iiiiiniU,ll,1V'f1.f',ti"yJ' TWO THE DAILY NEBRASKAN EDITORIAL STAFF Editor Oeoroe Plpai Managlnfl Editors Don Wagner, Ed Murray Naws Editor Wlllard Bumey. Helen Paacoa, Jan Walcott. Howard Kaplan. Morris Llpn. Barbara Rosewater. Bporta Editor Ed Steeve Society Editor Virginia Anderaon ON THIS ISSUE Desk Editor . Wagner Night Editor Burney Under direction of the Student Publication Board. Editorial Off ice University Hnll 4. Business Office University Hall 4A. Telephone Day I B689U Nlghti B6862. B3333 (Journal). Flooded CbUe6ia!e Pnn Distributors M CbHe6iofeDi6esl About All We Can Do Is Try Another Hatch God, give us leaders. It's an annual prayer, and never so timely as the day when Nebraska's activities boys and girls graduate into the ranks of the senior honoraries. ' More significant to the campus should be the spring elections next week, when students are given their one opportunity to demand certain things from self-governing agencies. Our prayer would not be doleful if those in high office had fulfilled their responsibilities dur ing the past year. The need would not be keenly felt had students in elective positions principally the Student Council increased the value of extra curricular life for the average student. The record of this supreme governing body has little to commend it. Members mulled over fac tional politics, meddled with other organizations, and appropriated new powers for their own use all with little or no constructive accomplish ment. Their opportunities for fruitful labor were Ignored. The student bookstore, supposedly a stu dent enterprise in part, was allowed to fall into administration hands, and its professed "savings" to student buyers have become a farce. Only one student forum that one successful enough to war rant many more was held. When an enterprising group of juniors presented a class organization program, they were delayed and ridiculed by need less committee bickering. Their greatest accom plishment in launching the new student union gov ernment was the selection of political appointees to the union board; but one of their membership fiakboAiAntA. Do or Don't They Give a Damn? By John and Joan Barb. It can't be true, it seems almost beyond the realm of possibility for such a thing to come about but it has, for a fact it has. In the short space of only three days no less than two students pulses on the barb situation have found their way to the editor. "The barbs don't give a damn," says Adrienne Grif fith, "The barbs do give a damn," says Kenneth Mill. Neither offers a practical remedy to pacify or satisfy the "hair tearing barb polit ical leaders" but the mere fact of their writing indicates that there are hidden about the campus a few barbs who do care enough to stand up on their hind legs and shout what they think. Two out of 4,158 barbs is hardly enough percentage to give the "lie" to the oft-voiced claim of barb insensibility to campus affairs, but it is a step in the right direction. Pulse con tributors Griffith and Hill were at least conscious of the fact that there were barb and Greek students on the campus and that the unaffiliates were trying to accomplish things in a political and social way. John and Joan Tell All: For over two months Joan and John Barb have been columnizing for the barb cause, trying to let you know what is going on .trying to bring aobut a modicum of barb solidarity. Thus far we have with held our own opinion as to what is really wrong in the b&rb camp. Today we let down all restraint and tell you. If you agree with us say so; if you don't, say so; but for gosh sakes say so: The reason barbs don't care is not because they won't, but be cause they can't. And our reason for saying so is based upon a lit tle private delving into barb polit ical history, and a great deal of personal back of the scenes ob servation of barb-Greek political "deals." In the past elections barbs have been sold down the river. We wait only until the publica tion of the lift of student coun cil candidates to pass out judg ment in this. In brief: The whole history of the barb group, but especially of the Interclub coun cil, indicates that yearly one or two politically ambitious barbs obtain control of certain united barb groups. The next year they go fawn upon fraternity faction bosses; pledge the whole barb vote