Poqe 4 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Thursdoy, Februory 26, S53 Sfeep Ladders, Catwalks Provide Entrance To Love Library Cupola s' n il H ! M ? ? 1 ft 11 JJT I ' "" """-"' " 10 1 I ''W'ouMj juiwii .: -many , f ' I J I j j . j I V l f If I L ! ; ' i '! ! 1 - i! 1. ?' f : ... ,7- :r..x. t FROM THE TOP ... This view of the campus was taken from atop Love Library in the cupola. Two photographers and a re porter are the first to enter the cupola to take pictures. Chairmen Elected fMil Dlnwyrx Hi If For Engineer Week I1 YiwllcywcuillCUll iwi iw w To Appear On Waring Show Concert Scheduled LOVE LIBRARY CUPOLA . . . A view of the cupola from the top of Love Library. nrrir mrrrv larDroximatelv an 80-decree angle; during the time the armv Feature Editor and the second at a 90-degree an- the library, the janitor explained.! many five times, studying German It mar be treacherous, but it's'gle. Then, a soldier had to climb upj history and problems. During his " . tin 4. lnJA Kn rlllu.1. J U n K mywt ragout tpin in 1 UdVI np S A EOOu V v iicil tuiuuuig; ii ic iauuci, vvc.iu uic LUAiia auu (jui i i . c idg uui m.. John Whitlock and Norm Scott will be co-chairmen .of the 41st annual Engineers' Week ac tivities beginning April 30. Departmental chairmen for E Week, elected by their respective societies, are Gordon Kruse and Bill Stout, Agricultural Engi neers; John Savage and Tad Tucker, Architectural Engineers; Dick Pusateri and Lloyd KeJlar, Chemicar Engineers; Leslie Mar tin and Jack Bale, Civil Engi neers; Arthur Gross and Paul Moseman, Electrical Engineers and Bernard Kittle and Charles Schade, Mechanical Engineers Engineers' Week Open House will be held on April 30. The Convocation, Field Day, and Ban quet will take place May 1. E. N. Anderson To Address YM Banquet Dr. E. N. Anderson will discuss 'The Problems of German Re' vival" at the annual YMCA YWCA banquet to be held March 10 in the YM Green Room at 6 D.m. - Dr. Anderson, university nis uovlitorv Drofessor. has visited Ger- 1 1 1 V Previously, no one had been al- could spot a small beam of light at lowed to co ud there, because two, me lar ena. inis was - irap uuoi students had stepped off the cat ceiling of a study room on fourth floor. Therefore, it is necessary to obtain permission from the Di--Uinn f Rnilrfinps and Grounds to enter the cupola on Love Li- about nine feet wide brarv. Ieel JO"s opening into the cupola The cupola on Love Library is every morning. Some of the names are: Jim Woodbury, John Brown. Connie Owen, Pat Beadle, Jim Heppner, member of a United States War Departemnt commission which toured German Universities for four months. One of the representatives from the State Department mvestigat all wood except for four large 'Don Young, Bob James, Jean Mc- windows. containing 30 small ; Cartney and Betty Crubb. It must panes of glass. The cupola is have been a steep climb for those ing German schools ana umver- and nine girls. . sities in 1946, he neipea arau a I A few cigaret butts, match fold-policy on re-education in Ger- TWIN PIANO . . . Virginia Morley and Livingston Gearheart, twin-piano virtuosos, will be an additional feature to the Fred Waring show which will be Tuesday, Mar. 3. Annual Nebraska Art Association Exhibit To Open At University Galleries Sunday Speech And Hearing Clinic Aids Students, Lincolnites By WILLIAMETTE DESCH Staff Writer & n .t ermmnoH with Names and Greek letters are ers. rusty nails and an old wooden many. Previously, ne spent a year cameras took the elevator to j carved into the walls dating from I box complete the furnishings ofistudying at the University of fourth floor of Love Library and:1942 to 1946. Caning was doneithe cupola. " jBerlin. - walked down a long corridor to a locked door. We continued up a steep flight of steel stairs and proceeded to balance ourselves on a catwalk about 12 inches wide. While walk ing