Page 12 University Daily Kansas Thursday, April 11, 1957 Summerfield, Watkins Scholars Announced The winners of the Summerfield and Elizabeth M. Watkins scholarships for 1957-58 were announced today by Spencer Martin, director of the aids and awards. All are graduating seniors in Kansas high schools. Eleven senior boys and 11 senior girls will receive other honor awards at KU. The 32 Summerfield and Watkins scholarship winners were chosen *from approximately* 500 seniors nominated last winter by their high school principals. Each has gone through both a preliminary and final series of competitive examinations and interviews. Chloe & Ken Martin. Chosen for Merit "Each scholar was chosen solely for merit as demonstrated in academic achievement, leadership, character and promise of future usefulness to society." Mr. Martin said. "However, the amount of each individual award is determined by need in most instances." Summerfield and Watkins scholars may receive only a $100 honorarium once or as much as 100 per cent assistance. Their awards are renewable for a 4-year course at KU. Holders of the other honor scholarships will receive from $200 to $600, except that General Motors scholars will receive as much assistance as needed up to 100 per cent support. These awards also are renewable. The 1957 winners of Summerfield scholarships are Charles Aldrich, Osborne; Carl Baker, Emporia; Robert Barnhill, Lawrence; Charles Buffon, Topeka; David Carson, Kansas City, Kan.; Joe Douglas, Wadsworth; Lloyd Ericson, Lawrence; Brian Grant, Kansas City, Kan. Robert Hall, Pittsburgh; Terry Hart, Mission, William Jackson, Topeka; David Kendle, Salina; Errol Kinseiner, Ness City; Richard Kock, Haven; Thomas Kosakowski, Leavenworth; Stephen Little, Topeka; Fred Morrison, Colby; John Robinson, Wichita; John Spencer, Topeka; James H. Wood, Fort Riley, Watkins Scholars The 1957 winners of Elizabeth M. Watkins scholarships are Sandra Kay Beck, Emporia; Jill Boxberger, Russell; Joan Dunkin, Wichita; Barbara K. Foley, Lawrence; Rebecca Ann Grantham, Topeka; Betsy R. Lyon, Kansas City, Kan.; Ann Marsh, Fort Leavenworth; Lelia Mayfield, Hutchinson; Margaret M. Proctor, Pittsburg; Jeanne Rustemeyer, Leavenworth; Janice Skelton, Wichita; Carol Diane Thompson, Altamont. Drama Festival Friday, Saturday More than 200 students from 33 Kansas high schools will participate in the State Speech and Drama Festival Friday and Saturday at the University. The students, who received top ratings at their district festivals to qualify for the state festival, will present 1-act plays and speeches, including menuscript readings, original orations, dramatic and humorous readings, and informative and extemporaneous talks. Four 1-act plays will be presented in Fraser Theater, beginning at 6:15 p.m. and three will be presented in the Lawrence High School Auditorium beginning at 7 p.m. The play schedule for Saturday will begin at 8 a.m. and will run until 3:15 p.m. in Green and Fraser Theaters and in the Lawrence High School Auditorium. Squeeches will be given in Fraser Hall and Strong Hall. GLASS Auto Glass Tabletops Sudden Service AUTO GLASS CO. Receiving Donnelly Honor scholarships for women, which are in the amount of $300 each are Jolene Brink, Ottawa; Nancy Craven, Hillsdale; Judith Gordon, Great Bend; Carol Jones, Hutchinson; Angie Lee Magnusson, Wichita; Donna Roof, Ness City; Mary Lou Shelly, Ford; Karen K. Wedel, Moundridge. East End of 9th Street Winners of U. G. Mitchell Honors scholarships* ($2500 awards), for which special aptitude in mathematics as well as honor qualities are required, are William Deaschner, Topeka; Virginia Mae Glover, Larned; James F. Hoy, Cassaday; Robert S. Hyslson, Overland Park; Larry E. Jones, St. John; Kenneth A. Megill, Independence; Gordon M. Penny, Garden City; David E. Sutherland, Ottawa; Mary Ann Waddell, Bethel. A general scholarship is awarded to Patricia Campbell. Mollyern. The Flora S. Boynton scholarship will be held by Jack D. Salmon, Elkhart. Boeing Scholarships The Boeing Airplane Co. scholarship for a boy beginning the study of engineering, the amount being based on need up to $500, will go to Richard E. Jones, Winfield. The Corn Products Refining Co. scholarship, awarded to a male student who will study engineering or chemistry with an amount of $600 a year, renewable for four years, will be held by Norman Ray Greer, Kansas City, Kan. Two General Motors Corporation College scholarships, provided for students planning