Friday, June 13. 1958 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 80 On Faculty Get Promotions Promotions in academic rank for 80 faculty members have been announced by Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy. Thirty-two of the promotions are for faculty on the Lawrence campus and 48 are at the Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Promotions on the Lawrence $ ^{\circ} $ campus were: To professor: Klaus Berger, art history; Maud Ellsworth, education; Paul Gilles, chemistry; Wiley Mitchell, business administration; Charles Oldfather, law; Mrs. Angelica von Sauer, piano, W. Keith Weltmer, business administration. To associate professor: Ralph Adams, chemistry; Charles J. Baer, engineering drawing; Russell Bradt, mathematics; Miss Matte Crumrine, Romance languages; Sidney Johnson, German; Bert Kaplan, psychology; Miss Winnie Lowrance, Latin; Seymour Menton, Romance languages; Walter Meserve, English; Thurmul McMahon, civil engineering; Philip Newmark, biochemistry; Sherwood Newton, business administration; John Pozdro, music theory; Frank Rowland, chemistry; Frederick Samson, physiology; Robert Schofield, history; David Simonett, geography; Robert Sokal, entomology and physical education; Elden Teftt, design; Charles Warriner, sociology; Edward Zeller, geology. Faculty promoted at the KU Medical Center are: To associate professor: Charles E. Brackett, surgery; Antoni Diehl, pediatrics; Michael Klein, surgery (biophysics); Elizabeth McCune, nutrition; Arlene Payne, nutrition; Kathryn Schaaf, nursing education; John M. Hansen, surgery. To assistant professor: G. Bower Sutherland, physiology; G. Edgar Wolfe, English; George Worth, English. To associate clinical professor: William H. Algie, medicine; M. G. Gerry, medicine; John H. Wheeler, medicine. To assistant professor: John Christianson, medicine; James C. Crockett, medicine; Alice Damon, nutrition; William M. Diedrich, hearing and speech; Russell Eilers, pathology and oncology; Jeanne Holman, nursing education; William E. Larsen, medicine; William E. Olson, psychiatry; Robert W. Weber, medicine and microbiology. To assistant clinical professor: Lucy D. Ozarin, psychiatry; Harry Statland, medicine. To associate (not to be confuse with associate professor): Phyllis Boyle, medical technology; Gustave Eismann, medicine Fethi Gnolubol, medicine; Henry Hardy, surgery; Herbert Janssen, psychiatry; Robert McComas, gynecology and obstetrics; Rodger Moon, psychiatry; Paul Moss, medicine; William L. Mundy, medicine; Peter Rasmussen, pathology and oncology; Earl Sifers, surgery; Marjorie S. Sirridge, medicine; Morris Statland, medicine; Leonard Wall, gynecology and obstetrics; Charles B. Wheeler, pathology and oncology; Howard L. Wilcox, gynecology and obstetrics. To instructor: Calvin J. Curtis, ophthalmology; Georgia Dierking, nursing education; Howard Farmer, ophthalmology; Edward H. Fischer, medicine; Sara Freeland, pathology and oncology; Ray T. Parmley, Surgery; Maurice Peril, surgery; Charles S. Stotts, surgery; Edward J. Twin, medicine; Robert W. Wright, surgery; Anthony Zbranek, pediatrics. Liaison Body Established An 8-member College Intermediary Board will serve as a liaison body between students and the administration of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dean George R. Waggoner has announced. The student group is an outgrowth of a curriculum committee set up by the All Student Council last fall. The name "Intermediary Board" was borrowed from the University of Minnesota where a similar group has functioned successfully for several years, Dean Waggoner explained. Membership of the Intermediary Board for 1958-59 will be: chairman, Susie Stout, Wichita junior; Jane Dean, Prairie Village sophomore; Mary Helen Clark, Leawood junior; Stephen Hill, Lawrence junior; Pat Little, Wichita junior; Michael Ryan, Emporia freshman; Bill Sheldon, Salina sophomore; and Gretchen Watkins, Bartlesville, Okla. freshman. Watson Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday during the summer session. It will be closed on Sundays and on July 4. Library On Summer Hours More than four million persons, or six per cent of the U. S. working population, are engaged in some form of selling. Three professions are tied for the largest number of citees: business and industry, writing and editing, and education, each with 17. Science follows close behind with 16, engineering and architecture with 12, law and diplomatic service with 10, public office and public service with 8, medicine with 7, banking with 6, the arts with 4, religious service with 4, and the armed services with 3. These, of course, are only the primary professions of the recipients and not necessarily the activities for which they were cited. A study of the list of 121 KU alumni cited through 1957 suggests that a banker has less than one third the chance of an author, and a doctor less than half the chance of an executive or professor. A woman has only a little better than one chance in ten compared to a man and she would do best if she had been a missionary. Tradition For 70 Years The University established its tradition of not awarding honorary degrees almost 70 years ago, deciding that degrees should be earned through academic work. The last honorary degree awarded by KU was to John James McCook, a prominent New York lawyer who was commencement speaker in 1890. He became so interested in the University that he gave the Athletic Assn. $2,500 to buy land that later became McCook Field, the area adjacent to the present Memorial Stadium. KU has on occasion been tempted to desert its principles. William Allen White, the famous sage of Emporia, lacked only a few credit hours of his degree when he left classes to take a newspaper job. At one time the late Chancellor E. H. Lindley got an approval from the University Senate for an honorary degree for Mr. White but Mr. White's reply to the telegram announcing the planned honor preserved the University's tradition and its later peace of mind. Mr. White turned If You Want To Be Cited By KU, Pick One Of These Professions A young KU alumnus who wishes to be cited for distinguished service by his alma mater would do well to consider his occupation—and perhaps his sex. it down vehemently. it down venomently. A few years later, at KU's 75th anniversary celebration in 1941, the Alumni Assn., in conjunction with the University, launched a new policy of awarding citations to alumni who had distinguished themselves in the service of their fellow man. Among the first 24 charter members of the citation club was William Allen White. The Citation for Distinguished Service, the highest honor KU can bestow upon its alumni, has been awarded to 107 men and 14 women. Four of the women had done missionary work in the Far East. This Spells Photo Service! 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