Round: Progress at Ataturk University Satisfactory Ataturk-University at Er. stance prevailing in f Ur- SOn. PYfpnsinn visual aide Tiii-trfcli Anlrara ITnNrnrelt.. son. extension visual a ids zurum, in eastern Turkey Turkish Ankara Unlversitv key, progress at Ataturk was regarded as satisfac tory. The new institution opened Nov. 17, 1958. It is presently located in a girls school building at Erzururn, but a new pampus is being constructed and may be occupied next year. Ataturk University is fashioned after Land-Grant college and state univer sities in this country and is planned to give the Turkish student similar research and educational advantages of the land-grant program in the U.S. Round and Lloyd Peter. specialist at the College of Agriculture, traveled to Tur key to shoot movie footage for a national educational TV program depicting the work of the Nebraska pro gram in Turkey as an ex ample of international rela tions of land-grant colleges during their centennial year. The original Ataturk pro gram took place at the are now on the staffs at where the University of Ne braska supplied faculty and funds to bolster a large enough teaching staff to be gin the new school at Ataturk. Some 130 Turkish profes sors have come to the Unit ed States and chiefly to Ne braska under the program for further educationalt training and studies since the program started. They at both schools. Ataturk and gram and remained until last November. The original head of the Nebraska corps of teachers and researchers. Dr. Otto Hoiberg, is now the director of the Hall of Youth at the Nebraska Cen ter. The program is described as "views of areas arid ac tivities in Turkey which are near me itussian border, has opened its 1961-62 aca demic year with an enroll ment of 500 and hopes to graduate its first senior class next spring. That was the report brought back from Turkey by George S. Round, direc tor of pi bile relations at the University, who spent two weeks in that country as a personal representative of Chancellor Clifford Hardin observing the University's work at Ankara and Erzur am. Round said under circum- Ankara and Ataturk and at other locations in Turkey. The original Nebraska work centered around An kara University where a new home economics de partment is now established the first in Turkey. The objectives of the Ne braska group in Turkey, the problems which have been encountered and the prog ress which has been made Ankara, will be the topic of a program at the Ag Union Tuesday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. This program, along with a series of slides, will be presented by Dr. L. K. Crowe, professor of dairy husbandry, and past head of the Nebraska faculty in Turkey. Dr. Crowe was in Turkey at the beginning of the pro- eaucauonai and interestin to Americans." Crowe. set 1961 Honorary Commandant- List of Candidates Will Narrow to Nine Interviews will begin Sunday for the selection of nine finalists, one of which will become the 1961 Honorary Com mandant, according to Norm Beatty, editor of the Daily Nebraskan. The nine finalists will make a television appearance and wm be presented during the halftime at the Nebraska-Colo- uu luuiuan game. Three of the nine girls will be chosen service queens with one becoming, the reigning royalty at the 1961 Military Ball. Sunday interviews will be gin at 10 a.m. in 234 Student Cast Tryout To Begin Next Week Tryouts will begin Monday in Howell Theater for two plays, the stage play "Light up the Sky" by Moss Hart and the television play "I'm Bring ing a Friend" by Martin Fox. The schedule of tryouts is as follows: Monday, 4-6 p.m. and 7-9:30 p.m.; Tuesday, 3-5 . p.m. ana v-:3U p.m.; and Wednesday, 3-5 p.m. and 7 9:30 p.m. in. joseon Baldwin, nssn date professor of Speech and uramauc Art, will direct "Light up the Sky." He said that this comedv is Derhans the truest and funniest play ever written about the Broad way theater. Moss Hart, author of the play, wrote many hit plays, some of them in collaboration with the late George Kauff man, master of comedv. Hart's recent best-selling dook, -Act une," tells of his experiences as a playwright. "Light up the Sky," written earlier than the hnok. -pnHc like dramatized chapters of ine Dest-seiier, Dr. Baldwin said. "I'm Bringing a Friend" will be directed by Dr How ard Martin, assistant profes sor of Speech and Dramatic Art. The play was the winner of the 1961-62 Nebraska na tional television playwriting contest. Dr. Martin originated the television playwriting contest as a national event last spring. Dr. Martin and Dr. Baldwin both emphasized the fact that all University students are eligible to try out. Union, Beatty said. The "S" street entrance of the Union N Meet Invites .