Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 3, 1962 16 New Members Appointed to GUF Sixteen new members have been appointed to the Advisory Board of the University of Kansas Greater University Fund, it was announced today by Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, chancellor. The appointments are for three years. The Greater University Fund was organized in 1953 as the annual giving program of the University of Kansas. Through it, contributions of any amount from alumni and friends of the University are received and used to help meet University needs for which state funds cannot be made available. New Board appointee are Dr. Paul D. Adams of Osage City, Dane G. Bales of Logan, Fred B. Benson, Jr., of Independence, Kan., Darrell L. Havener of Prairie Village, Kerwin S. Koerper of Shawnee Mission, August G. Lauterbach of Colby, Lewis H. Medlin of Oakley, Tom Meschke of Garden City, Mrs. J. D. Miller, Jr., of Leavenworth, Donald D. Millikan of Salina, Robert M. Noll, Jr., of Ft. Scott, Leroy W. Raynolds of Emporia, Brig. Gen John A. Seitz of Chicago, Ill., Alan R. Sleeper of Alden, Odd Williams of Lawrence, and David J. Wilson of Meade. Work Progressing- (Continued from page 1) for the earliest fossil mammals which have not yet been found in North American deposits. Some fragmentary remains of early mammals have been found in geological formations of the corresponding age in Europe and Asia. Unofficial word received Sunday was that the expedition has found one tooth of an early mammal. Its actual classification awaits confirmation at the laboratory. Karlise S. Smith, professor ot anthropology and sociology and curator in anthropology at the museum, and 10 students are excavating at a place inhabited by Indians about 1,000 years ago. They are at Malvern, in Osage County, and are racing against time to excavate this site before it is permanently covered by the waters that will rise behind the dam now being built by Army Engineers for flood control purposes on the river near there. A fourth expedition of J. Knox Jones Jr., assistant curator in charge of mammals, and four students left Sunday morning for the Yucatan Peninsula. The expedition will work in the Mexican states of Campeche, Yucatan and Quintana Roo, the three states that comprise the Yucatan Peninsula. IN THE MONTH of August five more advanced students will join the party making its total membership 10. The party is working under contract with the New World Military organizations and will intensely study ectoparasites on vertebrate animals and will bring back collections of the vertebrates and their ectoparasites. "Expeditions like this, carefully planned so that there are no adventures to report, yield specimens for advanced teaching and research in the museum," Hall said. "To be effective, a museum's collections must be growing. It is planned field work such as is being done on these four expeditions that has gained KU a place among the leaders in advance teaching in the field of vertebrate natural history." KU Budget - Mr. Hall left yesterday for the Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.C., to attempt to do the first one-third of a research job in the field of mammalogy. (Continued from page 1) REED SAID issues cover a four per cent increase in salaries of faculty members, to be awarded by individual schools on a merit basis. They also include civil service position increases ranging from 3.3 to 7 per cent at the various schools. (Continued from page 1) He said the Board reduced original budget requests of the schools by $920,582. BOWLING is FUN! The approved appropriation requests of the state-supported schools are: KU, $17,290,750; KU Medical Center, $12,924,897; Kansas State, $18,142,724; Emporia State Teachers College, $5,069,016; Pittsburg State College, $4,281,115; Ft. Hays State College, $3,000,704; School for the Deaf, $670,255; and School for the Blind, $370,367. LONDON — (UPI) Fashion advice to women in today's Daily Express: "A girl's best accessory is a man." Amen Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES Summer Session Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Ping Pong Tournament Trophies and Plaques for Winners Play Will Begin Tues., July 10 Sign up now at the Student Information Desk or in the Jay Bowl. INDIVIDUALS MAY PRACTICE IN THE JAY BOWL College Outlines for Aid to Study BY Barnes & Noble Littlefield Outlines of... Economics Accounting History Chemistry Physics Psychology .and Many Other Subjects By Schaums Theory and Sample Worked Problems in . . . Physics Chemistry Calculus Trigonometry Algebra Analytic Geometry Kansas Union Book Store