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October 14, 1972 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-10-14

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Saturday, October 14, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Mi

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PI BETA PHI SORORITY

Green and chem dept.:
. differences run deep

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FIRST UNi1ED METHODIST
CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDA-
TION - State at Huron and Wash.
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon by
Dr. Donald B. Strobe: "According
to My Gospel."
Broadcast W N R S 1290 AM,
WNRZ 103 FM, 11:00-noon.
WESLEY FOUNDATION
NEWS ITEMS:
Sunday, Oct. 15:
4:30 p.m. - Volleyball, Wesley
Lawn.
5:30 p.m.-Supper, Pine Room.
6:15 p.m. -Celebration, Wesley
Lounge.
7:00 p.m. - Program, W e s I e y
Lounge.
Thursday, Oct. 19:
12:00 noon-Luncheon Discussion
Group, Pine Room. Book of Acts.
6:00 p.m.-Grad Community. Call
668-6881 for information and de-
tails.
* * *
ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, 306 N. Division
8:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist.
10:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist and
Sermon.
~ .
thru
Cdasfied

riE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Avenue
Erwin A. Gaede, Minister
Church School and Service at
10:30 a.m. A Film: "The Automat-
ed Battlefield."
S* A
BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH
OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149
Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr.; R. E.
Simonson.
9 a.m.: Morning Prayer.
10 a,.m.: Worship Service and
Church School.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL
On the Campus at the corner of
State and William Sts.
Rev. Terry N. Smith, Sr. Minister
Rev. Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant
S * *
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Avenue
SUNDAY: 10:30 a.m.: Worship
Services, Sunday School (2-20 yrs.).
Infants' room available Sunday and
Wednesday.
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Li-
berty St.: Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat.,
1-5; Closed Sundays and Holi-
days.
For transportation, call 668-6427.
SAMARIA LUTHERAN, LCA
272 Hewitt Rd., 1 block south of
Packard.
Rev. Dean Tyson, Pastor.
Family Worship and Nursery at
11:00 a.m. Faculty and Students
welcome.
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw
Don Postema, Minister
Servives - 10:00 a.m. - Morning
Worship.
11:00 a.m.-Get acquainted hour.
6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship.

LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN
CHURCH (ALC, LCA) (formerly
Lutheran Student Chapel)
's01 S. Forest (Corner of Hill St.)
Donald G. Zill, Pastor
Sunday Worship-9:15 and 11:00
a.m.
Sunday Supper-6:15 p.m.
Program-7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Eucharist-5:15 p.m.
HURON HILLS BAPTIST
CHURCH: 3150 Glacier Way
Pastor: Charles Johnson
For information, transportation,
personalized help, etc., phone 769-
6299 or 761-6749.
- * *
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Avenue
Services of Worship at 9:00 and
10:30 a.m.-Sermon: "A God-Cen-
tered Optimism." Preaching: Rob-
ert E. Sanders.
COLLEGE PROGRAM
Bible Study -Sundays at 10:30
a.m.; Tuesdays-12:00 to 1:00;
Holy Communion - Wednesdays
5:15 to 5:45.
* *' *
THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
502 E. Huron St., Phone 663-9376
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST
2580 Packard Road, 971-0773
Tom Bloxam, Pastor, 971-3152
Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.
Worship: 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Training Hour: 6 p.m.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN
CHAPEL (LCMS)
1511 Washtenaw Avenue
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m-
Worship Services
Sunday at 9:15 a.m.-Bible Study.
Wednesday at 10 p.m.-Midweek
Worship.

AND
DANCI
Saturday, October 14, 1972
following the Michigan-Michigan State
game until 6:30 p.m.
836 TAPPAN (off of H iII Street)
EVERYONE IS WELCOME!

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(Continued from Page 1) ?
that would be one thing, but the
way it is, it isn't fair to kids
who may go on to other courses
with strict instructors."
Like many of the younger fac-
ulty members at the University,
Green has little respect for a
system which rates all academ-
ic performance on the standard
four point scale.
"I said at the beginning of the
class," Green says, "that if you
do all the labs and take the two
tests, I'll give you an 'A' or a 'B'."
Even on the areas he grades,.
Green takes a rather unusual ap-
proach for a chemistry professor.
"When I grade student's experi-
ments," he says, "it's not on whe-
ther they got all the products or
not, but whether it was done with
soul or without soul. Walking
around the lab watching students
work, it's easy to tell."
Yet another area in which Green
clashes with the chemistry estab-
lishment is over his free-form, or
"organic" method of class presen-
tation.
"I just didn't like the way he
laid out the course," Merbergen
explains: "I didn't like the amount
of swearing or the way he pre-
sented the material."
"Some people don't like me be-
cause I have a rather organic way
of running the class," he says. He

explains that material is presented
"in a manner subject to an inter-
active judgement with my stu-
dents.'
According to several of his stu-
dents, Green spends the last half-
hour of his class rapping-discuss-
ing various aspects of the class or
whatever comes up. It was during
this part of the class that the anti-
war slide show was presented.
Since his suspension, this seg-
ment of the class has been drop-
ped and students are merely dis-
missed.
After days of debate over the
showing of the slides which trig-
gered his suspension and looking
forward to weeks of dissection and
debate over his teaching record,
Green expresses a sense of exas-
peration.
"Look man," he says, "I'm not
the best teacher in this Univer-
sity and I'm not the worst. I'm
not even the worst teacher in the
chemistry department.
"When people get out of my
class I think they wind up some-
where within the confines of what
it has been decided they should
know for this course. But that
misses the whole point."
The point, Green says, is that
it is a teacher's job "to impart
relevance side-by-side with pre-
cise subject matter." He believes
he has succeeded.

Workers
strike 3
GM plants
DETROIT (k' - Auto workers
strick three General Motors plants
yesterday, including one which
manufactures parts for practically
all GM models. Company officials
said the firm faces four more shut-
downs next week, all over the
issue of production standards.
Under the current GM-United
Auto Workers contract, production
standards-which involve the speed
of the assembly line and the num-
ber of men required to work it-
are a strikable issue. The current
contract expires in 1973.
The dispute has been a recurring
one as assembly line automation
increased, with GM seeking a high-
er production rate and the UAW
maintaining that more men are
needed to do the job.
The most crucial strike is the one
at Mansfield, Ohio, where 2,300
UAM members walked out of the
Fisher Body plant at midnight.
More than 8,500 workers at the
General Motors Assembly Division
plant in St. 1 Louis also walked off
yesterday along with 3,800 workers
at the Doraville, Ga., GMAD in-
stallation. The St. Louis plant
makes Chevrolets.

Schools teach your kids
how to read and write.
We teach them
how to save lives.
help
us
The American Red Cross.
We dont know where
well be needed next.

You dont either
advertising contributed for the pu
AMERICAN RED CROSS CAMPAIGN

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M. C. ESCUER
We have just acquired a stock of original wood engravings by M.C.
Escher. They are from a limited edition and are numbered. Original
Escher prints are very rare. Visit us-and see them.
Also see our original prints by Chagall, Picasso, Miro, Deli,
Vasarely, Giaconetti, Calder, Maillol, etc.
c4Centicore Bookshops, Inc.
336 Maynard 663-1812
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Attention: SENIORS
CLASS of 173
THE
... IS THE SYMBOL FOR TAUREANS
. .but this is no bull.
Sign up NOW for your
YEARBOOK PORTRAITS

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