n sm. EiaGiIicis Follies Vol. 49 No. 97 - vy.. ;.vY.-fr,-4. ONE OF THE largest prehistoric rhinoceros skeletons yet found in North America went on dis play at the University of Nebraska State Museum last week. The giant animal was discovered just before the war on the Andrew Hottell farm ten miles west of Harrisburg, in Bonner county. Before and following the war a Museum field party, assisted by three Bridgeport men T. C. Middleswart, W. F. Chaloupka and the late S. R. Sweet excavated the remains from an Ice Age river channel. The Museum's rhino lived in Nebraska about 2,000,000 years ago. His ancestors originated about 50,000,000 years ago. Many of them migrated to Asia where the largest rhino skeleton of them all nearly three times the size of the Nebraska specimen was found recently. Just prior- to the advent of the great glaciers, all of the North American rhinos became extinct. 'What's in a Name?9 Ask Judges For Foundation Title Contest Sowers . . . N. U. Euilders . . . Student Boosters . . . Student Service . . . Cornhusker Couriers . . . Cornerstone . . . These titles are among those which the Student Foundation New Name contest judges will analyze with "What's in a name?" Tuesday noon. At a luncheon meeting Tues day, the five judges will meet to choose a new, appropriate name for the Student Foundation, cam pus service group and student public relations organization. The selection of the name will be in the hands of Mr. Ellsworth DuJeau, Lincoln businessman and former alumni secretary; Miss Mary Mielenz, Foundation faculty sponsor; Genene Mitchell, Foun dation president; Eugene Berg, board member; and Nancy Por ter, Student Foundation member. They will ponder over the ninety entries before awarding the $10 prize which Chancellor Gus tavson donated for the contest. They will attempt to selec t a name which embodies the Student Seed Growers To Hold Meeting Leading sed growers of the state will be presented at the an nual meeting of the Nebraska Crop Improvement association held at the Ag campus Thursday, March 3. Dr. F. D. Keim. chairman of ylhe University agronomy depart ment, will give an illustrated dis cussion of agriculture in Central America, wheie he visited re cently. Other speakers on the pro gram will be Dr. Ephriam-Hix-son, chairman of the entomology department; Dr. Kling Anderson of Kansas State College; and Dayton Kl;ngman of the Univer sity of Nebraska. The speakers will discuss sub jects pertaining to increasing production of the state's food stuffs. YM Invites New Aggies to Party The Ag YMCA will hold a stag party Tuesday night in the lounge of the Foods and Nutrition build ing. The party will start at 7:20 p. m. This pjity, to which everyone Is invited, is especially for new students on the campus this se mester. Gordon Lippett will ex plain the YM organization to the new student?. The remainder of the evening will be spent playing games. Refreshment.? will be served. IIu.sL.er Broadcast KOLN, 1400 on the radio dial, will carry the Nebraska-Kansas State basketball game tonight. The Eroadcast, sponsored by Mowbray-Lyon Co., will begin at 7:30. LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA -i mm ) 'A I V: MO!.' Foundation's work, both on the campus and throughout the state. . . . Cornhusker Liaison . . . Promotion N. U. . . . Pillars . . . Student Associates . . . Scarlet and Cream . , . Which will it be? Students May File for Civil Service Jobs The U. S. Civil Service commis sion has announced a Meteorolog ical Aid examination from which positions paying from $2,493 to $3,727 a year will be filled. These positions are located in Washington, D. C. and vicinity, mainly in the U. S. Weather Bu reau and Department of Com merce. A few positions in Alaska, in possessions of the United States and in foreign countries, may also be filled. To qualify in this examination, applicants must pass a written test and must have from one to five years of appropriate technical or professional experience. Perti nent high school or college edu cation may be substituted for all the experience required for $2,498 jobs and for part of the experi ence required for the higher-paid jobs. Interested persons may obtain information and application forms at most first and second-class post offices, from Civil Service re gional offices or from the U. S. Civil Service commission, Wash ington 25, D. C. Applications must Annual Art Show Will Include 160 Top Paintings, Sculptures Bj Katk Am Saadvlrdl Amid packing cases and excel sior, over 160 painting and sculp tures by some of the most sig nificant artists of today are