to study science or engineering, will be held by Rebecca Ann Grantham, Topeka; Jon S. Wayland, Independence. The General Motors scholarships are renewable for the four-year course at KU. The amount each scholar receives will be decided by the company, and will be based on need up to full assistance. Miss Grantham, although receiving her assistance from the General Motors scholarship, was accorded the additional honor of selection as an Elizabeth M. Watkins scholar. As any zoo visitor can testify, yawning or feeding hippos are a formidable sight. The square-snouted beasts have prodigious appetites. Their main diet is young shoots, herbs, leaves, and grasses, preferable hundreds of pounds at a time HOBBIES Of All Kinds Model Supplies & Games MARTIN HOBBY SHOP 842 Mass. Another Alec Guinness Romp . . . Even Funnier A $700 scholarship from the American Society of Tool Engineers has been awarded to Porter J. Clark, Independence junior. Than "Lavender Hill Mob" Tool Engineers Give Scholarship The scholarship is one of 10 awarded to students throughout the nation. KU students have received the scholarship four times. This makes the third consecutive year that the scholarship has been awarded to a KU student. The present holder is Garry A. Kinemond, Buaston senior. Speech Department Plans Assemblies Four speech assemblies will be held this month by the different branches of the department of speech and drama. The ASTE chose Clark at its annual meeting Monday in Dallas, Tex. Color Cartoon - News NOW—ENDS SATURDAY They will be: public speaking and debate, 7:30 p.m., April 16, Bailey Auditorium; radio and TV, 7:30 p.m., April 25, place to be announced; speech correction, 7:30 p.m., April 25, Bailey Auditorium, and drama, 4 p.m., April 30, Fraser Theater. The programs are designed to introduce students to the different areas of speech. Attendance is required for Speech I students. The Charleston, a dance that swept the United States and Europe in the mid-1920's, was named for Charleston, S. C., whose nimble-toed citizens originated it. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Physiology Course Stresses 5 Problems Of Organisms A different approach to physiology is being taught this semester for the first time at KU. The course, entitled Physiological Dynamics, was planned, over a period of several years by Dr. Fred E. Samson, assistant professor of physiology. The new course is organized around five major problems that all living organisms must solve, as opposed to the traditional organization based on systems of organs. An effort is made to illustrate the ways in which these problems have been solved by different forms of life. The course is an attempt to teach principles, rather than facts. A considerable amount of time is spent on the first major problem, that of deriving energy from substances that are taken in, the quantities of energy potentially available and the various mechanisms by which the energy is utilized by various organisms. Stringbooks Due In 2 Weeks. Members of the KU hometown correspondents organization should turn in stringbooks to the Public Relations office, 222A Strong, between April 26 and 29, Helen Pfeltz, adviser, said today. Hey Mister-Did You Know __that Faulty Brakes headed the list of mechanical failures contributing to automobile accidents last year. WHY TAKE CHANCES on something so vital to your safety SPECIAL BRAKE SAFETY - Pull one front wheel to determine condition of Drums, Lining and Wheel Bearings. - Adjust Brakes at all four wheels. - Replenish Brake Fluid, if needed. MORGAN-MACK Your Ford Dealer in Lawrence 714 Vermont Phone VI 3-3500 The other four major problems to be considered by the class are materials, semi-isolation, temperature and communication and regulation within the system. Dr. Hampton W. Shirer, assistant professor of physiology, will teach the section of communication and regulation. Eight undergraduates and 12 graduate students are enrolled from various departments, including the microbiology department in Kansas City and the pharmacology departments at KU and in Kansas City. The course carries five hours credit and involves six hours a week in classes and conferences. You expect the unexpected from CAROL REED. Your expectations will be surpassed! CELIA JAXKINSON - DANA DORE - KATHARNE AMISORE WOLF MANKOWITZ - Rebecca WOELD CAROL REED Renowned by Loretta Woolf Obligations Org. Feature Tonite 7:15 - 9:15 NOW THRU SATURDAY COMING SOON "Year's Most Exciting Film"