OB' A (Lv a APR MM (in ARCWVSi Vol. 74, No. 99 The Nebraskan Wednesday, April 26, 1961 AA UP, Meet Solons College-Public Liason Weak By Nancy Whitfard There are "breaks in the communication between the University and the legislature and the public as a whole and they must be repaired. Sea. Richard Marvel of Has tings told members of the American Association of Uni versity Professors. Marvel, said people "out side the college walls' never lock in and find out what the college is doing. Tnlversities are at fault 2 became any self-aaa!y-sit begun with the assucp tktm that the University is basically soaad and only seeds a paint and polish job," Marvel said. There are two sides to the communications picture. Peo ple request information and foe University interprets its goals and mission to the leg islature and people. Tragedy "One of the great trage- es," Marvel said, is that j the University's bason with I iMricirtnira it Mit ffnml " I t,i ia .v . . . . . coma oe rememea uy inore exposure" of students andIMeMW,: facity to the process of state J goverrjnexL Be said University faeslty members should serve on committees related to the leg islature and that stadeats shsald make use of the Uai caraeral laboratory" only a few blocks away. Charles PaMersoo, - chasr maq of the department of philosophy told the professors there are two aims of e&uca txxs: prctfessimal (to teach sSodezts bow to make a liv- ing) and Eheral (to teach stsHTtere is M illiteracy ia the deals bow to live.) S Soviet falsa." Several Points S To achieve a liberal educa tion, Paittersco said, a stu dent most learn to see the world from several cunxis of view science, literature, art, I history and religion- A koowledge of the scks tzSx enables the stodeut to see thUzigs with new signifi cance and meanBg, aad to develop the method of arnv ing at truth. PatterKns said. Ieratare give standards to lenrpvTarr literatare by, art develops (he aesthetic capa city and Littery ghes new perspective and measiag," be said. Dr. Vasce Rogers, presi dest of Weskyaa UQivercity, said the University most be is a ccstral position to pro tide: -&nir mHM mm tk I wnAivrmfra wrf ii aid I b did dsA believe a naaver-J the plaa of "acceifeg all sto- immt TffJlw tar artwjis. Top Clghl gradaate aad prsfesskmal programs to ft uta stasdards for txiisx edu f ffitxixi iotititioQS ia the state. Center of research aad a cestral library for stale-wide education. Senice (hrngh exteasiMi programs aad oorrespoikdence courses. Special programs wA pos sible in other state-wide io sttotias but etberflial to a total elucatiyn program. These wosuld Include f orei gn ytyjtfaiw prograxss. testisg programs for a&muskms placement, asad faculty eo rkttmeiit through visiting uixAar programs aad factuly exchanges. German 'Lije' Film Germaa Cfatb a ill sponsor fibe sbowicg of "Sky Wiib ct Stars" tomorrow after bwi at 2 f .a. la room S29 Baraett, aad tosmrow fright at 7:31 p.m. la Love library asditorinm. The G e r aa a a laagaage lira alii have EagHth svb tiO. The pablk is invited U the free sboaisg of this pktore tkh preseEls a view of tile brfaeea the East aad West xaes of Ger-maay. 3 c 1 r-1 ... Getting to know some of represents. Miss E-Week; pias aa E-Week badge Campus Panel Discussion 6No Illiteracy in Soviet Union,' Say Russians By Tom Kotoae and Jan Sack Five Soviet delegates sup- ported the theory and eSTec- tiveness of the Russian school svctom in a naitel discussion with to professors and a irrahia gtmAettt v54prdav , " . The Soviet mlcffi of edu- cation follows tee prto Dies to prepare the stn- dents to live a fmH life; to prepare them to be a good waiter in society: to ac- UQr gpg sght show dents, technicians and pro qaaint them with basac pridav. Mav 5 at Pershing fessional people are stadying toow!edge in different so ettces- Wbea asked the attitode of the Soviet stadeats toward the edaeatioaal syvtetn, del egate Vadim Koptilla. retort ed, "We are sraSiag more thaa ;h are." He eoatiBaed, Commlsorv general edmca- tion and technical traimng are emphasized in grades osae Ihiwiagh eight, being closely cozmectod with productive work. Three Schools Thereafter the student en rolls in me of three schools: A three year evening and night secondary s&wxA with general ami technical educa tion. Iwilh the saanie cBitmflMm. A three to foar year teca- Biral and specialized high With the motto "Stady MX be lazy- the Rassiaa sjttem is gradna&ag three eagsDeers to ma one; two sdestistf to mu- one; aad five BKtaSargKtc to oar one. TjBittioa ia soviet colleges, tmiversaies aad secsaodary chiiKls is free. State ta arshins are awarded to needy students