ine 7 n v n UBRM" VI NOVU LI lr fM Vol 75, No. 33 ARCHiycs Constrnction Bids For New Art Class r - Opening of bids for con struction of the HX),000 Nelle Cochrane Woods Memorial building on the University's city campus has been post poned to Nov. 21, at 2 p.m. The bid-opening for this new art building was originally scheduled for Nov. 15. If the bidding is within the available funds, construction will begin immediately, said V e r n e r Meyers, director of planning and construction. Used primarily by the art department, the building will include rooms for sculpture, graphics, pottery, painting, and the history of art. How ever, some rooms will be made available for other campus classes. Construction will be fi nanced partially by the Uni versity and primarily through a gift of $250,000"by the Woods Charitable Foundation Inc. It is to be built in mem ory of Nelle Cochrane Woods. I a picr;er Linco'n woman who served on the board of trus tees or the Art Association for many years. Loc d so? unrest of the: Sheldca Art Ga'iery zni di- icctly south an! west of the Grant Memorial Bn'Ming, the j versify Thursday, Nov. 16. to j cago faculty as an instruc cxterior or th building will ; deliver the 90th Avery Me- j tor in 1934. In 1948. Dr. Olm be de5i;n?d to be harmonious j mortal lecture. isiead was appointed a full viih t'ze Shc'.uon Art Gallery. Dr. Charles E. Olmstead. professor, and in 1953, as head It will be 163 feet Ions. 44 chairman of the department f of the bntanv denartment feet "Xz, and three stories high. The interior will navejot uiicago, wui speaK on uie moveable partitions and be topic, "Are Scientists Trained suitably equipped for art work. Architectural plans were designed by Hazes and Robinson Architects. The old administration building will be torn ddwn in conjunction with this develop ment, possibly next spring, although the Woods building will not be built on its site. Med School Modernizing Accelerated Plans to modernize the five-'i story outn Duuamg on ine College of Medicine campus in Omaha were accelerated! recently with the appoint- i ment of the Omaha firm John Latenser and Sons as arcai tects for the project Renovation of the building will provide increased re search and student labora tories for the development of biochemistry, physiology and pharmacology, preventative medicine, and physical medi cine and rehabilitation. No estimate on the cost of the project will be available until the architectural plans have been completed. Financ ing will come from the state building levy for the College of Medicine. Galleries Receive New Paintings Fifty-eight thousand dol lars worth of art work has been presented to the Univer sity Art Galleries by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation of New York. The University Calleries were presented with ten paintings of the Kenaissance period valued at S3,000. The paintings will be placed on display in the Sheldon Art Gallery as soon as it Is com pleted; at the earliest, in the spring of 1963. The gift is . part of a na tionwide series of gifts to var ious schools known as the Kress Study Collection. The purpose of the gifts is to en able schools offering art his tory courses to enrich their presentation of the subject matter. The pictures and their art ists are: "Madonna and Child with the Infant St. John," An tonello Da Saliba; two panels depicting Saints Bartholomew and Paul and Saints John and Peter, Andrea Di Bartolo; "Christ Washing the Feet of the Apostles," anonymous Ve netian painter; "Portrait of a Young Prince," Giuseppa Maria CrespL "Portrait of a Man in a White Wig," V. .GhUlandi; The Voyage of Jacob," Gio vanni Benedetto Castiglione; "St. Martin Dividing His Cloak with a Beggar," studio follower of Jacopo Bassano; a 16th century portrait, Dau phin Henry; and "Portrait of an Unknown Man," M. Mer-an. ANOTHER BITES DUST The "old" Administration building, west of the new Sheldon Art Galleries, now nnder construction, will soon be torn down. The new Nelle Cochran Woods art building will be constructed north of this site. Dr. Olmstead Will Present Avery Memorial Lecture botanist who reared in Eastern Nebrask: and gained national recoeni- lion at the University of Chi- cago will return to the Uni- of botany at the University or Educated?" The lecture i will be at 8 p.m. in Love u. and then editor of Bo Library auditorium Jtanical Gazette, in 1946. ine rauaman uicmry 30- uTZLV - - KUU. Dr. Olmstead, a native of Colorado, attended etemen- tary and secondary schools at enm,c. uoJvernorsf .ue Rokeby in Lancaster County ca Academy of Sciences, from 1914-22. He attended the ; - r m . University of Nebraska from! OICC iTlcllOr 1924-29, where he earned his J Bachelor Arts degree. He K Ac T?Z vAf was second in academic ltllivS J. II SI standing in his graduating ;! T t C. Jin -Review also was elected -a member oi vm Beta Kappa ana ig- ma XL in 1931. he obtained bis Wjiwm- In Ar.fIrHi,dThcre Was You" major at the University, a singer in the University op era "Cosi Fan Tutte," and a distinguished researcher in 1 member of Delta Gamma so- chemistry; will be the guest r0"ty. lecturer at a meeting of the Second place went to Clark Nebraska chapter of Sigma Metcalf. He played the fla- Xi Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. I