THE recent announcement of the 1,780 books selected for the first permanent library at the White House by a distinguished group of librarians and scholars set many faculty members checking the long list. Four current faculty members found five of their books there. Prof. Louis Morton of the History Department was listed for his The Fall of the Philippines and he was co-author of another selection, Command Decisions. Professor Morton also edited eight of the 29 selected volumes of The United StatesArmy in World War II.
Prof. Hugh Morrison's two contributions were Louis Sullivan: Prophet ofModern Architecture and Early American Architecture, both of which were included in the Art and Architecture Division.
Profs. John Masland and Laurence I. Radway wrote a book listed in the Military History and Armed Forces Division, Soldiers and Scholars.
AND speaking of books and articles, L two associated school faculty members were recently awarded prizes for their publications. Prof. Robert H. Guest's book, Organizational Change:The Effect of Successful Leadership, won for him the fifth annual Publications Award of the Organization Development Council. The Council said that the book "was chosen as the best work published during 1962 on the subject of organization on the basis of four criteria: (1) insight, (2) originality, (3) persuasiveness, and (4) usefulness to practitioners."
Graham B. Wallis, Assistant Professor of Engineering, was awarded the Ludwig Mond Prize by the Institution of Mechanical Engineering in London. The award was based on two papers he wrote and delivered recently. One, "Some Hydrodynamic Aspects of Two-Phase Flow and Boiling" was delivered at the International Heat Transfer Conference in Boulder, Colo., and the other, "Two-Phase Flow Aspects of Pool Boiling from a Horizontal Surface," was given at a symposium of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in London.
Two faculty members have been awarded special fellowships and grants for study and research during the coming academic year.
Thomas K. Landauer, Assistant Pro- fessor of Psychology, has been awarded a fellowship at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, Calif.
James B. Quinn, Associate Professor of Business Administration, has received a Ford Foundation faculty fellowship for research in Europe this year. Professor Quinn will investigate industrial research planning and control in European busi nesses and the relationship of this planning to that of various national planned economies.
RECENT travelers among the faculty have included Profs. Arthur Wilson, H. Wentworth Eldredge, Kenneth Davis and Edward J. Green. Professor Wilson attended the First International Congress on the Enlightenment where he presented a paper on the political theory of Diderot. He received a grant from the American Council of Learned Societies to make the trip to Geneva. Professor Wilson was also recently appointed to the editorial board of the Journal ofModern History and to the American Historical Association's Committee on the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize.
Professor Green spent the summer in Ramallah, Jordan, directing a program for teachers in programed instruction. The program was sponsored by UNESCO and participants came from Jordan, Lebanon, Gaza, the United Arab Republic, and Syria.
Professor Eldredge is spending much of his time this fall in Cambridge, Mass., where he has been named Visiting Lecturer on City Planning at the Harvard Graduate School of Design for the fall semester. He will deliver thirteen lectures to the graduate and undergraduate course on "'lntroduction to Urban Planning."
Professor Davis left this summer for Lausanne, Switzerland, where he has been named visiting professor for the year at the l'lnstitut pour l'Etude des Methodes de Direction de l'Enterprise.
FORTY-NINE new members have been added to the faculty of the College for the current academic year. They include three new full professors - Ernst Snapper of Mathematics, Milton J. Rosenberg of Psychology, and Eugene H. Falk of Romance Languages - two associate professors, eight assistant professors, 27 instructors, lecturers and teaching fellows and nine visiting faculty members of various ranks.
