s( m)V. FEliRUAKY 12. lm THE DAILY MEBHASKAN T1IHI-E OFFICIAL BULLETIN. THREE CREEK CROUPS CUE FORMAL DAM ES lli'tas, Ih'lla Cam mas, Phi Del ts Arrange Week End Events, Betas Entertain. Beta Theta Ti announces a formal dance Friday, Feb. 17, at the Lindell hotel. Kddie Jungbluth a nl lii.s orchestra will furnish niusic for the affair. D. G.'s Give Dance. At the Cornhusker Friday eve ninL' Delta Gamma will be hostess to a tormai unuc College club orchestra will play. The chaperones have not been se lected. Phi Delts Plan Formal. Saturday evening at the Lincoln 1-lii Delta Theta will entertain at k formal dance. Howie Christian son's orchestra is in charge of the music. Group Plans Party. Sigma Kta Chi. Congregational girls sorority, is planning a party tor Friday, Feb. 17. Altine Hahn has charge of arrangements for the affair. Sorority Arranges Tea. From 3 to 5 Sunday afternoon Zeta Tau Alpha will entertain at a tea. Guests of honor are Mrs. Howard Gardner, grand president, and Mrs. J. C. Nouton, chairman of the national finance committee. House mothers and presidents are among those who will be present. Club Sponsors Dinner. Chi Phi Mothers club will give its fifth Sunday night dinner this evening. Alumni as well as active members of the fraternity and special guests have been invited to attend. Charm School. The charm school will meet at Ellen Smith hall, Tuesday, Febru ary 14. Special entertainment is being- planned and election of of ficers will be held. Cornhusker Staff. All members of the editorial staff of the Cornhusker are re quested to attend an impoitant meeting held Monday, Feb. 13th, at 4 p. m. in the office. Day with a formal banquet at the Hotel Cornhusker. The sorority colors, yellow and brown, were used in the appointments. Jonquils and narcissus were the flowers used. Miss Margaret Reynolds, nresident. presided. About four teen active and alumnae members were present. Plan Fireside Dinner. A fireside dinner is beinjr planned by the poster and publicity staff of the Y. W. C. A. for Tuesday, Feb. 14. Jane Bobs is in charge of the arrangements. Honorary Gives Tea. Iota Sigma Pi, women's chemis try honorary sorority, gave a tea Thursday, Feb. 9 in honor of grad uates and the professors of chem istry and their wives. The tea was held in Chemistry hall. MEMBERS OF NEW V. W. C. A. CABINET TO BE INSTALLED V. jr. C. A. SPOSSORS TRAIMXC SESSIOMS Xeiv Cabinet Receives Its Instruction in Campus Work. The Y. W. C. A. cabinet training conference was completed Satur day noon. Sessions were held Fri- d y from 4 to 9 o'clock and Satur day from 9 to 12 o'clock. The main theme of the conference was "The Purpose of the Y. W. C. A. on the campus and what can we accom plish here?" The discussions were led by Jean Alden, president, Gertrude Clarke and Evelyn Haas. A banquet was held Friday evening at the down town Y. W. Evelyn o uonnor ana Breta Peterson were the speakers. New cabinet members of the Y. W. C. A. will be formally installed Wednesday, Feb. 15, at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith Hall. The installation will be followed by a dinner in Ellen Smith Hall. Home Ec Laundry Laboratory Will Lighten Washday for Housewife Celebrate Founders Day. Thursday evening, Feb. 9, Gam ma Alpha Chi, women's advertis ing honorary, celebrated Founders Members of the new Y. W. C. A. cabinet will be installed Wednes day. Feb. 15, at 5 o'clock in Ellen Smith hall. After the installation, dinner will be given for the old and new cabinets and members of the advisory board. Evelyn O'Connor is in charge of the arrangements. Wellesley girls have decided not to speak to one another when meeting on the campus. They say that greeting the same persons several times a day is tiring. Graduation at Hamline univer sity is dependent upon compre hensive examination, rather than on credits. finiTs sir?" u always dancing ' n,ve"ity students Howie Chmtcnsen and Hi, Band ' Playing Tonight rr lerson trancing Free n u vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv THE PUBLIC DfcMANU 1 1 ! An Additional Showing of "PORGY" MONDAY NITE, 7:30 P. M. If. been crit.cised-BUT If. been liked. The packed houses all last week testify as to it. popularity. A really unusual production. HJaBDYCirsnly EPlayeirs Good Ticket, for Monday Nite Performance Available in Temple Theatre Box Office. 