v Friday, December 19, 194 Murfin to Use Sigma Tau Award for School Expenses Paul Murfin, electrical engineer Ing senior who received the annual Sigma Tau senior scholarship award Wednesday, plans to use the money to defray the now con siderable expenses of university tuition, books, and maintaining his lamny. "No one was more surprised than I when they announced that I'd won the prize, Murfin said. The award is given yearly to one engineering senior who ranks in the upper ten percent of his class, and - who is scholarly, sociable, and in need, according to the wording of the prize. Significance In Prestige. The prize carried only a $50 check, but the significance 'of the award is in its prestige, Murfin said. The Sigma Tau award is not the first professional honor Murfin has won. Last year he was award ed the Sawyer Scholarship, which is given yearly to an engineer majoring in electrical engineering. The Sawyer prize has a $150 sti pend. Murfin holds the presidencies of the Engineering Executive board and of the Nebraska chapter of the American Institute of Elec trical Engineers, a society open to majors in electrical engineering. There as six clans an engineer can join, Murlin says, iney are, chemical, mechanical, civil, agri cultural, architectural and electri cal. Member Sigma Tau He is a member of Sigma Tau, honorary society for all engineers, and last year he was elected a member of Sigma Xi, the national scientific honorary which paral lels Phi Beta Kappa for the college of arts and science. (Although any student who completes the re quirements for the arts and sci ence college, regardless of his college, is eligible for member ship in PBK.) He has been on the honor roll for four years. When he graduates this June Murfin will take a position with the Stromberg-Carlson Co. of Rochester, N.Y., manufacturer of radio and telephone equipment. UN Gratl Back From Chinese Relief Work SHANGHAI, China. Dean E. Eckhoff, University of Nebraska alumnus, recently returned to his, home in Central City after com pleting a ten month assignment as a pesticides specialist with the United Nations Relief and Re habilitation in China. A former entomologist with the United States deparement of agriculture, Eckhoff went to China last January to lend his skill and experience to the UNRRA program, training Chi nese farmers to protect their crops from food-eating insects. Working with other UNRRA pesticides advisors, Eckhoff helped transform an old aban doned Japanese soap factory near Shanghai into the national pesti cides plant. Products of this plant made from calcium arsenates, der ris powder and other materials native to China are being u.'d with UNRRA-imported pesticides to safeguard crops irr. key agri cultural centers thruout China. Varied Projects. In addition to his work at the pesticides plant, Eckhoff has traveled widely in China carrying out a series of projects to control locusts, rice and fruit pests and other crop-destroying -insects. Certain UNRRA activities, in cluding the displaced persons and medical programs sponsored and carried on by UNRRA in China have already been taken over by UN agencies, and plans to con tinue longterm rehabilitation projects under a trusteeship are now being considered. Past and Future. After completing his studies at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln in 1931, and Iowa State college at Ames, Eckhoff went to work in the bureau of entom ology and plant quarantine of the United States department of agri culturer He has also worked as a teacher of vocational agriculture at Central City high school and a construction work expediter at the Grand Island ordnance depot. As for future plans Eckhoff was fairly explicit. 'I am going some where to look for more bugs to kill." hp said in Shanghai before he left. NtM I V ' t I . J ' i PAUL MURFIN He will do research work in elec tronics, particularly with high frequency sound waves. Engineering Jobs Plentiful. Jobs for engineering graduates this year are plentiful, according to Murfin. There are several open ings for each graduate, pay is liberal and scales upward fast; Murfin served with the Army Engineers Corps from April '43 to Sept. '46. He entered the army as a private and came out a captain. He went into France in February of 45, after the Battle of the Bulge, and his company followed the troops into Germany in April. From France Murfin sailed to the Philippines in June. When the war ended abruptly after the two atom bombs dropped in August, Murfin was sent to College Life In llie Without Kicks for Students Ever wondered what sort of college life NU guys an' gals had way back when? Few realize that the gay whirl which constitutes the college social life of today has a different tone from that of many years ago when the university first began. Having little interests outside the classroom, the first students came for the sole purpose of get ting an education; studying occu pied all their time, believe it or not. In 1892, the university enroll ment