FOUR WEDNESDAY. JANUARY fl, 1936. THE DAILY NEBRASKAN CAMIPILi$OETY rPHE MUSIC GOES ROUND AND 1 round ami so does collet' lifV In act it's going around a. bit too fast for the average student, and what with finals ind inrmnls all mixed up together, it looks as though there'll be a shortage somewhere. Nothing daunted by after vacation worries the 1). U's will entertain at the Lincoln Friday night, and the Aea- in'.s at the Cornhusker. The next night, the gals of Alpha .Chi Omega, and the boys of Chi Phi are gathering for their . .... . . . i -,1 1 .1 T ! (i tin ua L atiairs at rue i ornnusKer aim um- colu respectively. From the parties scheduled, ami those un known, it looks' as though the week-end should be a full one ami if there's a shortage somewhere, we're willing to bet it won t be in social functions and their attendance o seen ON the campus: Don Rhnrtlrff climbing over various ntonle to close the Moon's ventilat ino- svstem... Ditty Perkins rest ing after his arduous eight o'clock . . . Mary Lu Kirk and some Kappa Sig meandering around. . .Theora Nye without the usual Fischer at tachment. . .Frank Crabill wasting that Rhodes scholarship brain caking... Carolyn Davis in a mas sive fur coat, grey bear or some thing... John Freeman and Bernie McKearney wearing those fasci nating, shall we say, junior uni forms ... Three Thetas wandering around in search of a booth with little success. . .Bob Ronne in a miniature Smith Davis fur coat . . rnn Fasterdav lust standing... John Jarmin hunting for the good old pipe, only to find it In his mouth and Bob Callahan, sur rounded by the usual million girls in the Drug. ANNOUNCED Monday was the marriage of Mildred Hess of Al bion and Frank E. Stibal of Springfield which took place Dec. 31. Mr. Stibal is a Nebraska grad uate and the couple will. livein Springfield. t 0 AND DECEMBER 23 at the home of the bride's parents, Mar garet Sears of Polk and Orville Olmstead of Tecumseh were married. Both Mr. and Mrs. Olmstead have attended the uni versity. The couple win live in Tecumseh. CHRISTMAS day in Berkeley, California, Evelyn Kuehn of Ful lerton was married to Walter H. Keller of Berkeley. Both are for mer students here, and Mr. Keller is a member of the faculty of the University of California. recently elected officers of Delta Upsilon are president, Gil bert Autrey of Omaha; vice presi dent. Jimmy Harris or uncom, recording- secretary. Ted Pres- cott of White Plains, New York; eorresDondine secretary. Bob Martz of Lincoln; librarian, Hank Me vers of Omaha; senior man-at laree. Chuck Minnick of Lincoln; delegates to province convention Dick Schmidt and Louis Cass. AND PASSING the candy last night at the Alpha Chi O house, was Marv Edith Hendricks of Lincoln, big activities gal and Mortar Board. The lucky man was Henry Feusner, in his first year at Omana medical college ana a member of Phi Beta. WHATS DOING Wednesday. Alpha Omicron PI alumnae buffet dinner at the home of Mrs. C. A. Reynolds, 6:30. Faculty Women club meet Inn at Ellen Smith hall. 2 o'clock. Alpha Phi alumnae dinner at the home of Mrs. can Bum stead, 6:30. Thursday. Sigma Phi Epsilon auxiliary luncheon at the home ot iwrs. E. T. Hoffman, 1 o'clock. Pi Beta Phi mothers club meeting at the chapter house, 2 o'clock. Sigma Alpha Epsilon moth ers club business meeting at the chapter house, 2 o'clock. Friday. Palladian banquet and dance, Venetian room, Lincoln, closed. ACACIA formal at the Cornhusker. DELTA UPSILON formal at the Lincoln. Delta Gamma mothers club luncheon at the chapter house, 1 o'clock. Kappa Sigma alliance bridge party at the chapter house, 8 o'clock. Saturday. CHI PHI dinner dance at the Lincoln, 7 o'clock. ALPHA CHI OMEGA for- mal at the Cornhusker. Mu Phi Epsilon alumnae club lucheon at the home of Mrs. Gribble, 1 o'clock. FUESS SAYS ENGLISH Li LUG OBJECT Phillips Academy Head Talks to Language Teachers at National Council. TUESDAY evening at the Pres byterian church, Thais Mickey of Gibbon and Gordon Weinbrandt of Gothenburg were married. Mrs. Weinbrandt is a Nebraska grad uate and a member of Mu Phi Ep silon, while Mr. Weinbrandt is a graduate of Kearney state teachers college. The couple will live in Gothenburg. FEBRUARY M, Alice Sprague of Beatrice will be married to Byron Goulding of Omaha. Miss Sprague attended Ward Belmont at Nashville, Tennessee, and the university where she is a Kappa. Mr. Goulding received his degree at Nebraska and is a Beta. CIGARS were passed at the Acacia house Monday night, but not for the usual reason. John Growth chose to announce the con clusion of his engagement in the same way that it was originally made known. The young Alpha Phi, it