on the long catwalk, we filed our way through the air-condi-tiong plants and air ducts. After j : Unnlr f . i "i 1 L-i n fT th'fk ramVtn a ladder divided into two' The 1953 exhibition of the Ne- A special feature of this yearsjtion of Arts. He was curator of;in 1940 under the direction of.partment is the head of the Clinic " ' . , hraeta Art Accnriaimn ni r.rwn i vhmiriAn ic tha trrrMin rsr wnrirs ' n AvraTi vp arte or i no i pvp ani . , . ' JLl Lb. i. 11C III iouuvt For Tuesday Night Virginia Morley and Livingston Gearheart, twin-piano virtuosos, will be an added feature to the Fred Waring and his Pennsylvan ians concert in the Coliseum Tues day at 8 p.m. The husband wife team are appearing at only 14 of the 63 cities which the Fred Waring con cert is touring. The duo-pianists featured on Waring's television shows, met and combined their musical talents in Paris when they were scholar ship students at the Fontainebleau Conservatory. Before returning to the United States, they presented several joint recitals in Paris, Lyons, Zu rich, Berne, Fontainebleau and Paris. They make annual concert tours through the States and Can ada. The pair's unusual arrange ments of popular music, featured in several of New York's top night spots, brought them to the atten tion of Fred Waring. Since 1943 they have appeared regularly on his show. Gearheart has written many of the musical arrangements for the Pennsylvanians, including "Dry Bones." More of the team's in ventiveness is appearent in the nine popular tunes contained in their albums, "Night Life of Two Pianos" and "Two Americans in Paris." Miss Morley, a native of Cali fornia, studied piano from early childhood and later won highest honors in piano and composition at Mills College, Cal. This lead to tients at the Veterans Hospital; a scholarship to study under Rob in order to aid the correction of ert Casadesus in Paris. The Speech and Hearing Clinic speech problems. Gearheart, born in Buffalo, headed by Dr. Wiley is perhaps The Clinic handles cases oiiN- Y, first studied piano under a project that University students speech problems of a very severe nis mother- An oboist and com know little about. !nalurP an(1 ntlim lhat nrp minnr ? Pinist. he - - r a e rA-aiiinACA rvrwMr r t This clinic which was started Dr. Wiley of the Speech Hice To Speak At York HS Convocation William H. Hice, assistant pro fessor of Journalism, will speak to an all-school convocation York High School Thursday. open exhibition is the group of works decorative arts at the Cleveland ! Dr. Laase provides an opportu- and be is assisted by Mr. Adams, in the University Art Galleries in by contemporary Italians which Museum of Art 1919; curator ofnit' rrtrrtinn f ciwrh de the super-isor. The Clinic urged students with Clinicians work with persons 'speech problems to investigate the!near Fred Waring at Shawnee-on- Morrill Hall on Sunday for a;begins with some of the elders of ipainting, 1925-30; director 1930 toj ficiencies or difficulties.' monin s run. imoaern liaiian an sucn as mo- present. The exhibition, oldest of its randi, Sironi and "Z??jl?TDZ rr!SWal programs have been in-ing Clinic. Their deficiency mayl Uv-Arai vrc in tomtc nf material if,,. Af r,A rnrini WnrVc'fmm iqfi t loin rA-!sta1Jed to ald ln correcting those neipea or completely corrected. De-,raneements for violin entitled "Fiddle Sessions." When not. on tour or making TV apeparances, the Gearhearts and their seven-year-old son live Martini and Rathbone is a graduate of HaH.Au fashionable vard University and was curatori"., B" u" lr riTnio AtU IZ ra induded. There will be paintings, I also include a still younger con-! tary-directer of the "Masterpieces j 01 ine various age groups. sculputre, drawings, prints -nd tingent Salvatore de Messina,! of Art" exhibition, New York Tbe pre-school children w 1 1 h PvQprtc TO JudaP ceramics. iRoberto Crippa and Luciano World's