MRS BERNIE SMITH OFFICE OF SEC OF FAC EAST WING LIBRARY 083 010 The Raft: Trying to mqke changes occur By DEBORAH KRELL Interim Associate Editor He's only 15 and scared. He has problems at home; problems in his head. He ,wants to get away, but has no place togo. Where does he go? Until 'now, area teenage runaways could only contact a juvenile home through the police for assistance. But after July 1, the Raft, a home for runaways, will open in East Lansing. Why The Raft? Teme Levbarg, one of the founders of the home said, "We took our the inspiration Huckleberry House in San Francisco. from After all, Huckleberry Finn was probably America's most famous runaway, and it was while he was on the raft that most of the changes in him took place. "We thought it was an appropriate name." Miss Levbarg and Susie Kehde, both workers at the Listening Ear, East Lansing's crisis intervention center, conceived the home for runaways idea after their contacts at the Listening Ear . convinced them that such a home was needed. * * * NOW THEY have a board of directors of The Raft, Incorporated, have been ftre - inspected and are filling out their state application as an "emergency shelter." The two of them plus area high school and junior high school students are fixing up a large residence that has seen better days at 420 Evergreen Ave. to house the runaways and the staff that will help them. "The kids who've helped us have been just great," they agreed. Once The Raft is spruced up and operating, the house staff will include four "house parents," two Of whom will stay. in The Raft from 10 p.m. uhtil 9 a.m. on alternating nights. In addition, The Raft has a 24-hour staff of student volunteers who have been trained to deal with runaways and who have had the initial training necessary to deal with drug problems. "When a runaway comes to us, he'll be able to talk with a person from his peer group," Miss Kehde said. The Raft personnel have also compiled a list of paraprofessional and professional people who will be on call to help when they are needed. "They'll come to handle individual and family counseling," Miss Kehde said. * * * MISS KEHDE said The Raft has had (Continued on page 4) MSU Faculty News Vol. 1, No. 31 Michigan State University June 30, 1970 Commission looks at five categories To facilitate the gathering of vital would not meet again until late subject the discussion of September. the information and He added that each subconunittee admissions Presidential, CQnunission on Admissions would submit a provisional paper on its an4 :S'iude:nLBoQy Composition .has..." ~12.P,iE , when the whole commissi()n does orok"en: into subcommittees or "task meet again. forces" for the summer. areas, Ira Polley, consultant to the preSident, said the whole commission probably Standards; High The subcommittees will work in ftve areas: Admissions: Procedures and Students, Minorities and "Open Admissions": Enrollment Mix; MSU Academic Goals, Future and "Mission of Michigan Risk SUbcommlettees State;" and Special Programs. are listed These committees, which ftrst met June 19, will meet periodically through the summer, Polley said, and they will questions, be most comments and ideas of all faculty members. receptive to • ADMISSIONS, PROCEDURES AND STANDARDS James H. Pickering, English, 355-7573; Clifford J. Pollard, botany and plant pathology, 355-4575; Chitra M. Smith, James Madison College, 353-4508. Other members: William Greene, graduate student; Ron Jursa, Bureau of Higher Education; Ben Leyrer, Michigan Association of Secondary School Principals. HIGH RISK STUDENTS, MINORITIES, "OPEN ADMISSIONS" Dorothy Arata, Honors College, 355-2326; Norman Abeles, psychology, 355-8270; James B. Hamilton, chemistry, 353-1693. Others: Louis Legg, alumni; Stanley Sibley, graduate student; Walter Thomas, undergraduate. ENROLLMENT MIX W. Vern Hicks, elementary and special education, 355-1872; James D. Shaffer, agricultural economics, 355-1695. Others: Robert Cahow, Michigan Association of Community Colleges; Frank Beadle, ' former senator; Sandy Grebenschikoff, undergraduate; William R. Rustem, undergraduate. state MSU ACADEMIC GOALS, FUTURE Willard Warrington, University College, teacher 355-3408; Henry W. Kennedy, education, 355-1713; Mordechai Kreinin, economics, 355-6579. Of hers: Patricia Carrigan, alumni; Kwong - Yuan Chong, graduate student; Jerry Rupley, undergraduate. SPECIAL PROGRAMS Charles Blackman, secondary education, curricuhim, 355-1761; Daniel F. Cowan, human medicine, 353-9160; Mildred Erickson, American Thought and Language, 355-3515. Others: Paul Bader, Michigan School Counselors Association; John Hoekje, state independent colleges and universities; David R. Snyder, undergraduate. STAFF SPECIALISTS Margaret Lorimer, institutional research, 355-6626; Charles Eberly, evaluation services, 353-3212; Thomas Freeman, institutional research, 355-5062; David Hershey, admissions, 355-8332; Leroy Olson, evaluation services, 355-1779. "The way I see it," Polley said, "The opinions of interested faculty members will the subcommittees. " be