Page Four THE MICHIGAN GAILY Thursday, September 9, 1,971 Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thu rsd~y, September 9, 1971 You Always Have a' Choice of Merchandise at FOLLETTS FeltC TipPens Clocks Scrap Books Photo Albums Umbrellas Decals Note Books Spiral & loose leaf Filing Cards Folders Term Pope Covert Staplers Plus all kinds of STUDENT SUPPLIES a. Ihrough the eyes of a aculty member ." By ROBERT SCHREINER Stop what you're doing for a 1minute and pretend that you are in a different role. Imagine instead of listening to someone talk to you in class, that you are the one giving the lecture. Imagine instead of reading that book from the course syllabus, that you are the one who wrote it. What would you do if you were being hounded on the one side to increase your teaching load, but knew that if you did, it would cut down the t i m e available for your research, thus possibly putting your job and academic reputation in jeopardy? And how would you react when a bunch of kids less than half your age demand to have an active voice in matters that closely concern you,? If you can visualize yourself in these situations, and know how you would feel, then may- be you can begin to understand a member of perhaps the most crucial set of University em- ployes - the faculty. There are about 4,000 fa- culty members at the Univer- sity. About 3,000 of them are, full time teachers throughout the 18 schools and colleges, and their student audience numbers over 35,000. Each year, these faculty mem- bers do over $62 million worth of research. They also teach, write books, publish articles, ap- pear on television, give speech- es and win prizes - not neces- sarily in that order. Some faculty members a r e former or current high govern- ment officials, and many more are consultants to various branches of the governments and big business. Among their ranks are Nobel Prize-winning scientists, famous authorsnand an overwhelming number of re- nowned leaders in their fields of specialization. Whether tenderfoot lecturers or department chairmen and deans, the vast majority of fa- culty members are men. Be- Sginning steps are being taken, however, to ; increase the num- ber of women teachers at the University. While"the faculty runs the gamut of the entire political spectrum, naturally the tie which binds the most radical faculty member to the most conservative is their overwhelm- ing commitment to the pursuit of learning and education. It has often been said that the real measure of a col- lege's excellence lies in t h e quality of its faculty. If one accepts such a premise, t h e n he has reached a sufficiently high level of "academic excel- lence", he is promoted to t h e rank of associate professor, and may never be legally fired by the University, except for ethi- cal reasons. Although the criteria for de- termining "academic excel- lence" are kept purposefully vague, teaching ability and per- sonality are among the things considered. However, overrid- ing emphasis is placed on re- search and scholarship, in the form of published books, ar- ticles and the like. Thus, the need for a fledging teacher to "publish or perish" is often at the root of faculty dif- ferences with students concern- ing academic questions. Many students, tired of cours- es closing early and in some cases not even being offered during a term because of alleg- ed insufficient teaching staffs, have persistently called f o r faculty members to spend more time teaching and less time do- ing research for their own benefit. Such students argue that a faculty member's top priority See VIEWING, Page 6 Labs: Profs' other home "Research makes this University what it is," says A. Geof- frey Norman, vice president for research. However, in the midst of decreased budget allocations and student demands for a more personalized education, faculty have been caught in an on-go- ing controversy over how to spend their time-in teaching or in research. While this controversy continues, the University's re- search volume continues to spiral-increasing 145 per cent in the last ten years to a total of $62,399,268 for the last fiscal year. Among the most prominent research faculties at the Uni- versity are: -A two-million-watt Ford Nuclear Reactor; -The Ship Hydrodynamics Laboratory, which includes a 360-foot naval towing tank and a 100-foot wave and maneuver- ing basin in which ship and hull designs are tested, and -The Cyclotron Laboratory used by researchers studying nuclear structures, which includes 83- and 50-inch accelerators. Federal agencies provide the largest amount of research funds-the largest sponsor being the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, providing 29.3 per cent, and the De- partment of Defense sponsoring 16.7 per cent of on-campus research. A combination of other governent agencies funds 26.5 per cent of the projects. The other 27.5 per cent of research funds come from non- federal agencies, including industry, the University, private foundations, and state and local government agencies. Faculty as researchers: 'Publish or perish' U USED TEXTBOOKS UP TO 1 OFF U LRICH!S ANN ARBOR'S FRIENDLY BOOKSTORE the University can be consid- ered among the top schools in the nation. A report issued recently by the American Council on Educa- tion indicates that such is the case. In surveying over 6,000 academicians across the coun- try, the report ranked t h e University's faculty as among the top few in the country - equalled only by Harvard, Berkeley, Princeton, Chicago, Stanford. and Yale. But while the quest for aca- demic excellence is a common denominator among them, there are other questions and issues, on which faculty members are divided, and others where as a group they are at odds with students. The first problem which a f a- culty member must deal with is the very personal one of ad- vancement. Just as most stu- dents have as the driving force the desire to graduate, faculty members desire to become "ten- ured." When a faculty member prov- es to his older colleagues t h a t *i ... Seeking a greater voice r By HESTER PULLING As the University grows, so does its bur- eaucracy - and an increasing number of faculty members here are expressing fears that the administration's bureau- cracy is getting too tough for them to penetrate. Recently, faculty members have polite- ly but firmly stepped up their drive for a greater voice in formulating University policies along with an increased role in administrative decisions. For the past several years, business af- fairs - such as buying new property - and financial matters concerning alloca- tion of budget funds have been handled by the administration with relatively lit- tle faculty input. Faculty, on the other hand, have