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Show UNIVERSITY LAUNCHES FIRST TV COURSE credit class for four quarter hours, at a fee of $30, or may sign for the certificate (non-credit) (non-credit) course for a $1 fee. Both credit and certificate enrollees will receive the special study guide, which includes the complete com-plete class schedule with notes, reading and written assignments and study suggestions. Credit students will be required re-quired to view the 36 half hour pograms beginning Monday, and complete required reading assignments, as-signments, submit two papers, and take midterm and final examinations. ex-aminations. Scheduled on March 15 and June 7, the tests will be given in Spencer Hall on the University of Utah campus, although al-though students beyond a fifty-mile fifty-mile radius may make arrangements arrange-ments for special examinations. Primarily planned as a university univer-sity class in general education, the television course is accepted as partial fulfillment of the university uni-versity requirement in the humanities hu-manities area for graduation and is normally a freshman or sophomore sopho-more course. In the certificate course, requirements re-quirements are somewhat more lenient, both in amount of viewing view-ing and reading, with one student stu-dent submitting three postcard reports and an informal paper. An official certificate of participation parti-cipation will be issued upon completion of the non-credit course. The first university credit course to originate from KUED, Utah's new educational television televi-sion station, will open February 3, according to University of Utah authorities. Offered by the University of Utah Extension Division with the cooperation of the Department Depart-ment of English, English 15X-TV, 15X-TV, An Introduction to Literature: Litera-ture: Stories, Plays, Poems, will be viewed on Channel 7 on Mondays Mon-days and Thursdays from 6:30 to 7 p.m. until June 5. ( Staff for the unique live program pro-gram is headed by Dr. Harold F. Folland, professor of English, and Dr. Jack H. Adamson, assistant as-sistant professor of English, with guest lecturers from the Department Depart-ment of English at the University Univer-sity of Utah. Essentially a program to increase in-crease interest in and enjoyment of literature, English 15X-TV should serve as a stimulus and guide to the viewers' independent independ-ent reading. For convenience of both regular regu-lar and casual viewers, each Monday or Thursday program will be organized as a unit, with pych writers as Hemingway, (Ythorne, Faulkner, Kafka, Vwflrdy and Conrad; plays of Ibsen, Ib-sen, Shakespeare, Sophocles and Fry; poems by Donne, Wordsworth, Words-worth, Milton, Keats, Browning, T. S. Eliot, W. H. Auden, and others. Telestudents may enroll in the |