-Studen By Mike MacLean The University has been in vited to send six delegates to the Collegiate Council for the United Nations to be held in New York in November, ac t will be open. Remaining in- llmvemr ac: terviews will be scheduled for pSent Steve CaL UnCl1 Tuesday evening Wirmi Df President Steve Gage Indian Prime Minister Jaw Tuesday evening beginning at . ine room wm be an nounced later. Interview Schedule Sundav interview schedule- J Campbell Alpha ai imiui . . . in aim & Joyce Curd !'..'.'.!!". Zeta Taii niFiiit HMO Kay Strausa ... Chi Omega ... lol20 arnnne uamar .. Delta uamma .. 10.30 Chi Omega 0:40 Dirwiii-e nnuae ,,,, Zeta Tau Alpha io:ao nnry nji nummei Kappa 11:00 Lynelle McManaman . Towne Club . 11:20 nominn non . sma Kappa ., 11:30 Rllfh.nHn BuJ VII T1LI .......... ... am mi ... u:wj UH$ Tumbull Gamma Phi Beta U:50 .Ttlffv WW.i4 Qltfm IT.iut. 1.AA - " - - ...... . LU..I. nNKl X .w p. III. Karma Anderson Burr nan ,, . , 1:10 mannene tallow Kappa Alpha Theta 1:20 Rttv.rlv Rmv t Memorial Hail ..'.",. 1:30 Eunice jeirrey Delta kjcim jjeua ,, 1:40 .mw... tuviiwui .... rnu, nut .... j:ou Diane Tin an Kappa nappa iamm 3:00 Sukey Tinan Kappa Kappa Gamma 2:10 liayle Hranigan ... Pi Beta Phi ... 2:20 Judl Ann Zadina Alpha ' Omicron Pi 2:30 Sherry Koater .. Nebraska Center .. 2:40 Judi Lee ... Nebraska Center .. 2:50 Karen San Women'a Residence Hall 3:00 nancy iraerman Ajpna i;ru umega 3:10 ttnrharn P.nurirJr AtflllAtjn.. unavailable 3:20 amrwy fHrKer Alpna Xi Delta 3:30 Tuesday interview schedule Vicky Cuilen .. Gamma Phi Beta 7:10 Ray Johnstone .... Towne Club 7:20 Iann Kitta Alnhn Phi T.n Kathy Matfsea . . , Delta Gamma . .'. 7:40 Jean uisen Fedrte Hall 7:50 Jane Price Fedde Hall 8:00 Nancy Sorensen ... Kappa Delta ... 8:10 Kay Anderaon Love Memorial Hall a. oa juay wntucieson ,... AlPna mpiim jiiom ,, e:w KNUS Will Air Freshman' Game KNUS will be the onlv sta tion broadeastine the Nebras- Ka iresnmen-iowa state fresh men football eame at Memor ial stadium at 2:30 p.m. Fn- oav. The schedule of the station. 10 on the radio dial, will be as follows: 2:30. tot) tunes: 2:45, pre-game show with the line-up and vital statistics and 3 p.m.. eame time. Don Isherwood will eive a play-by-play account of the game on the live broadcast.! ahrlal Nehru has announced his intentions to speak to the uoiiegiate uounca which will include delegates from col leges and universities through- uui thp uniTpn .Mares. "1961: UN Year of Crisis" is the subject of the confer ence. Also, "The Role of. the Non-Aliened Nations in litter- national Politics," "African Development and the United Nations," and "The Problems of Chinese Representation" will be discussed in panel Ses sions. ' The University has also been invited to send two dele gates to the Midwest Model United Nations which will be held in St. Louis, March 29- This organization, features students from various colleges and universities who portray delegates from different coun tries and carry on actual UN business. It is nart nf tho V1. legiate Council for the United Nations. International The invitation stater! that the "Model United Nations is designed to stimulate interest in the international realm of Poles 9 Religious Freedom Surprises Dr. Schultz By Janet Sack Dr. C. Bertrand Schultz. director of the University Museum, recently returned from the International Association on Quaternary Research (INQUA) Congress held in Warsaw, Poland. I certainly found INQUA to be verv worthwhile flnH T was harvnv tn moM momr SDecialists in various fields rf Ounternnrv research," said Dr. Schultz, U. S. delegate to the sixth Congress. He said some 537 delegates from 5 countries met in Warsaw for the meeting irom Aug. Z7-sept. 7. included in the dele gation were some 30 renresentatives frnm Russia and three from Red China. A wide field was represented at the con gress with soil scientists, geographers, oceanographers, archaeologists, physical anthODOlieists. ecolotrists. nalaenhntflnists palaeontologists and meteorologists pres ent,. Impressed' Dr. Schultz was Dartieularlv imnressAd by the eeoloev of Poland. He said the southeast part of Poland in particular is quite similar to that of west-central Ne braska. This is known as the T.nhlin Tin. land region. Dr. Schultz said he had verv little trouble understanding talks nrespntpd at the congress because thev were translated into four different languages: English, frencn, German and Russian. Also at the congress Tr. Sr-hnltT rir o brief illustrated report on the boundary problem of the Pleistocene-Holocene age. He also nresented a naner nn the "Pleictn. cene Vertebrate Paleontology and Strati graphy of the Central Great Plains of North America" which will be published in the INQUA bulletin series. Dr. Schultz. who was accomnanied hv his wife, said the people of Poland were very friendly. But