The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 12, 1965, Image 2

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Fox's Facts
DAILY HIM. SUBSCRIPTION
CLIP AND MAIL
DAILY NEBRASKAN
ROOM 51
NEBRASKA UNION
UNIVERSITY ef NEBRASKA
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
Yr.-$6
Sem.-S4
Find $ Enclosed
Thanh You!
Deadline Nov. 1st
!
By Gale Pokorny
You know, as one glances
through a history book, one
finds all sorts of strange
things that result from our
nation being involved, di-,
rectly or indirectly in some
sort of national or interna
tional strife.
Take the Revolutionary
War for instance. The
shrewd observer of the day
undoubtedly noticed a
marked decline in the sale
of monocles and tweed um
brellas immediately after
the Concord and Lexington
fiascoes.
If this same observer
were around after the Civil
War (some people lead ex
tremely clean lives), he
surely would have noted
the new fad in dress.
Namely, a lot of people be
gan wearing beards and
stove pipe hats. The femi
nine half also responded to
this pacesetter, although
naturally not in the s a m e
way as did the men-folk.
Warts on the nose were
really "in" for them how
ever. To get a little closer to
our present situation, look
at the strange results of the
second World War. (You
look at me and I'll look at
you.)
But the most recent re
sult, and one that deserves
detailed analysis and com
ment, stems from the cur
rent game of Catch-Me-If-You-Can
being played to
day in gay, sunny," south
Asia. (When the referees
throw a penalty flag there,
it usually has a bottle of
gasoline attached to it.)
Our dynamic language of
slang labels this person as
a draft dodger or Uncle
Sam's Elusive Nephew. Our
campus may be red and
white, but it is not always
red. white and blue for we
have our share of this spec
imen. They are hard people to
understand for they usual
ly represent a conflict of
statements. On one hand
they profess to want to con
tinue their education i. e.
"I'm a grad student and
I'm taking three hours,"
and on the other hand, they
turn down Uncle's brillant
educational offer.
The army has a beauti
ful plan for helping stu
dents in numerous fields
pain valuable first hand in-
Some day soon
rs 7k iys r. -s
if3f it
Your fcarvcdP Dream Diamond Ring
will come to you on its own precious throne
P A
jiTiiiiffaiiwiiriiifniirr'fflrtrTwiM(rtt,iriiiiiiiiilii)l-ir-rr- -ir i! iniinfiilf i(ftimriffn'T""'v l-1Trnlf""1r,'fA-ffelllwl1lfmMli1lWlnl,' r "miftMiniiiWtM
ntOMISE
BLOSSOM
LOTUS
TRIBUTE
TRIUMPH
Because it really deserves tsl Daintier, loftier, an
ArlCarved is designed to flatter you and the diamond.
Each is a dream fulfilled forever . . . guaranteed in
writing and backed by a Permanent Value Plan. Get
all the facts and aee our complete ejection today. All
styles, with their thrones from $150. - .
gin
EiGIHSfil
br-A Spaclol 10 Discount
fo oil students
ON ANY MERCHANDISE IN THE STORE
Welch Kepairiftf
Tape Recorders
Jtfertos
Typewriters
Watches
Diamonds
Watch Bonds
Transistors
Watch Repair
jewelry Repair
Cameras
Portable TV
Open Mori, and Thurs. Nights Til 9
formation. For example,
you can go along with them
and learn on the spot little
known facts about medicine
(malaria, jungle rot), about
physics (does a bullet real
ly light up at night and
why), about nutrition (103
ways to ook rice), and
about acting (72 ways to
play dead.)
The whole thing in fact
reads like a colorful, ex
citing travel brochure. Col
orful night life (red, yel
low and white mortar fire),
meet interesting people
(Ho Che Minh), recreation
(hand grenade catch).
But perhaps all these
things do not add up to the
professional students idea
of adventure and fun. It
could be he Is merely wait
ing till Uncle calls him and
offers him a similiar trip
to a better location like
Thailand, somewhere in La
tin America or possibly the
United States.