if the faction will promise to nominate even only them one or two men mind you ; and let the rest of the barbs go hang. Why should they care about the rest of the barbs? They are nominated and that's that. Last year the barbs chummed with the progressives, got one man nominated for the student council, one for the pub lications board elected only the pub board candidate. In next Tuesday's election the Barbs are teamed with the Liberal party. In joining this faction, the Barb Inter-club leaders were prom ised 50 percent representation. Un der such an arrangement the Barbs should be given six. certainly no less than five candidates on the Student Council ticket. Have they received them? If not, we promise TlllltTY-SIXTH YKAR Business Manager, Assistant Mjnager. Circulation Manager $1.50 a year $2.50 mailed Entered as second-class matter at the postofflce In Lincoln, Nebraska, under ar.t of congress, March 3, 1879, and at special rale of postaue provided for In section 1103. act of October 3. 1917, authorized January 20. 1922. Published every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. Friday and Sunday mornings ot the academic year by students of the Uni versity of Nebraska, under the supervision of the Board of Pub lications. you, there are, assuredly, two somethings rotten in Denmark! Reform, Activities, say Joan and John Barb, of the Barb A. W. S. board and the Barb Inter-club council should be correlated, and the two groups made responsible to the common Barb Council. The Council itself should be given a new constitution, and a new set of duties. Merely spon soring the Varsity parties in in sufficient reason for its exis tence. If some progressive action is not instituted it is time for Dean Thompson, Dean Heppner, and the Student Council judic iary committee to take a hand. If the Barb Council cannot per form a truly valuable function for the campus unaffiliates, it might just as well be scrapped the sooner the quicker. Wa believe that the council can have a valuable function: but its rests upon you, Barbs, whether such new and more powerful funs tions are given it. To Barbs, the election of Barb Council nominees Tuesday is more important than the Student Coun cil election. ANY Barb may vote for Barb Council members, and by the choice of his candidates, can effect the desired changes in the organization. Mrs. Martin Johnson Views, Admires Nebraska Museum (Continued from Page 1.1 men, attached to the personnel of Morrill hall. Mrs. Johnson, smart I in 20th centurv street dress of black shirred chiffon, black ac cessories, and silver fox, was wheeled about between the glass cases of animals almost as old as time itself. She expressed much admiration for two enormous tusks suspended from the ceiling of elephant hall and explained how she had seen great tuskers in Africa so wearied by the weight of their own ivory that they would rest their tusks on banks, on limbs of trees, and even on the backs of other ele phants. The ancestral beaver in the Mor ril paleontological collection, tho very small, came in for more in terest on Mrs. Johnson's part than any other animal but the giant mammoth. Chashed by Rhinocereroses. The camels on the other hand seemed to come as a distinct sur prise, .ince Mrs. Johnson's train ing and knowledge as a naturalist had led her to believe that the Nebraska soil was too inhospitable for camels. A woman who has been chased up trees by rhinocer oses, however is not phased by so ordinary a matter as a camel. From two to three o'clock Wed nesday afternoon she toured the halls, regally, like a queen, with her retinue following, ready with explanations of the fossils they passed. As one of the staff mem bers remarked later, however. Mrs. Johnson gave them more infor mation than they gave her. talking cf her experiences with flesh and bone beasts like the stuffed ones i , i Tour Exhausts Her. At three o'clock an urgent en gagement cut her visit of inspection short, and she was carried back to her car exhausted by her day's actlvit.es. since this was the first day she had been allowed to walk at all since the plane accident that took her husband's life. Half an hour later, following a speedy change, she was in soft and clinging white, with a corsage of flowers, turnin;' that dark-eyed childish look of h us eagerly into the face ot the urpheum theater- BUSINESS STAFF Bob Shellenberg .Bob Wadhams, Web Mill, Frank Johnson. Stanley Michael sLIJSCIUITION RATE Single copy, 6 cent 11.00 a semester 11.60 semester mailed 10 rOH NATIONAL AOVSBTiaiNS Y National Advertising Service, Inc Colltfr Fubtiskm Reprntntativt 420 Madison Ave. new York. N.Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON SAN rnANCISCO Lea Anssls Portland sattli can take credit for work on the union consti tution. The student leaders, more than ever before, must realize that their election or appointment is the beginning of, and not the prize for their labors. A wider field of opportunities is open to the new class, and the rest of the campus, with more at stake than in any previous year, should demand that they meet the challenge. Student responsibilities on the union building governing board will eclipse those of any single organization now on the campus. The bookstore must become something more than a profitable administrational sideline. Student forums should become the center of campus controversial Interest. Other opportunities, some ancient and some untouched, are still open to well-directed work. A series of great artists and noted speakers con vocations would be a valuable addition to this university community. Possibilities in special fields, such as the organization of unaffiliated students, arc endless. Housing conditions for those living off fraternity row could stand a thorough clean ing. The university building program, with the ad dition of a men's dormitory, still demands student efforts. If Nebraska's spring election could become contests over issues instead of popularity of in dividual candidates, half of these problems of stu dent government would be solved. But no little gods ever had clay feet half as lifeless as the faction platforms worshiped for the limited period of two campaign days. We can only pray that some of the new In rocents, Mortar Boards, and student council mem bers will take their positions seriously, and con sider their new offices more than a reward for smoking campaign cigars with the right people. audience as she had turned it thru the blank and shining sides of the glass cases to the bones and fossils of Morrill Hall. FIVE NEBRASKANS TO SPEAK BEFORE SCIENCE ACADEMY (Continued from Page 1.1 ings. This sectional meetings is expected to be of special interest to Nebraskans since it will feature a chronological presentation of cli mate and conservation in the mid dle west including a discussion of prehistoric drouths in the central great plains region, rainfall sta tistics since 1800, a discussion of variability rainfall maps for the same region, and addresses on con servation, land use readjustment, the shelter belt and wild life. Melchers to Describe Nile Life. A description of "Life and Scenes Along the Nile" by Dr. L. E. Melchers, chairman of the de partment of botany and pathology at Kansas State, will highlight the 8 o'clock assembly Friday eve ning. Dr. Melchers organized the department of mycology for the Egyptian government from 1927 to 1929, making a study of the plant diseases of the Nile valley. The annual society banquet to be held Friday evening at 6 will fea ture an address on "Factors in the Destiny of Man" by D. C. J. Shirk, professor of biology at Ne braska Wesleyan univernity. More than 200 delegates from the various institutions of the state are expected to atcend the meeting, and over 130 papers will be read at the 12 different sec tional meetings. Most of the latter will deal with late scientific de velopments in all fields with many directly applicable to Nebraska, according to Dr. Weaver. He in vites everyone interested to attend both the general and the sectional meetings. Sectional meetings will begin promptly at 9 o'clock both Friday and Saturday mornings, and again at 2 o'clock on Friday afternoon. ANNUAL BIZAD PICNIC PLANS REACH FINISH (Continued from Page 1.) game, highlight of the afternoon, will be revealed at three o'clock Friday. Professor C. O. Swayzee, speaking in behalf of the faculty, said that they would be able to boast of a first class team. He predicted that the faculty would win by the lop-sided score of 24 to 2. "A close race" was all that John Howell would predict regard ing the game. Eddie George, Les Pankonin and other