Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1959 Assistant Dean Of KU Medical School Resigns Dr. Vernon E. Wilson, assistant dean of the KU School of Medicine since 1953 and acting dean and director of the Medical Center in Kansas City since May 15, resigned Thursday to become dean of the School of Medicine and director of the Medical Center of the University of Missouri in Columbia. "Dr. Wilson has served with dedication and distinction for six years at the University of Kansas School of Medicine. During that time he has made a major contribution to the growth, vitality and excellence of the academic programs at the Medical Center, as well as in the important matters of hospital and patient services. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy, a former dean of the School of Medicine, said, "The University of Kansas has suffered a real loss in the decision of Dr. Vernon E. Wilson to take up new responsibilities as dean of the University of Missouri School of Medicine and director of that institution's Medical Center. "His activities as an adviser to the Kansas Board of Social Welfare, regarding especially our mental institutions, have extended his service to the state beyond the confines of the University. Dean Wilson will remain in his present post until the return of Dean W. Clarke Wescoe, who is on leave for a teaching and research fellowship at the University of the Philippines in Manila. He will assume the Missouri deanship November 1. "We wish him well as he assumes his new and important post," Dr. Murphy said. Dean Wilson has been in charge of student affairs at the KU Medical Center and an assistant professor of pharmacology. He has engaged in a 6-year unique study of medical school admissions techniques and a publication will be forthcoming. Four years ago Dean Wilson took the place of Chancellor Murphy on the Governor's advisory committee on state institutions and for the past three years he has been chairman. As assistant secretary of the Association of American Medical Colleges he has been a member of the official accrediting survey team. An alumnus of the University of Illinois, Dean Wilson earned the B.S. degree in 1950 and both the M.S. and M.D. degrees in 1952. Should you see a herd of zebus running down Massachusetts Street, consult your family physician. Three Given Landis Grants The first three Landis scholars have been appointed at the University of Kansas, Irvin Youngberg secretary of the Endowment Assn. announced. Each will receive $25 for the 1959-60 school year. Judy A. Fiscus, a junior in nursing from Wichita, will be the first Maude Landis scholar in nursing. She has held a residence scholarship in Sellards Hall and will enter the Medical Center in Kansas City this fall for two years' clinical training and classwork. Nancy Suellentrop of Great Bend will hold the first May Landis scholarship in mathematics for her senior year in the School of Education. Last year she held a U.G. Mitchell honor scholarship in mathematics. William F. Cronin of Kirkwood, Mo., will receive the first Paul Landis scholarship in business administration. He will be a senior. He has been wholly self-supporting at KU, and his fraternity elected him president for next fall even though his work the past year had required him to live away from the chapter house. The Landis scholarships are supported by an endowment created in 1956 by Miss Maude Landis, now of Claremont, Calif., for many years director of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The endowment was supplemented a year ago by a bequest from the estate of Paul Landis, a public accounting firm executive of Southern Pines, N.C. They and their sister, the late Miss May Landis, were alumni of KU. 'Monkey Saddle' Is Being Re-Saddled The campus "monkey saddle," the wooden structure west of Marvin Hall, will be "up again as soon as possible," according to George M. Beal, chairman of the department of architecture. Dr. Beal said students are rebuilding the "monkey saddle" with different types of connecting units on the plywood. 1. 2018年3月,北京市工商行政管理局对北京中航工业股份有限公司进行立案调查。 Ike Will Meet Press WASHINGTON — (UPI) The White House has announced that President Eisenhower will hold a news conference Wednesday morning. 1025 Mass., VI 3-2966 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Dean Woodruff At Harvard Meet Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students at the University of Kansas, has been attending the 41st anniversary conference of the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators at the Harvard Business School. More than 350 student personnel administrators from all parts of the country were registered at the conference, held from June 25 through June 30. During the conference sessions the administrators discussed varying aspects of their jobs. They participated in seminars on administration, group discussions on financial aid, foreign students, student attitudes and behavior, extracurricular activities including fraternities, discipline and student government. Special speakers included David Riesman, author of "The Lonely Crowd," and Lyman Kirkpatrick, assistant director and inspector general of the Central Intelligence Agency. Conference registrants, their wives and children were in residence in the living halls of the Business School. Special programs for wives and children included sight-seeing trips through Harvard and New England, sports programs, and a subway trip and ride on Boston's famous swan-boats. A New England clambake was a special family occasion. A zebu gets wet when it stands in the rain. The geologic and mining history of the Mulky coal, one of the first coals to be mined in Kansas and the uppermost of the commercially important Cherokee coals that occur in eastern Kansas rocks, is recorded in a publication just issued by the State Geological Survey of the University of Kansas. Geological-Mining History Of Mulky Coal Described The eighth in a series of inventory studies made on Kansas coals by the Geological Survey, the Mulky is the first of the inventories of the Chero-kee coals to be completed. In Kansas, the Mulky occurs in eastern Bourbon and Crawford Counties. Its mining area is between the Arma-Mulberry district and Fulton, and it was mined as early as 1842 for fuel at the United States military post established at Fort Scott in that year. Named after the Missouri town of Mulky, the coal also has been called the Osage, Fort Scott, Fort Scott Red, Red, Rusty, Bunker Hill, Mound, Hilltop, and Sunshine. Coal beds of the Cherokee Group rocks occur near the surface in southeastern Kansas and at depth elsewhere in eastern Kansas. The coals have been mined in Bourbon, Cherokee, Crawford, and Labette Counties in southeastern Kansas, and near Atchison, Attichion County, and Lansing and Leavenworth, Leavenworth County, in northeast Kansas. Where mined, the Mulky coal is 7 to 22 inches thick Approximately Entire Mercury Classic Catalog Record Sale Monavral – $2.49 $3^{1/2}$ million tons have been mined in Bourbon and Crawford Counties, and reserves (measured and indicated) in the two-county area exceed 170 million tons. Recoverable measured Mulky coal, according to the report, is estimated at 35,265,388 tons. Stereo - $3.98 Bell's The geologic occurrence of the coal, its physical nature and its thickness in relation to adjacent rocks and overburden, and production and analytical data are treated in the report. A map shows the mining area, including locations of active and abandoned mines. Rains Claim 42 in Pakistan The floods were hitting west Pakistan yesterday and scores of villages were reported inundated and cut off near the Kashmir border. Twenty inches of rain also took three lives in Kashmir, it was reported. Kansan Want Ads Get Results KARACHI, Pakistan — (UPI) — Monsoon rains which drenched Karachi all last week killed 42 persons in floods and collapsing houses, unofficial reports said. ANSCOCHROME ..WORLD'S FINEST - Makes great pictures easier. - Available in all standard sizes. - For making beautiful Printon® color prints. - Exposure Index 32. BUY IT HERE, BRING IT BACK FOR FAST DEPENDABLE PROCESSING CAMERA CENTER 1015 Mass. — VI 3-9471 Next to Varsity Theatre