seems, wanted to be en tirely without connections while attending school in New York City, ABOUT 400 representatives from all sororities and fraternities will attend a French Pastry hour Wednseday evening from 8 to o'clock at the Lincoln hotel. Danc ing will be the chief diversion and there are to- oe no dates. era STUDENTS C'-VrX Tomorrow! Publication, Stuart, Hompes Tire Co. to Give Away 'Collegiate' Car. In celebration of the college pic ture, "Collegiate," with Joe Pen ner, Jack Oakie and Frances Langford, opening at the Stuart, Thursday, Jan. 9th, the Daily Ne- braskan, Stuart Theater and the Hompes Tire Co. will give N. U. students a real thrill Friday night, Jan. 17, when they will hide a 'collegiate" car on the streets of Lincoln and with no strings to it. The lucky student that finds it has only to remember one thing "Finders are keepers." There will be a man sitting in the car with the title and the keys .and the first student that shows his or her blue identification card just gets in and drives off. Now make your plans to join the fun. Hop in your cars, get bicycles. horses or buggies, and if you can't get any of these, start out on foot. Just don't fail to join the fun and hunt for this car. Just think: It'll even be painted up with all the slo- J gans that are typical of collegiate cars. Watch the Daily Nebraskan for further details and the picture of the car. By College News Service. INDIANAPOLIS. Language is only a means to an end, not a group of undefiable laws, in the opinion of Dr. Claude M. Fuess, headmaster of Phillips academy, addressing the National Council of Teachers of English. Language is man s instrument, not his master. When I began holding classes in 1907, my col leagues were spending hours on grammatical forms which no one except a pedant ever used. "I confess that I have been guilty of wasting forty-five min utes discussing whether it should be, 'I knew it to be him,' or 'I knew it to be he' a construction in either version so clumsy that I have never employed it in speech or writing." The headmaster said English teaching has improved since the turn of the century. "It has grown less rigid, less monotonous, less addicted to prunes and prisms," he added. "Formal grammar has been rele gated to the subordinate position which it ought always to have, as a means to an end and not an end in itself. "We shall continue to make progress while we cherish the con viction that the English language is alive not frozen or moribund and should be dealt with tenderly like a living thing. Movie Box STUART "TALE OF TWO CITIES" LINCOLN "IN PERSON" ORPHEUM MARY BURNS, FUGITIVE" LIBERTY "WE LIVE AGAIN" "THICKER THAN WATER" SUN "BILLY THE KID" "GIFT OF GAB" COLONIAL "FRISCO WATERFRONT" Westland Theater Corp. VARSITY "IF YOU COULD ONLY COOK" KIVA "ESCAPE FROM DEVIL'S ISLAND" "HAPPINESS C. O. D." UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS FIRST SEMESTER 1935-36 Laboratory classes meeting for several continuous hours on one or two days may avoid conflicts with other classes of the same nature by arranging that their examinations occur as follows: Classes meeting on Monday or Tuesday may be examined on the date scheduled for the first hour of their laboratory meeting; Wednesday or Thursday classes on the second hour or their meeting; Fri. day or Saturday classes on the third hour. e--.. THURSDAY, JANUARY 23 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 8 a. m., Tues., Thurs., Sat., or any one or two of these days. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 11 a. m., Tues., Thurs., Sat., or any one or two of these days. FRIDAY, JANUARY 24 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 10 a. m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 1 p. m., Tues., Thurs., Sat., or any one or two of these days. NEBRASKA POLL t SHOWS STUDENTS IN LIBERAL TREND (Continued from Page 1). nitude to justify any definite pre dictions. Other measures which seemed to meet with favor among the stu dents were the Civilan Conserva tion Corps, which led by a con siderable maiority. the Home Owner's Loan corporation. Regula tion of Holding companies, and the policy of Military prepared ness to prevent war. Leading the programs which met with decided disfavor among the voters were: The National Recov ery Act, which was annulled by the Supreme Court last May on practically the same grounds given for repudiating the Agricul tural act: The Guffey Coal Act which was intended to be a modi fied form of the NRA but which will undoubtedly be rejected by the supreme justices along with the AAA. The Townsend plan and immediate payment of the bonus, which is now being studied