The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 06, 1946, Image 1

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    Vol. 46 No. 11
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Elections pe&i
Slated to run for the offices of
junior and senior class presidents
next Tuesday are three juniors
and two seniors.
Appearing on the ballot as jun
ior class candidates are Darrel
Devoe, Dake Novotny and Jackie
Tobin. Donald Chapin and Peggy
Shelley are running for the sen
ior office.
Polls on the city campus will be
open from 9 a. in. until 7 p. m. in
the Union . basement. Voters may
enter on the east side and must
have their identification card to
be admitted. Ag polls will be open
from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. in Miss
Yehudi Menuhin Presents
Concert in Lincoln October 9
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YEHUDI
BY SAM WARREN.
Adding more "firsts" to an al
ready eventful career, Yehudi
Menuhin, who appears here Octo
ber 9, was the first artist from
any allied country to appear in
Moscow, Paris and Prague.
This honor was accorded him
not only because he is one of the
living masters of the violin, but
also because his name is a favorite
among Europeans as well as
Americans.
After appearances in England a
little less than a year ago, Menu
hin flew to Prague where he was
csm Tidkei SdilH na Salic
for
UunivcTOnty TTBaeatlre, HS4-47 Scirica ff 5 IPlays
Season Tickets $3.00 n i 1M . .
i j- -j i d jc i f.w Buy tickets now at University Theatre box office,
STa SSS.5: :::::::::::::: Good seat sua Available
Prices include Fed. Tax 1-rth & R St. Phone 2-7181, Ext. 782 rings.
i
Wheeler's office, secretary of Dean
Burr.
Eligible Students.
A list of junior and senior stu
dents eligible to vote will be sent
from the registrar's office and
will be retained at the polls. Jun
iors must have 53 to 88 credit
hours, and students with 88 or
more credit hours will be consid
ered a graduating senior.
Rules of procedure are to be
closely observed. The Student
Council constitution reiterates in
See PRESIDENT, Page 5.
MENUHIN,
the first American artist to give a
professional concert after the war.
A .similar concert in Paris took
place in the liberated French
capital, just as General deGaulle
had promised Menuhin one year
before, at a banquet in London.
Menuhin included on his program
there the Mendelssohn violin con
certo, which had long been banned
by the Nazis.
But it was Moscow' who received
the violinist with the bieffest
shower of affection. Greeieri at
thg airport by a delegation of
See MENUHIN, Pape 7.
83
l-ULT
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Paul Engle,
Speaks Here
At Convo
Paul Engle, who will lecture on
"Poetry and Modern Life" in the
Union ballroom Tuesday, October
8, at 11:00 a. m., has had the dis
tinction of having parts of his
"American Child" published in
Life Magazine.
Quotes Life: "Iowa poet Paul
Engle has always written in terms
about the greatness of the coun
try . . . Now in his latest book,
Engle's poetry has become in
timate and personal." Along with
the three-page write-up in the
magazine were pictures used in
the book. "These pictures," say
the editors, "catch the reflecting
tenderness of a fathers poems and
the gentla charm of a child s grow
ing up."
Here is the last verse in the
See PAUL ENGEL, Page 5.
MB's Forbid
Block Voting
For Coeds
Any junior woman who is a
member of any organized house
which "votes as a block" will be
ineligible for Mortar Board, was
the decision of the Mortar Boards
at their meeting last Thursday
evening.
"Such voting is opposed to the
standards and ideals of Mortar
Boards," said Eleanor Knoll, pres
ident, "and therefore any coed so
participating would not be show
ing the standards in leadership
and service which are prerequi-
sits for Mortar Board."
Block-voting, as these senior
women have interpreted it, may
mean one of two things: (1) either
the official or unofficial guaran
tee of votes to one party or for
a certain candidate; (2) r- the
insistence by an organizaf .on that
See MORTAR BOARDS, Pare 4.
Omaha Girl Wins
Hitchcock Award
For Journalism
Patricia Berigan, Gaha, has
been awarded the 1946 Gilbert M.
Hitchcock $1,000 scholarship to the
graduate school of journalism at
Columbia university.
Miss Berigan, the sixth woman
to win the award which was es
tablished in 1934 by Mrs. G. M.
