t i v i Wivcps-rr or M8ftl. Week See Husker Track Page 3 . - . . , r - - " r i r 1 V -i ill Vol. 32, No. 62 Charity Dispersal Is Object Of AUF PoU By EMMIE LIMPO AUF Assistant This is the first of a scries of four Daily Nebraskan articles ex plaining the operation of ALT, the All University Fund. By voting at the All University Fund polls this week, every stu dent can help choose the chari ties to which he will give through AUF this coming school year. The poll, listing 15 charities un der the general headings of Health, Children and Improved Living and Education, will allow students to vote for three organizations. "Since the booth is conveniently placed in the Union, we hope that each student will stop and fill out the poii. Please check three chari ties that you feel are worthy of AUF's support and your contri bution," explained John Glynn, AUF president. "We would like everyone voting sf Hi ft,. . t Foltz . . . leaving Foltz Accepts Witchita Post Work Here Wim Hardin's Praise Dr. David Foltz, chairman of the University's music department, will leave Nebraska in September to accept a position on the faculty of the Municipal University of Wichita, Kans. Chancellor Clifford Hardin praised Foltz's work with the music program at the University. Dr. Foltz joined the staff in 1945 and was named department chairman in 1952. He organized the Madrigal Singers, which have given concerts throughout the state and during the Christmas season ver at national radio network. He has directed the University lingers during the past two years ind is director of the Nebraska ill-State Fine Arts Course. Among his other activities, Dr. Foltz has done work with the choral clinics, written several musical publications and directed the University's annual Spring Choral concert. Grants .. ft Axi Many Opportunities Exist For Eager Scholars Have you ever wished that you could spend a year, or even a summer, studying in England, Mexico or Germany; spend your junior year studying in New York City; or receive a scholarship to cover a three-year law course? Taking advantage of opportuni ties in the various fields of study can perhaps develop into realities, Some of the fellowships, grants, and scholarships open to Univers ity undergraduate and graduate students include: Scholarships Elihu Root-Samuel L." Tilden scholarships are open to potential law students at the New York University's School of Law. These scholarships are valued at $7,200 each. They cover tuition, room, board, books and living expenses during a three-year law course. For further information students may write to the New York Uni versity School of Law, 40 Washing to Square South, New York City, New York, no later than March 8. Graduate scholarships in journal Ism for the 1958-59 academic year are being offered at Stanford Uni versity. Interested students may write to the Executive Head, Department- of Communication and Journalism, Stanford University, Stanford, California, no later than Saturday. More Scholarship! University of Denver is offering a scholarship in international re lations for college graduates hold ing a baccalaureate degree, or the equivalent, by Sept. 1. Fellowships will be granted ranging from tuition to $1600. For application forms stu dents may write: The Director, Social Science Foundation, Uni versity of Denver, Denver 10, Colo. A graduate scholarship in the amount of $1,750 is open for the 1958-59 session at the College of to select one charity from each group," Glynn added. The fifteen charities include: 1. American Cancer Society leads a lifesaving crusade with its pro gram of education, care of pa tients and research. 2. United Cerebral Palsy Asso ciation of Nebraska needs money to develop better programs for Cerebral Palsied children. 3. National Tuberculosis Associ ation works throughout the world sponsoring medical research in the study and control of tuberculosis. 4. American Hearing Society helps prevent deafness, conserve hearing and rehabilitate the 15 million Americans that are hard of hearing. 5. National Society for the Pre vention of Blindness is the only voluntary national agency at work in all phases of sight conservation. 6. Muscular Dystrophy raises money to help and try to cure through research persons afflicted with this disease. 7. Lancaster Association for. Re tarted Children operates and sup ports a county school (LARC School) and home (Robin Dale) for mentally retarded children. LARC hopes to enable its chil dren to become independent mem bers of our society. 8. Save the Children Federation serves underprivileged children without regard to race or creed, through school-community im provement, service to Indian chil dren and a child welfare program. 