Thursday, March 21, 1968 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3 Faculty promotions okayed by Regents The Kansas Board of Regents today approved promotions for 79 KU faculty members. The promotions will become effective in February 1969. Elsanor Loeb, social work; Matthias P. Mertes, anthropology; Felix Moos, anthropology; Ronald R. Olsen, economics; Edward L. Ruhe, English; Delbert Shankel, microbiol-ian;邓颖aye Shelly, psychology; Hampton Fennell, native biochemistry and psychology and el-critical engineering. Faculty members receiving promotions: TO PROFESSOR: Vernon Chamberlin, Spanish and Portuguese; Benjamin, Chr. chemistry; Djacoff, economist; E. D. Deelman, zoology; J. Eugene Fox, botany. Robert J. Squier, anthropology; Milo O. Stucky, education; George W. Hood, engineering; Robert D. Tomaske, political science; Fred S. Van Lieck, mathematics; Byron S. Wenger, comparatism; Nils Waltz, education and physiology; Nils Waltz, education. **ASSOCIATE** PROFESSOR: Dennis B.招 speech and drama derr. D. R.唐 chemistry Robert Carlson, chemistry; James Connell, art; Franklin Donnelly, philosophy. Elliott Gillerman, geology; Gene- vieve Hargiss, music education; Charles Himmelsborg, mathematics; J. Hammelsborg, Wilmer Linke- kel, speech and drama. Donald Dusanic, microbiology; Edmund Eglinski, history of adrian; Adrian R. Fung, electrical engineering; Roy E. Gridley, English; Sintan H. Sanna, mathematics; Chi-Chou Huang, Oriental languages and literatures. Daniel Jansen, entomology; Alfred E. Johnson, anthropology; Howard Kahane, philosophy; William La Shier, education; Herman La Shier, science; Robert W. McColl, geography and East Asian area studies. Walter J. O'Brien, civil engineering; Walter J. O'Brien, civil engineering; Parson, speech and drama; Joseph Pichler, business administration; Ja-chen Pichler, business administration; Frank M. Reiber, design TO ASSISTANT PROFESSOR: Malcolm Applegate, journalism; Elizabeth Banks, elassies; James A. Gowen, english; Wilbur Jorgenson, civil engineering; Roger L. Kroth, education; William M.olan, education; George D. drawing and painting; George F. Wedge, English; Lee F. Young, journalism. Roy L. Richardson, education; Milton Rosenberg, mathematics; Richard W. Ruppert, economics; Thomas C. Puber, journalism; Lawrence Sherr, music; Raymond Shumway, music theory; Raymond Souza, Spanish and Portuguese. Max K. Sutton, English; Arthur H. Lasky, English; Arthur H. Lasky, lmosophy; Mildred Watson, social work; Richard J. Whelan, education; Richard J. Whelan, physics; Arvid M. Zaylev, economics TO LIBRARIAN III: George Jerko- vich TO LIBRARIAN II: Gilberto Fort, Marion Howe, Ann Hyde, Suzanne Knowlton, Helen Mitehell, Dorothy Nameck, Susan Unger. EUROPE? For Those Visiting Europe This Summer Let Us Arrange: Air and Steamship Reservations Student Flights Student Tours Car Leasing and Rental Car Purchases Eurail Passes British Rail Passes with the male exhibiting greater disturbance tendencies. Female monkeys alone engaged in any social experience, he said. MAUPINTOUR The Malls VI 3-1211 "If you want, you can believe the data, and I'm still not sure I really do," he said. "But what can I do? The monkeys generated it." P. S. For those taking SUA flights, contact us for any of the services listed above. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 15th & Iowa A Church for the Campus Community SUNDAY, MARCH 24th 9:45 a.m. Discussion of "The Cost & Contribution of Playboy." 11:00 a.m. Contemporary Communion Liturgy Message: "In or Out of Society?" 5:30 p.m. Dr. Howard Matzke, KU Med Center speaks on "An Anatomist Looks at the Suffering of Jesus" (following cost supper) By Susan Brandmeyer Kansan Staff Reporter Monkeys 'got clobbered' CO-ED'S DEN Pictures of other monkeys playing, exhibiting withdrawal behavior, and indulging in sexual activity were shown to the isolated monkeys. Available for parties any day or night monkeys could not see out, there was a projection screen on the rear wall of the cage. For nine months the only varied stimulus the monkeys received was color slides and motion pictures projected on the screen. The purpose of the study was to see if varied visual stimuli alone would help relieve social aggressiveness. The monkeys showed a marked increase in climbing and threatening activity, Sackett said. However, both the quality and the quantity of aggressiveness depended on the sex of the monkey, "We also showed pictures of nothing, of a scroungy monkey with his back turned, and of girls in tight sweaters," Sackett said. When tested for social behavior, young Rhesus monkeys raised in total isolation will attack adult males—and get clobbered, an associate professor from the University of Wisconsin said Wednesday afternoon. "When we put them back, they attack again — and they get creamed again," Gene P. Sackett, associate professor of psychology, said in his lecture on "The Effects of Very Early Experience on the Behavioral Development of Monkeys." Sackett spoke at the Human Development and Family Life and Psychology colloquium in the Kansas Union Forum Room. VI 3-2414 VI 3-0106 Sackett has just completed an isolation study in which eight monkeys were raised in completely closed cages. Although the Room 101? What is it? O'Brien's Pad? No. But, Room 101 really does exist It is in the Kansas Union just off the main lobby. Room 101? See you there. Don't wait until 1984. It is the scene of Reading Dynamics demonstrations (Tonight at 7:00 & 8:15 p.m.) SPECIAL PURCHASE NO-IRON UNLINED SPRING RAINCOATS $19.95 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 Lawrence's Fashion Leader Since 1896