PAGE 4 Violinist to Appear With NU Orchestra Dorotha Powers, violinist, will appear as guest artist in a concert with the University of Nebraska Symphony Orchestra Sunday eve ning, Nov. 20. Emanuel Wishnow will conduct the orchestra. Miss Powers, veteran of more than 500 American concerts and a European tour, is the owner of one of the world's three finest violins, the "Earl of Plymouth" Stradivari. It is that instrument she will play here. Sponsored by the Student Union Home Ec Club To Celebrate Anniversary A birthday dinner Wednesday, Nov. 16, will be the event of the week for the home economics club. The dinner, which will be held at 6:30 in the Union ballroom, is an annual event, celebrating the birthday of the founder of home economics, Ellen H. Richards. The dinner is sponsored every year by the service committee of the home economics club for the purpose of honoring Mrs. Rich arris and bringing together the students and faculty of the de partment of home economics. Gwen Monson. the president of the club, will be toastmistress and will present Mrs. Dorthea Plum, the speaker for the evening. Mrs. Plum has recently returned from Denmark and will discuss home economics in that country. Mrs. Plum's address will be fol lowed by singing led by Pat Han Ion and the invocation by La verna Acker, president of the Ag YWCA. General chairmen for the ban quet are Jeanne Wielage and Marcia Adams. Committee chair men are Dorothy Bowman, Mari lyn Brewster. Ardis Westerhoff, Molly Myhre, Jo Corzind, Joanne Engelkemeier, and Doris Malm berg. Bells to Plav Church Hymns During Week The Mueller Carillon tower will play an important part in the University's observance of Reli-gion-in-Life week this year. Hymns of all churches will be played from 12:50 to 1 p. m. every day this week. Prof. Myron Roberts of the music department will play four hymns each day. He has planned the daily pro grams to include music represen tative of the Roman Catholic, He brew and Protestant churches. The following selections will be heard during the remainder of the week: Tuesday: "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God," "Men and Children Everywhere," "The Lord Will Come," and the "Vexilla Regis." Wednesday: "Veni Creator," "The God of Abraham Praise," Thee Holy Father We Adore," "O Beautiful for Spacious Skies." Thursday: "My Faith Looks Up To Thee," "Pange Lingua," "Be Thou My Vision," and "Adon Alom." Fridav: "Faith of Our Fathers," "Shofar Song." "For All The Saints" and "Divinum Myster ium." Seniors Wisest, Says NU Study A campus tradition which holds that seniors are wiser than other students on the campus has some basis in iact. A study just completed at the university shows that grades earned last school year by all seniors averaged about 82 per cent. The average of grades re ceived by all freshmen students averaged about 74 percent. Sophomore grades, the study shows, averaged aobut 77 per cent and the juniors about 79 percent. In all four classes the average of grades earned by women stu dents was consistently higher than those earned by the men. During the first semester 4.5 per cent of total grades given stu dents were "flunks" or failures, but in the second semester tins dropped to 2.9 percent. Activities Committee and the School of Fine Arts, the concert will be presented at 8 p. m. Sun day, Nov. 20, at the Union ball room. Tickets may be obtained now from the Union office without charge and are being issued on a first come, first served basis. StU' dents must show identification cards and faculty members must call in person. Since the ballroom seats only 800 persons, admission to the concert will be by ticket only. At the concert. Miss Powers will appear with the orchestra in Wieniawski s Concert for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 22." Wieniaw ski, who died in 1880, is accepted by musicians as one of the great violin virtuosi. The concert program: I. Concert Overture for Orch estra . Sowerby, 1895 . II. Concerto for Violin and Or chestra, Op. 22 . . . Wieniawski, 1835-1880; Miss Powers and Or chestra. III. Introduction to Act III "Lo hengrin" . . . Wagner, 1813-1883. IV. Evening Prayer and Dream Pantomine "Hansel and Gretel".. Humperdinck, 1854-1921. V. Rumanian Rhapsody No. 1 . . . Enesco, 1881 . Bizad College To Hold 25th Honors Dinner Students with outstanding scholarship in the College of Business Administration will be honored at the 25th annual Bizad Honors and College dinner to be held Tuesday evening in the Union ballroom. Approximately 250 students are expected to attend the dinner. Robert Simmons. Chief Justice of the Nebraska Supreme Court, will be the principal speaker. His topic is, "The Comparison of Rus sian Government With Ours." The winners of William Gold Prize keys will be presented by Nathan Gold, Lincoln merchant; and new members of Beta Gam ma Sigma, bizad honorary, will be announced by Dean Earl S. Full brook. The master of ceremonies will be Prof. Karl M. Arndt. The stu dent committee in charge of the dinner composed of the presidents of the three professional societies for Bizad students: Robert W. Freeman, Delta Sigma Pi; Rob ert C. McNare, Alpha Kappa Psi; and Mary Tous, Phi Chi Theta. YM-YW to Hold Joint Meeting A joint meeting of the YM and YWCA will be held in the Tem ple lounge, Wednesday, Nov. 16. An open forum type of meet ing is planned with Dr. Daniel Blain, medical director of the American Psychiatric association as the speaker. Dr. Blain is one of the main speakers for Reli-gion-in-Life week, now being held on the campus. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p. m. instead of the usual hour of 7 p. m. Coeds to Begin Search for Males Eight-thirty's the hour, Nine is the date, Start looking now girls Before it's too late. That's the warning being issued to University women. If coeds don't want to be caught without a date at the last minute for one of the highlighting dances of the formal season, sponsors of the dance advise them to start thinking about the event now. Posters and bulletins bearing this slogan have been distributed to all organized houses on the campus to remind students of the dance. Classified C call 3-413T. wTnTkTJ ride lo CIjicmko. Thankneivinij. Call Nina or Jan. 2-1174. LOST Pout uliile rule Thura. Iter 5. Reward. Call 5-6479 Pioneer belts ami ufp'-ri'lcrs for fall, at AVERS CIjOTHING, H'M O St. WANTKI" - Kllr lo Trx:i Thanksgiving, fchare expense. Boti Kelly. 