PAGE 2 TTIE DAILY NEBRASKAN Friday, Tuly 8, 1949 JIisl (Dotty rh6AaAuttv Member Intercollegiate Press rOKTT -SEVENTY THAR The Daily Nebraskan It nablMird by the itnoVfita of the Fnivcmitr eY Kebsaafca a M rqmiiuin of Mmtflin Mid dxnloat only. According to article 11 of (he By Un jovrinln stndrnt publication and administered by Mm Boara of PniMattoM: "It M the declared policy of the Hoard that pnnlfoatlnns narr rM Jnrtsdfrttoa vfl bo free from editorial censorship the part of tbe Board, or oa the part of My member of the faculty of the university: but members of the staff of The ftaktly Kcbraskan are personally responsible for what they say or do or nm to be printed. Sobseriptkw rates are M.Ofl per nemester, $t.M per semester mailed, or M M for cne eoilere year. mod mailed. Mnisie eopy ft. rvnnncd daily fliirmn tne tenom year except Mondays and 8atOTdays, vacations and examination periods, by the litiiverssty of Nebraska ander the snpervlslon of the Publication Board. Entered M 8eeond 'las Matter at the Pott Of (Ice In Lincoln. Nebraska, nnder Aet of Coarrem, Mareh 3, 18T, and at special rate of postaie provided for fa section 1103, Aet of October 8, 117, autnorired September 10, lyzi. Editor M. J. Melk-k Business Manager Keith O'Bannon It seems as though the DAILY doesn't care too much for the way one of our aluir spends his money. Planning on being a rich alum someday myself I have been discouraged from ever donating anything to this fair institution. I had planned on giving the first half of my first million to the university to build a wall around the campus with the names of all of those of us who have managed to cheat, crib, study our way through the school. The second half of that million I had planned to U6e to earn my second million all of which I was going to donate to the school. I was going to let the Board of Regents use the money as they saw fit, but now I am afraid they might be influenced by the DAILY and use it for some foolish purpose such as class room buildings, auditoriums, and so forth. I may even be forced to use the money for my own use. To an old alum there is no greater satisfaction in life than being able to give a million or so of the money he has earned through the education that his alma mater gave him. Now that I know that this has been taken from me I look forward to my old age with much dismay. Ajax O'Meara. Whittakcr . . . (Continued from Page 1) marshall after being adjudged unsafe. Tryouts for the production were open to any summer session stu dents. They were concluded Tues day night and the cast was then announced by Whittaker. Re hearsals will begin immediately according to the play's director. Summer theater is a regular part of the University's summer session program. Last year's pro duction "The Show-Off by George Kelley starred Bill Pal mer. The show was directed by Dallas Williams of the speech de partment. It featured a minimum of scenery and other stage props in contrast to this year's produc tion which promises some elabo rate stage effects. Classified COOT, semi -basement with bath 2 boys. One room for two boys permanent. 1845 E of e&va&imr Lincoln 't Iwty Just Arrived! ttt in ir1 Hzfis II irn-h Mack engineer boots with practical oil tanned uppers and sole. Ruckles across instep and at the top. COIJVS . . . Street Foot Bargain Basement The other day we heard a sweet-faced tittle coed say cheerfully "I just don't under stand politics on this campus" and just as cheerfully we could have smashed her dear little head right in. On second thought, it occurred to us that perhaps she'd get the point of campus horsetrading if we drew a set of pictures for her, and threw in a little information gathered from Psycho 70, Poli Sci, and Animal Husbandry. But we decided that we weren't artists, nor do we have any red paint handy so, we will give that sweet-faced little thing the picture in words and music. First, a few statistics. Around ten thousand students annually are enrolled in NU. Less than one tenth of this group are Greek. The rest, we presume, struggle along This Greek group, however, is not the control. That is where even interested people get fouled up, when analyzing the political system on this campus. This campus is politically con trolled by about ten people, and usually one or two of these people have a final sayso. These big ten may be all Greek, BUT it is not a prerequisite. The pre requisites seem to be a certain kind of smartness, a willingness to crawl, a willingness to com promise, and a willingness to deal out your best friend if it has to be done. The way it is now, control is in the Greek name, but even so there are just a few hands in the pot, so to speak. Let s analyze what those in control have to gain, and how they operate. They have to gain: places in senior honoraries; class offieership; posts in activities. They do gain these things, and sometimes more. A nice basis for a power complex, later in life. So, perhaps the sweetfaced little coed says: " I came to col lege for an education. Some people, including myself, don't care about these activities, and honoraries. The little girl doesn't have her thinking cap on. These activities, and these honoraries are im portant. They establish contacts, socially, economically, politically. They get better jobs, for it just stands to reason that an em ployer, who is looking for a man or woman straight out of college, and who wants the type of per son that is going to be worth a good salary, is going to pick a man or woman who has been ac tive in these things so we say, See BARGAIN, page 4. On the National Scene . It looks as if Congress is throwing rocks at the presi dent and Truman is hiding behind them. The issue, of course, is government spending. The calculations didn't run particularly close for this fiscal year and now someone has to take the blame. While the powers that be in Washington are passing the buck back and forth, we in Nebraska have a few general com ments to make on the entire subject of government finances. The whole matter seems a trifle incoherent. If gov ernment spending is purposeful and systematized we have yet to find the system. Every year a certain sum of money must be disposed of so someone flips a coin and bingo it's gone. The next year the same process is repeated and so on ad infinitum, witk apparently no reason. A factory manager will show off an air-purification apparatus, installed at considerable expense, or a costly bit of machinery, with the simple explanation: "It increases efficiency." True economy, then, is a difficult and sophisticated art, and yet an understanding of the principle of making real savings through high-capital-cost efficiency rather than through painful and short-sighted frugality is rather well-diffused among us. There is only one level on which we still insist on a more primitive approach to the question of economy, and that is the level of government. As we said before, our government spends a great deal of money but not in the imaginative way that business does, for the sake of future benefits, ultimate savings, smooth ness of function or contented operation. For example, to set up a fund, say, five billions of dollars, right now, to halt the gathering recession by pro viding work on public projects, and low-cost loans for busi ness expansion, might completely change the current busi ness mood and atmosphere. But at the mere thought the cry "economy" would split the air. Our government is simply notallowed to engage in this kind of economic weather control or social air-conditioning. No private business would be debarred by its stockholders for spending money to provide against a known risk. But government is. It is only on the governmental level that we consider a penny spent to be a penny lost. Government simply isn't allowed to be as clever or as acknowledageable or as foresighted or as cagy as private business. Government under the argument of economy is not permitted to take steps to insure the welfare of its citizens or its own delicate financial balance. Numbly, it must lift its head toward whatever blow may fall; knowing what may happen, it is nonetheless required to act as if it did not know and all this is justified on the ground that it is important for us to "save" every penny possible. No man dares to go very far in life without insurance, but for government to take out insurance in its own future and its own people is unthinkable. Government spending with a purpose? Government spending to ward off crises to prevent disaster which may cost billions how novel! Well might the boys behind the bricks stop to consider where the dollars have gone and for what purpose, rather than "who done it." I SHORT SESSION HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR USED TEXT BOOKS WE PAY MORE! BECAUSE WE ARE NATIONWIDE BOOK DEALERS. HEADQUARTERS FOR CAMPUS NEEDS BOOK STORE 1. Mjig f;j wju. '