HIGHACRES COLLEGIAN UARIETTA INSTITUTES PROG WHICH INGINEERING Ka BECOME MORE CULTURAL lihri.etta 0 T. 1 ,- A now plan where by pre-engineering graduates of Marietta College will be accepted for Masters level work at Columbia University upon the recommendation of their department head and the Dean of the College was announced here recently by President Bay Irvine. The new program, known as the 4-2 Combined Plan, was discussed at a meeting of Combined Plan cal-logos on Columbia's campus last year. Dean Merrill R. Patterson of Marietti: attended the sessions and said at that time it was agrecq that the pan be presented for approval to V. - .e Columbia University Committee on Instruction. Dr. Patterson revealed that under the now setup the student will attord Marietta for four Years and then receive either a BS or BA degree. After successfully completing two years at Columbia he will receive hip Masters in Engineering. Under the 3-2 plan a student spends three, years at lariett6 and two at either Columbia, Pennsylvania, or Case Institute of Technology in order that he may receiv3 a BA and a BS in Engineering. Frank H, Lee, chairman of Columbia's Ccmbjned Plan Committee, in writing to President Irvine stated: "We feel surer that this action most clearly expresses the satisfaction of our faculty at the results being obtained under the 3-2 arrangement." According to Dr. William H. Davis, head of the Marietta College physics department, the Binary program gives the student the chance to acquire the "broad cultural outlook and basic scientific knowledge which engineering schools now feel is necessary for a good engineer." *, SANE PARKING SPACE, JOIN A OAR POOL FRIDA. ()crop ER _ 19 58. RUS',IAN WILL BE TLUGHT LT GRINNELL =MEI la.- I.P. 1, course in Russian will be instituted at Grinnell College this fall, President Howard R. Bowen announced hero recently. Edmund Heier, formerly a teaching fellow at the University of Hichigan, will initiate the course and will also teach German. His Grinnell appointment as an instructor in the modern foreign languages department will be effective this month. President Bowen, in announcing the addition of Russian to the Grinnell curriculum, pointed out that only about 4,000 Lmericans arc currently studying Russian, in less than 200 colleges and ally a handful of high schools, despite great demand for translators and other experts in the language. By contrast, English is being taught to at least five million Russians. "Education in language is essential to our understanding of foreign ways of life," he said. "Our international responsibility demands thorough knowledge of foretn institutions and literature. We expect that tit° addition of Russian at Grinnell will not only strengthen our liberal arts offering but .lso contribute tc the needs' of national security." TMLESLEY ADOPTS LONGER PERIODS MMNITIE 7011odoy College has announcod that bc:gianing this fall there will be no Saturday or Uednesday morning classes. This plan, submitted to the college by a student committee, will permit the student to devote longer periods of concentrated tine to her individual Studies. Under the adopted system, students will have two one hour sessions in a course, rather than the previous fifty minute classes a week. 4t- * * * a * * * * * -;;•• * NEI