at this time there was . a little bit of tension toward the U.S. be cause of the Berlin situation. Free Religion Both Dr. and Mrs. Schultz were sur prised at the religious freedom of the Poles. He said all the religions of the country work together. The delegates of the Congress were told not to admire the churches as museums because the people took their religion seriously. Many shrines dotted the city of Warsaw and they were strewn with fresh flowers. The commu nists don't seem to bother them. Dr. Schultz noted that Warsaw has been restored beautifully with very little evi dence oL&he war remaining. One of the most horrible, yet enlighten ing, experiences Dr. and Mrs. Schutlz had was touring the former concentration camp at Lublin where about two million Jews from Europe were exterminated dur ing World War II by the Nazis. Fingernail imprints remain in the ce ment walls where the victims tried to claw their way out of the death room, he said. Folkdance On the brighter side of Polish life, the Schultzes attended a folkdance festival at ,the Palace of Culture. During the month (from Aug. 17-Sept. 17) that he spent in Europe he also visited museums in Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Denmark, Belgium, France and Britain. "Seeing these museums gave me a bet ter idea of the direction in which we could develop," he said. An added note of excitement to the Con gress was the selection of the United States as the site of the 1965 Congress with Lincoln as the possible city. Youth Wants to Help affairs and help students and others to understand more realistically the work of t h e United Nations." Any organization or individ ual who is willing to sponsor a Student Council member Should Contact .Tnhn Ttfnlan nf tne Student Council. In other action taken bv the Student Council Wednesday, the Judiciary Committee re turned the constitution of 7 organizations for revision. The organizations are: Agricul ture Executive Board, Ameri can Chemical Society, Beta chapter of Alpha Tau Alpha, Gamma Lambda, German Club, Spanish Club, and Uni versity of Nebraska 4-H Club. The committee amiroved the re-submitted constitution of Aquaquettes. Open Hearing Jim Samples, chairman of the Judiciary Committee. said. "The Judiciarv Commit- tee is calling an open hearing ior iov. l. trom 2-4 D.m. at wnicn time the president or an appointed representative oi eacn ot tne above organi zations will be asked to ap pear. The committee will ex plain the faults in their re spective constitutions and ask that they be corrected and re-submitted." Pat Spilker was appointed by tne union Board of Mart agers as a non-voting mem- oer oi tne council. Procedures to handle the voting for Homecoming -v ... . ueen, wnicn wm take place Wednesday. Nov. 1. in both the Ag and city Unions from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., were discussed. Letters of aDDlication for the position of representative from the Colleee of ' Law. which was vacated bv John Wightman, should be turned in to Don' Witt at Selleck Quadrangle by noon, Nov. 1. The council associates mem bers committee, which is working with 93 volunteers. has placed them on commit tees, ine associate members, who are working on a merit system, are being used to aid the council committees and strengthen the liaison system between students and th Council. Committee To Pick New Dean Five-man advisory commit tee to Chancellor Clifford Hardin for the selection of a new dean of student affaire upon the retirement of Dean J. P. Colbert, was announced today. Under the chairmanch Dr. A. C. Breckenridfe. dean Of faculties, the mftmhers nf the committee, whn win lect a new dean when Dean Colbert retires, are: Lyle E. Young, associate professor of engineering mechanics; Dr. Roger Washburn, chair- man of the department nf chemistry; Mrs. Marion Nic kerson, assistant professor of business teacher education, and Dr. Lavon J. Sumption, assistant professor of animal husbandry. Professor Young is also a member of the self-survey committee which is re-exam-Ing the entire area of student services and student affairs. Dean Breckenridge is also chairman f this committee. Professors Washburn Mir.. kerson and Sumption were recommended to the newlv named advisory committee hv the University Senate's liaison committee. Dean Breckenridge n i a that after an organizational meeting to be held within the next few weeks, a nrneerlnre will be outlined in the search for a new dean. He said the committee exnected later tn solicit views of students and nominations and suggestions from members of the Univer sity. Dean Colbert, who has served as dean since 1952, must retire as dean of stu dent affairs next summer be cause of the administrative age limit of 65. He may re main on the faculty as pro fessor of civil engineering. Will Adults Let Them? 