in Bessey Hall auditorium. Dr. Wazer is the 1951-62 Sigma Xi lecturer. A native of Chicago, be was assistant director of the Monsanto Chemical Co. for ten years ringelson Terms Liberia Pro- By Sue Hovik Liberia is a decidely pro American country although a firm believer in "P a n Afrkanism." a proud de sire to be African, not East ern or Western. This was the international political situation in Liberia when Rich Bringelson, pres ident of Ag YMCA, spent four weeks there last sum mer. Bringelson 'was a mem ber of a fifteen student work camp group which west to Liberia nnder the national YMCA's Buildings for Brotherhood program. The team spent four weeks is Greenville, Liberia build ing a YMCA program of fice. Liberia's constitution is patterned after that of the United States as is their system of government. Re cently a bill was passed forbidding students studying in foreign countries from traveling in countries not listed on their passports (no Communist countries are listed), said Bringelson. "Head From Sand" He said that he believes the United States should "get its head out of the sand" because it feels that anything against status quo is Communistic." Bringel son also said that he now believes that just because the American government has recognized a govern ment in the past doesn't mean that it's for the best He found that people there Postponed Budding ' was. Master's degree from Okla- raskaihoma and ua a SfAriiml i Fellow at Yale n-her hp earned his Ph. D. in 1935. He joined the University of Chi Among his honors were the j prf sideDCT of the American IecoIopv Sociefv botanical ed- jtor 0f "Ecoloev" from 1943- He has been a member of the board of directors of The! Grassland Research Founda- ?ace " "e f ? ","wt,"' ",c 1 t ! Christy Johnson won first paace in tne Au-umversiry ToW Rmriatir C.inHaw ning. singing "Look Me Over T..-, T" rl Till " " menco guitar, a type oi gypsy nance music irom spain. Aiei- a course in taxation for the calf has played guitar for legislators was entirely sep five years. arate from the tax institute Marvin Ruback won third for out-state Nebraska resi place with his rhythm skit dents, but that the two may called the "Hambone" act have been confused. ' .-.4R are much more interested in international affairs than are Americans, and that they knew more about the United States then he knew about Liberia. "The people down there are not naive," he sa'd. Bringelson cited as ex ample of a headline in a paper which said "Space mas Says He Took a Good Look at Africa." A high school s t a d e n t assured Bringelson that they (Soviet Union) were just trying to impress them. Bringelson said that he learned a lot about race re lations as three of the boys on the team were Negroes. In Liberia -it is unconsti tutional for a non-Liberian citizen to own land, but no white man can be a Liberi an citizen. Racial Problems He said that Liberians know about the racial prob lems in the United States and that they are difficult for them to understand. They hear about the disputes con cerned with violence but don't hear about the ones settled peacefully. The space given to these prob lems in the papers is mostly a matter of personal inter est in the matter. The general secretary of the YMCA in Greenville who invited the team to Liberia met the team when t h e y first arrived and told them that their job of construct' ing a building was of sec ondary importance. The The Nebraskan Economist Reaffirms Tax Stand Purpose: 'To Educate Rather Than Advocate By Nancy Wbitford The University's position that its tax institute work shops are for educational rather than propaganda pur poses was reaffirmed today by Everett Peterson, profes sor of agricultural economics. The tax institute is co-spon sored by the agricultural eco nomics department and the extension division and will consist of 12-15 workshops throughout the state in Feb ruary and March. Peterson said the purpose of the program Is to "edu cate, rather than advocate." He said, "Our purpose is to present basic factual infor mation on public affairs is sues to the people of h e state. This has no relation to the budget, but is part of our continuing program of pro- j : : r : vi? formation, The decision is up to the ' people- We only indicate the lvarious. methods (f govern- ment finance) available. Sen. Richard Marvel, chair man of the Budget Commit tee, said people were asking him about the tax institute, but that he "didn't know the University s reasons The persons who conduct these workshops are in a very said. delicate spot if they are to "The real conflict is be avoid being accused, of at- twees the U.S. and Russia tempting to do more than in- and not the West and Corn form the public" .Marvel monism Wd aiMi j noted Sen. Kenneth Bowen, "Chair man of the Legislative Coun- cil Tax Committee, had said aiso: ine universuy teeis it lost a fight this year on the budget and has given the; im pression it wants to broaden the tax base." j Peterson had appeared! be fore Sen. Bowen'i committee last week to give information oa the University's tax insti tute. Peterson said the confusion tion wilJi another Droblem he was on at the " "k. " - " ,fn r cnHt!nni a fa linnr t the committee might proceed, Among his suggestions