Hitchcock in memory of her hus
band, Gilbert M. Hitchcock, the
founder of the Omaha World
Herald, is a 1946 graduate of
Creighton university. Patricia A.
Chamberlain of Blue Springs, a
graduate of the university, re
ceived the scholarship in 1945.
JUlfd
U
BY GEORGE MILLER.
The Cornhuskers did not disap
point a crowd of 35,500 fans who
jammed into Memorial Stadium
to witness the Huskers' first home
tilt Saturday, for Bernie Master-
Union Bridge
Tourney Starts
Saturday Noon
The opening session of the
Union contract bridge tourna
ments will begin at 2 p. m. Sat
urday in room 313, announced Pat
Lahr, Union director.
According to Dale Ball, sper
visor of all bridge activities, each
tournament will consist of four
games of six hands each, and
prize will be awarded to the two
teams with the highest scores.
Becaue of time limitations, com
plete rubbers will not be played;
scoring will be based on the vari
ation in points of the winning and
losing couples, with the differ
ence in score counted as a posi
tive score for the winning team
of each round and negative for
the losing couple.
After several tournaments the
teams will be seeded according to
their ability and will be more in
teresting for both advanced and
beginning bridge players.
All couples who wish to enter
the tournament may register at
the Union office before noon Saturday.
w
Lugn Plots Flight Course
Of Navy 'Truculent Turtle
BY ROGER MOORE
Dr. A. L. Lugn, geology pro
fessor, held the rank of lieuten
ant commander with the Navy
Hvdromaohic division, where he
plotted the course for the flight
of 'the navy PV-2, "Truculent
Turtle," which covered 11,237
miles and established a new non
stop flight record.
While with the Navy Hydro
graphic Division, Dr. Lugn was
responsible for charting courses
and distances of aircraft over
ocean territory. In June, the
Navy Bureau of Aeronautics re
quested that he plot three courses,
one from Melbourne, Australia, to
Washington, D. C, one from
Perth, Australia, to Washington,
D. C, and one from Sydney,
Australia, to Washington, D. C.
The course used for the recent
flight of the "Truculent Turtle"
from Perth, Australia, to Colum
bus, Ohio, was the course that
failed to reach Washington. Dr.
Sunday, October 6, 1946
U
ri cr-p
son's boys ran up a 31-0 win over
the offensively impotent Kansas
State Wildcats.
In achieving their initial win
of the season, and at the same
time getting off to a flying start
in Big Six competition, the Husk
ers scored at least one touchdown
in every quarter.
Halfback Dick Hutton and Full
back Gerald Moore, led the scor
ing parade with a pair of touch
downs, but it was the Nebraska
speed boys, Hutton, Bill Moomey
and Jim Meyers, who carried the
brunt of the Scarlet running at
tack. Successful Passing.
When the Huskers took to the
air, and they were far more suc
cessful this week, completing six
of nine attempts, Quarterback
Sam Vacanti displayed an abun
dance of aerial skill. The day's
best play occurred when Vacanti
lofted a 55 yard pass to Dick Hut
ton, who had gotten behind the
Wildcat defenders. The fleet-footed
Auburn ace rambled on to a
score, the third of the day for
Nebraska, which came with eight
and a half minutes gone in the
third quarter.
CoRfih Masterson swept the
bench, sending every gridder who
was suited up into the fray. On
the other side of the field K-State
mentor Hobbs Adams did almost
as well, having only one player
who did not see action.
But on the playing field the
'Cats were nowhere near the
See FOOTBALL, Page 6.
Lugn was also responsible for
plotting the courses from Bikini
Atoll to all observation points
during the Operations Crossroads
experiment.
Air Travel Information
The information on all aspects
of air travel, landing fields, fa
cilities for flight, and air traffic,
was analyzed by Dr. Lugn, while
he was in charge of Air Naviga
tion Research. Information on
enemy aviation activities was
easily obtained as well as infor
mation of American aviation ac
tivities. "Significantly enough,"
states Dr. Lugn, "we could get a
wealth of material on all types of
aerial activity for all countries ex
cepting Russia."
Although Dr. Lugn will be on
terminal leave from the navy un
til October 26, he has resumed
his former position with the Uni
versity and is conducting classes
in the Geology Department.
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