4 Mondav. Julv 29.1974 University Daily Kansan IEC Classes Moved from Foster; Demands Studied By KEMPTON LINDQUIST Kansas Steff Reporter Intensive English Center (IEC) classes will not be in Post Hall this fall, Del Shankel, executive vice president. He also said no punitive action would be taken against IBCE teachers who have recently voiced their concerns. Shankel said Edward Earrazis, director of IEC, and Charles Susan, coordinator of IEC, could not be heard. THE AD HOC COMMITTEE recommended that no punitive action be taken against teachers involved and that Erazmus and Sauer be dismissed immediately. Both groups had asked that IEC classes not be held in Foster Hall next fall The recommendations of the ad hoc committee were -Erasmus and Sauer should be dismissed from the IEC. - Teaching methods and materials should be changed at the discretion of the teachers. - —The IEC should be removed from Foster Hall. —Teachers should be adequately trained with computer technology. - No punitive actions should be taken against teachers for their criticism of IEC and its directors. Students and teachers should participate in all decisions made at IEC that affect them. STUDENTS WHO CHOOSE to live in Oliver Hall during the 10-week summer IEC class session were told before their arrival that their fees included room and board for the entire 10 weeks of classes. After they arrived, they were told that their contract was only good for eight weeks and that they would have additional $3 a day for a room and they would have to eat elsewhere for the remaining two weeks. "The Committee insists that students in Oliver not have to pay extra money nor go without food service since they have been previously led to believe that their initial fees at Oliver covered the full 10 weeks for room and board," the recommendation stated. The recommendations of the teachers' group were: -- Teachers should have completed a course in teaching English as a foreign language before teaching French. --The staff should have greater individual choice of teaching methods used Teachers should take a practical course in teaching methods that acquaints them with a wide variety of teaching methods. Before classes begin, experienced IEC teachers and teachers from other relevant departments should meet to advise new IEC teachers on teaching English as a foreign language. VARIOUS SCHOOLS and departments should offer introductory courses for foreign students for University credit that teach English in terms of relevant subject matter. This is a means to individualize instruction and integrate foreign students into the University... - New classrooms for IEC instruction should be found somewhere besides Foster Hall. —Most students didn't understand that their Oliver Hall contracts did not cover the entire 10-week —The IEC teachers have formed a staff organization to work with the University. IEC class period. The staff asks that something be done to provide for these students. Shankel told the IEC advisory committee, which was established in March by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, would continue to investigate IEC matters. "We hope to have some things wound up by the end of the summer," Cobb, said last week. ERAZMUS MID the texts and methods used to the IEC were being studied for possible revision. He said that the texts and methods used were recognized as standard and current in the field. The issue concerning IEC students' room and board at Oliver Hall would be studied to determine whether a computer system is IEC classes probably will not be held in Foster Hall this fall. he said. Erzamas said IEC students planning to live in Oliver Hall this summer had been informed in advance of how much their total summer room and board would be. He said that after arrival at KU, the students paid less for their halls contracts than was indicated in advance because the contracts were for an eight-week period. Sauer said that after the students had arrived, they were told they would have to pay on a daily basis for room and board after their hall contract expired. "We warned them by word of mouth and in writing about it," he said. "It's unfortunate. It would be better if we could have some lump sum payment." GEORGE HEYWOOD, assistant instructor in IE and sponser for the students' hoc committee, said the committee would probably meet with the sponsor to consider the responses to their recommendations. He said the group would take further action if their recommendations were not met. John Dagenais, assistant instructor in IEC and chairman of the teachers group, said the group would meet today to work on curriculum and teaching methods for the fall semester. The group would also discuss ways of improving communication between IEC directors and staff, he Walker Names Ex-Cage Star Assistant A.D. Jerry Waugh, former KU assistant coach and basketball player, has been appointed assistant athletic director at the University of Georgia, director Clyde Walker announced last week. Waugh will begin Aug. 12 and will have several administrative assignments. A native of Wellington, Waugh was a 1961 graduate of Kansas. He was a guard for the Jayhawk varsity from 1948 through 1951. His senior year he was captain of the team. Following graduation, Waugh embarked on a successful basketball coaching career at Columbia. He was also here three years at Emporia and two at Lawrence High. His 1956-58 Lawrence high team won the old Northeast Kansas League championship. He was KU assistant coach Waugh, 47, has been athletic director and chairman of the physical education department at Trevor Browne High in Phoenix, Ariz. the past two years. The