Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 16, 1965 Fine Arts School Lists Three New Professors Three professorial level appointments to the School of Fine Arts have been announced. J. Bunker Clark, who taught last year at the University of California at Santa Barbara, will assistant professor of music history and literature. New Albrechts Due on Campus The Albrechts are coming to KU. But Dean William P. Albrecht of the Graduate School isn't guilty of negotism in the appointment of two unrelated Albrechts to the University of Kansas German faculty. Dr. Erich Albrecht, the better known of the two, will be a full professor. He has been chairman of the department of German at Tulane University since 1957, is an authority on 18th century German literature and German-American literature, and is editor of the American section of the Standard German Literary Bibliography. He is a graduate of Johns Hopkins University and taught at the University of Nebraska and Wittenberg College before going to Tulane. Fritz Albrecht, who will be a lecturer in Swedish, has been lecturer at the University of Lund at Uppsala, Sweden. Wichitan to Receive Hackney Scholarship William L. Burnam, a Wichita junior majoring in chemistry, has been awarded a $200 Ed T. Hackney scholarship for next year. The award is financed through a $5,000 gift to the Endowment Association by the late Mabel C. Hackney of Wellington in memory of her husband, a KU alumnus. Burnam, who also held a Hackney scholarship last year, has held a residence scholarship in Pearson Hall his first two years at KU. Ernesto Lejano, a visiting lecturer last spring, becomes visiting assistant professor of piano. The "visiting status stems from his Philippine citizenship and not from temporary appointment. Edward L. Kottick, who has taught at several conservatories of music and Alma College and the University of Iowa, will be visiting lecturer in music history and literature. He will handle the courses of Dr. Milton Steinhardt, who has a Guggenheim fellowship for musicological research in Europe. Clark received bachelor and master of music and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan in 1954, 1957, and 1964. He was an instructor at Stephens College, 1957-59, held a Fulbright fellowship to Cambridge University in England in 1962-63, and then taught at California. Lejano received the bachelor of music degree from Santo Tomas Conservatory in Manila in 1954 and taught there for four years. He also holds the diploma from the Royal Conservatory in Madrid, Spain, and the master of music and Ph.D. degrees, the latter in 1965, from the Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester. Kottick received the B.A. degree from New York University in 1953, the M.A. from Tulane University in 1959, and the Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina in 1962. To South Dakota Post Carrol M. Mickey, holder of two degrees from the University of Kansas, will return to the University of South Dakota faculty this fall as chairman of the department of sociology. He previously had headed the department from 1955-61 before undertaking special assignments in the area of gerontology. Mickey attended Metropolitan Junior College in Kansas City, Mo., and received the A.B degree from KU in 1936 and the M.A. degree from 1941. Three conferences for continuing education and service to the public are highlighting the University of Kansas extension program this week. Three Extension Sessions Are Held The United Steelworkers of America have gathered from several states to consider union matters of organization, legislation, arbitration, changing technology and world markets. Speakers have included Ted Ruhig, assistant director of labor education, Roosevelt University, Chicago; Raymond G. Dickow, managing editor, Educational & Benevolent Association, Inc., Chicago; Emery Bacon, director of education, United Steelworkers of America, Pittsburgh; Henry Wade, Washburn University, Topeka; E. C. "Bill" Buehler, KU professor emeritus of speech and drama; Dan Hopson Jr., KU professor of law, and representatives of the United Steelworkers of America. The institute ends today with a Labor Management graduation dinner featuring Lloyd McBride, director. District 34 of the United Steelworkers of America. St. Louis. Also this week, county welfare directors and case supervisors from over the state held a three-day Social Welfare Workshop. The focus was on new dimensions in the public welfare administrators' role and new methods of tapping community resources. Speakers were Thomas G. Bell, executive director, Colorado State Department of Public Welfare, Denver; Mrs. Mildred Johnson, sales executive, speaker and author, Prairie Village, and Marvin E. Laron, director, Kansas State Department of Social Welfare. Engineers and architects studied the design of steel framed high-rise buildings at a KU conference this week. The lecture series introduced new methods of designing such buildings on the advice of leading consulting engineering offices. Speakers included Kenneth H. Lenzen and Nicolas Willems of the University of Kansas engineering faculty. Ballet Camp to Present Campus Concert July 31 The 1965 ballet camp session, under the direction of Mrs. Marguerite Reed, ballet mistress and choreographer with the Tulsa Opera Ballet Company, and Larry Long, guest artist, choreographer and teacher with Ruth Page's Chicago Opera Ballet, will present its annual concert July 31. A La Baroque (Long), Handel, THE DANCES that will be presented are listed, with the choreographer's and the composer's name following, respectively: This production will present the students on a professional level. Their work will be a representative of different musical and choreographical stages. Bach, Mozart; La Plus Que Lente (Long-Reed), Debussy; Incredible Magician (Long), Piston, L'Image (Long), Ravel; Der Rosenkavalier (Reed), Strauss; Radical 6.000 (Long), Povlene; Beautiful Galatea (Reed), Von Duppe; Rhapsody (Reed), Rachmaninoff-Paganini; Soiree Militaire (Long-Reed), Saint-Saens; Americana (Reed), Gould; Reverence (Reed), Grainger. Mrs. Reed said these may be subject to change. The concert will be held in the University Theatre, with music under the direction of Gerald M. Carnev. This production will be taped for television as has been done previously. "THE MUSIC MAN" Original Cast Recording Mono or Stereo BELL'S 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 Daily Deliveries Anywhere In Town OPEN NITES TILL 8:30 THE RED DOG INN is open EVERY WEEKEND featuring TOP ENTERTAINMENT PLUS The Students' FAVORITE BEVERAGE THIS SATURDAY ONLY BOOKER T. and THE MG'S 'GREEN ONIONS' and 'BOOTLEG' also CHARMELLES – THE MAD LADS- 'tear maker' – JAN KILLER KARL KUNNINGHAM- 'death rattle' DAVID PORTER- 'can't see you when I want to'