TUESDAY, JUNE 27, 1939 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN PAGE THREE Announce Miller Watkins Awards ★ 78 Women To Benefit From Scholarships During 1939-40 School Year Seventy-eight young women have been awarded scholarships in Watkins and Miller Halls of residence at the University of Kansas for the academic year 1939-40. Watkins and Miller halls, gifts of the late Mrs. J. B. Watkins to the University, provide campus homes for self-supporting women students of educational promise at a nominal cost. Fifty-five of the 78 scholarships are renewals, and 23 are new awards. To have their scholarships renewed, the students must maintain a certain grade average. Only six of the 78 are from outside Kansas. The awards Miller Hall (New awards). Ruth Moritz, Marysville; Colleen Poorman, Wichita; Mary R. Gans, New Cambria; Mary Willis, Newton; Ruby Bostwick, Holton; Virginia Van Bebber, Troy; Evelyn Nielson, Monument; Etta Leonard, White City; Irene Neis, Wellville; Mary Frances Schultes, Leavenworth; Jeanne Scott, Topeka. Miller Hall (Renewals). Mary Anderson, Minneapolis; June Aumiller, Topeka; Alice Boyer, Topeka; Margaret June Gray, Pratt Leah Highfill, Winfield; Gladys H尔里, Preston; Laura Holste, Ludell; Helen Houston, Rosedale; Gladys Huber, Valley Falls; Nellie Jo Hurtgen, Ruedi, Colo.; Betty Kimble, Mulvane; Jeanne Knight, Chapman; Viola May Knoche, Paola; Freda Lawson, Mcpherson; Sarai Mohler, Topeka; Eunice Nielson, Atchison; Esther Norman. Edwardsville; Lois Ross, Dover; Doris Sholander, Topeka; Barbara Smith, Waverly; Cleojaele Smith, Moline; Rhus Spencer, Topeka; Janet Stoltenberg, Holyrood; Eleanor Swan, Erie; Esther Tippin, Topeka; Helen B. Van Dyke, Kansas City; Elizabeth R. White, Lead, S.D.: Kathryn Zenor, Hutchinson. Watkins Hall (New awards). Verona Meredith, Hutchinson; Barbara Edmonds, Kansas City; Janice Gartrell, Beagle; Mary Alice Flynn, Kansas City; Katrine Eberhardt, Kansas City; Mary Gene Hull, Wichita; Janetta Fetrow, Haddam; Leora Adams, Clay Center; Gina Gsell, Olathe; Luella Holl, Bird City; Helen Wilson, Mulvane; Joan Bradley, Greensburg. Watkins Hall (Renewals). Rose Etta Carr, Osawathem; Elizabeth Curry, Wichita; Dorothy Douglas, Olathe; Addie Mary Egbert, Topeka; Herta Eichtersheimer, Newark, N.J.; Roselyn Felten, Kansas City; Lillian Fisher, Leavenworth; Sara Jane Graham, Wellsville; Genevieve Harman, Tonganoxie; Odory Hendrikson, Atchison; Marion Horn, Rocky River, Ohio; Muriel Johnson, Topeka; Evelyn Kamprath, Leavenworth; Ruth Knoche, Paola; Margery Lewis, Atwood; Bernice Malm, Silver Lake; Corrine Martin, Paola; Mary Frances McAnaw, Exelsior Springs, Mo.; MauR Mercer, Wellington; Verda Lee Miller, Bethel; Marcia Molby, Salina; Imogene Morris, Moline; Mary Ellen Roach, Lowemont; Virginia Rose, Paola; Nadine Schuerman, Enid, Okla.; Joyce Standiferd, Salina; Ruth Warren, Lawrence. WANT ADS BOYS: Rooms for summer school; shower and cool study room in basement. Board optional. Just off campus, west of Snow hall. 1325 West Campus Road. -4 BOOKS: One set of Harvard Classics, one set of Kipling, one set of Lodge History of Nations, and others for sale. Phone 2337. 1031 Vermont. Dr. Florence Barrows. -5 LOST: A red purse in front of the Library. Contained a pair of horn-rimmed glasses and fountain pen. Want glasses back especially. Finder please send to Nadine Bitter, 1231 Oread. Phone 1783. COOL, bungalow-type apartment, private bath and entrances, well furnished, 3 rooms, ground floor. 1547 Kentucky, $6 per week, $25 per month. -6 Foreign Students Enroll in Kansas Summer Session Four students from foreign countries are enrolled in the University for Summer Session. Alaska, Japan, Canada, and Venezuela, eighteen states, and the District of Columbia are represented here this summer. Of Kansas' 105 counties 93 are represented by the summer students. Two hundred eighty-one Kansas towns also are represented on Mount Oread. Douglas county leads with the greatest number of students, 225. A record for summer enrollment was set this semester with 1281 persons signed up for summer courses. A special course in English is being prepared for the correspondence bureau by Miss Esther Wilson, assistant professor in English. This course is designed primarily for students who wish to study for the required proficiency examination. This special correspondence study will be ready by the first of July, Miss Ruth Kenney, secretary of the University correspondence study bureau said. The course, which will not be given for credit, is designed to help students in any phase of English which they especially need to pass the required examination. Musical Program For Summer The piano recital given by Jan Chiapusso of the School of Fine Arts faculty at 8 o'clock Monday evening in the Auditorium of Frank Strong hall opened the series of musical offerings to be given during the Summer session. Included on the programs sponsored by the School