j? ' Qi ill . I -fit 1 f If " " I PjtW 1 IKS IS I 1 I pf4i:ii;FT MjfI is.! LI NCQLN, NEBRASKA - TUESDAY, JUNE 21, .1960 Adventured in Accidentia Social Science vs. Specialization It 1J4 . A Education: Committed to What? 1 . 1 .Jfl. TI.WI ' ! If.! Modern Africa... Africa Preview Given by Scholar , "Africa, Awakening Giant: Challenge to the United Na tions" will be presented by Heinrich Albert Wieschhoff as the second World Affairs Previews program Monday at 2 p.m. in Love' Library Auditorium. ' Wieschhoff was named as speaker for the "Spotlight on Africa" program on the rec ommendation of Nobel Peace prize-winner Ralph J. Bunche when John Furbay was un able to speak. Wieschhoff is director of the Department of Political and Security Council Affairs of the United Nations. Until recently he was director of Trusteeship and Information from Non-Self-Governing Ter ritories for the United Na tions. He taught African and Co lonial Affairs at the Univer sity of Pennsylvania for 11 years before becoming asso ciated with the United Na tions in 1946. A naturalized citizen, , he was born in Germany and educated in Frankfurt a- , at the University of Vienna. During his last five years at the University of Pennsyl vania Wieschhoff was also Reading List On Africa See Page 2 curator of African affairs at the University of Pennsyl vania. He served as a consultant In the United States Office of Strategic Services from 1941 to 1946. From 1946-51 Wieschhoff was chief of a territorial re search analysis section for the United Nations. During 1949 he conducted field trips to South Africa and to West Africa. ' He is a member of the Council on Foreign Affairs. The contributor to the En cyclopedia Britannica is a 'distinguished international scholar" and an "authority on African affairs," accord ing to Frank P. Sorenson. He is tlx? author of the fol lowing books on Africa: Afri kanische Trommin, The Mon-ometapa-Zimbabwe Culture in South East Africa, Colonial Policies in Africa, An An thropological Bibliography of Negro Africa, and seven Afri can Handbooks. Wieschhoff is the editor of African Transcripts, which was published in 1945. Home By Carol Steckling Have you ever tasted soy flour fried in peanut butter? Most people haven't and this is why an Indian girl in the experimental kitchens at the University of Nebraska has asked another Indian girl to come in and taste-test her new candy. The girl is developing a new recipe for candy using soy flour and peanut butter, which are available in her country. She began by frying the soy flour in peanut butter and butter. The next time she used only peanut butter. "The American girls in the class have no idea what the candy should taste like," she said. This was one of nine exper iments being worked out by home economics majors in the experimental cookery class taught by Dr. Josephine Brooks at the College of Agri culture. "We try to learn the whys of successes and the whys of failures, but sometimes we don't find out," Dr. Brooks said. , Learn by Trial It is best to learn the ac tion of the ingredients of a recipe , by actually experi menting with them, she said. One of the girls is varying the ingredients in a standard growing giant H. A. Wieschhoff AEC Grant To Pharmacy A $12,807 grant from the Atomic Energy Commission will allow the University Col lege of Pharmacy to intro duce instruction in the uses and applications of radioiso topes in pharmacy, accor to Dean Joseph B. Burt. Dean Burt said the radio isotope training will be intro duced in basic professional ogy, and graduate courses. Among the major equip ment sterns which will be pur chased are: a Gamma scintil lation detector, and an Alpha-Beta-Gamma transistorized survey meter. Union Sponsors Evening at SAC SAC Night at the Lincoln Air Force Base, sponsored by the Nebraska Union, will begin Friday, July 8, at 2:30 p.m. The guided tour of the base will be open to all University students who have signed up at the Union Activities office by July 6. It will include an inspection of the B-47 atom bombers and will end with smorgasbord in the Officers Club. A highlight of last year's tour, according to Mrs. Sylvia McNeil of the Activities Of fice, was. the showing of the German police dogs being trained at the base. Bus fare and $2 for the din ner will be the only cost to participating students 'and faculty members. jfiiT ' mum y Economics Students -XS 'I if til Soy flour. . .for cake recipe to study their ef fects on the quality of the cake. She diminished the amount of fat in two test cakes and omitted fat entirely from a third cake. "I had never made a cake rithout fat be fore," she said. She expected it to be tough and smaller than if she had, used fat.' She also . thought' it would have less flavor. Sight and taste By Mary Louise Reese ' Is there a conflict between the sciences and the humani ties? Not according to M e r k Hobson, dean of the College of Engineering and Architec ture. But Nicholas DeWitt, as sociate of the Harvard Uni