propped against the walls of the Morrill hall art galleries, waiting to be hung for their debut Sun day as the 59lh Annual Exhibi tion of Contemporary Art. The exhibit is sponsored by the Nebraska Art Association. Last ing from March 6 to April 3, the show is free to all students. In technique, the exhibit in cludes paintings, drawings, wa tercolorn and sculptures. This year's show ranges from abstract pieces like I. Rice Pereira's "Oblique Illusion" done on sev eral layers of glass to academic portraiture, such as the portraits of General Eisenhower and Dor othy Canfield Fisher done by Stephen and Hirsch, respectively. ACCORDING to Joseph Ishl kawa, curator of the art galleries, Tuesday, March 1, 1949 Honoraries List New Members New members of two pharmacy societies and an art honorary have been announced as follows: Kappa Epsilon, professional pharmacy society for women: Co- rinne Coker. Doris A. Dunn, La Vonne Lawson, Janice E. Teter and Leola Willard. Rho Chi, national honorary pharmacy society: Harold C Fentiman, Milton O. Johnson, Joan E. Duffy, Arthur J. Boye, Glenn F. Walsh, Martin J. Bak ken and George A. Breon IV. Delta Phi Delta, national art honorary: Jack Brodie, James Hinkle. Francis Wallace, Eliza beth Slaughter. Beverly Colbert Don Hazelrigg, Don Sharp, Edith Freitag, Roberta Flory, Stanley Sohl, James Hiatt, Verna Mae Miles, Owen Scott, Anna Seme- nec. Phil Rueschoff. Sid Tingle Joan Davidson, Andrew Morrow and Margaret Woodbridge. Ag Experts Will Advise Farmers Three extension specialists from the University will be on hand at a livestock clinic at Imperial March 10 to assist Chase county farmers with their livestock problems. They are Animal Husbandry man W. W. "Bill" Derrick, Animal Pathologist S. W. Alford and En tomologist Jack Lomax. The meeting, which is open to the public, will have emphasis on livestock management, diseases and pest control. be on file in the commission's Washington office not later than March 15, 1949. the exhibit is more conservative than it has been in previous years, showing less of the so-called modern art. Ishikawa stated that the trend in art now is more con servative. Artists represented include many whose works are now in the permanent collection of the University. There is a primitive by Grandma Moses and pieces by Richard Taylor, cartooni.st'for the New Yorker and Kahlil Gi bran, author and illustrator of "The Prophet." Sloan, one of the eight of 1903 who revolutionized American painting, is represented in the show as well as Jacob Lawrence, a Negro artist who has done several series for Fortune on Negro migration north, slum conditions and John Brown. THIS IS one of the few op portunities that Nebraskar get to see a show of this depth and breadth," Ishikawa said. "It is a show of national scope." The an Matinee Dancing Dates in Demand Need dates? Lost your specs? Vnn har5 hptter find them and start looking for a date to the Union Matinee dances wnicn wm be held every Tuesday at 4:30 in the Union ballroom. TVTncie fmm thp best name bands will be furnished by Pro gram Service, everyone is m hpfore or after their coke dates. You need not dress up, just thrust your dooks in a dark corner and rush to the Union. The Union's Tuesday calendar is also including Siesta films at 4 in the main lounge oi Union. Pictures to be shown are: two March of Times, featuring in formation on Swedish ana pud i; i-i(innc Another film, called Mr. President, will also be shown. No charge will be made. NU-Red Cross To Form New College Council TY,rmjtinn of A Red CrOSS College Unit Council was an nounced today Dy me caucus unit president, Eugene Berg. The r-minril will be made up of rep resentatives of campus houses and organizations to De eieciea by their groups this week. Tr;ct mpptinff of the proposed council, a further expansion of the young organization s program, will be held rnursaay ai i.ou ty, in PaHnr X of the union. The council of representatives will meet weekly ana win aci as liason between the unit and the ruani7pH erouns. All unit pro jects will be carried through the council tor campus suppun. Ai nurv ROSENBAUM. vice- president of the college unit, will conduct council meetings and direct the representatives' actions according to Berg. Representatives to the Red Cross Council were selected last night by most houses in answer to letters sent by the College Unit. The Council's activities will in clude reporting to their houses on such Unit activities as insti tutional entertainment, motor corps driving, first aid classes, in addition to special projects such as fire prevention