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April 14, 1966 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1966-04-14

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lPAGE TWO

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

THURSDAY. APRIL 14, 1666

PAGE TWO TIlE 1~IICIIIIuAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1966

Faculty Viewv 1
Su:,rveyedyi
OdAA Study
Questionnaire Probes
Attitudes on Facilities,
Time Improvements
By HELEN KRONENBERG
The many facets of faculty life,
from the use of parking struc-
tures.-to salaries and freedom on
deciding teaching methods, have
been surveyed in a questionnaire
sent from the office of the vice-
president for academic affairs.
The "Academic Staffy Question-
naire," consisting of 94 questions,
has been distributed to 000 mem-
bers of the University staff. An
estimated' 45 per cent have re-
turned the questionnaire, said
William Schlatter, assistant to the
Thvice-preysident for academic af-
fairs.
iThis survey of faculty attitudes
was compiled by the office of in-
stitutional research with help from
members of the staff of the In-
siuefor S o c i a 1 Research,
Schlatter added.
4 Main Parts
The survey isdivided into four
main Mrt. The first, on "Con-
ditiai af Academic Servipe,"ques-
tionsuch topies, ras physical fa-
cindos;, .fringe benefits, adminis-
trative concern for personnel, the
person to whom the subject is
responsible, and independence and
freedom. Faculty members are
asked how satisfied they are at
present with each of these aspects
and how important each aspect
would be to them if they were
evaluating an academic -position
elsewhere. The faculty are given
five choices of mratings.
The second section, "Nature of
Academic Service," covers time
spent by the faculty in various
activities: instructional, scholarly,
and.: professional. Members are
asked how much time they actual-
ly do spend on the activities and
how much time they would like
to spend.
The third section is devoted to
improvements at the University.
The questionnaire evaluates the
desired degree of improvement in
fifteen main areas such as person-
nel services (secretarial help, as-
sistance from graduate students);
freedom to speak, teach, and write
in their field of competence; cali-
ber of students and intellectual
stimulus from them; and compe-
tence of colleagues andI intellectual
stimulus from them.
This section also includes a part
forfaculty to mentionmother fea-
tures of the University which they
would like to improve.
Last Part'
The last division concerns the
subjecthimself. Teaching rank,
length of appointment time, and
salary are three of the questions.
Schlatter said that the office
has received "many interesting
letters, both favorable and un-
favorable, on the questionnaire, on
aspects of University life and on
rthe University."
Faculty members who complete
the questionnaire, which is to be
returned to the office for academic
affairs by tomorrow, will be kept
anonymous, and results will be
reported to the faculty members.
Ph. 483-4680
m F~ iweOn. CARPENTER ROAD

FREE 'IN-CAR HEATERS
BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30
- NOW SHOWING-
BIG STARS
BIG HITS! < WI t
BIG- :
Shown at'7 30-112:20

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DAILYOFFICAL BULETI
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The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-t
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan D aily assumes no editor-
ial responsibility. Notices should be
sent In TVPEWKITT EN form to
Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday
for Saturday and Sunday:"General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum of two times on request; Day
Calendar items appear once only
Studentdorganiration notices are not
accepted for publication.
THURSDAY, APRIL 14
Day.Calendar
Symposium on Remote Sensing of En-
vironment--Registration, Rackham Lob-
by,. 8:30 a.m.

Management Development Seminar-
"Management Orientation": Michigan
Union, 8:30 a.m.
Management Development Seminar-
"Basics of Supervision": Michigan Un-
ion, 8:30 a.m.
Big Ten Survey Directors Conference
-Registration, Michigan Union, 12:30
p.m.
Museum of Art Gallery Talk--Jaques
Brownson, chairman, Dept. of Archi-
tecture: Museum of Art, 4 p.m.
School of Music Degree Recital -
Carol Young, cellist: Recital Hall, School
of Music, 7 p.m.
Cinema Guild-"A Man Escaped":
Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m.
School of Music Degree Recital-Jo-
seph Krysik, clarinetist: Recital Hall,
School of Music, 8:30 p.m.

