WI DM SnW. N.'HII. S. 1QM The Daily Ncbraskan Italian A, klnctin, Naraaha OFFICIAL Tt'OrNf POBi-ICATIOM YMViHSIl OF NkllW Ur a)lrvt"n f " Ftuata ' TWINTV'MNTM VAR EDITORIAL ITAFF IdiUr Kfc aaaae ImOvi... Manaalna Mils' Naws KHiri Mar)M AH" William 0 Ttylei William MtOaftia Flaa Wf r llmaM Wint Ulm tkav itf USINMt STAFF Marafcall FMUar tyamaaa Manafai Annum Bwt'naaa Manager Leftay jKk tnn twior l.tr Lshmtyar FOR FUN. T 1TE for the fun of It." That la the counsel five a chiefly to young peo ple la an article by the renowned Harry Emerson Fosdlck in the April numlx-r of the American mag ulne. Some university students will seize throe a-orda jladly and upon academic failure will con sole, themselves that they are 'living for the fun of It." Rlfbtly Interpreted. Doctor Koedlck could give bo better advice to college men and women. Ry fun. however, be does not mean a perpetual round Of thrills and. excitement, ever tempting to the nnl veralty student. In the find place, that kind of un Is fun only while It last. There In a much more lasting, a much more wholesome, and a much finer type of fun that all can realize if they will put forth the effort. No one can live entirely unto himself. Kveryone hu a certain Job be muxt perform-a Job that re lates to other people and bas to do with their hap piness r weirare In some way. The young man and woman who elect to come to univernity have a four year J-b ahead of them. Puring tho.e four years thry roust "live for the fun of It" and ob tain genuine enjoyment from their college work If Jt Is to bt worth while. Many students apparently enjoy lamenting over the drvneis and the difficulty of a course they are taking. Nearly even,' one bas some subject that to htm. seems almost despicable. There are two ways of remedying this situation. If the subject lies entirely outside ones Interests it fhould be dropped. But that should not come to pass until after the student has made an earnest and sincere effort to like It to get something of value out of the coutk. It la so often the expectation of the student that knowledge will be dished out to him wholesale on a silver platter and that be will have nothing to do but to digest it. He fails to recognize that in many lines of learning, knowledge can he gained only :hrough diligent and persevering effort on his part. If the Instructor seems a bit uninteresting. If the text Is dry and bard to read, there is an even greater opportunity for the student to master the subject thoroughly. Few subject will be obnoxious if an individual will adopt this point of view in surveying the course. Those few would be even less if he would peer Into what they offered before registering for them. Outside the classroom and the university, men and women are encountering obstacles that to them often seem Insurmountable. They become obsessed with the Idea that they don't like the work, that they hava made an error in choosing their life vocation. Just as university students may do if they so desire, these people can look a little deeper and find something really interesting and absorb ing in that work. Everybody can "live for the fun of it" if he tries. RETURNING PAPERS. 10ST seekers after knowledge who undergo mid semester examinations this week may expect to have their papers returned and corrected shortly after spring vacation or about a month hence. This rapidity with which instructors and their assistants work is little short of remarkable. To imagine that within thirty days students will know Just what mistakes they have made and what grades they have received seems quite wonderful. Of eourse this speed record is not demonstrated in all departments of the university. Some get papers back within a week after they have been handed In. Even the gadflies of "Fire and Sword" could not criticize them. But there are plenty of others who seem to delight in compelling .students to wait four or five weeks before returning the blue or red penciled efforts submitted long before. Seriously, the value of having assignments re turned within a few days after they are handed in is unquestioned. But this value is too often tor gotten perhaps because the readers and instructors are la too great a hurry, perhaps because the de partment budget is running short. The student who wants to know where he erred in written as signments and In examinations should not have to wait a month to find out what they were. BOB: ART: OB: ART; BOB: ART: BOB: ART BOB: ART BOB: ART BOB: ART: BOB: ART BOB: ART: "WHO IS HE? ' (Two gallant University of Nebraska men stand on the steps of Social Sciences. A third man walks along the broad sidewalk, nodding at the Idling pair. He continues in the di rection of a campus building. . Nice fellah. Looks all rights What is he ? What do you mean? Well what fraternity? Gamma Kappa Theta. Oh. (Significantly) I see. See what? Well, I see what kind of a fellow he must be. You must be a good judge of men. Oh, you can always tell. Now if he's a Gamma Kappa Theta he has plenty of money, makes rotten grades, cakes a lot and dabbles In politics. Yeah? Well, you missed it this time. He's not that way at all. Don't fool yourself. You're fooling yourself. If you always judg? people by their fraternity affiliations or lack of affiliations, you're going to make a big mistake some time. Don't be silly. You ought to judge people by what they are not by the fraternity Hardware th ; carry around. When you get out of school you'll probably divide all of your business asso ciates into Kiwanians, Rotarians and Elks. That's a swell idea. Maybe you're right. (Looking at parked oar.) Say who's that girl? Alice Farnham. What Is she? Curtain. UNIVERSITY PRISON GUARDS. 