The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 10, 1946, Image 1

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    Vol. 46 No. 14
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Thursday, October 10, 1946
Editors Announce
Cornhusker Staff
Editorial and business staffs of
the 1947 Cornhusker have been
announced by Editor Merrell
Grant and business manager Dean
Skokan.
Jerry Johnston has been named
it editor, and Joan Ackerman,
Joan Fankhnuser and Marian
Weith are managing editors.
Del Ayers and Priscilla Flagg
will fill the positions of assistant
business managers. Business as
sistants are Rick Walstrom, John
Adams, Bob Hildebrand, Art Tir
ro, Cherry Viele, Frank Skokan.
Bill Gold, Lloyd Whitney, Norma-,
lee Weyenberg, Stewart Gottstein,
Mary Jean Mulvaney, J. P. Gart
ner, Jan McEllvian and Bill Wal
die. Handling the section of Ad
ministration in the Cornhusker
will be co-heads Jean Compton
and Harold Smith. Marilyn Den-
ontract Bridge
Classes Begin
This Afternoon
The first of a series of contract
bridge classes will be held this
afternoon at 4:30 in room 315 of
the Union, according to Pat Lahr,
Union director.
Students interested in learning
the fundamentals of contract are
invited to attend this first class
by Dale Ball, supervisor of all
Union bridge activities.
Opening session of the Union
cot. tract bridge tournament will
begin at 2 p. m. Saturday. Twelve
teams have already registered for
the tournament. Miss Lahr an
nounced yesterday. Additional
teams who wi-h to enter have un
til noon Saturday to register at the
Union office.
The tournament has appeal for
beginners as well as more ad
vanced bridge players since
teams will be seeded according to
ability shown in preliminary
tournament play.
Palmer Will Head
Cam pi
ms Business
Research Bureau
Dr. Edgar Palmer, chairman of
the department, of business re
search, was named Tuesday to
head the univertsiy Bureau of
Business Research, which ,. has
been inactive since the war.
Work of the bureau will be to
publish statistical tables, a per
iodic index of Nebraska business
activity and a monthly business
review in the University of Ne
braska News, extension division
publication. In addition, the
bureau will study the business
cycles and will also analyze' the
problems of small businesses.
Plans have been made to have
Dr. Curtis M. Elliott, assistant pro
fessor of economics and insurance,
study and publish the employment
trends in Lincoln.
BIGGER
BETTER
Only
3090 Copies
for
9000 Students
nison and Marge Barney will as
sist them.
Class Section.
The section on classes will be
directed by Jeanne Branch. Kay
Blue will have charge of the senior
class, Priscilla Bailey the Juniors,
Mary Ann Moyle the sophomores,
and Kay Kinsey the freshmen.
Genene Mitchell will handle the
section on medical students.
Jean Gass will head the section
on government, and assisting her
will be Mary Maddox and Georgia
Lemon.
Joan Titus and Jean Hickey will
direct the Women s section, with
Norma Rakow, Phyllis Kokjer,
and Marilyn Nixon as assistants.
Publications
Julia Ann House heads the Pub
lications section with Jeanne Hal-
ligan as her assistant.
Pat Latham will arrange the
See CORNHUSKER, Page 5
Menuhin's
Violin Solos
Acclaimed
BY SAM WARREN.
From the sustained, liquid
tones of the Tartini sonata that
opened violinist Yehudi Menuhin's
recital to the last capricious notes
of the closing gypsy air, last eve
nings concert audience expert
enced the pleasant combination of
technical skill and discerning
musicianship.
Playing with a matter-of-fact
assurance that results from
nearly 20 years of concert sue
cesses, Menuhin was not for a
sir gle moment disappointing. An
elasticity of tone was prevelant
from his opening number, the
Tartini sonata, which sparkled
with florid passages and unac
companied violin gymnastics bal
anced by lyric moods.
Moving immediately into the
high point of his program, Menu
hir. delighted his audience with
the showy but thoroly pleasurable
Mendelssohn E Minor concerto.
Altho the overall effect suffered
somewhat from the orchestral
parts being supplied by piano
only, Mr. Menuhin made up for
it in every respect. He paced the
opening allegro with fervor while
treating the lovely andante with
marked tenderness. A vivacious
bow-hopping in the vivace com
pleted the concerto.
Even a broken string couldn't
detract from the beauty of the
concerto in the hands of a master
like Menuhin. Altho Paganini
was noted for purposely breaking
one string during a concert so
that he might sensationally finish
on three strings, Menuhin's mis
fortune could not be so inter
pretated, since the string snapped
in the middle of a four-figured
cadenza which required all four
strings!
Pronounced variety was first
introduced with the third selec
tion, the French composer Chaus
See MENUHIN. Page S.
1
i
14?
UummnsE3
ngirn 3Tfflffly ft
Journalism
Banquet Set
For Tonight
Dr. W. F. Swindler, director of
the school of journalism, will be
the featured speaker at the an
nual journalism achievement din
ner tonight at 7:00 p. m. in the
Union main dining room.
Tickets are still on sale, accord
ing to Shirley Jenkins, ticket
chairman, for the banquet which
is open to journalism students,
members of the student publica
tion board, staff members of all
university publications and stu
dents interested in newspaper
work.