was the idea for a short course on taxation for the legislators, He said this would sot neces sarily have to be sponsored by the University, but that University facilities would be available if desired. He said the sueseslion for ----- - main objective was to bring about better understanding between two different cul tures. Bringelson said that they lived in as elementary school School was in the middle of the term but the students moved to ether buildings in the town. For the arrival of the YMCA team the townspeople bad sprayed for mosquitoes so they wouldn't get malaria, screened is the windows, hung curtains, cleared away the brash, and set op a schedule so the teachers could do the cooking for the visitors. The school term disrupted the work of 17 Liberian col lege students who also worked on the project. Two students from Kenya, who had been tribesmen in the Mau-Mau uprisings, also worked on the project. Judges, Senators Bringelson said that the social-economic groups that helped worked on the build ing were astonishing. The chairman of the building group was one of the su preme court judges of Li beria and senators from the Greenville area also helped. The team left Li beria with only one-third of the ioof left to finish. Bringelson said that it was amazing how well the college generation in Li beria approached their new position in an entirely new life. Most of their fathers had three wives, and were Nehru: World Rests on UN's In War, By Tom Kotouc The only way that the world can survive is if the United Nations has supreme and sovereign power in ques tions of war and peace." This is the opinion of Jawa harlal Nehru, prime minister of India, speaking to the 1,500 delegates from 43 states at the Nov. 10-11 Collegiate Council on the United Na tions in New York City. "I do not advocate world government," Nehru said, "but ask that the United Na. jtions be given supreme au thority In tunes when war and mass threat to human lives face the world." Three University students attended this unique confer ence which studied the chal lenge "1961, UN Year of Cri sis." Students The students are Jim Sam ples and Barbara Tanner, seniors in arts and sciences, and Arthus Hughes, graduate student in history. "Nehru said that we must breach the gap between the technological and scientific complexities and t o d a y's mode of tiiinkins" SamDles Sunday AVF Pancake Feed, Lincoln Drive Nets $631.25 Crippled by pledge class sneaks and the official migra tion to the Iowa State football game, the All University Fund Pancake Feed netted only 231.25, while the afternoon LujCOm solicitations totalled ! m c,earLn8 the original goal by $200. According to Helen Landis, Lincoln Drive chairman, more I n!M up rlas fnnrtinns are scheduled, and the AUF board will solicit Thursday night in Builder Directories The 1961 Builders Stu-. dent-Faculty Telephone Di rectories will be on sale this week at the front booth of the Student Union, S a.m.-4:30 p.m. The direc tories, which are a new size this year and have a colored cover, sell for $L subsistance level farmers. Now their sons are in col lege. Rubber Exports Bringelson said that the sole source of income is from the exportation of rub ber. There has been eco nomic domination with the coming in of Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. in 1926, but now some of their execu tive positions are being held by Liberians. The YMCA had a small projector with which they showed movies and cartoons to the townspeople. After work the townspeople would collect for the c a r t o o n s which they tirelessly sat through five or six times. Bringelson reported that their object in going there as a whole was with the idea of "establishing a close association with the Liberi an students, but ended up with a close association with the townspeople. In the African system, no one goes hungry. People will feed others if they pos sibly can. Bringelson said that their ability togive is also much greater than ours. They give a gift in the pure sense of the word. One of the students met a family who wanted to give him one of their last chick ens when he left. This was the ultimate gift because they were giving a part of themselves, related Bringel son. Good Image The team tried to present Peace Questions "Nehru is not the starry eyed neutralist painted by the American press," Hughes said. Nehru said it would be insane for any nation to un dertake unilateral disarma ment Yet he has an unshak able conviction that the greatest hope for the world is universal nuclear disarma ment followed by non-nuclear disarmament." Basic Necessities "We in the U.S. must put ourselves in the place of the n o n-aligned underdeveloped nations who are facing prob lems of securing the basic necessities of food and cloth ing for their people if we are to understand and cooperate with these non-a 1 i g n e d groups, Nehru emphasized," added Miss Tanner. But the impressions of the future of the UN that the University delegates got aft er studying the body in theory and fact of observation are umque. "The greatest strength of the United Nations is her positive influence for peace in the world through her functional agencies, such as UNESCO, food and agricul tural organization, technical assistance programs