FOUR. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 193 1. CAWPSJSOCBETl SOMETHING NEW in the wuyO of formula will take place this Kridav, when the Acacias give their ' Bowerv Ball at the Corn husker. Bids for the affair are original, being done in gaudy ink on originally shaped cards. The three hundred musts who have been invited are to be attired in j bowerv costumes, which will no i .loubt Vive coeds an opportunity to "go Mae West" in earnest. Leonard j r-f. anil ITronklin Meipr are in I charge of the plans, and chaperons are to be Mrs. W. A. Brown, pro- j fessor and Mrs. A. A. Luebs, and ; Professor and Mrs. Karl M. Arndt. TODAY AT Sudanis, honoring Mrs Clarisse Painter, the active chapter of Mil Phi Kpsilon will en-; tertain at a luncheon. Among the j guests will be the members of the , faculty of the school of music. AND NOW Lambda Chi Alpha j announces the pledging of Mark Richards of Oregon, Missouri. THE ENGAGEMENT of Helen! Moore of Omaha to Clayton Weig-1 and of Omaha has been announced, 1 altho no date has yet been set for j the wedding. Miss Moore was a Theta at Wisconsin and Mr. Weig-! and received his M.D. at the Ne- i btaska Medical college, where he j was a Phi Rho. ON THE 25TH of February j Harriet Bow en and Grand Island will be married to James Bost of i Omaha. Both are former students of the university, where she was an Alpha Phi and he was a Sig ' Alph. j AND THE KAPPA alums will j give a musical tea on March 13 at j the First Congregational church. I Wilbur Chenoweth and Mrs. Le-' nore Burhett VanKirk will both j be present. MOTHERS OF Alpha Chi! Omefra will meet Thursday at 2:30 at the house, when Mrs. J. W. Bishop and Mrs. B. K. Bushee wiU be hostesses. AT THE Lincoln Chamber of Commerce yesterday afternoon the members of the men's commercial club met for a 12 o'clock luncheon. Harold Barnes, secretary, was in charge of the arrangements. A WASHINGTON birthday din ner will be given Thursday at Conkling hall by the Faculty Woman's club of the college of medicine. Guests of honor will in elude Chancellor and Mrs. E. A. t Burnett Mr. ana Mrs. Earl Kline. 1 Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Gunderson and Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Seaton. MISS JAYNE FONDA of Omaha, who was a Delta Gamma here, will be married Thursdav aftrenoon to John SchoentE-en of ; Council Bluffs. Mr. and Mrs. lieved by those in charge that were Schoentgen will take a trip to the fraternities to have a part in plan south after which they will live in i ning these functions, they would Council Bluffs. ' soon eliminate that feature of the THE REGULAR meeting of the party system. Men's Commrecial club will be I held this afternoon at 2:30 in the club rooms. Included in the busi- j ness will be the adoption of a new j constitution, plans for a party on- tn iwenty-eir.tn ot mis montn. and arrangements for a spring : trip ' ' MRS. L. W. KORSMEYER was ' hostess to the Delta Gamma alum-1 nae at a meeting last Monday eve- i ning at her home at 7:30. ' Miss j i EASY STARTING GASOLINE HOLMS 14th A W B3998 Beware of Greeks Cheap inartistic gifts are one thing! But those of beauty, of fineness, of interest are another. 93 c of the women u; sororities have learned the lesson of good photography. For it is they who have experienced the thrill of seeing their picture done by Rinehart-Marsden. When you send a photograph that is true, you send a gift most appreciated. So place your order today for Mother's Day. It's but a short time off. And she will enjoy it more theii anything you can send! ORinehart - Marsden, If it isn't artistic, we take it over. Rinehart-Marsden Studio i .1 '"Offirial Cornhusker Pholofraphrrt" Capital Hotel DURING THIS WEEK AND THOSE following it Logins to look ns if the so rority mill fraternity freshmen will start to the 'school of hard knocks.'' The in stitution known as "hell week" has be gun at several houses and is scheduled to start at all the rest some time during the coining couple of weeks. It seems reason able to suppose that while this sort of activity is going on. week end functions won't be any too well attended, for it seems that these days are .just as hard on the actives as they are on the pledges. WHAT'S DOING Tuesday. Sigma Nu Mother's club, 'mu sical tea for mother of pledges and wives of alumni at the chapter