Page 2 Editorial Comment" Aid for Education The Daily Nebraskon TupsHav. December 2, 1953 Tuesday is the traditional day for big elections in the United States. Many Ne brasjcans believe that this year's big one came on a Tuesday early in November when the Republicans through out the Hate woke up .grinning and went to bed early the next morning frowning. There is little doubt that discontent for the Repub ( lican way of things was made known that day when Donald McGinley, Lawrence Brock, Richard Larsen and Ralph Brooks although a few foggy-eyes souls have refused to admit it won out over Re publican opponents. This Tuesday may, over the long haul, prove almost as important to Nebraska citizens. This is the day when the Ne braska State Board of Education may say "yes" or "no" to federal aid from the National Defense Education Bill of 195S. Local school boards have been polled to determine their stand on the issue. The results hat been about 130 for and about 150 against. The weight swings in favor of participation, however, when one realizes that Omaha, Lincoln and Hastings, leav ing out only one of the state's four largest cities Grand Island, have voted in favor of accepting the aid. W. A. Schindler, consultant in school ad ministration in the State Department of Education, and Cecil Stanley, director of the division of vocational education, have been busy these past weeks devising plans for the state's possible participation in the act. Wesleyan and the University of Nebraska have already decided to partici pate in one area of the plan, matching funds from the federal government for loans to students in institutions of higher education. These men now are working on problems of the high school plans, where the bill would provide matching funds for assistance for strengthening mathematics, science, and modern foreign language; for guidance, counseling and testing, and for area vocational education programs. There is no way for Nebraskans to avoid paying tax funds to the federal govern ment to support this program. It would be silly for the state to pass up a chance to bolster curriculums of Nebraska schools. The cries of federal control are senseless. Title I of the act "sets forth Congression al findings and policy declaration and pro hibits federal control over the-curriculum, program of instruction, administration, or personnel of any education institution or school system participating in the Na tional Defense Education Act." A "yes" from the State Board of Education would give Nebraskans another important Tues day in 1958 and improved schooling for years to come. LITTLE MAN ON. CAMPUS,. 5 My Little World I wonder what there is about the University that makes it so exciting when you aren't here? So far, the many people I have talked to have e x pressed great bore dom at the n u merous small towns that they come from. How ever, these same people in a c o u p le of weeks will be moaning the Judy bv iudv truvll . - - - w w of the human body still in room 208 of Burnett Hall and what was it ever doing in a history room in the first place? Do the dent students still look like the most pro fessional group on campus when they gather in a white coated cluster around the coke machine in Andrews Hall. ' Can you still, if you sit In side the Union door, eventual ly see every person you know? Does the Union still sell cof fee for 10 cents a cup? Do the R HERE, HtNKV, l'p KNOW OUfc Wm-AXYPIMW Books on Review lack of excitement here and : P'offfsors f. wishing that we went to a i the Union and do they -talk .of wide-open brawling where all would be wine, wo men, and parties in Omaha every other weekend. The reverent tone used when referring to "Omaha parties" really does amaze me. In my sheltered life I must be missing something. My gala round of parties in cluded bridge with the girlsr period! Maybe I don't know the right people? From the Slot by George M oyer "The G o n c o ii r t Jour nals, 1851-1870." by Kdmond and Jules de Goncourt. Edit ed, translated and with an in troduction by Lewis Galan tie're. Doubledav Anchor Book. $1.25. Students who enjoy persu- Urp! i The University has an-t This biennium, the Univer- trwi - rati , i .ini m iiiaimsgiviug ocj-j nounced its proposed budget 'sity will be talking to a newjing the personal comments 10'.nr f,. ka 'for the coming biennium. It ! statehouse administration ! ?.nd observations of literary Bvntvu nuiii mc cur torial page of our last edition ; calls lor an increase of ap talk of storm windows and tire chains? Do the engineering buildings