Fair. 1939. He has been'sPb problems meet during the Most of the material will American but there will be a spe- beiMiori, who are only now making director of the Citv Art Museum for two hours with Mrs. Dr;J-,0 rnfoc I e- their first appearances in Ameri-'in St Louis since 1940. Mlller in vcharSe- 011 Saturday , iH U Dfiage V.OnTeST I iicKeis tor tne waruig concert may be purchased at booths in the Union and Ag Union lobbies. A special student section ticket costs $1.50. Other tickets range from $1 to $3. at rial wtinn naintinps anH iiln ran fvhihiiinnc TvtnrAC Hnrinv March n-ill Vw morning me cniiaren 01 SCnoOl ture by contemporary Italians and The central body of the showiat P1"- on Wednesday, March !'"sc The convocation will pay tribute representative examples by other to a group of students who are to European artists such as Stanley be initiated into Quill and Scroll, Spencer, Joan Miro, Paul Klee journalism honorary for high and Ernest Barlach. school students. In his speech, "You Don t Sayr Hice will discuss the responsibili ties facing today's American newspaper. He will stress the view that while the press is aware of certain areas in which it hopes to become better, much of the criticism aimed at it is un fair. , Hice feels that the press is do ing an admirable job, and the American people need to give it a boost He will also discuss the factors which make the best reporters. Winners of the Union-sponsored Louis Glymph To Speak idge tournament are being!. . ai dged in New York bv bridge V.On$erVCHIOn Meet s and'22 anl 29-A11 lectures will be held! week at arranged times for aidexperts. Results will be announced' The student chapter of Soil rt As-1 in Gallery B of the University; in numerous speech problems. !jn iate March. I Conservation Society of America r.iuriiic it-;ii tjii - -n - f .u. .u- '! . . ... I will hold & monthly meeting will consist of manv Americans!1"' 11 and 24. Lectures will be aouiis. oom university siu-,. " . . . .7 At Consprvatinn Moot whosework has bESwS ?Un-(held at 3 p.m. on March 7, 8, isjdents and others, meet during the Judged in New York by bnde OnsetlOn Meet coin on previous occasions som vnhn arp nw in the Art uaiienes, moitui Hall, Tha nattAm nf h pvhihit is nni : :: ...vi:. - HallArip XTnrrill Hall . I fn r.t v,o fagdiuc iho ... ... . ' w m noia r''.---. iauciauuu a uuuul. ' . . avmuam v wiv kuiiiv f ma mnnprc l 1 u an tn Kancac ti . - of maximum variety, reflecting n,,A Any campus group desiring a is the active program that is be-'siato rnllPP in nartiinat- in h lnur5aay tures will be Henrv Koerner,scond,u,cted tour of the ebibition ing carried on for foreign stu- Big-Seven Conference tourna-!.Pf meeting, slated for room DiKhfiiM'a -u .'-v. w . uvKiii.iii.ii. v. . the University's and the Art As-; sociation's widening interests. Thisir'," -7. . . , . , J . A 1 tlllllCt ft! UUI lit J . UUI L1U11.1U if M- A m . ;7jr;h.A h,Tty. ' sprmg,- Gorkys- r Menkes "Boy With Through class work and ment. They will also enter the306 Agronomy building, well be- uH. opened any evening except Satur- Udy . vr aunc j these groups. permanent collections which bavej, - , VCm dtUUUCU icicili jtaii.. , cv,u'. Basic to the exhibition plan i is erie st'e and Rnath's "Nau-liay or Sunday to accommodate me inclusion or a scieticu uumua u:.,! . . i . : a .1 1 . iJLa i. 01 worKS Dy Americans ui uic : i 19th century. In the show will! Among the "comers to the q j ncmr:ftr be choice examples of Blakelock, Lincoln show will be Johah kmig- LUnunq inSirUCTIOn Ryder, takins, Newman ana weir. -v,.., r J r., 1 1,,., "hearing aids. Also some of the Among American moderns of the'Andrews. Douglas Snow, Mariana DOnSOred DV U 11 1011 student clinicians work with pa- three days in ad-;clinic work these students are national collesiste hridpo iniimaJgin at 7:30 p.m. Speaker for the galleries will bejhelped with speech problems,1 ment ievenirg will be Louis Glymph, re- q ',1 J'n0 LS5eThi Team winners of preliminaries lon sedimentologist He will 9 and 10 especially designed for,.ere Joe jerman and Mar speak on "Sedimentation Prob the foreign students. 