+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Front Matter

Front Matter

Date post: 15-Jan-2017
Category:
Upload: duongkiet
View: 215 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
6
Front Matter Source: AAUP Bulletin, Vol. 61, No. 3 (Oct., 1975) Published by: American Association of University Professors Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40224859 . Accessed: 13/06/2014 20:23 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . American Association of University Professors is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to AAUP Bulletin. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 62.122.73.86 on Fri, 13 Jun 2014 20:23:11 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Transcript
Page 1: Front Matter

Front MatterSource: AAUP Bulletin, Vol. 61, No. 3 (Oct., 1975)Published by: American Association of University ProfessorsStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40224859 .

Accessed: 13/06/2014 20:23

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

American Association of University Professors is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extendaccess to AAUP Bulletin.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 62.122.73.86 on Fri, 13 Jun 2014 20:23:11 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Front Matter

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^1 AUTUMN ISSUE • OCTOBER 1975

^M ^^H^^^^H BARBARA BERGMANN and MYLES MAXFIELD

^H ^^^^J^^^^^^H on salaries of women faculty

^B j^^^^^^^^H STEPHEN P. DRESCH

^H ^^H^^^^^^H on enrollment and demographic trends

^B H^^^^^^^l ROBERT WULIGER

^V ^^^^^^^^^^H on lta''an universities

^^^^^^^^^^^kS^H Other articles, reviews, and poetry

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H a publication of

KjS^K^^^^^^^^^^^^H the American Association of University Professors

This content downloaded from 62.122.73.86 on Fri, 13 Jun 2014 20:23:11 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 3: Front Matter

ANNOUNCEMENTS AND REMINDERS

LEGAL DEFENSE FUND

The Association welcomes contributions to the newly established Legal Defense Fund. The Fund will assist in financing litigation involving faculty members on issues which have broad application to faculty employment. Contributions should be addressed to the General Secretary.

PUBLIC MEMBERSHIP

By vote of the Sixty-first Annual Meeting the category of Public membership was established. All persons who are not otherwise eligible for Association membership will be accepted in this new category. Public membership should prove especially attractive to college and university administrators - who would be eligible for Associate membership if they had earlier held Active membership - and chapters are encouraged to extend invitations to administrators at their institutions, as well as to other interested persons. Public members receive Association

publications, and the annual dues are $15. Application forms are available from the

Washington Office.

THE ANNUAL SURVEY OF FACULTY COMPENSATION

The Annual Survey of Faculty Compensation conducted by the Association's Committee Z on the Economic Status of the Profession is under way, and the report will appear in the summer issue of the Bulletin. The format this year will be the same as for 1974-75 when the

questionnaire was modified so that salary data and tenure status could be reported by rank and by sex. Almost ninety percent of institutions represented in last year's survey provided data broken down by sex. The continuing success of the survey depends on the help and cooperation of the participating institutions, and we hope that chapter representatives will contact their appropriate administrative officers to encourage participation. Any questions concerning the survey should be directed to the survey director, Maryse Eymonerie, at the

Washington Office.

NEW CHAPTER OFFICERS?

Chapter secretaries are requested to notify the Washington Office promptly of any changes in

chapter officers.

CHAPTER BULLETIN SUBSCRIPTIONS

Chapters are reminded that they may enter Bulletin subscriptions in the names of ad- ministrative officers and board members at a special rate. The cost of each subscription is only $1.25 a year.

PUBLICATIONS AVAILABLE

The following publications are available from the Washington Office, Suite 500, One Dupont Circle, Washington, D. C. 20036: Policy Documents and Reports, $1.50 for members, $3.00 for nonmembers; Faculty Tenure, A Report and Recommendations by the Commission on Academic Tenure in Higher Education (paper), $2.50 for members, $5.00 for nonmembers. A Primer on Collective Bargaining for College and University Faculty, $3.50 for members, $6.00 for non- members.