'G reater Editor's note: This is the fourth article In a series exam wing the exodus of youth from the state of Nebraska, pis story studies what can and is being done, accord ing to leaders in the state, to keep young people here. The final article, "Is the Grass Really Greener?" which will appear Monday, is a series of interviews with young people who have left and returned. By Tom Kotouc In examining what is being done to improve Nebras ka and to interest youth in remaining in the state, many adults would discount the part that youth can play in strengthening our state and in mobilizing others to take action and help her grow and become more attrac tive. In an exclusive interview, Gov. Frank Morrison, said, 'We need greater areas of contact between business and education, between the community and ts youth. We need to work closer with the educator, who tan point out the Opportunities in Nebraska to his students." "We are losing youth to other states because youth do not know the opportunities that exist here," he added. Last July 1 concerned with the loss of youth from Nebraska, Governor Morrison called together 20 state youth to form the Nebraska Council of Youth. Group Study The group ' studied the problem through Interviews with experts and youth and prepared a plan of action to check this exodus. The greatest cause of youth leaving the state was that youth were neither informed on the potentials and opportunity ot the state nor able or inter ested in taking a part in the solution of existing prob lems. Adults had frequently and unintentionally ignored their youth when they discussed local and state problems, believing youth to be incapable and irresponsible. Returning to their communities and campuses, these young people discussed these problems at every oppor tunity with their parents, other adults, and other youths, trying to interest them in taking action to solve the prob lems. , Project Action In this phase of the program, called Project Action, the young people sometimes were able to form discus sion groups in their community or school which were interested in studying the problem further. From these groups in communities like Humboldt, Sidney, and others Adult, Youth Contact Needed'Morrison I : r I ' iN' 1 A' v Vis? . ! F 'i'l t GEE WHIZ! A group of third grade Boy Scouts from seum, which is an example of the edu Seward examine a python in the MorriQ cational and historical resources that are Hall museum. Day after day groups of abundant In Nebraska, school kids and adults come to the mu- they organized local conferences of youth or conferences of youth and adults to discuss and recommend solutions to the problems on the local level. Presently, a television series is being prepared to discuss the reasons for, the ways of checking, and the fallacies of Operation Exodus. To be shown on channel 12 and on Nov. 30, Dec. 7 and Dec. 14, the series will pit young Nebraskans who are leaving the state against those who are remaining or against adults who have made this their home. Yet this is a youth program and only serves if it mob lizes student and adult interest and in building Ne braska and in acquainting its youth with the state's po tentials. Adult programs, like those outlined Wednesday and like the following, play an equally vital role in im proving the appeal of Nebraska to her youth. Charles Chace, executive administrator for the Ne braska Chamber of Commerce, in the absence of Presi dent Ralph Misco, said that the Nebraska Chamber is concerned with forming a better image of Nebraska for its people. Since its organization, the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce has emphasized five points for strenghening the state. First, industrial development through promotion of the advantages of Nebraska's business climate was em phasized, coupled with a search for industry. Second, we emphasized the development of a tourist trade. .-. Presently, the Nebraska Chamber has stepped up its efforts to promote tourism since the state is short of funds. It has gone into forty-six communities already. Last week Chace helped Indians set up an assembly line in Mason, Neb:, to make souvenirs on a profitable basis, part of the Chamber's broad program. The third consideration is agricultural research, es pecially in soil conservation and reclamation, to make the state more attractive to agriculture and agricultural industries. Fourth, the Chamber has promoted public relations and publicity of the state's economic strengths and his tory. "Eighteen high schools have set up a "Know Your Nebraska program," Chace said, to acquaint our students with our diversified economy and products, recreation, history, and the potential for economic development in (Continued to Page 4)