DAILY NEBRASKAN Thursday, 'October 17, 1940 dihoMaL - - The Prom Committee It's face is lifted After four weeks of discussion, argument and study of various proposals presented by a special committee appointed to investigate methods of run ning next year's Junior-Senior Prom, the Innocents society has adopted a sys tem which will be used in planning future proms. Following last semester's furor over what Liberals and Barbs termed a highly inefficient committee and what the progressives excused as a commit tee handicapped by a limited budget and by an almost impossible booking situation, the DAILY initiated a campaign to have future prom committees elected entirely by student ballot. The Innocents society last year followed the DAILY proposal by asking higher-ups if that group could take over the sponsorship of the prom, to do with it what the Innocents thought best. Their request was granted. Political wrangling stopped. Everyone was satisfied. Present indications show that almost everyone has forgotten about the matter, so the Innocents announcement should come as somewhat of a surprise. Pefore announcing what its plan is, the society wishes to assure all stu dents interested at all in the prom, that it has tried to take its handling out of the realm of politics. No method, however, of selecting prom committee members would be entirely devoid of politics unless the men's senior honorary acted as a prom committee itself. This very same idea was promised in order to avoid any wrangling that might follow whatever other plan was adopted. And so, the Innocents adopted a plan to choose a prom committee . . . but the prom committee won't be the ConumsnL - - (Bulidhv bosses, the Innocents will. And therein lies the core of the idea. Several mem bers of the Innocents society served on last year's prom committee and it wag felt that their experience would greatly help a junior committee, working without any knowledge of what staging a prom entails. 1 Here is the plan: First: The Innocents society shall sponsor, at a student election, the election of three junior men and three junior women to form the prom com mittee. The junior man elected Junior Class president shall automatically become a regular, not an ex-officio, member of the prom committee. Only junior and senior men and women shall vote for prom committee members. Second: The president of Innocents society shall, at some time in the near future, appoint a committee from among the Innocents to supervise handling and planning the prom. This committee shall include a genera chairman in charge of the prom and a business manager of the prom. The Innocents on this committee will not be on the prom committee proper. The latter is made up solely of the seven juniors provided for in the ruling. Whether one of the seven juniors shall be made chairman of the junior committee, to function as an intermediary between his committee and the In nocents committee has not yet been decided. The tradition of piom committee will be carried on. The method of selecting a prom committee becomes the ballot. Factional majorities in student council can no longer hold back a junior leader because he is in the wrong faction. We doubt seriously that either fac tion would ever select men from the other faction so long as one of Ihera controlled the student council. That situation will arise no more. And so, the politicians, through bungling and failing to recognize merit or popularity have lost the prize plum. By Chris Petersen Horse Sense. An expressionless man was leading an expressionless horse down the same kind of a street one day, and he passed a man standing on a coiner. Turning to the man, he said, would you mind helping me lead this horse down the street? Sure! Thanks! Don't mention it. They led the horse to gether for three blocks and stopped in front of an expression less house. Do you mind helping mc lead this horse up the front steps? Sure! Thanks! Don't men tion it. They squeezed the horse into the front hall. Do you mind helping me lead the horse into the kitchen? Sure! Thanks! Don't 'mention it. The horse hit his head on the door. Forgot to open it. Do you mind helping me lead the horse up the back stairs? Sure! Thanks! Don't mention it. Would you mind helping mc lead this horse into the bathroom. Sure! Thanksl Don't mention it. The first man left the second man holding the horse. He went out. Soon he returned with the gun. He shot the horse. The horse died. Being nosey, the second man said, "Do you mind telling me why you shot that horse?" Sure! Thanks! Don't mention it. Well, it's like this 1 have a brother-in-Jaw, and every time I tell him anything he always says: I know it I know it. I'm gelling damn tired of hear ing him say I know it I know it. So you know what's going to hap pen. My brother-in-law is coming over to dinner tonight. He is go ing to go upstairs to wash his hands. Then he's going to come back down with a smug look on his face and he's going to say, "You know what?" And I'll say, "No. what?" There s a dead horse In your bath room! And do you know what I'm going to "I know it. I