in the house of representatives. Altho no one presidential can didate carried a majority of the votes thus far in the poll. Presi dent Roosevelt canied a decisive plurality of the ballots Others who failed to approach the obvious democratic candidate but who showed undisputable favor with student voters were: Gov. Alf Landon of Kansas, Ex-President Herbert Hover, who won by a sweeping majority in a similar poll four years ago, Senator Borah of Idaho, Senator Norris of Ne braska, and Frank Knox, Chicago publisher. Standings of the leadings con tenders in the order of their pop ularity thus far is as follows: Huo.evelt Z.il Kiiiiti 14 . .. . ! -mltli 8 . . . A.1 laljimdre A . ... !H r. Kmisevelt Jr.. -I . .. . IH I'hfiman 3 It perhaps should be noted that Norman Thomas, famous socialist leader, ranked tenth with but ihi ee votes. Altho later returns might change the appearance of the bal loting, it would seem from early indications that charges condemn ing modern universities for their socialistic nature are completely unfounded. Among the votes which were .nndon Hmner Rtiruli Nurris cast in favor of students and fac ultv members top honors would have to be given to Amanda Hepp ner, who polled ten votes. Profes sor Lyman also proved a popular candidate with two votes. Other faculty members who registered as likely candidates were Prof. Hor ace G. Deming and T. T. Smith with one vote each. One student stated his choice in plurality by casting his ballot in favor of the Dean Brothers (Thompson and Harper) . STRICT CONSERVATIVES GRIN OVER AAA COURT DECISION (Continued from Page 1). left their black garbs in "hock" midwestern college professors our countries liberalists might have left their balck garbs in "hock" Monday evening. Prof. W. H. Brokaw, director of college agricultural extension, de scribed the court's decision as a "destructive blow to organized ag riculture. It was not as if they repudiating a radical move SATURDAY, JANUARY 25 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Classes meeting at 7 p. m., Mon., Wed., or Fri. 9 a.m. to 12 m. All Freshman English classes (0, 1, 2. and 3). 10 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 7 p. m., Tues. or Thurs. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Classes meeting at 5 p. m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 5 p. m., Tues., Thurs., Sat., or any one or two of these days. " MONDAY, JANUARY 27 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 9 a. m., Tues., Thurs., Sat, or any one or two of these days. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 2 p. m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. TUESDAY, JANUARY 28 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 9 a. m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. 2p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 3 p. m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 10 a. m., Tues., Thurs., Sat, or any one or two of these days. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 1 p. m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. THURSDAY, JANUARY 30 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 11 a. m., five or four, days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 2 p. m.p Tues., Thurs., Sat, or any one or two of these days. FRIDAY, JANUARY 31 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 8 a. m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or two of these days. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 3 p. m., Tues., Thurs., Sat, or any one or two of these days. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 9 a.m. to 12 m. Classes meeting at 4 p two of these days. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Classes meeting at 4 p m., five or four days, or Mon., Wed., Fri., or any one or m., Tues., Thurs., Sat, or any one or two of these days. were ment for the condemned measure was a sane organization," Brokaw continued. Prof. H. E. Bradford of the agricultural college, affirmed Brokaw's statement by declarin that be believed that the plan was serving its purpose in full. He also predicted that possibly within a few years the annulment will re sult in another siege of overproduction. Dr. David Fellman, professor of political science, showed more confidence than his fellow instruc tors by citing the belief that the measure is not completely dead as yet. Prof. Fellman stated that un doubtedly a large portion more of the new deal will be declared un constitutional in the near future unless some sort of an amendment to the present constitution is made. However, it might be question able that such an amendment as would justify