two athletes who has had basketball coach and professor of physical education at San Francisco State. Taller also announces the changing of walkers of two members of athletic depart- ment. Gale Sayes, who has been assistant to the athletic director since February 1973, will become the assistant director of the Williams Fund. John Novtoy's title has been changed from assistant athletic director to executive director of the Williams Educational Fund. Novtoy was named head of the Williams fund, primary source of scholarship money, last January. Shankel Names Replacements For Rosser Job The two chairmen replace James Rosser, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, who leaves Sept. 30 to work with the New Jersey higher education system. Ralph Christofferson, professor of chemistry, and Richard Von Ende, executive secretary of the University of Kansas, will supervise the work of four committees planning for different aspects of the new computer center, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, announced last week. Shankel said the two chairmen would coordinate the work of the four computer groups through the developmental phase of the new computer system. The four planning groups are a central task force, a building program committee, a committee working on bid specifications for a new research and instructional uses of a group working on specifications for a computer for administration use. The building program committee will be led by Von Ende; Von Ende and Christoferson will lead the central task force; the bid specification committee will be led by Robert Adams, associate dean of the College of Applied Sciences; the committee on specifications for administration use will be led by Gilbert Dyck, director of admissions and records. Kansan Staff Photo by DERRIE GUMP Fraternity Initiates Five Women Bill Ploehn, a kU grad now working with a Topека advertising agency, has to settle for partial coverage while relaxing in the Cil Omega office. The company is not offering any training. Five women were initiated into the KU chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, a professional education fraternity that has been open to women for only eight months. on July 22. Hot Little Pinky The women are the first to join any chapter in Kansas or Missouri. They are members of a national student Rita Haugh, Lawrence graduate student, M. Claridne Johnson, a Teopak teacher, Caryl Smith, associate dean of women, and Winfried Woodward, St. Simons Island, Ga., "I've been in favor of admitting women for along time," John Estes, Lawrence Dillenstein, said Friday. "I can see a place for separate women's and men's groups, but I'm not for organizations if their ultimately disadvantages non-members." THE ADMISSION OF WOMEN was long overdue, said Herold Regier, associate professor of education and faculty adviser for Phi Delta Kappa. With the recent trends towards emphasizing affirmative action and equal opportunity, allowing women into the fraternity was "the only realistic way of dealing with the profession," he said. Piha Delta Kappa, founded in 1910, has 93,000 active members, according to Walter Smith, associate dean of women and president of the KU chapter, which has 58,000 members. The fraternity are professional educators and graduate students in education. Caryl Smith, one of the five women initiated, said that Phi Delta Kappa had been talking about initiating women for six or eight years. Regier said allowing women members had first been discussed 10 years ago. Smith said Phil Delta Kappa voted to change its constitution at a meeting of the international Biennial Council last October, and that he was a member of the chapters of the fraternity in February. "Phi Delta Kappa has a very strong "Our chapter voted almost unanimously for the initiation of women," Ecken said. THE FRATERNITY publishes books and pamphlets, journal, the Kappan, and is working on study projects in the USSR, China, Japan and elsewhere. Regier said. Phi Delta Kappa is non-profit in nature, Estes said, because all the money that the organization collects is put back into educational research and programs. The apartments that don't give away gasoline, bicycles or trips to Bermuda. Phi Delta Kappa published its first book when a woman last fall. The author was a graduate of English at F.T. Hays State College. She reviewed B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees from KU. "We hope that through this experience we can improve the qualities of education," he said. "The three keystones of the organization are research, leadership and service in education. We put the emphasis on relationships of home and child and school." There's no reason to. The quiet luxury of Meadowbrook apartments speaks for itself. Come visit us. reputation, but they've certainly been sex exclusive in the past." Smith said. "I thought it was an honor that I was asked to join, and being a woman had never been so easy." "We don't serve ourselves; we serve the profession," he said. The goal of Phi Delta Kappa, according to Reger, is to draw together people who are interested in the study of philosophy. Woodward said she thought she would be accepted by the male members of the church. Jean Pyfer, associate professor of physical education, was one of two other women joining Phi Delta Kappa who were not present at last week's initiation. She said she had turned down invitations to join the university and turned out to be primarily social in nature. Meadowbrook is Apartments *Townhouses* *Residences* Fine Creline 847-420-7650 Office open 11am - 6pm a good place to live Edwyna Gilbert, associate professor of