for moan amid board A jdeteramoed carnco- fcim WTfltma a SDMSS9a S CW- Hpe i csammiM&rr, woeo miifcEtiomed about Swiist m- doctriciatioiffl of a stoflemt, lawyer Mavr Davtyan re pljei. "A cMd is edjacated by the fanniDy and the schsnol from birth in the fjwrSt of the CommioniiA sMrialMic mwality asd aallaolL" Yasis Vaivois, ymnufiisA far the Soviet Youth, re vealed that a foreign lamga a?e other than that spoften TODAY Wedaesday: Bailder's Advertising Com naiMee, 5 p.m- 342 Student Union Dr. KmMer Hectare, a.ni., 252 Eesjay H&33 "Chaflren of the Sm" t p,BL, Ra3jh MjneDer Plaae tanum Tborsday: Red Crots Leaderhip, t:30 p.m., SlDdeul Union Eopneers Open House, 2-19 p..n., Oly campus Ssiience ia Agrkuhare, all day. Ag camp T&bias R. Weaver, lecture, A p,m... 222 Union Physics ColDoqiiiiiiun, 4:15 p..m., 231 Erace Lab Air ROTC awards parade, i p.m., 14th asd Vine German film, 7:39 p.m.. Love library aodilorram Jo'iiat Anray-Navy Parade, own. Women's P.E. Field S3ftiH M r ITS A PINNING the ran she Jadi Zadina, Deaa Mark within that republic is taught for three hours a week be yond the fifth grade level. The state is teaching the realistic view towards ma terialism that it is the pre- tomiaate motivation of sode- I WBetaer tse staaeats Classroom Dress For Spring Nigllt IPC TO -w - f. 1 L me nave xe- mnoctMl rhttmnm hro ritwccl Anditorimin. Tickets are being sold in the form of coupon books. Organ- ized houses have been con tacted and will again be con tacted concerning ticket buy ing in blocks. ijidividaals may obtain tic kets throegh any Com Cab member or at a booth set op in the north lobby of the Slta dei$ Uniom. There ws2 be no general ad mission. AH seats must be re served. Ag Engineers Meet The American Society of AgricB&aral Engiaeers (AS AE) 13 meet today at 7 pjn. ia rem 2H6 Ag Eagf aeermg BaUding. Ftaal pre paratives win be completed for E-Week. IRC WiU Sponsor ilediertd Historian A discission, "Bejanns to Doctor: Some Casual Re marks on Medieval Stodect life," will be presented at Love library Austmimm Fri day at 11 a.D3. Prof. James L. Cate, a lead ing medieval hifitorian. will be the speaker. Dr. Cate has served as co-editor of the seven- volume "Army Air Forces in World War H," pub lished by the Uoiiversity Chi cago Press. The lacture is spsmjored by the departmect of history asd the University Research Coin ed iVRCh Ag Science Meet By Jim Forrest "We may bulge the walls a tittle, tat that's what we are Howking for." Tin was the surprised comment of Dr. Franklin E. Eldodge, director of resident instruction, on beartcg that tw 32 high school jmxm and seniors are expected to attend the fourth annual Science in Agriculture Conference, Thariday. "TMt indicates that a aew attendance record is ia the mails g at the 1X1 conference," saM Dr. EWrWge. Be weal oa to say that fa the years past the attoadaace always ranged betweea 2W aad 2S4. During the conference, the stodenls will get a chance to see IS dii'ferent demonstrations of basic science in action in agriculture and home economics, outlined Dr. Eliridge. "AgSckace" This conference on "Science in AfricuMaire" has been developed by the College of Agriculture to call to the attention of capable high school students in the upper scholastic quarter of their Junior or senior class: The professloaal ofportsaities ia science applied ta agrkvltiire; The valae to our aatfoa of scientific devebrpmeati la agricialtiire; TTse accomplisfamevls of scientists fa agriealtoraJ research; Tte aeed for more agricBltaral sckfilists the wslmu&t devekproesl of our nation; The fasciaatioa of scientific mearck; The place that higher edaeatioa takes ia tfee prep ra tion of scientists; w i-' v - l J ' V , V V- ri w j i.. J Hobson of the College of Engineering and Architectare. Smiling their approval are two engineering stadeats. agree or aoi," said Davrlu. Russian student college pa pers, although numerous, are subject to careful censorship by an editorial board, "to purge the papers of utter nonsense," said one delegate. Methods aad Carricabim "7 ,7. 