Sunday, October 1, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page even ti of 1 Army-Navy Surplus (I S OUR NEW LOCATION 518 F. WILLIAM ~ (formerly Borders Books) SPECIAL Mon. and Tues. only: (REG. 9.50) Denim Jackets . .. . ..7.99 NEW 4-PATCH POCKET Bell Bottom Denim Jeans . 4.99 DON10'T BLOW YOUR MIND... EXPAND IT! Chff's Notes put you inside the heavy stuff...the novels, plays and poems that can "uadd real meaning SA MLeE T to your lteif you really . understandthem. Cliff's Notes can help. Ecology...we'r working on It During the past 14 years Cliffs Notes has used over 2,400.000 tons of paper using recycled pulp. More than 200 titles available at: ULRICH'S BOOKSTORE INC. 549 E. UNIVERSITY ANN ARBOR, MICH. 48104 LSA faculty to meet on RC suggestions (Continued from Page 1) M cost per ,RC credit hour as about .5 of the LSA costs. Both Dougherty and chemistry Prof. Thomas Dunn, who calcu- lated the review committee's fig- ures, agree that the RC costs about $25 per student for credit hour teaching and $30 per student credit hour for general costs. They both point out that there .are departments in the literary school which cost more per stu- dent credit hour than the Residen- tial College. Also to be discussed by the gov- erning faculty is a committee recommendation that pre-doctoral Istudents not be hired as full-time faculty members. The increase in the budget is Sdesigned to allow the college to rely to a greater extent on senior faculty. Teaching fellows are hired be- cause they are inexpensive, but their preoccupation with teaching ': slows their progress toward de- AP Photo grees, explains geography Prof. Rhoads Murphey, review commit- tee chairman. carriage Both Rhodes and Residential ang Ngai College Dean James Robertson feel "exploitation" is too emotional a label for the teaching fellow * situation. Residential College. The review committee's report reads. "It's (RC's) job is academic ed-cation, not exposure to life, still less the simple reflection of what the st'idents bring with them." "panning is not a substitute for academic education, nor is intel- lectlal dilletantism an acceptable product. the report adds. Learning is hard work; it cannot be ac- complished otherwise." Perhins the broadest of the com- mittee's recommendations to be decided calls for the creation of a joint board of representatives from the Residential College and the literary college which would review the. RC and "make recom- mendations concerning appoint- tn "ts, c~irrictiblur changes and major policy matters"-subject to the final approval of the dean. The committee in its report was especially concerned that the RC, rrcated to foster new LSA ideas, had remained isolated from the parent college. The RC as well as the literary college, they felt, would benefit from greater com- munication. The joint board, to have no more than eight members, would also make a f'ill-scale review of the college every four years to "rec- ommend its continuation, altera- tion, or termination." The go-erning faculty will also vote on a recommendation to form a fill-time RC faculty.which will make un 25 to 35 per cent of the teaching staff. Subscribe to The Daily The price of war A disabled South Vietnamese veteran propels his through the ruins of Mo Duc following a battle in province town in South Vietnam recently. special the Qu Murphey also claimed that wom- en work at the college for less than they would be paid elsewhere. But the increased reliance on senior faculty also springs from the committee's desire for greater "academic excellence" in the _ r _ I don't kno' should laugh