University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 20, 1972 5 Indian Education Review Initiated just nine jin to get see particular marital arrangement grant has we've the we've they they production proteus routine kiding, armed room room coooom I've I've I've Ive su get you ton ton! lom lom!) in jail in jail black black the little By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer porter nururs, brief in relief in that is in a indicated the domicile the finances afraid cases of of that the that the illy is. would student Two task forces have been appointed by an inter-institutional committee recently named by Chancellor E. Chancellor E. Haskell Supet, Wallace Gallucci to research and make recommendations on Indian education, Tom Beaver, representative of India at the State Department (CIA) and co-coordinator of the task forces said Monday. students houghout working level in George 因使用技术限制,建议您校对本报告的准确性。 建议在收到本报告后 48 小时内向公司或其授权机构 联系。您不得对本报告的内容或内容做出更改。 因特殊情况而导致的任何损失,请与公司联系。 联系信息:电话:0123-4567-8900 网址:www.skytech.com One task force, composed of staff and students from the University of Kansas and Haskell courses offered at the University now and make recommendations for additions, he said. The other task force, according to Beaver, will consider Haskell students and administrators and will be concerned with finding ways for Haskell students to pursue part-time work at KU for credit at Haskell s to s from states they can assist from the a. 9. 1970) nator ut THE INTERN-INSTITUTIONAL committee, made up of three members from KU, four administrators and one student from Haskell, was formed to help establish an office with Indian perspectives in mind. The group was also interested in making current and prospective Indian students aware of the opportunities they in the way of scholarships and loans. Beaver said that new financial aid programs were not necessary because most Indian students already eligible for aid already offered The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), Ford Foundation, Arrow Incorporated and the National Association of Distance Education (NAB) offer scholarships, and hip Crewsrol Young loans to students who meet the requirements. Although the requirements vary, most Indians can receive aid from at least one organization, he said. The inter-institutional committee and its task forces, were developed through efforts by the CIA last fall. Beaver告了 INDIAN STUDENTS at KU knew other schools were offering Indian studies programs and Indian languages programs, Beaver said. The group thought Indian awareness be promoted here in this area. "The top five graduates from Haskell will not go to KU because it does not offer Indian courses." Beaver said. They are looking at colleges a long way from Lawrence to get what they want, he said. Washington and Utah have In-Formation Schools, as well as Oklahoma State University. The first step towards Indian awareness on the KU campus was taken in September of 1970 when a group led a movement to change the plaque on display with Comanche in the Museum of Natural History. The plaque was moved in and inaugurated in a ceremony last semester. "THE UNIVERSITY needs to make a definite commitment to the proposed program before an appointment with Haskell can be made," William Burgess, dean of information at Haskell and International Institutional Committee, said Monday. The first step toward that commitment was made by point of contact with the committee and the task forces, Beaver said. Beaver said the task forces would mainly be concerned with placing an Indian representative in the KU Office of Minority Affairs, and placing an Indian to the University. The task force has received a letter of support from Marshall Jackson, assistant director of ad-hoc programs, and received favorable reviews from Chalmers, Beaver said. The task forces will meet April 20 with the chancellor to discuss a new Indian representative. Financing the new program is a circular problem, according to Beaver. If the University would be more willing it could I get the money it needed. Funding organizations will not give aid to an unstructured program, he said, and it is hard to know what the role of funding the money is not there yet. Blind to Navigate In Rallye Sundav The ninth annual Braille Celebration of American Jayhawk Sports Car Club will be run Sunday, Bill Francis, Rose Hill junior and president of the club. Navigators for the rally will be students from the Kansas State University and are decapped (KSVH) in Kansas City. Navi. Navigators will be divided into two categories: those who read only Brille and those who read both Brille and the KSVH. Drivers will meet at 11 a.m. Sunday in the southeast corner of O zone, where they will form a caravan to the KSV. Francis said that the drivers would be paired with their navigators at the school at 12.30 n.m. The rallie will begin at 2:15 p.m. leaving the starting line at one minute intervals. The rallie will end with a paternal later in the afternoon. Park. Francis said that about 15 cars would compete, with entrants coming from Pittsburg, Topeka and Kansas City, Kan. About 75 cars would be neede, Francis said, to make the rallye successful and guarantee that the cars were not dispatched. Last year, he said, students had to go in groups because there were not enough cars and drivers. Trophies will be awarded to the team that won a category. Both the driver and the navigators will be presented trophies Dash plaques will also be awarded. So far, Francis said, $50 had been delivered because new car dealers to the trophies. Also, the A&P Super Market has donated the food for children. An entry fee of $2 is being charged. Francis said. Committee Planning Continues in SenEx The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) is still in the process of making committee assignments in the University and Faculty senates, according to Ronald K. Calgaard, cochairman of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and SenEx chairman. Calgaard said SenEx hoped to have the appointments ready for presentation at the combined University of California and