he Daily. Nebraskan XXI1--NQ. 121. 'VOL. SCHOLARSHIPS TO BE AWARDED BY ASSOCIATION Two Underclasswomen of Uni versity Will Receive Gifts from Lincoln Branch. ANNOUNCE REQUIREMENTS Awlicants Must Be Either Freshmen or Sophomores and Have a High Average. The Lincoln branch of the Ainer ton Association of University Women, which annually .awards sehol .uM o undorclasswonien of the University, announces the regulations ,n(j Qualifications governing the awardinp of these scholarships. Two scholarships are annually iwanlPd, one of one hundred dollars, ind one of fifty dollars. The former b held this year by Janet McLellan, a junior In the College of Business Administration, and the smaller one by Lillian Margolin, In her third year In the College of Arts and Sciences. The requirements as announced re: "An applicant must have been and ier freshman or sophomore year at the date of her application. She must be either a sophomore or a junior when she holds the scholarsip. "An applicant must ave been and be, wholly or in part self-supporting. "An applicant must be a regularly enrolled, student in the University of Nebraska. She must be in good stand tag at the time of her application. "An applicant must have a high jcholarship and must have some In terest in general college activities. "Every applicant must fill out one of the regular application blanks which may be obtained from the Dean of Women, or from the chairman o" the scholarship committee, Miss Cer trude Jones, 2427 P street, Lincoln. Every applicant must furnish five references. Three of these should be from persons on the campus; the other two from persons not connected with the University. The Dean of Women will always be used as refer ence, so her name should net be given. The applicant should make' arrangements with the persons whose, names are given as reference to send their recommendations to Miss Ger trude Jones, 2427 P street, Lincoln Applications will not be considered by the committee unless this request is complied with. "The scholarship consist of gifts of $100 and $50 respectively. They will be paid in two parts, half the first semester and half the second semester. "Applications, together with a transcript of grades should be sent by May 1 to Miss Gertrude Jones. 2127 P street, Lincoln." Dean Amanda Heppner will pro vide further information for Hies" flrls who are interested. Keep Off the Grass! GIRLS fiHIO PARTY Y. M. C. A. Commission Makes Plans for Funfest at Ellen Smith Hall Next Saturday. The girls or the freshman class will be entertained at a big party. Satur day afternoon, April 14, from 3 to 5 "'clock at Ellen Smith Hall. The Party will he given by the Freshman Commission, an organization under toe auspices nf the Y. W. C. A. Games and stunts of various sort3 8ave been planned to provide amuse ment for every guest. Several original skts will be presents, and any group of freshman girls is invited to pre pare one. A prize will be given for toe cleverest entertainment. Tradition has made the annual en tertainment given by the Commission 1 kid party. Girls are urged to use "genulty in planning their costumes, nj a Prize will be given the best. he cmmittee announces that each g'r ia expectod to bring her dolly. , here wiu he no formal invitations ued. The Commission is endeavor- 5 to get in persona touch wltn dat"7 8irlS ,n lhe Class before the iriii6 h the party' Undoubtedly somc ore n misscd' 80 tna each girl is Sea by the Commission to set aside the Saturday afternoon, April 14, for e Party without waiting for further (Continued on Page Four) UN FRESHMAN Mystic Fish Will Hold Benefit Show Mystic Fish, first-year girls' honor ary society, will have chargo of the ticket sale for "Trilling Women," the moving picture to e shown at the Rlalto the week of April ninth. The freshman organization wlli ur,e the commission on the ticket sale to fur ther their campus activities. The main purpose of Mystic Fish, how ever, is to promote good fellowship among the members of the rreshman class. GladyH Sidles Is In charge of the ticket sale. A party for ull freshman girls, to be held sometime In the future, Is being planned by the memers of Mys tic Fish. Keep Off the Grass! ANNOUNCE CANDIDATES FOR lU. OFFICES Irnia Kirk and Marie Snavely Are Nominated for President. Candidates for next year's officer.'' of the Women's Athletic Association were announced yesterday by the organization, as follows: President. Irva Kirk, Marie Suavely. Vice President. Mable Dickerson, Lois Pederson. Corresponding Secretary.1 Rosalie Platner, Esther Swanson. Recording Secretary. Silva Kunc, Glee Gardner. Treasurer. Irene Berquist, Dorothy Dougan. Soccer Leader. Marguerite Eastham, Elsie Cram lich. Hockey Leader. Dorothy Goodale, Elizabeth Arm strong. Basketball Leader. Edith Gramlich, Florence