The new appointments, listed by department, are:
ART - Robert L. McGrath, Ph.D., Instructor; BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES - Philip L. Johnson, Ph.D. (fall terra), Visiting Assistant Professor; CHEMISTRY - Lowell Schwartz, Sd.Ch.E., Research Instructor; CLASSICS - Ned P. Nabers, M.A. (fall term), Lecturer; Edward M. Bradley, Ph.D., Instructor; Stephen M. Simpson, M.A., Instructor;
DRAMA - Ward Williamson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor; ECONOMICS — Howard R. Bloch, A.M., Instructor; Harvey Galper, M.A., Instructor; ENGLISH - Thomas A. Carnicelli, M.A., Instructor; James M. Cox, Ph.D., Associate Professor; Jeffrey Hart, Ph.D., Assistant Professor; 'Anthony Herbold, Ph.D., Instructor; Donald M. Rosenberg, M.A., Instructor; Robert G. Tisdale, M.A.T., Instructor;
GEOGRAPHY - Martyn J. Bowden, M.A., Instructor; GEOLOGY - Mark F. Meier, Ph.D., Visiting Associate Professor; GERMAN — Heinz Bluhm, Ph.D. (spring term), Visiting Professor; Gert E. Bruhn, M.A., Instructor; Mrs. Henry Ehrmann, Certific. (fall term), Lecturer; GREAT ISSUES - Alexander J. McKelway, Ph.D., Instructor; HISTORY - Hans Baron, Ph.D. (spring term), Visiting Professor; R. Burr Litchfield, A.M., Instructor;
MATHEMATICS - Peter V. Bushel!, Ph.D., Research Instructor; John W. Lamperti, Ph.D., Associate Professor; Kennard W. Reed, Jr., Ph.D., Research Instructor; Ernst Snapper, Ph.D., Professor; Albert W. Tucker, Ph.D. (fall term). Visiting Professor;
PHILOSOPHY John C. Kirscher, M.A., Instructor; David Sanford, 8.A., Instructor; PSYCHOLOGY Milton J. Rosenberg, Ph.D., Professor; Thomas J. Tighe, Ph.D., Assistant Professor; Norman J. Slamecka, Ph.D., Visiting Associate Professor; RELIGION Jacob Neusner, Ph.D. (spring term), Lecturer; C. Peter Slater, M. A., Instructor;
ROMANCE LANGUAGES - Gareth A. Davies, Ph.D., Visiting Associate Professor; Eugene H. Falk, Ph.D., Professor; Robert Garapon, Docteures Lettres (spring term), Visiting Professor; George J. Gauthier, M.A., Instructor; Peter W. Lock, Ph.D., Instructor; Yvonne M. Oge, Agregahon, Visiting Lecturer; Richard L. Regosin, A.B., Instructor; Peter H. Robinson, M.A., Instructor;
SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY - Derek L. Philips, Ph.D., Assistant Professor; MILITARY SCIENCE - Benjamin C. Buckley, Instructor; NAVAL SCIENCE - Philip N. Frazier, Major USMC, Assistant Professor; Arthur R. Horsch, LTJG, USN, Assistant Professor; Warren H. Merrill, CR, USN„ Assistant Professor; William R. Sachse, LT, USN, Assistant Professor.
THE Associated Schools have added 22 new faculty members, including one full professor, George Margolis, Professor of Pathology at the Medical School. The Medical School has twelve, the Tuck School six, and the Thayer School four.
MEDICAL SCHOOL — C. Brian Burke, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Surgery (Anesthesiology); Theodore Colton, Sc.D., Visit- ing Professor in Biostatistics; Paul R. Dietz, Ph.D., Visiting Professor of Cytology; John L. Dunn, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Pathology; George E. Files, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Surgery (Urology);
D. B. Gaitonde, M.D., M.Sc., Visiting Scientist in Pharmacology and Toxicology; Walter C. Griggs, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Surgery (Ophthalmology); Leland W. Hall, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Surgery (Orthopedic Surgery); George Margolis, M.D., Professor of Pathology; Joseph Merriam, M.D., Instructor in Pathology; Henry E. Payson, M.D., Assistant Professor of Psychiatry; Margaret M. Sullivan, M.8., B.Ch., Instructor in Pathology.
TUCK SCHOOL - Donald W. Dobler, Ph.D., Visiting Associate Professor of Business Administration; Christopher E. Nugent, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Business Administration; Walter M. Aikman, M.B.A., Lecturer in Sales Management; Steven Roth, M.B.A., Research Assistant; William C. Sadd, M.B.A., Research Assistant, and Alan S. Danson, LL.B., Research Assistant.
THAYER SCHOOL - Alvin O. Converse, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Engineering; Paul T. Shannon, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Engineering; Peter H. O. Roe, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Engineering, and John W. Strohbehn, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Engineering.