EDITORIAL ADDRESS

Manuscripts submitted to the Bulletin should be sent to the Editor at the Washington Office. The Bulletin assumes no responsibility for either the acknowledgment or return of

manuscripts not accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed return envelope. The process of review will be facilitated if prospective contributors provide a second copy along with the rib- bon copy of their manuscript. The Bulletin will not consider manuscripts in xeroxed or mimeographed form. At least one of the copies must be the ribbon copy.

This content downloaded from 62.122.73.86 on Fri, 13 Jun 2014 20:23:11 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 4: Front Matter

^ AAUP ^^^ "^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ Published by

^ ^^^ "^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ American Association WHmY^^^^^z^^^^^^^m

of University Professors KftMBLflMjyLiiriMUJLfli October, 1975, Vol. 61, No. S

ORGANIZATION AND 226 Association Officers, Staff, and Council INFORMATION 227 Censured Administrations

228 Association Membership 229 The Board of Regents of the University of Texas

System - A Crisis of Confidence 230 A Change of Editorship 231 Edward C. Kirkland, Twenty-first President of the

Association Mark H. Ingraham

ARTICLES, REVIEWS AND 232 A Henry james Memory VERSE Hargis Westerfield

233 Italian Universities and the Social Crisis Robert Wuliger

238 Moonlighting Gordon Clark

239 Educational Saturation: A Demographic- Economic Model Stephen P. Dresch

247 Homage to Certain Minnesota Men, ca. 1947-1958 AD.

Leland D. Peterson 248 The University Then and Now (review article)

Ronald M. Johnson 251 Marking Time and Tenure in Manitoba, March 2,

1974 James Keller

252 Antibias Regulation of Universities: A Biased View? (review article) Phyllis latlin Boring

255 Other reviews Ann Tukey Harrison, Ritchie P. Lowry, John E. Rexine

262 How To Analyze the Fairness of Faculty Women's Salaries on Your Own Campus Barbara R. Bergmann and Myles Maxfield, Jr.

266 To the Sensual Ear T. Alan Broughton

269 In the Land of the Baptized Indians Suhail ihn-Salim Hanna

273 "Blew, Bryght, Clere Was the Ayre" Sara deFord

214 Unsolicited Letters: A Do- It- Yourself Prescription for Coping with the Job Shortage When You Are a Member of the Ph.D. Surplus Robert E. Grinder

REPORTS 279 Record of Council Meeting

Editor- Lawrence S. Poston, III, University of Nebraska Associate Editors- Jordan E. Kurland Managing Editor- Sarah G. Womack Tom J. Truss, Jr. Assistant Editor- Dixie Lee

© 1975, American Association of University Professors. Advertising: Advertising rates are available on request from Publisher Services, Inc., 621 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314. Publications Office: Inquiries concerning subscriptions, individual copies, or offprints should be sent to the Publications Office, AAUP Bulletin, Suite 500, One Dupont Circle, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036, Tel. 202-466-8050. Indexed by CURRENT CONTENTS, EDUCATION and HISTORICAL ABSTRACTS and/or AMERICA: HISTORY AND LIFE. Printed by William Byrd Press. Issued four times a year: Spring (April), Summer (August), Autumn (October), and Winter (December). Sub- scription price (due and payable in advance) is $10.00 a year, postage free. Single copies, $3.00. Foreign subscriptions including Canada are $11.00 a year. Second-class postage paid at Washington, D. C. and at additional mailing offices.