such measures as the AAA and NRA could be made a reality in the face of such op position as expressed in recent poll of the countiy in which 59 percent of the ballots declared disfavor with the AAA. Dean W. W. Burr, of the eol- leRe of agriculture, joined other faculty members in favoring the act as it has been functioning and stated a belief that some other measure might be substituted in its place. Prof. H. P. Davis, instructor in j dairy husbandry, stated that the agricultural program has un- j doubtedly benefited the state of Nebraska for the last two years thru its policy of curtailing pro-. s duction, but he added that he j doubted its merits as a permanent policy. Program Served Purpose. Prof. Karl M. Arndt, professor of economics, stated his belief that the program was serving its purpose and that if the economics of the farm program were ques tionable enough to justify such a decision all industry is equally questionable. And so it promises to be an in teresting show indeed for the non predjudiced observer if there be such an individual to stand by and wait for the outcome. The an tagonists will wait for another move from the administration and the new dealers will continue their season of mourning, all while the government executives are trying to find a source for the 500 million dollars still due on unpaid farmer's contracts. It should be a "bang up" performance clear thru to the last curtain so lets sit back in our seats and give the victor a hearty applause as the curtain drops. NEBRASKA DEBATERS OPEN SCHEDULE WITH KANSAS STATE TEAM (Continued from Page 1). stated Prof. White, "since the wording we have adopted is, 'Re solved, that the AAA promises to be of permanent benefit to agri culture.' The merits and demerits of this subject are unchanged by anything that is involved in the supreme court decision." The four Nebraska debaters will also be members of the Student Legislative at Topeka Thursday and Friday. Two of them will be members of committees while the other two will appear before com mittees in favor of bills. Delegates from about twenty colleges will be present and will meet in various committees Friday and hold a regular session for discussion of bills Saturday morning, Prof. White indicated. Two university teams will ap pear in Shenandoah Dec. 14. One will debate before an agricultural group and the other over radio station KFNF. c LASSIFIED ADVERTISING 10c PER LINE Stuart Building. Barber Shop 2nd Floor I' hone U7'bS MANICURES lru Cc o STUART Ltut Day! Witter Sntir.KH .eerie BKt.NT "IN PERSON" Hani? Crass Keunier CrtMaliui4 ftrvma 'A 1 1 4 Tomorrow! 9 Wtleomm Mvrna Back I MYRNA LOY inonijvniv. Spencer Tracy 20c TRI-K CLUB SPONSORS NOVEL DANCE AT AG (Continued from Page 1). Following the requests of students tentative arrangements are being made to have the orchestra lo cated on the floor instead of on the stage. According to the announcement made by Bob Cushing, president of Tri-K, favors of whistles and ser pentines are to be distributed for the enjoyment of those attending. The committee in charge of the party includes Darrell Bandar chairman; Dale Smith and Dayton Klingman. Chaperons for the eve ning include Dr. and Mrs. F. D. Keim and Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Frolik. Mail Orders Promptly Filled at Cold's We Give S. & H. Grtcn Stamps IP r v i Last 2 Days The first rnnuh mmsntie comedv of )K funks with "It rlpined One Nlfbt" snij "She Married Her Boss." HERBERT MARSHALL JEAN ARTHUR In "IF YOU COULD ONLY COOK" Mtts. 20 Mights 25 A BIG ONE-DAY SALE OF Beautifully Sheer Whisper Hosiery by GOLDETTE Friday! Jets' Matthew in -FIRST A GIRL" 3 Yes! i If';: ( j Jmm SLIGHTLY SHADED 3 PAIR PAIRS 2.10 V ) They're t h e same 1cautiful 2-thread. full fashioned Chiffons you usually buy here for 1.00 pair. Extremely sheer . . . with especially constructed feet for longer wear. You'll delight in the inexpensive luxury of these lovely stockings . . . ao smart and so attractive . . . yet priced so extremely low! And while classed as "SEC ONDS." the imperfections are only slight shadings due to the slightest defects in dying . . . no "runs" or "snags" at all. Their wear is not impaired iu the slightest degree. In Stunning Mid-Winter Shades COLD'S Street Floor Coming oo 10L Details will be published Jan, 19th! Watch for this important Notice LOST Near Rifle Rhiikb. a white gold wrist watch. Call Nebraskan. TEACHERS'PET". . . and so do the students In Collegiate starting Thurs day at the Stuart. The Daily NebrasSca - ' .'i.i.i.iijiiiiji.1.1ist,ilittiJsi.itti1iJiiiittjuujtnuiilititIlliiUtiitiUI si 1 t4sjui 1 si t i i 1 i UUllsl is is 1 1 ii 1 1 i t sil