fridby, Rcvsr.bsr 0. 1073 PZZ2 7 Roy Proffilt The campus and size cf UNL have changed consider ably since fee 1940s, but despite the changing times, students remain basically the same, according to Roy Proffitt. In Proffitt's college days, "beer and people of the opposite sex" were the main interests of" students, he said, Proffitt's contact with students at the University of Michigan, where he is now a professor of law, indicate thai modern student interests have not changed much from the 40s, he said. Proffitt was graduated from UNL in 1940 with a B.S. m business administration. Following five years in the US. Navy Proffitt received his law degree from the Uni tferaty of Mkfajgan Law School in .1948. He currently tes&ss admiralty law at the University of Michigan and L Gefl Rock ; Tm Lkdy to learn as mss&k as dt students week because Tm really in terested to bear what Uds have to say." said Gzl Thomas Screnscn Wiam Tomsk 3 s J Rock. 'Hack wis graduated ra 1961 wi2i a B.A. in broxd . casting as J is a fkedaaee author who" has written dramatic tslstisea specials 2nd childness DOfS. -Rock said that fee Tcrsty has c&acrsd a lot in fhs 15 years fcSowsej feer ra4aatg, and she lauded the ; charges as bef-g better for &s sod. ' .,.-7 Rggk also ss7 dhsss la tie moral tone of the ma-' feiBly, mad tsid fhs tficst fcst &s Swocl was more Lberzl than it was when she was graduated. "The idea of a comic strip wh a pot head or of an advertrsssct ia the BzZy Ne&ssfcan for a cure for crabs fiie piper would fejfe been closed down if it had pristed sosseihiag Hks that when I was ia school, Rock, said. . -. ..: " ' .'' Locking back on dae vshse of her UNL education, Ruck trd, ItecJxsSy fjdas, the vslue.of my educa tion waszSdi, 1st pjagg3sicaSyt I learned a lot, Bandings may have changed and students ap pearances may be different, but Thomas Sorenson, now . of Scarsdale, N.Y., sail the basics of UNL and Neb raska have remained the same. Sorenson, a Lincoln na tive, was graduated from NU in 1947. A journalism and political science major, he is currently a general partner in Advest Co. "Nebraska is still Nebraska," Sorenson explained. "It's different from other places. There's something to be said for that in a rapidly changing world . lie said he would urge students to specialize in their careers. , - An example of the need for specialization is in jour nalism, he ssld. People can no longer train to be general assignment reporters, he said, because editors are looking for people with backgrounds in certain areas. Specialization wEl make it easier for students to find jobs, he added. David Thomas David Thomas, senior vice president of finance at Duna & Bradstreet Co., Inc. ia New York, said he came to Lincoln because he thought it would be exciting to spend some time talking to students. impressed with to- s generation. They're smarter than we were, Thomas saM. v: Thomas : was 'graduated with distinction fna UNL ia 1949 with a BS. degree in business Admmistratica. He S2d hs fessa't kept in touch with the university because , he's so far !3?ay. , " jC. -After i v "'iliatioo, Thomas worked in a financial podikm fm Geserd Electric from 1949 to 1959. He then became controller for the McCaTl Corp. in New York City until 1961, whea he joined General Dynamics Corp. "I wasn't the typical college student, Thomas said. He eid fc -stered college at the end of World Var II after he was ia the service. Because he was married, Thomas said, he lived off campus and didn't really get into the college social life. l'm looking forward to seeing how tilings have charged," he said. High-speed computers have revolutionized agricult ural economics, said William Tomek, agriculture econom ics professor at Cornell Uni versity in New York. Computer - programmed simulation and futures tables games used in the classroom are more realistic than old teaching methods, he said, and computers have made an even bigger impact on research. Tomek, a native of Table Rock, was graduated from NU in 1956. Tomek received the 1965 National Science Foundation Fellowship and co-authored Agricultural Product Prices. The subject matter interests of agriculture students has shifted, he said, from farm and farm management to natural resources,' land use and the economics of irriga tion and pollution. " Farms are bigger and large corporate farms, mostly in California and Arizona, have become specialized, he said. vnek'j advice to students was "dont belittle your background." 1 1 1 ' v S ': H., IA, Jan Weir v Y? " ' - crossword puzzle E2ed lj tTHI. fSIT-Sf Read the Want Ads The university was much simpler in 1945, but it has something solid that will never change, said Jan Weir, here for Masters Week. Weir was graduated from NU in 1945 as a history major. She now is a princi pal owner in Mefford, Warren, Wkr Advertising Agency in Denver and chairman of ther board of directors of Fontana Media Corp. ' "When I went to the university it was mudi sasplier because there were 4,000 students at the mcst on the downtown campus," she said. Weir said the campus now is like a new world for her. Temple Eldg. is the only building she recognized, she said: In the 1940s; the university was more socially oriented then it is now, Weir said. Even though academic pursuits were offered, she said it was not fashionable to partake in -them. - I was a secret library freak, Weir said. In this way, she said, she could accomplish her academic goals while at ' the same time maintaining her social standing. Weir was ia school during World War II and said women then expected to get married immediately. A career was not considered by most she'sdded. But no matter how much things change, there is something that remains unchanged, something solid " she said. "I can't pinpoint what it is, but something about the atmosphere Is the same.' AC 1 Catch Kcf S "Act Cue" 19 Gives courage to Eosae IS t&ssLoos 13 Victim 17 M.Z.binI 13 French historian 13 lns 22 S-staxid 2 Sir & given 23 DartTitlfss" 22 G!adea . 24 WjOcpampoasIy 25 Dasycce 23 Eatrecy S33TOUS 27 Trptnpe visual 23 cJ up, as a Voz 23 Type cf nevet AitT. 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