The North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 68, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 22, 1970 Page: 3 of 4
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Wednesday, April 22,1970
PAGE 3—THE NORTH TEXAS DAILY
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AAUP Distributes Evaluation
To Full-Time Faculty Members
The NTSU chapter of the American
Association of University Professors
(AAUP) has distributed evaluation sheets
to all full-time faculty members asking
them to participate in a Faculty-
Administration Cooperative Evaluation.
The project is the first of its kind at
North Texas.
Each full-time faculty member has been
asked to evaluate his department or division
chairman or coordinator, the dean of his
school or college and the academic vice-
president.
Completed answer sheets should be
placed in a large envelope addressed to
Roscoe Adkins of the government faculty,
president of the NT chapter of AAUP, or
given to Adkins personally no later than 5
p.m. Monday, Adkins said.
Adkins said April 28 is reserved for
computer time and tabulations will be taken
to President John Kamerick as soon as the
results are compiled.
Adkins and his staff distributed materials
through department, division and
coordinator secretaries. Each participating
faculty member received a letter from
Adkins, a direction sheet, three statement
sheets and an evaluation sheet to be coded
for a computer.
Adkins said no one is expected to reply to
all statements, but the faculty has been
asked to answer all the ones they feel
competent to answer, and to omit only
those statements which they feel unqualified
or uninformed to answer.
From 16 to 18 statements are made about
the three positions, and faculty members
are asked to rate those being evaluated by
the following scale: I—highly favorable,
2—favorable, 3—neutral, 4—unfavorable
and 5—highly unfavorable.
Adkins said personal anonymity of
faculty members will be complete. "No
names will appear anywhere," he said.
"Results will be tabulated by computer and
made available to President Kamerick."
Individual administrators may request
from President Kamerick information1
pertinent to themselves, but coded
information on the identification number
box will go to President Kamerick only.
"We acknowledge our debt to the student
evaluation of faculty, F.A.C.E., which was
conducted last year with administration
approval and support, and which is
generally agreed to have resulted in
increased communication and improved
relations between students and faculty,"
said Adkins.
"We hope that this evaluation will
contribute at least as much toward
improving faculty-administration
relations," he said.
Statements about the department
chairman include general ones like:
Fine Arts Series Picks Performers
On Basis of Popularity, Finances
On a February day 67 years ago, a
Iramatic reading of "David Harum" was
•resented at North Texas by the current
.iteraturc Club.
That was the beginning of the "Lyceum
Entertainments." Later known as the
irtists' Course, it eventually became what
i > now the Fine Arts Series. The evolution is
described in "The Story of North Texas,"
by Dr. James L. Rogers, vice-president for
administrative affairs.
The Fine Arts Series Committee chooses
performers on the basis of popularity, the
Fine Arts Series finances and what types of
entertainment have been presented before,
said Dr. William F. Belcher Jr. of the
English faculty, chairman of the committee.
"We try to balance it. We'll have some
dance, theater and music," said Dr.
Belcher. "One year, we may have classical
ballet, the next year, we'll have folk dance."
A regular feature for the "last 15 or 20
years," Dr. Belcher added, has been the
annual Dallas Symphony Orchestra
concert.
The Fine Arts Scries this year has also
presented such programs as Camerata
Bariloche, an Argentine Chamber
Orchestra composed of eighteen virtuoso
musicians; "Your Own Thing," a rock
musical based on "Twelfth Night;" and
Ann Schein, an American pianist in her
only American concert this season.
Also presented this year have been the
Dallas Civic Ballet doing "Firebird" and
"Les Sylphides"; Jean-Pierre Rampal and
Robert Veyron-Lacroix, a flute and piano
duo; and Les Danseurs Africains, a
company of 45 dancers, drummers and
acrobats from the Republic of Cameron.
The Fine Arts Scries Committee includes
Dr. Belcher, Dr. Kenneth N. Cuthbert,
dean of the School of Music; Dr. Leonard
Benson of the Sociology faculty; Dr. L.
Paden Neeley of the accounting faculty; Dr.
Paul F. Smith, chairman of the division of
educational leadership; and three student
members selected each year by the USNT
president, Dr. Belcher said.
The Fine Arts Series is financed by part
of the student activities fee, Dr. Belcher
said. Faculty members may buy a season
ticket for $3. Anyone else may purchase a
ticket for $5.
Application Photos
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— Significant contributions to
scholarship.
—Professional leadership outside this
university.
— Personal integrity, honesty, fairness,
objectivity.
—Ability to harmonize conflicting views.
The academic dean will be evaluated on
statements like;
—Encourages scholarly and professional
activity of faculty.
—Maintenance and promotion of faculty
morale.
—Makes decisions quickly and firmly.
—Makes clear the basis on which
decisions are made and willing openly to
defend such decisions.
Evaluations of the academic vice-
president will be made from statements
including:
—Inspires professional respect of his
colleagues.
— Is open-minded and innovative
regarding the future development and
growth of the university.