Faculty Senates on April 27. Charges to the University Council committees, which were appointed last week, are also responsible for that a special effort was being made to clarify the ambiguous function of the Planning Committee. Calgaard said the Planning and Resource Committee had no expilet function provided for in his tenure. He devoting its energy to general long range academic planning, Confusion arose, he said, when Confusion Bork established the Planning Body for this purpose. Over 1,000 questionnaires were sent out last week by the University Safety Committee to faculty members, staff and students who will be able to obtain comments from all segments of the University concerning safety problems at KU, Elmo G. Lindquist, associate professor of mechanical engineering and committee chairman said Wednesday. Safety Committee Solicits Planning Needs for KU included everything from "fire escapes to sidewalks to improper work rules." Ellen said Wednesday. Lindquist said this diversity For the past few weeks the University Safety Committee has been investigating safety at the University of Kansas. The committee hopes to centralize the safety problems to determine a feasible approach to their risk requirements, Llindquist said. KU Scuba Club Trains For Potter Trash Dive The KU Scuba Diving Club will conduct a trash dive from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday to clean up the bottom of Potter Lake In order to participate in the dive, members of the club had to take an eight week course involving classroom and pool instruction, and be instructed in the fundamentals of seba diving, diseases, diving hazards, diving equipment and teachers from Kansas City diving. Participants must have passed a written test, a pool check out and a water check out last. Test the same as their open water check out April 17. This semester's classes will be closed for water check out April 29 and 30. Patty Feist, Arkansas City senior, said prizes would be given LHS Students Test New Plan For Enrollment The club has been making diving flags required in Kansas to warn boaters that divers are in the water. The new enrollment system is similar to KU's, according to LHS Principal William Medley. After making her class select cards, she picked up card cards at stations in the high school cafeteria. Lawrence High School students got a chance to schedule their own classes for 1972-73 last week. The students assigned the schedules assigned by commu Medley said the high school was trying the system to reduce the number of student complaints about scheduling. for various items found in the lake, including the most unusual item found. The new system gives the student freedom to select his instructor and, usually, the order of his classes. In past years, counselors spent much of August and September changing the schedules of dissatisfied students. Tennis Dresses from Point Set and Court I Made of Washable Polyester for Easy Care Priced from 24.00 to 30.00 KIRSTEN'S In The Hillcrest Shopping Center The University of Kansas Theatre and the School of Fine Arts present LA BOHEME. An Opera by Puccini. (Sung in Italian) Cantata nell'originale Musical directing by GEORGE LAWNER Stage directing by PIERRE LAROCHE Prof Gets Grant April 18, 19, 21, 22 at 8:00 p.m. Matinee April 23 at 2:30 p.m. University Theatre—Murphy Hall TICKET RESERVATION 864-3982 Robert D. Moyer, KU associate professor of mathematics, has created a National Science Foundation for an additional year of work on a project entitled "Solvability of Equations and Index Theory." Mon thru Thurs 8:00 p.m. Only Fri-Sat 9:30, 10:00, 10:10 Sunday y 1:30 & 8:00 p.m. Bay Office Mon thru Thurs 10:00 p.m. Open Fri-Sat 1:10 p.m. Takes on job that may Use Kansan Classifieds Those days are over. But not everybody realizes it. Doesn't General Electric realize the days of enormous corporate profits are over? There was a time, fifty or sixty years ago, when a major corporation in America might expect profits of twenty-five cents on the sales dollar. What would you call enormous? In 1970, Fortune's Top 500 industrial corporations realized an average credit of about 4 cents on General Electric fared slightly better than average. Last year, our profits amounted to about 5 cents on the dollar. We are occasionally attacked, along with business in India, "oponotori oriented." People argue that if social progress is to be made, business must make it. And that profits stand in the way of social progress. We would argue quite the opposite. The business of business is not just business. The purpose of a busi- ness, as we see it, is to pro- duce and distribute necessary goods and servi- ces to the profit of society ... and the business itself A business must reflect society's needs. Economic, political, legal and moral, as well as social. It must change as society changes and, to some extent, influence those changes. How much profit is enough to keep a business operating? How much is too much? It's hard to say. But if society profits and the business does not, the business will fold in the short run. It will have no operating funds. However, the companies making only marginal profits from the companies providing new employment, creating new products or adding to man's scientific knowledge. Marginal companies are not the ones making the important social contributions today. For a simple reason, They can't afford to. No responsible company wants a return to the days of the robber barons. No responsible company wants a return to the days without the profit system, can survive without the profit system. Why are we running this ad? General Electric is a big, technological company, with the capabilities to do a great deal of problem solving in this country. We think profits have a direct effect on our ability to solve problems. But we realize the issue of profits is one with two sides. By telling you our side, we hope we've moved you to think about your side. Perhaps even write us about it. We'd like to hear what you have to say. Please write to Dept. 9011 670 Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10221. GENERAL ELECTRIC