TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAiaF? r- :MRF V? - - . A.~FAAm~E~ SHAW BECOMES LS&A DEAN: Robertson Departs to Residential College' Hatcher Commission Attempts To Define Complex Mandate By DAVID KNOKE A changing of the guard has taken place in the literary college administration that ultimately affects the lives of most under- graduates who will pass through the college and the new Resi- dential College. After 17 years as associate dean of the literary college in charge of students, James H. Robertson moved into temporary quarters in the East Quadrangle as dean of the Residential College, replacing retiring dean Burton D. Thuma. Into Robertson's position moved James W. Shaw, formerly head of the junior-senior counseling divi- sion of the college. Warm Tradition Robertson leaves behind him a warm tradition of dealing indi- vidually with the hundreds of thousands of students who sought help from his office over the years. As chairman of the ad- ministrative board which is con- cerned with students in academic trouble, he inherited and extended the policy of reviewing transcripts and records of students in trouble at the end of each semester and counseling students individually on possible alternatives. "It has been a basic conviction that part of the college's respon- sibility is to help the student un- derstand what happened, so thata he may make timely decisions af- fecting his future," explained Robertson. Shaw concurs with the policy, having served on the administra- tion review board during the hectic two-week round of review- ing and interviewing. During his tenure as dean of the literary college, Robertson wasf instrumental in setting up the junior year abroad programs in which several dozen selected lan- guage students study at Aix-en-I Provence in France or Freiburg,1 Germany. He will continue to di- rect this program while dean of the Residential College and will also advise the Committee for In- stitutional Cooperation-the joint venture of the Big Ten and Uni- versity of Chicago - on study abroad programs. Robertson's good-natured, pipe' smoking demeanor belies his brittle intellect, according to his administrative assistant, J o h n Manning, Jr. "This is the sort of man you want in charge of the Residential College," said Manning. "Because there are no rules and precedents, you need a man who models his touch to the individual in dealing with people. At heart he is a lit- erary person, a humane humanist who sees education as an educa- tor and is only secondarily an ad- ministrator." j I i I I 1 into one of the best and most comprehensive for the size of its clientele in the country. Robertson's record also makes a tough performance for Dean Shaw to follow. Shaw will con- tinue to head junior-senior coun- seling until a replacement is ap- pointed. He inaugurated further policies designed to free students and faculty from the more mun- dane aspects of selecting courses. The optional counseling pro- gram permits students to preclas- sify without the aid of a counselor and a "superclerk" position will be created for routine and coun- seling appointments clerical jobs. Last spring a "progress report" form was created for faculty use to appraise the counseling office of any student showing difficulty or outstanding progress in his work. "Students should be aware that counseling is primarily a passing of the buck to the students; stu- dents have to come to us if they want to get things done," cau- tioned Shaw. "Compulsory counseling is about the only reaching out we can do for the student not already in trouble. We owe the student something more than an IBM- shuffle; we feel he deserves to see a faculty member face to face at least once a semester. "We do lots of little bureau- cratic things that cannot substi- tute for the value of teacher-stu- dent perceptive insight into a student's progress," commented Shaw. "Unfortunately, most stu- dents come to us only as a last resort." Shaw does not view his role solely as one of passing out Kleenex to despairing students, however. "This is an intellectually inter- esting place to be because of its breadth of contact with men in every field and events going on in the college," he explained. "We think this is the place where theory and practice of what a college ought to be come together and are adjusted," con- tinued Shaw, who is also a mem- ber of the English department and continues to teach classes. "Students should look upon this office as a place of accommoda- tion where they are treated as in- dividuals with different back- grounds and goals. We hope to give the student neither a 'yes' or 'no' but some intelligent discus- sion of his particular problem." "In sum, what this office aims to represent to the students of the college," continues Shaw, "is the spiritthat 120 credit hours represents, not just the legalities of the requirements." To countless students, Deans Robertson and Shaw have and will continue to represent the spirit of the education counselor. By LUCY KENNEDY The interim report of the Com- mision on the Role of the Students in University Decision Making leaves many problems unanswered, but committee members are op- timistic about possibilities for suc- cessful report by the end of the fall semester. President Harlan Hatcher set up the commission in November, 1966 in response to students' demands for a greater voice in University policy making. The commission's report will be, presented to the University presi-j dent, but it is not binding. It func- tions as an advisory body only. Last November, Ed Robinson, '67, former SGC president, Mark Killingsworth, '67, former editor of The Daily, and John Dalameter, grad, former president of the Graduate Student Council were appointed as student members of the commission by Hatcher. Afterl Robinson and Killingsworth re- fused to serve, Hatcher said he would allow SGC to select the stu- dent members of the Commission. Faculty and administration rep- resentatives were appointed by Hatcher. Students Skeptical From the beginning, the com- mission was considered by many students to be a way to avoid sion considers its mandate. Most of the commission members are, however, satisfied with the pro-, gress the commission has made and feel the right atmosphere has been set for a report that will be acceptable to all parties. "It is apparent," the report states, "that there is broad feeling within the commission that stu- dents should have a more impor- tant role in the governing of the University than the formal struc- ture would appear to suggest or require." Much of the work of the com- mission so far has been to find what