Page 2 EDITORIAL OPINION Peace Corps Is Working But More Help Needed The future of the Peace Corps was brightened consid erably Thursday when Congress voted almost overwhelm ingly to authorize one of United States' newest projects in foreign affairs. Prior to the authorization the Corps was operating on only hopes and determination. Funds for the Peace Corps are expected to be granted sometime this week before the congressmen close the current session. Friday afternoon, James Gibson, assistant dircetor of Peace Corps public relations visited the University and the Daily Nebraskan and painted an encouraging picture of the Peace Corps. His enthuslam was generated from not only the late congressional action but the success of the 10 Corps pro jects now in varing stages of progress. Gibson's visit was primarily to promote interest in the Corps mainly to those students with an agricultural back ground supplemented by a related course of study. How ever, he also noted a great need for other types of skills. There are 600 in the Pease Corps today with hopes of 8,000 by vie end of December and 5,700 Peace Corpsmen by September 1962. These figures perhaps seem high however, there is a reason. As Gibson pointed out, the Pease Corps is working in each instance and it is not like foreign aid dollars alone. Those countries who receive Peace Corps help find that the Americans are more doers rather than advisors or in structors. They live with the natives and do the streneous work required of the average native. As a result the coun try visited may take pride in any accomplishments they attain. This is somewhat diferent than feeling like a charity. Today there are more requests for Peace Corps proj ects than can be handled immediately. Gibson noted Fri day that when one country receives Peace Corps, there are requests from surrounding countries. The Peace Corps is a challenging adventure for the youth of America and a means for helping countries pull themselves np by their own boot straps. More important, it is our most positive method of keeping Communism from creeping into these smaller countries and promoting the cause of all freedom loving people. Sevareid U.S. Must Decide Now To Risk War or Help Russian Cause Eric Sevareid LONDON In Berkeley Square the first of the crisp, yellow oak leaves are sailing across the streets, tinkling against the s h o wcase , of the Rolls R o y c e sa 1 esroom and the windows of the old house where Clive of India lived. Grouse and p a rtridge, Sevareid shot this week in the heath er and stubble, hang in the open markets. The morning air is cool to the lungs. This reporter is leaving the mut ed tones of old Europe in the loveliest of autumns for the hard colors, the thrust and vitality of his home land and not without some pangs. I suppose Americans who love not only their own land but their civilization, their heritage, will always feel this way, their hearts al ways pulled a little, east ward and westward, as they cross and recross the Atlantic. Yon want to be among your compatriots whose will and drive and competence you really trust, in the land that is more than ever the "last, best hope" of man. But somehow we have become the guardians, the trustees at long distance of the cul tural homeplace, this Europe, this garden of the senses, this translucent meadow of grace and cus tom and continuity. You feel responsible, even when you leave. Sevareid All the arts of living are accumulated here and life in Europe is very good. You feel the beautiful com plexity, of this marvelous work of man on this "ex tension of Asia". And then you see that porcine Rus sian face squinting over his brick wall, cemented by hu man blood, enclosing the social piggery called "East Germany." You hear the ranting voice announce that everything on this side of the wall is decaying illu sion, that the true garden of prograss is over there to the East, where live the "peace loving" in the true brotherhood of man. Each time he speaks you nave t sense of madness Daily Nebraskan Member Associated Collegiate Press, International Press Representative: National Advertistng Service, Incorporated Published at: Room 51, Student Union, Lincoln, Nebraska. SEVENTY-ONE TEARS OLD 14th & R Telephone HE 2-7631 ext. 4225, 4226. 