—Makes known the long-range goals of
the university and how best each sub-unit
can help meet these goals.
Several of the same statements are
included on each of the statement sheets
about the three individual positions.
iniMiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiam^
Campus
Calendar
TODAY
9 a.m.—Art Exhibition: Annual Voertman
Awards. Main Gallery, Art Building.
—EARTH DAY: Place: park area, North of Art
Building.
10 a.m.—Keynote Address: Senator Ralph
Yarborough.
11 a.m.—Texas State Department of Health
Panel Discussion, organized by Dr. J. K. O.
Silvey, chairman, department of biological
sciences.
2 p.m.-TEACH-INS: Dr. Roland Vela, biology
—"The Brighter Side of Environmental Pol-
lution"; Dr. Gerald Raun, biology—"Popu-
lation and Birth Control"; Dr. P A. Y.
Gunter, philosophy "Philosophy and Eth-
ics of Environment".
3:30 p.m.—Dr. Hershel Anderson, business ad-
ministration—"Business Responsibility vs
Government Central Planning".
7:30 p.m.—Dance in the Women's Gym, music
provided by Southwest F O B
8:15 p.m.—Graduate Voice Recital: Kathy
Carter. Music Recital Hall
Visit Walling's
Barber Shop
EXPERT TRIM
Try Roy's Supershine
Looks Better and Lasts Longer
A & P CENTER
W. OAK AT WELCH
4tt earthquake
of Entertainment!
Wall DIkiiov
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In m'iiivIi of t/ir
in wit,
Castaways
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£21,
Wall Hanging
This wall hanging done by Fort Worth senior Linda Holley won the best
textile award in the Voertman Annua! Art Awards. The hanging is made of
Jute and miscellaneous yarns and is appropriately entitled "Wall Hanging."
The art exhibition will continue through May 1 in the Main Art Gallery of the
Art Building
Seven To Go
To Oral Meet
In Missouri
Seven students, accompained by Dr. Ted
Colson of the speech and drama faculty will
attend an oral interpretation festival
Thursday through Saturday at Southwest
Missouri State College in Springfield
Out of approximately 40 schools, NTSU
and 17 other schools have been asked to
present a reader's theater production.
"The Phifer People" a play based on the
cartoon of Jules Phifer (which as been
presented several times this year by three
graduate students) has been selected.
The play will be directed by John Wilson,
Corpus Christi graduate student.
Portraying the different "Phifer People"
are the husband and wife team of Marvin
and J.J. Rains, Fort Worth students, and
Jerry Hayes, from Commanche, Okla.
Also performing in the festival are three
students selected by Dr. Colson from the
oral interpetation classes.
Nila Reynolds, Richardson senior, will
present poetry and a dramatic literature
reading. Monty Vaughn, Richardson
freshman, and Vic Kinney, Odessa junior,
will present poetry and prose readings.
Dr. Colson says of the trip, "It will give
us a chance to see what other schools are up
to, besides allowing us to learn and
experience new things."
Around the Campus
KDs To Sponsor Worm Election
Kappa Delta sorority will hold an "Earth
Day worm" election at their booth in front
of the UB. today.
Ine election is aimed at anti-hero
candidates. The winner will receive a gift
certificate to an area store and a free dinner
at Burger Chef.
All candidates will be write-in and no
ID's will be required to nominate or vote.
Nominations arc 25 cents and votes are 10
cents. All proceeds will go to cancer
research being done by Dr , Vernon Scholes
of the biology faculty.
Judy Sanford, Carthage sophomore, was
installed as president of the Women's
Recreation Association last Thursday night
at a banquet for incoming and outgoing
officers.
Other officers installed were Debbie
Allen, vice-president; Gail Lehrmann,
secretary-treasurer; Marie Haney, reporter;
Dee Adams, badminton manager; Sara
Leith, basketball manager; Sherri
Alexander, bowling manager; Sally
Schwartz, volleyball manager; Sue
Bearden, Softball manager; and Sharon
Sullivan, tennis manager.
A sidewalk art sale, sponsored by the
Burning Bush, 1224 W. Hickory, will be
held Saturd y from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. by the
south wall Oi Sears in Denton Center.
The sponsors invite all area artists and
craftsmen to participate. There is no limit
on the number of projects one person may
submit and no limit on the prices artists can
set for their work
Further information can be obtained by
calling the United Center at 382-6035.
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THING I HAVE RECENTLY
SEEN ON THE SCREEN!
A really good movie about
sport! Anyone, whether he
cares about this sport or
any sport, must respond!
'Downhill Racer' is invig-
orating ... good, strong,
purging stuff!"
-Richard Schickel. Life Magazine
"EXHILARATING! A
perceptive,
unsentimental portrait of
a young athlete on the
make! Electrifying
camera work!"
— Time Magazine
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Flynn, George. The North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 68, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 22, 1970, newspaper, April 22, 1970; Denton, TX. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth326435/m1/3/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.