x=17 10 8 4 2 1 9 1 5 9 1 5 CCP 10019507 Page 2 University Daily Kansan Success Formula UNESCO Arrives Via World's Acceptance The United Nations Educational, Social and Cultural organization—UNESCO—probably has the most successful record of any UN agency today. Its success formula has been the cooperation granted it by peoples of the world-cooperation which has played a tremendous part in easing troubled situations in a world engaged in an arms race. One of the specialized agencies of the economic and social council within the UN, UNESCO has as its express purpose the promotion of collaboration among nations through education, science and culture in order to further justice, rule of law, and human rights and freedoms, without distinction of race, sex, language, or religion. Its work in the war-ravaged countries of Europe and the Middle East has helped soothe the wounds made by tanks, planes, and tramping feet. It has raised illiterate nations to the point where they can take their place in the advanced world. By April, 1952, UNESCO had specified projects working in seven countries in the Middle East and in a number of related major activities affecting most of the countries in the area. A fundamental education center was opened in Egypt this fall to train teachers and produce model teaching materials geared especially to the needs of all the Arab-speaking world. UNESCO has established 114 schools with the aid of the United Nations Relief and Works agency to care for 43,000 refugee children in Arabia. Critically needed school supplies and equipment for added vocational training classes are being furnished to some extent through UNESCO's gift coupon project. UNESCO has provided technical assistance and fundamental education missions to Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, and Turkey. Forty-one experts from the organization are at work in these countries. In most of the countries in the Middle East, UNESCO is working to provide schools' education, agritourism schools, science laboratories, and library services. The service organization has been working to encourage education from the primary level up in virtually every country in the world. It has attempted to bring backward areas of the world around to the modern strata of education and technological achievement. UNESCO has gained the approval of the people. Educational institutions throughout the United States have endorsed its activities. With a scholarship exchange program, UNESCO has been able to produce first-hand understanding among the diverse peoples of the world. As long as the people lend their support to such an organization and its activities, it cannot fail. -Bob Longstaff משוואה מסוג בניית תכונות No civil style survived After having been a leader of the political and psychological poets of the 1920s, Mr. Auden became one of the most conscious of the religious poets. His work has always reflected the most exciting of the current theories about man, society, and God. But the wry, the sotto-voce, Ignia and monochrome This is a point of some importance for Freudian or other psychologies In Mr. Auden's work we find evidence of the much-talked-of "influence" of Freud. It does not appear as an influence on his poetic method or his central vision, but in the form of a psychological terminology, and of Freudian concepts applied to traditional situations. That pandaemonium ("Nones," by W. H. Auden, (Random House, 1951), is reviewed for the Daily Kansan by Arvid Shulenberger, assistant professor of English. Mr. Auden will deliver a lecture at the University Friday afternoon.) News Room KU 251 Ad Room KU 373 Member of the Carson State Assoc. Daily Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press Assn, Repress Assn. 2420 Madison Avenue, N. Y. City, Wystan Hugh Auden's newest poems are much in the tone that has characterized his work from the beginning of his public career. The subject matters of his poetry are the traditional ones; the style is modern. He defends his style and tone in the dedicatory poem of this collection, observing that he "would in the old grand manner 'Have sung from a resonant heart,' had not all the traditional words been "soiled, profaned, debased" in an age of cheap journalism and advertising. EDITORIAL STAFF NEWS STAFF Editor-in-Chief ... Chuck Zueger Editorial Assistants ... Bob Stewart, Mary Schroeder Managing Editor Charles Burch Ast. Mgr, Editors Lorena Barbay, Barbara Burch Delmarline Jones City Editor ... Phil Newman Society Editor ... Mary Cooper Sports Editor ... Boynton Asst. Sports Editors ... Nielson, Clarke Keys Telegraph Editor Picture Editor ... Max Thompson Image Editor ... David Mason Victor J.丹威利 'Ironic-Monochrome' In Auden's Latest Work Business Manager ... Frank Liese Advertising Mgr. ... David Arthurs National Mgr. ... Michael McClure Mgr. and Mgr. Virginia Mackey Classified Ad. Mgr. ... Patricia Vance Promotion Mgr. ... Elbert D. Spivey Business Advisor Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or (add $1 a semester if in Lawrence). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Entered second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at Lawrence, Kan., Post Office under act of RUSINESS STAFF lacoueline Jones seldom influence the perceptions and basic methods of a genuine poet—and then only as one of a thousand comparable elements in the poet's environment. Freudian psychology is a symptom of the situation out of which modern poetry has sprung, not a cause of it. In Mr. Auden's new poetry we find, expectedly, such fashionable concepts employed as those of Sheldon's theory of somatotypes. It is easy to parody this element in Mr. Auden's work, or to imitate it. One simply applies the concepts of abnormal psychology to a normal, traditional situation, and writes of the situation in technical terms and in some liqging variant of ballad meter. Here is an imitation of his manner: Pale Jack and endomorphic Jill, Slaves of the viscerotonic will, Clambered the symptomatic hill Ostensibly for water, Jack fell intentionally down Breaking faith but not his crown, And with extimizing frown Jill came tumbling after. Mr. Auden is a genuine, and important poet. His best work transcends the limitations of a trick style and a too-facile manipulation of fashionable theory. There are excellent poems in his latest collection and passages of unusual power. Phone 61 In such a slight poem as "The Fall of Rome" Mr. Auden can demonstrate in little the major collapse of national power, in quatrains of which this is representative: And you can make every occasion, party or meal time, more enjoyable with the best in baked goods from Drake's. Let's Celebrate After the Game with coffee and donuts from Drake's Be good to your guests—and yourself. . . . It's the traditional celebration. CALL DRAKE'S TODAY. Caesar's double-bed is warm As an unimportant clerk "Drakes for Bakes" As an American citizen since 1939, Mr. Auden has been increasingly concerned with elements in the American scene, especially with the Writes I DO NOT LIKE MY WORK 907 Mass. On a pink official form. milieu of the universities in which he has frequently lectured and taught. He has written amusingly of the post-war students in the gigantic departmental schools; Among bewildering appliances For mastering the arts and sciences They stroll or run, And nerves that never flinched at slaughter. Are shot to pieces by the shorter Rooms of Deane -Arvid Shulenberger Students Begin Reading Lab Approximately 50 students, in three class groups, began the Reading Laboratory's six-week series of reading and study methods improvement meetings Monday. Dr. Henry P. Smith, director of the Reading Laboratory, reported that another 25 students have started once-a-week individual counselling sessions. Although the reading and study methods groups are full, Dr. Smith said that time is available for six more people. We Can Only Guess ... but we know you'll want the smart, young fashions featured at Adelane's. about tomorrow's score See our fall collection of sport clothes for class and date-time wear. Adelane's "The Friendly Fashion Store" 823 Mass. . . . But now's the time to order crested articles. Give the personalized gift—the most appreciated gift by fraternity, sorority, and service people everywhere. Order gifts engraved with the crest or emblem of your choice. See Balfours today. If you live out of town, write Al Lauter for information. BALFOUR'S 411 W.14th 8