The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 06, 1960, Page Page 2, Image 2

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, I960
Summer Nebroskan
Page 2
: V
V."
- V
Young . Leaders Needed
Continued Page Z.
And Nebraska does have
some young men in public of
fice. -
, . Members of the 1959 legis
lature Joe Vosoba of Wilber,
Ray Simmons of Fremont,
Stanley Portsche of Lincoln,
Dave Tews of Norfolk and
Dick Marvel of Hastings were
all under 32.
Governor's assistant Rob
ert Conrad, Senate candidate
Clair Call an, Elmer Scheele,
county attorney running for
county judge and Paul Doug
las, county attorney candi
date, are all young men.
KM-Elective Politics
Other Nebraska politicians
under 40 Include Charlie
Thone, state Republican
chairman, Lawrence Schmidt,
Young Republican chairman,
Don Ross, national Republi
can committeeman, and Rich
ie Ashburn, baseball star and
politician.
Most of these young men
began with a law degree.
Toon; lawyers frequently
rn for sack offices as county
attorney U get recognition t
help bmOd up their practice,
according to Beisbeim.
Some quit when their law
practice develops, Winter
said; others stay m pouues.
"Once you get an elected
position, yoa get sort of ex
cited about it," according to
Belsheim.
Simmons, 32, the son of
Summer Nebraskan
Tkc Sons ?Seferafcaa Is fae (Anal
aaa ii ! i of U I mvawar m Nebras
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am nil I kaladax aod au ac-
Staff
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latanaatiaa tar aaburam av k
btobi a uU Barnes at cafiea ai sa
maartiai SIM r UK.
LUKCHES
SHACKS
-WHERE CAMFrS
rttEXDS MEET
1131 R STREET
MIT TO
XEBX. BOOK STORE
k : iM him
Winter Gerken Belsheim Thone
Siaunons Vosoba Portsche Tews
3k"'il L. ilium in irJUttaj A L- I .i.43
Manel Conrad CaUaa Scheele
, xt"" I
I Douglas Ross
Nebraska Supreme, Court
Chief Justice Robert i;m
mans, graduated Phi Beta
Kappa from the University,
then with honors from the
Nebraska College of Law. A
former Young Republican
stale chairman, he broke into
the Washington arena as a
law clerk for Supreme Court
Justice Harold A. Burton.
Vosoba, 30, followed a
typical" political path aft
er" graduating from law
school. He was Saline Coun
ty deputy county attorney,
then ran for the slate legis
lature.
Conrad was Genoa city at-
attorney before becoming as-
hls name from "Tboen" to
"Thone" so that people could
remember it more easily.
The University law graduate
said be became interested in
politics through a close
friendship with past-C-over-
sistaat to the governor. A 1SSS j nor Dwight Griswold. Thone
delegate to the Democratic m u,c UJte 01 Lue
mauonal roDvention, Conrad ' retary of State, then assist
said be accepted the job ofnt attorney general and a
executive sUrv of the delegaie-at-large to the 19o6
Democratic Partv n ebras-! Republican convention be
ta because be felt be could fore becoming chairman of
do something to rebuild the nepuoucan party m te
state's two-party sj stem.
Thone began by changing
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IXot AD Are Lawyers
Not a3 politicians, or even
j all young politicians, are law
yers. Callan is a merchant.
(Portsche sells real estate.
Schmidt is a farmer,
j According to Jasper Shaa-
dob, chairman of the Univer
sity Department of Political
j Science, what oar politicians
do have in common is one
! of two backgrounds.
1 First they are the people
! whose well-to-do families
I have great political interest.
jTfcis group ochides the Har
irimans and Rockefellers of
New York, Lodges and Ken
n e d y s of Massachusetts,
Talmadges of Georgia, La
FoUettes of Wisconsin and
Longs of Louisiana, none of
whom live in Nebraska.
Nebraska's young political
U 1 leaders come from the other
5 gtoup. Shannon calls them
5 ! the "Horatio Alger type.
