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Arizona Daily Sun du lieu suivant : Flagstaff, Arizona • 11

Publication:
Arizona Daily Suni
Lieu:
Flagstaff, Arizona
Date de parution:
Page:
11
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Recruiter Scheduled TEMPE Arizona State University's ninth annual Recruiter Roundup Aug. 8 will attract representatives of more than 125 southwestern school districts seeking teachers for the fall term. The 6:30 a.m. until 12 p.m. session 00 in the Memorial Union, coO sponsored by ASU, the University of 23 Arizona, Northern Arizona Univerm sity and Grand Canyon College, should lure more than 1,000 jobseekers, according to Jean Eisel, director of ASU Career Services.

"The program is designed to bring teachers together with school district personnel who are trying to fill last-minute job vacancies caused by unexpected growth, sudden resignations and illnesses," Eisel said. "Last year, representatives of DE20 30 seven Career Ray out-of-state states Castillo, Services school and associate districts coordinator director from of of the roundup, said one out of six people interviewing at the 1985 session was hired. "Of the 1,021 attending, 178 were placed in 92 school districts," he noted. "In 1984, there were 154 placements in 68 districts." Castillo added that last year's Music Camp 0260 July 27 at NAU NEWS AND PUBLICATIONS About 350 musicians in grades 9-12 are expected for the senior session of the Northern Arizona University 00 summer music camp, which begins Sunday. 30 students During will the participate two-week in instruc- camp, tional sessions and concerts for musicians and singers.

The camp includes symphony and concert orchestras, jazz ensembles and honor, symphonic and concert zor bands. Singers will be involved in honor, concert, show and pops choirs and an opera workshop. Classes on various instruments are available for both beginning and exceptional musicians and a conduc0-30 ting course is open to qualified musicians. Other class offerings include music theory and history and umBO-0 than faculty, literature. educators.

50 Campers the In will professional music be addition taught camp to musicians by 15 staff more NAU and includes teachers and performers from other state universities and colleges and educators from Arizona elementary, junior high and high schools. Camp director is Dr. Ralston 0. KNAU-FM For Northland NAU NEWS AND PUBLICATIONS By the end of 1986, radio listeners in Page and Kingman no longer will be greeted by static when they tune to 89.7 FM. KNAU-FM, the public radio station at Northern Arizona University, has been awarded a $6,990 radio project grant for the installation of two translators to relay its broadcast signal to Page and Kingman.

The grant was awarded by the National Telecommunications and Information Agency and will be administered through the Public Telecommunications Facilities Program. "KNAU was one of 56 radio stations nationwide awarded a grant for this fiscal year," said Russ Hamnett, KNAU station manager. Hamnett said the grant monies will go toward the purchase and installation of equipment needed to rebroadcast KNAU's signal to Page and Kingman. He added that matching funds in Cancer Get Needed TUCSON (AP) University of Arizona researchers no longer are threatened with losing significant research dollars for a promising, though not fully developed, cancerfighting therapy known as hyperthermia. Pioneered at the university during the past decade, hyperthermia involves heating cancer tumors and cancer cells to kill them or halt their growth.

The university's research attracted steady and increasing federal grants over the years, until overall federal budget-cutting forced a tentative thumbs-down on several large grants from the National Cancer Institute last winter. But in early July, Arizona Cancer Center officials and researchers were informed by the institute that hyperthermia research will continue to be fully funded. That means the awarding of $2.4 million in grants for the next three years. "We are pleased, to say the least," said Dr. Robert Cassady, chief of radiation oncology at the university.

Although heat alone can effective- Roundup NAU Hosts Family Communication The SUN, Flagstaff, Arizona, Thursday, July Seminar 24, 1986-11 at ASU average salary for those hired was $17,000 annually while the previous year it was $15,000. Those 178 placements generated about $3 million in salaries. "I believe 1986 will be a good year for those seeking a teaching job in Arizona," he observed. "The state is not producing enough teachers to meet its growing educational needs. As a result, there will be a teacher shortage this fall." Some disciplines, notably English, special education and math, are in shorter supply than physical education, and foreign languages.

"School districts are being forced to intensify their recruiting," Castillo emphasized. "They do not have the luxury of being as selective as they have been in the past." He said teaching and administrative job candidates should report to the ASU Memorial Union at 6:30 a.m., Aug. 8. They should bring their resumes and other pertinent data and be prepared for a heavy interview schedule. Preregistration is not required.

