UNC resignations, retirements, leaves noted ' A—number of resignations, leaves-of-absence, and retirements - of faculty members were an nounced at the. University in Chapel Hill this week. Paul W. Wager, professor of political science, will be/retiring Sept, 1, it was announced by Chancellor William B. Aycock. Ernest Lloyd Mjjckie,, professor of mathematics, is also retiring effective Sept. 1 but he will con tinue teaching mathematics. (Resigning in order tt> accept opportunities elsewhere are Act ing Dean of the Library Science School Carlyle J. Frarey, who will accept a post at Columbia Uni versity; Prof. George Simpson, now on leave from the Depart ment of Sociology and Assistant {Deputy Administrator of the Na tional Aeronautical and Space* -2 Administration, who continues in his position with the NASA; Associate Prof. John M. Ehle, on leave from the Department of Radio, Television and Motion Pictures, and recently resigned as Special Assistant to the Gov ernor of North Carolina, who will give his time to writing in New York; Associate Prof. Herbert William Fred, Department of Mu sic, who will join the faculty of the University in Greensboro; As sociate Professor of Classics and former Dean of Student Affairs Charles Henderson Jr., who will accept a post at Smith College; and Assistant Prof. Robert Ross (Holloway, Classics Department, "/who wilT take a faculty poition at Brown University. 11 get leaves Eleven faculty members of the 'Divisign of Academic Affairs (have been awarded leaves; .Clifford Pierson Lyons, Kenan Professor of English, has been awarded a leave during the fall | and part of the spring semester ! of 1964-65 to attend the Shakes? ! peare Festival in England; Wil liam M. Whyburn, Kenan Profes sor of Mathematics will be on leave from Sept. 1 to April dur ing which time he will hold a National Science Foundation Fel- j lowship and will be at the Uni versity of London. Donald R. Matthews, professor of political science, will be—cm leave at the Center for the Ad vanced Study of Behavioral Sci ences at Palo Alto, Calif.; Ray mond Dawson, associate professor of political science, has been awarded a Fulbright grant to Kings College, University of London, and will be on leave from UNC for one year beginn ing Sept. 1. William Hamburger, associate professor, School of Business Ad ministration, will participate in the research program of the In stitute of Defense Analyses of the Department of Defense and has been awarded a leave for one year beginning Sept. 1 for this program; James B. Meriwether, associate professor of English, has been awarded a leave from Sept. 1 to March 1, 1S65, in or der to accept a Guggenheim Fel lowship with which he is working on a bibliography of the writings of William Faulkner. __ Richard L. Simpson, associate professor of the Department of Sociology-Anthropology' has been i awarded a leave during the spring semester of 1965 in order to com plete several publications; Sieg fried Wenel, assistant professor of English, has been awarded a one-year leave enabling him to. accept a grant from cte Ameri This is our “Best Buy” for National Frigidaire Week. Hurry! Mtdtl 0-12-44 11.** M. ft,4 ctltrc tr whitt Space-saver FRIGIDAIRE Refrigerator! • 63-lb. freezer chest. • Sliding chill drawer for fresh meats. • Giant vegetable Hydrator. $188 With Operating Trade SVWIftL OPFti/i /wCww rWCrs rTwfru • Insulated—kesps «suM, drinks hot orcoW for hoors! • 9tur^. hghtwetgtrt—choice of two-tons colors. 7 PAYS ONLY! can Council of Learned Societies ? which will take him to England to complete a book on medieval literature. j William Leon Wiley, Kenan Professor in the Department of ; Romance Languages, has been j awarded a leave from July 1 j through the fall semester to ac cept a visiting professorship at Brown University; Stephen Bax--j ter, associate professor of history, j has been awarded a leave for the 1965 spring semester to complete j a manuscript for publication. j _E, P. Douglass, associate pro fessor of history, has been award ed a leave for the fall emester to complete a manuscript for publication. In the School of Dent’stn- Pr Gerald M. Cathey, assistant pro fessor of operative dentistry, has been granted a leave of absence from Aug. 31, 1264 to July 1, 1966, to pursue graduate work at the University of "Washington. Promotions noted . . . Fourteen faculty members of the Division of Academic Affairs have been promoted professors effectivev July 1; Twelve faculty members have been promoted to the rank of as sociate professor and 10 to as sistant professor, all effective July 1. Those receiving the promotions from associate professor to pro fessor are: John B. Adams, School of Journalism; Ernest M. Allen, Dept, of Phvs'cal Education; R. Darrell Bock, Dept, ot Psychol ogy; E. P. Douglass, Dept, of His tory; James R. Gaskin, Dept, of English; John Gulick, Dept, of Sociology-Anthropology; William E. Jenner, Dept, of Mathematics; Peter G. Phialas, Dept, of En glish; J. Dickson Phillips, School of Law; Isaac Newton Reynolds, School of Business Administra tion; Robert A. Rupen, Dept, of Political Science; John -W. Scott, School of Law; George B. Tindall, Dept, of History; Robert Brown Voitle, Dept, of English. Promoted from assistant pro fessor, to associate professor are: 'David G. -Brown, School of Busi ness Administration; James D. Buckholtz, Dept, of Mathematics; See UN?C, Paige 10 L 8TMMOT romxxY mam mm ■ gemr • omoot mi w.

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