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Monday, June 17, 1974
University Daily Kausan
THE OFFICE of the Dean of Men has announced an opening for an assistant dean to work with fraternities and the College within-the-College in the field of administration, programming and advising of students. Inquiries should be directed to Alderson, dean of men, 282 Straw Hall. Candidates should have a Master's degree.
THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas department of East Asian Studies has received an $8,300 grant from the Japan Expo 70 Foundation in Tokyo and Osaka. The grant is for the acquisition of Japanese books and materials.
DAVID P. CURRY, assistant to the director of the Art Museum, has been selected to attend the 16th annual Seminar in Philadelphia June 16 to July 26 in Williamsburg, Va.
JOHN S. BRUSHWOOD, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Sacramento Sariola, professor of sociology, and Andrew Tsubaki, associate professor of speech and drama, theatre, East Asian studies and Oriental languages and literature, will receive awards by the Board of Foreign Scholarships and the Department of State.
THE ARCHIVES of the Douglas County Community Improvement Association (Pen House have been deposited with the Collection in the Spencer Research Library.
DR. KERMITE.Krantz, dear for clinical services at the University of Kansas Medical Center, has been appointed to the National Advisory Child Health and Human Development Council of the National Injury Prevention Health Council reviews applications in research project grants and makes recommendations on those that should be funded.
LUPE MENDEZ, San Jose, Costa Rica, junior, and Carlos Diaz, Panama City, Panama, junior, have received Maude L. Sauergrant's award to Students for the 1974-1975 academic year.
ELMER C. JACKSON, Jr., Kansas City, Kau,
an attorney and member of the Kansas
Board of Regents, received a Distinguished
Alumnus Citation by the KU School of Law.
THE UNIVERSITY Press of Kansas has published an annotated bibliography of the "Congressional Hearings on American Defense Policy" from 1947 to 1971.
LELSI DIENES, associate professor of geography and Slavic and Soviet area studies, is the recipient of an American Council of Learned Societies and Social Science Research Council post-doctoral grant for a research project on the mechanisms of environmental disruption in Hungary.
correction
The total increase for health services at the University of Kansas this fall will be $5, 00; $10, 50; as was reported in Thursday's Kansan. A $7 campus privilege fee toward construction of the new Watkins Memorial Hospital was begun last spring.
Continuing Education Multifaceted
BY DONNA HOWELL Kansan Staff Reporter
Members of the Division of Continuing Education at the University of Kansas say that a student's education should not stop when they finish school, but should be a lifelong activity.
"Among colleges and universities," Howard Walker, dean of Continuing Education, said recently, "the term 'continuing education' means the offering of a wide variety off-campus, post secondary level learning environments."
Kansas has six centers for Continuing Education, sponsored by the six state colleges and universities. These centers are four state institutes of administrative divisions within the universities.
Along with the faculty, these divisions plan, coordinate and facilitate functions that develop and deliver these "learning environments" to the part-time student. The seven divisions are the Extramural Independent Study Center, Classes and Centers, Conferences and Institutes, the Audio Visual Center, the Continuing
Walker said the program usually had 3,000 part-time students enrolled in off-campus credit classes, 3,900 in independent (correspondence) study courses and 3,300 persons in short courses, conferences, and institutes.
Education Library and the Institute of Public Affairs.
The classes and conferences division provides a traveling art exhibit, which carries a comprehensive collection of art from the Spooner Art Museum at KU.
The firemanship division of the program offers training programs for firemen and a firefighter.
The Continuing Education Library, which is located at 7th and Ninth Hampshire streets gives 3,000 people special library loans and offers Reading Program for 17,000 youngsters.
Educational films may be rented from the Audio Visual Center, which is at 8th and 10th floors.
The Instructional Television Center, with the cooperation of Sunflower Cablevision, offers a variety of television programs.
and the entire university to reach the community through local Channel 6. Instructional aid for the faculty is also provided.
Cynthia Lingle, TIV operations manager,
said that in the fall a two-hour resident
phone call will be broadcast on Channel 6 and that anybody
Continuing Education also sponsors such
Continuing Education also sponsors such events as Boys and Girls States.
Walker said each year new and different programs are tested. The In-Residence Independent Study Program, which was started four years ago, is being adopted by many other colleges and universities. It offers a credit course taught by KU professors. They use study syllabus, readings, books and direct contact with professors.
The Extramural Independent Study Center offers both credit and non-credit courses to college and high school students. Most of the classes offered are liberal arts courses, but the department has hired, and college level courses must be the departmental or adviser's approval.
These classes are offered world-wide, as
School Committee Airs Complaints
Recommendations to Be Presented to School Board
Citizens for Responsive Schools discussed grievances and prepared list of recommendations Thursday at the Lawrence Public Library.
The recommendations will be presented to the Lawrence Board of Education. The list contains four major areas of concern: discrimination, discipline and evaluation.
