8 The 20 years Wait, is it "the" or "that"? It looks like "the". Let me look at the second line again. Line 2: "The third law of thermodynamics states that a system in thermal equilibrium with its surroundings will always possess a constant temperature." Yes, it's "the". University Daily Kansan Placement Bureau... From Page One service in the School of Business, and the service is not offered to alumni. College of Liberal Arts & Sciences; Gadys Padget, Placement director; 208 The College awards over 1,000 bachelor's degrees each academic year and has faculty classes and classrooms scattered all over campus. The office is located near the deans' offices. Numbers of on-campus interviewers have declined in recent years to the six or eight now coming each semester, Padget said, and most of the interviewers offer selling "Students aren't interested in sales jobs," she said. Padget said she hoped to have a small interviewing office in the general College office area when remodeling being done in the area. The office had offices and meeting rooms now. THE COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICE does not produce an annual report, and has records of student participation in college or liberal arts graduates went to graduate schools. She said students rarely reported back to her office after graduation. Padget said that when companies wrote to her asking to interview liberal arts students, she asked them to place an ad in the newspaper. The office does not actively court prospective employers because so few students have been interested, she said. Students who were asked about the College placement effort said that they were unaware of its existence or that they needed more training of type of jobs available through the office. Educational Placement Bureau; Herold Reuter, Director: 103 Bailey. Described as a "different kind of service" by Regier, the Education Placement Bureau emphasizes keeping up with alumni. With a separate budget and income from fees charged to registrants, the bureau has expanded into job placement for all levels of education, from inexperienced college graduates to district superintendents, Reiger said. Credentials are prepared for registrants and are sent to school districts selected by the registrant from a list provided by Newcomb, assistant placement director, 7,494 credentials were mailed to 1,826 candidates applies upon enrollment and secondary level last year. THE 1971-1972 ANNUAL REPORT produced by the Educational Placement Bureau contains 60 pages of tables and written information about the project. It shows that 35 schools sent representatives to campus interviews during that academic year. The Annual Report does not distinguish between KU graduates for the current year and for other years, but states that for the period of the report, 812 inexperienced elementary and secondary candidates were registered. registered. The report shows that, at the time of its preparation, 391 inexperienced candidates were employed, or 48 per cent of the total. A count of reported placements in elementary and secondary positions shows that 265 bachelor's degree graduates in 1972 gained teaching positions. Bachelors' degree graduates in 1972 in non-teaching positions number 27. The offices of the Educational Placement Bureau are located near most teacher offices. Interviewing space in the Bureau will take place in the Kassam Union, according to Regier. Students asked about the service generally rated it highly. School of Engineering Placement Office; Eloim Lindmap, director; 113 Marlin Hall, Although limited in space, the School of Engineering placement offices provide extensive information to students about prospective employers in engineering jobs from Sunday through Friday at the Kansas City Star are posted, as are letters from firms seeking workers. Approximately 200 slots line one wall of the placement office, containing brochures from private and government employees of the institution. Information is kept in the engineering library. PARKING FOR INTERVIEWERS is a major problem as is the difficulty for interviewers to meet with professors because of scattered locations of engineering buildings. There is no charge for the placement registration and no service is offered to alumni unless specifically requested, according to the student. Students are required to furnish a resume. All students asked about the placement program in the School of Engineering were aware of it. One specifically mentioned the poor condition of the interviewing room. According to the 1972-1973 Placement Office Report, 184 students received a B.S. degree in some engineering discipline during that academic year. Out of 184 students, 96 have gone to graduate school, to the military, are uneducated, did not report to the placement office or are foreign students, the report FOREIGN STUDENTS are rarely hired for engineering jobs, according to Lindenquist, because of a U.S. Department of Labor edit requiring firms to hire foreign students in the shortage of engineering jobs a few years ago, he said, and has never lifted. The report shows 84 graduates employed who received B.S. degrees in the 1972-1973 school year. Lindquist said that approximately 200 companies sent representatives for on- School of Journalism Placement Office Dana Leibenga, Placement director) 105 802-764-3990, dleanebenga@journalism.edu campus interviews, and that nine were normal here at one time. The school of nursing was a small institution. Students, faculty and interviewing space are all located in Flint Hall, according to Dana Leibengood, director of the placement office. Both juniors and seniors in the School of Journalism are included in the placement publication that is sent to prospective employers. The 42-page book contains information on each graduate, as well as on junior seeks summer internship positions. The information includes specialties, work experience, work and geographical location of the course, and the student's permanent address. Students interviewed were aware of the placement office, and most said it was effusive. PLACEMENT INFORMATION is communicated to students through announcements from teachers, bulletin boards in the central hall and by prominent posters set up a week before each interviewer arrives, according to Liebenstein. The 1971-1972 Annual Report of the placement service reports 154 Bachelor's degree graduates. The report says that 74 have found work in their field, 47 in work outside their field, that they have jobs with the military or for the military service and that 39 did not report. Representatives from 21 organizations did interviewing during that academic School of Law Placement Office; Carol Eubank, director; Green Hall annex. The Law School placement effort cannot be compared easily to other projects because the law school placement instead of undergraduate, non-professional placement, according to The offices are small, but are located close to students and faculty. Eubank said that many interviewing rooms were in need of training, building which is to be completed in 1978. The office includes a large board listing all job openings and appeared to contain a list of vacancies. ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWERS come primarily from Wichita, Topeka and Kansas City, according to Eubank, and are normally from large law firms. According to the School of Business report, 26 law students used the business school interviewing service during 1972-1973. Students interested in other areas of law make their own contacts, she said. Students interviewed said the placement service was good, especially for students going to Kansas City, Topeka or Wichita. According to a report prepared in May by the Law School Placement office for the CU News Bureau, 128 students graduated from this placement office and 82 were placed, including those who found jobs on their own, and excluding students去 to graduate studies or the military. The report says that 38 firms visited KU to interview in the School of Law. This is the picture you've read about "ELECTRA GLIDE IN BLUE' Evenings at 7:30 & 9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat.at 2:30 James Coburn "THE HONKERS" Box Open 7:00 Show Time 7:00-8:00 Hillcrest HELD OVER!! Evenings at 7:25 & 9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:00 Sunset WEST IN THEATER - West on highway 94 Eve. at 7:30 & 9:25 $^{14}$ Sat.-Sun. Mat. at 2:05 Hillcrest Katherine Paul Hepburn Joseph Scofield in Edward Albees "A DELICATE Cotton in Edward Albees BALANCE" Tickets by Subscription Only 2:00 and 8:00 THE HILLCREST Five Kansas University faculty members will present papers or participate in panel discussions at the Central Slavic Conference Thursday and Friday at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater. They are Jarslaw Piekalkiewicz, associate professor of political science and Slavic and Soviet area studies; John Alexander, Five KU Faculty to Attend Central Slavic Conference XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX associate professor of history and Slavic and Soviet area studies; John Langley, the University professor of Kansas; Roger Kaman, the University professor of political science and Slavic and Soviet area studies; and William Fletcher, chairman of the department of Slavic and Soviet area studies. 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