This content downloaded from 62.122.73.86 on Fri, 13 Jun 2014 20:23:11 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 5: Front Matter

ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, STAFF AND COUNCIL OFFICERS William W. Van Alstyne (Law), President Duke University

Winton U. Solberc. (History), First Vice- President University of Illinois, Urbana Alice S. Rossi (Sociology), Second Vice- President University of Massachusetts Richard P. Adams (English), Secretary-Treasurer Tulane University

GENERAL SECRETARY Joseph Duffey (Urban Studies) Washington Office

GENERAL COUNSEL John A. C. Hetherington (Law), General Counsel University of Virginia Matthew W. Finkin (Law), Associate General Counsel Southern Methodist University

WASHINGTON OFFICE Jordan E. Kurland (History and Russian) Associate General Secretary Daniel Adler (Psychology) Associate Secretary Gerie B. Bledsoe (History) Associate Secretary Maryse Eymonerie (Statistics) Associate Secretary and Survey Director Margaret C. Love (History) Associate Secretary Woodley B. Osborne (Law) Associate Counsel and Director of Collective Bargaining Carolyn I. Polowy (Law) Associate Secretary and Associate Counsel Joseph E. Schwartz (Political Science) Associate Secretary for Program Alfred D. Sumberg (History) Associate Secretary James G. Trulove (Communications) Associate Secretary and Information Officer Tom J. Truss, Jr. (English) Associate Secretary William B. Woolf (Mathematics) Associate Secretary and Director, Administration Lesley Lee Zimic (Spanish) Associate Secretary

WESTERN REGION Richard H. Peairs (Psychology) Director and Associate Secretary Charles J. McClain, Jr. (History and Law) Associate Secretary and Assistant Counsel

NORTHEAST REGION Martin Lapidus (American Studies) Director and Associate Secretary Steven Ney (Law) Associate Secretary and Assistant Counsel

COUNCIL MEMBERS Joost A. Busincer (Meteorology) University of Washington 1973-1976 Donald C. Cell (Economics) Cornell College

Frederick Ferre (Philosophy) Dickinson College George K. Horton (Physics) Rutgers University Muriel Latham-Pfeifer (English) University of Albuquerque George O. Marshall, Jr. (English) University of Georgia Genevieve Snider (Mathematics) Belleville Area College Edward A. Stettner (Political Science) Wellesley College Roger Wines (History) Fordham University

1974-1977 Sue N. Atkinson (Economics) University of Bridgeport Gwenneth L. Browne (Philosophy) University of the Pacific R. A. Eubanks (Civil Engineering) University of Illinois, Urbana John C. Massmann (History) Saint Cloud State College John Peyton Morris (Law) Arizona State University Paul A. Rathburn (English) University of Notre Dame Leonard L. Ross (Anatomy) Medical College of Pennsylvania Abraham D. Sofaer (Law) Columbia University Sandra W. Thornton (Political Science) Georgia Institute of Technology Shien-Biau Woo (Physics) University of Delaware

1975-78 Gordon Brewster Baldwin (Law) University of Wisconsin Robert S. Brumbaugh (Philosophy) Yale University David E. Feller (Law) University of California, Berkeley Michael W. Friedlander (Physics) Washington University John H. Gilbert (Political Science) North Carolina State University Robert A. Gorman (Law) University of Pennsylvania Mary W. Gray (Mathematics) American University William R. Keast (English) University of Texas at Austin James H. McKay (Mathematics) Oakland University Paul A. Smith (Political Science) State University of New York at Binghamton

ASC CHAIRMAN A. E. Keir Nash (Political Science), Chairman University of California at Santa Barbara Martha Friedman (Library), Past Chairman University of Illinois

FORMER PRESIDENTS Ralph S. Brown, Jr. (Law), Yale University; Sanford H. Kadish (Law), University of California, Berkeley; Walter Adams (Economics), Michigan State University

226 AAUP BULLETIN

This content downloaded from 62.122.73.86 on Fri, 13 Jun 2014 20:23:11 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 6: Front Matter

ASSOCIATION MEMBERSHIP

GENERAL PROCEDURES

Membership in the AAUP is open to teachers, research scholars, professional librarians, counselors with faculty status, and graduate students at approved colleges and universities. Membership is also open to any professional appointee included in a collective representation unit with the faculty. (" Approved in- stitution* ' here means one on the accredited or candidate-for-accreditation lists of the established regional or professional accrediting agencies, subject to modification by action of the Association.)