4227 SsborHptkMi ratra are S3 prr wnMln ar M for the aradrmlc yrar. Entered aa srrnnd elan matter at the poet office In Lincoln, Nebraska, under the aet of Anirust 4, 1812. The Daily Nebraskan Is pnbllnhed Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Fri day during the srhool year, except during vacation and exam period, by student af the I niTenrtty of Nebraska under authorization of the Committee aa Student Affairs as aa expresstoa of student opinion. Publication under the Jarlsdictiati of the Subcommittee on Student Publications shall be free from editorial censorship on the part of the Subcommittee or oa the part of any person outside the i:ntverlty. The members of the Dally Nebraskan staff ara personally resnonslble for what they say, or do, ar cause to be printed. February 8. ISM. . as I I 1 I i I loose at last: You feel al most paralyzed with incred ulity as when Adolf Hitler roared of the master race from the sportspalast in old Berlin. Arguments rush to clog the angry brain: They do not know how to live in Rus sia and they will never learn so long as that monstrously unnecessary system pre vails. Successful, they call it. Any system can be made to work after a fashion if all opposition to it is de stroyed long enough, and 45 years is long enough. Virtually everything was copied from the West: All Russia sweats to have pre cisely what the West al ready has, and yet we are told that the West is all wrong, unworkable by the laws of Marx and history. Russia has made a "re markable recovery" from war's devastation un der Communism but one thinks of West Germany or Italy, both smashed even worse proportionately and now providing a higher av erage standard of life than the Soviet Union. Surely, free choice has something to do with this. The whole debate is a joke, but only the gods can laugh. On the facts, the argu ment is closed. But we have entered a weird and fright ening passage of history where facts are not of con sequence. Khrushchev knows the facts and their existence explains much of his rage. Communism as a doctrine is finished. It can not advance another foot by the momentum of its own "unanswerable logic." But Russian power ad vances because of the thrust of it is now aimed, not at man's reason, but at his nervous system. This works, in fits and starts, but us ually enough for each im mediate Soviet purpose. We have thought of the "battle for men's minds" in terms of facts and persuasion. The Communists believe this battle can be more quickly won by instilling fear. Rus sua lies close and ' heavy upon Europe, Asia, Middle East; America is far away, a modulated echo. Some words of John Foster Dulles are most per tinent: "Few men in politi cal life anywhere act with out first thinking whether they will please or displease the leaders of the Soviet Union." Fear has done this, fear of mystery, unpredict ability, amorality.ruthless- ness, the fear that all nor mal men always have of the "special strength of the shameless." Of course Eisenhower and Dulles failed to "regain the initiative" in world affairs: Of course Kennedy and Rusk have equally failed. Those driven by a profound, un shakable philosophy of de liberate conflict, those who seek not order but dis order must always have the initiative. We shall view the world and our own capaci ties more clearly once we accept this simple law of human society. But now an ominous thing has happened. The Soviets have acquired the greatest, indeed the ulti mate weapon, in this battle for man's nervous system: The central engine for maintaining the initiative is in their possession. They have convinced much of mankind that the decision for peace or war is theirs, that they and they alone are the arbiters of man's final fate. At their indulgent ca ress, the light will keep on shining; or, at their signal, the darkness will engulf us all. They have convinced half mankind that they hold the mortgage on the earth and they expect a file of quak ing tenants seeking terms to pay the interest charges. The principle will never be paid off, for Khrushchev ex pects to raise' the interest rate, higher and higher, if and as his stratagem works. Now the President anx iously seeks to know how we, too, can engage in "psychological warfare", as distinct from the standard image-creation of normal information and propaganda. I hope he finds a way. Other Americans have tried it in peacetime and failed. We cannot instill fear of ourselves in others. Many people may dislike us, but fear us they can not. We cannot work at instilling fear of Russia in others for that would only add grist to Khrushchev's mill. Nor can we become the youthful, dashing, unconventional leader of the world wide "revolution of rising ex pectations." I dearly wish to be wrong on this. But we are not the America of Tom Paine, and I can think of no backward land likely to accept us in that role. As a generous, patient, richer uncle, yes. For the moment there is only one thing we can do, but it is basic to every thing that may follow. We can decide in our hearts that we will truly risk war rather than pay the kind of blackmail that would start a rush of tenants to Khru shchev's door. We have to decide this and somehow convince the enemy of our decision. There is no other way. The Daily Nebraskan fc --staff- -sr MY OENUMCIA.TIOMS TO THE CHEF. Over the Top By Norm Beatty Speaking as strictly a col umnist and not for the Rag, this is my first opportunity to talk off the cuff on those things that interest me in dividually. First, let me be the first to stick my neck out, and predict that we may all