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Show E II :i,i'S"irsi!;i"!s'' ' - ' J TO EUROPE THIS SUMMER. CSU staff members and student on European summer assignments are, left to right: Professors Craig Jones, George St rebel, Rex Christ ensen and student Jim Hansen. i CSU Personnel to Assist With 19S7 Foreign Language School A College of Southern Utah student and three faculty members have been selected to participate in the 1967 Foreign For-eign Language League Schools in Europe. The league is the largest and oldest institution offering travel and study in Europe for high school stu- dents during the summer months. James Hanse, Richfield, will serve as assistant administrator administra-tor of the league's main European office in Paris. Professor Pro-fessor Craig Jones of the CSU political science department will teach Comparative Government Gov-ernment for 10 days each in Rome, Geneva, Paris, and London. Lon-don. Professors George Strobel and Rex Christensen, instructors instruc-tors for the CSU Latter-day Saints Institute of Religion, have been assigned as principal-supervisors to travel from the United States with groups of students and instruct in-struct them enroute as they I tour various European coun- tries. Dr. Strebel will tour and lecture on European His-1 tory with 35 students through Germany, France, Switzerland, I Italy, and Austria July 6 through August 21. Prof. Christensen will spend ap- proximately seven weeks with students in France and Switzerland. Swit-zerland. He will depart June 25. I Mr. Hansen and Prof. Jones 'will leave for their assignments assign-ments June 20. Wives of the I faculty members will travel with them. The CSU participants were selected on the basis of in-! in-! terest, ability, and performance perform-ance from among several hundred hun-dred applicants. 1 According to the plan of study, classes are held in the morning with field trips dur-' dur-' ing the afternoon, evenings, ! and weekends. Language j 1 teachers are also employed from their native countries to ' : further enhance the program. The Foreign Language League Lea-gue is a non-profit American School system offering special-1 ized courses of study exclu-1 sively for high school students from 14 to 19 years of age. Groups of 8 or 10 students: with a chaperone from their own school or area comprise a total student body of more than 6,000. The primary goal of the program is to provide American Amer-ican high school students with an opportunity to gain an understanding un-derstanding of Europe and its people through living and studying in the European environment. en-vironment. League campuses are located locat-ed in France, Germany, Italy, England, Austria, Scotland, Greece, Jerusalem, Jordon, and Portugal. |