2 Thursday, March 2.1972 University Daily Kansan Cultural Awareness Goal Of KU. Haskell Course By WENDIE ELLIOTT Kansan Staff Writer Students at the University of Kansas and Haskell are attemptng to meet the needs of Together they are challenging cultural prejudices in a course entitled Intercultural Communications: The American The course is taught jointly by Robert Hamlin, assistant professor of speech and communication and associate at KU. Jim Johnson. Haskell assistant instructor of speech and J. Rodgers. Haskell assistant instructor of business and attend each weekly meeting. "This is a monumental achievement," Hamlin said Thursday. "This is one of the first students to get an education on an academic level." THE PROGRAM was originally designed to be an emphasis on Indian culture and was attended by both KU and UTS. It was begun by Lynn Osborn, professor of speech and drama at KU. The class was taught by Dr. Bill Hamlin, whoました Hamin said, in the spring of 1968. Since then, Hamlin said, emphasis has gone from "interest in" to "awareness of" the Indian culture. "It was more like weekly meetings with programs," he said. "There was no interpersonal experience." Since the program began Oakland in 1974, Washington State in Ellincoln. Wash. to become chairman of the speech and drama departments. HAMILIN SAID a goal of the class was the discovery and appreciation of values in Indian culture are important to communication This is Hamlin's first semester in the intercultural communications class. Another goal of the class, he said, was to create an understanding of the class participants in a biculacial situation and advance the cause of communication between each "We're at the perception stage right now," Hamlin said. "The group is interested in identity as are most young people," he said. "Non-Indians KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM THURSDAY 7:30 a.m. The Morning Show 7:45 a.m. News Weather-Sports > a.m. News-Weather-Sports $ 15 a.m. Filmcast 8:30 a.m. Campus and Community Calendar New Weather 9:30 a.m. Morning with the Masters Noon—News-Weather-Sports 9 a.m. News-Weather-Sports 9 a.m. News-Report from Haskell Indian Arsenal Calendar 1 p.m. Listen to Their Voices 2 hrs. Music and Migration of Canada 12:30 p.m. Campus and Community Calendar Noon - News-Weather Sports 12:15 p.m. Noon Hour Concert 12:30 p.m. Campus and Community Calendar **Liken to Thorns** 19:30 Warner Bros. Canada 2:55 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada 1:59 Warner Bros. Canada **The Afternoon Jar** 19:30 Warner Bros. Canada 4:55 The Afternoon Jar 4:55 The Afternoon Jar 4:55 The Afternoon Jar 4:55 Jawahawk Locker Room 4:55 Jawahawk Locker Room 4:55 Jawahawk Locker Room 4:58 New York Weather Special **KAMT Special** 8 p.m. Boston Symphony Orchestra Concerts 10:15 p.m. TBA-underground rock in stereo think they should decide who they are and live it. "Indians feel their identity is out there somewhere, and they must find it, not make one," he said. The class, made up of about 40 KU students and 20 Haskell students, meets Monday evenings at Haskell Guest speakers from KU and Haskell begin the sessions and the rest of the class time is spent in open discussion. "TO BE TRUTHFUL." Johnson said Thursday, "the numbers have baffled me." "Some students would prefer a new teacher to know their better, and they'd get to know each other better. The results would be more pleasant." The problem has been resolved somewhat, he said, by breaking up into smaller groups for discussion. Hamilin considers inhibition in phonemic phonemes. He thinks perhaps the Indians don't think they are be analyzed so much in larger "Whites want more intense personal discussion than the Indians are willing to give," Hamlin said. "The problem now is that we—non-indians—must learn to work with them, rather than on our terms," he said. "Otherwise relate a to them." HAMILIN SAID the white students must fight the "I want to help you," and the "open up to me." complex. Johnson said, "It's not indian to relate that way. Many students had grandparents who had Indian wars. We can't overcome centuries of friction between two nations in a semester of discussion." Each group tested the other in the first encounters. Hamlin said. "The whites were pretty naive in their questions," he said. "The Indians they ate and how they felt when a carload of white drenes by them attacked." HAMILN SAID he would have expected those who had studied interpersonal communications to have shown better feelings of humaneness. He said the KU students often observed in class and the Indians tuned out the obscurity and turned off the communication. "I have been disgusted by the general insensitivity of non-indian to Indian." Hamlin said. "I'm蒙雀, it goes both ways." Hamin said if he could have his way, he would stage a weekend program for non-Indian students to take part in intercultural communication. The Indians, Johnson said, have lived with white society all their lives and don't need a preparatory course. Miniaturation is the key word in the discussion of analogies. BELFAST-Terrorists marched a Northern Irish militiaman from his home and shot him to death, minutes after assuring his sobbing wife he would not be harmed. Hours later, a giant bomb rocked Lordenbey, wounding at least 15 persons, including two soldiers, and causing the city center's worst damage in more than two years of violence. MIDDLE EAST - Syrian jets bombed Israeli positions in the occupied Golan Heights in retaliation for new Israeli air and ground strikes. THE REV. PHILIP BERRIGAN's initial priority as a militant anti-war chieftain was the blowing up of heating tunnels in Washington, according to an FBI-intercepted letter read Wednesday at his trial. People: Treasury Secretary JOHN B. CONNALLY urged Congress to resist, at least for the now, that demand to allow Americans to buy and sell gold. Amending a dollar-devaluation bill to permit U.S. citizens to own gold bullion for the first time since 1934 would be misunderstood overseas in nervous financial markets, Connally said. Things: The Kansas Senate, grinding relentlessly through its once-huge backlog of bills, passed 29 measures, including a $1,000 HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION for all Kansas homeowners and a $500 homestead exemption. Commission's for a NUCLEAR WASTE RESTRICTION, in effect. Places: A bill REAPPORTIONTING 125 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICTS in Kansas headed for the desk of Gov. Robert Docking while a house committee moved a Senate application to establish a provision for future reduction of the size of the House. Soleri Advocates 3-D Communities "I try to learn from