of Fine Arts during the Summer Session are the weekly band and orchestra concerts to be presented every Sunday by the band and orchestra of the Mid-Western Music Camp. Each week a different director will be in charge. The remaining list as submitted by Dean D. M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts, is as follows: Thursday, June 29—School of Fine Arts Faculty Concert. Aud. F. S. Hall, 8:00 p.m. Sunday, July 2—Midwestern Music Camp Orchestra Concert. Hoch 3:30 p.m.; Mid-Western Music Camp Band Concert. Campus, 7:00 p.m. Sunday, July 9 - Mid-Western Music Camp Orchestra Concert. Hoch Aud. 3:30 p.m.; Mid-Western Music Camp Band Concert. Campus, 7:00 p.m. Thursday, July 6—Faculty Recita Thursday, July 6—Faculty Recita, Violinist, Aud E S. F., Holl 800-1234 Thursday, July 13—Recital by Georgia Graves, Controlto of New York City. Hoch. Aud. 8:00 p.m. Sunday, July 16—Mid-Western Music Camp Orchestra Concert. Hours: 3:30 p.m.; Mid-Western Music Camp Band Concert, Campus, 7:00 p.m. Thursday, July 20—School of Fine Arts Faculty concert. Aud. F. S. Hall. 8.00 p. m. Sunday, July 23—Mid-Western Music Camp Orchestra Concert. Hoch Aud, 3:30 p.m.; All-Musical Vespers. Hoch Aud, 7:00 p.m; Mid- AT THE GRANADA Johnny Weeismuller in a scene from "Tarzan Finds a Son" Starting Wednesday for 4 days Listed in "Adventures in Good Eating" EVANS HEARTH Where Faculty and Students Meet 20th and Massachusetts St. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Daily Luncheons (desserts included) -- 35c & 50c Special Sundav Dinner 50c - 75c 50c - 65c ALL WOMEN COOKS Special Private Dining Rooms for Small Parties Granda- ends tonight: "Calling Dr. Kildare" starring Lew Ayres. Lionel Barrymore. Wednesday for four days: "Tarzan Finds a Son" with Johnny Weissmuller, Maureen O'Sullivan and Tarzan Jr. At the Theatres CAMPUS CALENDAR Varsityt—ends tonight: "Algiers" and "The Jones Family in Hollywood. Wednesday. Thursday: "Sally Irene and Mary," and "Shadows Over Shanghai." Friday and Saturday: "The Terror of Tiny Town" and "Navy Secrets." Eleven Fifty-Year Medals Awarded at Exercises Dickinson—ends tomorrow: "Invitation to Happiness" staring Irene Dunne, Fred MacMurray and Chas. Ruggles. Thursday through Saturday: Shirley Temple in "Susannah of the Mounties." Patee — ends tomorrow: "David Copperfield" and "Hard to Get." Saturday, Friday, and Saturday: "Mountain Rhythm" and "It's Love I'm After." Eleven persons were awarded Fifty-Year Medals at the 1939 Commencement. The list, which contains persons who have been graduated from the University for fifty years or more, was reported by Mrs. Frances Eddy Johnson, chairman of the 50-year reunion committee. Those of the class of 1886 who received medals are Bertha Nellie Atwood of Springfield, Mo., and William Staples Wooley of Liberal, Kansas. Of the class of 1889 Mrs. Johnson, Lawrence; William T. Gaywood, Houston, Texas; Asa Dutten Kennedy, Omulgee, Oklahoma; John Crogan Manning, San Francisco, Cal.; Mrs. Mary Manley Parmalee, Buffalo, Wyoming; Thomas Allen Pollock, Kansas City, Kansas; Loren Wade Snepp, Olathe, Kansas; Edwin Eberhard Squires, Broken Bow, Neb.; and Lewis Abyrom Stebbins, Chicago, Illinois will receive medals. What most people crave is an intelligence rest. Western Music Camp Band Concert. Campus. 8:00 p.m. Thursday, July 27—Mid-Western Music Camp Student Recital. Aud. F. S. Hall; 8:00 p.m. Sunday, July 30—Mid-Western Music Camp Orchestra. Final Concert. Hoch Aud. 3:30 p.m.; Mid-Western Music Camp Orchestra. Final Concert. Cantor, 7:00 p.m. Monday, July 31—Summer Session Advanced Student Recital. Aud. F. S. Hall. 8:00 p.m. Thursday, August 3—Annual Summer Session Sing. Campus. 7:45 p.m. Join Our RENTAL LIBRARY 15c for 5 Days THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel 666 Statistician says that every fifth person in the United States owns an automobile, but what he means is that every fifth person in the United States will own an automobile if he ever gets it paid for. The reason why some married men never know when they are well off is because they never are. DICKINSON Scientifically Cooled for Health and Comfort! FRED MacMURRAY IRENE DUNNE in "INVITATION TO HAPPINESS" NOW SHOWING STARTS THURSDAY You will thrill to mourn redmen in battle! You will be stirred by the courage in one young heart! You will live through the peril faced by a woman in love! Action, drama, spectacle, emotion! 20th Century-Fox Picture RANDOLPH MARGARET SCOTT·LOCKWOOD STARTS SUNDAY 1.ESTER MATTHEWS 20th Century Fox Pictures MARTIN GOOD RIDER J. Farrrell MacDONALD MAURICE MOSCOVICH MORONI OLSEN VICTOR JORY Your Favorite Sunday Evening Radio Program JACK BENNY ROCHESTER DOROTHY LAMOUR Mct. 25c Nite 25c 'til 7 then 35c STARTS SUNDAY "Man About Town" WE ARE HEADQUARTERS $5.00 Summer Tropics $5 to $7.50 Most Styles - Two Tone Tans - Whites or plain dress types - Golf Shoes with Calks HAYNES & KEENE 819 Mass. ___ Phone 524