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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Sept. 12, 1963
Three Gain Research Job
Theodore Heim of Topeka, James S. Kine of Marion, and William B. Fenton of Greenleaf have been named to the staff of the KU Governmental Research Center.
Heim, who has been superintendent of the Reception and Diagnostic Center in Topeka, will come to KU as training program coordinator and will be responsible for the organization of in-service training programs for government servants at the city, county and state levels.
Heim was an administrative assistant to the director of Penal Institutions prior to his present assignment. He earned the B.S. degree from Kansas State University in 1953 and the M.A. degree from KU in 1960, where he held a graduate research assistantship.
Kline, a special agent for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, will come to KU as coordinator of the Peace Officers Training Program.
Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the Governmental Research Center, said that "Mr. Kline's long experience in police training and his wide knowledge of Kansas law enforcement agencies and personnel make his appointment a significant milestone in the development of this program.
A 1952 graduate of Kansas State, he served four years in the U.S. Army. He was deputy sheriff of Marion County, 1947-50, and sheriff, 1950-54, then went with the KBI He graduated from the National Academy of the Federal Bureau of investigation in 1958 and has been lecturer and instructor at many law enforcement training schools in Kansas and Oklahoma.
He is a member of the board of education in Marion and a trustee of the Methodist Church there.
Fenton, who will be a research analyst, received the master of arts degree from KU in June. He earned the B.S. degree from Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia, in 1961.
B. L. Seruggs, present training program coordinator of the Center, and Joseph McKenna, research analyst, are resigning to devote full time to their doctoral studies in political science.
Salina Senior. SAE's Receive National Honors
A KU fraternity and a KU fraternity member have been honored as the most outstanding chapter and individual in each's national organization.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon has been selected as the nation's most outstanding chapter. The fraternity received the John O. Mosely award for excellence in leadership, scholarship, athletics, service and activities for the 1962-63 school year.
Breon Mitchell, Salina senior, has been named the outstanding undergraduate member of Phi Delta Theta.
He received the $500 Arthur Priest award at the fraternity's recent national officers' convention. Mitchell, a Summerfield scholar, is majoring in German, philosophy, art history and humanities.
He is president of the Student Union Activities Board and is a member of the KU tennis team. He has spent his summer abroad in Germany and France with the KU Summer Language Institutes, and he held a Carnegie grant for study in Austria. He has won the Taylor Book Collection award and the Live and Learn key by the National Association of Broadcasters.
SYRACUSE AND WYOMING are the new teams to the 1963 football schedule, replacing California and Boston University. KU lost to Syracuse in 1959 and 1960 and tied the Cowboys, 6-6, in 1961.
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