Page 2 THE NEBRASKAN Sunday, April 14, 1946 EDITORIAL COMMENT J Jul (Daily. TkLhctAkcuv FORTI-HFTH TEAR ck.,.ri.i!.. r.t.. .r. ti m nr iniatier or 11. So for tha college year. IS. 50 mailed. Single copy 5c. PublUhed dally during tha chool year axcept Monday and Saturdays, vacations, and examination periods, by the students of the University of Nebraska under the supervision of the Publication Board. Entered as Second Clas Matter at the Post Office In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, March S, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for In section 1103. act of Octooer 8, 19U, autnonzea sepiemoer ju, ij. inirnmi. KTAFI editor Belt Io Ha.i Munatlnt Editors IMiyllls Teanardrn, Milrk-j Jenkins haw Editors Mary Alice Okwood, rhyllli MortloeW, Jack Craawiaa, nl KavAtfiv. MftlhMI Halcomb t.,ia r.iii tieorire Miller Ciwil.l i.lllnr Toof ELl.la STArK Hnnliiru Manaicer Lorraine Ahrmoa AUunl Ralnr Mni(tr Daralhaa Ke.rnberr. Denja Pttersen in.ui.ii.. Mnrr Krlth Jones, Thone -4tl3 JIxsl d&L gov by Marthella Iloloonib Nebraska's Finest. . . Today's announcement of the retirement ot Dean Rufus A. Ly man of the college of pharmacy and Dr. C. W. M. Poyntcr, dean of the college of medicine, brings forth deserved praise from faculty members and present and former students for the work the two men farnliv n-iombor expressed it. "We are sorry to see thejn go. Both of them have tione noble jobs at the university." Dr. Poynter has faced particularly unusual problems in heading for 16 years a branch of the university which must be administered iws s oniw nd a nuhlic eleemosynary institution. He has been in the difficult position of having: to conduct himself and the med ical school in a manner satisfactory to both the practising physicians and the lay public. He has done a magnificent job in both In. stances, turning; out Jtood doctors and at the same time educating the dog story. nublic to the need for medical education and hospital service. He is first a physician and secondly a research scientist and is held in the highest respect by. both the physicians and research men on his Omaha staff. According to the members of the administration, the deon of the medical school has to handle one of the most difficult budgets in the university. As an executive, Dean Poynter has al- .av nuHo rprLiin that the medical school cot its money's worth and more out of that budget. Dr. Lyman stands out as a national leader in pharmaceutical edu cation. In his 38 years as head of the pharmacy branch of the uni versity, he has brought it up from a trade school to a bona fide pro fessional school. He has stimulated research in the field and ranks iiv amnntr scientists and educators in pharmacy. He is also highly thought of by practising pharmacists over the country. As senior ranking dean of the university, Dr. Lyman's associa tions with his students has been unusually close. Jokes about the condition of his office, his preference for the Presbyterian church and certain of his courses are among the beloved campus classics. Both Dr. Lyman and Dr. Foynter have known and followed their students closely. During the war Dr. Toynter corresponded with med ical students scattered all over the world. Th university is losinr two deans who have for many years given of their best to the shool. In doing so they have added immeas urably to the spirit and tradition of Nebraska. "That's a stupid way to come to class," one laboratory assistant told a student who'd forgotten his lab manual this week. After years under a tough sergeant such com ment didn't faze him in the least, he just looked up and said, "Hut I'm stupid." The next session brought the assistant back to his desk again, with an apologetic, "I've thought it -over, and I don't think you're stupid." Remember the good old days, when we swiped golf balls from dad's bag to play jacks, and thought penciled initials were enough to keep them safe from filching hands? Now we can't beg, borrow or steal a first rate one, even to play golf. Self-conscious and struggling to maintain a fragment of his cus tomary applomb, one university student sat more or less calmly waiting for a red light to change the other morning, while some- ones big yellow dog barked in frenzied fascination at his scoot er's tires. No, it isn't a shaggy News in Brief PM Editorial . . . (Continued from Page 1.) sr.d Cornell to Chicago, Nebraska, Texas, and Stanford. "But he had been restless in college teaching, and he was rest less during his six-year spell as a liberal editor. At Texas he had been the sort of maverick pro fessor who writes a novel called "The Professor and the Petti coat." In New York liberal circles it was curious to see this big, hulking Scandinavian farmer from Nebraska, who told caustic irreverent stories, and who pre ferred writing semi-fictional ironic sketches to finger-pointing editorials. New School. "In 1923 he found his metier and his real life" work, and he has stuck to it with massive tenacity ever since. The New School for Social Research had been started a few years earlier as a gesture of protest and freedom in the dreary wastes of academic ty ranny. Some of the best minds of the day were behind it Veblen and Beard and Harvey Robinson. But it took Johnson who took over as director and gave the school a local habitation and a name in the American intellectual world. "Johnson and the New School reached the peak of their great ness in the crisis of European scholarship under fascism. When Hitler made life in Germany and almost throughout Europe a Gehenna for free men, the great danger was not that Europe would lose some of the most creative minds and skills in history but that no other culture would find them. "Johnson was quicker than anyone else I know to talfe the full measure of Europe's loss and America's opportunity. He quickly sent word thruout Germany and Europe that the anti-fascist schol ars would be welcome here. I count this the biggest single edu cational achievement