5 7 ZTaI Zrr, vZZTZZjrJrZ? , rK;T u JyjX of Education in the fifteen 8 CjMAt wmriklW '-k Todav OVCT 50 miHiOll StU-l lunder the Soviet educationa ytom. Corn Cob Smoker Cera Cobs will have a smoker tomorrow evening at S p.m. ia the Stadeet Ua ioa party rooms. Baa Goald, Cora Cob vice president asked that each organized boase send at least two men interested ia beteg Cora C workers. University Host Education Meet Services m Teacher .Ldoca - Vioa will oo3d taea- anneal conference April 30-May 2 on the University campas. Dr. Walter K. Beggs, Dean of Teachers College, wCl de liver Monday's keynote ad dress: "Teaching in Tomor row's World." The theme, "Developsag Standards for Evaluating Field Services in Teacher Education", wO be further developed by two panel discussions: "Develop- ImZ Standards for Noa-Creiht 8 Activities through Fieri Serv ices" on Monday and "New Trends in Education Their I Effects on Field Services" on I Tuesday. Tuesday's coadsdixg baa pet w3 see installation of officers, with Adolpku Whit ten, dean of faculties at the University of OUahoma City, acting as master of ceremonies. Prosperity of Future Challenge of Engineer Portrayed in E-Week By Dick Stuckey Drafted in special consider ation of the traditional chal lenge facing the engineer and in the effort of in creased understanding be tween layman and engineer Mechanized with the per petuation of technology as an instrument of a peaceful, prosperous, free world From this assembly of pro cess and plaa rolls "the 1961 E-Week of the College of En gineering and Architecture. Dedicated to the hope of en gineering as the prosperity of tomorrow, the April 27-28 49th annual E-Week offers the purpose, function, and place of engineering in today's world in an effort designed for the education of the pub lic. Least Understood Mark Hobson. Dean of the College of Engineering and Architecture, stated m a wel Dorm Reps Leave For Conference Thirteen representatives Mrom University residence w.U leave tomorrow for Oklahoma State to attend a meeting of the Association of College and University Resi- . 5 ' dence Halls. The meeting in Stillwater, Okla.. will last for three days. The University reiiderxe baHs are charter members of this rroiiD. bow in its seventh year. Membership js com posed of schools throughout the Midwest, including all the Big Eight schools. Representatives from the Women's Residence Hall are Karen Sass, Nirma Country man, landa ac3e.s:7i;i, ana Miss Betty Ware. Those going n - u George IZsXfTlCA 4v Tliroo Porrnonfc KOOert Ruzeata aure une owe-b lgie. Ag Grad Student Receives Grant Martin Hansen, a University graduate stadenL has been -.t wAtA .i tita rt h P. threes for Future to rtaSjl Arrangements are be- the aatcation of ground water pig made for pablic appear- in pomp irrigated areas of Ne- braska. Hansen wl conduct &e re search as partial MOIlnient of the requireimexls for a Ph.D degree a agricultiiral ecoooniiics. A native of Somers, Ia., Hansen came to the Univer sity in 1362 after completing a master's degree in agricul tural economics at Iow a State University. He obtained a bachelor's degree in agricul tural education at Iowa State in im Hosts Youth The rewards of sdeatifie acbievemeat ia agriculture. The conference is scheduled to open Thursday morn kig at 9 a.m. with an address by University Chancellor CMford Hardin, who majored and did graduate work in agricultural economics at Purdue University. Dr. Deaa Id Ifaaway, department of agronomy chair man, will speak at the aooa tsncbeoa, which wCl be pre pared by the Block aad Bridle Club, oa the topic: "Science password to front line pportaafties ia Agricaltare." E. W. Jaake, Agricultural Exteasioa Senice director, will serve as mailer of eeremosks. During the morning and afternoon, the high school students will be guided by members of Alpha Zeta to witness these different demonstrations of science in agriculture and home economics: Atoms in Soil Science, Electrophoresis, Come With Me to the Intercellular Spaces, Insect Wonders, Proteins and People, Science in Poultry Nutrition, Juggling Genes, Sperm to Steak, The Future of Dairying is in the Test Tube, Operating a Radio-Controlled Tractor, Science in Wheat Processing, Home Equipment and Physics, Radio- isotopes in AgncuMurrJ Research. Hormones in Horti- ..4 i?n-rrrt i T&vinii7,, ctuture, and Enzymes in Dairy Technology. The high schoolers wfQ be divided into IS grotrps aad 12 be sbowa three demoBStratkias daring the day. "These conferences are educational programs de signed to encourage the high school graduate to come to the college of his choice. It is not a recruiting show for Ag College," emphasized Dr. Eldridge. come message in the official E-Week program that e n g i- neering and architecture are among the least understood professions by the public at large. "For this reason," con tinued Hobson, "the students of the College open the doors to the public ... we wel come this opportunity to give you a view of the interests and the activities of our fu ture architects and engi neers." Hobson iudkated that "at no time i the affairs of man kind has engineering played soch an important role as it does today." He noted a conservative de nial of