most welcome in Preparing The Raft: Kathy Darling, Bill Bunt and Sue Forstat take a whack at - Photo by Bob Smith an old ceiling. Bus drivers' charges dismissed A state trial examiner has dismissed charges of unfair labor practices fIled earlier this year against the University by Local 1585 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). The charges stemmed from a dispute that culminated in a four - day work stoppage by campus bus drivers last February when all the drivers called in sick. In a March 10 hearing, it was charged that MSU had not "conferred in good faith" regarding a request for upgrading bus drivers' cIassiftcations. The charges also alleged that the University had "refused. to even negotiate as regards such upgrading." Local 1585 and MSU signed their most recent agreement last fall. The pact expires June 30, 1970, although wage adjustments are to be negotiated by this July 1. That last contract contained a letter of understanding in which both'parties ' agreed to meet to "study and discuss feasible changes in classifications as between different pay grade levels in order to correct possible inequities." mind." But Bixler pointed out that the Pu blic Employment R~lations Act "does not compel either party to 'agree to a proposal or require the making of a concession." * * * JOSPEH B. BIXLER, trial examiner for the Michigan Employment Relations Commission, said that while MSU had regarding refused classifications of the bus drivers, the ~niversity had "expressed willingness to !iIter any of the job classllcations, if agreement was reached that an inequity existed as a result of the discussions." negotiate to He reported that while making concessions on the part of the employer "readily indicates bargaining with an intention to reach an agreement," lack, of any such concessions "does not justify the the conclusion bargaining did not satisfy the statutory requirement." that Bixler said he found no evidence that MSU did not intend to reach an agreement or to, alter job classllcations if inequities were revealed. He also said that the Union seemed to rely on the fact "that the employer (MSU) did not agree that tnere ~re any the inequities and would not alter thus allegedly classifications, approaching bargairiing with a closed Faculty Club Mordechai Kreinin, professor of economics, will outline "A Proposal for University Involvement in Inner City Education" at today's'meeting of the Faculty Club. The meeting begins at 12 noon in the third - floor parlors of the Union. MSU Faculty News, June 30, 1970 The case against departmental sovereignty: 'Confidence Crisis' examines self-service By GENE RIEfFORS Editor, Faculty News ''The department is botr the refuge and support of the professor. (It) provides his working space: An office, an adjacent classroom or seminar, and (for the scientist) a well - equipped laboratory ... The professor 'looks to the university for a parking place, although he believes that if universities are well - run each department would have its own facilities surrounded by parking places restricted to the departmental staff. The department exists to nurture the professor, and the university exists primarily to nurture thedqmtnX!ut .. '" For all its seeming cynicism, the preceding description nonetheless reflects the views of " too many university professors who fo cus almost exclusively on their own instruction and research, and show little interest and considerable contempt for the activities of the deans and of central administration." So say three researchers - two of them at Michigan State - in a newly published book that examines "that bastion of academic freedom," the university department. The book is "The Confidence Crisis," published in April by Jossey-Bass, Inc., of San Francisco. . Its authors are Paul L. Dressel, professor, assistant provost and director of institutional research at MSU; Philip M. Marcus, associate professor of sociology and coordinator of the Urban Survey Research Unit on the campus; and F. Craig Johnson, formerly in the Office of Institutional Research here and now a instruction are likely to iden tify with the university, while f aculty in departments placing more p riority o n research and graduate inst ructio n ten d to identify more closely with their departments and t heir disciplines. Faculty in English and hist o ry ran k~d un dergraduate instruction higher than aid those in mathematiCS and psychology the researchers note. Chemistry and mathematics faculty tend to rank basic research high in priority; faculty in management and English rated it lower. "These flndings are not surprising," they say , "but they do demonstrate empirically the conflicting priorities which appear in the modern university. Each discipline pulls in its own direction and compromises have to be made while overall policy issues remain unresolved." * * * THE QUESndN of departmental autonomy prompted varied responses from faculty in the survey. Some strongly en dOIsed the idea, and one respondent said: "The u niversity as an entity is less important than the