On Seminar
Students To Tour Harlem
Plans for the year's first
seminar to New York are in the
final stages. Claude Shotts,
coordinator of the two N. Y.
seminars for 1968-69, has
announced the schedule and the
leaders for the week-long
seminar.
The group of approximately
30 students and three faculty
members will fly December 14
to New York where they will
stay at the William Sloane
House, a YMCA International
Young Adult Center. Two days
will be spent in orientation to
New York and the U.N., and the
remaining four days in special
study in three areas of interest.
The study units offered for
the seminar are in the areas of
city government, the problems
of the inner-city population, and
the role of the U.N. in today's
world. The students will receive
one hour credit for their
participation.
One group will tour Harlem
and observe private institutions
in the Middle West Side and
Lower East Side of Manhattan.
They will also visit public
agencies in Harlem to study the
relation of the police with the
community.
The U.N. group will attend
meetings and interviews at the
United Nations. All of the
groups will have dinner in
Chinatown with an
interpretation of the
community. They will also
(Continued on Page 3)
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On Seminar
Students To Tour Harlem
Plans for the year's first
seminar to New York are in the
final stages. Claude Shotts,
coordinator of the two N. Y.
seminars for 1968-69, has
announced the schedule and the
leaders for the week-long
seminar.
The group of approximately
30 students and three faculty
members will fly December 14
to New York where they will
stay at the William Sloane
House, a YMCA International
Young Adult Center. Two days
will be spent in orientation to
New York and the U.N., and the
remaining four days in special
study in three areas of interest.
The study units offered for
the seminar are in the areas of
city government, the problems
of the inner-city population, and
the role of the U.N. in today's
world. The students will receive
one hour credit for their
participation.
One group will tour Harlem
and observe private institutions
in the Middle West Side and
Lower East Side of Manhattan.
They will also visit public
agencies in Harlem to study the
relation of the police with the
community.
The U.N. group will attend
meetings and interviews at the
United Nations. All of the
groups will have dinner in
Chinatown with an
interpretation of the
community. They will also
(Continued on Page 3)