Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 21, 1965 Washington Official To Open Model UN A U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State will speak to a session of the KU-Y Model UN at 9:30 a.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. Raymond Everett Lisle is the deputy assistant secretary of state in the Bureau of Public Affairs in Washington. D.C. A career foreign service officer, Lisle succeeded Philip H. Burris as deputy assistant secretary of state in 1962. He has the specific responsibility within the Public Affairs Bureau for policy plans and guidance. FROM 1949 through 1953, Lisle served successively in the office of the United States High Commissioner for Germany at Frankfurt and in the embassies at The Hague and at Warsaw. In 1954 he was named Deputy Director of the Office of Political Affairs in Bonn. He went to Washington in 1956 where he became Deputy Director of the Office of German Affairs. He attended the Senior Seminar in Foreign Policy at the Foreign Service Institute during the 1958-59 school year and was subsequently named a senior Foreign Service Inspector. Later in 1960, he was assigned to Belgrade as Counselor and Deputy Chief of Mission. He received the personal rank of Minister in 1962. Shows at 7:00 & 9:15 LISLE will arrive in Lawrence tomorrow. The Douglas County Chapter of the UNA-USA will hold a banquet in his honor at the Holiday Inn. The banquet will be at 7 p.m. and interested persons can attend by paying $2. Tickets are to be obtained from Professor Clifford Ketzel of the department of Political Science. Easter Treasure Department Head to Benefit from Grant CATHEDRAIL SET Engagement Ring .. $400.00 Bride's Circlet .. $ 15.00 Rings enlarged to show detail. Marks Jewelers MEMBER AMERIGAM GEM SOCIETY June Miller, professor and head of the department of hearing at the KU Medical Center, will be working with a $72,800 grant for the preparation of teachers of the deaf and hard of hearing children. 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 "The deaf and hard of hearing children do not learn to talk and learn the language like normal children do." Prof. Miller said. "They learn to talk and read lips by using the hearing they may have." has normal intelligence if one can get them into a school. DEFICIENCIES in hearing range from mild to very severe loses. The deaf and hard of hearing child There is a national and international shortage of teachers for the deaf. About 450 are being prepared annually in the United States. There are presently an estimated 5,000 teachers of the deaf in this country. "We need another 5,000 more." Prof. Miller said. "We really don't know at this point whether this number will be enough." number will probably graduate this year. Seventy-five to 100 va-voffered to these 13 graduates. cancles in the teaching field will be THIRTEEN students were graduated from the medical center in this area last year and the same There are two large schools for the deaf in the area. One is the Kansas School for the Deaf in Olathe. Students from the medical center do their practice teaching there. The other school is the Kansas City, Mo., School for the Deaf. Deaf students may be taught at the state residential schools for the deaf, private schools and public day schools. SUA Poetry Hour & The English Department present Melvin Walker LaFollette reading his own poetry 3:30 Friday, April 23 Forum Room of Kansas Union R Fa T Tl of t flop flyb coll mill H pain ove um.