40c Admission This i. the last time you will be able to witness '-Porgy." AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Cecil If. DeMille'M THE STQJAIRT )eMille's rHE CROSS" with Fredric March, Elissa Landi, Claudette Colbert OF THE LDNCdPILN HARDING LESLIE HOWARD MYRNA LOY in "The Animal Kingdom" " llll IRIPIHJIEQJM 15-25 DOUG. FAIRBANKS, Jr. BETTE DAVIS "The Parachute Jumper" UNIVERSITY ALUMNI PLAN CELEBRATION FOR CHARTER DAY (Continued from Page 1.) consist of an hour broadcast over radio station KFAB. Wednesday, from 10 until 11 a. m. The broad cast will contain a series of six dramatized incidents, all pertain ing to the history of the univer sity. Ray E. Ramsay, alumni sec retary, and Oscar Norling, editor of the Nebraska Alumnus, have been working on the acts. The laying of the cornerstone, and the dedication of University hall, on Sept. 23. 1869, will be the subject of one of the skits. An other scene will depict the stage show wh'ch was given by the man agers of the Hespetian, the stu hi nnhlication. in 188S. One bit of the drama will center about the life of Ellen Smith, who was regis trar of the university from 1877 until 1902. To Portray War Scenes. Nebraska's part in the Spanish American war will be the subject of another act. The first geological expedition, headed by Dr. K. H. Barbour, and the founding of th first Nebraska museum will be nipturpd in another of the skits. t , . X1 . . A broadcast ot me last braska-Notre Dame football game, in 1925, when the Cornhuskeis de feated the "Fighting Irish" 17 to 0, will he the subicct matter of the other dramatic presentation. The University Glee ciud, anu r n T. C. band will also present several numbers to supplement the broadcast. Tho sneakers who will make the contacts with the alumni in Ne braska are: Dr. Harold W. Stoke, Alliance, Feb. 18. Dean T. J. Thompson, Scotts bluff, Feb. 15. Dean H. H. Foster, Harvard, Feb. 15. Herbert Yenne, Broken Bow, Feb. 15. Chancellor E. A. Burnett, Au rora, Feb. 15. Dean Burr, Nebraska City. Feb. 15. Ray E. Ramsay, Orleans, Feb. 16. Dr. J. E. LeRossignol, Holdrege, Feb. 15. Dr. George E. Condra, Geneva, Feb. 15. Karl M. Arndt, Tierce, Feb. 15. R P. Crawford, McCook, Feb. 14 R. P. Crawford, North Platte. Feb. 15. F. V. Peterson. Tecumseh, Feb. 15. Senning To Go to Iowa. Dr. John P. Senning, chairman of the department of political sci ence will go to Sioux City, la., for 'the Charter Day festivities there Wednesday evening. Most of the other out of state meetings will include the showing of special films from the university, includ ing such "shots" as football games, the Ivy Day program, cam pus scenes, and views of other uni versity activities. Dr Walter Judd. a Nebraska graduate of thiiteen years ago. will be present at the meeting which will be held on the Univer sity of Minnesota campus at Min neapolis, Feb. IS. Films will be included on the program when the alumni of the following cities honor the day: Colorado Springs and Denver, Colo.; New Haven. Conn.; St. Louis. Mo.; New York City, N. Y.; Pittsburgh, Pa., and Seattle Wash. Emory Buckner. president of the New York chapter, is m charge of the reunion which will be held there Feb. 18, Los An geles, Calif.; Minneapolis, Minn.; Portland, Ore.: Milwaukee, Wis., and Sheridan. Wyo.. will not have films at their gatherings. All of the reunions will be held Wednes day, except the Portland meeting which will be held Friday. Feb. 17. . ,, vi vnrk and Minneapo- lis gatherings, dated for Saturday I, Just-married husbands are to be spared the disillusionment of com ing home on wash day to find their "very own" with her face steamed a beet-red, hair of shredded-wheat character, and so dog tired that her mood shows distinct signs of savage blood coursing through her veins, if the laboratory laundry that has been established at tne University of Nebraska by McCalls Magazine has anything to do with it. Here experts are stalking the hovrpv that has loner stalked home- makers everywhere the washing problem. This magazine nas maae extensive research into tne proD lem and have questioned hundreds of housewives in all parts of the country. As a result the Univer sity of Nebraska Home Economics department was chosen in which to conduct its surveys. The real reason for such a pro ject is to teach the housewife the easiest, most economical, and shortest way to a pleasant Mon day. The reports of the survey re vealed a great many different and conflicting opinions on how to overcome the varied problems. "So." in the words of the article, "that's how we came to set up our laboratory laundry at the Univer sity of Nebraska . . . How we came to be responsible for that