a Page 2-Sunday, October 17, 1982-The Michigan Daily Faculty react to fall in ranking (Continued from Page 1) main categories: faculty quality, the effectiveness in educating researchers and scientists, improvement during the *past five years, and national reputation Qf the program and its faculty mem- bers. The chemistry department-rated 19th in a 1969 survey and 16th in 1980's controversial Gorman report- dropped to 31st place in faculty quality ip the 1982 survey. - WHILE NOTING that surveys are "a very crude qualitative method" of rating programs, chemistry chairman Tom Dunn said his department's fall in the ratings reflects certain shor- tcomings, real and perceived. "The physical sciences haven't coun- ted for a row of beans here since the 1930s," Dunn said, adding that the only new facility built for these disciplines ;since that time has been the Dennison Building, which is "not really a physics building, but a classroom building." According to Dunn, the outdated chemistry facilities hurt outsiders' per- ceptions of the quality of the entire department. In the view of Dunn and many other officials, the inferior facilities are the root of the depar- tment's problems. THE FACILITIES in the chemistry department make it difficult for the present faculty to teach, research, and attract new faculty who have to be recruited from schools which have ex- cellent facilities, said Robert Holbrook, Associate to Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye. Chemistry Prof. Peter Smith added that overcrowded classrooms and laboratories detract from the quality of teaching in the department. He noted that demonstrations which used to be routinely done in organic chemistry classes are no longer included because the demonstration facilities have been put to other uses. - "I feel embarassed when I visit other places and see their facilities," Smith said. ANOTHER reason the department may be perceived unfavorably is the high number of non-chemistry majors that are taught in the University's .chemistry courses. Said Dunn: "87 per- cent of the teaching here has nothing to do with chemistry majors. That amoun- ts to 3,700 students per semester in the introductory chemistry classes." Dunn admitted that the teaching of non-majors is one of the responsibilities of a public university, but he cautioned tlat as a result of that priority, "It is totally unrealistic for this univesity to ever expect to be in the top five schools (in chemistry)." Teaching, he ex- ;ained, takes time away from .the ore glamorous research function of the department. In addition, the department, which depends heavily on modern instrumen- tation, also- faces a serious shortage of the latest equipment. In spite of its role and importance to several other depar- tments, it doesn't count for much even with the administration, said Dunn, SELECTED QUALITY RATINGS FROM THE CONFERENCE BOARD OF ASSOCIATED RESEARCH COUNCILS Mathematics Statistics Chemistry Physics Geosciences Comp. Science Berkeley . Cticago .. Columbia . Harvard: . linois .. . MICHIGAN Princeton . Stanford . Wisconsin Yle ... ......... . ...... .... ..... ... .. 72(2) 71 (4) 6 (9) 71(5) 63 (15) 64(11) 73(1) 67 (7) 65(10) 69 (8) 72(1) 70 (3) 614(10) 62(7) 57(18) 53 (21) 62 (9) 72 (2) 66(4) 60(15) 74(1) 69 (8) 70 (5) 74 (3) 69 (9) 58(31) 64(13) 70(6) 69(10) 64(15) 72(3) 70 (6) 69 (9) 73 (2) 67(10) 60(23) 72(5) 70(8) 61(21) 65 (11) 64 (9) 66(5) 67 (4) 65 (7) 53 (27) 57(22) 63(11) 66(6) 60(14) 64(9) 70 (4) unranked 50 (26) unranked 63 (7) unranked 55(14) 75 (1) 57(12) 60(8) "." .".""."..". Above are listed the raw scores of faculty quality at 10 universities, Associated as compiled by th e Conference In parenthesis Board of are the Research Councils. school rankings from a much larger sample. The survey was conducted in April 1981. . citing his yearly $5,000 equipment budget. A single scale costs $1,600, he said. THE SOLUTION to the department's problems, in the opinion of all the of- ficials interviewed, is the construction of the new Chemical Sciences Building, on the drawing board since the late '50s. The new state-of-the structure, which would assemble all the University's chemistry-related research under one roof, would return the University to prominence in the field, Dunn said. Holbrook affirmed the ad- ministration's commitment to the con- struction of the new building, rating it attor near the top of the University's list of capital improvements. He said the reason for the delay in starting con- struction has been the huge cost of the sophisticated building: about $45 million to $50 million dollars. The University's geology department greeted its rating with considerably less understanding. Previously ranked sixth in the 1980 Gorman report-a sur- vey which stirred controversy because the researcher, never adequately ex- plained his methodology-the geology department was ranked 22nd in the 1982 survey. ROB VAN DER VOO, geology depart- ment chairman, expressed surprise and dissatisfaction with the results. Citing the department's ranking in the 1980 study, Van der Voo noted that his department has implemented no cuts and has changed nothing for the worse since then. "The department is as strong now or stronger than it has been in the last decade," said geology Prof. Bruce Wilkinson. He listed as examples an in- crease in graduate students and an almost threefold increase in the amount of research funds granted to the depar- tment-from $120,000 in 1973 to $340,000 in 1982. In addition, Wilkinson and Van der Voo pointed to the fact that among the department's graduate students are six National Science Foundation Fellows, a number unsurpassed by any