Daily Nebraskan
Member Associated OM""
Published at Room 51. Nebraska Union, Ntjjjska
TELEPHONE: 477-8711, Extensions 2588, 25X9 ana
Snh mmlltM Student PMWIr.H.M. . Zt "' '
EDITORIAL ST AT1" j0nne stohlmav. voh.
Editor. MARILYN HOKGF.ME YFK , m.n.tfjT J ,?'JZ'.. " TOMVYEmI
editor, JIM SWARTZ; nlrht new, lor. MBFTHfcREl.M ' oH.KS, 11IANE W T. ,
editor I JIM SWAKItl mm news ":. .k,m RKl'CK OH.KS, lllrr. Wr.ll V mrvv
writer.. JILIE MORRISON. STEVE JORDAN. N J1 rEAKSE. copy rdllor.. JACK TODD, POLLY REIN.
r.asi vampiiR reponcr, jnron. ii't-v. ml
OLDS, BI'ENCEK DAVIS.
HRK.I1T, MIKE KIRK
BUSINESS CTA BRVtK w
Buslneti nunfr. MIKE JKFFERYi bu.ine.. ;"'""n,XH IN, ,ubrrlilloii mner, JIM
MAN. SHIRLEY WENTINKl clrcul.llon m.n.jer. L NN Friday
BUSINESS OFFICE HOURS: J-4 .m. Monday tarwufn rrioay.
Base
-r
The new system of using
Social Security numbers for
student ID numbers prob
ably disappointed some
people who have finally
memorized their number.
The advantage of the sys
tem can be seen however,
in that now students will be
able to practice from the
time they are 14.
Dear Editor:
Franz Penner is con
fronted with a false prob
lem. He does not want to
study anything that "does
not have a practical applica
tion." He demands that each
subject he studies have "a
direct application to the
profession for which we are
preparing ourselves."
It must be hard to strug
gle along in such a stupid
curriculum, and I sym
pathize with Mr. Penner. I
suggest that he transfer to
a technical school. Many
exist, and offer excellent
training. One may graduate
a better engineer from, say,
the Milwaukee School of
Technology than the Univer
sity of Nebraska. Such
Sympathizes With Penner
owa nrp nil husiness. Mr. the German chemistry
Penner. They specialize in
the practical.
Suppose you wish to be a
chemist. Graduate from
such a school and you will
know chemistry from A to
Z. And not be able to write
up a decent research report.
And you will imagine that
Alexander the Great lived at
the time of Columbus, and
will never be able to read
periodicals, and will be the
oddball at any cocktail con
versation that swings off on
T.S. Eliot or Robert Frost
or Arrowsmith.
If this is what you want,
stand by your principles!
Transfer! Or is this what
you want? Good luck, Mr.
Penner.
Sincerely,
PJC
-Jjmm AT- !? .5 ei
rSSllLil
OPERA C0UPAI1Y
presenting Puccini s immortal
FR8KK CC!1
iafiiyiieHiiH.iUiiiEiJ
XL iinaiWMBfBar
i vn
AU TO LOPEZ
Anyone can
0
V U AU
With Eaton's Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper, you
can erase that goof without a trace.
Not a telltale smudge remains. A special surface per
mits quick and easy erasing with an ordinary pencil
eraser. For perfect papers every time, get Corrasable.
In light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In
handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes.
At Stationery Departments.
tin
mm
4 TIMES ONLYI
October 20 and 21
Matinees 2 p.m. SI. 50. Evenings S fJu
$2.50 Advance TKkets New At
Varsity Theatre or Record Ditcoont Center
G & S
Do-Nut Shop
farofrscomASAsui
Only Eaton makes Corrasable
IATON PAPER CORPORATION. PITTSFIELO. MASSACHUSETTS
Ph. 432-7089
j 27rh & VINE
45 Delicious Varieties
For the finest in quality pastries take your
appetite and your date to the G & S Do-Nut
Shop. 27th & Vine.
Open Sun. Cloed.Mon.
Open 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Counter Service Carry Out
Phone for Special Orders
Ph. 432-7089
A Great Way To Take A Break
lUMtv rail
4. H IB Ui
M 1 W .J
it &l m
Qj J yQ
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9!cfiii
Of i
Additional Assortments
2
each
JtfJtejea BOOK STORE
OIAMONO RINOS I
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