HUJK THE DAILY INKHUASKAN wkwnksday. maucii io, 1937. dUox., Ubiqima. CbukAAon. SKK.N ON mi: CAMPUS. Virginia Clemens very late to i-lass alter an unsuccessful at tempt to writrsle out of a gym suit with a .itendfast zipper... I. lea', week at the Tri Delt house with the actives (loins all the work, answering phones, being call fclrls, and duinff door duty... Mary Pavisson, Theta. walking down the street practically hid-, irn by a huge trombone . . .the tennis 'courts looked slightly for-, lorn, but Don Bellamy was put- j tins in some fancy serves true to form. . .Mr. Arndt'asking students J to sort out crib sheets or any i other notes from their exams to save time for the reader. . .One ice cream cone is enough for the : most of us but Harold Niemann refuses to be satisfied with less than five... Bill Hollister search ins fo'- the culprit who made away with 57 inches of gore...: the library once again a popular j spot: it may bo six weeks ex-1 ams but last semester's grades I jolted a few ... A certain Sigma Chi looking sheepish over the j phrase, "Al will you woo?"' ... S-ni On j Aj: Campii".. Marian Hoppert. Is it true that Dale Smith has had two dates with the same girl j this year? . . . Carrol Garey audi Kdith Filley keeping the Rural I F.c. department well organized... Bob Parsons tearing through the halls of Home Kc. building look ing for Pat Meier ... A wild March hare dashing down the quadrangle our mistake, it was Myron Keim . . . After expecting cigars for a long, long time, the ACBC's were finally rewarded Monday night when Herb Morgan passed the stogies . . . Mildred Kruso eating alone at the cafe teria . . . Where was Arnold Reed ? Tom King with open mouth lis tening to Gladys Morgan in the H. K. parlor . . . Phyllis Robinson, Ag Campus' Joe Penner. attract ing much attention with her "Woe is me." . . . Charlie Fileher strut ting nonchalantly around the campi's with a girl clinging to each arm . . . And then there's the coed who waded through oozy mud to avoid walking tinder a ladder . . . Milton Gustafson claiming that he has actually seen the stage in the ac tivities building rolling like a rough sea . . . Announce Marriage Ol' MriilUt. Dr. Neil S. IVttinger. son of Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Peltinger. and graduate of the college of dent istry, was married February 2Mb to Miss Irene B-chto!d. daughter of Revel end and Mrs. W. Bech told of Syracuse. The wedding took place at 1 p. m. at the .St. John's F.vangehcal church at Sy racuse. After a short wedding trip the couple will be at home at Sy lacusc. Former Ay Student Wed I!ecentl. Tyler McKillip and Miss Frances Lewis, boih of ClearXater. were married Feb. '2H at the home of the b'i i"'. parents. After a short trip the couple will oe at home in NVhgh. Mr. McKillip attended the university agricultural college. Mollier to .Meet For Luncheon. Lunchir.g at the chapter house Fuday v.i!l b- tV Phi Mu Mothers club. Mrs. Charles R. But ler. Mrs. H. K. Moffitt and Mrs. K. Ncsbft will be hostesses in charge for the afternoon. ; . if I'lii Si" iYiw Sprint! Sw iny. J'bi Sigma Kappa will hold thir ' m.nual spring party at the Lincoln ho' el Friday. March 12. Preceding tli- party will be a banquet at the ! chapter house for the entire chap- ! tcr and lh'ir dat-s. Decorations will lv in the chapti-r colors. Prof, j and Mis. H. P. Doo- and Prof. . ai'i Mrs. L F. Lindgren are chap- ' f. jT.?, for the o caMon. z Mudent! Marriue nixMiuced Here. The marriage of Miss Clara f 'rirpcnter of Ka.K.s-tt to Herbert Morgan aiso of BasseU which took plai in Lincoln. Dec. 2'i was re (intly announcd. The bnoe zrvotn is fcttendiriy the I'niversity 'if Nebraska agncullural foljege. The tonple will make Th'-ir home In Linrvlii. Sloyyic l'aed ut I'lii Siy l!oiic. Phi S'gtua Kappa brotheis v. ere much surprised when president Fvciett 'hlt1 r,.i n pavui i:iik 'i :uir!onner informally hi i-n-::M';ern nt to Helen Klen. a -r l-iH ( jradualc W cd In .Nen ork. .Jijhtin Wolf. giaJ'jate of Har vard and graMuat urn la'j'l of thf I.'nivi rsity of Nebraska school f law. vm married March 7 to Min Sylvia White of New York ' 'lty. The bridegroom wan a mem ber of Z-ta Beta Tav fraternity , on thin carnpuK. The couple vi! : make their home in Carubrid-je. Masn.. when- Mi. Wolf in doing graduate work at Harvaid. Heitkotters Market QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES Maii'rt of Fin? Sauag anJ Barbecued Meats B IMS " Societu THIS WEEK Wednesday. Alpha Phi alumnae, 6:J0 o'clock dinner at the home of Mrs. Carl Bumstead. Thursday. Sigma Alpha lota Mothers club, 1 o'clock luncheon with Mrs. A. J. Stenten. Sigma Phi Epsilon auxiliary, at the chapter house at 2 p. m. Alpha Xi Delta Mothers club, at the chapter house at 2 p. m. Friday. Sigma Phi Epsilon, spring party at the Cornhusker. Phi Sigma Kappa spring party at the Lincoln. Kappa Sigma alliance, bene fit bridge party at the chapter house, 8 p. m. Alpha Tau Omega auxiliary, 1 o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. R. E. Campbell. Phi Mu Mothers club, 1 o'clock luncheon at the chapter house. Saturday. Pi