departments severally." Others viewed such autonomy with concern. Replied one person: "The problem arises because of Parkinson's law, because department chairmen are almost inherently empire builders, and because higher authorities don't have the breadth, wisdom and guts to do theIr jobs of keeping unjustifiable expansions under control." - The three researchers pOint out additional hazards resulting from departmental autonomy, particularly when visible accountability is absent. They reported that when autonomy is seen as "license to do whatever an institution or department desires . .. negotiations based on mutual confidence degenerate into a confidence game in which higher education loses, even when an instituE-~ n or department appears momentarily to win." _ They add that in SOme cases " one of the best things that can happen to a University is a period without Significant budgetary increase or even an actual cutback," since such circumstances force administrators t6 review imd possibly cut back existing programs, and they make faculty, "tllOugh·,reluctantly, face up to the necessity of reassessment." * * * THE THREE authors suggest that reforms are needed to contain some of the uncontrolled growth among departments. Control is required, they said, "so that their (department's) resources are allocated and used in accord with priorities set for the university by the,.university in cooperation ~ith those who support it." ' "i.:)~ . ,~.~ : Part of their solution is development of a management .i!lfo.mtaY .. o.~ ·~~t~m to insure that allocation of resources is based on "careful consideration'(;of programs acknowledged to be appropriate to the university.' ·~ . rl!'! :!co:: . PHILIP MARCUS PAUL DRESSEL professor in instructional research and service at Florida State University. The book reports on a study the three authors conducted at 15 universities (excluding MSU), where they examined each institution's mathematics history, psychology, chemistry, English, management and electrical engineering departments. In addition to assessing the current state of the university department and reactions' to it, the three researchers offer suggested guides for departmental self-evaluations and provide proposals for departmental reforms. They contend that reforms are needed because departmental autonomy in many cases has become detrimental to the university as a whole. * * * BASED ON VISITS to the 15 campuses where they interviewed faculty and administrators, Dressel, Johnson and Marcus report general confirmation of two hypotheses: Departments with high national standlng (in terms of research and Ph.D. production) are more informal in their administration than are departments with less national stature; the highest - standing departments are less involved in local institutional matters and tend to ignore institutional practices. They also say that faculty in departments emphasizing undergraduate AAUP members elect leaders; officers assume duties this week The newly elected officers of t he MSU Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) are: labor and - Si gmu nd Nosow, Presiden t professor of industrial relations; vice president - Albert P. Linnell, professor of astronomy; secretary - W. Fred Graham, associate professor, Justin Morrill College; treasurer -Frank J. Blatt, professor of physics. AAUP Council members are: Tenured ranks - ~mes L. Dye, professor of chemistry; Lester Manderscheid, professor of agricultural econolT'i.::s; industrial labor and Jack Stieber, professor of economics relations; and - Demus Burkh, nontenured ranks assistant professor of music; Julia Falk, assistant professor oflinguistics; Charles R. Peebles, assistant professor of natural science; any rank -James B. Hamilton, assistant professor of chemistry; George A. Hough, associate professor of journalism; and Dennis P. Nyquist, associate professor of electrical eneineering and systems science. The officers will begin their terms July 1. They also suggest improved methods and systems of budgetmg systems, input - output analyses and general introduction of scientific management into the universities: "It is to be expected that departments and faculties will strongly resist any r{(organization or any system which permits review and control of their activities," the authors observed, "and .administrators will be powerless to effect such alterations until public pressure makes continuing support-contingent upon full rev:elation and upon adherence to priorities on which that support is predic~ted." - . Dressel-veteran chronicler of u.s. higher education The senior author of "The Confidence Crisis," Paul L. Dressel, is a veteran observer of higher education who has conducted several national studies in the field. He assumes the presidency this week of the American Association of Higher Education. Dressel continued foresees development of alternative structures to such as institutes, the department - centers, residential colleges and colleges devoted to themes. At the same time, he says, it is unlikely that .any breakdown of the