Nebraska Curriculum uu By JUDY KOEPKE English composition may be viewed with more pleasure by Nebraska elementary and high school students in sev eral years. A new English curriculum is being developed and studied by the Nebraska Cur riculum Development Center which is located on the Uni versity campus. "Project English" is being held "to conduct experimentation for teaching of composition," said Dr. Frank Rice, co-director of the program. Working as the Woods English Curriculum Institute, 43 teachers are preparing study units to be tested next year in various Nebraska Nebraska schools for grades two, five, eight, and eleven. They are also revising simi lar study units tested last year in grades one, four, sev en and ten, which will be taught again. Dr. Rice hopes the study units for the re maining grades will be in troduced in a year. - Instead of a textbook, the Carpenter Musi Press By JIM RISSER The University's failure to get the money it wants from the Legislature can only be blamed on the University it self and its alumni, Sen. Ter ry Carpenter said Monday. Carpenter, who will pro pose a $1 million increase in the Budget Committee's rec ommendation, said the school's requests will never be granted until the admin istration, the Board of Re gents, and particularly the alumni, become militant in their demands. "There's no reason for them to be hesitant to ask Marvel Wants Students Jo Share The Burden The budget committee's rec ommendation for an increase in tuition at the University was defended by the chair man of the Budget Commit tee, as placing some of the By VERL HATCH After lunch, there were three-legged sack races, and the married men played the single men in softbalL The married men always lost The women chased, changed, and yelled at the little ones. The little ones ran away, got yet wet, and did things to cause yelling. The rest of as Joined the community events except cousin Minnie. She went moonia' off under the trees with her lover-fella. Uncle Otto and cousin Jake sat in Jake's pickup' truck, and kept reaching under the seat. J only INDEX 70 INSIDE SCENES OF NEBRASKAIand The summer Nebraskan suggests that summer students see scenic Nebraska during the July 4 holiday weekend. For coverage of Nebraska in pictures, see. . . Page 4 COLLEGE FRATERNITIES A depth reporting student asks leading college administrators if the college fraternity is a dying institution. This story appears on Page 2 UNIVERSITY EXPANSION Summer Nebraskan report ers ask University officials about plans for physical expan sion in the areas of athletics, living units and museums. For these stories, see Pages 2 & 3 Schultz Describes Plans for By RICHARD HALBERT A Dinosaur Hall, a Hall of Space and a Hall of Time by 1971 these are t b e projected hopes seen in C. B. Schultz' plans for the fu ture of the University's mu seum. The halls would be part of a wing that would connect the south side of Morrill Hall with Andrews Hall. However, the new wing could become a reality by 1971, the Museum's centenni al, only through private fin ancing said Dr. Schultz, mu seum director. This was but one of the plans expressed by Dr. Schultz who this month is be ginning his 23rd year as mu seum director. Development' h teachers are preparing mimeographed packets, con tabling short reproductions of selected works and suggested procedures for teaching them, Complete Curriculum Some paperback books will be used too. The teachers feel a complete curriculum of literature and language is the tool for learning composition, Project English began m 1961 when Dr. Paul Olson, the other co-director of the pro gram, ac cepted the chai r m a n ship of the Curricu lum i; o m m 1 1- tee of the Neb r a s k a Council of Teachers of English. In a two- week work- Dr. Rice shop supported by the Woods Charitable Fund, Inc., the committee produced a 400 page book, "A Curriculum for English." Eh. Olson used this book AW, Alumni Demands for what they want," Carpen ter said. "If the present leg islators won't go along with them, then the alumni should spend the time and money to support candidates who will." Carpenter said that other groups campaign and go to great expense to promote the legislation they favor, but that the University seems re luctant to press its demands. "If the University would appeal to the alumni for sup port, it could get enough money from the Legislature to carry on any reasonable expansion program it want ( Continued on Page 3) burden on those that benefit. Sen. Richard D. Marvel said that the taxpayers al ready bear a big burden, and the students should share It. (Continued on Page 3) About 4:00, Dad and Grandpa fished several Tex as Diamond melons out of the ice tank in Grandpa's truck. Everyone, including Minnie and her fella, but excluding Unlce Otto and cousin Jake, lined up a n d filed by while mom and Grandma dished out smil ing slices of melon. Before the last of the clan was served, sister Jeanie was dancing up and down, obviously in need of adult supervision, but still shouting, "More wa-melon, mommy. More, mommy." When the sun sank, and museum He hopes that a "Story of Earth" and a "Story of Mankind" can be soon added to the third floor of Morrill Hall Dr. Schultz also hopes to see the Health Galleries, El ephant Hall, and African Hall expanded. Presently less than 1 of the Vh million specimens of the Museum are on display at one time. The exhibited highlights of the Museum are: The Ralph Mueller Plane tarium and the extensive col lection of Nebraska meteor ites. The world's largest