the enlarged role of scientific application in t h e erowin? technological world "We may argue the merit of fession and its accomplish this state of affairs," said ments." Hobson. "but the fart itself The chairmen expressed can scarcely be denied." Major Element "Technical experts in all phases of applied science are being called upon in increas ing numbers to participate as instruments of our national foreign policy all over the world. Science and engineer ing seem to constitute the major element in the defense of our country." "The traditional challenge . . . of controlling the ma terials and forces of nature to the benefit'of man . . . has always faced the engineer and architect," Hobson said in discussion of "special considerations" a n d e r lying ! the basic challenge of eagi- I nccrs. I The main featare of E-Week is the assembly of stadent eeastraeted displays ia each department. Open boase wiu be held from 2-19 a.m. oa Thursday, April 27. Oa band at each denartmeat of the col - lege wui be staaeats to ex plain the displays aad answer questions that may be asked ZT VZ " I Wit uwi aJt&f ifa v April Lincoln Jaycees Select ViUUjtj iui xuiw a. The Lincoln Jaycees have three Scholarship Pageants to be held next month. Entries may be accepted until Friday. Dates of the Pageant are: Miss University of Nebraska on May VSih; Miss Nebraska Wesley an. May 191b; and Miss Lincoln, May 29. e entries wui appear oe- lore a screening I for pre!:ntisary jaaging next aares we r Contacts for possible public appearances can be arranged through the Junior Chamber of Commerce office. The three winners will be entered in the M.bs Nebraska Pageant at Fairbury on June 9-19. The entries are as follows: Miss Uafversity of Nebraska Law wm Zea T JUdAk U(W tUSWKf Vntirr CmEwt ........... Gamma Ft Jmt Cur lM Tk Km Ormmr Pm Mi imt rH luma ft Cr& ftmrnmu . Kmvo a ...... r tH Pun . Mt can orma 27th the visitors to E-Week will have an opportunity to visit the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, Roberts I Tlairv T.inpnln Tni?mal a n A Star Newspapers, Coca-C o 1 a Bottling Company and Cush man Motor Works. Interested laymen will meet in front of the Mueller Tower at 8:15 a.m. and at 10:45 a.m. to be gin a "visual encounter" hoped to stimulate interest and develop knowledge in the engineering profession. Student Interest Bart Bredenkamp and Don Gable, overall co - chairmen. and the other engineers and arch'tects behind the formu lation of E-Week, expressed hope that the public "realizes the interests of engineering students in their future pro I confidence in the hope that E- i Week will show the necessity for the 1961 theme, "Engi neering for the Prosperity of Tomorrow." Reigning over the slidernle activity is Miss Judi A a a Zadina, Alpha Omicrea Pi sophomore in Teachers Col lege. Miss Zadina was se lected from the eight finalists chosen by the iodividaal en gineering departments. Chosen for beauty of face and figure and for over-all poise and personality, she will be officially presented to the public in the April issue of the Blue Pint, and to the engineers, at the Engineers Banquet and Dance Friday evening at Cotner Terrace. Lotus C. Lundstrem, direc tor of the General Motors Proving Grounds wd be the lea tared speaker at the ban- ret. Lundstrom will s p e a k on 1 "Transportation the Road to Prosperity". He is a grad uate of the University in Me chanical Engineering, and is orginally from Tekamah, Ne braska. received 45 entries for the JsSS.r.'.'.'.rST oSS l r . ; fa- rm CxmlM eJJ,1 T SaE SSSui' DKMtnr bat Kuutaa Tm Ma .un mt PI Put fejurfl kaiftf ..... ., Cigmmm Fib fina Jwuui Mi ZAjb .. Oamnc ft Hubka To Head Young GOP Club Ladi Hubka has been elected president of the Uni versity Young Republicans for next year. Other new officers are Jean Habn, vice presi dent: Jeanette Johnson, secretary; Chuck Sherfey, treasurer; Bill Buckley, pub lic relations chairman; Gwynn Showalter, member ship chairman; and Nancy Butler, program chairman. Gary Rodgers was elected national committeeman and Bemice Hodge, national com mitteewoman. Don Jacob is the new social chairman: Elaine Gibbs, the assistant secretary; and Ivan Grope, assistant treasurer. KK Announces Election Slate Kosmet Klub has announc ed its slate for the upcoming election to be held May 2. Slated for president are Neil Ferguson and Steve Gage; vke-presider-t. Marsh Kuhr ! and Chuck Sherfey; business S manager. John Schroeder and manager, John Schroeder and Deon Stuthman; secretary, Mike Miiroy and Jim Sam ples: fall show chairman. Bob Geiiler and Dick Nelson; spring show chairman. Al Plummer and Jerry Gale.