Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. Daily Hansan 51st Year, No. 154 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, May 26, 1954 Promotions Go To 67 Members Of KU Faculty Promotions in academic rank for 67 members of the University faculty were announced today by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Twenty-three promotions are for faculty on the Lawrence campus and 44 at the KU Medical center in Kansas City. The promotions on the Lawrence campus, each being from the next lower rank: To professor: Ammon Andes, aeronautical engineering; Kenneth Rose, mining and metallurgical engineering; Anthony Smith, psychology. To associate professor; Rollin Baker, zoology; Robert Baxter, botany; Karl Edwards, education; E. Gordon Ericksen, sociology; George Jenks, geography; Charles Leone, zoology; Daniel Ling, physics; Phillip Mitchell, German; Wiley Mitchell, economics; Richard Page, civil engineering; W. Stitt Robinson, history; William R. Scott, mathematics; Carlyle S. Smith, anthropology; John Weir, zoology. To assistant professor: Mary June Carter, home economics; Frank Dobyns, business; Ruth Franzen, home economics; Nicholas Hotton, anatomy; Annette McCormick, English; Elden Tefft, design. Faculty promoted at the KU Medical center: To associate professor: T. B. Hall, dermatology; R. A. Schwegler, gynecology and obstetries; H. L. Gainey, gynecology and obstetrics; Wm. B. Barry, otorhinolaryngology; John S. Knight, otorhinolaryngology; Chaucey Bly, pathology and oncology; M. E. Taton, psychiatry; Paul C. Laybourne Jr., psychiatry; Red Diveley, orthopedic surgery. To assistant professor; D. B. Morgan, dermatology; Charles A. Hunter, gynecology and obstetrics; Wm C. Mixson, gynecology and obstetrics; Jack W. Wolf, medicine; Alvin Baer, ophthalmology; Max Berenbom, pathology and oncology; I. S. Birenboim, otorhinolaryngology; Floyd Skelton, pathology and oncology; Morton Jacobs, psychiatry; Harry Gianakon, psychiatry and child study; Lois S. Forman, psychiatry; E. L. Frederickson, surgery; Evelyn Allen, hearing and speech. To the rank of associate (a medical school rank): Irving Kass, medicine; T. K. Lin, medicine; Larry Calkins, ophthalmology; Earl Pad- meld, opthalmology; Will Eabank, opthalmology; F r ed Bosilevac, opthalmology; Peh I Chang, pathology and oncology; H. Adrian Shahi, pathology and oncology; Russell Kerr, pathology and oncology; Richard C. Schaffer, pathology and oncology; David Gibson, pathology and oncology; Angeli Lapi, pathology and oncology; William J. Robinson, psychiatry. To instructor: Norman Asel, dermatology; Richard L. Hermes, gynecology and obstetrics; James G. Lee, gynecology and obstetrics; Ralph Hale, medicine; B. A. Leiberman, medicine; Samuel Kantor, ophthalmology; Frederick Wade, ophthalmology; Travis Robinson, ophthalmology; James E. Bresette, ophthalmology. --last for most of the week, according to weather bureau officials. The forecast calls for showers and occasional thunderstorms with little temperature Daily Kansan Ends Publication Year This is the last edition of the Kansan until June 11. There will be no paper published during final week. The Summer Kansan, published twice a week, will begin publication June 11. --last for most of the week, according to weather bureau officials. The forecast calls for showers and occasional thunderstorms with little temperature New Staff Board Named For Kansan ASC Senate Resolution Asks Review of April 20 Election The Daily Kansan will be in the hands of Stan Hamilton and Dave Riley for the first eight weeks of next school year. Hamilton yesterday was chosen executive editor and Riley business manager. Managing editors will be Elizabeth Wohlgemuth, Kenneth Bronson, Letty Lemon, and Bill Stratton. Audrey Holmes is to be the advertising retail manager. The news editor and assistant will be Amy De Yong and Ronald Grandon. Society editor is Nancy Neville. LaVerle Yates is assistant. David Conley is circulation manager. Sports editor will be Jack Lindberg and the assistant will be Tom Lyons. Dana Leibengood is telegraph editor and Jack Glick promotion manager. Courtney Ernst was named editorial editor. Assistants will be Karan Hilmer and Gene Shank. Martha Chambers and Kenneth Winston will be national advertising and classified advertising manager, respectively. New students chosen to the Kansas board, governing body of the Daily Kansan: Bronson, Miss Wohlgemuth, Miss DeYong, Grandon, Miss Hilmer, Leibengood, Miss Neville, Shank, Miss Holmes, Glick, Winston, Miss Chambers, Conley, Taylor Rhodes, and Mrs. Georgia Wallace. All are journalism juniors except Ernst, who is a college junior. Music Group Elects Officers Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity, has recently elected officers for the fall semester. Heading the fraternity as president is Mel Biggart. Others are Jerry Stone, vice president; George Duerkson, treasurer; Bruce Rogers, 'corresponding secretary; Don Shaffer, recording secretary. Weather Rainy weather conditions will remain in Kansas today and the mav change for tonight and tomorrow. Graduation Exercises To End 3-Day Program Commencement exercises this year will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, climaxing a three-day commencement program. The program is as follows: Saturday. June 5 1:00 p.m. Alumni registration opens, Student Union Lounge. 3:30 p.m. Meeting of board of directors, Alumni association, alumni office. Nearly 400 high school students are expected to attend the annual Midwestern Music and Art camp at the University this summer. 6:30 p.m. Dinner and entertainment for those not in special group meetings, Union. 8:30 a.m. Mortar Board reunion breakfast. The Midwestern Music camp will be held for the third con-secutive summer. Clayton Krebiel, assistant professor of music 400 Expected to Attend KU Music, Art Summer Camp 9:00 a.m. Endowment association trustees breakfast. 12:00 p.m. Close meetings 12:00 noon Class reunions. Russell L. Wiley, director of the University band and Symphony orchestra, will be the camp director and will conduct instrumental ensembles, and Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education, will be the associate director. N o n-musical programs will be supervised by Marjorie Whitney, professor of design. 