About a dozen people attended the meeting. They expressed a need for better communication channels, including common language and frequent listing resources available to a parent who wishes to complain. Other suggestions, such as the availability of the school board, visitation to classrooms, rescheduling appointments to classroom hours and the establishment of a grievance
Burr Committee Organizes To Raise Campaign Monev
About 20 persons attended an organizational meeting Thursday of the Douglas County Lance Burr for Attorney General Committee.
Karen Bassett, county coordinator for the Burr campaign, said the goal of the group would to reach all 4,000 registered Democrats. The group is primarily, Fund raising, volunteer and
CPA to Chose Director Today
An interview committee of the Consumer Protection Association will announce the choice of a new CPA director Tuesday, a member of the committee said yesterday.
Four members of the CPA board of directors are on the interview committee.
media subcommittees have been formed to work toward this goal, she said.
Bruce Janssen, Lawrence sophomore, said that the board of directors would meet tonight and that the committee would have a statement ready Tuesday morning.
Kay Turney, Hays junior, interim CPA director, said the committee had preliminary interviews of eight applicants on Friday and final interviews on Saturday.
Bob Landman, manager of Burr's Topeca office, said about $10,000 had been raised. The campaign was currently about $1,000 in the hole, he said.
Landman estimated that Burr's total primary budget would be $40,000. He said the bank expected to release $20 million.
Most of the persons attending said one of the reasons they were supporting Burr was his accomplishments during his six years as a naval officer and chief of the consumer protection division.
Mary Lafail, St. Louis graduate student, said she supported Burr because of "what he's done on consumer protection. He's very intelligent and fair."
Ben Zimmerman, associate professor of social welfare, said he liked Burr's stands on consumer protection and the environment.
committee in each school, were discussed. Acknowledging the existence of discrimination in schools, the committee stressed the need for increased commitment by the school board and administrators to check discriminatory financial problems concerning race, sex, religion, financial status, mental, behavior and physical, difference issues. The group also discussed reviewing the process for renting musical instruments and handling free school lunches at the office level.
Craig Stcliffe, Lawrence attorney, said, "Burr is obviously an intelligent man who can see more than a few years into the future and is concerned with the life of the common individual in Kansas. He is a great egalitarian."
Paul Munson, West Bend, Ia., graduate student, said he didn't come to the meeting as a Burr supporter, but rather to find out what the candidate's policies were
"What I heard sounded good," he said.
The committee said that suspension and expulsion were measures that hurt rather than helped students, and agreed that no short term suspensions should be permitted as a form of discipline. Longer suspensions should be allowed only as a last resort.
Art & Photo Exhibits
The committee also discussed recommendations for banning humiliation of students, physical punishment and corporal punishment in police or other authorities on school grounds.
Classes in Acting,
Directing, Design,
Theory and Criticism
Guest Lectures
Workshops
Concert Series
The group agreed that the effectiveness of teachers, personnel, principals and admins were there many students performing up to or more years below the national norm and because student achievement varied between school within the Lawrence system school.
"Picnic" July 11, 12, 13 by William Inge
"The Glass Menagerie" June 28, 29 by Tennessee Williams July 5, 6
"The Dark at the Top of the Stairs" July 18,19,20 by William Inge
Theatre Presentations
Admission Price: *250 K.U. Students *150 Season Ticket *600
Suggestions will be presented to the school board in a closed-door session tomorrow night. The results of that meeting will be announced on Tuesday. Citizens for Schools Thursday.
Production Dates
Repertory Week
July 23-27
Films
All Performances in the University Theatre . . . Murphy Hall Reservations: 864-3982 8:00 p.m.
well as in Kansas. Wallace Clark, assistant director of the center said that those taking correspondence courses come from all walks of life, from teachers or doctors who are updating their knowledge to prisoners at Ft. Leavenworth prison. Continuing education classes numbered by many of college credit classes being held any of the 24 federal prisons. Clark said.
The Institute of Public Affairs is involved in the education and training of government officials.
Continuing Education is partially self-supporting and also state and federally
Festival Events
Cedurwood apartments
The Cleanest Place in Town
THE WORLD OF WILLIAM INGE celebrating the life and works of one of America's major dramatists
1-2-3-4 bedrooms from $^{99}0^{\circ}$
75 gallons of gas free.
The University of Kansas Theatre Festivals
1-2-3-4 bedrooms from $^{199}$∞}$
All modern conveniences.
2414 Oudahd 843-1116
present
Use Kansan Classified
CHECK THESE SALE PRICES
Suits from 5995
Shoes $ \frac{1}{3} $ off
Sport Coats from $ ^{149}{}^{95}$
Dress Shirts $ _{1/3} $ off
Wash Slacks '5°0 or 2 for '9°0
Long & Short Sleeve 1/3 off
Lightweight Jackets $ \frac{1}{4} $ off
Short Sleeve Sport Shirts $ _{1/4} $ off
Belts & Ties 20% off
Long Sleeve Sport Shirts $ \frac{1}{2} $ price
Bermuda Shorts 1/4 off
all sales final
Across from Lindley Hall next to Shakespeares Pizza
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ac p m te th fr g
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open 9:30-5:30