education and faculty adviser for Pi Lambda Theta, she did she not know what effect the admission of women to Pi Delta Kappa would have on the membership of Pi Lambda Theta. productivity of the type of people in this fraternity," she said. PIH DELTA KAPPA cooperates with Pi Lambda Theta, a women's education honorary organization, according to Walter Smith. He said that he didn't think that the two groups should merge. However, he said that women had not had leadership roles in the past, he said. Kathleen Knox, New Brunswick, Canada, graduate student, has also paid dues with her family. Another reason for joining Phi Delta Kappa, according to Walter Smith, is to meet, associate and exchange ideas with other educators. "The social contacts through the organization are exceedingly important," "Pi Lambda Theta is now open to men," she said. "We're planning on possibly co-sponsoring some programs with Phi Delta Kappa next year." The admission of women to the organization; she said, is one step towards helping them advance in education because they could have more contact with other top people in the profession. She said that during her time as a teacher, women, few women traditionally had gotten advanced degrees in education and had held top administrative jobs. Prepared Childbirth Group Teaches Expectant Parents By PAM BEGERT Kansan Staff Reporter Prepared Childbirth Inc. is a program designed to teach prospective parents facts about childbirth and to give them an understanding of what labor, childbirth and birth like, Jan Bentz, Lawrence graduate student and head of the program, said Friday. The program of class sessions was started in Lawrence last summer by Bentz. She has held many workshops. Each couple attends six class sessions during the last two months of pregnancy. They meet once a week for two hours, and classes are limited to eight couples. There is a $20 charge for each couple enrolled in the class. THE CLASSES MEET in various places. The next session, starting Aug. 4, will be meeting in the KLWN radio station building, Bentz said. Bentz said both the man and wife did the same exercises in the class. These exercises are not designed as athletic developers, but operators. They also awareness of their bodies. Bentz said. The couples are taught the difference between tension and release. They learn how to use tension and release practice what labor and childbirth will be like. The husband learns these techniques so that he can understand what happens during labor, and becomes her "labor coach." by the end of the six-week session, the husband knows what his wife's contractions will be like, so that during labor he can recognize tension in pressure areas, such as the back and upper chest. He is taught to relieve his wife's tension by gently massaging these areas. The couples also consider their emotional and psychological relationships before and Coaches Picked ForGymnastics, Hockey Teams Ken Snow has been named coach of women's gymnastics and Jane Market has been named coach of field hockey at the University of Kansas. Snow, 25. is a former Lawrence High and Kansas State University gymnastics star. He coached K-State men's gym in 1973 and was coach of KU's men team last year. Markert, a native of Littit, Pa, has been field hockey coach the last four years at Central Missouri State College in Warrensburg. after the arrival of the child, Bentz said. Bent learn about prepared childbirth while attending classes in Columbus, Ohio, preparing for the births of her children, Mike. 11, and Jenny. 8. "The physicians at Lawrence Memorial hospital are accepting the Prepared Medical Records." The hospital is a progressive one in its use of comparatively low amounts of counterfeit drugs, and the doctors at Bentz said. Lawrence Memorial Hospital also has a program called "roming in", in which the newborn child is allowed to stay with its mother during the day, rather than alone. The new instructors were needed because the program has become very popular, Bentley's. Karen Warren, Rt. 2, and Sandy and Jeff Dolezal, 706 Maine, were chosen Thursday night as new instructors in the Prepared Childbirth program, Bentz said. Lawrence has been relatively slow in acquiring a prepared childbirth program in relation to other cities in Kansas and across the United States, Bentz said. National League Los Angeles 65 62 37 837 — % Cincinnati 62 61 41 692 3/4 Houston 13 10 32 121 Alabama 33 49 330 12 San Francisco 34 67 447 19 Texas A&M 31 65 447 19 W L W Pct. GB Philadelphia 50 51 .590 2 St. Louis 50 50 .500 2 Florida 48 42 .480 3 Montréal 48 42 .480 3 New York 43 34 .443 4 Ottawa 43 34 .443 4 Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 5, Ohio 4 Cincinnati 10, San Diego Cincinnati 10, San Diego Houston 3, San Francisco 2, 10 lintures National Lacrosse League W L W Ptl. GB Boston 51 60 362 7 Cleveland 51 67 320 11 Bahrain 30 49 305 4 New York 30 49 305 4 Milwaukee 49 50 498 4 Oakland 49 50 497 4 Oakland 59 W 52 L 48 R 584 -7% Kansas City 69 W 42 L 310 R 69 % Chicago 69 W 42 L 310 R 69 % Texas 51 W 51 L 500 R 8 % Minnesota 49 W 49 L 400 R 18 % California 49 W 49 L 400 R 18 % Yesterday's Games Detroit 6, Cleveland 3 Colorado 0, St. Louis 0 Boston 9, New York 3 Philadelphia 7, Boston 4 Oakland 6, Chicago 2, 2nd Minnesota 1, Minnesota 1 California 12, Minnesota 9 Decorate your room or apartment with original graphics! Tues., July 30 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Exhibition/Sale of original graphic artworks From Roten Galleries, Baltimore, Maryland Sponsored by Student Union Activities To be held in Union Exhibition Gallery, first floor of the Union. Prices begin at $10.00.