 Falling Another aid to students which the University provides is scholastic reports or "down slips" which are issued twice during the semester. Those persons receiving "down slips" at the end of the four or ten weeks period are required to go to their instructors and find out why the '"down sdip" lead was given and what can be done to rectify it. If the "down slip" Is not re moved, 8 p.m. study hours are levied so that additional time may be given the subject causing the trouble. In this way, students with low grades are notified in time to correct the situation. A student desiring to graduate from the University of Nebraska roust have maintained an over-all four average, or above, for four years.