ele phant. -The Health Galleries which contain: "Ceres," t h e (Continued on Page 3) Coinnif f I 1 I s)sflir0rQ II u as evidence "of Nebraska's seriousness of what they're doing" when he wrote the proposal applying for funds from the federal government, Dr. Rice said. The five-year grant of $250, 000 came early in 1962. The Research Divison of the Uni versity is the custodian of this money. Last summer 45 teachers from Nebraska schools wrote 85 teaching units for all grades during an eight-week session. During the last school term, 19 elementary, junior high, and senior high schools in Lincoln, Omaha, and Cork tested the units for grades one, four, seven, and ten. Pilot Schools These were pilot schools. Another 20 schools used them Tuesday, July 2, 1963 University Budget By JOHN KESSEL With the Nebraska Legisla tive Budget Committee's 1963 65 appropriation recommenda tion emerging through the Unicameral, LB455 appeared safely advanced beyond gen eral file Friday. Passage seems certain sometime next week. The measure, calling for $363,398,281 in allocations, has been under close observation by University of Nebraska of ficials since it appeared in preliminary proposal form months ago. It reflects dol lar requests amounting to $31,478,841 in state general funds for education use. The budget committee, un der chairmanship of Senator Richard Marvel of Hastings, Hastings, had recommend an increase of $3,382,841 for the University to boost the appor tionment from $28,096,000. The University had request the high school band climbed down from the stand, everyone went down to watch the fireworks everyone except Minnie, her fella, Otto, and Jake. Firecrackers popped, and rockets whizzed skyward. The last display was always a popping, smoking, daz zingly lighted United States Flag. As the last "fizzy" burned out, we returned home to milk the cows and wash the dishes, but the 4th of July, though gone in time, was ours forever. I wonder what ever hap pened to the celebration of that day. Liberty? Philosophers question it; Psychologists sometimes doubt its exist ence; men die for it, and nations cry for it. Some say we got it, and some say we ain't neither. Back in the "Good 01' Days," we used to proclaim it, and the 4th of July was equalled only by Christmas. Come the 4th of July morn ing, brother Bill would jump out of bed before the sun was up, and shoot off his biggest firecracker. Uncle John had a muzzle-loader which usually missfired at least once. But, the day started with an explosion, to say the least. When the cows were, milked, and the breakfast dishes were stacked in the sink, everyone jumped in the 23 Ford. Dogs, food baskets, and kids, barked, or almost fell on the floor, or cheered depending on who could do what. Grandma and Grandpa B. were always at the park ahead of time to save us a table, and the next to ar rive was Aunt Effie and Uncle Otto in their new-second hand 28 Chevy. By noon, every picnic ta ble in the park was full. There were uncles, cousins, sisters, brothers, half broth ers, inlaws, outlaws, and lovers. There was a band in the stand playing "America," and "The Star Spangled Banner." There were little boys setting firecrackers under the drum, and wish ing they had nerve enough partially or entirely, accord ing to Dr. Rice. The Woods Fund paid $27, 500 in stipends for the 45 teachers. The same fund is paying $24,500 to 36 teachers this summer for preparing units to be introduced this fall and revising those tested last yey""'Six more, teachers are paytrrfcitheir own expenses. Referring to future similar summit- institutes, Dr. Rice said, "There will be as many as we can get financial aid for. We don't like to ask the Woods affain because they've been so generous." Dr. Rice hopes other sources will contribute funds During the remainine four years in which the federal grant will be ettecuve the ed an increase of $9 million, Governor Frank Morrison had suggested a $5 million figure. Senator Terry Carpenter of Scottsbluff made a last-ditch effort to boost state tax funds to $33,382,841, but this attempt sagged under a 7-27 vote. While Marvel was compli menting his committee for seeing to the Legislature's 33-0 approval of its recom mendations without change on the measure, the question of how the University could con tinue its fullest functioning under the bill's eventual pass age was forming thunder heads over the campus hor izon. As early as December, 1962, University Chancellor Clifford Hardin told Governor Morri son at statehouse hearings that in preparing budget requests University offici als are motivated by the to drop one in the bass horn. By 1:00 or 1:30, the pic nic was spread, Everyone under three years old was wet, Grandpa had run out Otto was wabbling suspi ciously while Aunt Effie was pretending she wasn't Here comet The Flag. Hail U! Who dare$ to drag Or trail it? Give it hurraht Three for the $tar$ Three for the bars. Uncover your head to it! The soldiers who tread (Lost i incp TRIBUTE TO THE FLAG By Senator George F. Hoar have seen the glories of art and architecture and of river and mountain, I have seen the sun set on the Jungfrau and the moon rise over Mont Blanc. But the fairest vision on which these eyes ever rested was the flag of my country in a foreign port. Beautiful as a flower to those who love it, terrible as a meteor to those who hate U, it is the symbol of the power and the glory and the honor of millions of Americans. eaclhDinig people working on the curri culum revision "want to see if the program we devised