University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 19, 1955 Page 10 $36,000 in Scholarship Hall Awards Given to 121 Men for Next Year Scholarship hall awards worth more than $36,000 have been given to 121 men for the 1955-56 year. Most of the 121 are graduating high school seniors who will enter the university next fall. A few already are attending K.U. or other colleges and universities. Selections were made on the basis of scholarship, activities, and need. The 121 scholars will be assigned to the five scholarship halls: Battenfeld, Jolliffe, Pearson, Stephenson, and Sterling-Oliver. The names of the new resident scholars and their chosen field of study are listed below. William Arthur Arendt, engineering; Gerald Grant Austin, no choice; James Allison Avery, music; Gail Eugene Bachman, engineering; Jerome Wayne Bailey, education; James Lewis Baker, engineering; Morgan Roese, education; J. Morgan Bishop, engineering; Robert Eugene Boehme, law; William Donald Boles, engineering; Gill Lincoln Bower, chemistry; Harold Thornton Bowman Jr., engineering; Robert Herbert Briles, engineering; George Herbert Briles, chemistry; Milton Leroy Bronson, engineering Craig Burns Carlson, education; Ernest Richard Carlson, chemistry; Paul Norman Child, no choice; Gilbert Jan Po Chum, medicine; Jerry Jay Cooper, medicine; Maurice Eugene Crawford, engineering; Thomas Leonard Creel, engineering; Howard Engene Crottchel, engineering; Byron Kelly Cruel, dental; Carl Norman Damftschel, medicine; Walter Kohn, engineering; Wayne Dickson, engineering; Norman Dean Dudey, nuclear physics, and Roger Carlton Duffield, engineering. Gary Jay Ellis, engineering; Robert Allen Ewen, medicine; James Eugene Fowkes, business; Philip Robert Friedman, engineering; Robert Garrison, music education; Ira James Gentle, engineering; Ira Lawrence Gentle, engineering; Dore Milne Berg, education; Richard Bevre Gregg, journalism; William Bruce Griffith, engineering; Richard Griffith, engineering; Donald Roy Grisham, business; Alen Kaye Haye pharmacy; Vernon Stanford Hampshire, college; James Phil Hansell University of Chicago Harris, engineer; Charles Harrison engineering; Roy Wiley Hartley, medicine; Herbert Hawfler, engineer; Robert William Hilton education; Vernon Milton Hay, engineering; Robert William Hayes, chemistry; John Richard Hedstrom, physics; Robert Hilton education; Francis William Heiman, engineering; Philip Gary Heinschel, engineering; Norman Dale Hothouse, education; Cecil B. Watson, education and Richard Edward Hunt, business. Robert Matisthon Jackson, college; Harry Dean Johnson, engineering; Phil Dunne Kastr, engineering; Frederick Henneman, engineering; Arnold Kraus, law; Richard Frederick Krueger, business; Arthur Jesse Lewis, architecture; Richard Donald Lewis, no choice; Frederick John Lueders, chemistry; Frederick Lee Luedek, engineering Glen Carvin McDermed, architecture; Joseph Leroy Markley, engineering; Donald Lee Martin, law; George Bernard Martin, physical education; Larry Cecil Martin, medicine; Charles Andrew Matlack, no choice; Terry Lee Lerriweather, pharmacy; Dan Byron Miller, medicine Thomas James Miles, engineering Flair Floyd Mordy, no choice; Robert Blais Moya, business; Ralph Leonard Ohliner, engineering; Walter Eugene Palmer, engineering; Robert Martin Palmer, engineering; Gerald Franklin Peterson, engineering; Jack Alan Phillips, engineering; Raymond Burton Randolph, chemistry; Charles Edward Platz, colligious business; Donald Curtis Potter, engineering; and Michael Lord Printz, seminary. Larry Eugene Reeder, medicine; Gerald Merle Roberts, engineering; Francis Henry Roth, no choice; Charles Ozwin Rutledge Jr., pharmacy; James Douglas Servier, engineering; James Maurice Tremblay, chemistry; Gary Lee Shank, social science; Gary Lee Shank, social science; Gerald Max Simmons, engineering; Charles Dale Smith, education; Max Johnson Starns, pharmacy; Carl Everett Strain, accounting; Donald Lee Sturgis, Guy Edward Suberhain, engineering; and Charles Edward Swan, engineering. William Ludwig Tillman Jr., engineering; Arthur Paul Vogel, accounting; Richard Ira Wadsworth, engineering; Arden Weltner, engineering; James Raymond Wheeler, engineering; Carl Warren White, law; Maurice Wilberldin, engineering; Leland Kent Wilkinson, engineering; Bellamycell Oliver Wilks, chemistry; Robert Wayne Woodruff, medicine; and Donald Lloyd Wright, engineering. Hometown Reporters To Receive Awards Cash prizes will be awarded for the winning string books in the annual Hometown Correspondents contest at the last meeting of the year at 5 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Student Union. Tom Yee, public relations director, will give a short talk following the presentation of awards, and refreshments will be served. SUA Honors Top Workers The retiring officers and nine outstanding committee members of Student Union Activities were presented with traditional beer mugs inscribed with the name of the student by Frank R. Burge, director of the Student Union, at the SUA recognition dinner last night. The officers who received the awards were Ludwig Smith, engineering senior; Althea Rexroad, college senior; Suzanne Swantes, education junior, and Rollin Peschka, journalism junior. Apparent low bidder for the installation of the new cafeteria counters and equipment is the Smith St. John company of Kansas City, which submitted a bid of $11,182. Cafeteria Service Due For Freshman Halls The present table service in North College and Corbin halls will be replaced by cafeteria service next fall. J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, said today. Members of committee honored for outstanding service were Petey Doty, education junior, and A6 Algie, college junior, for public relations; Dean Graves, engineering sophomore, for sports; William Buck, college junior, for recreation; John Benson, college senior, for dancing; Ruth Henry, fine arts junior, for music forms; Peggy Hughes, education senior, for arts and crafts; Mary Ellen Lewis, business junior, for house and rules, and Jack Frost, engineering senior, for special events. Regents Begin Budget Session Topeka—(U.P.)—A two-day budget session of the Kansas board of regents opened in Topeka today. The board will confer with presidents of the five state colleges and heads of the Schools for the Blind and Deaf. 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