other university. That figure includes two of the 29 fellowships awarded this year. "This indicates that the department can still attract candidates which have the option of going anywhere," Van der Voo said. "I THINK the department is maybe 10th in the country," Wilkinson said, adding that in his opinion, the depar- tment is "easily in the top ten in any of its five areas of specialization." The' physics department, which placed 14th in the Gorman report, dropped to 23rd in faculty quality in the 1982 survey. While the department didn't object strongly to the survey, members said it doesn't accurately represent the current situation. "The Physics Department has changed very drastically in the last two years," said Marcellus .Wiedenbeck, associate chairman of the department, noting the aggressive program of new hirings including the addition of Prof. Martinus Veltman, one of the world's foremost theorists on Particle Physics. WIEDENBECK blames reputational lag (the period of time, usually from three to five years, which it takes for changes in a department to become widely known in the academic com- munity) for the department's drop in the rankings, noting that the hiring program's successes have been achieved too recently to have an impact on the survey. As an indication of the department's improvement, Wiedenbeck cited its threefold increase in research funding during the past five years. During that period, Wiedenbeck said, funding from outside sources-such as the National Science Foundation-has risen from $2 million per year to more than $6 million per year. In Wiedenbeck's view, the only problem the department faces is a shor- tage of space in the present facilities. To remedy this, it has submitted a proposal to the administration for a $2.5 million two-story bridge of offices linking Randall Laboratory and the Dennison Building. THE STATISTICS department, which has never appeared on any previous survey, ranked approximately 21st on the 1982 survey in faculty quality. Robb Muirhead, associate chairman of the department, blames its poor showing on two factors: Its small size and relative youth. "The higher ranked departments are much more visible. Michigan is a very small school, with 11 full-time faculty and two or three joint appointments," Muirhead said. In comparison, he said, the statistics department at Stanford University has more than twice as many faculty mem- bers. In addition, he said, the department here is only 12 or 13 years old, having grown out of the mathematics depar- tment. "IF I HAD to rank it (the University's department), I would rank it about 10th to 15th in the country - not too bad, considering its size," he said. The mathematics department, which did the best of any University. depar- tment surveyed, was tied for the num- ber 11 spot in the 1982 report, about the same place it's been ranked for the past 13 years. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Mob breaks up Klan rally BOSTON - Two dozen robed Ku Klux Klan members were taken away in police vans yesterday after a screaming mob of 1,000 people broke up a Klan rally in front of Boston City Hall. At least 13 people were injured in the resulting confrontation between protesters and police, authorities said. About 20 police on horseback wielding billy clubs and mace galloped down Cambridge Street to intercept the rushing crowd that hurled bottles, tomatoes, eggs, and epithets at the 23 robed and hooded Klansmen. Other police on motorcycles roared into the chanting crowd, also spraying mace and swinging their clubs. The Klan rally was called by Bill Wilkinson, the imperial wizard of the Invisible Empire, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, after he was attacked during a television talk show Thursday. Wilkinson, 40, of Denham Springs, La., and Angie Stringer, a member of the KKK Youth Corps, were pelted with eggs during the live "People Are Talking" show on WBZ-TV. Suspect sought in Tylenol deaths CHICAGO - The nationwide hunt intensified yesterday for a suspected killer and writer of a $1 million extortion letter who is sought in the murders of seven people who swallowed Tylenol capsules spiked with cyanide. While authorities searched for James W. Lewis and his wife, the FBI in Washington tried to match Lewis' fingerprints with partial prints found on the sabotaged bottles of Extra-Strength Tylenol. Comparisons of Lewis' neat printing and the hand-printed extortion let- ter led to the extortion warrant. The Chicago Sun-Times reported the FBI had matched Lewis' fingerprints with those found on the letter. In another poisoning in Florida, police officials said yesterday the acid spiking of cinnamon-flavored Lavoris mouthwash that burned the mouth of a 29-year-old man apparently was an isolated act of a demented person. Gemayel to disarm militia Lebanon President Amin Gemayel ordered the Lebanese army to secure positions across east Beirut yesterday to prepare for its greatest challenge - disarming the 20,000-strong Christian Phalangist army of his slain brother. Army units took up positions at key intersections in the predominantly Christian eastern sector in a bid to be fully deployed before Gemayel flies to the United States today to meet President Reagan. Gemayel's talks with Reagan in Washington this week are expected to focus on withdraway of all foreign armies from Lebanon, imposition of law and order and a reconstruction program that government planners say could cost $12 billion. A top government official said before Gemayel's departure the president considers U.S. support crucial to solving Lebanon's chronic political and social crisis. Brooklyn hospital