11 ..... ... 4fm Hf , H ONIVERSITY Of NEBS URRARY i u i' . . & " W.. rL . 4'. l- ;1 i' ' t .. n 'im iiiiflnrrirfim ...... ., BOBBLES, BANGLES, BEADS - V " if w "-r-minii i i iiihiJ Students will have a chance to do some world shopping today, tomorrow and Thursday at the YWCA's 1961 International Bazaar. Pictured above (from left) are Y members Gretchen Gaines, Bev Boyd and Mary Weatherspoon holding a pro motional poster for the bazaar which is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Goes Globe-Trotting With Christmas Bazaar . . "Globe-trotting with the Y is a descriptive sum mary of the articles being sola at. the 1961 YWCA In ternational Christmas Ba zaar in the Student Union party rooms from 9 a.m. to Five Faculty, State Officials Revise Book Five University faculty members, along with four state officials, have accepted the task of preparing a new manual for the American Lesion and its auxiliary for use in its Boys' and Girls' State programs held every summer. Dr. Royce H. Knapp, pro fessor of secondary educa tion, will edit the book. Other faculty members working on the manual and their departments are: Dr. A. C. Breekenridge, dean of faculties; John DeRolf, part time instructor in secondary education; Dr. Edward F. Schmidt, professor of eco nomics; and Dr. A. Bruce Winter, associate professor of political science. State officers who will work on the manual are Ger ald Vitamvas, deputy attor ney general; Walter James, re visor of statutes; Norman Otto, assistant to the gov ernor; and Hugo Srb, clerk of the legislature. Council for UN Meeting Tonight The National field repre sentative for the Collegiate Council for the United Na tions (CCUN) will visit the University campus today and meet with students interested in the possibility of forming a chapter here. The meeting will be held in the Student Union at 7 p.m. tonight. The CCUN is a national stu dent organization devoted to developing informed collegi ate support for the United Na tions. Its programs are de signed to educate students about the UN and to encour age an expression of that edu cated opinion. The CCUN co-sponsors sev eral model UN projects such as the recent meet heldin New York attended by three University students and the coming meet to be held in St. Louis. Students interested in visit in? with the field representa tive, Jed Johnson, may con tact him through Bill Buckley at the Sijjma Nu house, Gil 7-3984, during the day. University-Developed System Could Change Communications In Satellite, Radio, TV Fields A new communications svs tern which could revolutionize present radio, television and telephone systems and pro vide a new method of com municating with satellites has Deen developed by a univer sity scientist. The system, described Sat urday bv Dr. Clvde Hvde. acting chairman of the elec trical engineering depart ment. uses two signals in- stead of one to transmit in formation. Dr. Hyde said the system could also be applied to rail roads, airplanes, automobiles ana otner vehicles. The system is called "Side band Intermediate Frequency Communications System." The oair of sienals gives a truer and, purer reproduction man a single signal, Dr. Hyde said. Three Difficulties The system virtually elim inates three difficulties en countered in space communi cation today: The DoDDler effect, whinh is the change of frequency which occurs when the send- Student Union Loss Totals Over $450 9 p.m., beginning tomorrow ana running until Thursday. Over $10,000 worth of mer chandise has been ordered for the bazaar. Prices for the articles range anywhere from ten cents to twenty dollars. Countries that will be rep resented at the bazaar Include England, Norway, Sweden, Finland. Denmark. Francp. Germany, Italy, Holland, and Spain. Others include Japan. Chi na, India, the Holy Lands, and countries in Africa. International students on campus will be at the bazaar to answer questions concern ing the articles and to explain the stories and work behind the handicraft. The articles represent work done by the The varietv of article nn sale include jewelry, lacquor ware, oamboo ware, Japanese rice paper, dolls, mechanical toys, novelties, mother of pearl jewelry, wood carvings, Christmas decorations and Nativity scenes, olive wood Testaments, brassware. ebnnv articles, earthenware, cande- labras, and household goods. "The Christmas Bazaar is an excellent olace to do vonr Christmas shopping," said Miss r ems. It is especially good for finding something for that person on your Christ mas list who has everything. Miss Ferris further explained that the bazaar has a number of articles for children. The Christmas Bazaar started on the Nebraska cam craftsmen in the traditional ntIC CIV VaQfC fsern onI linn style of their particular coun- now grown to a $10,000 proi- try. In order to make it easier for the student to attend the bazaar, the doors' will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. New merchandise will also be put out on the tables everv dav so that those who aren't able to attend the first day will have a new supply of articles from which to buy, explained Bev Ferris, co-chairman of special projects commii:ee, which is in charge of the bazaar. ect and the maior undertak ing of the campus YWCA. The bazaar is also concerned with the citizens of Lincoln and the surrounding area. Tickets on Sale Student tickets for all "ker sports are now on ale for $4.00 in the Coli seum ticket office. Facuty tickets can be purchased for $5.00. By Cindy Bellows A total amount of equip ment valued in excess of $450 has been stolen from the Ne braska Student Union this year. Managing director of the Nebraska Union, A. H. Ben nett, says in regard to this thieft, "It is assumed that college students, as adults, are aware of the moral obli gations involved being good citizens." i However, he continued, re cent illicit activity of this campus denies any such