NORTHERN ARIZO NA UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Second Semester Application Due for Financial Assistance Financial aid applications for second semester·
are due immediately, Joseph Bednorz, director of financial aids, announced today.
To apply for aid. students should pick up the new ACT Financial Aid form and the Arizona Financial Aid application in Room 305 of the Administration Building.
Although students find it tedious and time consuming to fill out financial aid forms, Bednorz explained that it is required for three reasons.
"First, there are so many applications that we need some basis on which to decide which students really need aid," he said. "Second, we fi nd this is the fairest way to deal with applicants-they are
all treated in the same manner. Third, the federal government requires a need analysis from all institutions."
To help with the money stituation, Financial Aids offers scholarships, grants, loans, and work-study jobs for students. •
As soon as the papers are completed, the ACT ~ form should be mailed and the Arizona applica- Jl· tion returned to the Financial Aids office.
Completed forms for aid for next year must be returned to the Financial Aids office by Feb. 1, 1970, and applications for summer school musf be received by April l.
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i Nort ern Arizona University 1 ~ • • • • Vol. 58, NO. 12 Flagstaff, Arizona Tuesday, October 28, 1969 •
KATHY BI JIONA, NAU majorette, i• a busy penon every Saturday that the L umberjacks play at Lumberjack Stadium. (Staff photo by Doug I/ utter)
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HIGH SCHOOL bandsmen from the state of Ari:wna parade before the Northern Ari>~ona crowd at Saturday's home football game. The bands combined to play numerous popular selections and to march before the spectators. (Staff photo by Doug Hutter)
' .•. Happy Fella'
Debuts Next Week The strains of such old standards
as "Joey" and "Standing on the Corner, Watching All the Girls Go By" will resound Nov. 5-8 in the University Auditorium when the NAU choral department will present "Most Happy Fella," announced Millard Kinney, producer.
Tickets, with reservations re-quired for the Friday and Saturday night performances, are $2.50 and can be obtained at the NAU auditorium box office weekdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., or by calling 523-3032. Student tickets for the Wednesday and Thursday night performances will be $1 with an l.D. card.
Four consecutive performances of the late Frank Loesser' s rollicking Broadway comedy, involving more than 100 NAU students and faculty members, arl! set for 8:15 p.m . each night, Wednesday through Saturday, Nov. 5-8, with the final evening's performance capping NAU•s annual Mom' s and Dad's Day celebration.
Musical direction wW be by NA U ebonl director Millard KIDney, wbo, in past years, bas produced sueh
all-time Broadway musical favorites as "Fintan's Rainbow," "Guys 'n Dolls," "Brigadoon," and "The Music Man" on the Flagstaff campus.
Stage directioowi.ll be by NAU Opera Theater director Dennis Wakeling, who staged Puccini's "Madame Butterfly" with the Flagstaff Symphony two years ago, and who will direct the full-scale presentation of Verdi's opera, "Othello," with the orchestra next spring.
Sets are being designed by Robert Baker of the ::trama faculty; Annette Dimond of the music staff is the choreographer; Mary Gilbert of the University of Southern California designed the costumes; and Clarence Shaw of NAU•s music faculty will conduct tbe University Reperoire Orchestra for the production.
The 28-member cast is headed by Bob Evans of Phoenix and Mark Ledbetter of TIICSOD, alternating in the role of Joe; Anne Johnson of Winslow aad Debby White of Mesa, sbarlng the role of Rosabella; aad Jim Smith aad Laurel Ferris LeGere of Flagstaff as Tony tad Cleo.
NCACSS Reviews NAU Accreditation
Preparation for university review accreditation by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools are gaining momentum throughout campus, according to Dr. Frank Hamblin, NAU academic vice-president.
Racing to a Jan. 1 deadline, department and college chairmen are compiling complete reports on class activity, department :facilities, goals and student benefits.
The addition of doctoral programs, a PhD in Biology, Ed. Ds in Curri· cula, psychology and educational ad· ministration have added to accreditation "headaches" Dr. Hamblin explained. "Normally a college is accredited every six to 10 years but we wanted to get the doctoral programs going," he noted. NAU was review accredited when it became a university in 1966.
An eight man committee has been working on accreditation produre and co-ordination since Feb. "As far as we know every department in the university is working hard on accreditation," Hamblin added, "If they're not we'll give them a hard time."
The committee is divided into eight units, each delving in a separate phase of academic life. One cmmittee is studying the university as a whole, an· 0ther is analysing financial support. Other members of the committee are examining faculty standards, student characteristics and campus services. One of the by products of the accreditation review will be a revitalization of department and college library sections to up-date information in various fields.
Sometime in March or early April a team of accreditors composed of college and university presidents will visit the campus to "check on the accuracy of the submitted reports and review NAU strengths and weaknesses," Dr. Hamblin remarked.
Administration and faculty members will undergo a period of anxiety from April to July wbile the accrediting association is determining whether or aot NAU ,m receive accreditatioo in wbole or part.
"We expect most of the university will get through accreditiation without too much trouble," Dr. Hamblin forcast adding that the new doctoral pro- · grams will be "hardes hit" by accreditors. "We want to make sure that the graduate programs are perfect in every detail."
If approved the doctoral programs will be installed on a "token" basis. "We want to start with a small number of candidates until we fully develope the programs," he remarked. Other colleges within NAU are considering graduate programs for the future, he added;
'Thrills' Coming To Center
Do you own thing! That's the idea behind "Cheap Tl'.rills" to be held Friday at 8 p.m. in the University Center.
The dance, sponsored by the Student Art Center, will feature the "Gossips" fror11 Phoenix and an art gallary enabling students to make original painting or drawings.
"'The Student Collect Show,' which opened yesterday as another project, was postponed one week due to a lack of entries,". expWned Bob Lomadofkie, SAC director. The exhibit, consisting of unusual art objects, will run approximately three weeks.
Posters are now on saie tor $.50 at the SAC to promote the sbow. The "authentic prints" wW be a nllable for each coming ttmetioo. Future attractions IDelucle Western Texas Uoherslty aod tbe Santa Fe I~ tioD ~ Amerleao Indian Art.
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