was 381, including the prep school. The eight faculty members taught in only one building which was even loo large for the needs of the school. In fact, the third floor and attic were used as a men's dormitory. Living Costs. Living expenses at that time now seem ridiculously small. One boarding house housed 12 stu dents who received both room and board for about $4 a week. Some students cut this sum in half by boarding in groups and cooking their own meals. Some of the more extravagant men about campus paid $6 a week for living expenses. Social life of the average stu dent consisted mainly of Friday evening meetings of literary so cieties, an occasional play at the Centennial Opera House and church on Sunday. Sunday was the big day with some students attending two church services, two Sunday school services and YWCA or YMCA meetings. Most serious business at hand for most students was studying. Courses included math, history, the classics, and some science. Conversational topics centered around social problems of the day, tarriff, and morality. The only all-university activity which gain ed and held the student interest was the college publication, "The Hesperian Student." Aside from this, students seemed to apply their entire efforts to complete concentration on studies ... a bit different situation than exists now. Revolt. In 1884, revolt rose against the few fraternities on campus and a bitter battle ensued. Establishing of Greek letter organizations marked the beginning of a mod ern trend on the campus. Such items as organized baseball, col lege yells and th,e elective system of studies followed. Even though students' interests were confined mainly to studies, ther?, of courfe, had to be some (sort of dating zxrangemenLs, 10 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN A Thought Walking past a shop several days ago I glanced at the conven tional sign in the window: "X-mas cards personalized here." Later that evening as I wrote some holi day notes, I found myself thing ing about that word, X-mas. True, it requires less time and effort to make two perpendicular lines rather than writing out the worcT Christ, but surely our lives are not so crowded as to make us substitute an unknown factor for Christ. Christ has been a definite quan tity in the lives of men from the time he was born in a manger over 2,000 years ago. He has in fluenced men from the days of wise men and martyrs, who were burned for Him, to the present day when great sacrifices have been made in His sake. Christ has a definite and nearly tangiblevalue in our lives and it seems highly important to keep the Christ in Christmas. The students on our campus have taken their stand on the is sues of today in which their be liefs form their policies. P. M. has commended our discussion in re gard to racial discrimination in the Big Six. By taking the stand we have shown ourselves to truly mean "Peace on earth, good will to men"; men of all colors and all lands. We have taken a large step in the right direction and if our present attitudes and actions con tinue, more people will have an even merrier Christmas. Japan for occupation duty. He was stationed in Nagoya and Yoka hama, and did general construe tion work in Japan. He was mar ried in June '44, and the Murfins have a boy, 26 months old. supply this, each literary society presented, each week, a list of its ieminine members to the young men in the group. Each man signed his initials opposite the name of one coed, thus obliging himself to escort that young lady to the next meeting. No Scandal. Amazingly enough, old timers tell us, that there was no campus scandal to speak of at the Uni versity in this early age. Accord ing to Will O. Jones, "It was an enchanting and inspiring time, There wasn't a foot of pavement in two hundred miles and the automobile was not even a dream." Despite all the apparent and comparative calm of the campus in the 1890's, there were still those with an eye for mischief and fraudulent money -making schemes. One of these schemes concerns a drive for funds held by the college : per staff. Many students and faculty members were persuaded to attend an en tertainment program to be held in the chapel. Expecting a good pro gram, the audience bought tickets and filled the chapel. But all the program they ever received for their money was to listen to the strains of an orchestra playing "Many Are the Friends Who Are Waiting Tonight." Meanwhile, the ticket sellers had disappeared with the evening's profits. Ball Plan See BALL PLAN, Page 5 to consider more fully the pro posal for a Senior Week. Dodge Fails. The Senate then passed the mo tion, after an attempt to avoid consideration by laying it on the table was conclusively rejected. Ball's All-university week pro posal, which would co-ordinate the various departmental weeks, such as Farmer's Fair and Engi neer's Week, appeared to have the favor of the professors, and it seemed as if the special commit tee would report it out favorably. New Courses