Beta Phi annual founde.V day and initiation banquet at the Cornhusker. Mortar Board alumnae, an nual guest day musical at Car rie Belle Raymond hall at 2:30 p. m. Lambda Chi Alpha spring party at the Cornhusker. Sigma Kappa initiation ban quet at the Lincoln. Alpha Omicron Pi, active and alumnae chapters annual ban quet at the Lincoln. I'i Hii .Mothers' Chili Meet?. Members of the Pi Beta Phi Mothers' club will meet for a 1 o'clock luncheon Thursday at the rhapter house. Luncheon will be followed by a short business meeting. Your Cornhusker negatives are saved by TOWNSEND STUDIO to use for F.aster and Mother's Day remembrances. The most in timate of all gifts. No extra charge if new sittings are desired. You are entitled to our be3t at Cornhusker prices. Place vour order immediately. Studio "226 So. 11th. DEAN HEPPNER WILL TALK BEFORE AAUW GATHERING Addresses University Women Association March 20 In Shenandoah. Miss Amanda Heppner, dean of women at the university, will leave for Shenandoah, la., on Saturday morning, March 20, in order to ad dress a gathering of the American Association of University Women at a luncheon the same day. Invi- tat ion to Kpeak at the meeting was extended to Miss Heppner by I Mrs. Etarl Cowdcn, chairman of the program committee or the associ ation and an alumnus of Nebraska. Miss Luvicy Hill, chairman of the department of commercial arts will attend some of the sessions of the same convention and will give a report on the NEA meetings re cently held in New Orleans. GIVE HIM A CHANCE, EE TAIN BALANCE ARGUE DEBATERS. (Continued from Page l.i posal Lawrence argued that this country was founded by young and ambitious men and that it has pro gressed thru the years with youth as a propelling force. Prior to the Civil war out of 39 justices ap pointed none were in their BO' a, 20 were 50 or over. 14 had passed their 40th birthday, while five were slightly over 30. the speaker stated. Younger Men Preferable. Since the battle between the states out of 39 appointed only five had not seen their 50th birthday at the time of the appointment. Altho he informed that he was not of the school who believed that by the time a man reaches 60 or 70 he is no longer capable of carry ing out the duties and meeting the responsibilities demanded of a jus tice, by the time we are well over the half century mark "we will not be so bright, so cheerful, so full of faith as we were at 40 or at 30," Lawrence phophesied. "The president's proposal Is neither inconsistent with nor un usual when considered In the light of history." the champion of the bill declared in answer to charges that the president is at tempting to "pack" the couit. As he journeyed back through the pathway of history the speaker ; concluded "that of the 32 presi- i dents, only five of them ever j broke over party lines in their! appointments to the court, and the ! number of seats affected num-1 bered only seven." j Emergency Need. At times emergencies arise , which demand immediate action, I X: MOVIE iiice: TOItY IJIVCOLIV "The tirpjit (I'Malley" mill "Tlir Holy Tcu'or." Oil KUJ1 "As You Like It.'.' STIJAIIT ".Maid ol' Salrm." VAIISITY When You're In Love" and many times that action cannot be so limited as io sausry the strict restrictions of the con stitution, and when such a condi tion occurs our justices who re view the problem must make their decisions in harmony with the de mands of the times. Such an emergency has arisen today, the speaker informed, and it must be treated in a fitting manner. In our own state alone there are thousands of families whose welfare is threatened by the lack of seed and equipment to plant and cultivate their crops. "Those gentlemen who framed the con stitution simply didn't foresee that there might, in 1937, be an emer gency that would require an un derstanding president and nation to take some action that within the narrow confines of the law yers viewpoint, might be uncon stitutional," he declared. We must modernize our courts and bring them once again into harmony with the will of the people, Law rence concluded. Taking the floor in opposition to the measure Peterson took little time in entering the midst of the battle. He questioned the editor's approach to the all-important question and began with a defi nite statement of the issue in volved. Grave Crisis. "The American people are con scious, as they have not been in my lifetime," he opened, "of the existence of a grave constitutional crisis. The issue is not whether the age shall be limited, nor whether the number of justices shall be 9 or 15, not whether more cases shall be heard. The main issue is whether the administra ,? mm V ' ' ,.,y A ' ' y ' '4y Modem factories . . . spotlessly clean like your living room at home . . . that's where Chesterfields arc made. The Champagne Cigarette Paper is pure. . . burns without taste or odor . . .you can't buy tiny better paper. The mild ripe tobaccos are aged two years or more. ..like fine wines are aged. Refreshingly milder . . . more pleasing taste and aroma . . . and best of all They Satisfy. tion, standing before ihe bar as a defeated