9. Child Welfare League of Amer ica includes agencies providing protective services, day care, fost er care, adoptions and residential treatment centers. 10. National Society for Crippled Children and Adults is composed of state and local societies which render specific services to the crip pled, based on local need. 11. National. Society for Crippled Children is entirely student-supported and provides aid to students in underdeveloped countries in the form of medical aid, educational supplies and emergency food and clothing. 12. National Urban League is an interracial movement for improve ment of living conditions among Negroes and race relations in ur ban communities. It strives for harmonious adjustment of Negroes in employment and other com munity situations. 13. Near East Foundation .gives practical help in education and training of technical skills for the production of a higher standard of living in Near Easter areas. 14. Japanese Inernational Chris tian University Foundation gives aid to needy Japanese students and helps support the Internation al Christian University, which was founded in 1953. 15. Lincoln Community Chest supports 29 agencies concerned with relief and rehabilitation, com munity health, care of children and aged, military services, youth guidance and coordinating services. Europe at Bruges, Belgium. Courses and seminars are given in Inter national Economics, Public Admin istration, Political Theory, Sociolo gy and International Law. Applications and inquiry may be addressed to: Scholarship, Ameri can Committee on United Europe, 120 East 56th St., New York 22, N.Y. Four British universities; Stratford-upon-Avon, Oxford, London a the Edinburgh School, offer schol arships in English appreciation 'to graduate students. Summer Schools Information for the British Sum mer Schools may be obtained from the Institute Regional Office, 1605 Pennsylvania St., Denver, Colo. A German Language and Cul tural Seminar in Salzburg, Ger many, will be held for six weeks this summer. A limited number of scholarships covering tuition and maintenance are available from the Institute of International Edu cation in New York City. Scandinavian Seminars are open to college graduates and to teach ers and educators for the coming year in forty different institutions in Denmark, Norway and Sweden. Information and applications may be acquired from Aage Rosendal Nielsen, Director of the Scandin avian Seminars for Cultural Stu dies, 127 E. 73rd St., New York 21. Bilingual School A bilingual summer school will be held in Guadalajara, Mexico, June 30 to August 9. The schedule will include art, folklore, history, and literature courses. For more information write: Professor Juan Rael, Box K, Stanford University, Calif. New York .University's Washing ton Square College of Arts and Science is offering opportunities to students to spend their junior year in New York City. it What Happened! Tom Kraeger, Alpha Gamma Rho sophomore, has changed in the last eighteen years. Kraeger, winner of the Ag Union's Sno-Ball Dance Cutest Baby Contest, is shown receiving the first prize, a box of candy, from Mary Vrba, chairman of the Sno-Ball Dance. Kraeger's infant photo (inset) was Jjdged winner by the 200 dancers in attendance last Friday night. Joann Fahrenbroch, Alpha Omicron Pi junior, was named winner of an identity contest in which she correctly matched thirteen of the fifteen entries. Price Of Progress 'Lounge Lizards9 Cramped By Hammering Workmen With about half of the main lounge in the Union being rapidly boxed off, many students last week looked a little perplexed at the workmen's invasion. Metamorphos What has been the TV end of the Union is being metamorphosed into a cafeteria serving area, said Duane Lake, managing director of the Union. ' Temporary partitions are going up to close off this section of the lounge. This is primarily to keep out dust and section off work areas, Lake said. Hammers and drills are also much in evidence in the basement of the Union where work is being done in the old game roeni area. Original plans did not call for this work to begin this early, Lake said. Weather conditions have slowed work on the addition to the extent that in order not to fall behind schedule, workmen have started in on the old Union build ing. President's Breakfast Facilities to be offered in the Union after completion of the ad dition were explained to about 65 heads of campus organizations Sat urday morning at the President's Breakfast, Lake said. A new sound highlighted the breakfast, as a stereophonic sound