17ROM the office of tha superintendent of pruton In the lepartmrnt of Justice at Vahlngtou comes announcement that the federal prison service la being professionalized. Ffforts are being made to Interest university graduate In working up In the prison service system. Hanford Dates, the superintendent of pii.toim, writes: "An urgent appeal la made to the under graduates and recent graduates of American col leges and universities to consider entering the fed eral prison service at this time." The endeavor to get university men In the primm service marks a forward step In the outlook of the United 8lates government. This nation has been a laggard Id utilizing its best trained men In gov ernmental positions. Big buMness and the profes sions have always taken the pick of the crop of graduates. Terhaps a few have drifted into gov ernment Joba but It has not been the better few. It does seem strange, however, that one of the first concerted efforts to enlist College trained men In governmental agencies should be from the priso;i division. Men who go Into this work will Mart as ordinary guards, afier a four months Instruction course in such subjects as causes of crime, proba tion and parole, modern penology, and sociology. If there Is a place for university men as prison guards, there is certainly even a greater service they can perform In other branches of governmental work. But before the moat promising graduates are going to accept federal positions, a revision of the civil service laws now In operation la necessary to assure them of advancement. As Is shown by the situation today, many are very likely to te pigeon-holed In some drab job where they will re main until eligible for retirement. That is not the kind of work university nun are looking for. They want to be unchained and free. Maybe they won't get so far but they want the chance which today Is not offered them to a very great extent In government positions. AMLESTONES AT NEBRASKA The Student Pulse Slgnad eenlrlbutlena partintnt to ntattara of atudant Ufa and tha univcraity ara w.icom.d by thta dpart mant. Opinlona aubmltt.d ahouid ba brief and concee FOR A SWIMMING POOL. To the editor: A few days ago you published an article which made plain the need for a swimming pool at the University of Nebraska. This need has long been f!t and has become more acute In the past two years. Not only should there be a pool for tbe women, but there should be a pool which should enable the university to offer instruction to both men and women. A pool should be large enough to meet the ever-growing popularity of swimming and should be modern In equipment and sanitation. The only pool now available Is the one in the Y. M. C. A. It is small and out of date. Very little of its time now can be spared for university instruc tion. Many who would like to learn to swim do not register for the courses offered because of the un pleasant conditions. These conditions, of course af fect only the men. The women have nothing. Then, too, the university swimming team won the Big Six championship this year. These swim mers who broke four conference records and made such an admirable showing worked under almost impossible condit ions. Sometimes they got no more than thirty minutes' practice for a sport in which condition is everything. Even these precious moments were net undis turbed as small boys were playing in the pool, mak ing a practice workout impossible. Should the Big Six champions be unable to swim at home or must they continue to have all competitive meets away from home because we have no pool ? Swimming is admitted to be the best all-around sport that there is for physical exercise and pleas ure. What a pity, then, that a school like Nebraska, boasting of a wonderful athletic plant, should fail to provide for its students a chance to enjoy this wholesome sport. R. O. Y. "BROTHER PRESIDENT." To the editor: This, Mr. Editor, is what we hear every Monday night at fraternity meeting. What do you think of it? "I don't like to take up the chapter's time with things like this that seem pretty unimportant ,but it seems to me that the sophomores could be doing a lot more around here than they are. "Naturally, they don't know what the score is as well as the upperclassmen do, but they might at least get out and try to find out something. All I ever see of the sophomores is Brother