continue to" be the male refuge that they are or have women infiltrated their hallowed halls? Can you still wander freely through Morrill Hall and see student-paintings that you like above anything you have ever seen? in short we don't want our University to change because then we will no longer feci so close to it. Actually this has been one long beat-the-drum campaign to arouse feelings of intense loyalty for the old school for before the holiday that the Daily Ne braskan took a stand for catching up on studies. Well, this kid caught up on his eating. S t a rting with a force V . v" JlL i m i ra p it i 1 1 Anini) line i ir wnicn was elected on t n e ; Anphnr Rft nV in: campaign promise of more leased j latex0Vember. i f?"16"1. 1 h e . Edmond and Jules dr Gon- HI... .L. IT " r"lV .uost vi uie iiiversuy in proximately 5 8 million state property tax funds. court are credited bv Lewis If aDDarent eovernor plprt ; n.nni;-. . i i a - vjaiauuc tr a niuu aiui a oa,aiJnaipn tsrooKs can make goocr . "the crease is slated for i ( T1 Arm tho atruit A v hikes. Here's hoping that this his promise, the Legislature : X 3,", I"1 I claims, 'What did I tell you!" TJJ t?hl ,n;; might not be facing the same! them Zola. Alphonse Dauda clined to be liberal toward filTht mnnv cii,,af,nn ,t mv. J t.., thpir stat iinivrcitv ... i " 1 iiociisi. ouica " -T- to meet unaer trovernor vie In view of the 2.2 million valles. Jules, the vounger tor Anderson's "hold t h e De Gmu nnrt Hipd in 1R70 and more asked by the state line" tax policy. the book onlv covers the pe- teacher's colleges, however, i personaUy think it rj0d from 1830 until his death. It IS distinctly possible that iiMl- Hiffi.lt f,., i It was riminff this limp that breakfast oa Wednesday, the j hf University will have to Brooks to squeeze blood from ! ne brothers combined their process of catching up con.;take "t again. Nebraskna su beet talents to note what they felt tinned at a steady nibble! This opens up the old tui- ... o . Ko ,' ' about contemporary scenes. inrougniBiirsday. building up : tion question. Last biennium Last night, the most fun to sit and u'hnnn-it-un-at snort of a badly painted wall orjall fogm. A fine fall Satur a placard with something ex-1 day afternoon is wonderful for ceedingly witty written across football. But nothing beats a ii " - hot, crowded gymnasium with On a conversation w 1 1 n h nlavort nnlv fppt nuav and FIaubert-"Leaving de Sade everyone yelling and beating j basketball games ne launcnea - into me ; on the people around them, most enormous and Pantag-j ruelian ironies against th e yhose season-ticket basket attackers of God, telling this ball tickets are just as much story of a man who is taken ! 0f a bargain as the football fishing by an atheist friend, j tickets. And in 30 years when The atheist casts in the net! the old grads meet to remin and draws up a stone pniSce, I think the place to re which is carved: ! member "There Is No Place "1 do not exist. Signed: Like Nebraska" being sung would be at a basketball game. On a trip to the country "Nature is for me an enemy It's things like this that we Moyer The eountrv is to me a mor-: don't ever w ant to change tuary. This green earth seems ! Probably someday we too will to me a great expectant! be asking, does Bessey Hall cemetery, this grass grazes on man. This vegetation grows and flourishes on that which dies. This sun that gleams and shines so bright ly is the great putrefier. still smell the same? Is the chart of the veins and arteries KODL ANSWER IT AAJMAfA WEJG H C M0.9 jj H A G G IL jE H I N G E" Sljslclo N E S STEAM-" jT N S 1 IK A MM" Kr I- T I AS Pj!N .m, A lSE L I ltC k ojo l f rIeIt s VvV e nTdIs ETIaIe" t SmioIt hcz!1 l oisaE Amsau sim a AMUIS E SrlC ART oJn p a rTaTd" e a rouse P "REN I SlA jj RE j N 1 N i E T Swich -from Mots to Snow Fresh KQDL. to a Mutinous climM Thurs-lwhen the University found 1 W1" cra'1 .outKon 'he fabJed The reader will find much !n' th , 1pLv day night and tapering off themselves about 2 million shy "eaky old limb and predict! of little or no interest unless - ,v,; d. aiowly throngh Friday and Saturday. Net result: A gain of six pounds. Another weekend like that and they can ship me to Omaha. of what they had requested. t!?at the University will prob-1 he js an ardent student 0f the the legislature suggested that ; abIv have to settle for about I period, but he will likewise "SnA " th arlcuor in iha AnacHnn . 