The dinner will be the occa
sion for the awarding of ten gold
achievement keys to journalism
majors with outstanding records.
Five will go to upperclassmen,
See BANQUET, Page 2
The Husker football team will
be sent off to Iowa City, Friday
with the songs and cheers of the
st.udent body ringing in their ears,
for the coalition of Tassels and
Corn Cobs have arranged for a
gala send off rally for the team.
Plans provide for the assem
blage of students at the Stadium
at 3:45 on Friday afternoon, ac
cording to Lorraine Zahn, Tassel
publicity chairman. The "B"
team game will be over at about
this time, and the squad coming
Congregational
Sorority Holds
Social Today
A reception for all women stu
dents interested in joining Sigma
Eta Chi, Congregational sorority,
will be held today from 3 to 5
p. m. in room '313 of the union,
announced Betty Hurlburt, presi
dent. A religious fellowship group,
Sigma Eta Chi extends an invi
tation to all coeds of any race or
creed to be present at this aft
ernoon's tea.
Year's Program.
The year's program, in addition
to the social events which include
church visits, parties and outings,
will consist of weekly discussions
on current controversial religious
issues, with guest speakers and
book reviews to be featured at
frequent meetings.
The two pastor advisors are
Reverend Tishens of First Ply
mouthy and Reverend Dickson of
the Vine street Congregational
church.
MO)
Best Buy NOW ! !
A registration of student voters
of junior standing will be held
Thursday and Friday, Oct. 10 and
11, between noon and 7 p. m., ac
cording to the Student Council
Judiciary Committee.
Unless the student is a regis
tered voter, he will not be allowed
KU Travelers
Should Sign
Trip Petitions
Unaffiliated students planning
to travel to Lawrence, Kas., for
the Husker game, on the special
train scheduled for students, must
sign at a poll booth in the Union,
according to Doris Easterbrook,
Migration chairman.
Members or organized houses
are required to sign petitions
which will be circulated by Tas
sels and Corn Cobs in their re
spective houses, and houses which
have no Tassels or Corn Cobs
See TRAVELERS, Page 4
ally!!
out of the "stadium will provide
an appropriate background for
the expression of school support.
To help make this rally a suc
cess, Tassels and Cobs are re
quested to appear in uniform.
More necessary for the success of
this rally than uniforms is the
whole-hearted support of the stu
dent body. It is hoped and ex
pected that as many students as
posible will be present to give
the team the royal send off that
they proved themselves worthy of
in last Saturday's game.
Miller Announces
New Zoology Lab
Research Project
Research to study the heredity
and other breeding characteristics
of Drosophila, small fruit flies,
has been started in the univer
sity zoology laboratory, according
to Dr. D. D. Miller.
Although the project will have
no immediate practical applica
tion, research in this field has
already proved valuable to live
stock and poultry breeders in per
petuating desirable and retarding
undesirable traits.
The phenomena currently con
cerning Dr. Miller is that most of
the 100 species of truit flies are
reluctant to interbreed ,and that
offsprings resulting from inter
breeding are occasionally sterile.
AUF Solicitors
All AUF solicitors must be
present at a Friday meeting in
the Union roem 113, Mary
Claire Phillips. AUF director,
announced today.
sen
to vote in the second election,
scheduled lor Oct. 17.
The. list of registrants will be
validated by the council members
after a 'check with the official
registrar's records.
The junior election was declared
invalid because of a discrepancy
between signed voters and bal
lots cast. The discrepancy equalled
the difference in count for the
two leading candidates. Junior
class votes were tabulated as fol
lows: Darrell Devoe, 180; Dake
Novotny, 174; Jackie Tobin, 56,
one invalid vote. The total num
ber of votes cast was 411 and the
official signed registration was
404.
AUF Marks
$2,200 Goal
For Drive
Wilth a goal of $2,200, the an
nual AUF drive will be launched
Monday, Oct. 14, director Mary
Claire Phillips announced today.
The All University Fund organ
ization is set up on the basio of a
$2 donation from each student.
The group combines all university
drives into one a semester thus
saving the student from contribut
ing to two or three organizations
a semester
New Members.
New AUF staff members are
Mary Claire Phillips director,
See DRIVE, Page 3
Crib Supply
Of Chocolate
Is Dwindling
Fudge sundaes at the Crib are
dead as any Dodo and chocolate
malts may soon follow them into
extinction unless the Student
union can bolster its dwindling
supply of chocolate syrup.
Union food director Rosa Knick
rehm told a Daily Nebraskan re
porter yesterday that as chocolate
syrup becomes increasingly harder
to obtain, chocolate-hungry co-eds
demand ever more of the popular
fountain drink.
Miss Knickrehm said the choc
olate syrup scarcity was in turn
due to the current sugar famine,
and chocolate malteds might some
day not too far away join cokes
on a here today none tomorrow
basis.
Cornhuskers are by no means
alone in their grief, however. The
Iowa state Memorial union re
ports just enough malt to last
thirty more days, thereafter choc
orate malts will be substituted by
malts of other flavors.
Asked if there were hope of an
early relief of the desperate choc
olate situation. Miss Knickrehm
gently but with grim finality
shook her head.
"No," she said.
$5.50 full payment
or
$3.00 Down
Sold Exclusively by
Tassels &
Corn Cobs