Slank at the Gamma Kappa house every afternoon and Brother Slatch on the telephone every night at 10:30. "We used to be right up at the top in activities and scholarship now look at us. Brother Cartsell is about our only big man on the campus this year and by the looks of the sophomores he'll be the last one. As for scholarship just look at the hours down. "Brother Linney is down in one hour of freshman lecture that he was too dumb to get last year. Par don me. Brother President. Anyway, he was. All right. I won't tell all the others, but all the brothers know just how many sophomores were down. "I'll grant that the sophomores are the best pitch players in tbe house; at least they get the most practice. It seems to me, Brother President, that the sophomores certainly are making a mess of things all right, I'm almost through anyway and they better snap into it." RASKOB II. MUSIC HAS CHARMS ? To the editor: In this great institution, none can deny the value of music and artistic things of that nature; but does that excuse the wild youths who stalk through the quiet halls, whistling with all the vigor and energy of their boundless wind ? Most colleee students have a tendency to allow the slightest disturbances to detract from their at tention from lectures. When some well meaning youth, his attention held to the business in hand by the merest thread, hears the piercing whistle of some contemporary collegian from the halls, it re moves all scholastic thought from his mind. The atmosphere of quiet which exists in the halls and corridors in university buildings provides temp tation, to be sure, for the whistle-conscious youth. He should, however, be more considerate of his fel low students in their respective class rooms. Instead of stalking boisterously through the hall, his hoof- beats accompanied by some tuneful melody, he might walk through like a sensible, conscious human be Mil. K. K.. Hems, 'he nrw head coach. HMike at thtt Woild Fomm Prof. K. II. Harbour and Prof K. II. Hchramm returned from the national convention of petroleum geotogiMs. Tlu editor t v pi l the view that collide comic magazines had reached the pinnacle of stupidity. 19J0. Spiing vat at ton: no paper. 1915. Spring vitiation; no paper. 1910. The tia.k team was victorious in the Omaha Athletic contest. Statistics from the registrar's office vhowi-d that the percentage ot scholastic tit iiiiipiem ies anion fraternity men was becoming less. The etlitor pleaded with sluden's In vole In the coming city elec tions. 190 V The Black Masque society was organized. fioneial Itallmuton Booth, com mandant of tbe Volunteers of America, addressed a large convo cation aiiilicnce. The second nunilier of the Uni versity Journal was sent to various public schools over the state. WANT PRIVILEGES FOR WOMEN. NOIITUWKSTKRN V N IVKR S1TY. Kvanston, HI. Petitioning the faculty for permission to bring women nnchapcroned Into frater nity houses, the fiaternities of Northwestern university are class ed as favoring social reforms. The students request 1 o'clock permission for all parties with 1:30 as the tlm for returning the women to their dormitories on week nights and 2 o'clock on Sat urday nisrhts. The students also wish to be able to stage their par ties any place In Kvanston or Chi cago, sanctioned by the dean of women, instead of being forbidden to have their parties south of Bel mont avenue on the north side of Chicago. Along with other reforms, fra ternities wish the number of par ties to be raised from two, as at present, to six, having two of these formal, and the other four In formal. Contending that the rule that no women be allowed in the fraternity houses nnchapcroned is archaic and degrading to both the coeds and the men on the campus, the men ask for definite hours during the day when they may be allowed to bring friends into the houses. Now a sister or wife of a member or alumnus is not even allowrd in unt haperoned The fraternities pivnua to come to a 'gentlemen's agreement" not to present frvors at any of their paities In return for the granting of their wlnhes. These fa vol a ai alwava an expensive pait of any social function ard aie frowned upon by the school. DEFEND SMOKING At HARM LESS. BOUTHWKSTKRN COIXKV.K. KVANSTON. Ill Smoking doea not Impair a student s mental power In class work or in Intelli gence, according to (mythological investigation made recently by a group of students at Southweotei n college. Two out of every three men on tbe Southwestern campus smoke, and by taking a representative group of 100 smokers and fifty non-smokers. It was determined that the smokers made as good grades as those who did not smoke, liirls were not allowed to partui pate. EXAMI BECOMING "RACKKT" NORTHWESTERN UN 1 V K K SITY, KVANSTON. 