Stifles. Dance Drama. Ruth Ellsworth, lieiniee Ballance. Keep Off the Grass. OMAHA CLUB 10 GIVE HIT KB OF YEAR Tickets Are Thirty-five Cents Northwall's Orchestra Will Furnish Music. Tickets are now on sale for the spring mixer which will be given at the Armory Saturday Evening under the auspices of the Omaha Liu They may be secured from any mem ber of the committee. The price is thirty-five cents. All sorority and fraternity houses and dormitories will be solicited. Northwall's have been secured to play for the mixer. The University quartet will give "several numbers and a co-ed will appear in an oriental dance. The committee is confident that every guest will have a 'good time. The spring mixer is probably the last all-University party of the year. The all-University paMy committee gave its last entertainment before the Easter holidays. It has been said that a Nebraska student who has failed to attend a mixer during the year has missed an experience which rightfully belongs in a year of Uni versity life. The Omaha Club, w hich is in charge of the mixer, is an active organiza tion on the campus. Its purpose is to foster friendship among students from Omaha, and aid new ones en tering the University. The monthly dinners held by the club are attended by about sixty students. The or ganization is backed by Omaha busi ness men. Keep Off the Grass! Agricultural Editor Publishes Articles R. P. Crawford, agricultural editoi of the College of Agriculture and in chargo of the work in agricultural Journalism, had three articles in the March magazines, including Scriu ner's, the Scientific American and Business. The article ) he latter magazine, describing the work of the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce, brought the chamber nearly forty letters from other clubs in all parts of the country, and a request by tele graph from the San Francisco Cham ber of Commerce to reprint and broadcast the article throughout Cal ifornia. , lMo,1 The article in Scrlbner's. entuled "Discovering a Real American Art was also widely quoted by news papers LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, TATE ACADEMY; OF SCIENCE WILL MEET NEXT WEEK Thirty-third Annual Convention to lie Held at University on April 12, 13 and 14. INVITE PUBLIC TO ATTEND Organization Is Made Up of People Interested in Science , Students Eligible for '. Membership. . ., The thirty-third annual meeting . of the Nebraska Academy of Science will bo held at the University,. April 12. 13, and 14. The public is in vited to all the sessions of the con vention. The members or this organization meet every other year In Lincoln, going alternate years to other towns in the state, .according to the vote of the convention. The Academy is an organization of people interested in science, whether or not their knowledge of the subject he technical. During the meetings, a campaign for new members Is to be held. Students and faculty at well as other persons interested are eligible to membership, which may be secured through the payment of dues to the treasurer of the " organ ization, Prof P. K. Slaymaker. The program for the convention which begins at noon Thursday is as follows: ' Thursday. . 1:00 Meeting of the Executive Committee. 4:00 "Radium and Radiaetivity," a semi-technical lecture by Prof. IT. P. Cady, head of the department of chemistry of the University of Kan sas in the auditorium of the chem istry building. This will be a joint meeting with the Nebraska section of the American Chemical Society. 7:00 Business meeting, in the auditorium of the Social Science building. At this meeting there will bo election of officers, rerforts of committees, and the .introduction of resolutions. 8:00 "Liquid Air and its Applica tions." A popular lecture, especially for the general public, will be de livered by Prof. Cady, Illustrating his talk with experiments on liquid aid. This meeting also will be in the au ditorium of the social science au ditorium. 8:00 to 8: JO In the hallway or the Temple, the new members will.be registered. Old members will re-register at the same time and place. This affords opportunity for the pay (Continued on Page Four). Fcrty-four Students Meet Part of Cost of Education by Loan Funds ( University Publicity Office). Forty-four University of Nebraska students are meeting part of the cost of their education by loans that total $7,700 granted from the funds held in trust by the University. Fifteen of these loans were granted this year. According to L. B. Gunderson, Uni versity bursar, about a hundred stu dents have been loaned money from these funds in the past ten years. The funds entrusted to the Univer sity by philanthropic persons or or ganizations are divided in two classes according to whom the money can be loaned that is, loans to special