nature," Soleri said, "which is not the quiet romantic thing weinianize and complexity there. The Although Soler's archeologies would increase density in living areas, they could create a careless and creepy possibility for most of the land and water space of the earth to be used for food and recreational purposes. THE ONLY WAY to stop the car, he said, is to build "islands" which the car can't get into. "The exhaust of a car," he said, "is irrelevant. What is relevant is the existence of the car." By MIKE MOREY Kansan Staff Writer Arcology is Paolo Soleri's word for art. He is a pioneer of chiteure and culture, Soleri, who has been called a visionary architect, spoke last night in the museum. Soler developed he idea of archelis, a network of three-dimensional communities which provide his men's needs under one gigantic plan. Soler's arcologies, which would house thousands of people under one roof, would contain no automobiles. If man is to live in cultural, spiritual and racial harmony, he said, he must have a physical environment free of pollution of all kinds. Everything that lives there alters life, Solari said, is pollution. They are building Arcosanti in direction is always toward infinitely complex and miniatureized systems." Soleri said the crisis of the present day city was easily apparent. people have decided, he said, that the cities are not worth fighting for and have begun a mass exodus to the suburbs. What was it? "a trend with withdraw which is universal in this country." SOLERIAID by moving to the suburbs, the American people were asking technology for a reason. We saw that technology which wasn't simple at all. "We will realize," he said, "the suburbs are not the answer and we need technology a less simple-minded solution. And that when I think of it, I'm happy." At the present, Soleri and his students are in the process of building Arcosanti, a city which uses approximately 3,000 people. Several students and apprentices work with Soleri in the classroom. Soleri said he wasn't a very good teacher in the conventional school. "The only way I can teach anything is to do my work," he said. SOLER SAID they had pur- pared 800 acres of grazing land in the county. They will occupy about 10 acres, he will occupy about 10 acres, he approximately 100 feet high. LONDON (AP)—Britain's population in 1985 is expected to increase by 4.6 percent in 1990, compared with a 66 per cent increase projected for the country. the same way they have built their working and living quarters, with their own hands and with no professional help. "You build your life into the building that you are building," he said "so that it really becomes an experience." Soler, who later was born in Tortoise, is the author of 1918, studied at the Academy of Music and the Polytechnic of Torino, where he received his doctorate in music. HE THEN traveled to the United States and studied, for two years, at Yale University. After his marriage and a trip to Italy, he returned to the United States and established the Bates Foundation near Scottdale. 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"People's War- An Application to China's Foreign Policy" is not for today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, is canceled. In addition to a $50 increase in residence hall fees next year, residents of coeducational residence halls will be charged an additional security rate of $15, not $50 as was reported in a story in Wednesday's Kansan. China Lecture Canceled The Mount Oread Bicycle Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Pine Room of the Kansas City Metropolitan Library and will show slides on "How to Drive in Europe last summer." Bicycle Club Travel Forum Today Dorm Rate Correction OSMIROID PENS Again in Stock CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. 843-6133 Overwhelmed? Slow, unorganized reading is boring! You lose concentration and perspective! Come to me to help all your time studying! students do the majority of their work. Competent Fast, intelligent reading holds your attention against the ideas soonest and most accurately. You have time for leisure enjoyment! Reading Dynamics teaches you how to find the meaning in all those thousands of words. Our instructor is also a teacher. READ THE ENTIRE YEAR'S WESTERN CIVILIZATION ASSIGNMENTS IN ONLY 8 WEEKS Confident Our unique note-taking technique simplifies, organizes, and relates ideas in graphic form. This week Begins this week Begins March 2 and meets for 8 Thursdays 7:30 p.m. Finishes just before the W.C. Comprehensive Exam of April 29. P. 5. If you want to take Reading dynamics but do need the Western Criticism, you may, let me show you how it looks. Soler doesn't want people to reject his ideas because they don't like his models, he said. New Class Begins This Week office of the Kansas Union oft- individual travel counseling and organize and participate in group travel education programs organizing new travel services. At present, the bulk of the foundation's income comes from Solerl's speaking tours and from making and selling ceramic FREE Mini-Lesson By Appointment at the Reading Dynamics Institute Domestic Travel Forum Today When viewing models of his cities, he warned, "Don't think in terms of what you see; think in terms of what the concept is." EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS March 18; camping and hitching, March 30 and Mexico and Canada, April 13. EVELYN WOOD READING DIAMICS Downstairs at the Sound - Hillcrest Shopping Center. 925 iowa Phone 843-6424 There are four campus offices assisting students with travel plans. The Foreign Study Office strong handles questions and arrangements considering short or long term study on a foreign campus. The Maquintuin office in the Kansas City area manages arrangement such as tickets and reservations. The Dean of Foreign Student's Office in 228 Strong is tasked with travel in the United States. The travel adviser in the SUA Student Union Activities will sponsor a forum on travel within the United States at 4 p.m. today. Room of the Kansas University. The purpose of the forum is to acquaint students with travel possibilities and procedures within the United States. Representatives familiar with domestic travel will be available to answer questions and to assist students in setting basis with their travel plans. The forum is the fourth of a series of seven travel forums sponsored by SA during the EU summit. The forum deals with travel within Europe. Marcello Matrimonii's favorite Moc. On women that is the low, low price will FUEL you on, too! Leather handwash front in Red Bone, Black or Tan, Use MasterCharge, Bank Card. 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