111. Commer cialization of examination and quiz paper in Indiana colleges has reached the status of a racket, according to administrative offi cers there who are taking steps to curb the evil. The rracllce conmals in buying up the returned pnjera of the liest students and syndicating them to the dullards the following semes ter. Wholesale rates have been given to large purchasers, espec ially fraternity and sorority houses. Prices vary also with the in structor. A "tough professors quizzs, being greatly in demand, command higher prices. Where English professois assign the same themes year after year, a mimeo graphed "A" theme proves effica cious. Advanced courses, sciences anl foreign languages claim the lush est tariffs . Since an under in structor or a student corrects most of the quizzes, detection of repi tlon Is easily avoided. DISCOVERS "PERFECT CRIME" OKLAHOMA CITY Page the shade of Sherlock Holmes. The "perfect crime" has been discov ered. Despite the sleuthing dished out by imxlern fictionists ranging from Dm bltKxi-iiil-iiiunier type to soliloquies on pseudo-phycholocy. modern criminologists have found a murder that can t be punished. The case in point is the prosecu tion of a killer for a murder com mitted in an airplane. Two gov ernment attorneys contend it can't be done. Modern court procedure being what it is, establishment of venue la fully eitM-ntial aa the corpu delicti, or proof of tnme. How." the lawyers ak. "could the author of murder committed in an airplane engaged In Inter state commerce he brought to Jus lue?" Hailey Sxmelow. of the lr;al department of the bureau of aeronaut lea anwers promptly. "It ran t be done." Itoy St. wib United States dir.! net attorney, nays it could be tried Oklahoma Paily. PROFESSOR OR MINtTREltT UNIVERSITY OF NEW M EX lt AUU'WUEUgi K. N. M The fatuity o Ithe University of Nrw Mexico plana a minstrel how to pay off the del incurred by the 10.'9 issue of the year book. Where To DANCE Lincoln's New Ballroom Featuring the Best Available Orchestras And a Large, Perfect Dance Floor a Dancing Every Week Night Except Monday Wednesday Night, Couples Only Admitted, at 75c Per Hunters Serenaders Playing Every Tuesday and Friday Going Park-ward Wednesday night? We might have said 'Tark-ingM but we didn't want to detract your thoughts too much from these 2 and 3 piece novelty knitted suits. They are just the thing to wear for the Park opening! $16-95 Co-Ed Campus Shop 1123 R St. Davis Coffee Shops Day and Night - 108 N. 13 Facieg Campus 1131 R Fountain Service The profentors will paia.ie is blatk fieai and low cut rvenmf (ow n niUGioaToiPT. MS AVILY INDOWtO. OlVlPFNTAl. tM.I IV.E. I AnKtlri. I'alil.-Endowments ! laluiK $;Voi have leen rveivd by K t idental college beie. Thomas h'ynnot. wealthy Philadelphia, jav MlOHl lo endow the depart n.ent of reliRion Twenty-five thoiimn.l was (jiven fi .holai khip fund Wc mil rtt-lniin" and of all kind for paitica anil li.ilk-. AImi miiiplolr Mm "f liirifk and inaLc-iip. FERRIS COSTUME SHOP 1309 O St. . Kooni -M727 WE I ELL MOHAWK TIRES And TUBES BATTFRIES and BATTERY SERVICE NEW DRIVE-IN SERVICE CAPITAL CITY TIRE CO. 11th and L B4887 A. L BROWN ' rr Q Let's open our eyes to our opportunities next door t.." "" .,....-- -- - i..v.- awv mm MEXICO is one of the greatest storehouses of undeveloped natural resources on the face of the earth. In addition to that it is a land cf charm for the tourist. The people not only are as hospitable and courteous as any their hospitality and courtesy is developed against a background of 400 years of Caucasian civilization and culture. Basic soundness of Mexican institutions has been demonstrated ti the remarkable 'vay our Sister Re public has survived turmoil and trouble since 1910. There is no visible evidence today in any quarter of the years of strife. On the other hand, wherever one goes, there will be found happy, prosperous, con tented, aggressive, patriotic, home-loving and God fearing men and women who welcome the stranger within their gates. Mexicans realise they need and must have outside assistance in their development. They are prepared to welcome and reward such assistance in every legi timate way, and the citizens of our country visiting Mexico will be repaid in many ways. Few realize how easily and comfortably, quickly and economically a visit to Mexico can be accomplished. Excellent train service, that compares favorably with that throughout the United States, enables anyone now to visit Mexico City, for instance, on through trains from St. T.onis in less time that it takes to go from St. Louis to Los Angeles. Mexican railroads are marvels of engineering effi ciency and their equipment and service compare fa vorably with any in the United States. Recognizing all these things, the Missouri Pacific Lines, in addition to endeavoring to help develop the territory directly served by these properties, also acknowledges a responsibility to assist in every pos sible way in the proper development of our great Sister Republic of the South. Any 'Missouri Pacific Man will gladly provide any one interested with any and as much additional infor mation as may be desired. I solicit your co-operation and assistance. President "A Service Institution'' ing. Everyone wo old be benefited. A NON WHISTLER,