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Page 17 text:
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J An ft '-Q DR. WARREN WINSTEAD, President, Nova universny v v 1 . .- 4 h V ' - A 4. - , . - . -1 ' .ef . 1 J .s . W f . : -. M-4 , I -. 1 - 13 fr' ' ., '- -- , utr '-3. -,- N M-' .HQ -P. . 1 Q , , -, '.' . ' - . ri 3 '-CZ' .. - ATIBJ. '-'i'i:,- if Hi P - .gwnsii ,. 'gg . ' I. - .. rf-4-A. ' ' , - V, .-, ' ' ' .1 , .5 ' 7.3, -, 'Q 29,33 '. -,Q-1 .ff .x - .ll 1.,., . ., , ,Mx--e -M' t ,'-Z- I- A, .nip-.'4:l. 'A.- '. , 'Y wa if-3.7 -'V ?-.-I '-'. f gf-ill ! .swf -4' gt'-'Q-I S -ff 2 1 xl tw, .ik 'fy 5.::,,XisA: ft lf. 4 ip, l rx' 1 .Ri . iv 'gg I I .X .21 Kvgfkn if? 2 ' vi fm ,' r h- . ' , - -:V - iv , ,. 'r 4531. -45-,e,.-. --'g .-:P ,, , fig -,fu- 4 - :EY in ,A i r f,..-.:f-.- .Q .. ' 1.--1. -,.-.ff '- ' -. . '. ' f l- s T . . . .1 ' . U f ' ' , ' 4- F: Rs- est . r.-. ' A A as :Ui . - . . f .fF-3.1 ' isa ' 'f x -,-' :-fr 52 ' ' . -W ' W . Hg- , ite Q i. L zz - -j,.,, ..f ?5' ' .intl ' ' -V154 2 ng, ,.,,?:.,:3 I 2-'f L. .. JV' f - .f .-. . ' 'rv' ff- .,, f- S. f f y - 1 ..+. Irs' 3- t?.Q5- . , - v ' . R Q 74' v rx.,--' 5: 3-Tyr' - ...L .L -I '35, L '.-Q.. igsx Y' .- .-- . 1.3 E Tf'-'WH-, ' - ,- 1- iv, 7 -L-' !ri?'5g.' 1. s'7 I' f ' '35 q T, ' .-'19 L45 -L -,,,,,-,..,,., .f-' ..- -xi ., I u I I I I I 'gp R, u l 5 ng I I I .-, - . -- -- - 1 'Q ' J- -.LJ l.r:... '1s--F. I L 1- 7-f---1. . f JK-1, -A-' ...... .:.... ,H . .:.., 'er' -1.-:g:.::.x.:g:. .w...4 in .Q . . .. fr .-up - .......,. .ev.,.. ' . ---r ff---3 - e '-'- ' ' ' ' Q '2 ' - , ap es '- 1'- , - t . .-nf-+ 2- --- ' , x...- e--1-. .. L , -,.- '.,.,,,,, .-.. . -F Y . ... F - -- -- Q'-1-.--...-- . , 1..:- -f -rf H' A - 4 1'- F.,-Y ,. , '- ---f --gas-4' e ..:b:f1i',a..,' -- Q- - z - Q' 'L . . streets?-6524 . fa,,qa'5.. -.ustpee . -K. .,4,x,- ' -P'-..'. '-i Q- - , , 4, ':.: 1-:-.-.... ,- ,,, ,U I pw- , 4.-, -imakexhiu J. Y ,, 'H ,,..:,:q,,k..,,,m . ai-ik .ar 3.22: Kiss, 6. .,, '- - 4 2-4. '-4521.3---i' Jx7'F1-+--if5l,.wi6flk:K-- ivffl if :1 '.'f '. 5' .-A... f ' '- .. 4 'L'- 3 TIM --SSS? s r-fiffff . ' ,' xi-:SL47-f!'x5.f.:-'YH-ifn. x ' -- - - - ' ---- - .N 11-99531-Wm-ffr'--+ -.A iivfmsfgct. .-e - - , yu 9: .L X-I-,Q -'xyv N 3.05 Q Lge.. .2-.f rx. . . . ,un . -, A . 'A 1-:Fm-i.w'.2i'f5l4gii, 55A'1'ggL1f4fi-:lsigff.-'ff 'Af-'NS Sf'-ff ith? '-i2e.5ilL-?.,g. . ' Quota' . p ' Sf-1'-,gk -.1 151,41 'Z .- f .' . '1' .' : af fa tw 'ir '- 1,4 11 -v. ..' J . ' ' T' 'z-. ' -viz, ,Q--1 2 a'1Qs'.-d,,..r2-,-,tan s. '-,-.- -ws. . -N 7 1 ' - Q ' A A . - -Q . A - ' . n- :E 7? -. -' as if T5 , 1 P K .. . .. .. dent of the National Academy of Scienceg are all members of this board. Dr. Paul Brandwein, a prom- inent educational Consultant who was one of the planners of Nova High School. completes this list of men who are leaders in their field. All of these scientists and educators have been to Ft. Lauderdale to ex- amine the trustee's plans and help set them back on course when they stray. They advise on everything from the location of buildings to the selection of faculty and projection of student load. No one is chosen for the faculty without the endorsement of the Ad- visory Board. The faculty consists of only the finest in educators. The first to he appointed. in mid-1965. was Dr. Ray- inond Pcpinsky, Robert O. Law Re- search Professor of Physics and Chern- istry. He is considered one of the nation's top men in crystal physics and is a consultant to the armed forces on retrieval of scientific in- formation. The clean of the Education Center. named in August. is Dr. Abraham Fischler. recently a professor of edu- cation to the government of Chile. The professor of physical ocean- ography is Dr. Nlilliam S. Richardson. who is performing research contracts on the flow of the Gulf Stream for the Office of Naval Research and the Na- tional Science Foundation. Dr. Vinstead has as his assistant Dr. Charles E. Gauss, former chair- man of the Department of Philosophy at George VVashington University. The acting dean of the Physical Sciences Center is the retired presi- dent of Knox Class, Inc., New York. Dr. A. VV. XVishart. He was also a former executive wtih Westinghouse and Coming Glass. The vice-president of business af- fairs is the former president of Sun- beam Electronics, C. I. Rice. The university will not he organ- ized into colleges and schools in the usual manner. Each group of closely related subject areas will constitute a center, where the research professors 9