American Chemical Society Lecture-
Dr. Rudolph A. Marcus, Chemistry De-
partment, University of Illinois, will
speak on "Electron Transfer Reactions
in Chemistry," on Thurs., April 14, at
5 p.m. in Room 1200 of the Chemistry
Bldg.
Graduate School of Business Admin-
istration-Finance Club-"Career Op-
portunities in Corporation Finance"
by David Jones, treasurer, Standard Oil
Co., N.J., on April 14, from 4-5 p.m.,
in Room 141 Bus. Admin.
General Notices
Doctoral Examination for Charles
Joseph Stoneburner, English Language
& Literature; thesis: "The Regimen of
the Ship-Star. A Handbook for 'The
Anathemate' of David Jones," Thurs.,

April 14, 2601 Haven Hall, at 3 p.m.
Chairman, Austin Warren.
Recommendations for Departmental
Honors: Teaching departments wishing
to recommend tentative April graduates
from the College of Literature, Science,
and the Arts, for honors or high honors
should recommend such students by
forwarding a letter to the Director,
Honors Council, 1210 Angell Hall, be-
fore noon, Thurs., April 28, 1966.
Teaching departments in the School
of Education should forward letters
directly to thesOffice of Registration
and Records, Room 1513 Administration
Bldg., by noon, Thurs., April 28, 1966.
Attention Faculty Members Of: Col-
lege of iLterature, Science, and the
Arts, School of Education, School of
Music, School of Public Health and
School of Business Administration: Stu-
dents, expecting degrees April 30, 1966,
are advised not to request grades of
I or X. When such grades are abso-
lutely imperative, the work must be
made up in time to allow you to report
the make-up grade not later than noon,
Thurs., April 28, 1966.
Grade Sheets for Winter 1966: Have
been sent to all departments for dis-
tribution to instructors. Any grade
sheets with degree students should be

i _ _.e. ..

submitted to the Office of the Regis-
trar within 48 hours after the exami-
nation, and within 72 hours after the
examination for grade sheets with all
non-degree students. A grade messenger
service will be provided on a regular
basis by the Office of the Registrar
to departmental offices on the central
campus beginning Wed., April 20 and
continuing through Fri., April 29. Grades
may alse be submitted directly to this
office at Window A, Administration
Bldg., during working hours. Ques-
tions pertaining to grade reports may
be directed to 764-6292.
Evening of Modern Dance: Admission
free of charge to an Evening of Mod-
ern Dance held at Barbour Gym, Thurs,
April 14, 8:30 p.m. All dances perform-
ed by University of Michigan students.
Sponsored by the University of Michi-
gan Dance Dept.
Wanted: 20 graduate students to as-
sess tuition at Spring-Summer Registra-
tion, May 3 and 4. $1.50 per hour. Re-
port to Room 3007 Administration Bldg.
as soon as possible.
(Continued on Page 7)

The LIVING END4125
4 bks.N.of Grand 81.
Just 25 min. from campus 872-4990
April 26th-May 8th
Paul BUTTERFIELD and his blues band

ODETTA

May 13th-May 22nd.

Make your reservations NOW
Now appearing thru April 24th
TOM PASLE plus PHIL MARCUS ESSER

U'
a

-the great showman

-his songs and music

FOLK MUSIC, BALLADS, BLUES

OMMIA1

ORGANIZATION NOTICES

U

3 PLAYS FOR AS LOW AS X4.50!
PTP SUBSCRIPTION OFFICE OPEN WEEKDAYS, 10-1, 2-5

m film
i

ENDING FRIDAY
SHOWN AT 1-00-3:00-
5:00-7:00 and 9:05

SUBSCRIBE NOW !

DISCOUNTS !

USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN-
NOUNCEMENTS is available to official-
ly recognized and registered student or-
ganizations only. Forms are available
in Room 1011 SAB.
* * *
Guild House, Special noon luncheon,
Mrs. Le-Thi-Anh: "viet Nam-Historic,
Geographic and Ethnic Background,"
April 14, 12-1 p.m., 802 Monroe.
* * *
U. of M. Chess Club, April 15, 7:30
p.m., 3D Union.
Newman Student Association, Com-

munity mass & supper followed by Last
Blast! April 15, 5 p.m., 331 Thompson.
Folk Dance Club (WAA?, Folk dance
with instruction, Fri., 8-11 p.m., Barbour
Gym.
The Christian Science Organization,
Thurs. evening meeting, 7:30 p.m., 3545
SAB.

