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Show Tells of Postwar Education Role Dr. E. A. Jacobsen Talks to Lions Club A five point program of education, edu-cation, which "will have the principal tasK in snaping tomorrow's tomor-row's world," was outlined at a Logan Lions club meeting Tuesday Tues-day by Dr. E. A. Jacobsen, dean of the school of education at Utah State Agricultural college. "There will be no more peace in the world than in the hearts of men," Dean Jacobsen declared. "Peace is not put in. men's hearts by laws and police forces, but only through education for peace. Armaments and international agreements still are needed but their effectiveness will be conditioned condi-tioned by the extent of fundamental funda-mental peace teaching.'' Points of his suggested program were: Recognition by allies of their responsibility for educational progress toward world peace; creation cre-ation of an organization for international in-ternational education through a bureau for educational reconstruction recon-struction with representatives from all nations; control of education in axis nations to see that the educational scheme never again falls into the hands of militarists; militar-ists; agreement on a fundamental funda-mental educational program for world citizenship and seeing that all countries establish schools and arrange an international equalization equaliza-tion fund; exchange of teachers, ideas and students on an international inter-national scale. |