versity' Russian Research Center, says there is. "What we must ask our selves is the basic question commitment to what kind of education?" ' DeWitt said Tuesday, June 14, at the Uni versity of Nebraska's first World Affairs Preview pre sentation for 1960. Education For What? Hitting at the heart of what ever conflict there is, DeWitt described the- Russian sys tem of education. There the question "what kind of edu cation?" is answered by the needs of the state, not the individual. "The Russians orient their educational efforts so as to maximize the returns from it for the advancement" of their political, military and economic objectives. The communists do not be lieve in education for edu cation's sake," he said. DeWitt continued. "They do not believe in education for the individual's sake. The Russians do not want any Dart of liberal or general hu manistic education. They don t want any generahsts at all they want only special ists.". Without contending that the University produces what Karl Shapiro, associate pro fessor of English, calls "Ger- Index to Inside Pages FOR BETTER UNDERSTANDING In its at its business of building a better under second year on the University of Nebraska standing. See ... , campus, the Far Eastern Institute is busy Page 2 PHYSICS IN THE HOME LITERALLY to help heat and cool his house. For how In building his home a University of Ne- he did it see ., . . braska physics instructor put nature to work Page 3 ART, ELEPHANTS, AND THE STARS. . past when fossils were formed, and guide The University of Nebraska's Morrill Hall you on a tour of the stars. See . . . can show you art, take you into the distant Page 4 A BLENDING OF LISTENER AND ALL- the next Student Union presentation. STATE Leon Lishner and the 160-voice See . . . All-State Chorus will blend their music in For Summer Relaxation Reading List 2 jiuucui uikuu uiumuii. ...... ' f ' Summit pauinsifi rhpliilp & KUON-TV Viewing Schedule . . 4! ' ': " ..... V.l. i '' ' 1 t &J.-Jjfa - Indian candy facts after baking proved she was correct in her assump tions. Standard Recipe Many women remember that their grandmothers had one recipe forall cakes and merely added ingredients for variety. This prompted one of the class members to take a standard cake recipe and ex periment with chocolate, ba nana, spice and gold varia- j i ri i iff f.irw wi Nicholas DeWitt man scientists," men who carry on scientific research without any feeling of moral obligation because their work has no ethical connotation for them, other faculty members expressed concern about the production of specialists. Neither Shapiro nor Alan P. Bates, chairman of the Department of Sociology, disputed the need for spe cialists. Hobson did not dis pute the need for education in the humanities. The conflict appears to cen ter around "how much" and "when", not "what" or "if." It is not the clear-cut sort of conflict which can be dis cussed briefly, resolved and dismissed. The conflict is that basic question of DeWitt's: "com mitment to what kind of edu cation?" i - i Pream... better caramels? tions. She made three varia tions of chocolate, using choc olate and cocoa. "I looked at other recipes and compared them to the basic recipe to m3ke i" he measurement of the choco late," she said. "I increased the liquid and decreased the flour because chocolate thickens the bat ter," sho explained. She noted that chocolate cake recipes KM Alan P. Bates Both Shapiro and Bates emphasized the need to give a man a broad education in the humanities. Hobson marked a need for study in the humanities, but felt that with the present offerings of the College of Engineering and Architecture "our boys" can go ahead with later study on their own. Engineering students are now required to take 18 hours of electives in non technical and non-scientific fields, Hobson said. But the question of "how many hours in the humani ties" may not be one which can be answered on the basis of so many, hours of this sub ject and so many of that for each student, Bates ex plained. The need for a broad back ground in the humanities can f 1 - , f 1 Test for Taste seem to have a higher suijar content than other cake reci pes. Record All Changes She must keep track of all variations, such as letting one cake stand while the others are baking if there is not room in the oven for all at the same time. This may bring about some differentia tion in the quality of the cake, Dr. Brooks said. Karl Shapiro , only.be met by giving each' student a background in those arts with which he is not al ready familiar, he said. An avid reader should study the visual arts and music, tor example, more than litera ture. Shapiro agreed that all students should be ac quainted with all the arts, but recommended the Eng lish system of liberal arts education. There, he said, students are not taught to write, but to read'. When they do write, they are often better than our students who are taught to write, he commented. Fine Arts For All Shapiro feels that all peo ple