0.3 million more man mPV SOI fin1 noccorrnc u hinh ia i 1 ron. ! " '"J was a tuition boast. the last time The result was a thirty dol-1 Which, after all. is a fair lar semester increase in stu-; sized lump of cash. (Or at dent fees. I least it used to be.) tivate him From the Editor A Few Words of a Kind Junes says The of woman and the i crAo-'h rtf man m thAC n!v deep insight, keen observa- i, mv ,a ' mw tion, well turned phrases, and ; ,VJ "v0 ' The authors also provide numerous sketches on o u t- because of their e.e. Thanks to a comment by Colin Jack son, KUON-TV visitor from Britain, I have become acquainted with ' The Lis tener," a weekly publication of the British Broadcasting Corporation. The magazine is yours for 15 cents and a walk to the newstand at the but depot. "listener" contains re prints of talks and pro grams which appear on BBC as well ac a few features by BBC person nel. The format includes current affairs, history, science, poetry, fine arts criticisms and reports, a bridge forum, broadcast suggestions for the housewife, and the never to be denied letters to the editor. Haphazard habits have allowed me only enough time to read the letters, an article on "Education and Future American So ciety," suggestions for the housewife, the reviews, letters and bridge forum. The article on education apparently is by aa American Peter F. Drucker, whose name escapes me. Unfortunately the magazine's notes on contributors con tains no sketch on the man because this is his second article. It presents an inter esting contrast of the British and Amer ican educational concepts with such fact filled paragraphs as this: "Today ... we (Americans) cannot get enough educated people. The job market in the United States last summer is a good example. With a recession, and with employment of six to seven per cent of the total labour force, one would have ex pected that jobs would be scarce for the newcomers leaving school. So it was in deed for those who had no more education than secondary school that is no more than 12 years or so of formal schooling. College graduates, who had four more ad ditional years of schooling, usually with some degree of specialization in a major area, all got jobs, though for the first time in five years they had to hunt for them unless they were trained in such highly specialized and still scarce areas as engineering or teaching. But there was no recession for the holders of advanced degrees: indeed the starting salaries of fered them were considerably higher last summer than they had been in 1957 or even in the over-employment of 1956." If Decker's sources are correct, things have never been better for the college student and college study has never been a greater asset for, a young person seek ing employment. A sentence from his article which will give us the most pleasure reports: "Our word 'school', and all its synonyms in other European tongues, comes from a Greek word meaning 'leisure'." Ignoring what Decker had to observe on this point, the normal college student could not help but speculate that some where things have gone awry. Following the Nebraskan's editorial ex claiming that there must be more good things to do than studies during a vaca tion, I spent Sunday afternoon posed in front of a television set. The Chicago Cardinals muffed two good chances to beat the Rams, . Leonard Bernstein w as dynamic as he explained and conducted Beethoven's 9th Symphony. Harry Tru man and Clement Atlee agreed on nearly everything on Small World, Twentieth Century's Profile of a Dope Addict was good but didn't live up to expectations, Bret Maverick was below par, and Law man was the signal to read a book. Bern stein and the New York Philharmonic will be back on Jan. 25, which makes the day very significant. It is also my birth day. Recommended reading: Harry Golden's "Only in America:" a short condensation of same appears 'in the December Read er's Digest. comments which would seem appropriate even in De- L-CU1UC1 ivoo. me a I U U C II I , j; ,.,!,,. f K h. , , . . , . , siauuiuK auuiui s ui uic ijc- o delights in the taes of, 1 French mistresses will find Qeoree these also. Edmond's descrip cJd f readj or tion of Jules slow death ,, ; which appears primarily in - ' the 1870 se c t i o n. captures, Erfellliailll PlailS your complete attention. t j Samples of their com- LJ(YA Talk !mentS: t, ' rt ... The segregation problem f ,'teraPaPcr the-v will be the topic of discussion tabhshed -"The paper ls get- ,he Tl(,sda1 XUCWA mas$ j ling vm . ii iiiaivca iiu utuuc , I but it does make a lot of I noise." i On a woman who co'ors slereoptic portraits "But her . photographs of do i She added gou.v Daily Nebraskan speciality is the colorin" of i ' i-cn. is to lone of them. ..ie day. and Uhe child's nvuher, ser-mg it j already in heaven, paid handsomely. Since then : erstwhile mistress lends j them all wings." On visiting their former boarding school "My faded little memories are reborn in my mind and in my heart, and every corner of the gar den and the house is a re minder, a thing refound though it is also a tomb of the pleasure I am never tn know again." On art "I should not be surprised that the successful picture of one of our future salons turn out to sh.