house. Mu Phi Epsilon alumnae, 7 o'clock dinner at the University club for Mrs. Clarisse Painter. Mu Phi Epsilon actives, eve ning musical at the home of Miss Ruth Hovland for Mrs. Clarisse Painter. Tau Kappa Epsilon Mother's club, at the home of Mrs. Gene Vanderpool. Chaperon's club, 2:30 meeting at the Delta Zeta house. Wednesday. Sigma Alpha lota Mother's club, covered dish dinner for the active chapter at the home of Mrs. L. A. Getaz. Mu Phi Epsilon, luncheon for Mrs. Clarisse Painter at Suy dams. Thursday. Alpha Chi Omega mothers' club, at the house, 2:30. Friday. Phi Omega Pi Mother's club, 1 o'clock covered dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. Harry Reed. Lambda Chi Alpha auxiliary, 2:30 o'clock meeting at the home of Mrs. A. T. Lobdell. Chi Omega Mother's club, 8 o'clock benefit bridge at the chapter house. Theta Phi Alpha Mother's club, meeting at the chapter house. Sigma Phi Sigma, house party. Acacia Bowery Ball at the Cornhusker. Saturday. Delta Delta Delta Mother's club and alliance, bridge tea at the chapter house. Delta Gamma, formal at the Cornhusker hotel. Sunday. Miss Anne Bunting, open house for the Tassels, 5 until 7 o'clock at home. Pi Phi. 6 o'clock buffet sup per. ' Marie Wiesner, Mrs. Oliver Collins and Mrs. Ernest Hemminghaus were assistant hotesses. BARBS' PETITION ASKS CONTROL OF VARSITY PARTIES (Contim-ed from Page li. parties are conducted in the form of mixers. This enables students who do not feel they can afford to date to have an opportunity to dance at a minimum price. It is be- Some reasons why the t niver-: sity Senate bhould ol naury me Proposed All-University Party Committee Plan: 1. The present All-University system nas runcuonea wen ior jive , years. It ha3 paid for itself. No permanent debt has been incurred. And the University of Nebraska has at no previous time had such consistently outstanding parties, mufic and decorations, 2. The parties now provided under sponsorship of the Barb Council encouraged participation by students who are more or less timid and unacauainted. and who I ' do not have other adequate social opportunities. (This refers to the fact that more or less of a "mixer system" is preserved. Dates are not neces sary, either by rule or custom. Hundreds of students attend these Bearing Gifts . . . You need never fear of ft gift that comes from B2442 i parties to get acquainted with new people. I 3. Under the proposed plan, the probable tendency in a short time would be to eliminate the "mixer system," Fraternity students are frankly opposed to the mixer. All University Parties would tend to become purely "date" affairs-by force ot custom which is ironclad among fraternity and sorority par ties on this campus. This would de stroy one of the greatest values of the All-University parties. 4. The fraternity students, whose attendance the proposed plan would encourage, are not in need of further social opportunities. Thev are at present lax in their at tendance at all-University parties only because of the large majority of fraternity parties which keep them busy and dated up. (The original motive for the Baib Council undertaking the All University parties was to provide the kind ' of social opportunities needed by, and unavailable to, the students who are not in such a for tunate position. This objective is certainly more worthy than of simplv creating another colossal fraternity style party, i I 5. There is no need for frater- nity students to interfere in the management of the present parties j in order to be welcome at those ; parties and to enjoy them. All stu j dents are welcome at these parties, I and if fraternity students wish to attend in greater numbers, they 'may. (All fraternity and sorority j parties could be closed on nights 1 of All-University parties under the j present system if the fraternity ! students were really so anxious to ' attend these parties en masse. Why ! do not the Pan-Hellenic and inter- fraternity groups, or the Student j Council trv that? In other words, the fraternity groups are not after more general attendance at the parties thev are truly after Greek j control of the parties i . ; 6. A party committee with ! Greek participation will inevitably become emmeshed in factional ma- cninauons. :iemoersiiip win ur- come a political plum and the same difficulties will arise as are now so glaringly apparent in the Student Council itself! (And note that in spite of the generally ad mitted undesirable political situa tion in the council, it is the Stu dent Council itself which is now proposnir this plan for vour ratifi- 1 cation.). (Note also that the old . "Varsity Party Committee" ex ' tinct five years ago is a monu j ment to the undesirability of po I litical monkeying with the par ties.) 7. The Barb Council control of I the parties at present places them ; outside the range of campus po ' litical factional warfare. Factions ' have not yet arisen to play petty politics within the Barb ranks. 