v 't' V V- V V V v V k - , v : ' edibrio -"H; ( m m Travel broadens education . -' . . . ' r ttnir ctnrlv ann Kan 1 t i mi rrpfi is ur men .- ney iei,civc ----- Tha aworanp mst For many students on campus, leaving their home town main street behind was quite an accomplishment. Going abroad would be unheard of. What they don't realize is that travel or study in a foreign country probably is possible for them. Moreover, it can be surprisingly inexpensive. Several UNI departments and offices want to help. They offer programs or suggestions for foreign travel, as well as for study or work. One of those programs is the Wintoiim-F-light. For about $260 students can fly to Europe and back during Christmas break. For about $350 more, they can ?:irn UNL credit by taking courses in London, Paris, Munich and other cities: This spring, a similar trip tc South America is planned. Other ways to see the world include the Junior Year Ahnwl nrnnram. snnnsored bv t h i UNL lanauaqe departments. Students selected for tno program spend 3 yoe?hrernwaymsPtUoSef an'd woril abroad are explained other ways to udve. a Nebraska Union llciltaS with a family, become grape harvesters, work as chambermaids or simply see the sights. Spending time in another culture is one of the most educational experiences a student pfn ye. It enlarges a nerson's perspect ve. It helps h m snea nis ethnocentricity And, too, it teaches him something fPmsauihoaces new situations, how much he values his country and more. To find out more about nonacademic programs, visit the Overseas Opportunity Center. For information on academic programs, go to the Institute of International Studies, Oldfather iuj. departments, oiuaenis seiecieu i ur mc piuymni siu jUuiw,iUiv. their junior year studying at a university in France, It could help get you places. jane Owens Germany, Spain or another country. ; ' Ford is a good Scout: trustworthy, loyal, helpful, fiendly "Ti ey say a scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and reverent. (These virtues will be) my guide and my comDass in all my official duties" President and "Eagle Scout Gerald R. Ford in a major address to The Scouter-of-the-Year Banquet m Washington. 'Hi, there, King Faisal. Hope you don't mind my dropping by your palace like this to make a courtesy call. But, by golly, I believe in bev.g courteous at all times." Wen, Mr. President..." "Just call me, Gerry, King. I believe in being friendly, too." hopp old friend, Leonid, wouldn't it be swell if everybody could be friends like he and I are. "Ahah! So you've- made a deal with the Russians to seil us rut. I suspected you Americans would do anything to save yourselves a few paltry hundred billion dollars." "Gosh, King, I don't knew anything about this 'deal' thing. But I sure do believe in being thrifty." "I will never yk!d to threats! Go ahead, send in your Man res!" "Gee, Kino, l don't know what you're talking about," Let 'rr'- ccme clean, because I always believe in bjing clean. All I meant was that Leonid and i are loyal buddies." "A joint attar.k by Russian and American troops? My poor country would be overrun in hours. Ail right, you nave me over me ui. barrel. What do you want me to do?" "Whatever you say, King. Give me the word and I'll do it. If there's one thing I am, it's obedient." ' . ... u "You leave me no choice. I will cut the price of oil to a dollar a barrel and donate $100 billion to your favorite charity." "My goodness, King, that's trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty and brave of you." "By Allah, you are an unbeatable bargainer. I wash my hands of the whole thing." "And clean and reverent, too. Here, have a WIN merit badge. You're a good scout, s i e . .... s innocent ousronuef What sort of il iiaJaiah honor. Gerry. d3! ocryoii have in mind?" rbvarr What 's a deal, King? t-josrhoped t might be helpful in my trustworthy way." "Helpful? I assume, Gerry, that you are here because you are worried about the economic hardships our high oil prices are causing you." "What, me worry? If there's one thing I always am, King, it's cheerful." "Yes, I noticed (hat. You must have a card up your sleeve. Have you come to warn me you are contemplating sending your Marines to take over my oil wells?" "Well, that would sure be the brave thing d"), Kina. But ft wouldn t be kina. "I must warn you that if you make any military threats, I shall be forced to make friends with the Russians!" Great idea, King. As I was saying to my f 1 J to K inn Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. 1974 3errq Ford Dernonstrcxtes the Sou ScoJ Safufe. A SroJT 15 TRUSTWORTHY CHEER.FU'-. THSiFTY BZAVE r- 'Hkin of t'rorfcrr 0 'WX I 1 i i w (jV LUCttlUV. THEt DOT h. - i X- - wQuifte'ifTELbieEMr H Marriage institution satirization misinterpreted 'Wan, did you get zapped!" People have been telling me ihat for the better part of a wee-K now. They were referring to a Daily Nebraskan fjusit opinion by Sue Warren last Friday, 'r ich did a fairly good job of ripping apart my coiumn of .last Wednesday. Go, what are you going to do about it?" my friends would ask smugly. "If anybody is competent to criticize by writing, I am, knowing my faults better than ;.nyone else could," I replied. There were any number of things wrong .vim last week's column on the institution of marriage. But first, a brief defense of what wo? r wrong. I satirized a newspaper engagement announcement rewriting it to read as it might if the newspaper were honestly reflecting a common societal view on the leiaticnship between men and women a vie.v with 'which I disagree strongly. It vss clearly marked off by quotes, reading: "Mr. and Mrs. Horatio Aiger announce the sale of their daughter Petunia o John Bourgeois of Alda. John will take ever payments of the piece of meat after a June wedding." I was dismayed that Warren misinter preted that literary device and assumed I personally view -women as "pieces of meat." Another point. Warren implies that an unmarried person cannot form a valid opinion about the nature of marriage. To carry this page 4 loaic further, wo would have to write off alt male gynecologists z... hopeless incompetents and bar from practice all psychiatrists who lack a history of mental imbalance. . Warren is most likely an expert about her own marriage. Ho.veer, any further knowl edge she might hve about marriage in general must conn? from observation of other married people and social sources of knowledge, such as bocks, movies, etc. These sources are certainly not closed to the unmarried. ray woloeh iUQlefen at fee Beyond that, my hasty tossing together of thoughts suffered from the crime of philosophical inconsistency on the part of the author. I managed to stereotype an entire class of people. The ranks of the married include a wide variety' of people, not hinted at by my "movie-version summary" one type. I have seen or heard of immensely happy marriages whose partners didn't have to sacrifice a bit of their freedom and can get in return all the benefits marriage potentially can bring. daily nebraskan Conversely, a high percentage of mar riages end in divorce. The union made in heaven ends in divorce court and hatred. Of course, the divorced vary as widely as the happily married. The causes can range Uom personality conflict to unfulfilled expectations to economic hardship to what-have-you. Whether it goes on happily-ever-after or ends in bitterness depends ultimately on how the partners adjust to each other and to the demands (economic, social, sexual, etc.) of living together within the constraints of social expectations. So many things can go wrong that it is a credit to human resiliency that most marriages do succeed to some degree. Perhaps I wrote that co!umn from an entirely too personal point of view, forming my own fears into a model which I would attack while assuming it to reflect a real danger. It is often tempting to generalize one's own experiences as applying to everyone. This can backfire when those experiences fall on the fringe rather than the middle of the normal curve. Just where I am in that fringe is unclear. My opinion on marriage can fluctuate between cynicism and optimism, depending on whom I am talking to and on sunspot activity. That probably reflects the variety of marriage types and the ambiguity of society's attitude toward them. Wednesday, decern be r 1 1 , 1974 A t