It's A Woman's World Faculty Wife Plays a Part S''0m' JLlJL voiioii Hamuli 1 till A University faculty wife has helped construct the Uni versity's new Sheldon Memo rial Art Gallery or at least she has played a part in the project. Mrs. Giovanna Bowsky, wife of Dr. William Bowsky, history professor, hasn't lift ed any heavy equipment or pourea any concrete for the new building, but she has in directly helped lay the honey- coiorea maroie walls of the new gallery by speaking her native itauan tongue. Translator Mrs. Bowsky has acted as translator for Bruno Brescia m, 51, an Italian craftsman who was sent to Lincoln as facotry representative for an Italian marble company. cresciani coma speak no English and the workmen could speak no Italian, said Maurice M. Halstead, engi neer for the construction pro! ect. Mrs. Bowsky's help was needed to translate Brescia ni's advice and corrections to the workmen. With translated instructions, tne workmen were able to ar range the prefitied marble slabs into individual walls. Soon Bresciani was able to communicate with the other workmen through drawings and sign language. "Southern Europeans are very good at sign language," Mrs. Bowsky said. Menu Reading Although adjusted on t h e Job, Bresciani, still needed Mrs. Bowsky's help in some areas like reading American menus. He didn't need much help in f i n d i n g . his way through Lincoln streets, however. Lincoln streets are laid out very simply com pared to the tangled mazes in Italian cities, Mrs. Bowsky explained. Petite, dark-haired Mrs. Bowsky was born in Florence, Italy. While attending univer sity here she met her future husband who was doing re search on a book. A few years after their Ital ian marriage the Bowskys came back to the United States and to Nebraska. Once in Lincoln, Dr. Bowsky as sumed his duties as a medie val and renaissance history instructor at the University. Lift ART EXHIBIT A spectator views artwork done by high school All-Staters during their first nine days of the All-State art program. The work is on display this week in the Nebraska Union Art Gallery. All-Staters Begin Final Week Concert Ends What is believed to be the largest group in the 27-year history of the All-State pro gram will conclude activities Saturday, after three weeks of study on the Nebraska Uni versity campus. The 411 high school All-Staters, whose homes range from La Rochelle, New York to Scottsbluff, Nebraska, have been participating in art, journalism, music and speech programs under NU instruc tors since June 12. The All-State program, said John P. Moran, general di rector of the program, is a service to the state and the Ind'-duaL giving the stu denra the opportunity to work -with NU staff members, to learn and to take back to their communities "better 'skills and inspirations." Heading the program that "makes you sit down and work but have fun while you're working," in the words of a music student, are Bruce Kendall, speech; John Moran, music; James Morrison, jour nalism; and Gail Butt, art. While on campus the All Staters have been staying at various sorority houses and men's dormitories, dining in the Student Union and using such NU recreation facilities as the swimming pool, ten uis courts, ping pong tables and bowling alleys. The dormitory life is excit ing, said a speech student hurrying to play rehearsal. "You learn there are people Just like you, and you learn to get along," he said. Letting the student study in his one field from four to six hours a day "is a better system for teaching than the regular University system," Mrs. Bowsky has also been a University instructor. She taught Italian for a year. English Forbidden For 44 Teachers At English is almost a forbid den language on Burnett Hall's third floor this sum mer. In fact, speaking Eng lish is grounds for dismissal for the 44 high school lan guage teachers attending the NDEA Language Institute, according to Dr. Charles Col man, director. The teachers are studying various aspects of teaching French and Spanish at the eight-week institute, which comes under the National De fense Education Act passed in 1958 to help take care of some of the deficiencies in ed ucation in the U.S., Dr. Col man said. "Ana nf iha larks "VnfMSS felt was most serious at that time was that our people weren't learning to speak foreign languages. Even it they studied languages in school, they could just read and write them, and were unable to understand the spo ken languages,'' he said. The National Defense Edu cation Act provided for a number of special insti tutes supported by federal funds' to re-train high school teachers. Congress became aware of the need for a new approach "to language study during World War It, Dr. Col man said. 'When the armed services and government services needed language specialists tc serve as interpreters and translators, they couldn't find them," he said. "They didn't need readers and writers, but people who could take care of ordinary transactions in foreign countries." Crash Programs "The situation became acute right after we got into the war, so the armed serv ice forces set up crash pro grams to train people. Under Activities for 411 CI I P Iff li te m ('A fes il MA,, " -:-' -rr-i jumn.i inf r-r- piiti i ,;,: lift llpiilJiNitfM JF ; I'll c";.'s' '::':;:;:!:-'-Hv I :,t,rm WATERCOLOR This watercolor still-life by All-Stater Mary Greer is one of the many paintings and drawings now on display in the Union. said Mr. Butt, who also point ed out that such a teaching system would not be applic able to students taking a va riety of courses. Speech department activity heads the list of remaining events with three plays to be presented in Howell Theater. The speech All-Staters will present the Miracle Worker hursdav. June 28 at 7:30 p.m.; The Children's Hour