A prospective member should fill out the appropriate application blank and send it to the Washington Office for the checking of eligibility. Lists of new members are sent to chapter and conference officers periodically each year.

The membership year in the Association is the calen- dar year (January 1 through December 31). A person whose application is received in the Washington Office before June 1 becomes a member effective as of January 1 of the current year and receives the year's four issues of the Bulletin. A person whose application is received between June 1 and August 31 becomes a member effective as of July 1 of the current year and receives the autumn and winter issues of the Bulletin, unless he re- quests that his membership become effective as of January 1 of the current year, while a person whose ap- plication is received after August 31 may be admitted promptly to membership and nis dues will be applied to the following calendar year. The provisions in this paragraph do not apply to persons wnose dues are col- lected by deduction from salary, and who may join the Association as of the month salary deductions com- mence.

MEMBERSHIP BY APPLICATION

Active. A person holding appointment at an ap- proved institution is eligible for Active membership if he or she (a) has a position of teaching and/or research, with the rank of instructor or its equivalent or other ac- ceptable evidence of faculty status; (b) is a professional librarian; (c) is a counselor with faculty status; or (d) is a professional appointee included with the faculty in a collective bargaining unit. A college or university ad- ministrative officer with less than half a normal teaching or research program is not eligible for Active membership.

Based on salary, annual dues are:

$12.00 (under $8,000); $18.00 ($8,000-$9,999); $24.00 ($10,000-$l 1,999); $30.00 ($12,000-$14,999); $36.00 ($15,000, and above).

Graduate Student. Graduate Student membership is open to those who are, or within the past five years

have been, doing graduate work in an approved institu- tion. Annual dues are $5.00. One may not become a Graduate Student member if also eligible for Active membership, and Graduate Student members must be transferred to Active membership as soon as they become eligible.

Public. Public membership is open to all persons not eligible for Active, Graduate Student, Associate, or Emeritus membership. Annual dues are $15.00.

Joint Membership. A husband and wife who are both Active members may request a joint membership, whereby they will receive only one issue of the Bulletin and the dues of one will be reduced by $6.00. A hus- band and wife who are both Graduate Student members may request a similar arrangement whereby the dues of one are reduced to $3.00. MEMBERSHIP BY TRANSFER

Associate. An Active or Graduate Student member who becomes a college or university administrative officer with less than half a normal teaching or research program must be transferred to Associate membership. This does not apply to professional librarians, depart- ment heads, or counselors with faculty status, all of whom remain Active members. Annual aues are $15.00.

Emeritus. Any member retiring for age from a posi- tion of teaching or research may, upon request, be transferred to Emeritus membership. Annual dues are $3.00.

CONTINUING MEMBERSHIP

Once admitted, a member may change occupation or transfer to an institution not on the Association's ap- proved list without affecting the member's eligibility for continuance of membership.

SUSPENSION OR RESIGNATION

A member who wishes to resign or to effect a suspen- sion of membership should notify the Washington Office in writing. During the period of suspension, which may be for either one or two years but cannot ex- ceed two, the member will remain on the rolls but will not receive dues statements or the Bulletin. Following the suspension period, which runs on the calendar year, the member will receive a statement in January for the coming year's dues and be automatically returned to the Bulletin mailing list.

REINSTATEMENT

One who wishes to resume membership after it has lapsed should not go through the process of application and admission again, but should write to the Washington Office asking to be reinstated and enclos- ing dues for the current year.

Membership Inquiries may be directed to the Association at One Dupont Circle, Washington, D.C. 20036

New Members From June 1, 1975, through Aug. 31, 1975, 919 persons were admitted to Active membership and 110 to Graduate

Student membership.

This content downloaded from 62.122.73.86 on Fri, 13 Jun 2014 20:23:11 PMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions


Recommended