1 Thompson, Sydna Fuchs and Mar-jlems of the Nebraska Farmer." The Speech and Hearing Clinic ion Brown, Paul Gaiter and Jerry! The Nebraska chapter is the has a contract with the Veterans Weinberg, Kent Kelley and Bill first student chapter of this club Administration tor tne lining oi Mundeii. to be founded. early 20th century are Pender gast, Maurer and Hartley, TOURS, SCHOLARSHIPS Travel And Study Inc. Offers Summer Tours Peneda and Forbes Whitesides. An especially large section of .drawings and prints will also dis tinguish the exhibition from its predecessors. Prominent among the print makers represented will be Antonio Frasconi, Karl Zerbe, Louis Schanker, Adja Yunkers, Carol Summers, Nance De Groot !and Ynez Johnston. Papers by Ar- ,bit Blatas, Cornelis Rhutenberg Charleston sambo, m a m b o,t Travel and Study, Inc., of New.Romillat Ernst of New York City . ing among the drawings York City has announced its pro- will supervise the group. The poter's art will be shown gram for 1953. The Art, Theatre, and Music j the work of Martha Lauritzen, The organization each year or-!tul: attend the major art Franz Wildenhain, Robert Turner, ganizes a scries of tours abroad; festivals. (Helen Clark Phillips, Carlton Ball, to bring students and professional , Ttiest. an? iVest tour..wlU; Aaron Bohrod and Walter Ander people into contact with their col- study the rise of W estern civihza-json. jegiate and proiessionai colleagues " ,V j ' u I The waltz, rumba, tango and jitterbug Instruction Bureau Buys steps, beginning and advanced,; --wn. w uwj will be taught in the Union ball- Films For Foreign Aid room for six weeks starting March I ,, . . . 10. j The University s Bureau of The free lessons to be taught by j Audio-Visual Instruction has pur Donna McCandless will be given i chased four films which will be on March 10. 17. 24, 31, and April translated into foreign languages 15 and 22 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. .and shown to farmers and agri- k.. culture leaders around thp wnrH XTHSiiiS !SSdlStadent Union Dance Committee,! The National Education and In Fn amti a i outs.tand-j wi continuation of the series formation Films of Bombay, In- inff svnnnff The drawing 1 s j ; . . - . . .. m unite insvrucrion given aunng oia, nas purchased "Hunting Ani- the first semester. Union Dance Saturday nroffram nf arlivilis in fnrntv oreece, lurKey, me Lieoanon, , . r. in turope. C:.. 'tj V- 4 ,'iplanned to hiehlicht the exhibition Student, of journalism and cur-,- Nortrn Tour w 1 tike in win incclud lectu Aulgnfnentto-rr.directedbyDr.j01;.' of the Cleveland Mu-I?"" f mu.c " f'" for Ralph O. Nafziger, director of the1 dent? or artand It- seura of ad pry T. Rath- a"y ,s.pe"al .recor4ds !f. be played University of Wisconsin's School? J."". F '"."-hon of th- CitV Art xt,m. S'ven to either Dolores i i i.i j i in i iinv hi l n in - - - - A dance after the Nebraska Oklahoma basketball game will be held in the Round-Up room of the union Saturday from 9 to 12 p.tn. New popular dance records will of Journalism. The students will participate in seminars conducted by prominent European statesmen. Also partici pants will acquire background knowledge or European at iairs study. Inc., 110 through studies at the SorbonnejNew York NY. and visits to SHAPE and the In-; Milliken ; id Rathbone will assist in the selection of works to be added to the Frank M. Hall col- versity of Rome and one for stu dents of political science and eco nomic it lh T!nivpritir of ParU further information may be rculu" 31 L,mverjiy. obtained by writing to Travel and! Milliken is a graduate of Prince- East 57th St, ton and Western Reserve Univer sities. He is