groups of students and loans open to all. Freshmen are not eligible to loans from any fund, and seniors are given preference. No person can borrow more than $100 a semester and this is paid to them at the rate of $25 a month. The person signs a prom issory note that is endorsed by two property-owners satisfactory to the University officials in charge of the fund3. Each loan la payable not later than two years after the student has been graduated or has left college. Every loan but one which will eventually be collected has been paid when due, according to the bursar. By far the largest number borrowing money are men only three women are now In debted to the funds. The original donations to the funds total $5,552.04, which have grown now to almost $7,700. On June 30, 1922, $3,621.02 of this was out on loans, and $779.04 of it has been dorated since. The funds now available, their don ors. and to whom they are available are: Fill DAY, APRIL 6, 1923 I :"S. . ... f "J ,,fs , ' . ' t One of the fast Dear hurdlers E SPECIAL CONFERENCES Miss Helen Bennett to Hold Personal Interviews with Women of Uni versity. Special conferences with Miss Helen Bennett of the Chicago Col legiate Bureau of Occupation, who in coming to the University April 9 and 10, may be arranged by signing up on the list posted on the bulletin board of Ellen Smith Hall or by calling Margaret Wattles at B1416. Five min utes is the nlloted time for a per sonal conference, but if a girl wishes to have ton minutes with Miss Ben nett, she may sign up for consecu tive periods. Miss Bennett will speak on voca tions for women at meetings Monday and Tuesday, at 11 and 5 o'clock. The 11 o'clock meeting will be a gen eral meeting, and all girls are par ticularly urged by the members of the V. S. G. A. which is sponsoring Miss Bennett's visit, to come to this meetin, because it will be a general outline of the meetings to follow. The 5 o'clock meeting on Monday will be held in the Auditorium of the (Continued on Tage 2) John R. Webster fund (open to all) $1,SS5.56: William G. Whitmore fund (engineers) $1,470.89; John A. Wad dell fund (engineers) $1,542.09; Ida M. Carter fund (engineers) $737.10; Sigma Tau fund (engineers) $100; Dr. J. F. Stevens Memorial fund (open to all) $1,174.02; Class of 1914 (open to all) $169.04; Engineers fund (engineers) $500; Business Women's League (for women) $100, and Pi Beta Phi $10. In addition to thesB funds, the Omaha Chamber of Commerce has an agricultural students' aid fund, cre ated by public subscription in Sep tember 1921, amounting to $1,700. This is under a guardian, J. A. Changstrom of the Omaha National bank. Thi3 money is loaned to stu dents in the College of Agriculture, and it is reported that seventy-five students of that college have been loaned sums from that fund since it was started. Every loan has been repaid. Loans from this fund are secured through officials of the col lege. The students in the College of Medicine at Omaha have the use of the Conklin Loan fund. Mr. Gunder son says that there is need for a Tund for the College of Dentistry stu dents who must make large expendi tures for laboratory equipment. Pres ent funds and rules do not accom modate these students. The available funds do not even begin to take care of the large num ber of applications. . All the funds will grow in time. But University of ficials agree that student loan funds divided according to colleges should be established as soon as. possible. Vr hp S A a . " l ' clearing a hurdle in perfect form. 10 MAKE FIRS! TOUR Itinerary Calls for Trip Through Picturesque Europe, and Practical Newspaper Work. Announcement is made to the stu dents of the University of Nebraska of the first Journalistic tour for women which has over been takeu. This will combine travel through picturesque Europe with practical in struction in newspaper writing for the press. This itinerary covers a period of two month.: Tim miWy.wUi m. ii . 19 from New York and arrive at Cher bourg, June 28. The first stop will be in Paris In which a week will be devoted to the many places of inter est, including the Louvre, Napoleon's Tomb, and the Notre Dame. One day will be spent on the Battlefields nea: Rheims. From there the party will reach Rome through a roundabout course. Here, too, are places which will give these Journalistically in clined travelers abundant material on which to write. The tour includes Naples, Pompeii, and Capri where a trip will be made to the Blue Grotto. In Florence, the party will have the opportunity of visiting the Ufi'izi Gallery, Ponte Vec chio, Pitti Palace, Church of San Lor enzo, and other places. Venice with its Bridge of Sighs, Doge's Palace, St. Mark's, and Grand Canal by gondola conies next on the route. There will be several excursions through Switzerland