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Show ning, are.: 1. Anticipation of the type of personnel to be served and plans for selection and supervision; 2. Consideration of purposes and objectives ob-jectives of prospective students as to the following points: extent of the demand for general education to cultural and liberal type; extent ex-tent of the demand for specific vocational training in semi-skilled and semi-professional fields, and extent of profesisonal and pre-professional pre-professional preparation; 3. Offering Offer-ing of a curriculum to provide adequately for these three purposes and facilities for instruction, and j4. A channel for effective school-community school-community contacts. Post-War Groups Named at USAC Committees Will Work . With Permanent Group personnel of post war planning committees at Utah State Agricultural Agri-cultural college, who will work in conjunction with permanent committees com-mittees now functioning, were announced an-nounced recently by college officials. offi-cials. A central committee, headed by Dr. E. A. Jacobsen, dean of the school of education, will be responsible re-sponsible for the formation of a set of general plans and principles princi-ples that will be adhered to in the formation of a post war program pro-gram to serve as a guide for the work of sub-committees. It also will act as a clearing house for sub committee reports, he said. Assisting him will be Dean Alme-da Alme-da P. Brown, Dean Lewis M. Turner, Tur-ner, Dr. C. L. Anderson, Dr. V. D. Gardner, Professor H. R. Kepner and Professor D. W. Thorne. A guidance committee, with Professor Pro-fessor L R. Humpherys as chairman, chair-man, was set up to prepare a policy for selection and admission and supervision of the individual program of study. Other committee commit-tee members are Professor Evelyn Hodges, Professor A. F. Bracken, Professor E. C. Jeppsen, and Mrs. Esther L. Skeels. Investigation of present institutional insti-tutional facilities for the expanded program and suggestions for changes in instructional staff and additions to buildings and equipment, equip-ment, will be the responsibility of the instructional staff and facilities facili-ties committee. George D. Clyde, dean of the school of engineering, industries and trades, was named chairman with Dr. R. H. Walker, dean of the school of agriculture, Dr. W. L. Wanlass, Professor Milton Mil-ton R. Merrill and Secretary R. E, Bemtson as aides. Curriculum committee, Dr. G. Homer Durham, chairman; Dean N. A. Pedersen, Professor Cleve H. Milligan, Dr. John C. Carlisle, Dr. L. A. Stoddart, Professor Byron Alder and Virginia Phillips, committeemen; com-mitteemen; public relations committee, com-mittee, .Professor Merrill, chairman; chair-man; Professor H. S. Carter, Dr. King Hendricks, Professor A. J. Morrison and Miss Bertha Johnson, John-son, members. The curriculum committee will propose changes in the present curricula offering in terms of the purposes to be attained and the type of personnel to be served. Duties assigned to the public relations rela-tions committee include plans for extending institutional services to various public and social agencies, planning needed service for groups not now being served by college facilities, providing additional channels through which information informa-tion concerning institutional offerings offer-ings may reach prospective students, stu-dents, both regular and .specLjl. Four major factors that are be-ir.g be-ir.g considered in post-war plan- |