Tuesday, November 27, 1934 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 84 No. 65 Vcc:;cn Cloudy, windy and cold today with light snow (1 to 2 Inches possible), high of 33 (1C). Tuesday night, continued windy and cold with snow ending, a low of 25 (-3C). Wednesday, partly cloudy end cold with gusty northwest winds and a high In tha lower 303 (1C). IvoiTion runnors A...Page9 'Happy UeaSs..Pageio moving ahead despite property, sketch delays Oct. 5 meeting of the foundation board of trustees, he said. The sketches were presented in bro chures that have been circulating in Lincoln for more than a month. Varner said the sketches in the By Gall Y. ilney Daily Kertskta Salter Ec jsorter Although construction of the Lied Center for Performing Arts may berin Ister than expected, the plans to build the $20 million brochure were "very tentative " center are moving along well, said and they may not look like the D. B. "Woody" Varner, NU Foun- final version. The architects still dation president. are working on other sketches "We had earlier hoped to start that should be released in early construction late summer or early December. The official plans fall of 1935," Varner said, "now we probably-will not be approved may start the spring of 1088." until the end of January, he said. Complications in acquiring The plans must be modified to property and the architects' fit within the $20-million budget, preparation of sketches for the he said. 2,500-seat theater structure were The site plan for the center and the main reasons for the delay, he the way the building is situated, said. as shown in the brochure, are The foundation still is in the accurate renderings, Varner said, process of negotiating with the The building to be built on 12th owners of University Publishing and Q streets will be bounded by Co. and the Knights of Pythias to Q, R, 1 1th and 1 2th streets, obtain the property block at 1 1th The main entrance to the cen- and Q streets. The negotiations ter wilibe from 12th Street, which should be completed in 30 to 60 would end in a cul-de-sac at R days, Varner said. Street. R Street will be closed The drawing and presentation and converted into a pedestrian of the . sketches by the Henntng- -mall as- parte! tr.o artscc;-:txf- son, Durham and Richardson which will include Sheldon Mem architecture firm of Omaha have orial Art Gallery and Gardens, taken longer than expected, he Temple Dramatic Arts Building, said. Howell Theater, Woocb Art Build The foundation got its first look ing, Kimball Recital Hall and at the architects' preliminary Architecture HalL renderings of the center at the Coatlaned ca Pass 7 start" was Wai - - ,N T , . N W if , Vv . ' V mmm-wj Herbicide con 4 cro ;.i teYA & ' - Swtrini nin (imcniLii j i 'V. , -" j r im lii .hp'i.ui 1,11111"" I "preniatEre5 official says By Gene Gmtmp alachlor Nov. 20 after tests indi- entirely. cated it caused cancer in labora- The EPA has banned aerial Emery Nelson, UNL extension Anderson said the test results soravrng of alachlor. eliminating pesticide specialist, said Nebraska Restrictions on the nation's tory animais. Aiacnior is a neroi- on tne laooratory animai3 aonx about one percent of its total use. farmers use 4 million pounds or most widely used herbicide are cide manufactured in Muscatine, show a reasonable cause for it will require the use of protec- alachlor on corn and 1 million premature, Bob Anderson, pres- Iowa, and marketed, under the alarm. tive clothing, boots, goggles and pounds on soybeans. Alachlor is ident of the Nebraska Fertiliser Lasso trade name by Monsanto "Laboratory mice were fed a .gloves in other farm application the second most widely used and Ag-chemical Institute, said Chemical Co. high dosage of alachlor equalled methods and handling of the herbicide in Nebraska, second to numans oniy u n was mump- neroiciae. Aiacnior is soia unaer oniy io airazme. lied a thousand times," Anderson the trade names Lasso, Alanex While the EPA reviews the her- said. "It's so exaggerated it's like and CP-50144. Ninety million to bicide expected to take two saying we're going to apply alach- 100 million pounds is used each - years, the agency has required lor to the same field 1 00 times in vear on 30 percent of the nation's makers of the herbicide to include Monday. Alachlor is used to control "ThisJdnd of thing sets fear in weeds in corn and soybean crops, the farmer and is based on non- About 500,000 U.S. farmers use fact on human exposure," And- the herbicide; Anderson said. erson said. "I dent like it." Federal officials also said they The EPA placed restrictions on eventually may ban the chemical the same growing season." corn and soybeans to kill weeds. spiritual leader used zmoiogy w oppose a warning label on the product. TV T 1 By Iooa Z. Koppeksm D&2y Nebrcuk&n Seiiar E4itr efore Nasi guards took Dietrich BBonhoeffer away, he managed to convey a message to an English friend: Tills is the end for me, the beginning of Me." Bonhoeffer was tried by a Nasi court and sentenced to death the same night At dawn on April 8, 1945, BonhoeCer said a prayer and walked up the steps to the gallows. Nazi Germany fell one month later. With Bonhoeffer's execution, the German church lost a powerful intellect and a creative Christian. The world mourned a spiritual leader who had opposed Hitler's rule and the perversion cf German church. The Rev., Wclf-Dister Zimmermann, 73, of West Berlin, was in Lincoln last week giving lectures on the life and work of. teacher eM fellow theologian, Dietrich Bonhoeffer. "It Is kind of confusing to me because now he is a big man, a big hero," Zimmerman said. "But then we were just a group trying to figure out what it was to be Christian." Bonhoeffer was born in 1908 to a family of doctors and theologians. He studied at the University of Berlin, but did not absorb the liberalism of Berlin. His conservative views would change as Hitler's Nazi-socialist party rose to power. "He was not a theologian as you would think of theologians today," Zim mermann said "He did not produce a theological system. He tried to use theology to teach how to respond to problems in the state." Bonhoeffer studied at New York City's Union Theological Seminary in 1930. He wrote that his fellow American students were "less interested in real theology than in helping the poor and needy in more practical ways." He studied prob lems in the city's black ghettos, and attended a black Baptist church for six months. EonhocHcr returned to Berlin in 1931 and taught at the university. He joined the World Alliance of Churches, which would later allow him to spread worldwide the reports of Hitler's oppression of German church life. Hitler came to power when the Nazis controlled the 1932 elections. Bon hoeffer immediately aligned himself with evangelical opposition to Hitler. "An important man is an unimpor tant man who decides to take a step first," Zimmerman said. "So I guess Bon hoeffer took a lot of first steps and he took them by himself" A few German Protestants, including Bonhoeffer, founded the Confessing Church, an Dlegsl and underground organisation. And in 1034, about 1,000 theologians signed the Barmen Theolog ical Declaration, which rejected Hitler's contention that the church was an instrument of the state. BonhoefTer, Zinrnermaim and other theologians started an illegal seminary for training ministers at Fin kenwalde in 1035. The following year, he began teaching again at the University of Berlin, but was fired for his anti Hitler stands. The Evangelical Lutheran Church had sent a memorandum to Kil ter accusing him of perverting religion and condemning his concentration camps. The Nazis began following Bon hoeffer's movements closely. In 1939, he was forbidden to speak in Berlin, or anywhere else in the Reich. Bonhoeffer, a pacifist, escaped military service by serving as a courier in the German Mil itary Intelligence Service. The Gestapo quit dogging BonhoefTer's movements, and he came in contact with insurgents in Intelligence who . -planned to assassinate Hitler. As resist ance escalated, Bonhoeffer became a liaison between the resistance Continued en Ps2 6