Wednesday, April 20, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Page 7 2 Profs Announce Their Resignations Two University faculty members announced this week that they will resign to take positions in private busi ness. Dr. Robert Larson, profes sor of actuarial science, and Robert Spearman, assistant professor of journalism, have submitted resignations. Larson has been on the University staff since 1957. He was instrumental in sett ing up retirement plans for employees of the city of Lin coln and for Lancaster Coun ty as well as for the state. Larson was the first teach er appointed to fill a chair of actuarial science the comput ing and adjusting of insur ance claims created at t h e University by 18 Nebraska life, accident and sickness in. surance companies under the sponsorship of the Nebraska Actuaries Club. Spearman, who specializes in the field of radio and tele vision broadcasting, has been on the staff three years. His resignation is effective June 1 when he will take a posi tion in commercial television and radio in New York. Spear man said he is not at liberty to give the exact place of his new post. "The basic reason I'm leav ing," Spearman said, "is be. cause the University feels much more strongly about placing emphasis on educa tional television than on tele vision education." Spearman said his resigna tion has "no relationship, in cidental or coincidental" to the recent resignation of Dr. William Hall, director of the School of Journalism. He add ed that he sees "slim possi bility" that other faculty members at the School will leave this year. Spearman is a 1954 gradu ate of the University and a native of Ainsworth. 'Birclier' To Speak April 27 A member of the John Birch Society and opponent of com munism and socialism will speak at a University con vocation April 27 at 3:30 p.m. in the Nebraska Union ball room. John H. Rousselot, national director of public relations for the John Birch Society and publisher of "American Opin ion Magazine", will speak about the John Birch Society. Rousselot is a former Con gressman from the 25th dis trict of California. In the House of Representatives he served on the post office and civil service committee and the banking and currency committee. He was secretary of t h e California Republican Con gressional Delegation, direc tor of public information for the Federal Housing Adminis tration and deputy to the chairman of the California State Board of Equalization. Rousselot was graduated from Principia College, Elsah, 111., in 1949 with a B.A. de gree in political science and business administration. He was born on Nov. 1, 1927, in Los Angeles and attended public schools in South Pas adena and San Marino, Cal. He now resides in Arcadia, Cal. Anthropologist To Speak On FBI 'Detective' Role A noted anthropologist, Dr. T. Dale Stewart of Washing ton, D.C., will discuss "Mur der, Skeletons and the FBI" at the annual joint meeting of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi honorary societies Wednes day evening. Sewart, former director of the Museum of Natural His tory of the U.S. National Mu seum, is now serving as the Museum's senior scientist. New members of the socie ties will be introduced at the banquet which will begin at 6:15 p.m. Wednesday in the Nebraska Union ballroom. For more than 20 years, Stewart has been called upon by the Federal Bureau of In vestigation and some state medical examiners to identi fy skeletal remains found un der suspicious circumstances. The questions most asked of him involve sex of the indi vidual, age at death, race and estimate of the individual's stature. Stewart has brought to this work the experience gained in the study of skeletal collec tions of the Division of Physi cal Anthropology in the Mu seum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. These collections include at least 20,000 skulls from all over the world. He joined the Museum staff in 1927 and has served in var ious capacities since that time. He has made field trips under auspices of the Smith sonian Institution to Alaska, Mexico, Peru, Guatemala, Japan and Iraq. He is a past president of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists and the Anthropological Society of Washington, member of the National Geographic Society's committee on research and exploration, former editor of the American Journal of Phy sical Anthropology and since 1938 has served as a contribu ting editor of the Handbook of Latin American Studies. Stewart holds an A. B. de gree from George Washington University, a M.D. from Johns Hopkins University and an honorary doctor of sicence de gree from the University of Cuzco in Peru. 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