10 Friday, February 12, 1971 University Daily Kansan Switching to Comprehensive Juco Haskell Changing with KU Help By MARY FROJEN If the most effective junior colleges are those which are best fitted to the needs of the country, American Indian Junior College could be one of the most accessible one in the country within a few years. Alex Lazarino, director of the Independent Study Center of the University of Texas at Austin, has involved with junior college development for eight years, the university's largest. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. Lazarino and his staff are in the first year of a project designed to help Haskell make the switch from a post-high school to a comprehensive junior college. With the help of a $1,000 grant from the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Independent Study Center provides Haskell with courses in liberal arts and business. He said KU was contracted to provide support in the general teaching positions and Haskell was unable to fill all its teaching positions by regular MANY OF THE instructors are KU faculty members who teach part-time at Haskell. Others are full-time instructors who have been chosen for their ability to teach Indian students, Lozzaring said. "But providing instructors to Haskell is only the first step," Lazarino said in an independent Study Center hopes to have developed specialized curriculum materials faculty so the junior college will he essentially independent' of KI!" THE TWO SCHOOLS will continue to have a close relationship, Lazarionary school, each of special resources. But by 1972 Haskell hopes to have its own self-contained faculty, which will use the curriculum materials being developed jointly, he said. Lazarino said that because Haskell was a federal school established exclusively for foreign students in the list of 21 junior colleges in Kansas which were community funded. He said all junior colleges offered these types of needs, however, and that public junior colleges could learn much from Haskell's special success in this area. Mr. Lazarino noted who recently visited the Haskell campus, he said, rated the vocational program as the best in the state. "HASKELL'S curriculum is related to Indian needs," Lazarino said. "It does much better in vocational areas than most community colleges, improvement areSeen planned." Lazarini hasaskell and KU were cooperating in a program in which six Indian students were enrolled in an architecture course. We also predicted their programs at Haskell. Future programs in journalism and teacher education have also been discussed, he said, and they will be designed to allow students to apply to institutions and then to get practical experience on their home reservations if they wish. "HASKELL HAS resisted the temptation to provide only a vocational/technical program or training in the program," Luzzarino said. "The junior college has limited its offerings to those areas which can be financed adequately, with support on Indian-related subjects." Haskell students who are interested in a liberal arts education and in going on to a four-year college take most of their courses in general education in all Haskell students must take some general education courses particularly in English and mathematics. LAZARINO POINTED out that vocational education was very expensive because of the fact he had to take his father he said, however, that this field of education got results, and that there were many job offers for every Haskell graduate, with Haskell paying as much as $12,000 year. Lazarino described some of the courses that the Independent College offered, including Hardwell and other junior colleges. The courses allow students to work at their own pace, he said. Students also take courses in arts and large group sessions. "THE INSTRUCTOR serves as a tutor to individuals or small groups," he said, "and the class is provided with instructional materials which permit each student to progress at his own rate. "In this way, concepts such as semesters and failing grades are eliminated because the student can complete the work and be completed the work, and he It is official policy at the University of Kansas that religious religion, sex and national origin is prohibited. Much of the credit for initiating and enforcing this policy goes to the University's religious leadership. Committee Combats Bias By MIKE BROWNLEE Kanean Staff Writer He explained briefly that the common forms are "to investigate a crime," and discrimination brought before it and to make recommendations to it. "NO ONE has ever ignored our recommendations," he added. He also noted that 1963 when it was called the Civil Rights Council. When the present committee met in 1969, the committee came under the jurisdiction of the University Last year the committee investigated the selection procedures of the pompom squad because Kansas was the most because of the committee's recommendations, the Kansas Relays now have three queens instead of one, and the pom pom is the bigger composed of all sorority girls. The committee is headed by Reina Llorens, assistant professor of religion. She deeply concerned with all issues of University life. "We