Wednesday, April 7, 1982 Eugene, Oregon Oregon daily Volume 83 Number 125 emerald Faculty salaries fail to compete Average Faculty Salary at 76 Major Public Universities in the USA 1980/81 (50 states represented) 1 California (Berkeley 33 500 ? Alaska (Anchorage) 32 700 3 Pennsylvania. 31 400 4 Michigan 31 000 5 UCLA ... . 30 900 6 North Carolina 29 600 7 IHifKM 78900 B Woconsin 28 400 9 ONo State 78 300 SUNY - Albany 28 300 11 Arizona 28 200 Connecticut 28 200 13 Rutgers (MJ) 78 100 14 Michigan State 28 000 '5 Virginia ,27 900 16 Purdue 27 700 SUMY - Stony Brack 2 7 700 18 Waahmgtcn . 2 7 500 19 Minnesota _ 27 300 SUMY - Buffalo 27 300 21 Arizona State . . 27.100 Utah .... 27 100 23 Indiana 26 800 Iowa 26 800 75 Penn Stale 26 700 Source A Of Program Planning Committee 26 Massachusetts 26 600 27 Hawaii . .. 26 500 Wyoming . 26.500 29 Georgia 26.300 30 SUNY - Binghamton 26.200 31 Colorado.. 26 100 32 Florida Slat* ..... 25 900 33 North Carolina State. _ 25 800 Rhode Wand .25 800 35 Nevada Reno 25 700 Teaaa A4M 25 700 37 Loietiana State 25 600 38 Teaas. 25 500 Virginia Polytechnic .25 500 40 Missouri . 25 400 Univ of D C.25 400 42 Colorado State . 25 300 43 Dataware ... ...25.200 Maryland_ ___ 25.200 Sou*i Carolina 25.200 Kentucky. 25.200 47 WashingtonStat* 25.100 Florida . 25.100 49 New Mexico.. 25.000 50 New Mexico State 24 800 51 Neoraska 52 OREGON Oklahoma... 54 Nevada La* Vegas 55 Tennesse*. Utah State. Oklahoma State_ 58 Alabama 59 fchseiseippi State . 69 70 6' Arkansas._ kx*a State. 63 Kansas State. . . 64 OREGON STATE 65 Mississippi. 66 New Hampshire... 67 Vermont. 68 west Vagtma Montana State. North Dakota .. 72 North Dakota! 73 Maine .. 74 South Dakota .... South Dakota State 24.400 24.300 24.300 24.200 24.100 24.100 24 100 24,000 23.900 23.900 23.800 23.700 23.600 23.500 22.900 22.800 22.700 22.400 21.700 21.700 21.500 21.400 21.200 21,200 20.100 Graphic by Mas DaRunga By Debbie Hewlett Of Of Emmrakj Average salary levels for University faculty are no longer competitive with salaries offered by other universities for new, talented faculty members, according to one University department head and two deans of schools. As a con sequence, the University is finding it increasingly difficult to keep faculty members here The lessening capacity for the University to compete nationally has become demoralizing and frustrating, says James Tattersall, head of the economics department and a past president of the Association of Oregon Faculties. "There is a real problem in faculty morale," Tattersall says Recently, a senior faculty member resigned and moved south, "not entirely for monetary reasons but also due to our general climate of rotten news," he says. The rotten "climate" seems to be raining on more than just the economics department. Robert Berdahl, dean of the arts and science college, related several instances of not being able to offer competitive salaries and of faculty members leaving the University for higher pay elsewhere One mathematics professor — a Ph D. I was offered $23,400 by the University. "That was our top offer, it was the best we could do,” Berdahl says. But the University's top offer was almost $8,000 under what the professor accepted from another institution. Berdahl also pointed out two other faculty members that left the University for at least $10,000 more than they were making in Eugene. continued on oaae 2 Community pitches in at Alton Baker By Mahan Green Of tti* Emtmkl Money for Lane County parks may be in limited supply, but there's no shortage of local support as offers of volunteer help pour in from the community In Eugene, community effort is most noticeable at Alton Baker Park, where at least a half dozen organizations have donated labor and money and another 100 groups have phoned in offers of assistance, says parks division spoke sperson Chuck Schrader The parks division — like most county services — had its funding slashed this year The budget for Alton Baker Park is $105,000, half the amount needed to run the 375-acre park, Schrader says "The budget basically does not provide sufficient funds to maintain that park or any other park," he says So since last year, the parks division has been circulating pleas throughout the county for help with the parks, Schrader says And the community has responded Area Rotary Clubs donated $120,000 for the Alton Baker Park amphitheater The Active 20/30 Club built the chil dren's play structure Pre s Foundation and local running clubs have banded together to maintain Pre s Trail. The Toastmasters Club has been spreading the word about park needs And within the last week, Schrader has received more than 100 phone calls in quiring about the Adopt-a-Park program, in which groups or individuals help maintain the parks Age is no barrier to helping out, he says. "I’ve had a number of parents call to volunteer their kids. " "It’s a super idea," he says "Without those people, things could be worse than they are now." With just two park workers to maintain the 17 metro-district parks, which total about 600 acres, Schrader says the divi sion can guarantee only basic health Photos by BoO Bt*«r Community invotvomenl at Alton Bakar Park has gon* from us* to fundraising to vofuntoor tabor. code requirements, such as clean rest rooms, emptied garbage cans and suf ficiently mown grass. That's about all we re going to be able to do," he says “There’s not going to be a neatly mown lawn." Volunteers will pick up where the county leaves off, clearing overgrowth, planting shrubs and wildflowers and removing some blackberry brambles, Schrader says What they’re going to be doing is a lot of work that would not be done at all," he says. The value of this volunteerism is ines timable, Schrader says. "You can’t put a figure on someone planting wildflowers." More than 1.3 million people visited Alton Baker Park last year, he says. And that's a conservative estimate because it accounts only for car visitors, he says. The county couldn't afford to hire employees to count pedestrians and bicyclists this year, he says. The last count, which was taken in 1974, showed more than 350,000 bicyclists toured the park's trails. Schrader says he hopes the citizen involvement will lead to better treatment of park facilities and less toleration of vandalism. On April 17, the county commissioners and parks advisory committee members are hosting a brown-bag lunch work party at Alton Baker Park. All Lane County residents are invited to pull on heavy work gloves and put their backs into improving the park, Schrader says.