2-44GS. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN NU Bulletin Board Tuesday. The meeting of Sigma XI which was previously announced to be Thursday, will be Tuesday eve ning at 7:30 p.m. in the Animal Pathology bldg. in room 203. Flying Kernels will meet Tues day in room 432, Love library. NUCWA Speakers bureau will meet Tuesday at 5 p.m. in room 313 of the Union. Kosmet Klub workers needing points report to Coliseum to work on presentation backdrop from 2 to 5 p.m. See Roz Howard or Knox Jones for credit. . No dance class tomorrow be cause of the Bizad banquet. The class will continue Nov. 22. Pi Lambda Theta Cornhusker group picture will be taken Tues day at 5 p.m. in the photo lab, west stadium. UNESCO department of NUC WA will meet Tuesday at 5 p.m. in Parlor Y of the Union. Exec council and all Military Ball committees will meet in the Armory at 5 p.m. Tuesday. Flying club meets in Parlor Y of Union, 7:15. Will show movies. Wednesday. Union Activities meeting, spon sors and chairmen, at 5 p.m. Wed nesday in the faculty lounge of the Union. Reception for Honorary Colonel finalists will be held fn Parlors ABC of the Union at 5 p.m. Wed nesday. All candidate officers will wear uniforms. Phalanx pledges will meet at 7 p.m. and the actives at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Any female wishing date for Mortar Board ball call Oscar O' Bannon, Daily Nebraskan business office. Enclose photo. Due to the number of students who have made appointments for individual pictures for the 1950 Cornhusker, the deadline to have pictures taken has been extended to Dec. 1 instead of Nov. 15 as previously announced. All first round games in the Intramural and Union table tennis tournament must be played by Wednesday, Nov. 16. If not played by then, they will be forfeited. Second round games should be played off by Saturday, Nov. 19. Ag Student Reports On Life in Finland BY ARLEN BEAM. Duane Cellin, who just re turned from a two and a half months' stay in Finland, says that altho the Finns know well the menace of the Soviet Union, they are living as usual and even planning far into the future. He was among the 31 delegates who visited European countries under the International Farm Youth Exchange project. He was the only representative from Nebraska making the trip. Sellin, a senior at the College of Agriculture, spent about four and a half months visiting sev eral foreign countries, including Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Hol land, France and Germany. Most of his time in Finland was spent on two farms, one in the southern part of the country and one in the central portion. Diversified Farming. The Finns, he said, don't spe cialize in crops and "grow most everything." The yields, he added, are almost double to that of crops raised in Nebraska. He explained the Finns have an ex cellent system of soil testing, similar to the facilities at the university, and .the farmers keep Nash Continues Religions Series Dr. Arnold Nash, professor of religion at the University of North Carolina, will speak on "Campus Marriage," at the second all uni versity convocation of Religion-in-Life week, to be held in the Union ballroom at 10 a. m. today. All campus vespers will be held at the University Episcopal church at 4 p. m. today as part of the continued program. Nash will speak again at 7:30 Wednesday at the joint YM and YW meeting. His topic will be "Religious Emphasis in Life." Religion-in-Life week programs are of national scope. They are held on all major campuses each fall. Nebraska's project is under the sponsorship of the Religious Welfare council. Your College Clothing Store Exclusively MAG EPS First Floor f l Tuesday, November 15, 1949 their land in a high state ot fertility. As for the people, Sellin said he believes the Finns are more sincere than Americans. He said he has never seen a more com pletely honest people. "If you leave something in the middle of the street, you would probably find it there two days later or it would be returned to you." Slow to Change. He said the people are very shy at first meeting and they m are slow to change from their way of thinking. "But when they have something proved to them, there's little hesitation in chang ing." Sellin spoke highly of the 4-H program under way in Finland. He said it's patterned after club work in the United States. There's an enrollment of 65,000 from Finland's population of ap proximately 4,000,000. With one semester left to com plete his major in general agri- culture, Sellin plans to return to ' the University at the beginning of the second semester. Sellin is the first University student in several years to make such a trip. Speech Teachers... New York. The demonstration was part of the morning program held at Nebraska Wesleyan. Oth ers who appeared on the program were Rex Cosier, Nebraska Wes leyan staff member; Dr. Leroy T. Laase, Don Olson, Max Whittakcr, Maxine Trauernicht, William C. Dcmpsey, Erling Jorgonsen, all of the University of Nebraska; and Miss Mary Hamilton, Omaha North high school. Recommendations adopted by the group were Suggested by a committee including Marylouise Kennedy, McCook; James Tyson, University of Omaha; Dr. Laase; Miss Hamilton; Norman Hansen, Doane College; Dean Graunke, Norfolk Junior College; Burgess Marshall, Ogallala. and Miss Jean Kinney of Grand Island. !'ete n Different! II III mpy mm Slioen Iy Sandler of Boston Here's a new loafer . . . double strapped for a different twist. You'll like the comfortable wedge sole . . the good-looking hand-stitching. An original design by that old master . . . Sandler of Boston. liroun Green Camel 6 95