Lincoln, Nebraska the Army Specialized Train ing Program, all sorts of skills were taught," Dr. Col man said; "and the language branch was one of the main ones." During the nine-month in tensive language schools set up in various parts of the country, enlisted men and a few officers did nothing but study language and the cul tures of the people in the countries, Dr. Colman said. "I taught one of the lan guage schools in French my self," he added. "We kept those men busy from early morning 'til they went to bed at night, and we trained peo ple who could get along in other countries in practical situations." Saved Lives "After the war, some of the fellows came back and told us how much they appreciat ed this," -Dr. Colman said. One man's life and the lives of his comrades were saved because of the language train ing. They were captured by the French, who thought they were German soldiers. Be cause he could speak French, I Earning While Learning Science Teachers Sharpen Knowledge Some minds may associate science wim tne space race, but to 71 teacher-students attending the eight-week Science Institute, science is very much down-to-earth. They are eafning while learning paid to be in school. Each receives a $600 stipend in return for sharpen ing his science knowledge and teaching skills, said Dr. Wendell L. Gauger, director of the Institute. The money is part of a $91,000 grant made to the University by the National Science Foundation to provide the Institute. Students Friday, June 29 at 7:30 p.m.; and The Adding Machiine Sat urday, June 30 at 7:30 p.m. In addition to assuming the roles in the plays, the speech department members have also made the costumes, props and settings. Concluding the 1962 All-State program will be the Final Con cert Saturday, June 30 at 7:30 p.m. on the Stadium steps. Language Institute the man was able to explain that they were American sol diers, and thus save their lives, Dr. Colman said. A part of the wartime pro gram was a scientific study of how people learn lan guages and what are the most effective methods of teaching. "Out of this it was learned that if you are going to teach people to understand and speak a language you should begin with these skills first and not give any instruction in writing and reading until people are familiar with the sound Tatterns of the 1 a u - guage," Dr. Colman said, "the reasons for this," he continued, "are that you are dealing with people who speak and read English, and they will autbmatically try to pro nounce in the English pat tern. They should hear the language first, ana tnen go from ear to eye," ne saia. Understanding first So, one provision of the Na tional Defense uaucauonai Act was the re-traimng oi high school teachers to in struct languages in the audio lingual method, which em- (Continued on page four) This grant enables the Uni versity to provide science courses not usually available during the Summer Session, Dr. Gauger said. Faculty sal aries and costs of operation, plus the stipends, are covered by the federal funds. The Uni versity of Nebraska is one of the few across the nation chosen to offer such a re fresher for high school science instructors, he said. To supplement several courses in fundamental knowl edge and theory, each student is participating in his choice of a bacteriology, biology, chemistry or physics work shop, or a cell ziology semi nar, Dr. Gauger said. Those enrolled in chemistry are building atomic and molecular models to scale from styro foam spheres for use as class room teaching aids. Dr, Gauger invites all Sum mer Session students to share in the Science Institute. All are welcome to be in Room 114. Burnett Hall from 4:00 to 5:50 on Wednesday afternoons to hear Dr. Glen Driscoll dis cuss History of Science, he said. Dr. Driscoll flies from Vermillion where he is a pro fessor of history at the Uni versity of South Dakota. Arriving next week from England to observe the oper ation of the Institute will be Mr. and Mrs. II. F. Broad. Broad is a physicist and head master of one of the distin guished grammar schools in Great Britain, the Cedars School at LeiRhiim Buzzard, England, Dr. Gauger said. Dr. Gauger invites all Sum mer Session students to join the Science Institute person nel to hear Broad's lectures next week. Hour and location will be announced, he said. Power Cut For Some NU Buildings The University of Nebraska was without power in some buildings yesterday after noon when a power blackout hit southeastern Nebraska. Lincoln was without elec tricity for about 26 minutes when power failed at both Consumers Public Power and City Light and Power. The University was not without electricity in all buildings because it has its own plant, and obtains only part of the service from Con sumers. Power was cut off in some areas to conserve it for other areas needing it more. Activity continued in most buildings, however - with window blinds up. Summer Nebraskan V I ' Vv . 1 1 I .;4iK' ' W.illi,..,i.,fW SStS . V.fc,,'!,-, w.Tinnnn --w,,.. la.