system was demonstrated. Music Rooms Three music rooms in the ad dition will replace the one in the old Union, said Lake. One room will be for classical music, one for popular music and a third will feature the new stere ophonic sound set up. Writers Vie Literally Miss Slote Sets 3Iarch 7 Deadline The annual poetry and fiction contests sponsored by the English department will continue until March 7, according to Bernice Slote. who is in charge of the con tests. Entries will be received in the English office on the second floor of Andrews Hall. An added attraction of the con tests this year is that all entries will be considered for publication in "Scrip," the University's new creative writing magazine, Miss Slote said. , " The lone Gardner Noyes Poetry Awards are given from a fund established by Laurence Noyes and Mrs. Harold Meier in honor of their late wife and sister. Prizes are $50 and $25, for first and sec ond respectively. The contest is open only to undergraduates. From one to three poems may be entered by a contestant, Miss Slote announced. Prizes will be given to the best individual poems. Entry blanks are available in the English office. Judging will be done by a committee from the Uninversity faculty. The Prairie Schooner Fiction Awards were established by Mari Sandoz. The contest is cpen to both graduates and undergrade atcs. Prizes are $50 for first place, $33 for second, and $20 for third. Rules on entries and judging are the same as for the poetry contest. Each year the winning entries are considered for publication in "The Prairie Schooner," the Via versity's literary magazine. Lincoln, Nebraska $ 1 1 f Lake called the music system 1 "better than-an orchestra" for dances. The Union will have a portable music unit which -will be lent to organizations having hour dances or parties, he said. The breakfast served as a "sneak preview" for organizations, Lake said. ' . Scrip Names Printers University Service Receives Contract "Scrip," the University's new creative writing magazine spon sored by the English Department, will be printed by the University Printing Service, according to Ken Price, business manager. The choice of the University printers was reached afier receiving bids from several printers. Price said. The agreement reached with the University printers specifies that the magazine will be a forty page publication, with a two color cover printed on chrome-finish paper, Price announced. He said that the choice of type face and other tech nical decisions are being worked out. "We have been disappointed in the scarceness of contributions," said Steve Schultz, editor. "We know that eood work in creative writing is being done and it's just a matter of getting people to sub mit. "Our editorial policy Is not to nrovide an outlet for any clique, but to give an audience to a repre sentative sample of the work tnat s being done on campus," Schultz said. Contributions for the magazine will be received in Andrews 205, the office of Robert Hough, faculty nHvir for the publication. An envelope will be left outside the door in case the office is closed, Hough has announced. All entries in the creative writ ing contests being sponsored by the English department will be considered for publication in tne magazine, according to benuuz. Career Giddance Sessions Begin . A series of career guidance epecinns are being sponsored by the Bizad Council, according to Raymond De Vnes, president. tv first of the series features Mr. Ellsworth Moser, president ot the United States National Bank of Omaha, a University of Nebras ka alumnus. Opportunities in the fipM of Commercial Banking will be discussed. The session will oe held at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Social Science 303. Further meetings are slated for Feb. 26, and March 12. Senior Women File Applications for May Queen can be picked up in the Union Activi ties Office until Friday, according to Marilyn Heck, election co-chair man. Elieible to file are senior women who have a weighted scholastic averaee of 5.5 carrying twelve semester hours. if World Affairs Leaders Attend Seminar vfiere Over twenty five leaders and rep representatives of college In ternational relations clubs through out Nebraska descended on' the NU campus Saturday to attend the Ne braska Collegiate World Affairs Conference. The Nebraska University Coun Printed History Honors Teachers Anniversary Author, Dr. Goldenstcin, Traces 50 Year Educational 'Program The release of an eighty-three page printed history of Teachers College will highlight the collegers 50th anniversary program Thurs day. Dr. Erwin Goldstein, staff mem ber