litigator, shall be em powered to reconstitute courts so that its decision will be reversed. Administrative attempts to pass 'must' legislation thru the courts have been stopped by our sole check on elected officials, the su preme court. Such a change as proposed would result in the pas sage of such legislation thus ad ding to the force of the govern ment a form of 'must' jurist iction, which would leave the people of our democratic government with out an effective word in the ad ministrative policy of the govern ment. Petersen made much of the fact that ho was not so definitely op posed to the administrative acts of the government as the tendency to interpret the recent overwhelming reelection of the president as a mandate, sanctioning such a con stitutional change without further approval of the public. Had the president been in good faith, he would have presented the court re form as a part of the last cam paign in order that the voting pub lic might place its stamp on the act, for the emergency existed as really then as now, he declared. He hurried to reply, that ho did not mean by this that he ques tioned the honesty or sincerity of the president, but that he believes he is "laboring under an exag gerated estimate of his own im portance." Check, Balance System Needed. It was the intention of the framers of the constitution that the government should be com posed of three separate branches. each to serve as a check on the other with the Supreme Court act ing as the final guardian of the people's rights, Peterson declared as he entered into his final point of argument. The essential thing today is that we maintain that system of checks and balances, which has thus far retained an equilibrium between the forces of despotism on the one side and the rule of the mob on the other. Following the speech by Mr. Peterson, the floor was left open to questions by members of the audience which were answered by the speakers. Each speaker was al lowed 20 minutes, and each ques tioner allowed a minute to advance his query. The DAVIS School Service "A Good Teacher's .i gency' 643 Stuart Bldr. Lincoln f 3 "y, ';' y; 4 9 ',,' 1 y ' y 1 nestemeld a milder better-tasting cigarette FRENCH DESCRIBES PICTURESQUE BARDS OF ITALY FOR PBK'S (Continued from Page l.i his expose of their trade secrets, he told of the use of familiar characters such ns Dudone, the man "with a big stick," and stock descriptions that had comical ref erences to a primitive source. Remarking that "delving into the study of the ancient order of these improvvisatori is an ever interesting pastime," Dr. French went into the detains of the forms of improvvising. The principal form, according to Dr. French, was the octave in "ababec" rime scheme. Many Blind Improvvistatori. Dr. French revealed to his audi ence that a large share of the minstrel men were blind, but had astonishingly superior memories which acocunted, in part, for their ability to keep some basic lyric alive thru years. "These poets were the chief source of amusement for many of the feasts and banquets of the time," Dr. French said, "and many were retained in the nobility's courts. They attended all social gatherings, and their duties in cluded the heralding impromptu songs about the court's ethical and romantic questions." At present the improvvisatori can be found only in the isolated regions of Sicily. Until the last century Naples boasted of the feasts of these oral lyricists, but like the many picturesque things of past centuries, Dr. French con cluded, they arc gradually dis appearing from existence. Eunice Bingham, talented violin ist, played several selections as part of the program. Dr. James R. Wadsworth of the romance language department was in charge of arrangements. Plans for the April meeting of Phi Beta Kappa arc to honor the new mem tiers of the organiza tion whose identity will be re vealed next month. GROOMED APPEARANCE SPEAKS LOUDER THAN WORDS W'hu Xot HEAUTIFUL HAxMKS? Expert manicure $1.00 Shampoo, rinse and $5.00 Oil Permanent $7.50 Oil Permanent $10.00 Oil Permanent it Pays io ARISTOCRAT BEAUTTE SALON 132 NO. 12TH -Oil " xr'yy rrt:thi I & I ' I I v nfl-rn -A " I 1 ' A , f x MA 4 ir y' y' ; I V I -. '- . 'X: FINDING OF PREHISTORIC CITY BRINGS FAME TO UNIVERSITY. (Continued from Pugo l.i Topeka, New Orleans, Bangor, Me.; Boston, Detroit, Minneapolis and St. Paul, St. Louis, Kansas City, New York City, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, El Taso, Salt Lake City, Denver, Los An geles, San ' Francisco, Spokane, Seattle, and Montreal. Clippings were actually received from 32 newspapers in Illinois, 20 in Indiana, 12 in Minnesota, 32 In New York. 12 in Ohio, 18 in Ok lahoma, 10 in Texas, 11 in Vir ginia, and 11 in Wisconsin, as well as a lesser number from each of the other 35 states. Classified ADVERTISING 10c pR LN GIRL VISHFS RinK TO VXIVFIK slty dnilv from 22nd and Sumner. Share expenses. Call K114L'. 'Spring-Styling' in the drill uvv Trend by MR. HENRY LARABEE CORRELL'S BEAUTY SALON 132 No. 12th B2936 wave $ .50 .35 1.95 3.50 5.00 Vail at iht B4022 -s. mi, Lw.irr Umi Trto fJK