chiefly dealt with such aca- demic concerns as course offerings, new educational programs, and gradling meth- ods. However, last year faculty members voiced strong objections to their minor role in determining University budget priorities and pressed the administratioh to open channels for increased faculty input in this area. The faculty's major input into the ad- ministration has in the past been primar- ily advisory and done through S e n a t e Assembly - the all-faculty representative body. Composed of about 60 faculty mem- bers elected from the various schools, col- leges and departments, Assembly is re- sponsible for putting information and ad- vice into the hands of the administration and making sure faculty views and inter- ests are heard. Assembly gathers and disseminates in- formation through its numerous com- mittees - each involved in a specific as- pect of the University community. Senate Assembly's executive committee, the Senate Advisory Committee on Uni- versity Affairs (SACUA) is Assembly's most influential and most important com- mittee. Often President Robben Fleming Each of the six vice presidents at the University has an Assembly committee as- signed to work with him. However, a large faculty complaint is that, the Assembly committees, because they serve in only an advisory capacity, are sometimes ignored. Although some vice presidents are more receptive to Assembly's committees than others, SACUA and Assembly chairman Warren Norman feels that "overall, they are willing to work with faculty and will- ing to listen when they thing it is in their interest and the University's." Some faculty have criticized Senate As- sembly, contending that the faculty body does not take strong political or moral stances on issues and has little effect on the administration. INorman contends, however, that As- sembly is not a political body, but a representative one, and so must follow the dictates of its elected members. An because faculty viewpoints and opinions "range from one extreme to another" in See FACULTY, Page 8 You will find our store specially equipped to supply will turn to SACUA on an issue. for faculty opinions ... Becoming a union member? you with LAW case books and supplies. Our LAW section is staffed by law students to assist you. OVERBECK BOOKSTOR By JIM IRWIN Faculty unionization, tradi- tionally scorned by university professors as a means to gain power, has been an issue of growing interest and contro- versy at the University dur- ing the past year. A poll taken by the local chapter of the American As- sociation of University P r o- fessors (AAUP) last January showed considerable faculty in- terest in the possibilities of col- lective bargaining and yet some reservations. Since that time, a Senate As- sembly Committee on the Rights and Responsibilities of Facul- ty Members has been formed to look into the whole question of faculty participation in Uni- versity governance of which un- ionization is just one aspect. The committee was directed to evaluate and find possible alternatives to the present sys- tem of faculty governance and see whether a more effective means "might be obtained through the formation of a unit affiliated with a state or national organization." T h e committee has prepared a lengthy report which will be presented in June, after this supplement goes to press. One of the chief reasons for the increasing faculty interest in unionization has been t h e University's failure to keep fa- culty salaries in line with in- flation. "Economic problems have forced faculty members everywhere to re-examine col- lective bargaining," says p s y - chology Prof. Wilbert McKeach- ie, former president of the local AAUP Faculty salaries have b e e n particularly threatened by the relatively small increase in state appropriations received by THE LAW BOOK STORE Phone 663-9333 1216 South University r ,. _.._. ._ ._ - .___ . ._._._ .. ..._ _ .._. _ ___ the University in recent years. Faculty members had origi- nally been promised salary rais- es which would require $10 mil- lion in new funds this year. However, Gov. William Milli- ken's proposed cuts in the Uni- versity's request for funds would allocate only $7.5 million for all University salary increases. Education Prof. Terrence Tice, assistant chairman of the Rights and Responsibilities Committee cites other reasons for the growing interest rn un- ionization. Tice sees it as part of a trend starting six years ago, when faculty members across the country took advantage of a wave of state and federal legis- lation which allowed teachers and public employes to unionize and engage in collective b a r - gaining. Since the passage of Michi- gan's Public Employes Act in 1965, the faculties of almost all of Michigan's 29 two-year colleges have become unioni- zed. The faculties of between 80 and 100 colleges in the coun- try have unionized, almost all of which were community col- leges Yet so far the reaction at this campus has been mixed. University teaching fellows, whose salaries have been notor- iously low, have already peti- tioned the state employment re- lations board for recognition as a bargaining unit. University administrators have fought the move, however, and a decision from the board is still pending. In response to the AAUP poll, M-M-m-m- 59cAun however, faculty members dis- played a more cautious atti- tude than the teaching fellows. The most common response re- quested that AAUP keep fa- culty members informed on the processes of collective bargain- ing and its expansion at other campuses. According to McKeachie, com- ments written on the question- naire indicated that there were "quite a number of faculty who feel that collective bargaining would destroy the concept of the academic community." President Robben Fleming, expressing the view of m a n y administrators and some facul- ty members hypothesizes that for any money to be available for higher salaries, it w o u ld have to be obtained through re- duction in the number of pro- fessors employed by the Uni- versity an increase in average class size, and more extensive use of technology in teaching methods. Prof. McKeachie A' READ THE FINE! $ PRINT Prime campus location, 8 month lease, swimming pool, indi- vidual responsibility for rent, optional free maid service, resi- -den staff on cail 'round the clock, air-conditioning, storage facilities, 24 hour security lock, complete laundry facilities in the building, fully furnished, recreation room with soda and snack vending, study room, central heating. And Take Advantage of It! m, yummie! 59c 1 A giant hamburger of lb.l topped with lettuce, tomato, pickles, and ketchup. -also-- . HAMBURGERS " CHICKFN (". 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