Page 6 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, MAYS, 1981 Local/Statp. tc Defining professors’responsibilities is difficult task By TRACEY BUCHANAN Battalion Reporter Ask any university professor what his job entails, and he will reply: Teaching, research and ser vice — three small words that are hard to juggle and next to impossi ble to conquer. Nevertheless that is a profes sor’s job, and the majority say the three facets are necessary in order to make Texas A&M one of the best schools in the country. They are usually required to excel in at least two of the three areas in order to be considered for promotion and tenure. Tenure assures a faculty member that he COME GROW WITH US ALDERSGATE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH “The Church With A Heart-Warming Touch' MEETING AT Middle School Auditorium JERSEY AT HOLIK College Station MANOR EAST 3 MANOR EAST MALL 823-8300 Forged by a god. Foretold by a wizard. Found by a King. EXCALIBUR ORJon PICTURES Release hru WARNER BROS O A W«rn«r Communication* Com QtMl ORION PICTURES COMPANY AIL RIGHTS RESERVED 7:10 9:45 mmi : u Ts THE SAGA OF TWO RIVALS WHO CLASH AS ENEMIES AND TRIUMPH AS HEROES. BASED ON A TRUE STORY. 7:20 9:40 Gene Hackman Barbra Streisand She's got a way with men. And she's getting away with it. A UNIVERSAL PICTURE ©1981 UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIOS. INC. will continue in an academic posi tion. Faculty members are consi dered for tenure after a certain period of time, which normally doesn’t exceed seven years. Some faculty members are hired solely for teaching or re search and can not qualify for te nure. For example, faculty titles “lecturer” or “instructor” are usually on a non-tenure track and are involved only in teaching. Some faculty who work at the Texas Engineering Experiment Station are hired to do research only. “It is recognized that some per sons are better teachers than others, ” said Earl F. Cook, dean of the College of Geosciences. “It is the combination of the two related academic functions at a level of superiority that is required of a full professor. ” Teaching and research is neces sary at all faculty levels, Cook said. The dominant theory among administrators and teachers is that research enhances teaching, rather than detracts from it. “In order for a teacher to be an effec tive one, he needs to be aware of what’s going on in his field,” said Charles Hix, dean of the College of Architecture and Environmen tal Design. Teachers in the architecture college don’t have to be involved in research and publication to be promoted, he said. To be prom oted to a full professor, though, a teacher must be nationally recog nized in his field. Rod O’Connor, assistant profes sor of chemistry, said that although it is formally and official- the department and then sign a letter of agreement based on those terms. “If they (University administra tors) don’t (change the reward sys tem), we re going to have the worst undergraduate lower divi sion teaching program in the state of Texas, ” O’Connor said. “That’s where I think we re headed. The question of which comes first — teaching or research — varies with the philosophies of the Teaching is almost equally as im portant, but it takes much more time to be recognized. ” The route to promotion is ex plained to faculty by the depart ment heads either informally, through personal interviews and departmental meetings, or for mally, through individually writ ten guidelines. “It is recognized that some persons are better teachers than others, ’’said EarlF. Cook, dean of the College of Geosciences. “It is the com bination of the two related academic functions at a level of superiority that is required of a full professor. ” Even when a written guideline is used, it isn’t detailed. For inst ance, it would not specify 44 per cent of a teacher’s time must go to research, 35 percent to teaching and 21 percent to service or admi nistrative work. ly stated that reward will be based on teaching, research and service, a teacher is not rewarded for much of anything except research. He thinks a faculty member should be able to tell the depart ment head how he can best serve department heads who recom mend professors for promotion and raises. David H. Stewart, head of the English department, said: “Rec ognition and reward are most quickly attained with research. “I never like to tell a man exact ly what’s expected of him because that’s what he tends to do,” said Gordon R. Hopkins, department head of mechanical engineering. Research can get in the way of doing an effective job just like other responsibilities can, he said. However, it is not a matter of sac rificing teaching for research. “We re not just hiring teachers at A&M,” Hopkins said. “High schools hire teachers. Universities hire leaders in their fields. ” R. Alan Wiley, assistant profes sor of economics, said quality^ pie don’t have a problem coni ing research and teaching. I aspects are necessary to have id tionally strong college, hes William Bassichis, asso professor of physics, saidthetj versity needs to establish! atmosphere conducive to 1 teaching and research in ordo! achieve its goals. “Thereisi] punishment for a guy whoil crappy job of teaching, but as who does a similar job inrese is in big trouble. “To stand up once a year! say, ‘You people are doing a g job teaching and we appreciat won’t hack it,” he said. Defining good research i good teaching is more than deciding whether or nothj are necessary. Faculty members have peril departmental meetings too their goals and to evaluate J past performance. These i ings, along with self-evaliiM the faculty members, evaluation and student eii tion, play a part in deteri whether or not an indiviclii! doing a good job. Insurance rate hike recommended