Friday, May 3, 1968 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 7 Faculty retirement dinner set for Monday in Union Ten retiring KU staff members will be honored with a certificate from Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe at the annual University Retirement dinner at 6:15 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Tickets for the dinner may be obtained at the ticket center of the Kansas Union prior to Sunday. Honored at the dinner will be: Honored at the dinner will be Hazel Anderson, KU law librarian for the past 31 years, who received her A.B. in sociology in 1936 and a law degree in 1945 at KU. She taught legal bibliography from 1945 to 1948. Miss Anderson is a member of the Kansas Bar Association, national legal advisor for the national Business Federation of America, and parliamentarian for Kansas Business and Professional Women's Clubs. She is listed in Who's Who in American Women and in Who's Who in the Midwest. Ernest F. Bayles, professor of education since 1946, received his A.B. from KU in 1919, his A.M. from KU in 1922 and his doctorate from Ohio State University in 1932. From 1922-1928 he was an associate professor at Central Missouri State College. In 1928 he returned to KU as an assistant professor of education, and in 1934, he became an associate professor. Natalie Calderwood, professor of English, received her bachelor of arts degree from Carleton College in 1926 and her masters from Columbia in 1931. She came to KU as an instructor of English literature in 1942, became an assistant professor in 1951, and an associate professor in 1960. Carroll Clark, professor of sociology, served as chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology from 1933 to 1962. He received his bachelor and master of arts degrees from KU in 1922 and 1925, and was awarded his doctorate from Chicago in 1931. Merrrel D. Clubb came to KU in 1946 as professor of English literature. He received his B.A. in 1920 from Pamona College. His doctorate was obtained in 1924 at Yale University. Clyde Hyder, English professor since 1947, came to KU in 1928 as Latin sees KU student responsible Student responsibility at KU has favorably impressed a Brazilian dean of students, here on a state department tour. Since his arrival in Lawrence Saturday for the ninth annual seminar on higher education, Raul Caranjaira de Mendona, vice-rector of students at the Universidad Catholica in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, said he has noticed students at KU are not destructive to the physical plant and are serious in their academic work. De Mendonca and 22 other educators from 13 South American countries are visiting the U.S. to find ways to improve their own universities by observing the academic, financial and budgetary structures in U.S. universities. ATTENTION ATTENTION Girl Watchers! Freshman Girls' PICNIC Sunday Potter Lake an assistant professor of English literature, and in 1937 he was appointed as associate professor. He received a B.A. degree from Drury College in 1924, a masters degree in 1926 and his doctorate in 1933 from Harvard University. Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting in the School of Fine Arts, retired as chairman of the department in 1963. He attended Arts Student's League of New York from 1915-1920. He came to KU as an assistant professor in 1923, was an associate professor from 1930-1949, and became a professor in 1949. Maude Elliott, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, received her B.A. degree from KU in 1922, received her M.A. in 1921, and has taught in the department since then. Ralph Ring, KU instructor of engineering graphics since 1951. taught about 20 years in the Kansas public school system—serving as principal of the Osage City Rural High School district. He was an instructor at Baker University from 1948-51 in the preengineering program. Arthur C. Lonborg, associate professor of physical education, was KU athletic director from 1950 until 1964. After receiving a law degree from KU in 1921 he coached basketball at McPherson College from 1921-1923, and at Washburn University from 1924-1927. At KU Lonborg was a member of the basketball and football teams from 1918 to 1921. A quarterback during the memorable "dream-team" game with Nebraska in 1920, he dreamed about a play a few nights before—Phog Allen used it resulting in a tie 20-20. Sportswear with a flair featured at the . . Country House Alums organize King fund A Martin Luther King Jr., Memorial Scholarship fund to assist Negro students has been established at KU by five 1967 KU graduates. The five students, all Stanford University graduate students, wrote a letter April 24 to Bob Billings, director of aids and awards at KU, in which each of them pledged $25.00 in order to get the fund started. Billings said the King fund is the first KU scholarship program designed specifically to aid Negroes. David Hall, Terry K. Beach, Andrea F. Speer and Bruce N. Warren. "Because of a shortage of scholarship funds," the letter said, "KU must continue to deny support to a growing number of qualified Negro applicants who cannot finance a university education." The five are Kay Patterson Hall, Billings said the KU Endowment Association is currently accepting donations to the new fund. He said the fund would probably not be large enough to begin awarding scholarships until the 1969-70 fall semester. TONIGHT 8-11 Paul Gray's Dixieland Band SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOB & ye Public house 544 W. 23rd KEEP COOL IN ROBLEE THE SHOE WITH THE OPEN-COLLAR FEELING R-456 SANDALS Featuring the Bold Rugged Look, Dark Colors in Heavy Soft Leathers. Italian Made for ROBLEE.