bizad students bore him out in this, but hoped to give the faculty the short end of a stiff fight. Dancing will start at Antelope park about three o'clock, accord ing to the entertainment commit tee of Bob Avery, Ed Markytan and Quince Scott. Kay Risser, Helen Rosken and Marian Butler are in charge of the picnic lunch which starts at noon. I.lnyrl Ellis and Jim Grey are in charge of transportation. "Seeing Color Around You" was the subject of an address by Prof. Dwlght Kirsch, chairman of the fine arts department, at Smith Center and Atwood, Kas. Thurs day and Friday. Mr. Kirsch illus trated his address with natural color photographs. The lectures were sponsored by the Kansas State college agricultural exten sion division as a feature of their better homes program for rural THE DAILY NEBRASKAN . i I tituHuin ! mi Jfct i (phSAA 7J ' "'U175INI EXPOSURE of wholesale regis tration frauds in St. Louis as a "disinterested and meritorious public service" won for tho St. Inula Pniit.riiMnntnh the Pulitzer award for excellence in Aniericnn journalism. The highly publicized novel by Margaret Mitchell, "Gone With The Wind" won for her an other Pulitzer prize, which, ac cording to readers of this stirring tale of Civil war days, was in evitable in meriting the award. The poetry award was won by Robert Frost for his "A Fureher Range"; biography, Allan Nevins, "Hamilton Fish"; history, Van Wycks Brooks, "Flowering of New England"; and comedy, Moos Hart and George S. Kaufman, "You Can't Take It With You." "TWO-BITS" will be added to the weekly pay check of every Italian father whose home is "blessed" with a child. For two children the ante will be raised to 63 cents. Three children means 94 cents and four babes makes the father eligible for a $1.50 Increase. When a brood of ten Is acquired, $3.75 extra goes his way. This is how Premier Mussolini plans to check the de cline In the Italian birthrate as part of his scheme to raise more children for the future of Italy. Viva la duce! iNir.RPASE of two iustices in the supreme court's membership was proposed by Senator McCar- ran of Nevada, one or me uemu cratic opponents of President nnnapvolts roll rt reform, as a sub stitute for the administration's original plan. The Nevadan s pro nnsii ira a rienAi't ure from prece dent as heretofore suggestions have come in the form of amend ments to the bill. It seems that plans come and go, compromises onH Hiihsritntes. but President Roosevelt is sticking to his guns in demanding tne juuiciary ic-iuim as he wants it. COUNCIL PLACES VETO ON CLOSED NIGHT PRIVILEGE (Continued from Page 1.) election of Ivy Day orator was also revised. The revised method pro vides that any senior in any col lege is eligible to file but that only junior and senior men may vote for the orator. In the recent Ivy day orator election, the whole cam pus voted. Officers Elected May 12. Selection of a new sophomore barb woman to replace Virginia Nolte, declared ineligible under the A. W. S. point system, was de ferred until the next student coun cil meeting. Officers for next year's council will also be elected at the next meeting to be attended by present members and those who will be elected to the council in the Tues day, May 11, election. Student members of the publication board will also be elected in Tuesday's poll. ONLOOKERS CATCH FIRST GLIMPSE OF MAY QUEEN AT 11 (Continued from Page 1.) semi-circle beneath the blue-pil-lard stage. Presidents Plant Ivy. Then with attendants, pages, crown bearer, flower girls, and train bearers, the queen will as cend the throne. After being crowned, she will preside while the Ivy Day poem is read and the Ivy is planted by Bob Wadhams and Floyd Baker, presidents of the jun ior and senior classes. Winner of the Ivy day poetry contest will not be revealed until the time for the reading appears. The poem has been selected by incites from the university Eng lish department. Author of the traditional verse will reau me poem. Oration, Sing On Program. Preceeding the crowning of the queen this morning, will he the Tntnrfrntprnitv sine' and the Ivy Day oration by Frank Landis from the queen s dias. 