departments will occur. "I'd like to see the universities and their departments evaluated by looking at research - basic and applied - and at both they provide instruction graduate and undergraduate," he says. "There should be regular re-evaluations, with changes made when necessary." Dressel says these needs are now being met to some degree at Michigan State. He contends that higher education is undergoing a loss of public confidence because, in some cases, the universities "in the name of academic freedom and other banners" have moved in directions that serve themselves instead of society at large." In the conclusion of their book, Dressel and his co-authors note that "there are faculty members, chairmen, deans and others who recognize the need (for reform and realignment of priorities)." and' without they They cited pressures '.,for refoIm from the both within conclude: universities. And that these concerns and "Assuming and can pressures coalesced concentrated on the main issues - the reordering of priorities and better allocation of resources to achieve them rather than on peripheral changes of - minor significance, reform may be closer than it appears." be M§U Faculty New§ Editor: Gene Rietfofs Interim Associate Editor: Deborah Krell Editorial Office: 296-G Hannah Administration Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48823, Phone 355-2285. Published weekly during the academic year by the Department of Information Services. Second-class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. 48823. Denison: Universities face 'amazing complex' of adversity MSU FacUltY Ne~:' June ~(t1970 field during World War II and, for 12 years, a newspaper reporter and editor. It is the newspaper that has held a continuing attraction to Denison, even though circumstances dictated a career in higher education and university relations. "I didn't know what 1 was getting into Jim Denison repeats a story he heard not long ago, based supposedly on an incident at a small, Midwestern church college. A visitor to the college asked his host about faculty government at the school. The host answered that there was neither an academic council nor a senate that the faculty didn't even meet - officially, and the president had almost absolute power to govern. ' "But how can you operate, with the president in complete control?" the surprised visitor asked. "Well, we go to chapel every so often," his host replied, "and pray that the president knows what the hell he's doing." involved with * * * TO JAMES H. DENISON, a man in tima tely the administration of this University during his more than ' 20 years as assistant to former President John A. Hannah, :&at story emphasizes fundamental changes now taking place in gC)vernance as well as in nearly every other facet of American higher education. the Despite the growth of administration as profession, Denison predicts that increasingly faculty will become involved in campus governance, mainly because student concerns are turning from administrative matters the that directly affect academic areas faculty. to "Faculty members are getting pulled into these jobs," he observes, "and they're finding that it isn't quite as easy to settle student problems as it once may have seemed from the sidelines." * * * SHORTLY AFTER John Hannah take over as retired last year for administrator of International Development, Denison stepped down as presidential assistant and director of university relations to become a presidential consultant. to the Agency Beginning tomorrow (July 1), he will take a year's leave of absence before' returning next July 1 to spend his final year at MSU prior to official retirement. joined Michigan State in 1947, leaving his post as adminstrative assistant to Gov. Harry Kelley. Earlier he had been information officer for the Michigan War Council, an army officer Denison JAMES H. DENISON when 1 took the job here," he says, "but I'm glad 1 did." * * * ALTHOUGH IDGHER education has enjoyed some "golden years" of public itself in an "amazing complex of adverse Circumstances;" Denison says. it now finds -- s'up.PQrt, segment of "Universities are confronted with the very legitimate demands that they serve growing aspirations and ambitions of a wider the population. Working against them is the fact that more and more agencies are being created to meet all the demands of society, and the universities are forced to compete for support and money." Many persons see higher education as beneficial only to the students who get to college, he observes. This viewpoint prevails even though society's needs are greater than they ever were, and it is therefore vitally important for more people to attend college. "We haven't ever really succeeded in convincing the public that the primary service of higher education is not to the student, but to society as a whole," he contends. "A study several years ago showed that ' the most economically beneficial years in school - beneficial to the individual - are in the early elementary grades. Yet we willingly pay for the tust 12 years of education