Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 20, 1963 31 KU Faculty Members Get Leaves for Outside Studies Sabbatical leaves for 31 members of the University of Kansas faculty during the 1963-64 academic year were announced recently by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. Twenty-eight leaves are for faculty on the Lawrence campus and three for School of Medicine faculty in Kansas City. Seventeen teachers will be gone for the entire year. Five leaves are for the fall semester and nine for the spring semester. The policy of the Board of Regents is to permit a faculty member one year's leave at one-half pay in a 7-year period. The leave is to be devoted to professional advancement or for intensive effort in a creative field. Sabbatical leaves for the full year: Howard J. Baumgartel, associate professor of human relations, to study the application of psychology to problems in University; George W. Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering, to study structural mechanics at the University of California; Cyrus DeCoster, professor of robotics at the University of works of Junn Valera, in Madrid, Spain. Louis F. Dellwig, professor of geology, to do research on the salt deposits on the island, to associate professor of mechanical engineering, to complete requirements for the Ph.D. degree; William Gilbert, professor of history, to complete research and write a book on the Renaissance and Reformation. A. William Kuchler, professor of geography, to complete a new vegetation map of the united States, and to prepare an annual report on agriculture of Daird, assistant professor of political science, to study the problems of Soviet agriculture; Robert W. Lichtward, associate professor of botany, to study arthropods inhabiting fungi, in Japan and in Hawaii. John A. Melxner, associate professor of English, to complete research and write a book on the history of philosophy, to prepare a new course on Aristotle and to revise the course on the history of the Middle Ages, to study the professor of history, to study the role of the Jews in Italy in the early Middle Ages, and to lecture under a Fulbright grant (2018). Edward I. Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics, to study physics and mathematics and do research on radiation effects; Carleyn I. Smith, professor of radiation biology, to create a device the Far East, and to establish a jewelry and silversmithing studio for the University of Bangkok, Thailand; Robert R. Sokal, professor of entomology, to study in the fields of biometry, population ecology and population genetics. Robert Stump, professor of physics, to study high energy physics at the European Institute in Bern Switzerland; Hillel Unz, professor of electrical engineering, to study the theoretical problems of propagation the electromagnetic waves in the ionosphere. Sabatical leaves for the fall semester: Raymond Woodward of pain in creative work in the low- est and the sand dunes areas; John H. Nelson, professor of English and retiring American scholar; Scholars from American literature in the period from colonial times to the Civil War, and to in secular literature its degree of interest in secular literature from colonial times to the Revolution. Edwin O. Stene, professor of political science, to survey programs of training for local government service in several foreign countries; Miss Jean Hirsch professor of education, to complete requirement at Columbia University for a professional diploma; Lawrence Peters, professor of pharmacology. KU Medical Center, to do research at the Agricultural College and the University Uppsala, Sweden, August 15-January 15. Spring semester sabbatical leaves: John G. Blocker, professor of accounting and administration and the teaching of business administration in the Universities of Puerto Rico, Brazil, Bahia, Buenos Aires and Montevideo; and to study graduate programs in accounting in eight American universities: Robert P. Cobb, associate professor at the University research and to write a book on the colonial origins of American literature. A. W. Davidson, professor of chemistry, to study in the field of inorganic chemi- Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER listry and to consult with colleagues at several American universities and the leading institutions in England, Sweden, Finland, Germany and Austria. Dr. Wallek is a professor of English, to study William Faulkner, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Walt Whitman; Ralph W. Krone, professor of physics to consult about operation of an en de Grisogono genitator; and to lead the laboratory associated with the Argonne National Laboratory and the Chalk River Laboratory in Canada. Harold Orel, professor of English, to do research for and to write a book on the history of Mexico. Rothwell, associate professor of English, to study the epic tradition in America; painting, to study and paint in Greece; Jacob K. Frenkel, professor of pathology, to do research at the Universidad Nacional Automona de Mexico, Mexico City. No Friends for the Judge MILWAUKEE, Wis. — (UPI) “Go ahead and arrest me,” Edwin Kinney, 30, told police, "Judge Seraphim is a personal friend of mine. County Court Judge Christ T. Seraphim fined him $50 on a disorderly conduct charge and said, 'I'm a judge. I have no friends.'" 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