C j They f oDow the "Abraham
Si Lincoln path" of begisnirg
g j humbly at the bottom and
I j working up to prominence.
i Penitentiary Tour
j Planned by Union
The Nebraska Union's sec
ond annual Penitentiary Tour
will begin at 4:30 p.m. Thurs
day, July 14. accorlxg to
Mrs. Sylria McNeil of the
Union activities office.
The tour will include sLnrjer
and entertainment provided
by the penitentiary inmates
as well as a lour of the peni
tentiary offices, grounds a.nd
work areas, Mrs. McNeil
said.
Seven See
Europe on
Union Tour
The second annual Nebras
ka Union European tour
started June 17, when 7 stu
dents of the Nebraska Uni
versity, met 21 other students
from the United States and
Canada in Montreal.
The group, led by Miss
B. J. Holcomb of the Univer
sity of Nebraska, visited Mon
treal's Chinatown area, St
Joseph's Oratory, Mount
RovaL and the Notre Dame
of Montreal before they board
ed the R.M S. Cunard Liner
-Sylvania."
With two other college
tours, the group produced a
ship's show for the passen
gers. Maureen McGinley
wrote one of the songs and
routines for the show. Jim
Thomas and Mutsuo Sasaki
helped wUh the production
and Maureen McGinley took
part in the show cast.
The tour landed "at Liver
pool and traveled by train
through the Midland area of
England to London. In Lon
don, they visited Windsor
Castle, and Petticoat Lane,
where the famous London
market is held on Sunday
morning.
Some students attended
services in Westminster Ab
bey. The group saw London pro
ductions of "West Side Story,"
and "The Wrong Side of the
Park," "Rhinoceros" with
Laurence Olivier, and beard
the London Philharmonic Con
cert, featuring Nathan Mli-
stein.
The group is to tour Hol
land, Belgium, Germany,
Italy, and France, and end
the trip with three days in
Paris. Then the students will
return on the R M S. Saxonia,
arriving in Montreal August 3.
University students on the
tour are Maureen McGinley,
OgaLala: Mitzi and Kitzi Lee,
Broken Bow; Jim Thomas,
Omaha: Gail Schlacht. Bil
lings. Mont: Gail Gray, Oma
ha and Mutsuo Sasaki, Japan.
Is Fantasy Disappearing
From Children's Books?
p
"Sorry, we no longer pub
lish fantasy.
No fantasy? Where are the -Jacks
in the beanstalks, the
Alices in Wonderland?
Children's book heroes to- '
day apparently come fromf
space, like A Book of Sat-f
telites for You, Rockets Into!
Space and The Sun, the Moon
and the Stars, all Junior Li-i
brary books on display ati
Love Memorial Library.
"Why teach fantasy?" said
Lincoln scnool teacner, r.. n.. j
Meinke. "I'd rather stick to .
the facts. Twenty-five years w S
ago 1 wouiu nave aaiu uicac
space books were fantasy, but
not now."
"When I went to school.
they doubted the dinosaurs,"!
he went on. "Now they've1
found them."
So the modern c h i 1 d's
book, now more fact than
fancy, begins: "You live on
the earth. It Is your world,
and you know it very welL
You know that there are riv
ers and mountains and
space . .
Juvenile literature, is pro
viding more than entertain
ment; it's trying to tell its
young readers "why," and
"how" and "who." Like
these books. Getting to Know
the USSR; All About Archae
ology; Lather Burbank, Na
ture's Helper; Your Heart
Bd How It Works; and Let's
Visit Japaa.
Even the pre-schooler gets
the benefit of deeper ex
planations in his books A Is
for Apple and WHY.
If the small-fry wants space
and fantasy together, he has
Space Witch:
"Late one autumn after-j
noon Tilly Ipswitch, Queen ofs
Halloween, came f 1 y i n g t i
home on ber broomstick, car-1
rving a book called W h a t -Every
Space Traveler Ought!"
to Know. She had bought it'
at the planetarium where she j p
had been studying the stars."
