DAILY NEBRASKAN New Student Week Freshmen: Prepare, ..Register For First Year of Colleae i 4 V i i . ' A V 1 " V PAGE 6 The first week of the 1955-56 school year is dedicated to you, the incoming freshman. This week New Student Week, fulfills its purpose of acquainting you with the University, it's faculty and students. Upon arriving at the University, students are required to go to the Student Union ballroom to pick up their information packets. In the packets will be a schedule of the week's activities, a name tag and a Husker Handbook which is a reference book that touches oi all phases of campus life. Wheri one picks up his packet, he will receive his color. The colors red, blue, green and brown divide tht stu dents into different groups. Each group has the same activities but at different times. All new students will follow a specific schedule that will prepare them for-their first day of classes. Included on the agenda are the re quired tests, examinations, and orientations. A general summary of the weeks happenings could be as follows: First the student will meet with his adviser and student leader at 8 a.m., Monday. Advisers are faculty members who specialize in the particular fields that students are interested in pursuing. Stu dent leaders are upperclassmen who will serve to assist and help new students. This first meeting will be a get acquainted session at which gen eral instructions for the week will be given. Following the meeting, students will go on a campus tour PEDEN'S South of Love Library 2-3474 HAVE THE BOOKS & SUPPLIES FOR FRESHMAN CLASSES (All approved by instructors) You are always welcome . ' VIC'S SNACK BAR . Specializing In: Breakfasts Sand n iches Good Coffee Takeout Orders Quick Service ON"E POOR EAST OF THE TEMPLE Come In Meet your friends here! 1227 R STREET PHONE 2-7419 with their student leader serving as a guide. Various orientations will be held discussing the various colleges, ac tivities, and study-habits. A special sesion will be held which is con cerned with the use of the library. A student health conference will be held to familiarize students with the services that are available to them at the University Student Health Center. During the summer, those who have registered for the University will receive instruction concern ing the pre-registration tests that will be given during the Week. These exams will be given in he Coliseum on staggered days. Tests run from eight until noon and one until five. Upon completion of these exams, freshmen will meet with their ad visers in order to set up their class schedule for the fall semester. Physical, hearing, and speech ex aminations will either follow or precede this conference. Next on the list of activities are the all-college convocations. At this time, deans of the various col leges and certain members of the faculty will be introduced. Perti nent information concerning each college will be presented. Registration for classes will then begin. A card will be pulled for each class to be attended. .This will be done at the Military Science building. All activities so far mentioned are required of each student enter ing the University of Nebraska All special programs which are held in the evenings and during the weekend are for the students recreation, and are, therefore,- not required. UGH (HiWm n n nn Llll S iai (S You can read and see what is happening at the University simply by subscribing to . . . uNjslbrfflsEsgiDH Published three times a week. It costs only: $2.50 Per Semester - You Keep the ScrapbooJcUp-to-Datc Write THE NEiflASICAN Student Union Dldg. Lincoln B, Nebraska in X 1 I - NEW STUDENTS prepare for registration in the Coliseum. Faculty members and upperclass students are always on hand to assist during the process of signing up for classes. Without a doubt, the University of Nebraska is a great midwestern university. Its history is bound up with the history of Nebraska itself. Nebraska Territory was opened to settmenent in 1854. At the first eeting of the Territorial legis lature, held in Omaha, the acting Territorial Governor, Thomas Cum ing, urged the Territorial citizens to give thought to the establish ment of a university. This was long- range planning, since there were less than 3,000 white settlers in the whole territory at that time. When Nebraska became a state in 1867, one of the first acts was to make provision for a University of Nebraska. The act providing for a state university contemplated a "complete and perfect institution, embracing a college of ancient and modern literature, mathematics and natural science, agriculture, law, medicine, political science, civil engineering and mechanics and a college of fine arts." The first University structure, old University Hall, was built in a cow pasture a few blocks north oi the new capitel of Lincoln. The object of the university was "to promote the general educational interests and welfare and to quali fy students to engage in the several pursuits and employments of so ciety, and to discharge honorably and usefully the various duties of life." The first curriculum was characterized by an almost inflex ible course of study and practically no electives; classics and mathe matics formed the backbone of the entire work. History, English, French or German and text-book study of science were introduced to give practical knowledge to prac tical men. The first building on the campus contained 48 rooms on three floors. This included two gymnasiums, a museum, a library, offices, college I societies and classrooms. The first cost of the building was $152,000, but the work was done in such an imperfect manner that the edifice threatened to crack and crumble to ruin. A vigorous and expansive ef fort on the part of Lincoln citizens averted the catastrophy. A promLient Nebraskan once said that "the main fault of the Uni versity was that it was opened too early; and its scant patronage and an inferentially high per capita cost of students was industriously ridiculed and denounced. It was the old University Hall that the first students of the University be gan their year. There were five freshmen, two sophomores, one junior and 110 "Latin School" pu pils aged" 10 to 16. The course offer ings were few and toe faculty scant. Student activities amounted to the efforts of a few debating so cieties. But as the University grew, it produced a record of teaching and research that was to attract Nebraska leaders in many fields. it happened at nu Every year there is some stu dent, who, when the PBK lists come out, received a severe shock. One such student under one such shock could only utter "And I told all my friends he was stu pid." Of course there are the students who complain about the presence of some "brain" in a class who al ways gets such high grades that the instructor car.'t scale the lower ones. But after the PBK announce ments the complaints change to "Gee, he was in my class and was he ever smart." A motor vehicle death occurs every 14 minutes and an accidental motor vehicle injury takes place every 23 seconds. A n t'4'i AS IT WAS ... Eighty-five years ago the University of Nebraska was little more than a dot on the prairie, but it has grown into a great network of educational facilities. Expansion, modernization, and improved equipment are still campus by-words.