of recent years, by the side of which most of the controversial storms raging now seem thin-spun stuff." The convocation will begin at 10:15 and classes will be dismissed from 10 to 12 a. m., according to Chancellor C. S. Boucner. Thursday one of the FFA boys down for their state convention stopped at the Union office to ask where the banquet would be held. Betty replied, "In the ball room." He looked a bit confused. murmured, "Barroom?" and was away before she could ' set bim aright. There's one English 2 class which makes noun clauses, dan gling participles and adverbial ap positives sound really inviting. Held at 11 a. m., it s 100 percent navy, and nas a male teacner. Darn this heredity, why did moth er have to be an English teacher. Even the Thin Man doesn't have a chance on the early morn ing busses for school. Tho most people look forward to Friday as the end of the week, bus-riders with 9 o'clocks long for Thurs day, when stores- open an hour later, and they can breathe on the trip downtown. Ever since the beginning of this semester we've gazed in rapt' ad miration at the A-2 jackets flash ing around the campus with silver rows of bombs, sexy Petty girls, Jolly Roger emblems and miscel laneous selections from Disney painted on them. Epitome was reached Friday, however, when we found staring us in the face down the aisle, the boldly painted assertion, "Gentleman Jim." Glad they told us. Never know when you might want to know that. Religious Council Elects M. Davis As New President Martha Davis was elected presi dent of the Religious Welfare Council to succeed Bill Miller, at the regular meeting Thursday evening. Other officers elected are: Gordon Lippitt, vice president; Alice Rife, secretary: and Miss L. L. Runge. treasurer. Add Flight Training to your curriculum. Private courses now available at UNION AIR TERMINAL Caf1 6-2885 for details. FREE VARIETY SHOW Ella Raines Charles Korvin Gale Sondegaard ENTER ARSENE LUPIN" 3 P. M. SUN. APR. 14 UNION BALLROOM n qjte Rust Craft at the GOLDENROD 215 North 14th Boath af Stadeat I'aiaa WASHINGTON. A veterans' housing bill designed to speed the construction of 2,700,000 new dwellings by the end of next year passed the senate Wednesday and went back to the house for consideration of numerous amend ments. As the senate passed the bill, it will provide for six hundred million dollars in subsidies on scarce building mai terials so that more houses can be built sooner. The government has relaxed its construction controls to permit construction of some non-veteran housing proj ects. Heretofore only discharged veterans could qualify to build new homes. President Truman reports an improvement in world food prospects. Congress has moved to secure more meat and grain from this country to be sent overseas. .... The senate atomic energy committee have unani mously approved the atomic control bill. The bill frives tha government absolute control over the nrnrlnrti ftn. nwnor. ship, and use of materials from which atomic energy is de rived. General George C. Marshall has concluded his confer ences with President Truman, and is on his way back to China. The senate banking committee has approved the pro posed $3,750,000 loan to Great Britain. Renewal of contract negotiations next week between John L. Lewis and the soft coal miners is forecast by Secre tary of Labor Schwellenbach. PORTLAND. Ore. Lt. Nirolai G R naval officer arrested on espionage charges, has protested ma innocence ana agreea to return to Seattle -for trial. Change To Be Proposed In Siirolus Pronprtv Art i i j The War Assets administration will be requested to change its manner of disposing surplus prop erty among educational institu tions, according to a statement made Saturday by Dean Roy M. ureen or the engineering college. ine 1944 bumlus ProDertv Art broadly provides that educational institutions may receive surplus war property for instructional purposes at a cost of "packing and shipping." Green declared. A sub sequent ruling held, however, that surplus property to schools would De sold at the "current market value less 40 percent." 'Know How." "Nebraska's educational institu tions simply can't afford to pur chase this much needed siimlns property at market value less 40 percent. At the university alone the purchase under present policy of vital teaching materials now available in surplus property depots would amount to several hundred thousand dollars," the engineering Dean said. We believe that our conntrv was victorious in the war because of our oustandine capacity to achieve results in the fields of science and the technology of pro duction. Education certainly had much to do with creating this pro ductive 'know how. We also be lieve that the ability to solve the technological problems of peace can be greatly strengthened by properly equipped agencies of education." Program. Green was in Washington, D. C, last week representing the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education in a conference of 21 educational groups. The conference drafted a four point program which provided: (1) a policy of nominal pricing (cost of care and handling) of surplus property which would be of public benefit; (2) provide a 30-day period of offering to per mit fair flistribution o' property; (3) reservation of property in terms of estimated quantities re quired by educational institutions; (4) revision downward of mini mum purchase quantities to per mit smaller schools to fulfill their needs. Green also emphasized that he would urge all Nebraska schools and colleges to netitinn th Wai. Assets administration to revise its policy. If this were accomplished, educational institutions could ob tain much needed a tremendous saving in cost, and indirectly improve the quality of instruction to students. V i r r - v- : V - -'I -11 "M-mmthlsimUs. is delicious. 1 drinkit every day It Iceeps me lit FAIRMONT'S Include Fairmont' Milk in yout daily diet. Call for regular moraing de livery '' ' m iiininim nn .m