33 Faculty Members Named, 11 In College About 32 new faculty members have been appointed to the faculty. Twelve will teach in the College of Arts and Sciences; one in the School of Pharmacy, two in the School of Fine Arts, eight in the School of Engineering, three in the School of Business, four in the William Allen White School of Journalism, and two in the School of Law. The visiting professors: Four are visiting professors; five are associate professors; 12 are assistant professors; 11 are instructors, and one is a full professor. John Warren Giles will fill the place of Quintin Johnstone, former professor of law at the University. Mr. Giles was formerly a visiting professor at Catholic university, Washington, D.C., and has his A.B. and LLB. degrees. Earl B. Shurtz is a visiting assistant professor with A.B. and LLB. degrees. FROM ENGLAND P. C. Sylvester-Bradley, a specialist in invertebrate paleontology from the University of Sheffield in England, will be the Rose Morgan visiting professor. He will teach in both the geology and zoology departments. David Runnels is a visiting assistant professor of architecture. He holds a B.S. degree in architectural engineering from the University of Illinois and has been head of the industrial design department of the Kansas City Art institute. Associate professors Lewin Goff from Michigan State university is director of the University Theater and will teach in the department of speech and drama. He has his A.B. and Ph.D. degrees. Dr. Donald Dean is from the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy and teaches civil engineering He holds the B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees. Kenneth Lenzen is an associate professor of applied mechanics and has taught for the past five years at Purdue university He has earned his B. S. and M. S. degrees and will receive his Ph.D. degree in December. EXPERIENCED ABROAD Willard Strode will be associate professor of architecture. For the past 15 years he has engaged in structural design on projects in the United States, the Netherlands, West Indies, and Panama. Dr. Bruce Linton is associate professor of radio and television. He has been chairman of speech and dramatic arts department of Omaha university for five years. Dr. Lawrence Peters has joined the Schol of Medicine as a full professor and chairman of the School of Pharmacology. He has earned his B.S., Ph.D., and M.D degrees Assistant professors are: Assistant principal Edward L. Masters, teaches brass instruments in the department of instrumental music and is assistant director of the University band. Dr. Ralph Barr will be an assistant professor of entomology. He has earned his B.S. and D. Sc. degrees. Richard H. Benson will be assistant professor of geology He has received his B.S. and M.S. degrees. Leo A. Poland will teach courses in financial administration in the School of Business. He has received his B.S., master of business administration, and Ph.D. degrees. Page 3 NATIVE OF AUSTRALIA Arnold A. Strassenburg is assistant professor of physics. He has obtained his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees. Dr. David Simonette will teach physical geography. He is a native of Sydney, Australia, and has received his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees. Howard Baungartel will teach in the departments of psychology, business administration, and human relations, and will take over the duties of the late Prof. Hilden R. Gibson, chairman of the department of human relations. Dr. Baungartel has his A.B., master of business administration, and Ph.D. degrees. Dr. Ralph Norman Adams is assistant professor of chemistry. He earned his Ph.D. degree at Princeton in 1953. Dr. Edwin Browne and Glenn Price are an assistant professor and instructor respectively in the School of Journalism. Wilson Bryan Key Jr. will be assistant professor of speech and journalism. He has his A.B., master of arts, and Ph.D. degrees. istant professor of mining engineering He holds the B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. degrees and was once a professor of chemistry at the University of Lima, Peru. Bertram T. Lrillich Jr. will be assistant professor in the School of Business. He has his B.S. and M.S. degrees. Dr. Enrique Mongewill will be as- 11 INSTRUCTORS L. Don Scheid and Paul Wallace both will teach in the department of instrumental music, Mrs. Heywood H. Davis will teach design and nature drawing in the School of Fine Arts, Dana Johnson will teach commercial art in the School of Fine Arts, Norma Lou Falletta returns as instructor in home economics after completing her work for a M.S. degree. She is also dietitian for Watkins hospital. Victor M. Hyden Jr. is an