IX vif I or cry, have get a breakdown, f sick to my stomach or just pass out! Having problems with school? giving you a run around? DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1 Action Recruiting Service. Up W 50 DAY CALENDAR hrs/mo at $2.50/hr. Music School: L. Guinn, baritone, E. THE PROCTER & GAMBLE'S Latin Bossart, piano, Rackham Aud.. 4:30 pm. American subsidiaries, Mexico, Peru, Puer.o Rico. & Venezuela, are recruit- MONDAY, OCTOBER 2 Ing nationals of those countries, near- Environmental & Industrial Health ing graduation, who seek employment Seminar: C. Gray & J. DeKany. Mobile in their home areas. Check this office Source Pollution Control, "EPA Fune- for addl. info. tions and Responsibilities Regarding VOCAT'IONS FOR SOCIAL CHANGE, Motor Vehicle Emissions," Sch. of Pub. (a Calif. collective that helps people H1th. I Aud., 1 pm. find or create alternative, non-tradi- SACUA Meeting: 4th Floor, Admin. tional employment and life styles) will Bldg.. 2 pm. have reps here from 9 a.m. to noon, Psych. 171 Film Series: "Factory," Mon., Oct. 2; have assisted many peo- UGLI Multipurpose m., 4 pm. ple in finding full-time jobs working Physics Seminar: A. Melissinos, Univ. for various areas of social change. Stop of Rochester, "p-p ElasticmScattering at by and talk with them. 200 GeV," P&A Colloq. Rmn., 4 pmn. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT Carillon Concert: H. Ladd, carillon- Education Division neur, Burton Memorial Tower, 7 pm. New Orleans, La.: Public schools in Rive Gauche: French language night, New Orleans need 150 teachers at 1024 Hill St., 8 pm. elementary and' secondary levels; at FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICER exams secondary level greatest need is for for U. S. Dept. of State and U. S. Info. math, science, and Ind. arts; positions Ag. will be given Sat., Dec. 2, 1972; ap- are open now and teachers can start plication deadline Oct. 21. Open to Srs. immediately. and grad. students. Announcement ' If enough people interested, a school booklets & applics. available in Career administrator will come to campus to Planning. 'interview prospective teachers this ACTION/PEACE CORPS/VISTA needs week. Call 764-7459 on Mon. if interest- returned volunteer from Peace Corps 'ed in applying and/or talking to re- or Vista to serve as Campus Rep. for cruiter. Are offices on campus Now there's an answer for transfer students- the Orientation FOLLOW-THROUGH PROGRAM OPEN: MONDAY-THURSDAY AFTERNOONS AT: K1i13 WEST QUAD PHONE: 763-3577-ASK FOR: LESLIE OR JEFF .. . . . . -. . . . m 44 rp .T -r T U- K UJL J 1J LOOK IT OVER! OPEN HOUSE WEEK-SUN., OCT. 1--OCT. 7 EVENINGS 7-1 0 P.M. 1. ALPHA DELTAr PHI 556 S. STATE ST. 16. PHI SIGMA KAPPA 1043 BALDWIN AVE 2. ALPHA EPSILON PI 1620 CAMBRIDGE 17. P1 KAPPA ALPHA 1923 GEDDES AVE. 3. ALPHA SIGMA PHI 920 BALDWIN 18 PSI UPSILON 4. ALPHA TAU OM 1415 5. BETA THETA PI 6 6. CHI PHI 1530 WA 7. CHI PSI AEGA CAMBRIDGE RD. 504 S. STATE ST. ASHTENAW AVE. 19. SIGMA 1000 HILL ST. ALPHA EPSILON 1408 WASHTENAW AVE. 20. SIGMA ALPHA MU 8. DELTA CHI 9. DELTA SIGA 20 620 S. STATE ST. 1705 HILL ST. 21. SIGMA CHI 22. SIGMA NU 23. SIGMA PHI 24. SIGMA PHI 25. TAU EPSILO 800 LINCOLN 548 S. STATE ST. 700 OXFORD RD. 907 LINCOLN AVE. EPSILON 733 S. STATE ST. N PHI 1412 CAMBRIDGE MA PHI 09 WASHTENAW AVE. 10. DELTA TAU DEL 19 11. DELTA UPSILON 12. KAPPA SIGMA 13. LAMBDA CHI A 1601 WA .TA 28 GEDDES AVE. 1331 HILL ST. 806 HILL ST. LPHA \SHTENAW AVE. 26. TAU KAPPA EPSILON 805 OXFORD RD. 27. THETA CHI 1351 WASHTENAW AVE. 28. THETA DELTA CHI 700 S. STATE ST. VIII _, ,z. ' - - -- ' - -'-- -- - u- 9 L r9A % I