Pof. Samoff appeals two tenure rejections could make a recommendation - a (Continued from Page 1) process which could take months. considered. He said some people feared Despite wlat steps the panel would if the department recommended all take, the ultimate authority in the case five, the college - not wanting five rests with the Executive Committee, newly tenured professors - epilf drmf which is comprised of six professors in them back. : the college and Dean Frye. ACCORDING to LSA Associate Dean Other options the Executive Commit- Bernard Galler, the college's Executive tee could take would be to send the case Committee has a month to decide on back to the department or handle which of three procedures to use in Samoff's appeal directly - a procedure handling Samoff's appeal. But he said Samoff said he prefers. an option will probably be selected next, "The Executive Committee is the week. decision-making body of the whole Galfit said though he doesn't want to college," he said. "The sooner it gets to "second guess the Executive Commit- the college, the better." fee," thie procedure which calls for GALLER SAID since LSA's appeal establishing a three-person committee procedure was revised three years ago, to hearthe case vill likely be the chosen he knows of no precedent to dictate alterniive. which procedure the college should use The panel would be picked by Samoff to handle the appeal. nd his department from among 30 LSA Last week, thirty University r.4ofessors appointed by the college's professors and 15 campus ministers xecutive Committee at the beginning circulateda letter denouncing Samoff's of each year for resolving tenure tenure denials, marking the first time disputes and related issues. faculty members organized on his behalf. Distribution of the letter coin- 1' AFTER REVIEWING Samoff's ap- cided with a ceremony where the al or "Bill of Particulars," the panel professor was given a University award ould investigate his charges until it for distinguished service. Kozol spurs students (Continued from Page 1) from adult illiteracy," Kozol said. ONE OF THE major problems with American schools, according to Kozol, is that they "indoctrinate" children, first by not allowing them to use the fir- st person singular when referring to themselves. When they no longer think of themselves in terms of "I", they are no longer real people. "Public schools in the United States are scared stiff of the first person singular pronoun," explained Kozol. "They set out to destroy it and they do it with real skill." The practice of 'tracking' students in certain academic directions on the basis of achievement tests, also con- tributes to education problems, said the one-time Boston school teacher. " his mindless reliance on test data is an example of educational indoc- trination." ALTHOUGH KOZOL was speaking on a serious subject, he often told ram- bling anecdotes that wandered around his topic, "The Myth of Impotence: Student Power and Student Action." "I'm an odd radical, he confessed. "I like the United States, I like the people of the United States; I like my father. I even like school teachers." The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 20, 1978-Page 5 LSA ficademic * *e * J)udiciary Interviews Sunday, October ZZ2 Sign-up sheet at 4001 LSA* Student Government Office, Michigan Union -*..........*.*. SUBSCRIBE TO THE DAILY Call 764-0558 $3.00 Pick Your Own Hours APPLY IN PERSON Olga's Kitchen State and Washington AATA citizen C Qmuittee disi . PyJEFFREY WOLFF frustration d They ikizenis' Advisory Committee mn ht" k Aoumr sugg"ti for the Ann; Arbor Transportation osge sted , Authority (AATA) came to a quiet shelv g,. demise Wednesday night at the AATA Upsprung, Board meeting. Stewart Laidlaw, one of cluding fivet the committee's handful of remaining sit Survey a ctive rhembers, informed the board he decline in in had been authorized by Chairman the great difi David Arscott to declare "the Citizens' a level of par Advisory Committee now dissolved." any actual a Joyce 'Chesbrough, board member to keep such since 1974, says she "worked hard to get CAC PROV another one started" since she believes service star the board "must speak and deal with propriate wa the people who ride the system." Such lengths, wail 3 efforts by'board members and what per and pe r jcommittee spokesman Dave Arscott transfers be describes as "concern over service modification "complaints" led to the committee's proved by reemergence in September of 1975. sprung, curr ARSCOTT CONSIDERED it to be a 12 to 15 of : 'viable group" till around the summer adhered to ar 11 of 1977. Up to this point, there were 12-14 AATA regular' participatns. Laidlaw demon- Another su ,strated bow, such active participants 'provement ,entailed a: commitment.. of iap- -readability o iproximataly 202hours a ,week just in such 'as 'sch meetings as well as a heavy reading other genera o load. ' mittee pressu People were putting in this sort of Both boar commitment for two and a half years committee mn and many were getting frustrated, he significance said. Willie Horton, former commitee tments of fo I ,member and now on the board, also at- bers Horton tributed the decline in interest to board, itself. input )anded lue to the observation by we were thanks for a lot of Ionsand then they were citing his eight year ex- h advisory committees in- years as Urban Area Tran- director, felt that such terest is inevitable due "to ficulties in sustaining such ticipation," since "without uthority it is very difficult a group interested." VIDED AATA with many ndards such as the ap- iting time for buses, route Iing time for Dial-A-Ride, rcentage of coordinated tween routes. With some s these standards were ap- the board and Cecil Ur- ent board treasurer, says these standards are still nd reported on regularly by ccess was the AATA's im- in the clarity and f its public disbursements edules,' route maps; and'. i information due to com- ure.s d members and former embers agree that of real are the recent appoin- rmer commmittee mem- and Joel Samoff to the Receive The Daily daily! Subscribe-Call 764-0558 p 0 t ?'f'r' ,, . Sher was disheartened and full of fatigue Looking for meals with zest and intrigue But she did not lose her mind For she happened to find The delectable cuisine of the League! B.P. Thiefchigan. Next to Hill Auditorium Located in the heart of the campus. it is the heart of the campus. 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