MUSIC Kirsch selects picture slate for 50th Nebraska exhibit Following seven busy days in New York where he conferred with art dealers, visited studios and viewed latest painting, Dwight Kirsch is concluding arrangements for the 50th annual Nebraska art association exhibit opening in Morrill, Feb. 25. Fifteen New York galleries will co-operate with the art association this year in providing picture for the exhibit, a marked increase over the seven helping in last years show, Kirsch announced, adding that many of the artists to be rep resented are new in this part of the country. Books describe them Particularly interesting are the names of George Biddle, John Sloan, and Eilshemius, painters about whom books have appeared during the year. Eilshemius ia phowing his works for the first time in this city. Not so much emphasis ia to t put on sculpturing, the number of pieces to be exhibited being con siderably reduced from what the case has been in previous years. Despite this fat, Kirsch. predicts those chosen will prove of un usual interest. Waylande Gregory's conception of 'Tchabod Crane" and Warren Wheelock's "Paul Revere" will have a special appeal to chil dren while critics are expected to take Calder's sculptured "Abstrac tion" on the basis of symmetry and mechanics, tho the effect of the slab ia decidedly "humorous." Makes preliminary selections While in the east, Kirsch made preliminary selections for the F. M. Hall collection of original Ameri can paintings, selections which are purchased annually from the asso ciation show. These selections will later be voted upon, and those then chosen will be permanently hung with the collection now in Morrill. Artists will be brought to the galeries in the form of self-portraits or paintings by fellow work ers. Doris Lee who has "painted with spontaniety and dash" will appear on a canvas by Arnold Btonch. Waldo Pierce offers a self portrait and John Sloan presents a sketch of Robert Henri. Results of the exhibit, Kirsch suggests, are the gradual creation in the people of Lincoln of a deeper art appreciation stemming directly from actual contact with some of the finest work being produced today in the country. Union shows photo display Exhibit includes state fair contest winners An exhibit of prize winning photographs by the Lincoln Cam era club was placed on display yesterday in the book nook of the Union. The display includes the winners of the fine arts depart ment photography awards, given at the Nebraska state fair, this yenr. Winner of the first and second premiums is W. J. Rice, whose firat prie picture of "Rain Wor shippers" shows cornstalks stretching toward a background of cloud-flecked sky. The second pre mium winner, entitled "Fuzz and Buzz," pictures two puppies. Pictures on display are: "Gin ger," taken by Charles Barr; "Cow Hand." "Bed Time," and "Dark Contentment," taken by Gene Bradley; "Bird of Delusion," by Miles Breuer; "The Swimmer," and "Water Retards," by E. A. Grone; "Giraffes," "Lamplighting Time," and "Bulb Exposure," by Dwight Kirsch; "Dictator," by Delia Krem er; "Angles," by Robert Lipscomb; "Bingo," W. P. McDonald. "Rudge Memorial," by Lucille Mills; "Portrait," "Mountain Road." "Pattern," and "Hockey" by Claude Pilger; "Farm Home," "Capitol at Night," "Karen Begh tol." and "Cherry County," by F. E. Roth; "Portrait Study" by Rob ert Schricker; "Snooper Snapper," "Meditation," "Steps to Storage," and "Fire Fear." by Don W. Sig- ler: "Cowaashanock Pool," by Frank Slaymaker; "Porcupine Pattern," by Terry Townsend; "Old Age" and "Evening." by W. F. Weiland; and "Wood Pile," by Julius Bs Young. DRAMA IT lks, , .... ! . .j".:y i 1.,.,..,... o L 1 "Miner Rectlng," a nvw In- terpretatton of the working man by Paul Sample, wn ohoecn by Union officials with the aid of the art department as the January "Picture of the Month." The paint ing now hangs in the first floor corridor of the Union, where it Propaganda and censorship Creel committee with World by Margaret Ann Osborn Words that Won the War, by Mock and Larson, is the story of America's first "propaganda min istry," and its dynamic leader, George Creel. This book is edited at a moment when no one can say inai Arm- w.u u, . ! ...:n 1.. problems of 1917-1919. The les sons of the Committee on Public Information, the so-called Creel committee of the World war, are calling aloud for recognition in these tense days. France and England have be come, at least for the time being, "totalitarian democracies," and Americans ask themselves what may happen to this country if it is sucked into the maelstrom. This book attempts to demonstrate how the advance of censorship power can be silent and almost unnoticed as wave follows wave of patriotic hysteria. Resistance not great " If