know it" say . Spurr reports business gains Authority sees rise in monthly general index Nebraska's business activity in September showed gains over business in August according to the latest monthly business report by Prof. W. A. Spurr, university statistician. All available components of the university's general business index gained over August after adjust ment for usual seasonal move ments, except for a slackening in building operations. The year 1940 shows promise of being the best year for Nebraska business in a decade. The reports now on hand for August show declines from the July peaks in electric power out put and building activity, after seasonal adjustment, with little change in otlter indices of busi ness. In the following table each business indicator is adjusted to remove normal seasonal changes and the effect of the irregular calendar, thus revealing underly ing business trends. NEBRASKA HISINESS BAROMETERS. is-mi eimi iw. Gearral besWes. . Hank arpoaHa Deoavrum-ai more sain Ttit! rrerltKa HulMinc artrtlty Mr -trie Bearer atet rr rails Emotornnt , Ufa bearee)re aatri . . Sre. A a. 1J ! . I la I IS 111 II 11 IN lal 4 141 14a 13 ial tesa II n a IN IN 141 114 1M 11 Lincoln Cathedral choir sings iu coliseum Oct. 23 The Lincoln Cathedral choir will present its first performance of the season in the coliseum Octo ber 23 for the State Teachers Con vention. Their program will in clude: 'Lee Shore." Coleridge Taylor; "Norwegian Song of P r a i s e," Grieg, and "Cherubim," Gretcha-ninov. rfhi Daily Wedraskm 0icia NewspoptY 0 More Thm 7.000 Want FORTIETH TEAR. Sebscrlatiea Rates are SIM Tar Scmaalar ar $1.5 far tbe Callus Tear. UM Mailed. Steele eepr, Cent. Catered at wcmI-Iui matter at tbe eauffle la Uexwea, Nebraska, aaeer Art at Cm re as. March 1. It', ead at epeciei rata at estate ereviaed far ta Secliea 111, Art af Oeteber a. 117. Aatberiaed Jaaear? M. IK. Office Uaiea Bailaia( Day J-7lL Meat 1-11M. Msaabet Aseeeeeted Cellcgiale rreea, IMaVtl. Mratsar Nebraska rraaa Aaseeiatiea, 14-L. Reareseated far Natleaal AaerUuaf ar NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, INC. 4a Msateea A New lark. N. V. Caieaf Restea Ln Aaf ekes 8aa rreaeisea rabhtbed tVJI itnif tba tVtaal y aaeaat Meadayt aaa Sataraaya, Taa Meat, an 4 etamiaeUeas eeriedt by fttadeaie af tba UeJverstt el Nebraska aader ill aaaernaiea af Us rabUtatieaa Iwi Bulletin Tassels and Corn Cobs will meet at 6:20 p. m. this evening in the Union prior to the speaking tours for the rally. Attendance is re quired. aaa Sophomore and Junior AWS "N" stamp salesman will meet in room 316 of the Union at 5 p. m aaa Students interested in the or ganization of an independent group to discuss Socialist party campaign issues will meet Thurs day at 5 p. m. in the Y rooms of the Temple. aaa Palladian Literary Society will meet Friday at 9 p. m. in the Temple. aaa Young Advocates will hold sec tions meeting Thursday at 7:30 p. m. in room 209b social sciences. a a Cheer leaders will practice at 5 p. m. today in the stadium. It is imperative that all members of the squad attend. Students may obtain Union cal endars of the year at the Union checkstand. aaa Kosmet Klub actives will meet Thursday at 5 p. m. aaa Aq campus YMCA and YWCA will hold a joint luncheon Thurs day noon in the home ec building to plan discussion for future Library adds 16 volumes to shelves An unabridged unnotated trans lation of Adolf Hitler's popular boow, "Mein Kampf," haji been added to the university library. A new book of current interest, "Conscription and America," by E. A. Fitzpatrick. has also been added. Other books recently acquired are: Rhymes of Our Valley, by A. H. Euwer. Types of Poetry, by Jacob Zeit lin. Keeping Our Fighters Fit, by E. F. Allen. Normal Mind, by W. H. Burn ham. Woman Power, by G. A. Gei jerstam. Two Living and One Dead, by S. W. Christiansen. Frozen Justice, by E. Mikkelser.. Introduction to Literature of Europe, by H. Hallam. Social Work and the Courts, by S. P. Breckinridge. Conscription and America, by E. A. Fltzpatrick. Under vour Feet, by Blanche King. CLASSIFIED 10c Per Ih: LOST Notebook on Kresree' counter. Reward. Need iaurxdialcly. Leaving town. S-457S UMBOT waata faommate. 1511 St. TYPlNCr Rauonable rata. 1811 I at. Living Light, by E. Newton Harvey. Crime and Society, by Nathaniel F. Cantor. I Knew Them in Prison, by Mary B. Harris. The Philosophy of Santayana, by Irwin Edman. ml . lip f: 0$ .J -cXpQX ...Hilt Telephone men a know this piece of apparatus as the 108-A Amplifier. It is an "exploring amplifiertn developed by Bell System engineers to iden tify pairs of wires in telephone cables some of which contain as many as 4242 wires. The cable man explores this mass of w ires with the pencil-like probe. A tone sounding in the headphone tells him when he has found the right pair. Ingenuity special equipment attention to details play an important part in maV ing your telephone service the clearest and fatct in th ; world. Why not report "Alt', well" to the folk ot home f Rotes to most point are lowest ony night afief 7 P.M. and all day Sunday. J, ' llllll ,V.',V.', i.