THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Friday, July 7, 1950 PAGE 4 1 t. '8 9 I J si j if J I Vi "v M Mystery Pillars Had Depot BY KENT AXTELL. At last the heavy veil of mys tery which has hovered about Nebraska's famous pillars is lifted. Now there is an answer for the question which perhaps every visitor to the Cornhusker campus has asked: Where did they get those columns? Attempts by The Daily Ne braskan in the past three years to turn up definite information on the origin and a complete his tory of the collanade at the corner of 12th and Vine streets had not been too successful. Alum Detective The entire story concerning the origin of the beautiful pillars however is told by an alumnus of the University, Val Kuska, now agricultural development agent of the Burlington railroad. He is the father of Dick Kuska, editor of the 1951 Cornhusker yearbook. "It occurs to me," Kuska said, "that the interesting story of the old station and these columns should be told before it is lost to the memory and record of the people of Nebraska. Already the men who designed, built, and ap preciated its classic beauty are gone, and the difficulty in find ing records, descriptions, and pictures of it now, barely 20 years since it was replaced by the new structure; makes me realize how easily the past slips away from us." According to Kuska, the story of the 24 columns, which are worth a sum of $20,880, began in 1893. The Columns were quarried for the portico of the old Burling ton station in Omaha. "Handsomest.1' The Chicago Record in its July 16,. 1908 issue said, "The hand somest railway station ever seen is that of Chicago, Burlington and Quincy company at Omaha. It is an artistic gem and looks like a Grecian temple." Perhaps the best description of the columns' origin is in the Burlington timetable, August 1900. "The Burlington stations sits on the edge of a bluff and is en tered thru a portico sustained by 28 gigantic pillars of the Doric Style, made from granite quar- I i Ik U 4 -P mm ill m I 4 rcr v - 'J Ivi I Veil Lifts: NU fr" " ujwwttir v tw rjifi iTin i u I ; mi. liillfe i 11 III ill! v f i! 1IIIp iX-f IVY COVERED riLLARS The old Burlington station at Omaha is shown above before it was rebuilt in 1930. The columns at the en trance of the building were given by the Burlington to the Univer sity. Twenty-four of the 28 original columns now form a picturesque part of the campus between the stadium and the coliseum. The pillars were set in their present location under the direction of Linus Burr Smith, University professor of architecture. ried at Denver. Each weighs 18, 000 pounds." The columns 28 inches in diameter, 22 feet high with molded cap and base were nearly forgotten in 1930 when the station was dismantled. They were found in an Omaha stone yard. The beauty of the pillars was recognized earlier when contem plation of razing the old depot was made. Alan McDonald, archi tect, protested destruction of the station. He claimed the loss was nothing less than an architec tural castarophe. Grecian Columns The news that the plans for razing were final was contained in an Omaha Bee News story. The article stated that "in order that the station might fit in with the passenger terminal plans, it will lose its grecian columns and classic aspect." Perhaps most interesting is the story of how the columns ever arrived at the University campus. Kuska in pointing this out, said, "When Chancellor Burnett, 9k bnccrtn's Busy Deportment Stow Women's Rayon Suits QV A wonderful group of sum mer suits at July Sale price. Smart for wear during every cawwMi of the year. Tailored in fine wrinkle-resistant ray on suiting in navy, yellow, dusty pink, white and gray. Sizes 10 to 20 and to 21U. You'll want at least GOLD'S . . . -Second Float Origin who had long admired them in the Omaha station, learned that the pillars were being removed to make way for the new design he immediately thought of their fitness for the "Avenue of a Thousand Columns" (12th street) BE YOUR ik V-.v !'Awfr. x -a" A 1 ' - . r$r: - - - '.v:v v'ax : ' i v .,i,a.-1 4 :4 YOU buy pack f H it'll Chesterfields and you ii3 pen H vp NU Gracl Wins Yale Fellowship A graduate of the University Department of Architecture has won one of the top student prizes in U. S. architecture, Prof. L. B. Smith, head of the department was notified recently. The student is Dale I Gibbs of Lincoln who graduated last January. The award is the Grad uate Fellowship in Architecture for one year with a $1,000 stip end at Yale University. The award went to Gibbs after he had submitted his fifth once proposed for the campus. "He got in touch with his old friend, C. J. Ernst, assistant treasurer of the Burlington and former University Regent, to ask for the pillars for that purpose." Both Burnett and Ernst also had worked together for the establishment of the present College of Agriculture. Free of Charjre "So," said Kusa, "with the help of Burlington officials, authority was secured from the State Rail way commission to transport the columns free of charge to Lincoln from Omaha." The order for the transporta tion of the columns was made and entered Feb. 26, 1930. Only 24 of the 28 columns stand today, since four were broken before they were found and brought to the campus. Students and faculty, Innocents and TNE's, football players and PBK's come and go, but the pil lars can be counted ,on to remain a part of the University. They found a home at Nebraska. f v& 'i OVN CIGAtlETTE EXPERT YOU smH that milder ChesterfiW aroma. No rher cigarette hat it. Make your oWn ' comparison year class work in the Univer sity's Department of Architecture in competition with work done by' other competitors for the award from universities in var ious parts of the U.S. Gibbs is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Gibbs of Lincoln. School of Music Presents Recital The school of music presented an undergraduate recital at 4 p. m. in the Union, Thursday, July 6, with seven students participat ing. The program was: Clouds, by Charles, presented by Glen Clark, Aurora. Song of the Open, by LaForge, presented by Mary Wherry, Te cumseh. My Lady Walks in Loveliness, by Charles, presented by Jach Wells, Columbus. Blue Are Her Eyes, by Watts, presented by Leanord Blinde, Burwell. Thy Beaming Eyes, by Mac Dowell, presented by Neil Solo man, Culbertson. Ah Love But a Day, by Beach, presented by Virginia Taylor, Kearney. Se Tu Mi Ami, by Pergolesi, presented by John Moran, David City. HEHM"4 Good Teacher Agttcy DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE Esiablished 1918 Jrrving the Missouri Valley o b We' Coast Enroll Isotr. 52? Stuort Bldfl.. Lincoln . Nebrotfc YOM smuke Chttsterfilif and prov what vftry tobacco man knows- Tobaccos that sft!i Milder.., mk Milder, '4 J