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Page 32 text:
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coinage it DR. CARL W. HELMSTADTER Dean ofthe College of Applied Arts and Sciences Established in 1941, the College of Applied Arts and Sciences supervises courses for those who plan to work after gaining specific skills and techniques in instructional areas. There are two-year associate title programs which prepare students for semi-skilled and skilled positions, as well as four-year professional programs which entitle the student to a degree. The degrees which the College of Ap- plied Arts and Sciences recommends at present are: Bache- lor of Science in engineering and business administration, home economics, journalism, medical technology, military science and nursing. Graduates may qualify as teachers, enter business, industry and service firms, or pursue gradu- ate studies. ' :sf - 1 X gg 1: A , .-fiL:.,,fFfn-'T 'ri if I I ,VJ-14, K sw lv l' . ' , .. 53 f ish '- V-. A 5,?2.e.-L:-eg.':,gQ,5s,.i,fg'A ' 1. T - is T ' . The hum of machinery, the metal tool box, the much too heavy drawing board, and the cold red noses of the Saturday morning surveying class . . . to Omaha University students these things mean the engineering department is at work. Given impetus by Russia's Sputnik, this depart- ment's increased enrollment has created a problem. Classes have outgrown the East Quonset, and so it is with special interest that the campus engineers are looking forward eagerly to the completion of the Applied Arts Building. With more space and facilities available the engineer- ing department may continue to train stu- dents to fill the needs of a free people continuously demanding a better life. SYLVESTER V. WILLIAMS, professor and head of department of engineering, CHERYL H. PREWETT, associate professor of en- gineering, JAMES H. BROWN, associate professor of engineer- i ing, HAROLD l. DAVIS, assistant instructor of education and ' engineering, FREDERICK WEISSER, instructor of engineering.
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Page 33 text:
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ll -r .-V ' i- If y gftffijflt l Interested in home-making AND money- making? Then you've found your department. Careers in public or home service, demonstration, food processing, nutrition research, hospital or in- stitutional dietetics, 'Fashion co-ordination, pattern service promotion or teaching are only a few of the many jobs open to Miss B.S. Homemaking, '59. These masters of the pots, spatulas, sewing ma- chines and patterns will some day produce food, not burnt but eatable, and clothes, yes, clothes lhdl' fll. Visiting lecturers, demonstrations, teas, dinners and foreign foods buffets supplement classroom experience for the members of the University's Home Ec Club. The co-eds, who are automatically members of the college division of the American Home Economics Association, are led by president Mary Claire Lee. lSeatedl Shirley Van Orsdel, Sue Worman, JoAnn Pospichal, Karen Kaufmann, Sandra Fischer. lStanclingJ Deede Kuehn, Joyce Stolley, Dorothy Brown, Miss Audrey Boyer, Mary lee, Judy Suing, Mona McGrath. lFront rowl Dru Inman, Karen Kleider, Ruda Trautrimas, Marilyn Dvorkin, Deanne Heldt. lSecond rowl Donna Ludwig, Darlene Wissing, Katherine Mc- Lennan. lStandingl Marva Zentner, Diane Ulrich, Roberta Wilson, Judy lane, Carol Christiansen, Phyllis Anthony, Carol Krispense, Jeanne Kuhn, Rosie Corn Kozak, Sandra Averill. 5 MARGARET P. KILLIAN, professor and head of department of home economics, AUDREY BOYER, instructor of home eco- nomics. intl gif-l,v-gfrr . V. .,-- H M M. , T' LEEF, 'Q ,-' - ll ii 1 Z Ll ' Y, ' , T . . ,
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