2 DAILY NEBRASKAN Sunday, April'4, 1943 Jul (Daih 7bd)MAkcu v FORTY-THIRD YEAR Subscription Rates are $1.00 Per Semester or $1.50 for tho College Year. $2.50 Mailed. Single copy, 6 Cents. En tered as second-class matter at tho postofice in Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress March 3, 1879, and at iipecial rate of postage provided for In Section 1103. Act of October 3. 1917. Authorized September 30, 1922. Summer School Plans for summer school tlits year are an nounced in a recent Daily Xebniskan. Such an announcement seems rather ironic to men on the campus who will be in miltary service very shortly. But to those who will continue their ed ucation women, possibly naval reservists," 4-F's, specially deferred students summer school is something to start thinking about and planning for now. The two sessions in the summer are part of the accelerated program of the university. Administrative officials have found that inau guration of a summer school system makes it possible for students to complete their educa tion as fast, as the quarter program adopted at many schools. , Just as the university has seen fit to make changes in its summer program as a result of the war, students must make similar changes. They are expected to finish their educations as fast as possible. (Irantnig that a college education is worthwhile in time of war, an education, not along specialized lines such as physics, chem istry, medicine and the like, cannot win the war. As a matter of fact, ajiy kind of study will not win the war. It is the application of the study that is necessary. That is why the army is justified in permitting certain stu tlents to complete their educations, but such students are morally obligated to get that ed ucation and begin applying it as soon as pos sible. There is a place too for women and men physically unfit for military service in .the war program. They should take that place as soon as possible and still get an education. Leisure summer vacationing and the old job at the ice-cream stand are peacetime en deavors. If a student is to be used on a full time basis in the war program either military or industrial after getting his degree, he must attend school this summer. That is a short-cut toward a degree. V,..- Mail Clippings Pat Chamberl'm, Censor Second Lieutenant CARROLL SCIIRA DEIl is back haunting the Union grill wear ing his marine corps pilot's wings which he got at Jacksonville, Florida last Christmas. He is on his way to San Diego, Calif, where he will be stationed. DEAX SCH R A DER is an aviation cadet at Pasco, Washington. He completel his pro flight training at St. Mary' before he was transferred to Pasco. MERRILL KXGUW'D, former managing editor of the Daily, is Xaval Ensign stationed in Jacksonville, Florida. Merrill is a Kappa Sigma. Word comes that (JLKNX SCHLUCKE BE1ER has won his wings and is commissioned a second lieutenant in the marine corps. Cilcnn was back at UX about two months ago. The Public Relations office at Maxwell Field, Alabama, writes that five former UX studenls are now enrolled there in the pro flight school for pilots. The Nebraska men include: THOMAS 11. DAVIS, STANLEY FRED ESSMAX. ROBERT DA XI EL ORUE XIO. JOX W1L.MOT PRUDEX, and EDMUND DAL K SHAW. BURTON V. COALE has been promoted from the rank of private first class to Ihe rank of technician fifth grade, at the Will Rogers Field, Oklahoma. He has been on duty since May 5, J 042, as a clerk in the medical depart ment. ROLL1N LOUIS SQUIRES has been graduated from recruit training as honor man o fhis company at the (Jreat Lakes Naval Training station. Just Waiting... for Good Old Days? bome of your troops are stationed in isolated spots . . . They and others have to stand the monotony of waiting, just waiting1." Those words first spoken by Madame Chiang Kai-shek in her historic speech before congress, and repeated in several addresses since somehow seem much more applicable to the people on our own home front than to those fighting men stationed abroad. But in an entirely different way. Our fighting men are waiting for more fighting iuen, more guns, tanks, planes, car riers, destroyers and battleships. We at home are waiting for the return of unlimited sales of vegetables and fruits, nylon stockings, gas oline, a r-r. and thick steaks. In sh.it, too many of us are waiting for the return of "the good old days." We want to "get back to normalcy" with out doing anything to assure ourselves that "normalcy" will be normal. .True, our armed forces are getting equipment and supplies, probably at as rapid a rate as is humanly pos sible. Eventually, we will destroy the axis, but post-war international co-operation is go ing to amount to much more than thinking about yesterday and superimposing it on to morrow. It was that thought that prevailed after World war I. And those men in the south Pacific, in Alaska, Africa, Burma, and India, the men who will eventually have to fight on continen tal Europe want more than "the good old days." They are not willing as we seem ingly are to resolve tho end of the war into the simple proposition of complete 'destruction of the axis. The war will not be over until the problem of peace is worked out, because somewhere our men will be " ... waiting, just waiting." An air corps staff sergeant, writing from Hickham Field, Hawaii, in telling of the rest less desire on his part "to do anything but stand by" says: "Perhaps we are expecting too much. When we first entered the military service our hearts beat faster with the thought of sharing .the great privilege of fighting for the things we .love, but then came months of inactivity which wore dull the edge of the first exciting keenness and now the single prayer of every waiting soldier is action give us action. "We hope the nation's legislators will heed the stimulating radio message of Madame Chiang we heard two weeks ago. We trust they will be spurred on to permit us that which our allies have been permitted, 'to risk failure gloriously' rather than remain in the shadow 'just waiting'." "We hope; we trust." "Wo at home cannot propagate plans for allied strategy. We can forget about the good old days and start, now, to make sure that the Mar will be won when the shooting stops. O. W. A. Appoint UN Grad To Staff Position At Indiana Library Miss Marjorie Ann Stuff, gradu ate of the university and member o fthe library staff for four years, has been appointed cataloguer and acting curator of special collec tions on the library staff of In diana university. Miss Stuff received her M. A. Sigma Alpha lota Concert 3 p. m. Sunday Temple Theatre Admission Free Quibbling Democracies Lacked Pre-War Direction . . . Norman Hill BY PROF. NORMAN HILL. Political Science Department. The invasion of Poland in 1939 was the culmination of a series of events dating back to the peace settlement of 1919. This is not to say that the short comings of that settlement were the sole or even the main cause of the present war. Indeed the iniquities of that set tlement are often given too much stress and its constructive features overlooked. In two ways the treaties of 1919 set the staere for the 20 years which followed. In the covenant of the League of Nations there was a proclamation of a new in ternational morality which would substitute reason in place of power. Other Clauses. But in the economic and po litical clauses of the treaties were provisions which, however justifiable some of them may have been, created an order un acceptable to Germany, Italy, and some of the smaller states of Europe. The international rela tions of the 1920's and the 1930's were the manifestations of the two conflicting tendencies which were thus set at work. During the first post-war de cade the League of Nations made w - v -; s Courttsy Lincoln Joornn). PROF. N. L. HILL. promising strides, In spite of the absence of this country from its (See Hill, page 4) Official Military Outfitters (C3) Arrow Military Ties have a special lining that makes 'em wrinkle-resistant and perfect-knotting. Khaki or black barthea . . . 1.00. Arrow Military Handker chiefs are mansized and made of extra durable khaki . . . 35c. from Bryn Mawr college and a Yl Q In "1iKair 4talnincr Columbia university. hj, in uui cii jr unuiuig iivui