ARE trying to make all University organizations equally accessible to all people," Shelton said. He said the committee can initiate an investigation without a formal complaint being filed. "We looked into the hiring procedures of companies and school boards who interview on KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM FRIDAY, FEB. 12 Noon Hour Concert (Cultural) Award) U.S. Press Opinion Rockstar Hall Rollback Hall Chapter Day: "14 A.M." by Gale 150 This Afternoon (Art Buchwald; 'Campus & Community Calendar') 155 Kansas Editorial Basement 15 Kansas Educational Review 30 Anything Good at the Movies? (Prof Dart) Music by Candlelight News in Retrospect (Robert Sullinger) 130 KU Colloquium 180 OPER Is My Hobby (Prof. James 10:00 Faculty Favorites (Prof. Jack Brooking) 10:15 Sign Off SAT., FEB. 13 "Vocational courses must be adapted to the job market in a particular area," he said. "For instance, a community college in Boston offers a different program from that of a community college in Chicago." 1. Apple Danbo (Campus & Community School) 2. No School Today (Gary Shivers) 3. The Metropolitan Opera 4. The National Library & Community Calendar 5. Apple on the News 6. Anything Good at the Movies? (Prof. Music by Candlestick Music by Candlestick The Big Hit Hera Buddy Rich 15. To be announced Apple Steve Steinberg r 3 w was done to six per屁 Lazarino emphasized that each child had to gear its program to meet the needs of its own community. SUNDAY. FEB. 14 "Haskell has the special problem of meeting the needs of a national constituency and a national job market." 1:10 Philadelphia Orchestra Concert 1:00 The Vesper Hour 1. Fonthankle Orchestra Concert 2. Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra 3. Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra 4. Chamber Recital 5. Lottus Jannis Brudus 6. Father of His Country" 7. Gilbert & Sullivan Notebook (Prof. Jon Rockhill) 8. Jon Rockhill NEWS: Saturday New community colleges are opening in this country at a rate of more than five a month, Lazzarino said. 7. News Weather Sports (15 Min.) 8. 9. News Weather Sports (30 Min.) 10. News Weather Sports (3 Min.) 11. News Healthet Sport (3 Min.) 12. News Healthet Sport (30 Min.) 13. News Weather Sports (30 Min.) NEWS: Sunday 1:00 News-Wear-Sports (10 Min.) 1:00 News-Wear-Sports (15 Min.) Shelton noted that fewer complaints were being filed with the committee this year than in the past. He attributed this to the present practice of people taking grape straps straight to the head man. campus. We now send them letters which prohibit any discrimination in hiring if they come here," he said. “WE’RE in an era of direct confrontation,” he said. “You can get more publicity by holding meetings, but you can’t talk than you are coming to up.” cannot complete the work until he has attained acceptable standards." He said that "the University is one of Lawrence's employers" and that "we need to set a good environment for the community at large." Shelton said he was concerned because many students did not know of the committee's existence. He said any person connected with the University who thought he was being contacted would contact him and the committee would investigate the complaint Then instructional materials, such as slides, audio cassettes and films, were developed with specific learning objectives in independent students worked independently by the instructor and used the instructor as a tutor. Lazarzo said that one spectacular example of the success of this approach was with a course which the Independent Study Center has developed with Inpatient Education in Independence, Kan. Three years ago, he said, 47 per cent of students in the course got D' and F'. Shelton said the committee was beginning a long-term major study of University hiring and advancement procedures. "There is a myth that they cannot tell if you just put it on, or it just isn't true," he said. "They sometimes need help in setting up programs, but what they do, they must do." F's was down to six per cent. NATIONALLY standardized examinations were used before the new test was implemented. Lazartz testing last by spring the rate of D's and The committee meets every week, so that action could be taken on a complaint within a matter of days, he said. Chalmers Acquires Dog Catching Title According to eyewitness reports, Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers J. went to the dogs Thursday afternoon. John Dolan, Fairway sophomore, said he was walking into the museum about 1 p.m. History at 1 p.m. Thursday when he noticed that several persons were standing on the floor at a window well of the museum. Adults 1.50 Child .75 Dolan, his curiosity aroused, stopped and joined the gazers. He said he saw a dog being lifted out of well and placed on the ground. NOW!! Today s 2:30:40 7:30:90 Sat. Sun. 1:00:30 5:00:70 - 9:00 Mon. 2:30:40 3:40:70 9:00 Tue. 4:30:70 7:40:90 Dolan said that after the dog was lifted out of the well someone climbed out of the well. The humanitarian, Dolan said, was given a new coat of dressed in a business suit. Dolan could not tell whether Chalmers Ships Collide Near London No casualties were reported in the crash between