Dean of Women, 1941
Title
Dean of Women, 1941
Description
Dean of Women, Helen Hosp in the 1941 Cornhusker yearbook.
The description reads:
"A rather tall, slender brunette, graduate of Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland; and a formal pupil of Madam Schumann-Heink is Dean of Women Miss Helen Hosp.
Her philosophy on life may be quoted in the words of William Allen White 'I am not afraid of tomorrow, for I have seen yesterday, and I love today'
Working with students is Miss Hosp's aim in life and she has carried it through all the stages. First teaching, then as a field secretary and finally entering the University of Nebraska as its Dean of Women.
She has proved by her attendance at the school functions her belief that the faculty and students should be in closer contact. Dean Hosp also carries through the idea that there is nothing on earth from which one can learn more than from actual contact with people."
The description reads:
"A rather tall, slender brunette, graduate of Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland; and a formal pupil of Madam Schumann-Heink is Dean of Women Miss Helen Hosp.
Her philosophy on life may be quoted in the words of William Allen White 'I am not afraid of tomorrow, for I have seen yesterday, and I love today'
Working with students is Miss Hosp's aim in life and she has carried it through all the stages. First teaching, then as a field secretary and finally entering the University of Nebraska as its Dean of Women.
She has proved by her attendance at the school functions her belief that the faculty and students should be in closer contact. Dean Hosp also carries through the idea that there is nothing on earth from which one can learn more than from actual contact with people."