and then when the' major SOCiety would become beneficiary individual's for an education, we tell the individual that he's on his own. We only provide special help for groups who can prove special needs." He recalls that at one time Michigan "We haven't ever really succeeded in convincing the public that the primary service of higher education is not to the student, but to society as a whole. " residents attending this University paid $47 a term, all of which was for special fees and assessments, none of which was for tuition. But the state luis since become less willing to pay for an individual's higher education, Denison said, and the result increasingly is anomalous: An enlightened public (in n~mbers) that is becoming less supportive of higher education. "This is a basic in our flaw educational system." * * * DENISON says that when he came to the campus 23 years ago, he and his wife were struck by the assurance that at the end of his career he would get a whole year off. "We have jokingly said through the years that we'd go around the world when that year off came." And that's what he hopes to do in a few months. When he returns to the campus next summer, Denison will resume work on the history of MSU during the 1940s the and 1950s, University's most dramatic growth - the time when Jim Denison "didn't know what! was getting into." the period of 22 faculty retirees honored This year's list of faculty retirees includes 22 tenure at receiving persons whose average Michigan State is more than 25 years. recognition The retirees include: - story). James H. Denison (see related , - Stanley Ball of Leland, who joined the Cooperative Extension Service in 1941 who served in Leelanau County for 20 years. - Alfred P. Ballweg of Caro, an extension agent for Tuscola County since 1951. - Erwin J. Benne, professor of biochemistry who joined the faculty in 1938 as a research ' assistant in soil chemistry. - William C. Butts of Reed City, who joined the extension service in 1945 and has been county extension director in Osceola County for 17 years. - Clyde W. Cairy, a member of the retires as faculty since 1937 who professor of pharmacology. - Miss Lucille E. Dailey, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation who joined the faculty as an instructor in 1944. - Richard A. Fennell, professor of zoology, who began here' as an instructor in 1936. - Leo " Haak, professor of social sCience who joined the faculty in 1944 living as head of departIpent (then part of the basic college). the effective - Ray L. Janes, extension professor of entomology and a faculty member since 1946. Johnson - George M. (now of Honolulu, Hawaii), a professor of education since 1960. He is former vice chancellor of the University of Nigeria. _ -iHarry H,. Kimber, a faculty member since 1932 and until recently professor and chairman of religion. - Maurice G. Larian, professor of chemical engineering who joined the faculty in 1936. - Verdun E. Leichty, professor of English who started here in 1939 as an instructor. - Cle!llma Lenehan of Standish, who retires as area home economist for Arenac, Ogemaw and Iosco Counties after 16 years. - Donald K. Marshall, associate professor of philosophy and a faculty member since 1950. - Arthur Mauch, faculty member since 1945 and retiring as professor of agricultural economics. - Howard F. McColly, professor of agricultural economics who joined the faculty in 1949. - Mabel O. Miles, assistant professor , of music and here since '1930 when she became an extension worker in music. - James B. Stiefel, associate professor of physiology and a member of the faculty since 1934. iD -Orion Ulrey, who started at MSU 1929 as a special field assistant in economics for the experiment station and who retires as an associate professor of agricultural economics. - Randolph W. Webster, professor of health, physical education and recreation and a faculty member since- 1946. Tuesday, June 30 Wednesday, July 1 11 a.m. (AM) BOO K BEAT. Thursday, July 2 9 p.m. (FM) JAZZ HORIZONS. Friday, July 3 , -' 10:30 a.m. (AM) THE GOON SHOW. Sunday, July 5 p.m. 2 ORCHESTRA. (AM-FM) CLEVELAND Monday, July 6 & p.m. (FM) OPERA. "Norma." , Tuesday, July 7 1 p.m. (AM) LECTURE - DISCUSSION. Goerge W. Beadle. Wednesday, July 8 11 a.m. (AM) BOOK BEAT. With Robert Townsend, author of "Up the Organization." 8 p.m. (FM) BBC WORLD THEATRE. "The Shoemaker's Holiday." Thursday , July 9 11 : 45 a.m. (AM) MEN AND MOLECULES. 1 p.m. (AM) LECTURE - DISCUSSION. George Grant. 9 p.m. (FM) JAZZ HORIZONS. Friday, July 10 10:30 a.m. (AM) THE GOON SHOW. 11 CHICAGO. Political violence. (AM) CONVERSATIONS AT a .m. Saturday, July 11 10 a.m. (AM) IT'S A NICE PLACE TO VISIT BUT •.. 11 :45 a.m. (FM) RECENT ACQUISITIONS. 2 p.m. (AM) ALBUM JAZZ. p.m. 2 Hoffmann." 7 'p.m. (FM) LISTENERS'S CHOICE. (FM) OPERA. "The Tales of Sunday, July 12 (AM-FM) CLEVELAND p.m. 2 ORCHESTRA. 7 p.m. (FM) "LULLABY OF DEATH" Drug addiction. Monday, July 13 1 p.m. (AM) LECTURE - DISCUSSION. The late Robert Kennedy, Oscar Lewis, Kenneth ~1ar)c. ,8 p.m. (FM) OPERA. "Tosca." I J II : Wednesday, July 1 12 Noon THE FORSYTE SAGA Friday, July 3 12 Noon NET JOURNAL. Appraisal of the , 'VJI,jt¢ 'J)lations. 