University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 20, 1987 5 By GARY LARSON The Etch-a-Sketch division at work. On the Record A 1983 Dodge Diplomat valued at $ 3,500 was taken Tuesday from a lot in the 2100 block of West 29th Street Terrace. Lawrence police reported that an A450 was taken between Sunday and Tuesday from a car parked in the 2400 block of West 25th Street, Lawrence police reported. A white and gold wedding band and a diamond ring valued at $300 were taken Monday from a nurse's Hospital Lawrence police reported. A car stereo valued at $249 was taken Tuesday or Wednesday from a car parked in the 2100 block of Heatherwood Drive, Lawrence police reported. reported ■ A cordless telephone valued at $180 was taken between Nov. 13 and Sunday from a KU student's room in a house in the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police reported. ■ A pair of speakers and equalizer valued at $620 were taken between 11:30 p.m. Sunday and 2:05 p.m. Monday from a car parked in the Oliver Hall parking lot, KU police reported. Dubnick said, "A majority of faculty are not thrilled with the program, but I believe it should be salvaged rather than thrown out." But Dubnick said that he was in the minority. Regents vote to end major Burdett Loomis, chairman of political science, said he thought the program could have been saved if one of the departments that sponsored it would have defended the program. Campus/Area "There was no strong advocate anywhere," Loomis said. Plan for personnel administration must be ready by fall Staff writer The Board of Regents voted unanimously yesterday to discontinue KU's personnel administration program, and the University of Kansas has until fall 1988 to come up with a plan to reorganize the program. an extraordinary job of managing an extraordinarily large major with hardly any resources at all." Drury, professor of political science, is the personnel administration program director. By NOEL GERDES Staff writer Brad Wasinger, Scott City senior, said, "This was totally a shock to me. I don't know what the problems are, but I think they should do what it takes to keep it alive." About 630 students are taking classes in personnel administration now, and at least 20 faculty members hereby teach classes in the program. The major should be discontinued because it is too easy, a Regents staff report said. Personnel administration is one of the most widely held majors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "I think students would have protested if they knew in advance," said Bob Montgomery, Lee's Summit and personnel administration major. Students now majoring in personnel administration may earn a degree, but KU must stop admitting students to the program by fall 1989. John Welsh, Regents associate director of academic affairs, said Wednesday, "What we're trying to do is to reorganize the degree. We do want to discontinue the degree in its present form and offer it again later Welsh said that some alternatives might be to offer concentrations in personnel administration or to combine the program with public administration. - Emergency medical technology. - Medical radiation dosimetry. - Bachelor's degree in allied health sciences. "There doesn't seem to be any real core of classes," Dubnick said. "It's like a sampling from a menu in a restaurant." Mel Dubnick, associate professor of public administration who teaches classes taken by personnel administration majors, said that one of the problems of the program was that too many classes were optional. Master's degree in hospital diet- ary administration. The Regents recommended that KU consider reorganizing the women's studies program and discontinuing the humanities program. anywhere, Doubts still be he added. "Jim Drury has done in a different form." By JOEL ZEEF Special to the Kansan The lecture was the first in a series started this year by the psychology department. The series will present one distinguished speaker a year with money provided by David Fisher in memory of his wife, who studied psychology at the University of Kansas in the 1830s. "The series allows us to bring people of this caliber to KU that we couldn't bring on our own departmental budget," said Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, chairman of psychology. Senate and Regents concur on admissions problems divorced parents face during the first few years of separatation. With figures indicating that 45 percent of the marriages in the 1980s will end in divorce, attention now is beginning to focus on the situations and relationships divorces cause, a researcher said last night. E. Mavis Hetherington, professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, spoke to about 500 people in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union on the problems that children and parents suffer during divorce and remarriage. The Student Senate resolution supports the policy of "enhanced admissions" developed in September by the Student Advisory Committee, which is composed of the student body presidents of the seven Regents institutions. Yesterday the Board of Regents adopted the recommendations that the Council of Chief Academic Officers published this month. The council is composed of the leading academic officials at the Regents institutions. But she said that both groups probably made similar data analyses. "We had to be careful to not take, without thorough investigation, anybody's recommendations," Scott said. The stance that the Board of Regents took yesterday supporting selective admissions was similar to a stance expressed in a resolution that Student Senate passed Wednesday, Jason Krakow, student body president, said yesterday. Joyce Scott, chairman of the council, said the Student Advisory Committee's recommendations might be based on hearing on the council's conclusions. By a Kansan reporter "It's interesting that we all came out at about the same place." Both sets of recommendations are similar in that: 5 p.m.-Midnight "Most kids do well in nuclear, divorced or remarried families. There is just a higher risk of problems with children in divorce and similar in that: - They call for the completion of a recommended high school curriculum with a minimum grade point average of 2.0. Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop They call for open admissions at all Regents institutions for Kansas applicants 21 years or older who have high school diplomas. Hetherington, who for 20 years has conducted research on the effects of divorce, said that parents and children involved in divorce differed in the emotional changes they endured. "Everyone goes through an emotional change. Some people suffer long term, some show delayed effects and some sail right through divorce. The problem is predicting what's going to happen," she said. They allow students in certain cases to take at a Regents institution preparatory classes missed in high school. remarried families," Hetherington said. "We need to learn more to know what kind of support is needed to help these families." We Deliver! 841-DELI Hetherington said that problems with organization of the household, social and emotional adaptation and social relationships are the main XPRSS XEROX® 5¢ per copy open 365 days a year Videoxpress 1447 W. 23rd 843-9200 The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance KU Jazz Ensemble I Ronald C. McCordy, Director A TRIBUTE TO STAN KENTON with special guests Marvin Stamm, Trumpet/Flugelhorn Bill Holman, Guest Conductor Kim Park, Saxophone Dr. William Lee, Historian/Piano 8:00 p.m. Monday, November 23, 1987 Crafton-Preyer Theatre Tickets on sale in the KU Band Office, 214 Murphy Hall, and at the door All seats general admission. Public: $6; KU Students: $4; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $6 Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee. KLZR presents MIDNIGHT MOVIES! FRIDAY & SATURDAY "HILARIOUSLY FUNNY. AN INSTANT COMEDY CLASSIC!" LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS Varsity 'THE LOOMIEST, NUTTIEST, MOST OUTRAGEOUS MOVIE MUSICAL COMEDY IN YEARS. 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