singu lar phenomena; a clotncsiine on the campiH. "Though, to tell the truth, a clothesline on the campus at the University of Nebraska is not quite the paradox it would be at some universities. The descendants of the hardy plainsmen who turned trackless wastes of waving prairie grass into tidy acres of corn and wheat, who replaced thundering herds of buffalo with mild eyed cows, supporting hundreds of pros perous farm hornet, regard any thing that :uMm to human well-being as eminently suitable for uni versity curricula." The McCalls magazine is high in its praise of the Home Econom ic Srhnnl in tht University of Ne braska. It declares t everything a modern, scientific school of home economics should be. ' But that is not the only reason McCall's chose it," the article goes on to say, "it was the warm humanity of the staff the quick, responsive inter est in everyday problems of living, the glowing enthusiasm for finding ways out.'" "Jt may have been the baby that clinched the matter that school-of-home-economics baby, adopted for a year, to bo hroucht un according to the stand ards for child training that the University fails lo establish for Nebraska mothers." Every department of the Univer sity which can contribute help and advice has volunteered its services. With professors of chemistry, phy sics, houseplanning and equipment to check each step of the work, the course promises to provide much benefit for those who em bark on it. Lauding Nebraska itleals and character to the skies they declare that solid common sense coupled with a fine idealism that was dis cerned in the Nebraska character aptly symbolized by the new state capitol was considered ideal for the venture. Lincoln itself located in almost the exact geographical center of the country, anu sur rounded with towns big, little and middle-sized as well as flourish ing farms was perfect for the ex periment. "Here if anywhere, that 'standard practice' of laundry work can be evolved," the article declares. evening, Feb. 18. The Des Moines, la., alumni held their Charter Day meeting last Friday. L tll RECE THiliET PREFERS COSCERT SPACE HE STATES Famous Artist Imparts Reasons' for His Preference. Seven weeks from Monday Law rence Tibbett, famous concert-opera-movie star, will be in Lin coln and will present one of his concerts at the university coli seum. The date is April 3. Tibbett was asked not long ago which of the three, concert, opera or movie, he preferred, and which he found most gratifying. His in stant answer was, "The concert stage affords me the most." And here is why in Tibbett's nwn words : "In motion pictures I never can know whether the public likes what I am doing or not. I can not hear or see their approval on the screen. My figure on the screen talks, sings and moves about, but I cannot hear th least applause nor even notice the slightest disappointment. "On the operatic stage, of course, I know pretty well what is what in an audience; but in opera there are others on the stage and you are just one of the ensemble, and the conductor in the pit wields a terrible stick. "But on the concert stage I can do my own individual interpreta tion in my own particular way, and I quickly learn whether my audi ence approves or not. "Then, too, there is an intimacy between audience and singer which is more thoroly established on the concert stage than in the opera. So, taking it all in all, the concei t stage is the most exacting, but also the most gratifying for an artist. And I like it best." There is another point which which Mr. Tibbett. being modest, did not add. As a great singing- actor he can bring to his command without aid of scenery, costumes or any other trappings, a pit m. that he conjures up with voice, heart and soul. Tibbett lives his songs, each is a part of his life. A 35 c 5 COURSE DINNER Kniit Cocktail Consomme Soup Choice of American Chop Suoy Younr Rotust Capon T-Bone tSeak Two I ..an in Chops Two Pork Chops Pork Tenderloin Combination Salad Asparagus Tips Shoe .Siring or Mushed Potatoes Tea, Coffee. Milk )essert Choice of Pies or lee Cream IBY!DIEN'S Pharmacy H. A. REED. Mgr. Phone B7037 13 &. P no 30 A Udlentine Extraordinary - A Candy from Mrs. Stouers Candy the logical answer to the ques tion of what to send for Valentine's Day! Mrs. Stover's new bungalow is unique in the assortment of choclates which it presents for Valentine satisfaction. Delicious choclates does not necessarily imply expensive choclates, either. Mrs. Stouers ft 108 S. 13th St.