1 p.m. SONIA SINGS. 7 p.m. ON BEING BLACK 1,1 " 't' tf.fti'.ttiE'':'o'R:s'i1'E SA G"". ' " c' _1,>-:~,p1~.t\vOUR RIGHT TO SAY IT. 2:30 p.m. SOUL! 3:30 p.m. NET FESTIVAL. Florence since its November 1966 flood. 4:30 p.m. NET JOURNAL. Spanish Civil War and its aftermath. _ 10 p.m. EVENING AT POPS. Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait" 11 p.m. NET PLAYHOUSE. "Naked Island," Australian prisoners in Japanese war camp. (80 minutes) MOnday, Jlily 6 ' - '7." p.~, ;NET- ,JJI!.Zl-. -Gomettist ,Thad lones, drummer Mel LeWis. Tuesday, July 7 1 p.m. PORTRAIT IN • •• Photographer David Parker of Ohio State University. 7 AMERICAN INDIAN. p.m. SILENT HERITAGE: THE Thursday, July 9 7 p.m. HERE, THERE AND EVERYWHERE. Mid - Michigan summer events on location. Saturday, July 11 a;m. SILEN"r HERiTAGE: THE 11 AMERICAN INDIAN. 12 Noon THE SHOW. Folk artists Pete Seeger and OScar Brand. Sunday,July 12 1 p.m. THE FORSYTE SAGA. 3: 30 p.m. NET FESTIVAL. Paris of yesterday and today, narrated by Charles Boyer. 4:30 p.m. BLACK JOURNAL. Black leaders discuss armed clashes between the police and the Black Panth~rs. 10 p.m; EVENING AT POPS. Pianist Peter Nero joins conductor Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops. 11 p.~. NET PLAYHOUSE. "The Sea Gull," Hours expanded The Office of the Comptroller has announced that the divisions listed below will remain open during the noon hour (12 - 1 p.m.) Monday through Friday, effective July l. Divisions located on the fust floor of the Administration Building: Student fees and scholarship payments Room 146 ,Student, faculty and staff identification cards Room 142 Accounts Receivable Room 140 Divisions located on the third floor of the Administration Building: Staff Benefits Room 344 Payroll Room 350 Bookkeeping Room 360 Voucher audit Room 366 These officers will, therefore, be open from 8 a.rn. until 5 p.m., noon hour inclusive, The cashier's division Will continue to be open from 8:15 a.m. until 4:15 p.m. MSU Faculty News, June 30, 1970 Senate rejects faculty bylaw changes The still umesolved question of academic in is headed back to the student participation government Academic Council. Faculty bylaw have amendments that implemented would recommendations from the much - debated McKee Report were rejected deciSively by the Academic Senate at its June 3 -'meeting. The vote was 111 for and 427 against a motion that would have given students voting membership the Academic Council and on on Council standing committees. Instead, the Senate approved a resolution which endorsed its "objective in of great·:~ student but which academic referred the bylaw revisions back to the Council and clarification. reconsideration governance" involvement for to its complete The resolution was moved by Charles C. Killingsworth, University professor of labor and industrial relations and a consistent foe of portions of the McKee Report. It requested that the Council try bylaw recommendations in time for this fall's Senate meeting; that, in the interim, all departments, colleges schools continue planning along "the general lines present proposals;" and that Jan. 1, 1971, be for accepted implementing plans for greater student involvement. target date indicated and the the by as Killingsworth had earlier produced a four - page document in which he reaffirmed his the prospects of an elected faculty minority in the proposed Academic Council makeup, of students voting on such things as faculty hiring, tenure, salaries, concerns over promotion and flring, and of a "student - dominated" group (the proposed Faculty - Student Affairs Committee) having ~'veto power over certain actions of the Academic Council or the Board of Trustees." About a half - dozen faculty members spoke in opposition to the propo~d changes. A smaller group joined James McKee, professor of SOciology and chairman of the committee that wrote the report, in supporting the revised bylaws. the said issue was One proponent of the bylaw changes, Professor of Communication Gerald Miller, "the attitudinal stance that faculty will take toward students." To reject the changes, he said, would imply that faculty hold students in a labor - management view - as adversaries. * * * IN OTHER action, the Senate: - Rejected (by a vote of 289-255) ,a bylaw amendment that would have opened Senate meetings to spectators. Present bylaws (4.3.3.2) state that meetings are closed to non-members, except by invitation. - Approved an amendment renaming the faculty affairs committee the University Committee o,n ' Faculty Compensation and Academic Budget, and outlining new duties for it. _ the faculty - Approved bylaws relating to powers of tenure committee (5.4.4.6 and 5.4.4.7). The new bylaws state that the committee's decisions on tenure rule interpretations and cases of deviation from the rules shall be binding on the administration and the faculty member the administration acts contrary to the involved. case In Institute takes 