awareness on the part 4 its students. Five male freshmen have been called before the Student Tribunal by the Dean of Student Affairs this week. They participated in theft" of Union equipment whose value alone nears grand larceny, Bennett said. These students were aDore hended by Campus Police in two different instances, and made to return the stolen items. Three of the men stole a chair, and the other two an urn for cigarette disposal. This climaxes a rash of similar occurrances which re suit in the total loss of $450 worth of equipment Bennett explained. However, the oth er items have not been re covered as yet. Specifically, they are: two lamps from 241. a table lamo. a Tloor lamp, a chair, and a loveseat ail from the R St. entrance to the Union. Such abuse goes beyond the point of playing "pranks" he said, legally, it is termed grand larceny. If such action continues, civil . authorities will be prevailed upon and miscreants dealt with in ac cordance with the civil law. As Managing Director of the Union, Bennett says, "We feel obligated to enforce necessary discipline to insure that those who are good citi zens of this campus can en joy the benefits that have been provided for their use, mainly the equipment In this building." Moreover, thefts have not been restricted to the Student Union, other campus units have experienced much of the same trouble. The most r. cent example is the theft of a snrumcen head from the Uni versity Museum. Constant surveillance of equipment for student use on an aauu couege campus should not be necessary Ben nett said. However, campus police will continue close watch on Student Union equipment until this problem is resolved. Bennett said all University students should feel responsi ble for the return of these stolen 'articles if aware of their presence anywhere on campus. er or receiver moves at high speed toward or away from the other. The drifting of frequency when the frequency is high. Frequency changes which occur in space-ship or missile communications. Dr. Hvde said his techninue will allow transmission of in formation on heat, light or sound rays, similar to the present method of sendin? In formation on radio rays. . He explained that informa tion could be sent on the heat rays from the exhaust of a flying jet airplane and be picked up by a receiver some 100 miles away, this same technique could be employed in making use of sound en ergy. Dr. Hyde discovered the system while attempting to solve a problem of determin ing absorption properties of gases, a study being conduct ed by Dr. Gordon fin linn nf the chemistry department. Kenning System After he had solved Dr. Gallup's problem, Dr. Hyde saw that the same technique, slightly revised, could be used for communications. He got his idea for the system on Apr. 2, 1958, and since that time, he and graduate students have been rofinin the system. A patent has been issued through the Research ration of New York. profit firm which has a con tract with the University to iianuie patents placed upon discoveries and inventions by members of the! staff. Under the agreement voted by the Board of Regents Sat urday, Dr. Hyde will receive not more than 15 per cent of all nionies received by the Research Cnrnnratlnn fi-Am the patent. The University'i aiioie m royalties will be about 42.5 per cent. Chancellor Clifford TTarrtin noted that the Research Cor poration turns its profits back into University research projects. He said staff mmWi rhn - - t, hit develoD inventions nn thai jobs "have an ohliMtinn" t share the discovery with the university. 'Russian Art, Monuments' Pozzatti to Present Illustrated Lecture NSF Will Offer Science Grants The National Science Foun dation is offering approxi mately 1,000 summer fellow ships to graduate teaching as sistants. The fellowships will enable selected students to devote more time to their own scien tific studies and research dur ing the summer months. The grants provide stipends between $50 to $75 Der week and there is no limit on the number the University can nominate to receive the fellowships. The closing date for appli cations is Dec. 8 and full in formation can be obtained from the graduate office. A former University wnfes sor who was sent to Rusfeia last spring by the U.S. State Department as part of a cul tural exchange program will speaK on "Russian Art and Monuments" Wednesday. Rudy Pozzatti, associate professor of art at Indiana a.m. in the Pan American Room of the Student Union. The lecture will be illus trated and an exhibit of Rus sian photography may also be snown Pozzatti and Jimmv Ernst. creator of the mural at the Continental National Bank, spent six weeks visiting ten Russian cities where they in spected museums and art schools and appeared as speakers to groups of Russian artists and other cultural groups. A member of the NU art faculty from 1950 to 1956, Poz zatti is a graduate of Colo rado University, and studied unaer a t uunngnt scnoiarshin to Italy from 1952 to 1953. The oainter and nrintmaker served as a visiting professor at the Yale-Norfolk summer school and Ohio University in 1957, and held an Indiana University Graduate School Fellowship the same year. Pozzatti has received awards from Joslyn Art Mu-. seum in Omaha; City Art Museum in St. Louis, Mo.; and Walker Art rant - w.ai,l U Minneapolis, Minn. tie has had one-man art showings at the Art institute w - - KMWAVMW of Chicago; University of Ne braska Art Galleries; Univer sity Gallery, University of Minnesota: Walker Art ren ter, Minneapolis: and th Kan. sas City Art Museum. The artist is renresented in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of Art. Washington, D.C.; F. M. Hall Collection at the University of Nebraska; Nebraska Art Assn., Lincoln; and Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha. Karen Schroeder is chair. man of this event snnnsnref by the Union arts and exhibit committee. K.K, Needs