12 GRADUATION GUIDE / THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011 / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / KANSAN.COM Wide range of options available for new graduates BY CLAIRE MCINERNY editor@kansan.com editor@kansan.com As some seniors are preparing for jobs and planning their lives after school, some students are experiencing a different scenario: the end of college panic. Four years of classes and one degree later, sc know wh er. One opportunity that enables students to make that happen is through Teach for America.Teach For America is a program that allows recent college graduates to teach in public schools in lowincome communities.The assignment lasts for two years. Gina Littlejohn, the campus Wiechman spent his two years in Saint Lucia doing community development. He helped a farmers' cooperative develop a grant proposal to get funding for a composting project from the United Nations and also taught reading and music at a school. a way to prolong having to find a job, but rather look at it as a way to find new opportunities and new ways for students to use their passions. She said a lot of politicians who now work in Congress were in the program and are now fighting for education rights. PEACE CORPS The Peace Corps was an attractive option for Wiechman because p m gr in ca Wo be me ca WEDNESDAY,JUNE 15,2011 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE12 Johnson County police to get new'ear cams'to record interactions ASSOCIATED PRESS OLATHE — Johnson County sheriff's deputies are among the first officers in the country to wear cameras on their ears, in an effort to provide a better record of what happens during contact between officers and the public. "It's a double-edged sword," Taser International Inc. spokesman Steve Tuttle said. "If there is something that is bad (done by police), it will catch it and still protect the public. It's a neutral observer." The cameras, called AXON also provide an evidence chain and help officers fill out paperwork more quickly, said Sgt. Paul Nonnast of the chariff's off "This gives us the ability to show what happens from the officer's point of view from start to finish." Johnson County is the only SGT. PAUL NONAST Johnson County Sheriff's office of the sheriff's office. "This gives us the ability to show what happens from the officer's point of view from start to finish," Nonnast said. A spokesman for the company that makes the devices said the camera also protects the public. department in the Kansas City area to buy the cameras and one of only 16 in the country, although 100 departments are testing them. Tuttle said. "This is a game changer," he said. "Police and suspects behave better when they know it is being recorded." Johnson County Sheriff's Dept. Sgt. Paul Nonnast demonstrates on of the TASER Axon video system cameras. Johnson County sheriff's deputies are among the first officers in the country to wear cameras on their ears in an effort to provide a better record of what happens during contact between officers and the public. being the units cost about $1,700 each and about $1,300 more a year to store the digital video, The Kansas City Star reported. Johnson County deputies are REMARKABLE ENGAGEMENT! SMOKING SEGARS PROHIBITED! GRAND DRAMATIC SPECTACLE! STEP BACK IN TIME AND ENJOY THE THEATRE OF YESTERYEAR Celebrate the Kansas Sesquicentennial in Downtown Lawrence KANSAS SUMMER THEATRE 2011 DIRTY WORK AT THE CROSSROADS Tempted, Tried & True A Comic Melodrama by Bill Johnson 7:30 p.m. July 1, 2, 3, 4 and 8, 9, 10, 2011 LIBERTY HALL 644 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas General admission tickets are available, beginning June 1 at the Lied Center Box Office, 7854-2887, and online at www.kutheme.com and ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.com). The Lied Center Box Office is open from noon - 5:30 p.m. Monday - Friday. On nights of performances, tickets will only be available in a cash only basis — at Liberty Hall, beginning one hour before show time. Tickets are $12 for the public, $10 for高校 students, faculty and staff senior citizens, and $5 for K-12 students. The University Theatre is partially funded by the KU Senate Activities Fee. The University Theater's 2010-11 season is sponsored by the KU Credit Union. STUDENT SENATE stores it on a Taser website. Video can't be altered by police and can be set to save for specified times. using them in domestic violence calls, on SWAT teams, for warrant searches and to document sobriety tests. The ear camera plugs into a chest unit that connects to a police radio and to a belt computer with a video monitor. It can be mounted on the helmet of a traffic officer, who could show a driver his violation. If a driver throws something out the window, the officer can also use it to get a GPS location. And at the end of the shift, the officer plugs the gear into a docking station that encrypts the video and "We have a solid evidence trail, a chain of custody," Nonnast said. The new product grew out of Taser's popular stun weapon. It had a camera on it but the camera came on only when officers used the Taser, Tuttle said. That led to the idea of a camera on sunglasses or a hat and then to the new product. The camera can also be held to see around corners or into attics. SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE THAT COURSE THIS SUMMER! AAAC Tutoring Services offers small group course specific peer tutoring, Math, science, language groups are available. Request a group at www.tutoring.ku.edu Questions? Call (785) 864-4064 contributing to Student Success ...contributing to Student Success