have some ability in all of the arts, even though some may develop their abilities more highly than others. Talented Pupils Subject Of Regional Convention Enrollment Up Slightly More than 5,200 students of all ages are engaged in sum mer studies under the direc tion of the University of Ne braska, according to Dr. Frank E. Sorenson, director of Summer Sessions. The regular summer-school enrollment is 3,425, an in crease of 51 over a year ago, he said. In addition, more than 1,400 Nebraska high school students are on the University's Lin coln campuses. Five hundred sixty students are enrolled in University High School, a gain of 130; 250 in All-State Fine Arts Course; 300 in Girls' State, and 325 in Boys' State. t Also, Dr. Sorenson re ported, 200 elementary pu pils are attending Bancroft School and another 200 are at Pershing Grade School, both operated by the University this summer. Mixing fruit juices with plain gelatin may not sound as appetizing, but it demon strates the effect of the juices on the jelling ability of the gelatin, a girl said while measuring the consistency of gelatin and vegetable juice. "I once used pineapple juice .with getetin and never did get it to harden," she explained as her reason for choosing this experiment. Carol Steckling is a junior home economics-journalism mainr nt the University of Nebraska. She is employed by the Nebraska Farmer. Each student selects her own problem and works it out alone. , Helps Make Salad She said the knowledge gained from her work on this would be useful in mixing fruits and vegetables with gelatin for salads. The effect of liquid oil, lard, margarine, C r i s c o, Swift'ning and Fluffo on drop cookies is also being studied. The cookies will be tested for spreadability Of batter, vol ume after baking and flavor. Artificial flavorings, such as vanilla, have been omit ed in all recipes used in the Continued to Page 2 Merk Hobson Everyone should write and play and paint, he feels.' He especially emphasized the i n s i g h t and perman ence of literature, but added that the modern world makes it important for students to have an ade quate background of s c i entific study as well as in the humanities. It was not the scientist he deplored, but the undergrad uate specialist in any field, engineering, science or jour nalism, who neglects a lib eral education for a specialty. When To Specialize . Shapiro did not argue with specialization, but with the time for specialization, as did Bates. "The top engineers I hav Continued on Page 2 A conference lor leacners and administrators of schools providing special training for superior and talented students will begin Thursday in the Nebraska Union. Known as Project STS, the two-day conference will pro vide sessions on teaching, counseling, providing for and evaluating "advanced" stu dents, according to an agenda prepared by John Cronland, program coordinator. "Representatives from 'project schools,' that is, schools in which the talented student is specially provided for, will attend from Nebras ka and surrounding states," Cronland said. In curricula for superior and talented students, more advanced courses are offered and "the student is encour aged and left to do more on his own, similar to the at mosphere of college work," he said. An additional 38 people from high schools in the same area will attend the two-day meet "because they are in terested in the system and apparently want to get it es tablished in their schools," he added. "Pretty soon this won't be a project," remarked Cron land "because it will be out and, it is hoped, put into force in many high schools." Omaha Westside and Belle vue are "project high schools" in Nebraska. The University of Nebraska meeting is only one of several in the north-central area al though it is the first such program on this campus. Bus Ad Awards Of $4,000 Told Nearly $4,000 in scholar ships and fellowships to busi ness administration students at the University of Nebras- kahave been awarded for use during the next school year. according to Dean Charles S. Miller of the College of Busi ness Administration. The awards andthe recip ients are: John E. MUler GraduaU Fellowship In Businets Administration, $1,000 plus tuition to Paul M. Rooney of Lincoln. J. Kenneth Cozier scholarships, $240 each to Francis R. Freimuth, Lincoln, and Raymond R. Buin. MiUigan. Lincoln Association of Fire and Cas ualty Agents scholarships, $125 each to Gene A. Ktra3heim, Kimball, and Ronald G. Sutter. Lincoln. Magee Memorial scholarship; $100 to Pciy Merica, Omaha. Maytag scholarship, $200 to Ernest J. Carlson, Lincoln. Nebraska Association of Insurance Agents scholarship. $250 to Robert Chambers, Lincoln. T. B. Strain Memorial scholarships, $250 each to Kenneth D. Babka and John Hoerner, both of Lincoln, Jamco L. Dean, Arcadia, and Donald R. Fit tarn. Kimball. . , . W. G. Langworthy Taylor scholarship. $250 to Mary Jo Eager, Wtnnett, Mont. Rdward R Wells scholarship. $200 to William G. Gregory, Tabor, la.