-iw, against a strip of sky, either mpptmo. resinning at 7:30 p.m. in V bn ."508, Alexander Edel mann, professor of political science, will speak to the 51'oup on the subject. Preceding the mass meet ing, a meeting of the execu tive board will be held at 7 n m. in Room .109. ("nrnhusk- ber:er pictures will be taken. my Military Ball the fifth of December Spstdtondoh (DwoJdoihu (RouIaIwu can yon think of nythittlt t call this ULTRA BEAUTIFUL PARTY DRESS LOOK? similor to many in our famed collection of exciting shaped, enormously beoutiful gowns. 17.98 to 49.95 ... w (CROSSWORD No. 10 ACROSS t. Locufft trw, , intrMtd 1. Anrhnrn H. Ko-l gi ." vn m : riruir or king-fli with filter 14. HatrgHtn 16. Th " ua4 m httttftif 16. 'J k 17. Kind of rIJfr 18. TtuM it) affirm 19. dud whm Krundt It ice a chw 20. A in 'If lijht 11. CtAorudo 24. Kan (Trwh) 27. Bouony rhythm 22. H t wtrily t. AnjwM'i mom. dr Z. on rrt rt DOWN 1. frrmtii "Mht"1 2. k ttid of rhmt S. t imt Hum: rrmiM(un4 . KXii Hi rrt rthnf i . O'Nnll mi4 iml fa . KomMV iib 7. Knrluh "(!)" ft. Sli.I ft. Vmir inner mtt 1(1. Whit brtnfi out tpark It. Vallry 1Z. Rudolph 2U. 1 1 f rwt, m iW tbiDfi t II. Wao'i SIXTT-EIGBT TEAM OLD Member: Attoctftted CoNerlat PreM IntereoUe1at Pre KeprenentotiY: National A4f ertiting fterrice, tnconorata Psbllslied at: Room 20. Student t'nioa LisoAin, Nebraska 14tb K T Itwif IKknuuw i M)iMt u. Tufvter. flMMWH tm4 f rtria. eurint th arfaMol r, rxrA Ismum vmo Kri eram period. In 1u4rn mt h. tmtvmm'ty f Nrr.tc wniirr tW tftKnrtr-ftttaa mt Iba rMwwiHw mm ftemmmt Afrnir urn mm nprwtai mt r ffnlrMi. hUtmUtm onrfev im tnrtndirttrm ml Mf tonhrmnmluam nm InAttti fttMlfaf )n hll rrr from dltortal rmnrMn hh lh mn rf t Htthrmnmlif. mr 4M mmn mt wif mrtnhrr of tttr Imrnttr mt tmm VmU Tmm mmbn mt Ik hmmmkum ataff mrm mmt- tnnMr wmwmiilt for what the Mr, mt mn wr csaw ia b tflatrt. trfcrnarr . tfiu. ftiOnu-rlptfcni rslm mn tA mmt trmtmm w II f tin mrmmmir. rr. Vnirrr vrniu rtoi matHv al th. nnut affii a Janta. Nrbraka. aaaw tka met ml Aaruat 4. 1D1. BirKiAL ntktt Ultmt .. . truiLl Umm Manartat rltw Immct Mmn Hniim ntt H'rltar tmmir l.lmiK, mirtn rmtnr Randall lmhrrt Copt tmtutn ;arraH Kraa. biaaa MimHl, anaa knllj, fvtrbra aiaa. " WrHm . . Martini Cm tin. Himmrm Waato). i ywa tumthltrrft. Patra.br . Mlaivtta TuKir lvr.a STAf-T n.ln. Maaacar irrty arllratla wmtant tuini Maaarw aiM kaimsa, Cbartent (irrnmm, Snrm KohlTint Olrealaatoa Maaacar tmm Trap Keep On Your Toes With fmOQOZ Wha the Mudem body iu la :l all day. gelling numb al boih eada, be criTy like a fox. Kmp an your toea with NuDox. Be alrrt for late-hoar atadying ni hep na late late. Safe as coffee and aw h aaore eonvenieM. iKar!tia 29. f 'uaBa4anc fuma 4 HI. Y'aM ncmvmrm 82. I-Atin mbitrmvi- acioa lor mtm S3. V or whom any old fiam will do IS. Alamm' artida H7. Iinr sirn St. V. Piiiat mi. Dtrulna 4a. Buy your koola by tha 47. Victory aiarcb 4. Waka ap . I i Arfwuua Hwfmpmr W. It m&k Ijirnyt gal from kcfoul ti. If it'a old, it'a iralmnd ti. Ei-Nnr York railway SI). Horwa US. 7 iny mountala 8. M ijtity Intla man of tba movirm IS. Hut br baa aa luxury, iivirif Vay Up aorta (. All ha Brd-d waa braad, .ml, vara and thoa IR. a tha i rraat 4dmaa kirkM tba 42. u4 la tonnia? 44. Fiar.xa Marra 44. tma 1 P ' F Is I6 I 7 pi p jlO III Il2 -- fu- " " " "" " a Tt ARE VOU KODL l ENOUGH TO 20"" ;"IJft-J' 1 r mr a KRACK THIS? , 21 " " ! ii " j3 4 Jr1"" u- " 44 "" 46 47 j in 4 I : jo 40. yimMm-fi 41. 1 ba old maa it Xn! lo Prtxy; tvolJQZ Wilt tVJt'' kmp your ti 1 to Snow fresh KGDL What a wonderful difference when you awitch to Snow Freah COOL! At once your mouth feel clean and cool . . . your throat feel amootbed, refreshed! Enjoy the most refreshing experience in smoking. Smoke KOOL . . . with mild, mild menthol ...for a cleaner, fresher taste all through the day! Answer on Page 2. KOOL IVE YOU A CHO!CE-EOUtA. ..KING-SIZE WITH FILTtl i&a arwwuawiiiMii W baaaaj-JK. I r 1 I' MIU ailMTMOL Kie.eiti Qigarettel