and oth ers," Hughes said. "And one of her greatest weaknesses," added Samples, lieu of their-weekly business never knowingly aid our ene meeting. mies and abandon our allies Expenses for the Pancake Feed which had a total atten dance of 375 people, jumped this year from $146 last year to approximately S170 with the added cost of renting grills, AUF charity profits will be cut to around $100, according to ALF treasurer Mike Milroy, Mary Weatherspoon, AUF Special Functions chairman expressed her thanks to all who helped put on the feed. We had a working force of approximately 75 persons, with every organized house and dormitory on the campus represented by either its pres ident or a substitute," said Nancy Eriksen, assistant Spe cial Events chairman. Is ad dition to the AUF board, many AUF workers serve the pan cakes. Steve Joynt's Delt combo provided music for the Pan cake Feed. a good image and a high example of Americans but found that it was hard to associate our economy and standard of living to that of Liberia. With the little money they did have to spend on souvenirs buying tbem gave the impression that they had a lot and could throw it away. One of the customs of Li beria that is a little differ ent from American customs is that of a unique hand shake. Bringelson explained that you shake hands, slide hands to fingertips and snap fingers at the end. He said that he was 'hard to stop shaking hands in this man ner after they returned to the United States. Bringelson said that they were told before they left for Liberia that no young man could participate in an activity like that and come back the same person. Bringelson found this to be very true. "The United States has more responsibility than most of us realize and we as the college generation have to accept it, because' if we don't, who can we expect to accept it?", Bringelson said. lis added that if t h e r e are any sophomore or jun iors who would like to par ticipate in an activity like this, they should contact Ray Preston at Farmhouse. Next summer a team from this area will go to Hong Kong. U.S. Tuesday, Nov. 14, ',961 Survival Success "is that she faces bankruptcy from these very endeavors." Basic Obligations "When many nations fail to meet either their basic obli gations or to pay their share in the special actions of the U.N. as that m the Congo, the United Nations collapses financially," Samples said. "For instance, The U.S.S.R, failed to pay her share in the Congo operation (which ap proaches 50 of the costs; because she did not original ly vote for the operation and because France was not meeting her obligation." "I was amazed at the en thusiasm and dedication of every U.N. delegate and offi cial, from ambassador to guide, "that in the UN lay the last hope for world peace," said Hughes. "And this enthusiasm and interest was captured bv these 1500 delegates from 43 states," added Miss Tanner. Russia Russia win not let the U.N. collapse," said Hughes, "as long a it continues to serve her as a propaganda forum." "And even if the U.N. fails politically, the functional agencies will 'probably con tinue to operate if they can obtain financial support," he added. Miss Tanner had this to say about the admission of Red China to the U.N.: Dr. Vladimir Petrov, lec turer in Russian from Yale University said in our panel discussion that we should as we would be if we allow Red China to enter the U.N. "By this action we would give tacit "moral" approval to Communist actions in Asia," Petrov added. Dr. Friedman Dr. Wolfgang Friedman, professor of law and director of the international legal re search institute at Columbia University said, "It is unde sirable to keep 600 million people from participating in a world forum on problems of war and peace. This dis advantage more than out weighs the moral and friend ship characterists required by the U.N. Charter for ad mission to the U.N. "And what agreement on world nuclear disarmament or ban would ever be mean ingful without Red China'f signature," Friedman added. Hughes brought back these (Continued on page 4) NUC Eligible For Queen Title Nebraska coeds are eligible to enter the eighth annual Na tional College Queen contest which searches for the "na tion's most outstanding col lege girl.'; The judging is based 50 on attractiveness, charm and personality, and 50 on aca demic record, campus activ ities, hobbies and community service. The judges said that the next National College Queen will be a "typical American college girl bright, alert and personable." Regional winners will go to New York to participate in the . 1962 National College Queen pageant held next June. It will highlight the "New York Is a Summer Festival" celebration spon sored by the New York Con vention and Visitors Bureau. The winner will receive a sports car, diamond ring, and many clothes. The current National Col lege Queen is Miss Patricia Weaver, junior at Wilson Col lege in Chambersburg,, Penn sylvania. Coeds from the Uni versity of Cincinnati and Montana State college placed second and third. To enter, write to National Queen Contest Committee, Suite 1606, Paramount Build ing, 1501 Broadway, New York 36, N.Y., for an official entry blank and complete de tails. 4 hi i l" In- V i V f ' r, K r t ,' n Vv 2,V v i ,4