Universitv Dailv Kansan. September 17, 1984 CAMPUS AND AREA Page 6 Budig swaps hats to play prof's role By HOLLIE B. MARKLAND Staff Reporter A university chancellor is not the sum of his pipistripe suits and accumulated commencement addresses. Cancellor Gene A. Budig, who has taught a course at the University of Kansas every semester since becoming chancellor three years ago, instructs his students that a challenge disabilities extend beyond the office. Holly Hill-Brown, a Lebanon, Mo., graduate student, has taken one of Budig's classes: "Today's chancelor must assume new functions," she "FIFTEEN YEARS AGO, fundraising was not a function of the chancellor, but now it is part of his job." Although few chancellors teach courses at their universities, Budig has extended his role as chancellor to include the ib of professor. Like all professors, Budig established office hours when he could consult with students, Hill-Brown said. "It may be very early in the morning or very late in the afternoon." Budig said, "but I always make time for my students." Budig teaches a course on the organization and administration of higher education each fall. The course profiles the positions of university chancellor or president, dean and department chairman. Hill.Brown said that the fall course consisted mainly of KU administrators who explained their roles. DURING THE SPRING semester. Budig instructs a class on trends in higher education. Both classes are graduate-level seminar courses taken most often by students working toward doctorates, Budig said. Jane Tuttle, a lawrence graduate student who has taken both of BUDg's classes, said the chancellor's advice had his students an insider's view. "The chancellor attended a meeting of the American Association of Universities," Tuttle said, "a group of administrators from the top 50 schools in the nation. He came back and told us about the concerns these people had about the future of higher education. "That kind of experience can be matched by only 49 other people." Hill-Brown and Tuttle said the chancellor did not focus only on the "WE TRIED TO look at trends, not so much at KU." said Hill-Brown. "Budig tried not to inflict his own opinions on the class. He gave us a variety of perspectives because we may be in an administrative position ourselves some day. We may have to make our own decisions." Hill-Brown said she liked the idea of the charceller going back to the "If you're the head of an institution, you need to keep in touch with the classroom." she said. SOME COLLEGE COURSES ARE MORE EXCITING THAN OTHERS. How many colleges in New York City have a degree program in Computer Science or a field like IT? Or maybe not at all, but what kind of student is attending these colleges? At least 10 colleges in New York City have a degree program in Computer Science or a field like IT. 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PAID ADVERTISEMENT BRIMAN'S FASHION SHELL led j jewelers 743 Massachusetts • Briman's Charge • MasterCard • Visa • American Express 843-4366 REMEMBERING THE DEAD From the airport staging area they move north and establish a command post next to an airline observation post overlooking the camps. 4. With Israel flares lightning the area, some 600 Christian militiamen enter the camps. Gunfire and explosions are heard throughout the night Friday, Sept. 17 Out and out of the camps, campers troops look on and occasionally talk with the Christians but do not interfere. The children graves and cemetery bodies away from the area. On Friday, Christian militan meniten Akkaa Hospital and kill doctors and nurses. On Saturday, 18. militan clear Gaza on Monday. 19. militan refugees and mach-ch them off at gunpoint. "Hundreds and hundreds (of Israeli soldiers) did not feel strong enough to complain to their superiors (about the massacre). This is because we have come to disregard the Palestinians as people." Uri Avneri, former Kenesset member "...They (Israeli soldiers) had stood by as the murderers dug a 50 square yard mass grave and dumped Palestinian bodies into it—all within the direct line of sight of the Israeli observation post . . ." "...(he) counted 70 corpses in one small area of about 100 square yards." Ray Wilkinson, Newsweek journalist Newsweek, Oct. 4,1982 The Organization of Arab Students and the General Union of Palestinian Students wish to commemorate the massacre of Sabra and Shatila, two years after the tragedy. More than 800 Palestinians and Lebanese were murdered on Sept.16 and 17 of 1982. We attempt to illustrate the horror of human brutality hoping it to be a deterant for future inhumane treatment of all humans, a classification that includes the Palestinian people. Nador lost her family to the massacre in which she was injured. She, now, has a hospital for a home and the medical staff for a family. The General Union of Palestinian Students (Palestinian Students Association) at KU will organize a SILENT MARCH today at 11:30 a.m. in front of the Kansas Union. Please join in. PAID ADVERTISEMENT