spend Christmas vacation on the beaches in Miami. Laugh if you wish but I feel this is the year, especially since I am a senior and I would like to tell my chil dren that "We went to the Orange Bowl when I went to college." Unbased opin ion or not, I for one am packing my swimming suit and sun tan oil. Speaking of Miami, yours truly hopes to be fortunate enough to make a trip to Miami in a month or so for strictly business reasons. I hope to have time to see some of the beaches, etc. and give you a preliminary report . , a OTT- How about that card sec tion? I really wonder what all the effort turns out to be. I sincerely hope the words of the instruction sheet proves to be true (some thing about being the best darn card section in the United States) because if we weren't . . . well, I mean an Innocent counting to 60 before the student body in the rain and the student body flash cards so fast so as to bang the person sitting in front of them to uncon sciousness. In addition . . . Ron must have a good reason for ask ing 2,000 people NOT to stand up for the national anthem. OTT Now that orientation should be finished for every single campus organization, (Sukrilie Now at Half Price You con nod this world-foraoua. kiily nawspaptr for ft ntxt si months for $5.50, just holf trio prgulor subscription ratt. Er top naws eovtraga. Cnjra fcpacioi ftoturM. Gip far wra inca work. Sand your ordar today, Insloaj Shack or monay ordar. Us con pon below. Ths Ovation Scianct Monitor Hi. Cna Norway St., tartan IS, Mask. Stnd your mwtpaptf far ths ri btfekso. Qt months $5.50 Olyaaritt QCoHopa JtuOant O faculty "TEST" "AddraT irft Via aatial af- mllsMt ONLY It adlsaj savitt fKuit axitat Mvllsji ''"''l,'-n'"" I hope to see action. Last year the Student Council disbanded a long list of or ganizations for bad stand ing. That means do noth ing. Let us all keep this in mind. More later. OTT Its good to see all of the freshmen boys were beanies again this year. It is a part, I believe, of college life and each fraternity should fol low suit. (I wonder how many of them will graduate in 1965?) OTT I hope I haven't driven all of you over the top with my first push so I'll stop now. By the way, why the grave ia the middle of your yard snakes? Mr-'' r WISE k0 ) SHOPPERS : '" WORDS 1.10 11-15 16-20 21-25 26-30 ;, Cash with all ads. Ad Must be placed two (2) days in advance of date of publication. Errors corrected only if RAG is notified within 48 hours after ad has run. INSERT THIS AD Name Address DAI DAILY NEBRASKAN ROOM 51 NEBRASKA UNION On Films By Phil Boroff NEVER ON SUNDAY, a Lopert Films, Inc. re lease of a Melina Pro duction starring Melina Mercouri and Jules Das sin. A huge financial suc cess across the United States, this philosophical romp about an intellect ual but prudish Ameri can who tries to reform a jolly Greek prostitute also proves a huge cine matic success. In release over a year, the film has finally reached Lincoln, and the wait was certain ly worthwhile. Melina Mercouri, Greek actress made an interna tional star via this pic ture, displays an excellent acting range as the prosti tute. It is a brilliant exe cution of a larger than life character. Jules Dassin not only plays the American, but also wrote and directed. Dassin is better as direc tor and writer because he does not instill the right note of naivete into his role. But he is adequate, with Greek actors all colorful and effective in other parts. Plot: Dassin decides that Melina, as the prosti ture, is the symbol of the fall of ancient Greece be cause senses and feelings take precedence over mind and spirit in her pro fession. He persistently keeps after her and final ly she agrees to a two week For Your Little 2630 CORNHUSKER HIGHWAY PROPRIETORS CLARE BROTHERS DAILY NEBRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS 1 day .40 .50 .60 .70, .80 2 days .65 .80 .95 1.10 1.25 DAYS. Enclosed Find $ Monday, September 25, 1961 and Things experiment in which he will open her eyes to the finer things in life. Her friends sadly stand by while she gives up her work and busies herself with improving her mind. But habit has a way of resuming, and she returns to her joy life. All is re solved and there is a hint that love will save her from the oldest profession while Dassin returns : to the United States chastened. Composer Manos Hadji karis has given the film an excellent, racy, Jang, ling music score, employ ing bazookies, local Greek instruments. The theme song, "Never on Sunday," has had a large record success in this country and also, won the Academy Award for the Best Song of I960' earlier this year. Academy Award nom inations for this Greek film totaled five, includ ing Melina Mercouri as 'Best Actress' and Jules Dassin as 'Best Director The film is mainly in English with some Greek talk bits. USE DAILY NEBRASKAN WANT ADS Enjoyment AT 3 days .85 1.05 1.25 1.45 1.65 days 1.00 1.25 1.50 1.75 2.00 1 J Bohemia