Mary Mielenz, professor of!
secondary education, sug-
;tS .. .!... jfi
-aa a - - "v V V
Miss Mielenz
gested a reason for the fan
tasy to flight shift. "When
attitudes in adult life ap
proach space and internation
al problems, it naturally re
flects into children's litera
ture." "My seven-year-old now
prefers the 'science in your
own back yard' -books," said
Mrs. Mary Commers. sec
ondary school English teach
er. "Even pictures younger
children draw now are -of
rockets, jets and space men,"
she said.
sures children are bound to
" have an interest in these new
areas."
: The example of Davy
Crockett takes readers back
to pioneer days. "When tele-
I vision made Davy Crockett
j popular again, book publish-
ers had to reprint their
stories," Miss Mielenz point
ed out. Davy Crockett books,
Davy Crockett clothes and
Davy Crockett toys were in
great demand.
Relating this to the space
trend Miss Mielenz said,
"They're just phases."
At the City Library, Miss
Helen Davis, acting chil
dren's librarian, thinks fairy
tales are still popular with
the kids. From her observa
tions, "fantasy is probably
chosen as frequently as space
travel and other books."
The nutnber of children's
books at the main library
and its seven branches totals
44.943, according to Mrs.
Lillian Halberg, of the b
brary's technical processing
department
In the Junior Library col
lection on display at Love
Library, 600 books are ex
hibited for kindergartners to
young people. Of these only
25 are listed as fairy tales,
folklore or legends.
The odds in the '60's appear
Meanwhile. Miss Mielenz, to be aeainst fantasy. "But
said, "All this, doesn't mean j the classic fairy tales will
that fantasy is gone. It just
means that there is a wider
reader selection."
It's a "healthy sign" when
young folks read science
books, she said, "and with
television and parental pres-
always be in the class
rooms," Miss Mielenz said
like, "There once was a boy
named Jack and he liveJ
with his mother, a widow.
All they possessed was ona
old cow . . ."
i
a
9
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For Summer Reading
open Sundays daring the : Paloczi-Horvath. George. The j HE 2-4822
July Clearance
Men's, Women's,
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Tie Summer reading lists
are compiled by the Love
Memorial library staff from
the books available in the
library.
Summer library hours are
7:53 a ra. to 9:20 p.ra. Mon
day through Thursday and
7:53 a.m. to 4:50 p.m. Friday
and Saturday. The library is
not
Sun-mer Sessions.
Kb Iatrodactkw to Literatare,
ty Herbert Barrows. Hub
ert Heffner, John Ciardi and
Wallace Douglas. This new
introduction to literature is
ir.ade up of four volumes:
Reading the Short Story.
The Nature of Drama.
Hjw Does a Poem Meaa?
The Character of Prose.
Four well-known teachers
Lav served as editors for
tvies volumes. Herbert Bar
rows from the University of
Michigan wrote the volume
on the short story; Hubert
Tieffner from Indiana Uni
versity discusses the dra
r.a; the well known poet
John Ciardi was in charge
of the volume on poetry;
and Wallace Douglas offers
his interpretation of the
character of prose.
O Kara. John. From the Ter
race. This novel published
la. long ago gives a picture
of the life of the upper class
in America in the first half
of the twentieth century.
OKieffe, Charley. Westers
Story: The Recollections of
Charley 0Kieffe, 1S&4-1SSS.
Tales of a boyhood spent on
a Nebraska homestead, des
cribing the last great rush
of settlers and the end of
Indian conflicts. This is the
fecond in the University of
Nebraska Press's Pioneer
Heritage Series.
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Uiideafeated. An ardent
Communist until his impris
onment for five years, the
author tells his personal dis
illusionment with the Com
munists, culminating in the
1956 Hungarian revolution.
Portfolio. This new, beauti
fully illustrated periodical
is published twice a year. It
includes the well known Art
News Annual which was
first published in 192S. Ar
ticles on literature, theatre,
music, science and the vis
ual arts.
Ueewo. Catabugue de repro
duction en couleurs de pein
ture. 1S50 a 1959. The Unit
ed Nations Educational Sci
entific and Cultural Or
ganization regularly pub
lishes two catalogs of color
reproductions: one relating !
to paintings of the past and
the other to modern paint
ings. The present edition j
contains more than 1200 re- j '
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