8. To the Barb Council goes the entire and unquestioned credit ! for the development of the fine I system of All-University parties I which we now enjoy. Management ! of these parties is a worthy Barb I tradition, of which we are proud. (It will be remembered perhaps that the Barb Council took over the parties after the old "Varsity Party Committee" was abolished because it had become a political instrument, and had failed miser ably had even sunk to graft and piled up a $2,000 debt.) 9. The Barb Council is itself an excellent agency through which a good number of non-fraternity students may be active in serving their university. It will not be de nied that in general Barb students tend elsewhere to be crowded out of places of leadership by virtue of political factional strife. The Barb Council therefore should be preserved, by all means, for the good of the whole student body. The Barb Council is the only non fraternity organization conceived and created by Barbs themselves. ! 10. The proposed plan would i nearly, if not entirely, kill the 1 Barb Council and thereby elimi- nate a worthy Barb institution.! pour positions would be open on It he proposed committee (for; 1 Barbs I whereas eighteen are open) now jj, ne Barb Council. ' 11. It remains that the only ap-! parent reason for creating the pro-1 pojd committee would be to give . the fraternities a 50 percent con- j j trol of the management of the parties, aii oiner enas can oe achieved under the present system. We believe that to make the change would be to sacrifice the very existence of the Barb Coun- ; r;i and to sacrifice certain fund a mental and worthy values in the parties themselves. What possible benefit could result whicn would be worth such a price? j REVOLVING STAGE WILL BE USED BY PLAYERS i IN PRESENTATION OF NEXT PLAY; FIRST ONE IN TEMPLE THEATER. (Continued from Page 1). very popular type which requires an enormous stage is the turn table. In the Fulton Theater, Oakland. California, a turntable is used with six different sets on it. and is turned by simply pushing an electric button. The king-pin type of revolving stage involves three stages, one which revolves from one side of the proscenium arch, another which revolves from the other side of the arch, and the third which comes down thru the enter. While revolvine- stages are quite an ex pense, they are easily taken apart and transported to other theaters, they have had great success in New York and Chicago, and ac cording to Mr. Sumption, they will be used a great deal more in the future. JUNIOR CHAMBER AWARDS SERVICE MEDAL TO SAUER (Continued from Page 1). Coaches Browne and Bible, and from Superintendent of Schools Letter. Coach Bible stated in his com munication: ''It seems to me that you have selected a young man who really merit the honor. He is one of the best all-around ath letes I have ever associated with. Lost and Found. GOLD Conklln pn Name Polly Mc- ELGIN wrist watch. Return to ai)y P.wnl. FOUND Mhn' mrmt wtih. Onnr .1. I l.. , J,, ..id rtBXMtir f"T thin ad. Inouir Bumf Man ager. ihiJv .Ner,rasKan. Four California Graduate Students In Zooloqu Get Novel Experience in Wading in Research in Colorado Kiom Daily Calliornlitn. Wading up to their waists in swamp water fringed with ice is all part of the day's work for four graduate zcology students who are making a field study in the Colo rado river basin below the Boulder dam site. This is the statement of Prot. E. H. Hall, curator of mammals of the university museum of verte brate zoology, who returned yes terday from a week's stay at the zoologists camp in the Nevada desert. Daily these investigators, wear ing shorts, wade out into the flood waters of the Colorado to inspect the traps which