and author of the history, has traced the education department's history, facilities and programs back through the past half cen tury. "It .s our hope that the informa tion may serve to remind thous ands of alumni and friends of the services of Teachers College to the schools and colleges in Nebraska and other states," remarked the Dean of Teachers College, Frank Henzlik, in his preface of the book. Dean Henzlik will preside over the Fiftieth Anniversary Convoca tion at 10:00 Thursday morning in the Union Ballroom. Greetings will be given by Dean of Faculties A.C. Breckenridge. Symposium A symposium, consisting of Dr. Erwin Goldenstein, Professor R. D. Moritz, Dr. W. H. Morton and Dr. O. H. Werner will present a discussion called, "A Brief Look at Our History." Professor Moritz. Dr. Morton, and Dr. Werner, Professors Em eritus, are retired, after having served the Education department for approximately a quarter cen tufv. Following the symposium, Dr. Fred Wilhelms. director of the Di vision of Education and Psychol ogy at San Francisco State Col lege, will speak on "The Evolution of a Profession." Luncheon At the 1 D.m. luncheon in Union XYZ, Dr. Ernest Melby, former dean of the School of Education at New York University, will dis cuss "Current Issues in Teacher Education." Dr. Norman Thorpe, Principal of University High School, will preside. Dean Henzlik, having been with the education department since 1924, will be the featured speaker at the banquet at 6:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. He will speak on "The Teachers College Looks to the Future." Toastmaster will be Chancellor Clifford Hardin. Special guests at the banquet will be the Board of Regents and Dr. Freeman Decker, State Commis sioner of Education. A coffee will be held from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in 200 Teachers Col Pharmacists Outdated After "ears of working in an out-i dated uilding, the College of Pharmacy has a new home. The College will move to a new building, Lyman Hall, immediately following the summer session, ac cording to Pharmacy Dean Joseph Burt. Built in 1885, the old Pharmacy Building has witnessed a great many changes on the University campus. It was originally built to house the chemistry department, but it soon became inadequate. When Avery Laboratory was com nleted. the Pharmacy College and Student Health moved in and took possession of the vacated chem istry building. The Student Health with its over flow of patients in 1946, was forced to move to its present location. Since then, the Pharmacy Col lege has continued to outgrow; the building. "We won't be sorry to leave," said Dr. L. D. Small, Chairman of the department of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Chemistry. "The roof leaks, the plumbing is obsolete, the doors stick, wind blows in around the windows and plaster is forever falling down. We used to have more classes ud stairs," he con tinued, "until the second floor be came unsafe for more than a few students at a time." If in no other place, many stu dents have left their mark on the old building. The blackened ceil ings smolter yet where various reactions have caused paint to turn black. "We've had a few small fires and exDlosions. but in our new building, we will have safety show ers above every door. This should eliminate much of the hazard of a fire," he explained. "All in all, the new Lyman Hall is just about everything we have been needing and wanting for cil of World Affairs sponsored event (NUCWA) headlined Dr. Robert Cranford as guest speaker at the evening banquet. Cranford, Associate Professor of Journalism at the University, dis cussed the methods of internation al communication and advantages lege. Hostesses are the Dean's Student Advisory Committee. Music for the programs will be provided by the Madrigal Singers at the morning convocation and Leon Lishner, professor of music, at the banquet. Dr. Norman Thorpe heads the Fiftieth Anniversary Committee. He is assisted by Dr. Walter Beggs, Dr. Madison Brewer, Miss Luvicy Hill, Dr. Leroy Laase, Mrs. Ruth Levinscn and Dr. Charles Neidt. According to Dean Henzlik, ap proximately 1000 people, many stu dents included, are expected to at tend the Convocation. About 300 are expected to attend the Ban quet. Stein Gives Impressions Social Workers Study Starkweather "It should be mere possible to spot potential criminals before they act out against society," said New York social work educator Harold Stein during an interview last Friday. Stein was referring to the case of Charles Starkweather Stein spoke at the two day social work institute given by the