WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1940. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE W.S.G.A. Votes $100 for Dinner W. S.G.A. voted to contribute $100 for the Parents' Day banquet May 4 at the regular meeting of the council last night. The bill was passed without discussion since it has been customary in the past for the council to contribute this amount. Members of W.S.G.A. will not receive free passes to the musicale "Sing'n Swing" which they are sponsoring, O'Theen Huff, c'41, president, announced. Jean Robertson, c'41, who is in charge of ticket sales, selected members to work in the box office in Green hall. Marjorie Wiley, c'41, Nadine Hunt, c'43, and Joan Taggart, c'43, were selected to serve on the Point System committee with Mary Beth Dodge, fa'42, as chairman. O'Thene Huff, c41, president, and Velma Wilson, c40, past president of W.S.G.A. will attend the national W. S.G.A. convention to be held at Iowa City, Iowa, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Many Apply For Job As Chair Pusher At New York Fair More than 52 applications for summer employment as chair operators and guides at the New York World's fair have been received at the student employment bureau since February, Marvin Goebel, secretary of the bureau said today. Requirements for the position include at least one year of college, height from 5 feet 1 inches to 6 feet 2 inches, weight from 155 to 215 pounds, and age ranging from 18 to 25. In order to gain a thorough knowledge of the fair, the applicants attend a two-weeks training course, starting May 1. Goebel, however, said applicants would still be taken in in June. Man Responsible For Robinson Gym Dies in Topeka Clyde W. Miller, Topeka, the man responsible for Robinson gymnasium, died last night in Christ's hospital in Toneka. Graduating from the University in 1897 with a law degree, Miller became active and influential in Kansas politics. When a bill for funds to provide a gymnasium for Kansas University appeared in the senate, Miller nudged his father, who was at that time state senator and chairman of the Ways and Means committee. Summerfield Candidates To Hill Next Monday Thirty-two high school seniors representing schools in 17 Kansas towns will come to Lawrence Monday and Tuesday to make final bids for Summerfield scholarships awarded each year to potential students. The finalists were announced today after the selections had been simmered down from the original 310 seniors who took preliminary examinations in Kansas towns on March 23. The results of these exams were the basis of selection for the finalists. From the 32 final candidates 20 boys will be selected for the Summerfield scholarships. On Monday, the boys will spend the day in conferences with the members of the scholarship committee. A dinner for candidates, resident scholars and invited guests will be given that evening in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union. Tuesday morning contestants will begin their examinations. A luncheon for the contestants and members of the scholarship committee will be given in the English room of the Union building, Tuesday before the completion of the tests that afternoon. Wichita East high school will have the greatest representation with five boys. Lawrence and Topeka high schools will be each represented by four candidates. The final contestants and the towns they represent are: Donald Davis, Abilene; Bill Duvall, Beloit; Walker Betin and Keith Sheyner, Chanute; William Brownlee, Normand Butts, and Richard Miller, Hutchinson. Robert Coleman, Junction City; Women's Intramurals By CECIL KING The three winning women's intramural baseball teams more than doubled their opponents score, in the games played on the intramural field yesterday afternoon. Pi Phi downed Sigma Kappa with a score of 25 to 2. Dennie Lemoine and Virginia Anderson were the battery. Martha Starr scored a home run for the winning team. Kappa doubled the Alpha Delta Pi runs with a score of 28 to 14. Margarette Parker and Jean Wedell were the battery for Kappa, Marian Milhoan and Alta Armstrong for A. D. Pi. Gamma Phi outscored Alpha Chi Omega 24 to 5. Marjorie Heimbrook and Sarah Fair were the battery for Gamma Phi. Gilbert Rees, and Wayne Weller, Kansas City; Allan W. Cromley, Minneapolis; Mansfield Miller, Onaga Theodore Young, Oxford; Harvey Lanier, Pittsburg; Joyce Holmberg, Randolph; Robert L. Dean, Russell; William Leader, Leota. Day for Alumni Is Business School Eugene Dix, Yates Center; James B. Chandler, William Michener, Glenn Porter, Carl Hines Jr. and Robert McConnell, Wichita East; Gerald McConnald, Wichita North; Fred C. Collier, Clarence Engle, John Smith, and Jack Sterrett, Topeka; Garland Landreith, Thornton McLanahan, Arthur Nelson, and Clifford Nelson, Lawrence. Seven alumni of the School of Business will return to the campus during the annual Business School Day April 24, and give lectures to classes in economics, money and banking, public service industries, public finance, retail merchandizing, market management, and statistics. The alumni who will act as instructors are: Harold Hull, '26, investment bank; Donald D. Hoag, '26, retail store manager; Arnold R. Jones, '27, member of the Kansas Corporation Commission; Archie N. Cowles, '27; general manager of Dodge, Inc.; Jack Gates, '28, district representative of Republic Gear Co.; Paul H. Woods, '28, Wichita banker; and Louis L. Miller, '30, actuary and secretary of the United Life Insurance company, Salina. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE!! Preyer's Concert Well Attended Carl A. Preyer, professor of piano in the School of Fine Arts, was honored Sunday afternoon in Hoch auditorium by a program of his own compositions. Approximately 100 persons were present to hear the best of his works, composed during his 50 years in music. Probably the high spot on the program was a piano solo by Miss Ruth Orcutt, "Koncertstueck." Also well received was Miss Lucile Wagner of Iola, a former pupil, who played two of his more modern piano numbers, "Ballade," and "Toccata." DON'T FORGET THE RELAYS! The University Orchestra in con- clusion played his "Fairy Suite," after which Professor Preyer was in- roduced from the stage. Only Harzfeld has 'em! Clever little cotton dresses that go to school, on dates, to the city. You'll loaf in them, play in them, have fun in them! Pinafore, tennis, date dresses seersuckers, chambrays, linens, ginghams. Sizes 9-15; 10-18. See them at our shop Thursday, April 18 and Friday, April 19. --fun in spring 75c An ALL-UNIVERSITY Dance HOB NAIL HOP with~~ CLYDE SMITH'S orchestra 9-12 — SATURDAY — BALLROOM Who will be QUEEN? Cathleen Beyer Betty Bell Pattye Jayne Wadley Ann Rightmire Kay O'Sullivan Bernice Morris