Directors Interviews for the music director and choreoerarhv director for the Kosmet Klub show will be held Sunday, Dec. 3, at 2:15 p.m. in the Student Union. Any person interested should contact Al Plummer at HE 5-2957 to schedule an interview. Coed Finds University Stops for Tea, Biscuits By Sue Hovik Hour exams? Mid-terms? Semester finals? Students at the University of Durham at Newcastle-upon-Tyne in northern England do not have these tests to worry about, reports Marilyn Pickett. Miss Pickett, a 1960 graduate of the University, spent last year studying at the school of art at that university. She explained that they have exams at the end of the year only. Miss Pickett spent a year in graduate work at Dur ham on a Rotary Foundation Fellowship. She studied in the fields of textile printing, pottery and stain glass. The textile printing is a hand process which is still used by some of the textile industries in England. Miss Pickett said that' she was most impressed with the university systems in England. Most of the students are on grants from the surrounding English counties. These grants pay for food, housing, and tuition. Many stu dents live on these grants completely. There are a few exceptions when the students , receive bigger grants. She said that these students in the university go through interviews and exams and the very select few who enter the university are of a very high quality. Proficient Miss Pickett explained that students have to be pro ficient in four or five subjects before they go to the uni versity. Only the upper 20 of the school children at the age of eleven go to grammar school, she said. The English students seem to have a derogatory atti tude towards the American educational system. They feel that the idea is quantity not quality, she said. , The University of Durham is based on three terms. Miss Pickett explained that if a student wants to be a teacher of a certain subject, he goes to the university for three years, graduates and with a degree in that subject. He then returns to the school for a year in order to receive his diploma in education. The art department is on a different system explained Miss Pickett. The teachers are there, but are working on . . re ... ... . uieir own projects, n you want neip, you go una tnem. Students are expected to check in at 9:30 in the morning and leave about 4:30 in the afternoon. They can take one or two hours for lunch. The student is on his own, she said, but this system works because the students are in very competitive positions. Art School Miss Pickett was in the school of design within the art school. The other two schools were the school of paint ing and the school of sculpture. The university started in October, no Thanksgiving vacation, and a month for Christmas. Miss Pickett said that Oxford and Cambridge got five and a half weeks for Christmas and a month at Easter. Miss Pickett found that the students were very in tellectual and well read. They didn't have many activities, but she was impressed by their athletic skill. A tennis court came with the dormitory and the university had a very good rowing team. The English students were very curious people and al ways asked questions said Miss Pickett. . They were quite interested in the election, and she found that most of them favored Kennedy. The students were also amazed by American cheerleaders, though they thought they were absurd. Heating Systems Englishmen were interested in the central heating systems of the United States. Many of the homes there are still heated by fireplaces. Students had never seen pop corn so Miss Pickett explained that she got a can which had been imported from Iowa in a Newcastle store. She said that the way of living there is not such a rush as it is in the United States. Almost every department at the university took a forty -five minute break at 3:30 every day for tea and biscuits. She explained that biscuits over there are what she would call cookies in the United States and candy is known as chocolates or sweets. Most of the students live in "digs" which are little apartments. They have one room and a fireplace. Very few of the students have cars, she noted. Miss Pickett found that the English girls are very conservative and domestic. They sew, knit, and cook well. Common Names The common English girls', names are Ursula, Fiana, Peggy, Rosemary, and Joyce. Ian is a favorite boy's name with John and David also rating high. The girls wear either slacks or heels to school. The only place you see bobby socks is on the tennis courts, she said. ' TV shows have Huckleberry Hound and Maverickr but also some good intellectual shows said Miss Pickett. The plays which run for an hour and a half do not have any commercials breaking into them. One of the two main stations does not have any commercials and it is financed by licenses which are sold to the buyers of TV's and radios. In the summer English students sign up for camp-outs at the Union. Miss Pickett explained that physical educa tion groups would go to the Lake district, make their own canoes, live in tents, and do their own cooking. In England there are many small, individually owned shops said Miss Pickett. In Newcastle, which is a ship building area, there is a place called Quayside. Here they have auctions and little shops that sell everything from candied eels to fur coats. Miss Pickett said that the food was really cheap at the Union. For 45-cents, you could buy a complete meal. She said that they had some "fun Pubs" where you could play darts, drink beer or cider, or eat. She said that they also drank beer at a bar in the basement of the Union. , - Miss Pickett is now enrolled in the advanced profes sional division of Teachers college. She Is also house mother at Nebraska Center which is serving as tem porary housing for the overflow of women students. ; i1 l1 , In I I !" K I ' r v M ay V7 t V -J