Grad uate School of Social Work. He gave a series cf lectures on the application of knowledge from social sciences to social work. "If Starkweather's 'antisocial tendencies' had been spotted early enough, it is possible that he could have been helped to become a use ful member of society," Stein said. He stressed that such rehabilita tion would have depended upon whether the 19-year-old youth had a conscience or the capacity to de velop one. More funds and trained person nel would help agencies do a bet ter job of crime prevention, ac cording to Stein. A great deal is already being done. The educator feels that the social worker needs a deeper understand ing of social environment which might be attained through the social sciences. The adaption of adding social sciences to the edu cation of social workers is rela tively new and on the general level. Stein hopes it will become more widespread in the future. Prepare To Evacuate Budding Flayed many years," he said. "However, the new building isn't as large as we would have liked. It will limit us to about 100 students, but at least we shall have sufficient elec trical circuits and a few other modern necessities that were con veniences in our old building. About the only thing the new building lacks is facilities for han dling radio-active isotopes. But in re -fe v :J I s rvsi M&ti&st .,. 'ill 5 i-ve'ti' . V IS.' VT-tV ' , ? r " " f Wf'" ' it wruBimw-ra 1 '' '' " -i BUILDING BUSHED The old University Pharmacy Building, erected in 1887, will soon fall victim to. the wrecker's crowbar. Faculty members of the Pharmacy College will move to a new home, Lymaa Hall, immediately after the close of summer school. Monday, February 10, 1958 of uding communication as a medi um to promote international un derstanding. According to Cranford, by learn ing moft.' bout each other, coun tries wil-f ivt be as apt to enter into wars dl other conflicts. Cran ford praiset&the efforts of the two press organisations which are cur rently promoti"-Research in inter national comrf cation defects. They are the It V-America Press wmcn covers L.Tvji America ana the Western HeiSLphere and th International PreJ, Institute locat- ed at Zurich, Switzerland. Cranford's address was entitled, "The Value of Communication as a Channel of International Under standing." Problem Discussions Problem discussions highlighted the afternoon affairs of the con ference. Dr. Norman Hill, Professor of policital Science, discussed inter national organizations. Emphasis was placed on SEATO and NATO. Pan America and Pan American Problems were discussed by Miss Bernice Miller, Instructor of Ro mance Languages. Revolutions and their effects were the most dis cussed questions of the session. Dr. Albin Anderson, Associate Professor of History lead the final discussion. It pertained to illiterate peoples. Anderson mentioned creating the desire to learn in the people and a world wide education group to teach them practical things, such as "Keep flies out of your kitchen" instead of "Columbus dis covered America." ' Each attending delegation was informed of the topics of the prob lem discussions beforehand in or der to prepare questions and stim ulate thought on the subjects. AAUN Speaker Miss Florence Brugger, program chairman of the Lincoln division of the American Association of the United Nations, discussed the or ganization and activities of t h e Association and its collegiate sub division, the Collegiate Council of the United Nations. ' Other activities of the conference included an organization workshop and an organizational meeting. The organizational workshop was highlighted by subdividing the con ference and discussing problems faced by international relations or ganizations. Such problems as membership, activities, and for eign students were included.' Caravatis Planned Caravan tours of the state were planned to help international rela tions clubs at high schools and col leges to get started. Dates of the regional and nation al International Relations Confer ences were announced. Lawrence, Kansas will be the site of the Re gional Conference March 14 and 15. The National Conference will be in Washington D. C. from March 30 to April 2. Largest delegations at the con ference were from Nebraska Wes leyan and Duschene. Many Holes time," maybe we shall have that too" commented Dr. Small. The old building, which has been condemned by the State Fire Mar shall, will be torn down im mediately following the transfer of equipment to Lyman Hall. Dean Adam Breckenridge of the Univer sity building committee stated that "it is hoped the building will be removed by September, 1958."