siege ends NEW YORK - A 33-year-old convict who took five people hostage in a hospital basement during an escape attempt released his remaining captive and surrendered yesterday, ending a 46 -hour siege. Larry Van Dyke, a "career criminal" who was to have been sentenced Friday on an armed robbery charge, agreed to give up in exchange for making a final statement toreporters on prison conditions. "I am not a madman," Van Dyke told reporters through a window shortly before giving up. "I'm a man that was trying to get freedoin. . . I got caught, I'm here." The ordeal began at 10 a.m. Thursday when Van Dyke, who had gotten a cast removed from a broken hand, seized a prison guard's gun, wounded the guard in the arm and holed up with five hospital employees in a basement locker room at Brooklyn's Kings County Hospital, the nation's second- largest hospital after Cook County Hospital in Chicago. At 8:25 a.m. yesterday, Elton SMith, 28, a clerk, was released. Five minutes later, Van Dyke, who is called Larry Gardner in court papers, put his gun on the window ledge and clambered out of the basement, surren- dering to heavily armed police and negotiators. It was not immediately clear what criminal charges Van Dyke would face. Police said a complaint would be drawn up by the Brooklyn district at- torney's office after interviews with everyone involved in the case. Rancher ends three-day armed holdout on missile range WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M.-An 81-year-old rancher and his niece ended a three-day armed occupation of the White Sands Missile Range yesterday and were escorted off the secret test base that was once the old man's ranch. Dave McDonald wants the government either to return his 640-acre ranch or settle on a fair price for the land, which was taken over by the Army in 1942 as part of a secret base where the first atomic bomb was tested. McDonald and his niece, Mary McDonald, 32, were escorted off the range by Sen. Harrison Schmitt and Rep. Joe Skeen, both Republicans. Guards found the couple Wednesday sitting in lawn chairs behind a rope bearing a sign that proclaimed: "Road Closed to U.S. Army." They were armed with two rifles and a pistol and had put up signs warning people away. McDonald agreed late Friday to end his protest if Skeen-who also is a southern New Mexico rancher-would accompany him. Meanwhile, Schmitt said he had asked the General Accounting Office to "determine whether the federal government or Department of Defense has dealt with New Mexico ranchers fairly" in acquiring lands for the 4,000- square-mile base. Vol. XCIII, No. 42 Wednesday, October 27, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 Oy mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI. 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 763-0375'; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. COMMITTEE FOR SOCIAL ACTION ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING * OPPRESSED JEWRY * CAMPUS MISSIONARIES * SENIOR CITIZENS * TROUBLED YOUTH * THE NEW RIGHT Monday, Oct. 18, 7:15 PM at Hillel 1429 Hill St. Ut U.S. aids Israel in U.N. (Continued from Page 1> The United States views these threats with grave concern," Shultz said of the proposals to exclude Israel. "We will take . . action in other United Nations organizations if there are similar moves." POETRY READING with David Bornstein, Jeff Wine and John Richard MONDAY, Oct. 18th -8 pm GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe odmission free U.S. sources said, however, the United States does not contemplate withdrawing from the Security Council, the most powerful political body of the United Nations with just 15 members, five of them permanent. SHULTZ UNDERSCORED a prime U.S. concern when he said in his statement yesterday that Israel's ouster from the General Assembly would represent a "serious setback for progress toward peace in the Middle East." U.N. observers have said hardline Arab nations succeeded last week in getting a credentials vote on the matter postponed until Oct. 25. SER-UM ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE Auditions for Sound of Music -by Rogers & Hommerstein directed by GLENN CRANE Sun. 10/17, 2:30,p.m.-children only 7:30 p.m.-adults Mon. 10/18, 7:30 p.m.-adults Tues. 10/19, 7:30 p.m.-adults * Be prepared to sing a song from the show 388 South Main Call 662-9405-1-4 p.m. weekdays Editor-in-chief ...................... DAVID MEYER Manoging Editor ................ PAMELA KRAMER News Editor ................ ANDREW CHAPMAN Student Affairs Editor ......... ANN MARIE FAZIO University Editor................. MARK GINDIN Opinion Page Editors ................... JULIE HINDS CHARLES THOMSON Arts/Magazine Editor . . ...... RICHARD CAMPBELL Associate Arts/Magazine Editor ..........BEN TICHO Sports Editor .................. .. BOB WOJNOWSKI Associate Sports Editors .............. BARB BARKER LARRY FREED JOHN KERR RON POLLACK Photography Editor ..................BRIAN MASCK Laura Clark. Richard Dpmok, Jim Dworman, Dbvid Formon, Chris Gerbosi. Paul Helgren, Matt Henehon. Chuck Jaffe. Steve Komen. Robin Kopilnick. Dug Levy. Mike McGraw, Larry Mishkin. Don Newman, Jeff Quicksilver. Jim Thompson, Karl Wheatley, Chris Wilson. Chuck Whitman BUSINESS Business Manager .............. JOSEPH G. BRODA Soles Manager . ., ......... KATHRYN HENDRICK Display Manager. .... ...... . .... ANN SACHAR Finance Manager ............ SAM G, SLAUGHTER IV Assistant Display Manager .........PAMELA GOULD Operotions/Notionai Manager ....LINDSAY BRAY Circulation Manager.......... KIM WOOD Sales Coordinator........... E. ANDREW PETERSEN Classified Manager . . ..... PAM GILLERY