the record of the last war is to be taken, American resistance to repressive measures may not be great. The question arises whether, in the event of a new war, Amer- ica would feel like indulging in the luxury of some Creel commit- tee to stand as buffer between military dictatorship and civil life. The "strategic equation" of mil- ltary language recognizes four factors (combat, economic, politl- cal, and psychologic), and the Committee on Public Information touched all of these. For an appre- elation of the "psychologic front," we quote Dr. H. D. LassweU: "In the great society it is no longer possible to fuse the waywardness of individual in the furnace of the war dance, a new and subtler in- strument must weld thousands and even millions of human beings Into an amalgamated mass of hale and win ana nope. War propaganda lives "A new flame must burn out the Odcll will review writing problems Miss Ruth Odell, assistant pro fessor of English will discuss the research and publication of her new book before an open all girls meeting, sponsored by Coed Coun sellors in the Union Book Nook, tomorrow at 7 p. m. "Helen Hunt Jackson" by name, the book deals with the autobi ography of that author. Miss Odell is publishing the book aa part of her doctor's dissertation. Picture of the month was brougM temporarily from the MorrrH half galleries. Painted by a living American who r now artist-ln-resldent at Dartmouth university, the paint ing show a style peculiar to painters with a mechanical mind. The use of triangular shapes as canker of dissent and temper the steel of bellicose enthusiasm. The name of this new hammer and anvil of social solidarity is prop- aganda. Talk must take the place of drill; print must supplant the dance. War dances live in litera- ture and at the fringes of modern earth; war propaganda breathes caim, no &nd f . th capitals and prov. inces of the world." And in describing the specific public mind as when they were vividly presented by pamphleteers. For instance slogans; "The peo ple's war," a "holy war of ideas," and the "war to end war." And pictures of German atrociousness, cartoons and so on. So we see that the stamp of the CPI is visi ble, however, not only in the popular conception of World war history but also in official think ing about "holding fast the in ner lines" If America shouid be come involved in the new Euro pean war. So as the war to end war re cedes into the past, America's fighting men turn back to the CPI. Improvements on the Creel committee would undoubtedly be made, but if another war should come to this country, no American would need to read the story of the CPI. He would relive it! abjectives of war propaganda, Dr. Lasswell gives this list: 1. To mobilize hatred against the enemy. 2. To preserve the friendship of allies. 3. To preserve friendship and, if possible, to procure cooperation, 4, To demoralize the enemy, The reader will see how perfect- jy the work of the Committee on public Information follows this formula, thus making the record it8 activity not only significant aa a chapter in American history but an enpecially apt illustration 0 now au war propaganda works. Slogans powerful. America went under cersorshlp during the World war without realizing rt. The fact that censor ship power waa employed with moderation does not detract from Its Bisrnlficaace in American hia- McCarthy spokt at librarians' confrnc Stephen A. McCarthy, assistant director of university libraries, ap peared on the recent program of the university libraries subsection of the Association of College and Reference Libraries In Chicago. He addressed tho group on "Higher Education In the Gilded Age," BOOKS Gallery displays Schreiber watercolor group till Jan. 22 Sunday Journal and Star. the basts of the composition and the relation of the figure group to the stylized mountains show clearly his power to build pictures on abstract line. Some observers see In the sim plicity of expression on the faces of his subjects a comparison of workingmen to robots. study credits war victory tory. If the administration had wished, it might have imposed an almost complete censorship on tho utterances and publications of all Americans during the war. The work of the CPI is with us today. Its sterotypes which it gave us dining the war have per- sisted through two decades. The great majority of these stereo- types are as clear today in the Gettmann traces literary criticism thru times of war Condition of war and peace may be traced thru the study of shifts and trends in literary criti cism according to Dr. Royal Gett mann of the English department. The influence of war on the popu larity of foreign authors ia evident In the history of the literature written by tfce Russia author, Turgenev. At