'holistic' view of environmental concerns Kellogg, administrative assistant to Gov. William G. Milliken; August Scholle, president of the Michigan AFL-CIO; and William G. Hubbard, former dean of medicine at the University of Michigan and now a vice president of Upjohn Co. San Clemente said that the institute involve upgrading emphasizes nonprofessionals environmental quality. the need in to "The facile assumption that industry is the, prime culprit for environmental deterioration conveniently overlooks the his contribution multiplied millions of times," he said. consumer average and "It is a problem response individidual everyone's stewardship." that and involves requires committee's decision in a tenure matter, the case shall be reported to the Academic Council. - Referred back to the Council bylaw amendments establishing a University Committee on Public Safety. - Heard the report from John A. Fuzak, associate dean of education, on the Athletic Council. Fuzak reported intercollegiate athletics that MSU's difficulties" program "faces great regarding its fmancial well - being. He noted that the program has the problem of rising costs in the face of generally stable revenues from ticket sales. In a related matter, President Wharton announced three new members of the Athletic Council: Leo V. Nothstine; professor of civil engineering; Fred Vescolani, professor of education; John W. Zimmer, assistant dean of natural science. M ore faculty grants listed Here is the remainder of the list of faculty who received gifts and grants that were accepted by the Board of Trustees in May. The initial listing of May gifts and grants appeared in the June 2 Faculty News. J.B. Hook, Other faculty members awarded research grants were: T. M. Brody, pharmacology, $10,000 from Michigan Heart Association for correlation of cardiac activated ATPase activity of cardiac glycoside induced intropic stimulation; pharmacology, $7,500 from Michigan Heart Association for hemodynamics and metabolic effects of glucagon J.H. McNeill, shock; pharmacology, $9,716 from Michigan Heart Association for interaction between certain drugs and adrenergic amines on the heart; norephinephrine releasing action of certain drugs; Ching - chung Chou, physiology, $8,000 from Michigan Heart Association for mechanism of coronary vasodilation caused by adrenergic stimulation. in Also receiving grants are: R.M. Daugherty Jr., physiology, $10,000 from MiChigan Heart Association for effects of local vasodilators and systemic vasopressors and blood volume expansion on canine forelimb collateral blood flow folliwng arterial occlusion; G.J. Grega, physiology, $9,000 from Michigan Heart Association for skin and skeletal muscle vascular responses in curculatory Shock; F. J. Haddy, physiology, $9,500 from Michigan Heart Association for peripheral vascular responses in human essential hypertension; from P.O. Fromm, physiology, $12,288 Federal Water Control Administration to study toxic action of water soluble pollutants on freshwater fish; J.M. Schwinghamer, physiology, $8,500 from Michigan Heart Association study to responses during peripheral hypothermia; and Barriett Rosenberg, biophysics, $13,000 nom Department of the Navy to study electrical conductivity of biological molecules in the solid state. circulatory Pollution Other research grants for faculty include: E.J. KIos, botany and plant pathology, $2,000 from Eli Lilly and Co. to study fungicidal activity of EL273; E.J. Klos, $1,250 from Pennwalt Corp. to determine fungicidal activity of 1,2-bis benzene and TD 5-56; G.l. Karabatsos; chemistry, $36,328 from NIH for investigations in stereo - chemistry; S.R. Crouch, chemistry, $34,000 from NSF for fast kinetic studies of analytical sytems; Eugene LeGoff, chemistry, $29,000 from NSF to study synthesis of anne1lated four - membered ring hydrocarbons; Richard Nicholson, chemistry $16,300 from NSF for investigations of organic electrode processes. Additonal grants are: R.H. Schwendeman, chemistry, $32,900 from NSF for studies of internal torsion by microwave spectroscopy; Robert Ruppel, entomology, $2,000 from Farmers and Manufacturing Beet Sugar Association for investigations of nematode problems; Arthur Wells, entomology, $500 from Miller Chemical and Fertilizer Corp. for evaluation of exprimental insecticides; and l.W. Butcher, A.J. Howitt, R.F. Ruppel, and A.L. Wells, entomology, $3,100 from Niagara Chemical to study chemical control of insects. The following were also awarded research grants: A.J. Howitt, R.F. Ruppel, and 'A.L. Wells, entomology, $2,000 from Union Carbide Corp. for research on control of insect pests; E.M. Palmer, mathematics, $11,200 frpm NSF for graphical enumeration and its applications; C.S. Thornton, zoology, $27,268 from NIH to study trophic couplings of aquatic populations; C.H. Cherryhohnes and Alfred ArkJey, political science,$8,396.35 from U.S. Office of Education to study relationship of factors of organizational climates of low socio - economic status elemen tary schools to political orientations of 5th grade students; F.A. PiIUler and Shlomo