United Press International AUSTIN — The State Board of Insurance staff recommended Thursday an average 6.2 percent statewide increase in property in surance rates, including an aver age 5 percent raise in the rates for homeowners’ insurance. The staff announced its recom mendations for the first overall av erage property insurance increase since 1978 at the opening of the board’s annual rate hearing. The staff also recommended a change in the way the State Board of Insurance considers investment income earned by insurance com panies in determining insurance rates in Texas. “The new approach effectively anticipates investment income to be earned by insurance com panies, and directly includes these earnings in the rate develop ment formula,” said Gaylon Daniel, a staff actuary. “As a consequence of this re vised formula, the traditional 5 percent property insurance profit loading in the rates has been re duced to approximately 1.5 per cent.” He said if the insurance board staff had used the old formula in recommending new rates, the av erage statewide increase for prop erty insurance would have been 11.4 percent rather than the 6.2 percent recommended by the staff. cost of the same policy on a similar home in central Dallas would rise from $194 to $212, a 9.3 percent jump. The Texas Insurance Advisory Association, representing the in surance industry, is seeking a 11.3 percent statewide average in crease for property insurance. Under the staff proposal, the cost of a one-year policy for a $25,000 brick-veneer home in central San Antonio or El Paso would rise from $184 to 200. The The cost of a one-year policy on a $50,000 brick-veneer home in south Houston would go from $368 to $371. policy would go from $470 to(: in central Waco and Fort Wod from $804 to $812 in nortm Lubbock and from $510 tool: south Houston. Rawhii ed by j happy The largest price hike for the same policy on a similar home would be in Fort Worth and Dal las, where the cost would go from $339 to $371. The cost of a one-year polictl fire and extended coverage oil $50,000 brick-veneer home w:J go down in many locales undeil proposals. On For brick-veneer homes costing $75,000, the cost of a one-year Residents of northwest Li (11'"| bock could see their rates qi-A-I. from $430 to 425. Rates u drop 11.1 percent in south H( ton, from $234 to $208 a Unitec DALLAf feet and i: 7:15 9:35 Midnight Shows Friday and Saturday Black U.S. judge refuses Klan bid for her removal Iroductivit ise Texas to three tii jge, state : Statistic jealth dep led the cot istimated t United Press International HOUSTON — A black federal judge Thursday refused a Ku Klux Klan request that she withdraw from a lawsuit in which Viet namese fishermen seek court pro tection from threats by the Klan and native Texas shrimpers. “You are not entitled to a judge of your choice, but you are enti tled to a judge who will give you a fair trial,” U.S. District Judge Gabrielle K. McDonald told Klan leader Louis Beam. “I am deeply committed to equal justice under the law and you will get it. You are entitled to nothing more and nothing less.” Beam, the Klan and native Texas fishermen represented by the Seabrook-Kemah Fishermen’s Coalition are defendants in a law suit filed April 16 by the Viet namese Fishermen’s Association. The defendants have com plained about the influx of Viet namese refugees, but deny plans for violent actions. Beam said he doubted the de fendants' chance of a fair trial be fore a black woman judge, who as a lawyer, handled civil rights cases. The defendants charged that the judge’s law clerk favored the Viet namese in an incident Tuesday. “I have no confidence that I’d get a fair trial here any more than you might have in going before a trial by the KKK,” Beam told the judge in testimony. “I know the prejudice of your people against the Klan. “I have been a member of the Klan since 1969, since I returned from Vietnam. I have had ample opportunity to see the prejudice against whites who join the Klan. Everywhere I go, blacks holler death to KKK.” The Vietnamese lawsuit accuses the defendants of threats, intimi dation and violence in order to eli minate the Vietnamese fishermen as competitors in Texas coastal ^ob in 1981 marshals. ^ leathswer Defense lawyers filed then) during the tion asking the judge todisquili York, herself after an alleged incideit The sta which her law clerk, Charlesb rate is an e her, asked Vietnamese if it [Stopped kc were intimidated by Klansm jpational ac wearing white robes to deposit * "Lack o hearings. lisguiseth .. , ,i idling fro I wanted to give you the; n( j disea , nefit of the doubt,” Beam said ner state wanted to wait and see if “ j; vans would be impartial. 1 had noi ; ^ a ^ e tention of filing this motionti< Texas’ higl the court showed its prejudice [onthelacl The j udge denied giving Bait; instructions to act improperly; Barber testified he intended unfair action in favor of the pk tiffs. She said there was cient reason for her to duties to another judge fisheries. The suit seeks a court order and the protection of U.S. A hearing was scheduled Md day on the plaintiffs rec We dc rograms ’racey, e Texas Ind "We’ve ti put havei akes it s death cot preliminary injunction forbiddit there had harassment of refugee fisher®: ‘V* js All Seats TJ CINEMA l&ll ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo CAMPUS THEATRE 210 Un. 846-6512' Embalming bill called With r controls, safety fall a mixed i “We’re struction ton, For "Because $1 so p Skaggs shopping center/Across from A&MI Friday & Saturday Midnight NOW SHOWING: Double Feature! outrageous What a way to start the summer! BILLMURRAYn PRIVATE BENJAMIN’comesout with flags flying. Goldie Hawiv proves that she is the screen’s leading comic actress.” "A Winner! 8 Deliciously Nutsy.”