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Page 16 text:
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NOVA UNIVER by RONNIE CIANI Broward junior College, frowned upon by many students, is in the middle of the most outstanding edu- cational center in the Southeast. Nova University was conceived for the advanced, the gifted and the cre- ative student, where he and his fel- lows can move in an atmosphere dedi- cated to education and scientific dis- covery. The university was founded with two objectives. These are South Flor- ida's desire for a high quality center of learning and the need for a private institution in the southeastern United States dedicated to the advancement of science. SITY However, Nova will not be con- cemed with the technologies alone. The arts and humanities will also be emphasized. The University's forceful young president, Dr. Warren Win- stead, states, We are dedicated to the advancement of all learning. VVe hope to provide for the student an exposure in depth to the meanings and values of our culture, while giving him the skills and appreciation neces- sary to a full and rewarding life. The university is a part of what is called the Nova Complex, an edu- cational innovation which is unique in the United States. The complex consists of Nova High School, an un- graded, team-teaching, electronics- assisted institution planned with the aid of the Ford Foundation, Nova Elementary School, a scaled-down copy of the high school, and the Iun- ior College of Broward County. These are all public, tax supported and part of the county school system. The complex is located on one sec- tion of the wartime Naval Air installa- tion, Forman Field, which was given to the school by the General Services Administration. The privately en- dowed university is being built across the street, on a section of the field which was partly purchased from the C.S.A. by the university founders and partly given to them. They had paid roughly S125,000 toward a pur- chase price of S375,000 when General Services, with the approval of the U. S. Office of Education, forgave the rest. The total complex was planned un- der a K Qfor kindergartenj through 20 Cgraduate schoolf' concepts, by a group of school board members, edu- cators and about 50 business and pro- fessional people of the county, func- tioning as the South Florida Educa- tion Center, Inc. The first 14 grades were to be public schools, the univer- sity was to be privately endowed, open as a graduate school and work down to meet the junior college. For at least a few more years the university will only accept students with a masters' degree from another institution. Many will be engineers and researchers who have been sent by industries to take advanced courses. The past absence of a tech- nological university of this nature is considered a handicap to the region's efforts to attract more science-oriented industry. According to Dr. Winstead, Nova is conceived as the M. I. T. of the South and the third point of an American triangle embracing M. I. T. and the California Institute of Tech- nology. An Advisory Board of the top men in education, control and supervise the university's progress. Serving on this board are: Dr. James R. Killian, jr., chairman of the corporation of M. I. T., and Robert B. Gilmore, Cal Tech's vice-president for business affairs. Also on the board are two Nobel Prize winners in physics, Dr. Hans D. Jensen of the University of Heidel- berg, Germany, and Dr. Emilio Segre of the University of California at Berkeley. Dr. Richard Folsom, presi- dent of Rensselair Polytechnic Insti- tuteg Dr. Abram Sachar, president of Brandeis University, Dr. Athelstan Spilhaus, dean of the Institute of Technology of the University of Min- nesota, and Dr. Frederick Seitz, presi-
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Page 18 text:
