Student Organizations
https://hdl.handle.net/1808/9240
2024-03-27T04:03:22ZRichard Sheridan--Endacott Society Interview
https://hdl.handle.net/1808/21073
Richard Sheridan--Endacott Society Interview
Sheridan, Richard B.; Willhite, Jewell
1991-08-06T00:00:00ZMarilyn Stokstad--Endacott Society Interview
https://hdl.handle.net/1808/20513
Marilyn Stokstad--Endacott Society Interview
Stokstad, Marilyn; Kelly, Pat
Dr. Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art history at the University of Kansas from 1958-2002, discusses her family history and childhood. She details her academic studies throughout college and graduate school. Dr. Stokstad came to the University of Kansas in 1958. She recalls meeting Chancellor Murphy, Ed Maser, and Klaus Berger on her first visit to campus. Later on Dr. Stokstad explains the process of establishing art history as an independent discipline. A committed feminist, she discusses her friendship with Emily Taylor, then Dean of Women, conducting the first salary study on women at KU, and her time spent with the February Sisters in 1972. Also covered is her professional development and associations, and research interests.
2014-06-06T00:00:00ZCharles Stansifer--Endacott Society Interview
https://hdl.handle.net/1808/19933
Charles Stansifer--Endacott Society Interview
Stansifer, Charles Lee; Willhite, Jewell
Charles Stansifer, professor of History at the University of Kansas from 1963-2004, discusses how a job working for the Santa Fe Railroad influenced him to take Spanish courses in college and conducting research for his Ph.D. He describes how he taught the first history course on Central America, the KU-Costa Rica exchange program, his role as director of the Center of Latin American Studies, and working with KU Libraries to strengthen the Central American collections. Through his efforts and generous donations, KU Libraries now has one of the top Central American collections in the world. Dr. Stansifer also mentions what it was like to be on campus during the student protests in 1970 and his working with Representative Jim Slattery and Senator Nancy Kassebaum Baker during the Contra War in Nicaragua.
2005-10-13T00:00:00ZRenate Mai-Dalton--Endacott Society Interview
https://hdl.handle.net/1808/18193
Renate Mai-Dalton--Endacott Society Interview
Mai-Dalton, Renate; Kelly, Pat
Renate Mai-Dalton was hired as Assistant Professor in the University of Kansas School of Business in 1979 and taught until her retirement in 2010. During the interview she describes growing up in post-WWII Berlin as well as the educational system in Germany during the 1950s and 1960s. After marrying a US serviceman and moving to the American northwest, she acquired several degrees in Psychology and a Ph.D. in Industrial/Organizational Psychology in 1978. She describes raising children in the predominately white community of Lawrence. She was founder of the Multicultural Scholars program and was a HOPE--Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator--award winner. A strong supporter of women athletes, she describes inequalities in athletics at KU.
2011-11-28T00:00:00Z