University Daily Kansan, May 3, 1985 Page CAMPUS AND AREA 3 classes are removed from LA&S eligibility By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter Some students may find themselves in the add/drop line next semester when they learn that the English course they are enrolled in will not satisfy the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 'English requirement. Last spring, the College Assembly voted to change the requirement so that three English courses that now fulfill the requirement no longer would. The change will take effect next semester. The three courses are: English 359, Grammar and Usage for Composition, English 360, Advanced Composition, and English 362, Technical Writing. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences now requires students to take English 101 and 102, composition classes, and a third English course. Haskell Springer, chairman of freshman-sophomore English, said yesterday that the change had been made because the courses did not meet the traditional purpose of a third-level English course. "These are writing courses for specific purposes," he said. "The third-level course should be a literature course." English 359 is for students who have weaknesses in grammar and usage. English 360 develops specialized writing such as business and critical writing and English 362 helps them develop technical writing. Springer said, English who will teach Grammar and Usage for Composition next semester, said students traditionally write their writing in a specific area, or their writing in a specific area. The third course is supposed to combine writing and literature, she said, but these three courses focus only on writing. English professors plan to announce at the beginning of the semester that the courses no longer will satisfy the third-level requirement so that few students take the course thinking they have completed the English requirement, Springer said. But at the end of the semester students won't be able to plead for merry just because they didn't know the answer. The adviser failed to tell them, he said. Hitchcock gets lead in new RTVF course "It's the student's responsibility to know whether a course will qualify or not," Springer said. By BETH REITER Staff Reporter include a look at Hitchcock's career in chronological order. The course will be taught similar to the way a course on the works of Shakespeare or Bach would be taught. Berg plans to show 12 of Hitchcock's films, including "The Man Who Knew Too Much," "Sabotage," "Spellbound," "The Lady Vanishs," and "The Thirty-Nine Steps." He said the text of those class would be "The Art of Alfred Hitchcock," by Donald Spoto. Staff Reporter One of Hitchcock's greatest achievements, Berg said, was making viewers feel the same emotion a character was feeling. The director did this by placing the camera at the angle the character was looking, so viewers could see the scene from the character's point of view. A course at the University of Kansas this summer will be devoted to a film director who is known for captivating audiences with suspense, fear and irony. Margaret Arnold, a professor of The course is open to students who have taken six hours of radio-television-film courses or have Berg's consent. . . His name is Alfred Hitchcock. Radio-Television Film 399, Undergraduate Seminar in Hitchcock, will be offered this summer for the first time. Charles Berg, chairman of radio-television film, said yesterday. "I just love Hitchcock's work," said Berg, who will teach the course. Berg said the course would Resume Service Don't wait till the last minute Cover Letters * Word Processing 5 F. 7th 841.1206 Z-100 MEMORY House of Hupei 2907 W. 6th 843-8070 For the best in Authentic Chinese Food Graphic design systems - new Design Writer memory board makes expansion affordable at least. Add 256k of memory for only $389.95 ($454 list price) FEATURES— parity checked, expandable to 1 megabyte, and 1 year warrantie. INCLUDES— Ram disk, print spooler/diagnostic software CALL Bruce Cappo DATAWORD 841-8770 John Toppins Wheatstone systems 841-2272 (CLOCK BOARD ALSO AVAILABLE/ASK FOR DETAILS.) A compilation of pages bound in various covers. Used by students to glean information from, usually one night before quizzes or tests. A headache causing agent. Sometimes used as; portable desk; frisbee; footprop. Textbook. (Tekst-book) BUY BACK CASH. (Bi-Bak Kash) Green printed matter given for textbooks. Found in great abundance at the Jayhawk Bookstore. Always accompanied by bonus coupons, fast lines, and free parking. Has many useful purposes. ayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913) 843.3826 The best definition for "Buy Back Satisfaction!" "Now thru Finals".