ER 18.1944 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1944 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NEATES Soon or service- mas must be and Oct. 15, awards. Theive pounds, in inches, nor inches in obtained. Not may be sent , nor may more than a personnel. wèndful the starter the starter the hill leaving lering who e freshman n Chrysler. house there n as to who erd "active" h activity, sel certain no rate the ed to them as follows: 1 'til mid- 1 1:00 a.m. , paint- taking shoes e lawn at a cast at 6:00 e laid at 7:00 in a PT-7 from their ongoing time live life rate very high. in a book age woman and stuff y, she poi- fore taxi- like a rush likelike a cool disappoint- delta Games to. Con- a rug and a mother, soon not no one at off and an. Whe- buy four coming DG's a kindred Catching Up With This Summer's Events Many Shifts Are Made in Faculty As Ten Arrive and Eight Resign Eight resignations of faculty members and employment of ten others to replace and augment the present staff book place during the summer. Some of the resignations affected department administration positions and saw some staff members leaving who had been here for a number of years. They have been replaced by what the University heads consider able men. Ellsworth S. Gray came from the University of Missouri to become the chairman of the department of mechanical engineering. He succeeds Prof. Edgar E. Ambrosius, acting chairman of the department, who left July 14 for a teaching position at Pennsylvania State College. Dr. Loren C. Eisley, associate professor of sociology will leave the University November 1, to take a position as head of the department of sociology at Oberlin College. Prof. Tell Ertl, assistant dean of the College of Engineering and Architecture; resigned August 1, to take a job with the U. S. Bureau of Mines, Stillwell Goes to Illinois Prof. Henry S. Stillwell, who has received recognition here for building up the department of aeronautical engineering and is now the chairman of that department, will eave November 1. At that time, he will assume his duties as head of the department of aeronautical engineering at the University of Illinois. He will also be in charge of a new airport which is beng built for the University of Illinois. Prof. U. F. Rible, professor of architecture and consulting architect or the University, has left the facility to return to private practice in os Angeles. While here, Professorible new up plans for a number post-war building projects, including an addition to Watson library, a new girls dormitory, and recreation project, to be built in utter Grove. J. Sheldon Carey came from New Mexican Biologist Vill Study With Hall rof. Manuel Maldonado Koerdell, xico's leading biologist, will ar- art at the University October Ist, E. Raymond Hall, head of the ology department and curator of museum of natural history, hasounced professor Koerdell, a Guggenheim owship winner, will study competitive anatomy with Dr. Hall, who former Guggenheim fellowship her. at the present time, professor dell is chairman of natural his- in in the Institute of Scientific arch at the University of Nuevo at Monterrey, Mexico. He also taught at the University of co, of which he is a graduate, ell as the Technical Institute in co City. Professor Koerdell goes the of being the first holder of zuggenheim Fellowship to study university Other Student Returns or Directing Ballet srs Gloria Goff, daughter of Mr. Mrs. Melvin W. Goff, has rebelt to the University to enroll Sk sophomore after spending a Tin California where she direc-the ballet department of a dance wet in Beverly Hills and assisted the musical and ballet numbers prormy show at March field. York to replace Bernard "Poco" Frazier, instructor in ceramics, who left July 1. Miss Margaret Eberhardt, who received her master's degree here last year, is now teaching handicraft in the department of design. G. L. Pearson, formerly of the extension division, is the new principal of the University High School. He succeeds Madison Coombs, who went to Haskell Indian Institute. Pepinsky to Direct Guidance Dr. Charles H. Drake, assistant professor of bacteriology, left to assume a new position at Washington State College September 1. Dr. E. Raymond Hall, a graduate of the University, came from the University of California in July to become chairman of the department of zoology and curator of the Museum of Natural History. Donald Hoffmeister, also from the University of California, came July 1. He is an assistant professor of zoology and curator of the Museum of Modern Vertebrates. C. K. Hyder, associate professor of English, has been released from the army, and will return to the department of English next week. Maurice McGaugh has been teaching Army courses in geography during the summer. Daryl Pendergraft, who came from the University of Iowa, has been appointed assistant professor of history. He will leave the