Approved. The Senate also approved the university calendar for the school year 1948-49, and adopted changes in curriculum involving the set ting up five new courses. New courses are Marriage and Home Relationships, Radio Journalism, Body Conditioning, a Phys. Ed. course, Industrial Electronics, and Television Engineering. Courses dropped from the curriculum were E. M. 246 and E. M. 249. t. Vru- ? ' 1 ' " y I VISITOR FROM THE NEAR EAST Kenneth Fang explains his interest in wind-developed power to The Daily Nebraskan's ag editor, Keith Frederckson. In the background is the test panel for the new type windcharger which is now under experimentation. Chinese Industrialist Studies Wind-Power Experiments at UN BY KEITH FREDRICKSON This is to introduce Kenneth Fang student, pioneer industria list but above all, a man who desires to aid his country in every possible way. Fang is 28 years old, a typical Chinese with a fervant interest in agricultural engineering espe cially in the ways that it can be utilized to aid Chinese farming methods and production. At present, he is studying in the agricultural engineering de partment at Nebraska University as a guest and an International Harvester fellowship and as a rep resentative of the Chinese De partment of Agriculture, his pre sent employer. Fang's main inter est at presnt is farm power, par ticularly in w-ind-powered sources. "We lack fuel for steam genera tion," Fang explained in an un easy English, "Our only hope is through the exploiting of wind and water power." Chinese TV A Long rane post-war plans in China had made provisions for a proto-type of the American Ten nessee Valley Authority, to be called the Yangtze Valley Author ity. This plan was the dream of an american engineer and would have provided a substantial por tion of central China with water power and a source for irrigation water. Civil fighting in China aft er World War II caused indefi nite postponement of such a ven ture, which would have required extensive financing on the part of the United States. Fang is still very hopeful for the future of wa ter power in China but at pre sent he believes wind to be the most feasible method. I came upon Fang as he was pouring over a catalogue of speci fications for various farm -appli ances, on which he is preparing a report concerning their practica bility in China. Motors of all kinds were his biggest interest. China needs power sources to run its big industries rice hulling, polishing and threshing; home millin gof flour; laundry; cotton ginning; vegetable slicing; and feed grinding. No Money, No Land The stocky Chinese scholar was director of the Central Agricul tural Implement Works in Che kiang before the war and, as such, pioneered the field of agricultural implements in China. Since that time the government has set up several factories 1n the interior of China. After the war, Fang or ganized the Nanking Farm Im plement Producers Corporation, of which he was president. "I had no money, no family or land," he shrugged, "All the money wras galhered from my friends." He is generous in his praise of American help in Chinese agricul ture, especially to International Harvester for their contribution of four engineering professors to Chinese colleges. Fang is hopeful of a settlement on the civil strife in his home country in the near future. He has confidence in the leadership of Chiang Kai Shek, and doubts the strength of the Communist Party in China. "Most of the fight ing no wis in Manchuria," he ex plains, "And that is merely be cause they are too close to Russia." He believes that if the Russian influence . were . removed, the PAGE 5 f "1 - Chinese would soon settle their differences. It is Fang's belief and he hast ened to clarify that it was only his personal idea that certain concessions made to the Russians by the late president Roosevelt in the Yalta conference are directly responsible for the unrest in Man churia today. "Of course, I realize that he also helped my country in many ways," he continued. Life and school in Lincoln have proved very satisfactory to Fang, and, though he has some difficulty in speaking English as yet, he has made many close friends. He is quick to praise the system of edu cation here because it enables more to attend school, but he be lieves that students get more out of their education in his country because they eat, sleep, and live together while attending school. . Grades All-Important Exceptional scholarship is ne cessary to attend government-supported schools in- China, as grades are the sole basis by which one may attend grammar schools, high schools and college. Already possessor of a bache lor's degree in agronomy from Na tional University in Chekiang, Fang hopes to receive a higher degree after his work here. He does not plan to remain at Ne braska more than two years and would like to attend other colleges in this country. Plan Now to Re turn from Vaca tion Early Enough to Enjoy titer" TURNPIKE SUN JAN. 4 O to 12 H I ' V - I '. I t "v I 1 1