'ine oraiion win he presented at 10:15. Landis was rhn.wn hv An all camnus vote for the distinctive honor of presenting tne oration. Interest and predictions for the the Mav Oueen. Maid of Honor, attendants, pages, and chain leaders, nas Deen running high over the campus for the past The erection of the traditional dais and grandstands in the triangle between the Ad ministration building and old Nebraska hall has only intensified the interest. Girls who will "appear in the Daisy chain processional proceed ing the May Queer's appearance will be: Raymond Hall: Esther Mae Brrwer, Louise Marshall and (Vnevieve Atsnew. Alpha Omlcron PI: Ellen under, Elltalwtb Smith snd Wllma Pulllam. Alpha Phi: Jean Morgan, t-va Jane Sinclair and Charlena Omen. Alpha XI- Delta: Jane Pennington. Evelyn Tavlor and Lois Call an. Chi Omega: Jean Childs, Paulina Bowen an1 Jean Krlal. Delta Delta Delta: Maxlne lKe, Dorothy McClelland and Mildred Holland. Delta Gamma: Nan Talbot, Virginia Lea and Louisa Magee. litmma rni t.t. Kiu rC Maurlne Tecker and Dorothy Koser. Kappa Delta: Dorothy Ewoboda, Maxlne Federle and Mary Prlscllla Stewart. Kappa Kappa Gamma: Elisabeth Waugh, Harriet Cummer and Ruth Newell. PI Phi: Margaret Dlckerson. Rita Alter and Lucratia Oreen. Phi Mu: Lorraine Elmburg, Jean Fry and Kay Rlter. Sigma Kappa: Maxlne Whliler, Wllma Jones and Annabel Lee. Howard and Wllnon halls: Irma Plttman, Camilla Conger and Mary Butler. Rosa Bouton hall: Merna Traulman and Ruth Green. Barb A. W. 8.: Faith Medler, Beatrice Ekhlad and Klltaheth Kdlnon. siama Delta. Tau: Hunt Hill, Martelle Elman nnd Harriet Byron. Kappa Alpha Theta: Suanne Chuck, Margaret McKay and Joan Spangler. m I- Y COMPLETES PLANS . FOR MAY BREAKFAST Winifred Nelson to Act As Toastmistress at Mothers Day Event. Program plana have been com pleted for the closing event on the Y. W. C. A. activity, the annual May morning breakfast Sunday morning at 8:15 in Ellen Smith hall, honoring the mothers of members of tho organization. Performing the duties of toast mistress will be Winifred Nelson, Y. W. president, who will intro- rliiPB Frnnren Marshall, official welcomer, and her mother, Mrs. C. G. Marshall who will give the response. Jane Keefer, past presi dent of the organization will eive a review of all the year's activities alter Miss Neison nas lniroaucen members of advisory board, city camnus cabinet, ag cabinet, and Freshman cabinet. MiiHln for tho mornlne' will be furnished by the Vesper Choir, directed bv Maxlne Federle and by the Teachers college high string quartet, both of which will present two numbers. Freshman cabinet members on the program committee are Ester Mae Brewer, Mary Ellen Osborne, and Frances Piatt. General chair man of the breakfast is Maxlne Grant, assisted by Jane Keefer, senior advisor of the group. Visitors May View Marvels Of Modern Science Tonignt (Continued from Page 1.) ctvinoa Pnvopvpr" was soundinfr out, first normally, then with only piccolos and the like, and finally merely witn a Dasso rumoie, ui r.e vrhifVi la fiiiehtlv disconcerting to a proper appreciation of the selections neauiy, 01 course, um highly amusing. Another electrical engineering exhibit to pique the visitor's cur inoitir la ntio laheled "perpetual motion?" Here a small wheel of a metal called permalloy, which is ....... rrtonnoHrt nlnulv revolves In continuous motion without seeming reason. Part of tne secrei tuic a 'a aron't nuite sure whether thy want to tell all) lies in arti ficially induced temperature v,or,o:oo ivhlrri lower the nermea- bilty of the metal in the wheel so that the force of a smau magnta is grenter in one direction n" pulls the wheel around. The wonders of liquid air will i l,. in a riisnlav set UD bV UC BIIU ' ' I - mechanical engineers in the me chanical engineering rwr -moo w Hanev. chairman of the department, will conduct the demonstration ana give uu nonvinir lpcture. He will show such experiments as freezing mer- . - il. 11 !J ihni cury so naru in we nquiu on uu it may be used as a hammer. Chemical engineers will exhibit industrial displays in Avery lab nrntnrv and show the latest meth ods now used in the refining of oil. Lectures will also De given eveijr 30 minutes in the auditorium. Architectural engineers nave set ,ir rlionlnva )n the camnus studio. chnu-ino- rirawine' nlans and models of modern building and landscap- . . i i it ing. in mecnamcai arts nan, uvu engineers will show their survey ing equipment and conduct a water purification demonstration. In the