a member of the Carag or Danny Fogel. The casual dance will be and cokes will be served. mays of the Past" a film dealing with the University s work in paleontology. "Irrigation in Nebraska" and "Correspondence Study" have been supplied to the United States State Department for its informa tion service abroad. Throufch the Mutual Securities Administration, the films "Irriga tion in Nebraska" and "Seed Cer tification in Nebraska" are being used to aid in the recovery pro- free grams of various foreign coun I tries. ternational Press Institute. Ifmvorcitv nf irnriua . , -,. - . The Fashion tour workshoos will center in Italy, England and Announce. Assistantships'society, 'vice-president and mem Fr.nM Ttf4if n-irtta will Ka inirA.1 i n .. Archeological Institute of Amcri-H ca, the Medieval Academy of America, the American Ceramic The Graduate School of Syra cuse University France. Participants will be intro duced to European fashion crea The Junior Tour tor young peo-ithat 15 to 20 graduate assistant pie between 16 and 18 will centcrbips are open to qualified women Interest on the French language graduates or teachers during the and civilization. Mme. Jeannej 1953-1954 school year. Applicants must be interested in ber of the Council of the Ameri- has announced association of Museums and a iruicc oi uie rtjncrican rcaera- Faculry Recommendation Prerequisite For Award preparing themselves for student personnel work as that done by j advisers of girls, deans of women, jresidence heads and counselors. Any girl with a high scholastic! Application forms and detailed average, who will graduate in information are available by writ June or August cf 1954, 1955, 1956,iing Dr. Ruth Haddock, assistant and who can show evidence of director. Student Personnel Grad fi nan rial need, is eligible to applyjuate Program, Syracuse Univer for a scholarship offered by the sity, Syracuse 10, N. Y. American Association of Univer-I sity Women. jRadcliffe Management Application blanks may be se-JT . B rured t the office of the Dean of! warning rrogram Opens Vomen ii Ellen Smith Hall and Radcliffe College is offering fif ln ttie Home Economics office at! teen full tuition fellowships to Ag College. I young women to study the vari- When applying, girls are askedous fields of administration un to give the Registrar's office writ- der Management Training Pro ten permission to send their grades Jram. to the scholarship committee. Th stipend is $650. Two letters of recommendation,! fBrAl vf,e Ult one from a faciity member, must be submitted. The letters may be sent direct or enclosed with the application. ' Letters and applications must be sent on or before March 6, 1353 to Miss Mary Jean Mulvaney, 450 South 41st Street Lincoln, Nebraska. fellowship of $300 based on merit and financial need. Also college loans up to $400 each are available. Faculty members of the Har vard Graduate School of Business Administration provide the bulk of the instruction and case ma terial . Two five-week periods of full-time field work will provide the student witn practical experi ence in busincM situations. Further information, a 1953-1954 catalogue and a pamphlet show- A Smith College survey of car driving permission at numerous eastern women's colleges revealed jrwiie highly restrictive rules. ' Four forbid all student driving;1 ing positiSns now held by grad six limit cars to seniors; three uates are avail ibl from T. North permit commuter students only to! Whitehead, Director of the Man have cars; only five allow cars aU.agrment Training Program, Rad toxtt years. Iclife College, Cambridge 38, Mas3. GIVE A PIHT OF C10C3 .TODAY 1 SAVE A LIFE j TUE KOCEA jGI BILL 3 PECMITS ONLY OME OUMCe OF ED0CATO4 OR TRAINING COUC9E ...GO, VETECAN5, , MAKE SURE VOL) AC HEADED iN TUE ClGWT DlCECTION t?rnrfC i cTa or TV a tutur. I WHEN YOU USE (Daily. 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