3:30 p.m. Annual Alumni association meeting, Fraser hall. 4:45 p.m. Alumni commencement supper, Student Union. 7:30 p.m. Baccalaureate Services, Stadium. Monday, June 7 8:30 a.m. Senior breakfast, Student Union. 2:30 p.m. Phi Beta Kappa, English room of Union. 3:00 p.m. University reception, Union. The music camp will hold a session of the 10-week session, Sunday of the 10-week session. 7:00 p.m. Commencement exercises, Stadium. KU Law Library Dedication Set education, will be in charge of choral music. The formal dedication of the William L. Burdick Memorial Law library will take place 2:30 p.m. Sunday, June 6 in Green hall. The library is named for the late Prof. Burdick, longtime professor and former dean of the School of Law, vice president of the University, and author of many legal works. Poetry Prize Goes To Mrs. Schear Dean F. J. Moreau of the School of Law will preside and Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will give greetings. Nona E. Snyder, president of the Burdick Memorial association, and Kansas Supreme Court Justice Hugo T. Wedell, will speak of the "Footprints of Dr. Burdick." Mrs. Bernice Larson Schear, college sophomore, has been awarded the first prize of $50 in the Carruth Poetry contest. Other winners are George Herman, graduate student, second prize; Virginia Moreno, graduate student, third prize. Music campers will also join University students and faculty members in the Opera workshop performance of Flotow's "Martha." Guy Fraser Harrison, conductor of the Oklahoma City Symphony orchestra, will be a guest conductor of the camp during the three opera performances Girl campers will be housed in North College hall, and boys will live in McCook and Locksley halls. Hospital and Student Union privileges will be extended members of the camp. Choir to Sing At Baccalaureate The University A Cappella choir, directed by D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano, will appear for the last time this year at the June 6 baccalureate services. The coming year will be the last for the choir under Prof. Swarthout's leadership, for the former dean of the Fine Arts school will reach the mandatory retirement age for professors next June. Prof. Swarthout said he hopes to make next year "a banner year for the choir in every way." The choir will march in the baccalaureate procession in royal blue robes, and sing Tseshnokoff's "O Lord God" during the services. Rigorous tryouts are given each fall to students wishing to join the choir, Prof. Swarthout said, but former members of the group may retain their places by simple request. Three Professors To Hold News Jobs Three faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism will work on newspapers during the summer. Emil L. Telfel, associate professor, said that he has tentatively accepted a position as copy editor of the Rochester (N.Y.) Times-Union. Calder M. Pickett, assistant professor, will be a copy editor on the Kansas City Times, and Harris G. Smith, instructor, will work on the picture desk of the Chicago Sun-Times. Period 15 Refunds Available July 1 Patronage refunds from the Student Union bookstore for Period 15 may be collected beginning July 1 Ray Verrey, manager, said today. Seniors may mail their refund ships to the bookstore and a_check will be sent to the them, he said. Students may collect their refunds for Periods 5 to 14 now. --- Review Board To Be Named For Disputes A resolution to set up a board of review to see if the All Student Council election April 20 was held extra-legally was passed in the Senate of the All Student Council last night. Eight Senate seats and three House seats have been verbally contested by combined action of the Party of Greek Organizations and the Married Students' party. These contested seats are held by members elected in the second ASC election after the first one was declared invalid by the elections committee. The board of review will be set up with two members from the Allied Greek Independent party, one from POGO, and one from MSP, to be appointed by the various presidents of the parties; one unaffiliated student to be chosen by the president of the ASC, and the new chief justice of the student court. Charles Elmson, second year law. The chief justice will act as chairman, and two faculty members will sit in on the board's meetings as advisors. The resolution stated that the present ASC would decide if a person were properly elected. A second resolution instructed the board of review on deciding contested seats. It stated that disputes considered by the board would include only those seats which were protected as of May 8. "In that case, any protested seat which is not filled by either the first or second election as a result of action by the board of review shall be filled by a special election to be held concurrently with the freshmen election in the fall," the resolution stated. The resolution continued that protests should be considered on a seat by seat basis, and that the protests shall be upheld if fraud within the second election is found, or if it can be shown that the second election was held extra-legally. "If the board finds that the second election was held extralegally, the protested seats shall revert to the person elected in the first election unless the first election for that seat found to be uninhabited in sufficient magnitude to change the outcome of the election. A third resolution passed in the senate stated that the board of review be impowered to act in a quasi-judicial manner. In other business the council approved the appointments of committee members, and the secretary of the department of student activities, Jocyeln Dougherty, college sophomore; secretary of the department of public relations, Bob Iliot, business junior, and secretary of student welfare, Bill Arnold, college junior. The senate also decided that persons who will be graduated and on the election controversy should submit affidavits to the board. The student representatives on Student Union committees were approved and Fritz Heath, college sophomore, was approved as chairman of the Campus Chest steering committee.