and Germany. Heidleberg, which is renowned for its Castle and University, is included in the trip. The party will visit at Cologne the great Gothic Cathedral which is one of the most famous In Europe. In Brussels an excursion wil be conducted through the Royal Palace. Then to London to the West minster Abbey, British Museum, Tower, National Gallery, St. Paul's Cathedral, and Trafalgar Square where there has been erected a mag nificent monument of Nelson, hero of the Battle of Trafalgar which was fought with France in 1805. A visit will be made to Stratford and to Shakespeare's birthplace and tomb. The parly will sail from Liverpool August 11, and arrive in Montreal or New York August 20. t During the tour, Miss Mary Gilpin Armstrong, formerly Educational Ed itor of the New York Evening Post and of the Christian Science Monitor, will show the young women how to convert their Impressions into accept able copy enroute. Arrangements have been made with the American Press to take articles, and news-letters from this .tour of the old world. Keep Off the Grass! Business men of Norman, Okla homa, are opposing the plan to erect a Medical Builuing and the starting of a Oklahoma College of Medicine at Oklahoma City, because they are afraid that this step will result in the final moving of the entire state University to Oklahoma City. A mass meeting was held In order to attempt to compromise with a few merchants still holding out. CALIFORNIA AND NEBRASKA MEET ON CINDER PATH Cornhusker Tracksters to Battle Bears in Dual Meet Satur day Afternoon at Berkeley. BRUINS EXPECT TO WIN Careful Analysis of the Dope on Two Teams Shows That They Are Evenly , Matched. Dope Sheet. Nebr. Calif. 100 yard dash 8 1 220 yard dash S 1 Quarter C 3 Half-mile S 1 Mile run 5 4 Two mile run 6 3 120 yard high hurdles ..4 5 220 yard low hurdles .... 3 6 Mile relay 5 0 High jump G 3 Bioad jump 1 S Ptln vault t 3 5 Javelin ! 1 S Discus throw 0 9 Shot put 1 8 6.") 65 The Nebraska track team meets the University of California cinder path artists, 1922 inter-collegiate champions of America, in a -dual meet Saturday as the feature event of the University Day Athletic program at Berkeley. Both terns re in excellent shape for the meet, and will go through a light workout today, in preparation for the big contest to morrow. The California ns are con fident of winning the meet with the Iluskevs by a comfortable margin. In doping out a track moot, one man's guess is as good ns ar.ohor's and so the chart shown above may be judged accordingly. elusions shown there represent a careful study of (ho performances of the two teams, both last year and this, and give a fair estimate of the strength of the two aggregations. The fact that the Bears have limited their team to twenty men in order to be on equal footing with the Iluskers was considered in making this chart, and may account for the strength of the Huskers in several events. In the century dash Noble and Lloyd of the Huskers are expected to have little difficulty in winning first and second places, in view of their faty ten-second performances in the New Mexico meet. Shopard or Farnsworth of California are con ceded third place. The 220-yard dash should also be won by the fast pair of Husker sprinters, who tied the world's record in the fifty-yard dash at the Valley indoor meet. Aeain in the quarter-mile dash, Nebraska should make a strong show ing. Trexler of the Cornhuskefrs won the 440 in 52 seconds against a slow field at New Mexico, and should run the quarter faster than his New Mexico mark. The Bears, on the other hand, are relatively weak in e 440, for they failed to place in ie Southern California meet, when Martz of the, Trojans won in 51 2-5 seconds. In the quarter, therefore, the Huskers are given first place, with a probability of the other Husker quarter-niiler taking second or third. Gardner and Coats, Husker half milers who both ran the 8S0 under two minutes last year, are considered as winners of first and second places in the half, respectively, with Bau man, Bear 'half-miler, taking third. Captain Allen of the Huskers, Mis- souri Valley champion miler, Is doped to win the mile, with the Bruin runners taking second and third places. Ted Slemmons of the Husk ers is given lirst place in the two mile, with Cohen, another fast Husker, taking third place. The fast California hurdlers are ex pected to take first in the hifcS hurdles and first and third in the low hurdles, with the Huskers scor ing second and third in the highs and second in te lows. The Husker relay team should run around 3:25 in the mile relay, which would give the Scarlet and Cream team a safe mar gin in this event, as the Trojans de feated the Bears in the relay by fin ishing in 3:28. .The Bears will score high in all (Continued on Page Four).