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' mmufiu U liimlllmllnau Hmmm aim, K B ,Q 9. 5, .1 f. ,, .Hr ' ' , ., , .- .1 . , - -- -A -- vi ' Lf 5 .,5:iWi,f-EN?-:1 , li -,Eff - ,Q - .V A-.-A, , I Y M . fi ..Jr s1A ' f3f r -e5H4Q25aI'.4:r.g . m e if ff. -.39 , .law .ml f 14-'fbi' .i Q ' , 4,-:-452 , - 1, ,-fFkWdmg. ,, .Q - ra S. ,-.JH x A i :iw . 1 'Sei .-2. '. v::'r3 - V. a ., . ' ftp . - 1, -- 4. ,-1 .,A:,g ,- '-1 .L- jf'.'.,.f5L:ig'-fhf::,?lif2if?-gfiiiff F. 5gg7g'iy,,g,,ff.,.f ' -1 Y' f'f .' :-f,,fJ.fP ' ' 7 lu, 1.-firggf ww V N Tv R .. . xl ' - 175' . . li .1 r' . -V aa g 1 J is .I3...4..':g,-1 ' -:-gb, ' ' ' . if and their colleagues in the different areas will have the advantage of mutual interests and intimate associa- tion. Though each center will be separate, there will be constant co- operation among them in developing educational and research programs. At present there are two completed centers on campus - the two million dollar Louis YV. Parker Physical Sci- ences Center and the S300,000 Edwin NI. and Esther L. Rosenthal Univer- sity Center. A 531.25 million apart- ment building is now underway. The citizens of Hollywood are currently carrying on a fund campaign to fin- ance the 31.5 million Education Center. The peak enrollment of the univer- sity will only be 1,500 students, of these 1,000 will be in the graduate school. Every undergraduate will be 10 directing his efforts toward a graduate degree. The opening of the graduate school will take place in the autumn of 1967, with peak enrollment being reached by 1985. Undergraduates will not be ac- cepted until some time around 1970. The exact date has not yet been de- termined. Tuition for local residents and out- of-state students has not yet been set. VVhy begin as a graduate school? Because you can start a graduate school with one student and one pro- fessor, says Nova's president. Gradu- ate instruction inherently involves re- search, hence, an institution starting at the graduate level is in a better position to attract significant research grants. lt is also easier to recruit quality faculty since outstanding pro- fessors usually prefer to Work with graduate students and to be involved in research. Control of Nova University is vested in the local community, not in Tallahassee. This is one of the principal reasons that the trustees de- cided to make it private and depend upon endowment support instead of asking the state for a county college. Another reason is the salaries. The trustees pick professors under a sys- tem they call targets of opportunity. If an outstanding educator who is active in research becomes available they pounce upon him, and they can offer him compensation comparable to what he could get at M. I. T. or Cal Tech. The educator's field of competence matters little because the curriculum plan is adjusted to fit him. Why do the professors come? The challenge, replies Dr. Fischler, dean of the Education Center, and the opportunity. In most large, estab- lished universities, it's very difficult to break with tradition. If you want to innovate and try things radically different, it's easiest to do it in a new university. How will Broward County benefit from this great institution? The uni- versity, when combined with the in- dustrial research facilities that will be attracted to it, should represent one of the largest industries in Broward County by 1975. The research com- plex can produce a total of 15,187 salaried jobs, which would be sup- ported by 3-L994 service workers. The total payroll represented by these jobs would amount to S63O,652,659 and the new population for Broward County because of the university would approximate 165,000 people. The full impact of Nova University will be felt in all of South Florida. Nova University will be a constant testament to the benefits and the achievement of American private en- terprise. It will have been created from the results of that enterprise, to stand as an ever-present reminder that many of the world's greatest in- stitutions owe their existence to indi- viduals rather than to states,
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