they consider to be the cen- tral issue of the role of the student in University decision making. r How intrusive in the lives of students should the University be by way of regulation and service? ! Is administrative or faculty, consultation, advice, review, con- sent or veto appropriate in areas' where students play a definitive role? Should student represent-' atives be provided some direct for- mal access to the Board of Re- gents? * What constitutes a properly representative agency for student participation in University deci- sion making? *0 How can the necessary divi- By last May, many commission members felt concern for the,- whole University had been gen- erated rather than concern for faculty, administration, or stu- dents. Members of the commission summed up their accomplishment saying, "We have been learning about each other, from each other, and with each other. We still have much to learn, but we have every reason to hope that we can succeed in producing a re- port that will represent a con- structive contribution to the or- derly progress of the University." Prof. Bernard A. Galler of the math department commented, "The Commission was created at a time of crisis. I'm glad we didn't have to rush in and tear the University apart. I'm glad the group has come to be able to talk like a group." Few Accomplishments Prof. Maurice Sinnott of the College of Engineering, who is acting chairman for informal summer sessions, noted that there were few tangible accomplish- ments of the commission so far, "but we have progressed. Mem- bers now trust each other and have learned from each other." Gretchen Groth, grad, com- mented that the commission "has not in general been bogged down. Given the size and ambiguity of the mandate, it would have been impossible to come to a conclu- sion at this point." DEAN SHAW DEAN ROBERTSON The humanist approach comes out when Robertson talks of his hopes for the development of the Residential College. "We want to give the students a sense of their own responsibility in their personal learning much earlier than is received in the literary college," he explained. ! "This should be achieved not by laying down how things are to be done, 'but to create a 'sense of expectance' that would encourage the development of r a p p o r t among students and faculty en- gaged in the experiment." As dean of the literary college, Robertson stressed the importance of keeping counseling in the hands of faculty, as advisers, who work only ope-third time rather than full-time professional coun- selors. Along with the efforts of the counseling staff and dean'sI assistants, the policy of faculty involvement has built the service U' To Issue Student ID Cards With Social Security Numbers granting students more power and sion of student, faculty, and ad- many remain skeptical. The iri- ministrative functions be main- terim report to some extent con- tained while allowing all three to firms their fears, since it does participate in decisions affecting little but define what the commis- the whole University community? BY JENNY STILLER The new identification cards are only during the fall semester. The wide-spread use of social punched for use'in an IBM-III-7. This will give all students ample security numbers for identification The computer can be used to facil- time to acquire social security purposes is the chief reason behind itate record-keeping. numbers, which will replace their the University's decision to issue assigned numbers. new student identification' cards, Another advantage of the new Foreign students and certain according t Thomas C. Turner, hcards will be the elimination of clerics forbidden by their orders dacoringoThomsialsC.rneithe need for registration certifi-to obtain social security numbers "The use of social security num- cates. At the bottom of the cards will continue to have assigned bers for identification purposes will be term validation spaces, numbers after the fall semester. has become fairly generalized," which wil be stamped during each Freshman and entering transfer Turner explained. "Even the mil registration. students have been receiving the itary is now using them instead A place for the students' signa- ' new identification cards during of issuing its own file numbers." ture is provided on the back of summer orientation. Other stu- He added that, although duplica- each card. Any attempt to alter dents will receive theirs in the fall tion of names might occur, each the signature by erasing will ex- during registration. person's social security number is pose a "void" notation.j The embossed maize cards have runique. Students without social security planned for almost a year, The new identification numbers numbers will be given "officially according to Turner. The new will consist of the student's social assigned" numbers containing the I caries ofprevious anothe in a se- security number, followed by a same number of digits as a social res ofipreviouse identification cadwihat oetm vnfea- check digit. The check digit will security number. The initial three tured photographs of the students. help to circumvent clerical errors, digits will be zeros to distinguish The current cards were intro- since a programmed computer them from actual social security duced in 1961, and were the first would note any inconsistencies numbers. to utilize the "charge-plate" style within the numbers. All students who did not enter [of embossed letters and digits. The Using this method, coding er- a social security -number on their current blue identification cards rors, incomplete numbers, trans- last registrationnaire will receive will not be collected, but will be position of digits, and similar mis- assigned numbers. The assigned declared invalid at the beginning takes can be detected immediately. number policy will be in effect of the fall semester. I i I I i I 0 0 i SI 0 a z: The back-to-school rush always includes a rush for telephone service. Every year at this time we gear up by putting on extra people and working extra hours. But there have always been many who had to wait for their telephones longer than we'd like. If you want telephone service this fall, the sooner you can place your order with us the sooner we'll be able to install it. You can order telephone service any day, Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. As soon as you know your new address, call (Area 313) 761-9900 or visit our office at 324 E. Huron, Ann Arbor. (That's just west of the Ann Arbor News.) Or, if you're out of town, just call us collect. For those of you who can't order until the last minute, we'll be open an extra day, I