is really teaching kids to write," Dr. Rice said., Nebraska Program When Project English is completed Nebraskans will retain the right to use the pro gram. The U. S. Office of Ed u c a t i o n for whom the study is being done, will de termine the program's use elsewhere i n the United States. Dr. Olson Asked to comment on the benefits of the program to Ne- Summer Nebraskan Is Traveling Its Last Mile aim to provide the best edu cation possible for Nebras ka's youth and thereby make the state itself a more posi tive force in America. He pointed out at the time that the budget is "a blue print of what the University can do for Nebraska and its people. As a compilation of proposed expenditure it is in a real sense a further invest ment of this state." As explained by University officials and department chairmen, the budget in crease was hoped to bring salaries of the professional staff nearer to the average of other midwestern univer sities, modernize the Col lege of Medicine in Omaha, expand and deepen agricul ture programs and strength en University libraries. Two years ago the Univer sity was given $28 million up on its request for $37.1 mil married to him. By the time the food was out and ready most of us were on our second help ing, but Grandma B. would shush everyone, and Grand pa would fold his calloused hands in front of him, and bow his yellow-white head. His shaggy black eye If THE FLAG Arthur Macy to it Shout at the sight of it, The justice and right of it, The unsullied white of it, The blue and the red of U, And tyranny's dread of it! braska students, Dr. Rice reached for the May 27 issue of Newsweek magazine. An article on Nebraska's Project English tells of the enthusiasm of teachers, par ents and even youngsters for the new way to learn to write. The teachers for the sum mer institutes are chosen competitively. Each must submit a resume telling of his experiences as a teacher, his interests, and his interest in the program. He must send a credit transcript from his alma mater. In addition, his school su perintendent must sign an agreement saying that he will allow the experiment to be conducted in his school, that he will release the teacher from at least one of his lion from the general fund. While it is conceded that the present measure provides something for everyone,, the general money-spread falls short of University needs. Joseph Soshnik, vice chan cellor of business and finance, last winter compared Nebras ka University instructor sal aries with regional payrolls, saying, "We are from $600 to $1200 below this figure." He cited U.S. Department of Education figures. Soshnik explained the me chanics of the entire budget at the time to the Governor and tax commission officials, emphasizing the budget, pre sented in two parts, reflects both the total amount of monies needed to maintain present academic levels and a growth and development as pect tailored to provide extra money, initiate new pro grams, and strengthen exist ing procedures. He cited en brows raised and fell as he began to pray. He praised God for the free dom we enjoy. He remem bered the men who died, and the men who die, and the men who will die to preserve our freedom. He confessed to God that men are not free by the grace v jt9 Here comes The Flag! Cheer it! Valley and crag Shall hear it. Fathers shall bless it, Children caress it. All maintain it, No one stall stain it, Cheers for the sailors that Abraham Lincoln ... "With malice toward none; with charily for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan -to do all which may achieve and cherish a just, and a lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.9 Abraham Lincoln Second Inaugural Address o duties to spend time on prepa ration, and that he will buy the necessary materials. Geographic Areas , Geographic distribution also plays a part in a teacher's selection. The teachers this summer come from Grand Island, Omaha, Seward, Lincoln Nor folk, York, Central City, Chadron, Hastings, Scotts bluff, Sidney, North Platte, Ogallala, Bellevue, Hebron, Holdredge, and Sutton. Two of the teachers paying their own expenses are from Illinois. Dr. Rice is presently direct tag the program alone, as Dr. Olson is in England on a Guggenheim Fellowship. He is gone for a year and will return in September. Page One rollment increases as reasons for need of extra funds in nearly all academic areas. The emerging allocation's $3.3 million increase shows what the 1961 Legislature al lowed a flat $3 million. By incorporating a tuition increase recommendation into the University budget an ex tra $933,000 might be realized to make a new total of $4.3 million, allowing both the Board of Regents and the nor mal board to post salary in creases of $7 annually. The average resident un dent undergraduate would thus pay $46 more over a two-semester period. A whop ping $306 average fee would face non-resident graduates. Committeemen have specu lated this would bring the University an additional $350, 000 in 1964-65. At the same time no tuition hike would be recommended for Nebras ka's four state colleges. of God, but by his grace, have the right to strive for freedom. That Freedom is won, over and over, in ev ery generation. And he asked God that we might al ways to be alert to those who would push in upon our personal Freedom. With a great Amen, he would close. t , m V Data by fought on the) wave fork, Cheers for the soldiers that always were brave for U Tears for the men that went down to the grave for it, Here comes The Flag! Troditiomi