Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 26, 1969 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Friday, September 26, 1969 ____________ ii BE ON T.V. SIT INUoM CARD SECTION Section 31-Rows 52-72 ALL ARE WELCOME DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f or m to Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday.FGeneral Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appearonce only. Student organizations notices a r e not accepted for publication, For more information, phone 764-9270. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 Day Calendar the 0-0 Workshop Conference"; 296 Physics-Astronomy, 4:00 p.m. Geography Seminar: Professor Harold Rose, Department of Geography, Uni- vesity of Wisconsin. Milwaukee. "A Comparison of Racial Change in Two Urban Settings 4050 LSA, 4:15 p. m General Notices Graduate School Foreign Language Test: Application blanks available at 1014, 3014tRackham. Next administra- tion of test. Saturday, November 1. Applications are due in Princeton, New Jersey before October 8- Placement Service 3200 S.A.B. GENERAL DIVISION Local Store: Sales person, sonie Sat, work. Girl Friday asstpto manager, pre- fer degree, no exper necessary. Local Agency: Copy writer for small firm, prefer woman with BA and some exper in writing. Sinai Hospital of Detroit: Research DRUG SURVEY RESULTS I CHI OMEGA LAWN DANCE featuring LOVE'S ALCHEMY September 27 4-6 P.M. 1525 Woshtenaw , 37o of (Continued from Page 1) usage; University housing, 11.2 per cent; off-campus housing, 12.1 per cent; sororities, 0.0 per cent; and co-op, 8.3 per cent. The analysis of the amount of drug use by class shows a tendency for usage to increase as students progress in school until the graduate level. From freshman year to grad- uate studies the use of tranquil- izers increases from 7.1 per cent sample of 98 students) to 15.5 per cent at the graduata level (sample of 296 students). , Tobacco usage increases from 53.1 per cent of freshmen to 58.8 per cent of graduate stu- dents. Alcohol increases f r o m 86.7 per cent to 90.9 per cent at the graduate level. However, except for a com- ment of potential dangers of tobacco and alcohol, the com- mittee does not mace v a lu e judgements on the drugs. The committee does recommend various educational programs which the respondents indicat- ed would be desirable. Most students said the pre- sent campus and community re- sources do not adequately meet rue 5auages fellowships for work in biochem, en- and Literatures: International Confer- zymol., pharmacol, and endocrinol. ence on the Epic Poem LaAraucana: ckrd. in sc.w/interest in med. area, Rackham Building, 10:15 a.m. lab exper pref. Flexible time ached. Zoology Seminar: Dr. M. Hollings- CarborundumCo., Niagara Falls, N.Y. worth, Dept. of Zoology and Cmpara- -Sr. Industrial Engr, BSIE, pref. with tive Anatmy, St. Bartholomew's Med- MBA also and 1-3 years manuf. exper. ical College, London, "Ageing in Droso- State of Washington: Air Qu. Control phila", 2111 Natural Science, 2:00 p.m. Spec, phys. sci, publ. health, engrg. Astronomical Colloquium: Mr. Ro- bckrnd plus 3 yrs. 1 Engrg. positions ger J. Thomas and Dr. Richard G. planner, MA or BA plus 2 yrs. Large Teske, Dept. of Astronomy, "Report on listing of other openings in Wash. 'U students smoke pot the needs of students with questions or problems concern- ing drugs. Most students indi- cated they would tend to trust a university-sponsored program. Based on analysis of the sur- vey's data, the subcommittee suggests that future programs "provide current and objective information about physical and psychological consequences of drug use, ihformation on legal aspects, and provide information on r6sources available to assist students with problems or ques- tions. In order to insure the con- fidentiality of the questionnaires, no record was kept of the 1000 students selected for the sample. no signatures or any identifica- tion were requested and no code numbers were used anywhere on the questionnaires or return en- velopes. According to Bordin and his subcommittee the s u r v e y's sample is representative of the student community, with small ambiguities. "The 60.7 per cent of the sam- ple who were male, and the 39.3 per cent who were f e m a l e matches almost perfectly the 60 per cent to 40 per cent male- *emale 'breakdown of the total student population," says the report. In regard to marital status and certain residence groupings, the sample also matches the University commu- nity.: There are sample weaknesses in the breakdown for year in school and schools and colleges of the University. The survey reports that undergraduates mnakeup 49 per cent of the sam- ple while actually compr-ising 60 per cent of the student popula- tion. "This perponderance of grad- uate students in the sample may well affect some of the findings and should be carefully consid- ered in drawing conclusions," states the report. Another weakness is in the representation of the various schools and colleges. No re- sponses were received from law, medical and dentistry schools and proportionately few from the education school. In addition, according to Uni- versity recording procedure stu- dents in the graduate school are not listed as members of Rack- ham, as the survey reported, but as members of the academic unit which the department be- longs. Thus if the 40 per cent listed as belonging to Rackham were divided up among the other schools and colloges, the com- mittee believes "the configura- tion of students from LSA and engineering, in the sample, would closely approximate that of the total University." The committee noted the ex- tremely high usage of tobacco and alcohol in all the categories and groupings. "With all the attention paid to the potential dangers of non- medically prescribed, drug use." states the report, "It is often forgotten that the potential for abuse and consequential phy- sical and psychological damage? is a very real factor in the use of tobacco and alcohol." "Certainly the preliminary findings of this survey would indicate that there is a very real problem with regard to alcohol and tobacco usage on this campus," the report adds. Dr. Fred M. 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