cnnio bniwiintr the nDnlied mechan ics department will conduct tests snowing tne strengtn oi various matoriala and riisnlav outstanding working drawings done by Stu dents. Alan in mechanical arts hall, the agricultural engineers will demon strate the enects ot erosion ana show recent developments in rural electrification by means of models. For the first time military engi neers will exhibit the latest in army engineering equipment in Nebraska hall in a display showing the engineering side of war. Demonstrations of how poisons are detected, on the preparation of cosmetics and medicinal drugs, and on the analysis of foods" and drugs are just a iew oi ine iascmuuiiK attractions nroniised visitors to Pharmacy hall by pharmacy stu dents. Spectators will be invited to lane pari in color vision tests, blood pressure demonstrations, hearing demonstrations, and the like, a never failing method of at traction. Geologists will exhibit in Morrill hall where space will be given over to experiments in the handling and analyzing of ores, sediments, and fossils. Displays of minerals and a fnii i-i f tVii. mnoAiim , i ri 1 1 o Inn lu a l vj k. i j i . 1 1 v iiii.. v. nil, nil, atoJ in. offered for the visitors' amusement ana (no getting away irom n) education. P0NTIAC TO SELECT VARSITY SHOW CAST FOR FRIDAY PROGRAM (Continued from Page 1.) appear for tonight's rehearsal: Winners of the Interfraternity and Intersorority sings. Don Boehm and the master singers. Violin solo by Thomas Mc Manus. The Shildneck trumpet trio. Bonaphone solo by Warren Templeton. Ocarino trio. John Held, jr., master of cere monies for the Pontiac Varsity Show, is assisting Mr. Whyte in arranging the broadcast program which goes on the red network of the N. B. C. at 8:30 p. m. Coli seum doors will be opened at 7:30 and closed at 8:15. Free tick ets of admission, which must be presented at the door, may be secured in ag hall, Daily Nebras kan office, alumni office, school of music office and student ac tivities office. Harold E. Wise, supervisor of sciences In teachers cortege, is au- Science Teaching" which appears In the May issue of The School Ex ecutive. Heitkotten YE Market QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES Makers of Fine Sausages and Barbecued Meats B 3348 H0 So. 11th , r . 1 , ' :,;, yt, ' ! ; t .A W1 i i 7 A &waMaA-x ' f i 1 We were dashing nindly about the state house and later around a local hotel in an attempt to com plete Interviews with some 3. j Ne braska unlcumeralites bolore they leave Lincoln. ' ' f"i it w;is duiin;; this late rusii, which is in no ' i way aided by .SfWJ th'e intensity a ml sneed with ft which tlm leg islators are now working- that we met Senator Hugo Ashniore of Palisade. During the term we have picked the sen ators for inter views at ran--Lincoln jmirnaldom; no legis lative accomplishments or favors have blotted our choice. Altho Senator Ashmorc has had no previous legislative experience, he feels that he has learned more during this session of unicameral proceedings than lie could have hoped to learn under any old sys tem. That the legislature will only be what type of men the public chooses to represent them, has been the senator's firm belief since the beginning of the session last January. "Probably tho most efficient type of government would be a dictatorship if we hud a perfect man to be a dictator," the Palisade senator maintains. "But since all men are human and possess the frailities of all human beings, the best government must be close to the people thru equitable repre sentation." Senator Ashmore prides himself on being probably the second senator in line when it comes to introducing the least number of bills. Next to Speaker Warner, who has introduced no bills, the district 37 representative is second, having introduced only four bills. But the bills that Senator Ash more has introduced produce a different story. Of the lour, three have been passed by the unicam eral and have already been signed by the governor. One of the most important bills to the Palisade senator was bill 310 which provided for audits of country government. Legislative bills 245 and 216 were also his specialties. These two bills pro vided for a budgeting system in county government. Mr. Ashmore is a member of the legislative ad visory committee, the revenue