and used book collections. Fair Board Plans Rodeo Discussion Students will have an oppor tunity to discuss a current con troversial Ag subject this eve ning. . . . The Farmer's Fair board has called a special meeting for 5 p m. Tuesday in Dairy Hus bandry building. Room 301, for the purpose of discussing a rodeo in connection with Farmer's Fair this spring. All interested stu dents are invited to attend. nual exhibit is the source of the paintings kept in the permanent University collection, known as one of the best collections of American art owned by an Ameri can university. Gordon Robinson, juror for international art shows, visited one of the annual exhibits several years ago and stated then that it was one of the best shows he had seen in several years. A feature of the exhibit is the showing of the "Living Pictures" on the day of the opening. "Liv ing Pictures" is the occasion when townspeople pose in living rep licas of the paintings to be ex hibited in the annual exhibit. Prof. F. Dwight Kirsch, director of the University art galleries, has announced that the Nebraska Art Association ha3 made arrange ments for interested students and staff members to attend, without charge, the dress rehearsal of "Living Pictures' to be held March 5, at 1:30 p. m. in the Union ballroom. '49 Styles Shown in 'Gold Rush' Nebraska's treasured Typical Coed will end the long journey from the gold lands when she steps out of a forty-niner's cross country wagon into the spot-light tonight. The presentation will take place at the annual Coed Follies show scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the Ne braska theater. Preceding the ap pearance of the TNC, a gold rush of '49er fashions will be shown by girls who were finalists for the honor. NAMED THE "Fashion Fest of of '49," the show will begin with New Yorker fashions of the year. Then proceeding across the na tion, the show will stop in each city along the way to glimpse at leading fashions there. After the style show reaches the golden land of California a group of miners will leave the sunny styles behind and start back across the country with their treasure, the Typical Nebraska Coed. Their last stop will be the stage of the Coed Follies, where the treasure will end its journey. PATTY GUHIN will act as "Dame Fashion" in moderating the show and Jan Stratton will be master of ceremonies at the TNC presentation. An earlier attraction in the Fol lies will be the Mortar Board skit. Always a surprise, the Mor tar Board skit is annually pre sented as a take-off on some phase of campus life. Six skits and three curtain acts will be given by organized houses, who will be competing for first place ratings m each class. Houses to be represented in the Follies are Alpha Omicron Pi, dorm, Kappa Delta, Alpha Chi Omega, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Al pha Theta, Delta Delta Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Phi and Sigma Delta Tau. JUDGES FOR TnE skits will be Miss Ruth Odell, English depart ment; Miss Mary Hosier, cloth ing and textiles; Miss Aileen Lock hart, physical education; Miss Mamie Meridcth, business English and Mrs. Boyd Carter. Tickets will be sold all day in the Union today. They will also be offered at the Nebraska theater box office tonight provided they are not all sold out Delta Sigma Pi Marks 25th Anniversary Twenty-five years on the campus for Delta Sigma Pi, pro fessional commerce fraternity, was marked last Friday evening. Some 200 active members, alumni and guests attended an anniversary party at Cotner Terrace. They heard an address by H. G. Wright, national secretary-treasurer and head of the fraternity's central office in Chicago. Mr. Wright cited the local chapter for its work in promoting understanding between commerce students and businessmen through dinner forums and industrial tours. Activities like these, Mr. Wright said, improve public re lations and provide students with an opportunity to learn commer cial problems first hand. A feature of the dinner-dance celebration was the presentation of Miss Marjorie Hansen as the chapter's representative in the fraternity-wide "Rose of Delta sig" beauty contest. She was given a bouquet of American Beauty roses by Bob Freeman, president of the campus fratern- sty. . Formed at Nebraska in 1924, the fraternity has been in con tinuous existence except for two war years. It is one of CO chap ters throughout the nation which claim 21,000 active and alumni members. Membership in the commerce fraternity is restricted to male undergraduates and faculty mem bers of Bizad college. I