Read and Use
Daily Classifieds

.5 U

dmm

DIAL
8-64 16

Nominated for 5
Academy Awards!
JiLH
a ow BLurE

The most touching
picture of the year!"
-N. Y. Pat
"**** A film
to be cherished!"
-N.Y. Daily News
"Tremendous
emotional appeal!"
-N.Y. Herald Tribune
"Compelling
drama!"
-N.aY. Journal
American

MATT HELM SHOOTS THE WORKS!
7 t BIGGEST,
NOISIEST,
- NAUGHTIEST
~ .... =CONTENDERh
'> IN THENEW
SpY STAKES"
-Time Mag
MAR11TI
as MATT HELM
E 'SIRA S.E'EDAUIIAH WIN N BONO'R R 'G ]Eft-RO8ERI EBB[R
MM ES GREGORY' ROGER CORE1BEVERLY ADAMS KV ' tYADCHISSE
. SATURDAY 0
20th CENTURY FOX ,,s AN ASSOCIATES AND ALDRICH COMPANY PRODUCTION
O31F TWPM 4 XZ"K
CCO0=OR BY DE LUXE

i

111

R11

TIE A

IL hIN

k4ilm ii!

DiR

REPERTORY
COMPANY

0

L'

IN A
FIFTH FALL uFESTIVAL
PRIOR TO BROADWAY
PRODUCTIONTHIE FLIES by Jean Paul Sartre

2nd
Hit
Week

starrng
SIUNEY
POuTER

SHELLEY
- WINTERS

I

i

1.

aELIZABETH HARTMAN
starrig

ATTENTION

11

MUSKET

c433
!A1,11-21MIR

DIAL 5-6290
Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 P.M.

* CENTRAL COMMITTEE

Think YOUNG! Think FUN!
sbfi "D min qu.
RICARDO MONTALBAN'
AGNES MOOREHEAD- CHAD EERElI
KATHJARINE ROSS ED) SUILUVAN Hi > ::i>.i
~REER GARSON$

CAST

PRODUCTIDI
2.
THREE
SHORT
PLAYS

A brilliant drama by France's most distinguished writer.
TRIPLE PREMIE1
THE CAT AND THE MOON
A fantasy by the great Irish poet, Wm. Butler Yeats.
ESCURIAL
By the brilliant Avante-Garde dramatist, Michel de Ghelderode,
SWEET OF YOU TO SAY SO
An original new work by Page.Johnson

RE

- * CREW

ORCHESTRA

COMMITTEES

also:

TOM & JERRY
Cartoon

"THE EXPERT"
Novelty

OUR RECORDINGS OF
WEST SIDE STORY
HAS JUST ARRIVED
Come to the Musket Office on Monday or Tuesday
of next week (April 18 & 19) from 1-3 p.m. and
pick up the copy you ordered.
If you have not ordered a record, you may still buy
one. We have enough for all people connected with
the show.

SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL by Richard Ddnsley Sheridan
PRODUCTION Delightfulhit of the First Fall Festival in 1962.
RIGHT YOU ARE by Luigi Pirandello
YOUR Stunning success of the 1963 season.
CHOICE
ON WE, COMRADES THREE by Richard Baldridge
New pre-Broadway version, based on the work of Walt Whitman.

w
4

I

i I
aTonight t 7 'and E9
I I
E r
ROBERT BRESSON'S
U ,
I ,
~AMANESCAPED I
with Hardy Krueger ,
I I
1 I
U "
The true story .of an attempted d:
escape from a Nazi prison by a
member of the French underground ;
* /
I I
Saturday and Sunday
" I
' Charles Dicken's-NICHOLAS NICKLEBY
* with Sir Cedric Hardwicke and Stanley Holloway
Ia
I A
1 I
SIN THE ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM
* ADMISSIONt FIFTY CENTS;
I /
mum mum mum um mum mum um mm mum, um mum..... mm u mum a

DEPOSIT HOLDS RESERVED SEATS TO SEPTEMBER

I

I

M

FUN!

YES,

OH YES! FUN! FUN! FUN!

TONIGHT-Thursday, April 14th
LAST CHANCE TO ESCAPE BEFORE FINALS

The KU

GSMEN

FEATURING

The real words to

JOEY CHITWOOD'S Stunt Drivers
in "DON'T TAKE A CHANCE"
2 COLOR CARTOONS
p-

"LOUIE, LOUIE"

1~
9

I

I

In conjunction with the American Studies Student Association
THE CINEMA GUILD Presents
A 3-DAY BOGART BONANZA!!
Exams got you down? JOIN BOGEY and be mellow!
. Monday, April 18th "CROSS PACIFIC"
BOGEY, the reluctant spy with Sydney Greenstreet
and Mary Astor-directed by John Huston.
0 Tuesday, April 19th "THE BIG SLEEP"

"JOLLY GREEN GIANT"

"KILLER JOE"

"Little Latin Lupe Lu"

"AUNT FANNIE"

f n~f~nrhf 11 1 cEfc fD I MC

I

iL ..,,

I

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