committee, the government com mittee, and the labor committee. Mixing a bit of philosophy with his political comments, the senator is sincere in believing a Nebraska senator can make an honest mistake and be proud of it. It is only when the senator makes a dishonest mistake he believes, that poor legislation will come. He be lieves that the lobbyist has too much Influence in the new legis lature, but deems the corpora tion and organization repre sentatives a "human element." "Every voter should serve at least one term in the legislature of his state," the senator says. If we could bring about thu situation we could have the most intelligent legislative body ever on record. Representatives every day are faced with criti cism mainly because the public does not see our position." Senator Ashrnore believes in t -t i in-'' i ,7 tV 1 5 - .:, S hi fcWVaf' I -yjt'h r:A 1L J? P,e ,hlS summer- Travel i'r- Holland if COngei,ttl SJ0UP of college students. For year. tSTXi?",!!? ,imeS' Pleasant -commodation,, "twui To England, Francs snd Hollsnd , Juns 4 SIATENDAM STATENDAM VEENDAM . TOURIST CLASS . Juna 12 Juna 2o $22400 SOUND TRIP no v1.11 For full detail t sac SICA DEPARTMENT HOLLAND-AMERICA LINE r'-8 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, III TllirUSIMY, MAY 6, 1937. more Imsiness-liko methods in governmental units unu activities,, and feels that one session of the new one-house setup can not act us a crlterian for Judgments of all unicameral legislatures. The prin ciple trouble with this session, he maintains, is the fact tnat the members were Ignorant of how to begin their work. Representing the 37th district, Mr. Ashmore has his constituents In Hayes, Hitchcock, Chase, Dundee and Perkins counties. Ho has served as a member of tho school board In Palisade and for a number of years was leader of tho famous Hitchcock county 4-H calf club. He Is a republican, married, and 05. SENIOR HONORARY ACTIVES TO 'TAP' ' MASK members: (Continued from Page 1.) Delta, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Heta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamnin, Phi Mu, and Pi Deta Phi. Members of Delta Gamma will be defending the trophy which will go to the contest winner today. Sing competition among frater nities will take place at 9 o'clock this morning as the opening fea ture of the Ivy Day ceremonies. Six groups have entered the con test including Alpha Tau Omega, Deta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon. Sigma Nu, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, iinil Sigma Phi Fpailon. Sigma Phi Kpsilon will be defending three years of consecutive wins in the sing this morning. Judges who will serve for both intersorority and interfraternity competition are Chairman Oscar I'.ennctt of Wesleyan, Miss Wanda Cook of York college and Gunner J. Malmin of Dana college. Points which will be considered in the final rating of each group will be interpretation, 40 points; balance of parts, 20 points; tone quality, 20 points; selection of song, 10 points; appearance, 10 points. Immediately following the close of afternoon ceremonies students will have an opportunity to cele brate at an all university dance at Antelope park. The affair, sponsored by the A. W. S. board, will feature the music of Eddie Jungbluth and his orchestra. Scheduled as an all campus affair, cut dunces will be in order, according to Jane Barbour, A. W. S. president, and students are in vited to attend with or without dates. Instead of charging admission at the door, each fraternity, soror ity, and all ag and barb organiza tions have had an opportunity to subscribe $3.00 toward the dance, and this amount will admit the entire membership of the subscrib ing societies. Those wishing to attend the dance, who are not members of organizations support ing the dance will be admitted for 25 cents, Miss Barbour explained. Chaperons who will be present nt the dance include: Prof, and Mrs. H. W. Stoke and Prof, and Mrs. K. O. Broady. A Gift the Graduate will Appreciate and Remember GIVE LUGGAGE as a gift that offers lasting appeal and a lifetime of useful ness. ALSO Fountain Pens, Desk Lamps, Stationery, Engineer Supplies. LATSCH BROS. 1124 0 St. . . Juna 89 VEENDAM ... July 10 STATENDAM (.is Bu) July 90 THIRD CLASS $1Cl 50 UUNO THIP 1J-I. and up Anocialion) I