j - , - ; Ijr.vT- - - I ) i;r' A " , I -' - ,lul"u" I j&I I 7- I n - :" I -1 . I I ' " -'"5 s s i:- :'"."" t " L3J " v"" ' 1 ; - ' mlF' J : f ' 5 f XV j s : 111. 1 1 J A Vhis is the team which will report and interpret election night newt for the Columbia Broadcasting System. Poised for their all night vigil at the microphone as returns pour into the CBS election service "nerve center" in New York are: Elmer Davis, who will an alyze tre presidential race as it enters the home stretch; Bob Trout, who will give up to the second tallies; and Albert Warner, Wash ington correspondent, who will interpret senatorial, congressional and gubernatorial contests. Kirseh, Faulkner exhibit at prairie painter show Professors Dwight Kirsch and Katherine Faulkner of the art de partment have been invited to be come members of the Prairie Wa ter Color Painters and each has two water colors in the annual ex hibit of the organization now showing in Manhattan, Kas. Luebs attends ASME Prof. A. A. Luebs, chairman rf the Nebraska section of the American Society of Mechanical Don't Torment Your Roommate for his copy "owx roun own" STUDENT DIRECTORY On Sale tit Campus Buildings and Book Stores NEWS TICKERb STATE REPORTERS CENTRAL DESK TALLY CLERKS TABULATORS NEWS ANALYSTS Engineers, attended the regional conference of the society of Mil waukee recently. Questions of so ciety activities, student organiza tions, publications, employment, and national meeting of the or ganization in New York in De cember. Brown university's swimmers have won the New England In tercollegiate meet for eight con secutive years. WSUI, radio station of the State University of Iowa, is on the air 2,496 hours per year. 4 i- i To keep its audience abreast of the preferences of the nation's 60 million voters when they go to the polls next Tuesday, the, Columbia Broadcasting System and its local outlets, KFAB and KFOR, have set up a system of election news coverage on an unprecented scale. A far cry from the equipment of the skelton staff, which brought the first radio election returns less than 25 years ago is the setup to be used by the network's elec tion service in New York City. These workers, pictured above, will marshal the vote tallies as they pour in from similar local station staffs in all parts of the country so that listeners will have prompt and acciyate returns. Analysts. To helD Bob Trout give the numerical returns, Elmer Davis give his interpretation of the re turns; Albert Warner, give the Is sues and results of the state sena torial, congressional, and guberna torial races; and Dr. Elmo Roper, director of the Fortune survey ex amine the results from the view points of the national polls, CBS has installed ten special long-dis tance telephone circuits, six pri vate connections with distant points, four special Morse wires and nine AP, UP and INS print ers. Paul W. White. CBS director of public affairs, will be in charge of the coverage. All reports will be cleared thru a streamlined copy desk, where editors, connected by phone de vices will give the returns to tab ulators, equipped with head and best phone sets and stationed at giant white tally board. This, board is erected on a platform within easy view of the entire room. Re- 12:80 till 1 t(tr I illl JlfW Kw. SOr-40 Tax Ind. 'COMING!! "The Ramparts We Watch" Wltk thr HrimHtlniwl, Conflm-aUII Mazl Trr ror Ktlma ... "Baptism of Fire" fflosiTy ELMER DAVIS turns will be written on the board, scored by states, and kept up to the second. To bring all new angles. Other copy and new information on "running stories" based on latest available information pour ing into the room from innumer able sources, are to be double checked and forwarded to the spe cial broadcasting platform in the center of the studio. Numerous remote pickup points have been scheduled thruout the day and night, according; to White who said that special lines are to hook up the network with the busy scenes in both democratic and republican nntional committee headquarters in New York City, the crowd-packed Times square, Hyde Park, New York, and Kush viile, Indiana-or wherever the presidential contest rivals spend election day evening. Many other special features are being arranged to further high light Columbia's election coverage. A search is being instituted for the oldest voter in the nation as well as the youngest citizen to en ter a polling booth. Early in the evening, White will be heard as he speaks to several remote points, checking over last minute ar rangements for bringing the re sults to the central broadcast point. Early returns. In these 15 minutes, beginning at 5;15 p. m., besides the two- way conversations, listeners will hear early scattered returns from the few states where results are released pror to the actual poll closing time. Trout, Davis and Warner also Hre to be heard in SAT.-NOV. 2 "Creator of Shaker Rhythm" with his Famous Band GRIGGS Friday, November 1, 1940 : Ami ' JWiK&J ALBERT BOB WARNER TROUT 7" -1. preliminary talks to the network audience. From then on thruout the night five minute spots will keep the election news flowing to the nation and, as direct reports, bul letins and flashes hit their peak, regularly scheduled programs will be cancelled in their entirety to make way for the election results. This will continue until the final outcome is known. The entire staff of Columbia s two international short-wave sta tions-WCBX and WCAB-is to be on duty constantly to give lis teners in every part of the woria full reports on the elections, broadcasting in seven languages. Russell publishes psychology papers Dr. R. W. Russell, instructor in psychology and assistant in the bureau of instructional research, recently completed the fourth of a series of five papers published in the "Journal oi Gr.etic Psy chology." The series covers the results of one of the first complete studies of the development of ideas in children, Russell explained. Diver sified groups of children in both the Fast and the Southwest were studied under the same economic and environmental conditions." An extensive study of the Zunl Indian children was the subject of still another paper of Dr. Russell's published recently in "Child De velopment," a publication of the society of psychological research. P Their First Appearance in Lincoln ADVANCE IN PRICES tlW l:hllinFefA f JUI.