-n-.i. WELCOME Mrs. Frank B. Department representatives, Chester Bowles: Things Are There have been successes in U.S. foreign policy and "basically things are improv ing for us," but the threat of nuclear war, caused by some "hideous accident" cannot be minimized, Chester Bowles told a Nebraska audience last Thursday. Bowles, President K e n- nedy's special representative and adviser on African, As ian ana Latin American af fairs, headed a State Depart ment foreign policy team which presented a briefing on the University campus. Other members of the team were Frank M. Coffin, deputy administrator of the Agency for International Develop ment, and Robert E. Matte son, member of the Disarma ment Advisory Committee and the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. In an address at the Ne braska Center, Bowles said that military, economic and cultural frontiers lie between the United States and com munist interests and that the U.S. must maintain a policy of maximum maneuverability in relationships in these areas with the communist world. He said there is little room to maneuver on the military frontier, but that the U.S. is strong "West Berlin still stands as a shining example" of the determination to pre serve freedom." Economic Competition Western powers need not fear an increasing exchange of cultural ideas with the communist world, he said, but there is competition on the economic frontier, as. there should be. The West has an advantage in the eco nomic competition through the European Common Mar ket, he said. The U.S. must support in economic trade some un aligned nations of Africa, Asia and Latin America whose leaders do not think as we do, he said. At an afternoon open ses sion at the Nebraska Union, Bowles told an audience of over 800 that there is hope for an eventual peaceful vorld, where hope overcomes fear. Fear and hope are opposing each other in the world to day, he said. "The grim, dir- Index Morrison welcomes Chester Bowles and Frank Coffin, State at a reception at the Governor's Mansion. ty, horrible struggle going on in 11 parts of the world" shows the fear in the world, but the "remarkable degree of cooperation in thtj United Nations" expresses hope, he said. Bowles said that the United Nations "is important be cause it provides a forum where we can discuss our problems" even though "there are plenty of things wrong" with it. He added that many things have been settled there which would have pro duced wars in earlier years. U.S. Approach The foreign policy approach of the U.S. "rejects the con cept of nuclear brinkmanship in the nairie of 'liberation ' It thinks of power not only in terms of miliary weapons and industrial capacity, but in terms of people and the ideas that move them." Bowles cUfcd that the U.S. approach "also refuses to write off the millions who live in Eastern Europe as 'com munists' simply because they have been forced to live un der communist rule." "It seeks const jntly to as sure them that they are neith er deserted nor forgotten, that their future is not hope less, that the forces of free dom and dignity are still on their side and growing strong er year by year." Their Own "Way Bowles said that the govern ments of developing nations must develop in their own way just as the American government did. "The devel nnine nations of the world have learned that you can't turn on prosperity with a tau- cet. It's a long, painful proc ess and at least 90 per cent of the effort is going to have to come from within them selves." In a news conference, Bow les also stressed the import ance of involving people in their own development. "They must have a sense of belong ing and participation," he said. There are three factors in giving aid to underdeveloped countries the amount of aid, the method by which il is given, and, perhaps most important, the effect it has on the development of the to Inside Pages GENETICS AND INHERITANCE Do you know that reced ing hairlines and straight, white teeth are inherited traits? Do your feet resemble those of your parents or grandpar ents? Do you know that rotifers have virgin births? For further information see the story about an 84-year old re tired zoology department chairman on . , Page 3 MORE SUMMER SCHOOL College and high school stu dents aren't the only ones attending classes this summer. Over 400 elementary school children are, too. For a report of what's going on at Bancroft and Pershing elementary schools, see ... Page 3 ETV FOR NEBRASKA Educational television lias Teen discussed in legislative sessions of both our state and fed eral governments. A report of how their decisions can af fect Nebraska and the progress of educational television appears on . . . Page 2 FOR RELAXATION The staff of Love Memorial Library again, prepares a list of books for summertime reading enjoyment. This week's books are discussed on . . . Page 4 Tuesday, June 26, 1962 mprovmg country itself, he said. ""The money is important, but so is the attitude on our part." "The image of Americans in Africa, Asia and the Far East has improved. The American image has im proved in many ways because our cars are smaller, more American people speak the languages where they go, and more wives are working in charity work in these coun tries, Bowles said. In other comments, Bowles said that no one can say how long Cuba's Castro will last, but "he has problems and I believe things are going to get worse for him.1' He has six million people on a small island with few resources, he said. Bowles also had praise for President Kennedy's Peace Corps program. "It's improved a great deal and will contmue to improve. Everywhere 1 went 1 heard praise. I w a s leery of it at first, but it's been handled very well and very effectively." The State Department brief ing was the first such pro gram to be brought to the University of Nebraska cam pus. All-Staters Elect Ideal Girl and Boy The more than 400 Nebras ka high school All-State stu dents cast their votes for the Ideal All-State Girl and Boy last weekend from among eight candidates. The election is one of the traditional highlights of the three-week course. The girl candidates are An tonia Poulos, Grand Island; Sharon Warboys, Lincoln; Jane Miller, Davenport; Jeanette C o u f a 1, Seward; Kathy Armstrong, Minden; and Ann Kotouc, Humboldt. The boy candidates are Don Bellows, Grant; and John Ko touc, Humboldt. In addition to the can didates, elected from each of the eight houses, four escorts were chosen by popular vote and Include Jerry Lee, Kear ney; Gary Lamb, Alliance; Dick Packwood, Sterling; and Paul Coble, Mullen.