University, September 26 to accept a commission in the navy. Miss Sarah Roberts, who for the past three years has been in charge of occupational therapy at St. Luke's Hospital in Chicago, will replace Miss Barbara Jewett, instructor in occupational therapy, who is returning to professional work. H. B. Pepinsky is a new assistant professor of education. He will be associated with the new guidance and testing bureau. He comes to the University from the University of Minnesota. Karl Bratton, a graduate of the School of Music, has resigned as director of the Rantoul USO at Chanute field to become director of music at the Puget Sound conservatory at Tacoma, Wash. Lt. Pauline E. Garber, who received her masters degree in chemistry in 1933 and her doctor's degree in 1939 from the University, is the first woman medical officer to be assigned to Ft. Benning. She is one of the few women doctors in the Medical Corps. Among the 59 women who left Kansas Sept. 7 for WAC training at Ft. Des Moines was Pvt. Miriam Abele, a graduate of the University in 1942. Since then she has been a reporter on the Ottawa Herald. Following her internship at Huron Road Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio, she returned to K.U. to teach bio-chemistry from 1940 to 1943. She applied for admission to the Medical Corps as soon as legislation was passed allowing the commissioning of women. Miss Lucile Porter, a garudate in music education last year, has been appointed a member of the music faculty of the College of Emporia. She had been director of music in the Fort Scott public schools for five years. To Teach Journalism Broderick H. Johnson has assumed duties as instructor in the William Allen White School of Journalism. He was graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a master of arts degree in journalism. He was employed during the summer on the staff of the Wisconsin State Journal. His undergraduate work was done at Carnegie Institute of Technology, and at Grove City College. G. B. Price in England Word has been received that Professor G. B. Price is still in England as civilian consultant to the army air corps. Professor Price left to take up this work last October. KU Loses Two Training Programs; Adds Course in Physical Therapy V-5 Program Closes Closing the Naval Aviation Cadet training program at the University, the last class of 14 V-5's left the campus for pre-flight school at Iowa City, Iowa, the last week of July. The first military program to be established at the University, the air training program began in January, 1938. *** North American Canoels Training Cutting off the training program of the North American Aviation Company's employees in the middle of the course, this airplane manufacturing concern cancelled the training of 42 of their students at the University in mid-July. *** Med School Offers New Course In additional to occupational, musical and recreational therapy which are all being stressed in modern education programs, a revised project of the physical therapy profession has been added to the training course at the University of Kansas School of Medicine during the summer. Dyche to Display Mammals Two thousand new specimens of North American mammals will soon be on display in the Dyche museum, announced Dr. E. R. Hall, director. This collection, which was loaned to the University by Ralph Ellis of Berkeley, Calif., was procured chiefly from Nevada and Idaho, from which the museum formerly had no adequate collection. * * Music Camp Will Be Resumed The Midwestern Music Camp, which has not been held for the past two years, will be resumed next summer, Russell L. Wiley, director, announced This camp, which is sponsored annually by the University's School of Fine Arts, was discontinued because of inadequate housing facilities and other wartime restrictions. If present plans work out, Professor Wiley stated, the camp, which includes a band, orchestra and choir, will coincide with the six weeks session next July and August. *** Library on Welding Purchased The purchase of a library on welding was made possible for the School of Engineering and Architecture this summer by a gift of $100 from the James F. Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation of Cleveland, Ohio. The library will be assembled in the engineering library. For Military Trainees Only A PERFECT SET-UP BUY YOUR Army-Navy Activity Ticket Now! HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: University Daily Kansan Complete campus news. —News about trainees. - Latest world news by International News Service. Big Six and other sports news. Official announcements. Official announcements Editorials and special features. Published every afternoon except Saturdays and Sundays. Memorial Union Privileges —Use of game room, music room. Special Union events. Admission to Union dances. Use of lounge and reading matter. 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