tiwwwTir r "r1 " fur " i '3jiVrini7.... 1ST M ANO-P- "if you see nothing else this year, you must see FUfSBSaMBZ will not, I think, ever fade front JACK NICHOLSON FIVE nd Susan Anspach NOW OPEN. . . A 2215 No. Cotner Blvd. in Bethanay Featuring Original Paintings, Pottery, Handblown Glass along with many distinctive Imported and Handmade Gifts. Open 10-5 Monday - Saturday 1-5 Sunday Wednesday Night 'till 9 OOOOOOOOOOOOCK SUMMER HOUSING CONTRA OW AVAILABLE.... For Air Conditioned Residence Halls at the Office of University Housing 103 Admin Bldg -472-2034 LINCOLN'S NEW H 1 MI 't -Wtftw Admission $2.50 Please Bring Your I.D. BBBBBBJ?B Jf EASY PIECES Karen Black Unique New Shop GIFTSHOP & GALLERY 5 s Today At 1:00. 2:40. 4:20 6:00. 7:40, 9:20 Late Show Fri. & Sat 11 P.M. 'Sfete ii a: fv .n - 1 Jl . ft j -Vp . ; ... - vl .xi 4v5-7': Educator Holt I 'Self-educated man is out' by MARSHA KAHM Staff Writer The self-educated man is out of style today, John Holt told a packed Union ballroom audience Thursday afternoon. Author and educational reformer , Holt said that schools have so much of a monopoly that it doesn't count to learn anymore unless a person learns in school. Everyone accepts this as a right, said the author of How Children Fail but it is a disastrous mistake to equate schooling with learning and education. He explained that he went through the traditional educational system unquestioning and conforming. It wasn't until he had taught for five years that he began to question the value of the system. "I gradually began to notice that there were all sorts of students who weren't there to learn, they were there because their parents forced them to be there." For the last hundred years education has been defined as schooling, Holt said. It is a transaction between students, who are nothing but students, and teachers, who by and large are nothing but teachers. iAV UNION, THE FACT that it doesn't concern anyone else has several disastrous consequences, according to Holt. One is that when schooling is defined as learning it becomes so expensive that 95 per cent of the people cannot afford it. Even though this is primarily in poor countries, he pointed out, it also is true in the United States, the richest nation in the world. Of the $70 billion allocated for education by the government only $36 billion goes to secondary and elementary schools. This money is unevenly distributed between the rich and the poor kids. 'IN ORDER to provide equality in resources for all children we would probably have to spend over $200 billion," added the teacher, "and this will never happen." "And it wouldn't be enough, no matter how much we spent," he went on, "because we have created a situation where a person's success depends on the amount and the expensiveness of the schooling he is able to obtain." Holt called this "the competitive consumption of schooling." And, the people who benefit most are those who can remain in school longer the rich. Therefore there is much more tax money spent on the rich rather than poor children. "I can't see anything to contest this as long as we keep putting our resources into the schools," said Holt. "As long as this happens it makes it too difficult for anyone to create alternatve avenues of learning." For instance the high schools have more money for their narrow age group than the libraries do for the wide range of people and age groups they serve. HOLT WANTS a society where learning resources are not locked up in the schools and where schools are not defined as "education". As for the institution of childhood, Holt said: "We have built a walled garden for children to shelter and protect them from the exploitiveness of the world outside," "It is not protective, in itself it is destructive and exploitive." Museum director to discuss environment "Nebraska's Environment, Past and Present" will b? explored by C. B. Schultz, museum director, in the final Curator Lecture sponsored by the University of Nebraska State Museum. The program will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday in Room 20 of Morrill Hall, 14th and U. The lecture is free and open to the public. Schultz is a popular public speaker and has been director of the nationally renowned University of Nebraska State Museum with its uniqne Elephant Hall since 1941. A native of Red Cloud, he is an internationally known expert in the fields of vertebrate paleontology, geology and "early man". Schultz will examine the historical changes in Nebraska's climate, ranging from tropical to arctic. Improve Grvds Whit Devoting The Seme Amount Of Time To Study USE STUDY SOUNDS Increeeo Vour Concentretion And Improve Your Comprehension. Study At A Fester Rate. ELECTRONICALLY PRODUCED SOUNDS CAUSE THIS TO HAPPEN Please Specify Track Tape, Ceesette, Or LP Record Send Check or Money Order 99.94 tact) Include 7 be Handling and Po4ae Sound Concepts. Inc., Box 38&2 Charlottesville, Vo. 22902 PAGE 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1971