Further information about the ninth annual Recruiter Roundup is available from ASU Career Services, 1-965-2350. to Begin University Pitts, head of the music education program at NAU. Special guests include Rodney Eichenberger, professor of choral music at the University of Southern California, and James R. Jorgenson, professor of music at the University of Redlands. The young musicians will compete for 26 awards in nine categories and will perform in a number of public concerts in Ardrey Auditorium.

The first concert, Aug. 2, will feature the honor choir, symphony orchestra, symphonic band and honor band in a 2:30 p.m. show. An honor recital by a dozen of the camp's finest musicians will be given Aug. 3 at 7:30 p.m.

An honor ensemble recital will be Aug. 6 at 8 p.m. and a jazz concert will take place Aug. 7 at 7 p.m. Excerpts from several operas will be performed Aug.

8, also at 7 p.m. The camp ends Aug. 9 with three concerts. The concert choir, blue and gold bands, and concert orchestra will play at 9 a.m. in Ar- drey, followed by a piano recital at 10:30 a.m.

in Ashurst Music Hall. The final concert at 1 p.m. in Ardrey features the honor choir, symphony orchestra, symphonic band and honor band. Receives Grants Translators the amount of $1,165 have been raised by Page residents and that a Friends of KNAU fund has been established in Kingman so area residents can raise an equal amount. "In both cases, the matching funds are required by the National Telecommunications and Information Agency," Hamnett said.

"All donations collected will be used to help with installations and maintenance in each city." According to Bill Emshwiller, KNAU's chief engineer, the target date for operation of the Page translator is Nov. 1. Installation of the Kingman translator will be scheduled after a permit has been granted by the Federal Communications Commission. "Both translators could be signed on earlier than November," Emshwiller said, "depending on equipment arrival and the weather." Researchers Funding ly fight some cancer tumors, hyperthermia usually is used to enhance conventional anti-cancer therapies drugs, radiation and surgery. Research results at the university and at other cancer research centers in recent years have been so encouraging that doctors believe hyperthermia, which is relatively painless and non-toxic, one day may render the use of toxic drugs and surgery unnecessary against certain cancers.

"Hyperthermia creates a synergistic reaction, that is, when used with another therapy, such as radiation or chemotherapy, the effect is greater than the sum of the two therapies used alone," explained Eugene W. Gerner, UA professor of radiology and principal hyperthermia researcher. Heating cancerous tumors and cells apparently inhibits their repair mechanisms after the cells have been damaged by drugs or radiation, and even increases damage to cancers, scientists believe. That means tumors can be eliminated or prevented from recurring for longer periods, Gerner said. NAU NEWS AND PUBLICATIONS published work Professionals in various fields are munication, learning to understand and improve munication: communication within families in a With her Northern Arizona University counselor, Galvin seminar which may be the first of communication its kind in the nation.

Chicago, the The five-day seminar is designed kind in the for teachers, counselors, ad- Also teaching ministrators, psychiatrists, clergy dinator Dr. John and others interested in studying the of speech at impact of communication on the for- Hoopes, professor mation, maintenance and modifica- at Brigham tion of family relationships. Dr. Frank Led by specialists in communica- specialist at tion and family relationships, the Arizona. seminar began Monday and ends "I think this Friday.

The seminar features Dr. seminar of this Kathleen Galvin, chairperson of We hope to Northwestern University's speech event," Monsma education department and a leader excited to have in the family communication field. We were expecting Galvin is co-author of the first 50." Announcing THE Sealy. on family ComCohesion and Change." husband, a practicing conducts family weekends in only program of its country. is seminar coorMonsma, professor NAU, Margaret of family science Young University, and Williams, family the University of is the first time a He said the three largest groups at the seminar are school counselors, teachers and clergy members.

Seminar participants receive three hours of graduate-level credit. Seminar sessions deal with communication between spouses, parents and children and siblings, as well as relationships in stepfamilies. The seminar also covers change and stress in families, crosscultural communication issues, available resources for study and research in family communication, and teaching and counseling strategies. NAU is also hosting a three-week family communication workshop for undergraduate credit. The workshop deals with six of the family communication topics offered in the seminar, presenting them in a fiveday series of one-hour modules.

The workshop ends Aug. 1. Tuba City Meeting Slated type has been done. The Tuba City Unified make it an annual District No. 15 will conduct said.

"We're meeting Tuesday at 10 this many people. at the Tuba City Primary 30 and we've got School The purpose of the meeting will be an open to review and comment on the Title a.m., MDT, VII bilingual education programs in School. the district. BEST SEALY SALE IN ARIZONA TRUCKLOAD PURCHASE Sealy Quilt Top Inner spring construction Tortion bar foundation Reg. $299 Full 2 pc.

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Années disponibles:
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