na- n the Thursday. Sept. 12, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 5 90 New Faculty Members Named A total of 00 new faculty members have been added to the University staff for the 1957-58 school year. Chancellor Franklin Murphy has appointed 8 professors,10 associate professors,29 assistant professors,and 43 instructors. William P. Albrecht, professor of English, was named chairman of the English department during the summer session. He succeeded Dr. A. C. Edwards, acting chairman. Dr. Albrecht earned his B. S. degree from the Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1929, M.A. from the University of Pittsburgh in 1934, and his Ph. D. from the University of Chicago in 1943. He has taught at Carnegie Tech. Chicago, Pittsburgh, and Bucknell University, and the University of New Mexico. The Romance languages department has added two professors to the staff: Miss Helen Patch and Cyrus DeCoster. Miss Patch, who retired in June as professor of French at Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass., will be a visiting professor. Miss Patch received her A.B. degree from Mount Holyoke and her Ph. D. degree from Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania. Dr. DeCoster has been teaching Spanish and French at Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., since 1946 He received his A.B. degree from Harvard, his M.A. and his Ph. D from Chicago University. Painter Joins Faculty Ward Lockwood, American painter, will be the Rose Morgan visiting professor and artist-in-residence for 1957-58. Dr. DeCoster will fill the vacancy left by Dr. William H. Shoemaker, who resigned in June to become chairman of Spanish and Italian department at the University of Illinois. Prof. Lockwood was graduated from KU in 1916. He has been professor of art at California University at Berkeley since 1949, and before that was chairman of the art department at the University of Texas. languages, Cecil Williams, education and guidance; Edna Whitacre, English; Billie Rae Worthington, piano; Nita Wyatt, education. Correspondence Study Director He succeeds Miss Ruth Kenney, who retired in July after 27 years as director of the bureau. Donald R. McCov will become director of the Correspondence Study Bureau and assistant professor of history. Dr. McCoy received his M.A. degree from the University of Chicago, and his Ph.D. from the American University in 1954. He came to KU from Cortland State Teachers College, New York. Robert Baustian, associate professor of music, succeeds Russell L. Wiley as director of the University Symphony Orchestra. Prof. Wiley will remain as director of the band and of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Prof. Baustian recently returned to the United States from Germany, where he conducted for the Wiesbaden Opera Company and Symphony. Computation Center Director Urs. W. H. Hochstrasser has joined the faculty as associate professor of mathematics and director of the Computation Center. In 1551 Dr. Hochstrasser held a fellowship at the Institute of Numerical Analysis at the University of California in Los Angeles. He came to KU from the American University, where he worked in the computation laboratory under a contract with the National Bureau of Standards. Other New Faculty Members Prof. Fowler received his B.S. degree from the University of Illinois in 1938, his M.S. from the University of Michigan in 1939, and his Ph.D. degree from Michigan in 1943. William Cape, visiting professor of political science, will replace E. O Stein who will be visiting professor at the University of the Philippines for this year. Professors—William Cape, Robert D. Tomasek, political science; Jacob Kounin, psychology; Frank C. Fowler, chemical engineering. Frank C. Fowler, visiting professor of chemical engineering, comes to KU from the Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City for which he was a consultant. Coming to KU from the University of South Dakota where he has taught for the past five years. Dr. Cape received his A.B. degree in 1947 and his M.A. in 1948 from Fort Hays State Teachers College. In 1952 he earned his Ph. D. degree from KU. Jacob Kounin, professor of psychology, is coming to KU from Wayne University in Detroit where he has taught since 1946. He received his B.A. degree in 1935 and his M.A. degree in 1936 from Western Reserve near Cleveland and his Ph.D. degree in 1939 from the University of Iowa. Dr. Kounin has taught at the University of Illinois and is a specialist in social psychology. Associate professors—Albert Benedict, bacteriology; Wakefield Dort, Elliot Gillerman, geology; Frank Gambien, mathematics; William A. Kelly, Paul Wilson, law; Ralph Powell, applied mechanics; Russell Messer, chemical engineering; Harold Orel, English. Assistant professors—Gale R. Adkins, speech and journalism; Richard Bearman, chefistry; Peter J. Caws, philosophy; Robert Cobb, Frances Ingemann, Kenneth Rothwell, English; Robert Colodny, history; Ray P. Cuzzort, sociology; Rollie Fehrman, civil engineering; Robert W. Goettsch, pharmacy; Kenneth W. Hamblin, geology; George Ivask, German; Roy Laird, James E. Titus, political science. Dennis LeCroissette, Hillel Unz. electrical engineering; Robert Lichtwardt, William Vinyard, botany; James Lillo, mathematics; James K. Logan, law; Bernadine Peterson, education; Maurice Lungren, journalism; Curtis Besinger, architecture; Francis W. Prosser Jr., R. C. Sapp, William R. Wright, physics and astronomy; Bayard Wilson, applied mechanics; Harold Rossen, chemical engineering. Instructors — LeRoy E. Baker, business; Ernest Barenburg, civil engineering; Margaret Barton, piano; Gordon Beck, speech and drama; Annemarie Christiansen, German; William Conrad, architecture; David Dykstra, English; Robert Ellsworth, business law; Mary Fuller, education; Harold Gould, sociology; Claris Glick, English. John Hill, music education; Jam-shed B. Irani, mechanical engineering; Ralph King Jr., business; Gary N. Lane, geology; John Lohrenz, chemical engineering; Margaret Lorimer, home economics; James D. McClure, applied mechanics; Janice Mader, secretarial training; John A. Meixner, English; Monte Moore, speech and journalism; Richard Myers, biochemistry; James Owen Jr., architecture. James Paddock, business; Robert L. Parker, mechanical engineering; Joseph Polzer, history of art; Frederick Rankin, mineral and metallurgical engineering; Elmo R. Richardson, history; Tom Rea, University Extension, speech and journalism; David Robb, electrical engineering; Anne Rudberg, English; Patricia Salyer, education and guidance; Roger Schiller, mechanical engineering; Richard Schira, drawing and painting. Forty-eight foreign students from 27 countries spent six weeks at KU this summer for orientation prior to enrollment in U.S. schools. During their stay at KU the students had an opportunity to familiarize themselves with written and spoken English, with U.S. customs and culture and with classroom procedures. KU Helps Orient Foreign Students KU is one of nine foreign student orientation centers created by a 1950 act of Congress. KU is the only Midwest center. The average retail price of beef last year was 66 cents per pound, the lowest level since 1947. Beef output in 1956 amounted to 14,400,-000,000 pounds. ics; Ben Simpson, business; Philipn Thompkins, speech and drama; Denni C. 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