the time of the Crimean war the British read Turgenev's books to satisfy their curiosity concern ing their little known enemy. Tur- Library displays collection of prized 17th century maps Mont prised and akw the mont four seasons appearing at its cor- interesting possession In the map ners mark it as a true work of art. department of the university 11- In the collection also is a map brary ia a collection of 47 large of Africa by Carollum Allard 117" ?UIlrg l year" wh08e work waa Published 1050 iS?. by leading European 1670 Ljke orld map( thia fnoP k ,T f8 Kmap8,i"?aflUr shows the source of the Nile, ing 20 by 24 Inches and larger Another interesting fact about this at rcZllfl1 Y ,& Hnra;!an ear,y maP that it plies a largo 2 maTTf KFJtt M numb?r the Sahara. n. fc . ... , . Of particular Interest is a map of the world drawn by F. DeWitt arjouc 1B7U, which shows the source of the Nile to be two lakes south of the equator. Both these lakes, given the names Zaire and Zafflan, were located In the Inte rior of Africa long shown as a blank spot on much later maps. California an Island! , Pt,n,ly PrV0,;0f the ,obe AU the maps are lnexcellent con left blank on DeWitt's map ia dltion and quite legible with tho northeastern North America. Call- exception of a map of Great Brit fornla Is depicted as an Island, tain from which the ruler's coat Like many other maps Included in of arms was cut out years ago. this collection, the map of the other maps in the collection world is Illustrated by richly col- show portions of Europe, military red drawings. The scenes of the operations and fortifications of THE ARTS An exhibition of the works of Georges Schreiber, young Belgian American artist, has been secured temporarily by the art department through the courtesy of the Asso ciated American Artists for dis play in Morrill. Schreiber's paint ings recently won the acclaim of critics in New York. The 22 paintings will be in Gal lery A until Jan. 22. After that date the watercolors are to be featured at the Nelson gallery in Kansas City for several weeks. Beautiful as well as ugly. Schreiber portrays the beautlf fid, the disturbing, and the ugly phases of life in the Unifed States in his watei colors. The gambling scene from Wyoming is said to strike some as being' slightly dis agreeably realistic. There is a beautiful treatment of a disagree able subject in the watercolor of a Florida chain gang. Agony in the faces of the unfor tunate sharecrop farmers is shown in "Sharecropper's Funeral." The Tuthill prize at the twelfth international exhibition of water colors at the art institute of Chi cago in 1932 was awarded to Schreiber. "Portraits and Self Portraits," a book of characteriza tions in text and drawings of the leading International figures In art, literature, politics and educa tion, is his. His works are in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Brooklyn museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art and the New York City museum. Schreiber was born in Brussels of German parents in 1904 and fled with the family to Germany at the outbreak of the World war. They suffered much because neither country wanted them. He witnessed the German revolution and saw German soldiers trade guns tor bread to the Belgians, only to be fired at later with their own guns. "All this has made me conscious of the times I live in and the peo ple I live with. It has made me strive with passion for human undemanding in my work," com ments Mr. Schreiber. gencv'3 works were regarded as social documents rather than masterpieces of narrative writing, and served as propaganda devices for picturing the Russians as merely animated digesting mach ines who ate cabbage soup, stank enormously of garlic and commit ted unhead-of treacheries." Dr. Gettmann's study indicates that after the Crimean war Eng lish interest in Turgenev diminish ed and the few new translations which were published were re ceived with comparative indiffer ence. However, when the Russians marched on Constantinople in 1877, English sales of the Russian author's books mounted to new heights. Turgenev's works again were utilized as propaganda. In the closing decade of the 19th century, English literary critics led by Galsworthy accepted Tur genev's writings aa valuable liter ature, largely because these crit ics disliked French realists even more than the ruthless realism of the Russian, colored illustration pictures a jruuui, iuy uainae a lion icauing an ostrich-like bird by the neck. a. crocoutie and a negro queen complete the scene. Collection 100 years old The maps, now owned by the university, were first assembled about 100 years ago and were bound in cardboard. In recent years the library mounted the marts aennrntplv nn rl-.th KokIii