they have set on isolated knolls in an effort to de termine the klnus and number of George Sauer is not only held in high regard as an athlete, but as a student and a man. He is mod est, unassuming, and 1 would say one of the most popular boys on the university campus. He is clean and straight-forward, an un tiring worker, and loyal to those with whom he is associated." Coach Browne, coach at Lincoln high when Sauer competed there stated, "I feel that you have se lected the individual who justly For the Rest of the School Year m L Booth in Social Science 2 Ag Finance Office 3. "Rag" Office, JJ. Hall The Daily Nebraska!! birds and mammals, which fre quent the area. It is believed that the construc tion ot the Boulder dam will pre vent this annual flooding of the river and that a comparative study made of the area in five or ten years -will yield invaluable infor mation to the zoologists concern ing the rate which various animals invade newly opened territory. In connection with this thorough study, which will be completed next week, Prof. Hall and J. M. Lynsdale, research associate, are preparing papers on the mammal anu bird distribution of Nevada, respectively. "One of our purposes." explained Professor Hall, "was to determine whether any mammals of the trop ics could be found in Nevada. merits the high honor. I have been associated with George eight years. Hia university career was more brilliant than in high school, and wound up with being selected an All-American football star, and scoring all of the West's points in the East-West football game at San Francisco." F. D. Throop, chairman of the committee in charge of the selec tion declared, "The ' committee considered not only his athletic IS V OB record, but also his contribution to the young life of the city o'. Lin coln. Investigation shows that his record as a pupil in the public schools ia commendable tn every respect. At the University of Ne braska, the same record he made In the public schools was con tinued. His high school coach and his university coach are loud in their praises of hia manhood, his ability as an athlete, and his sportsmanlike character." Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sauer, George's parents, were present at the dinner, and others present were Chancellor R. A. Burnett, Coaches D. X. Bible, and Coach Henry Schulte. LORADO TAFT TO BE HERE FEB. 27 FOR CONVOCATION (Continued from Page 1). Some of his well known works are, "The Fountain of the Great Lakes" in Chicago; "The Washing ton Monument" in Seattle, "Foun tain of Time" on the Midway Plaisance, Chicago, and the sculp ture of the "Columbus Memorial Fountain" at Washington, D. C. Professional Lecturer. Among Mr. Taft's writings are "History of American Sculpture," considered a standard work on the subject; and "Modern Tendencies in Sculpture." The sculptor's con nection with the Art Institute ot Chicago extends over forty years. He is professional lecturer at the University of Chicago; non-resident professor of art. University of Illinois; member of the National On Mailed Aiaiiemy ol Design, o. the Amen can Academy of Arr ( Lelt' and honorary member ot th American Institute of Architect. Mr. Taft la not a atranger 1 Lincoln, having ..u. the bacc laureate address for univcriir seniors In 1931. made other appearances in the city. CHAIRMEN "TO REPORT ON AK-PAR-BEN SHOW (Continued from Page li the junior livestock show wili h. Charles Rochford, Ag junior Progress on the junior Ak-Sar Ben show, according to Shadbnit" has been very satisfactory thus far. He said Tuesday that divi sion chairmen have selected all the v.cnov-a iui mo Buuwinansnip com petition. What remains now; he said , for the individual students who Hr to exhibit animals in the show to train their animals and be ready to win the classes. Definite re ports will be made at the meetini Wednesday night, he said, of the number of students who have en tered the competition and the pro gress made on special features of the show. MIAMI. A student speakers bureau has Ohio, to supply local communities' tt'tth cnaalravo f v-, ... u In . Al ; 1 mm uuuj iui vanuus occasions. Would that we had a similar or ganization here; then some of our local windbags could air their fa. vorite subtects in more ropAr.fi... atmospheres. Campus LoT Elgin i rlat mat. h. George Leonard. J-6263. J7 A.