instructor in speech and director of the laboratory wired-wireless radio station KDGU. Jerry Millard Smith is an instructor in engineering drawing. Donald Robert Vesper teaches engineering drawing. George Forman teaches mechanical engineering. H. Lee Sturgeon teaches accounting. Lecture Series To Start A series of ten lectures on real estate agency operation is being offered by the Southwest Kansas center of University Extension in a one-a-week series beginning Sept. 29. The Dodge City Real Estate Board, in cooperation with the Southwest Center, will initiate the Course in Real Estate Fundamentals at the Dodge City Junior College. The first lecture will be Thursday night. In Utah, a condemned prisoner is given his choice of being hanged or facing a firing squad. About 60 savings and loan junior executives will be at the University Sept. 22-24 for the annual Savings and Loan Institute for Junior Executives. Savings Institute To Begin Sept.22 The program includes a series of lectures and workshops on savings and loan men's problems, and a business meeting and election of officers for the Kansas Savings and Loan League of Topeka. John Cauthern, of Wichita Federal Savings and Loan, is president. The League, with University Ex- tension, is sponsoring the school. Meetings will be in the Student Union. Lectures are scheduled on "savings accounts" "letter writing" and "office manners," plus a session devoted to the American Savings and Loan Institute. Workshops are on accounting, property improvement loans, delinquents, loan closing, Veterans Administration and Federal Housing Administration forms, teller proweams, and office procedure. State Speed Law Recommended Topeka—(U.P).A statewide highway speed limit law was recommended today to the Kansas Legislative Council. State Sen. Wilford Riegle (R-Emporia) suggested that legal limits of 65 miles an hour during daylight hours and 60 at night would reduce traffic accidents. He asked the Council to study the problem of road speed and, if it agrees on limits, to use council influence to secure passage of an act in the 1957 Legislature. The proposition was turned down by the 1955 session. Meeting for the first time since May, the 25-member "little legislature" also received proposals to the Kansas Civil Service system and to Statewide licensing and regulation of plumbers. Tomorrow the Council will receive a detailed preliminary report on State expenditures and revenues. In January Kansas for the first time will conduct a 30-day budget session of the legislature. Thursday. Sept. 15, 1955 Smooth and supple capeskin gives a new feeling of softness . . . cushioned on a buoyant airfoam insole! Choose yours from a rainbow of colors! Narrow and medium, sizes 4 to 9 and $ \frac{1}{2} $ sizes. University Daily Kansan Weaver's Shoe Shop Second Floor Communist China Studies Ancient Medical Devices TOKYO, (U.P.)—Communist China is conducting medical research in reverse, Radio Peiping said today. The broadcast reported on scientific study into ancient, not modern, ways to cure diseases. Red China's ministry of public health has set up a study group of doctors, -some trained in 20th century techniques and others in the ancient lore of the Orient. They announced this week, Feiping Radio said, that a 200-year old prescription for curing sleeping sickness worked in 90 per cent of 54 cases tested. The prescription contains several exotic items such as Rhinoceros horn. Communist doctors found the prescription in an old medical book. "Government health authorities have studied the method and decided to introduce it on a wide scale all over the country," Peiping Radio said. Wire cages installed over rain downspouts on a house will keep leaves from clogging them. Fugitives Face Second Charge KANSAS CITY. MO., (UP)—Two men captured here Tuesday night after a wild chase faced a new federal charge today, in addition to charges already pending at Kingston, Mo., and Alma, Ark. A complaint alleging interstate transportation of a stolen automobile was filed by federal authorities against the two, Elmer Whitt, 28, and his 18-year-old brother, Robert Whitt, Gallatin, Mo. Earlier they were charged with illegal flight to avoid prosecution. The two, along with a woman companion, escaped last month from the Caldwel county jail at Kingston, where they were charged with automobile theft and burglary. Arkansas authorities charged them with assault with intent to kill in an attempted burglary of a store operated by H. C. Jones at Alma. Ivy Flannels in charcoal, char. brown, and char. blue blue. $13.95 to 16.95 Strap-Back Model for Slim, Trim Waist . . . Slender Tapered Legs . . . Low-Waisted Twills. 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