Swirski, political science, $9,893 from U.S. Office of Education to study changes in American college students' perceptions of their role in society, 1929-1969; T.L. COIUler, sociology, $27,266 to study interaction in task - focused small groups. from NIH Also testing recieving garnts: B.E. Walker, anatomy, $32,968 from NIH to investigate factors involved in normal development of palate in mice, rats and rabbits and deviations from this induced by environmental factors; Harold Sadoff, microbiology lInq pup1i9 health, $52,284 from NIH to support training of 10 graduates and 1 postdoctoral student; G.R. Carter, microbiology and public health, $600 from Armour Pharmaceutical Co. for a for Armour project serum p harmaceu ticals; Leland Velicer, microbiology and public health, $6,000 from Anna Fuller Furtd to study proteins in cells with cancer - related viruses; V.H. MaIlman, microbiology and public health, $750 from Michigan TB and Respiratory Disease Association for specificity of tuberculo - protein obtained by disc electrophoresis; and W.O. Brinker, small animal surgery and medicine, $21,780 from the Sampson Corp. for comparative study of various methods of fracture fixation for long bones, mandible and pelvis of the dog. Also included are grants for four NSF institutes and conferences in the Science and Mathematics Teaching Center: $35,050 to Lawrence Krupka and Andrew McCIaiy for summer courses on science, technology and human values; $14,781 to H. B. Stonehouse for an in-service earth science institute for secondary school teachers; $14,874 to John Wagner for a summer mathematics conference for elementary educators; and $10,147 to Laurne Woodby for an in-service mathematics institute for secondary teachers. Trying to make changes • • • (Continued from page 1) "great cooperation" from MSU's Off Campus Housing office, the Listening Ear and Michigan Clergy for Problem Pregnancy Counseling. is Their biggest obstacle lack of money - money to "rehabilitate" the physical setting of The Raft, keep it in operation, and provide food and lodging for the runaways who decide to stay. Miss Kehde said they have received donations from the New Community, All Saints Episcopal Church and from individuals in the community. Misses Kehde and Levbarg estimate they~ll need $1,000 a month to keep The Raft in operation with 25 runaways living there. someone to sponsor our phone," Miss Levbarg said. Besides money, The Raft needs linen, blankets, pillows, towels, and "everything you need to set up a household," Miss Levbarg said. * * * THE RAFT is not designed to give runaways an escape route or a chance to ignore their problems. "We intend to help them initiate help for themselves," Miss Kehde said. When a runaway arrives at The Raft, he has a "rap session" with the volunteer on duty. The runaway must decide whether he's going to stay and get help for his problem. "What we'd really be grateful for is If he makes the decision to stay and work with The Raft personnel on what's bothering him, The Raft then contacts his parents, guardian or whoever is responsible for him to get permission for him to stay. . , "If he wants to stay, he's got to work on his problems," Miss Kehde said. "But we give him all the alternatives." Misses Kehde and Levbarg said they expect most of the runaways to be white, middle - class and between the ages of 12 and 16. They hope to do a lot of family counseling, but "we'll have to wait and see what direction this will take," Miss Levbarg said. "We've already had parents come here looking for their kids," Miss Kehde said. A three-day look at all forms of from the air environmental quality - and water to family and urban life - is underway this week at Kellogg Center. The event is "Environmental Quality: Now or Never," an institute that began Monday and continues today and Wednesday. Charles L. San Clemente, professor of microbiology and public health who is the institute's chief planner, said the session is a holistic approach to the environmental crises, dealing with man's physical his and surroundings ' relatiOnships with other humans. San Clemente said that MSU . faculty and summer students are especially invited to attend the institute. Today's session began at 8:45 a.m. with a panel on environmental problems ~d-4nswers, chaired by Lawrence R. -Krupka., associate professor of natural science. This afternoon's program deals with waste treatment innovations. Chairman of the session is Philipp Gerhardt, professor and chairman of microbiology and public health. S.H. Wittwer, the experiment station, will speak at a banquet this evening. director of Wednesday morning's session, on "multiple complexities," will be chaired by Niles R. Kevern, associate professor of flsheries and wildlife. An afternoon program on "positive responses" will be chaired by Ralph A. MacMullan, director of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. MSU faculty from 16 departments are participating in the institute. Visiting partiCipants include Gabor Strasser, Office of Science and Technology, Washington, D.C.; James