a 16,597-ton Bulgerian tanker Hydrophane Cmy-pri cargo steamer Aragon LONDON (UP1)—Two ships collided in the Dover Straight and overcame jet flights were diverted to Northampton after a dense fog covered 18 counties in southern and eastern England, cutting visibility in the area. Chalmers could not be reached last night for comment. soiled his suit in saving the wet, scroungy dog Mat. Daily 1:30 Cellar 7:30 Attic 9:20 Fri & Sat, Only Cellar 7:30, 11:00 Attic 9:20 You've Seen "WITHOUT A STITCH" You've Seen "WEEKEND LOVERS" NOW, IN THAT SAME GREAT TRADITION . . . From a Time & Place of Unparalleled Earthiness Comes The Adult Version of Anglo-Saxondoms Best Loved Tale THE RIBALD TALES OF ROBIN HOOD HIS LUSTY MEN & BAWDY WENCHES PEERLESSLY PORTRAYED IN A PANOPLY OF COLOR TONIGHT & SATURDAY NIGHT AT 12:15 ONLY THE Hillcrest No One Under 18 yrs. Admitted! PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)--For two years, Californiaers have heard predictions from both soothsayers and experts that a "great" earthquake was due to hit the state. 'Great Quake' Still Due ID's Required An assortment of astrologers, religious fanatics and hippies predicted it would snap the state like a stale cookie and drop most of it into the Pacific. They're wrong, according to Clarence R. Allen, professor of geology and geophysics at the University of Utah. The more sober earthquake earthquakes scaffold at that picture—but warned that the 600-mile long San Andreas fault was due for one of its periodic flares. That caused the San Francisco make of 1968 To the 10 million residents of the Los Angeles area who were jolted awake by Tuesday's devastating tremor, the predictions seemed to have come true as the quake killed more than 50 persons and caused damage that will run into the billions of dollars. "It is certainly not a great earthquake in the Adults $1.50 sense of the San Francisco quake," he told a news conference Wednesday. Earth strain continues to build up along the San Andreas fault—the border between two huge continent—sized blocks of the Earth's surface which are inching in opposite directions. When the strain grows too strong, the great quake will occur. Alen echoed the predictions of other geologists that a great quake—one with a Richer reading of 8 or higher—would hit along the San Andreas coast in California some time within the next century. War Camp Act Decried However, he said, knowledge of quince and their causes is not sufficient to allow a prediction Allen said Tuesday's quake, which measured 5 on the Richter scale, did not occur along the coast. WASHINGTON (UPI)—A group of House members advocated outright repeal of an amendment to end Thursday to end fears that minority groups might be placed in federal relocation camps in states like California. "We don't understand entirely what happened," he said. "It is not an area that has had a great deal of seismic activity and there is no recognized active fault." Another black, Rep. Parren J. Mitchell, D-Md., charged that if the act was not repealed the camps could be used to detain blacks and anti-war demonstrators. At a news conference, Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y., said that although a majority of black persons in America do not even believe the act exists "people of color are no reason to fear laws of this nature." Rep. Spark M. Matsumaga, D-Hawaii, chief sponsor of a bill to prohibit establishment of emergency detention camps, told newsmen he was hopeful his bill won congressional approval. However, he said Rep. Richard Iechard, the chairwoman of the Republican Internal Security Committee, was trying to win approval of a bill that would only cover charges against those who violated security. the basis of race or color. Stars DONALD SUTHERLAND ELIOTT GOLD GULD MARK SKERRIT Color by DE LUXER PAMWISON* R Ends Tue. Eve. 7:15 & 8:25 Matinee Sat.. Sun. 2:00 Adult 1:50 Hillcrest "MASH' IS WHAT THE NEW FREEDOM OF THE SCREEN IS ALL ABOUT!" Recalling that 11,000 Japanese-Americans were detained in the United States just because "they were Japanese faces," Matsuanaague护 his wife and husband or detention of any U.S. citizen in any place other than a federal prison or architectural institution following conviction. "We must prevent the establishment and maintenance of concentration camps where women in United States," said wusitunga. "LOVE STORY" COMING MARCH 10th "A COMEDY CLASSIC" Show Magazine "WILD" New York Post "Hilarious" Judith Crist "Uproarious" ABC-TV "CRAZY"- WNEW.TV A SIDNEY GLAZIER Production A Mel Brooks Film starring RON MOODY (unforgotten as Fagen in Oliver) TheTwelveChairs FRANK LANGELLA - DOM leLUISE MEL BROOKS * SIDNEY GLAZIER * MICHAEL HERTZBERG MEL BROOKS • SIDNEY GLAZIER • MICHAEL HERTZBERG G-2 Color LIME Pictures A Company of UNIVERSAL MACHINE CORPORATION UNC Eve. 7:20 & PICTURES 9:05 Matinee Sal · Sun. 2:10 Adult 1.50 Child .75 "Act of the Heart" Genevieve Bujold ... is an event ... a personal statement that hovers between brillance and melodrama. academy Award Nominee - Best Actress "in Anne of the Thousand Days" Matinee Sat. - Sun 2:05 Adolescents 1.50 Childs 7.5 Donald Sutherland ) THE Hillcrest Evenings 7:35 & 9:30 Ends Tue.