Tuesday, February 6, 1968 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 2 Eight faculty members to retire Eight KU faculty members, whose years of service total 246. will retire at the end of this semester. Those retiring are Ernest E. Dayles, professor of education; Natalie Calderwood, professor of English; Carroll Clark, professor of sociology; Merrel D. Clubb, professor of English; Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting; Maude Elliott, assistant professor of Spanish; Ralph Ring, instruction of engineering drawing, and A. C. Lonborg, associate professor of physical education and director of events for the KU Athletic Department. Bayles, now a professor of education, began as an assistant professor when he joined the KU faculty in 1928. He was promoted to associate professor in 1954 and obtained his present position in 1946. Bayles received his A.B. and A.M. from KU and his Ph.D. from Ohio State University. Mrs. Calderwood, who earned Men-write your Board Undergraduate students currently classified II-S must submit a report of their progress each semester to their local Selective Service Boards to retain their draft-exempt classifications. Each student must report his grades and his new class schedule each semester as evidence of progress. The University does not send materials to local boards except by request. New and transfer undergraduates should inform their board of their entrance into KU by personal letter, send their class schedules as evidence of enrollment, and submit their grade reports at the end of the semester as evidence of progress. Students classified other than II-S or 1-Y (available only in emergency or war) should request a deferment via SSS 104 packet available in the office of the Dean of Men or the Registrar. Questions should be referred to the office of the Dean of men. The Kansas Union Trail Room was the scene of a KUOK remote broadcast Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday during enrollment. For five hours each day, students were able to request, for five cents, any song on the "top forty" and hear it played on KUOK. The proceeds from the three-day program were turned over to the Campus Chest charity. KUOK conducts 'requestathon' A group composed of Dave Winegardner, Atchison junior, Bruce Barley, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Joe Goodman, Overland Park sophomore, Bill Hitchcock, West Springfield, Mass, freshman, and Tim Maher, Paola sophomore, organized and ran a "requestathon." Don McClow, KUOK adviser, felt that response to the "requestathon" was excellent—"people seemed to enjoy it." More remote broadcasts are tentatively scheduled in the future, but no definite plans have been made as of yet. her A.B. from Carleton College and her MA from Columbia University, joined the KU faculty in 1942. She was an instructor of English from 1942-1951, an assistant professor from 1957-1963, and an associate professor from 1960-1937. She obtained her present position of professor of English in 1967. Clark, who has served KU 31 years as a full-time faculty member, began as an associate professor in 1930. In 1933 he became a full professor of sociology. Clark obtained his A.B. and A.M. degrees from KU and his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. Clubb, who has taught at KU since 1943, holds an A.B. from Pomena College and a Ph.D. from Yale University. Before he came to KU. Clubb taught at Miami University, Texas Christian Uriiversity and at Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College. Eastwood, who came to KU as an instructor of drawing and painting in 1922, completes his 46th year on the faculty. He was promoted to assistant professor in 1921, associate professor in 1930 and a full professor in 1949. Eastwood studied at Art Students' League in New York, Beaum Arts, New York, and Yale School of Fine Arts. Miss Elliot was a professor of Spanish at Oxford college before coming to KU in 1929. She received her A.B. and M.A. degrees at KU. Ring joined the engineering faculty in 1951 as an instructor of engineering. He holds A.B, and M.S. degrees from KU. Lonborg graduated from KU Law School in 1921 but never practiced law. Instead he coached 29 years. He spent 23 years at Northwestern University before taking over for retiring KU Director of Athletics E. C. Quigley in 1950. Senate may give fee break to out-of-state students TOPEKA — Out-of-state students who live within 150 miles of any Kansas college or university operating under the Kansas Board of Regents would be charged tuition and fees at the Kansas resident rate under a bill introduced Monday in the Kansas Senate. Kansas Sen. Ted Saar, D-Pittsburg, introduced the bill. He was unavailable for further comment. Should the bill be passed, students in large chunks of Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma-plus a corner of Colorado—would be affected. The way the bill reads, however, an out-of-state student could attend at resident rates only those major Kansas colleges and universities he lives within 150 miles of. For example, a Tulsa student could attend Wichita State or Pittsburg State at resident rates, but not Ft. Hays State, K-State or KU. Olson called 'fair' Donald L. Olson, a KU graduate critically injured in an automobile accident Dec. 2, was reported in fair condition Monday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He is no longer in the intensive care ward. Olson, who had been the business manager of "The Screw," KU's underground newspaper, this past semester was transferred to Lawrence Memorial from the KU Medical Center several weeks ago. 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