Page 4-B-Friday, September 7, 1979-The Michigan Daily IMPACT OF 30% CUT IN ALLOCATION SLIGHT Fuel supplies adequate or 'U' By STEVE HOOK Although fuel supplies at the Uni- versity are significantly lower than a year ago, officials are confident that the huge fleet will have sufficient gasoline supplies. During an average month, just under 500 University-owned buses, trucks, and cars burn up 20,000-30,000 gallons of gas. At the present rate, allocations from the Amoco distributor in Detroit are running 30 per cent below last year's rate. "ALL WE CAN do is go with whatever supplies they (Amoco) give us," said John Ellsworth, the Univer- sity's transportation department manager. "There has been no problem. Current supplies are adequate," he said. Ellsworth has been in the Transpor- tation Department since the Arab oil embargo five years ago. During the early summer gas crunch this year, he managed the modified fleet without dif- ficulty. He said he sees no reason for concern about future supplies. "There's no information around to make you concerned or complacent," he said, "you kind of go as best you can. You don't go looking for problems that may never arise, otherwise you're wasting your time." AMONG THE University's fleet, there are 230 trucks, 223 automobiles, and °9 buses in operation today. The University currently pays just under 69 cents a gallon to Amoco, plus 15 cents a gallon in taxes. "I'm an optimist," stated Amoco's Pricing Manager, Bob Chamberlain. "Supplies may not get better overnight, but I can see a gradual increase in the coming months." From his office in Detroit, Cham- berlain said that he expects supplies to rise from their current 70 per cent of last year's rate, to about 83 per cent by year's end. "THE PRODUCT is available," he said, "but the price of foreign crude is unreal and ridiculous. Our position is to avoid foreign crude stocks as much as possible .. ..to avoid outright robbery." Service stations in the Ann Arbor area report 70 to 100 per cent supplies com- pared to last year. While Briarwood Shell's Manager James Hadley com- plains about his 75 per cent of last year's supply, and slightly shortened hours, Fox Marathon's Manager Jim Fox said he has no problems with his 100 per cent supply. Students at the University, therefore, enjoy ample supplies of gasoline, albeit high prices, around the Ann Arbor area. HARLAN MULDER, an Assistant to the Univesity's Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff, said that conservation is being encouraged for drivers of University vehicles. "We're encouraging people to be con- scious about conserving gas," he said. "We have initiated as many energy conserving measures as we can, em- ploying all known applications of con- servation." Asked what actions would be-taken in the event of a sudden cutback in fuel supplies, Mulder explained that it would be premature to specualte. "We couldn't make the alternative program until the restrictions are ac- tualy made. Then we'd look at our present use pattern and set our priorities from there." Mulder added that the University's commuter bus system would be the last to suffer in a fuel shortage on campus. "If you're driving a garbage truck or a bus," he said, "you have to drive your rounds. What else can you do?" State bill may force 'U' salary disclosure Receive The Daily daily! Subscribe-Call 764-0558 P'ROJECT OUTREACH Psychology 201. Experiential Learning In: Child Care Mental Health By SARA ANSPACH The University has not yet released staff salaries by name, but after the state legislature reconvenes Sept. 18, the school may be forced to reveal em- ployees' salaries tosthe public by name. Under a bill, sponsored by Sen. William Faust (D-Westland), which is currently before the state legislature, all 13 state colleges would be required to release the specific salary infor- mation. EARLIER LEGISLATIVE attempts to gain access to the University's name- linked salary data have, so far, been unsuccessful. ' Last May state Senate Ap- propriations Committee Chairman Sen. Jerome Hart (D-Saginaw) asked the president of each state public college and university to submit name-linked salary data to the Appropriations Com- mittee. Only two schools, the Univer- sity and Michigan Technological University (MTU) in Houghten Lake did not comply with his request. University Interim President Allan Smith said the University did not reveal individual salaries to the committee because such disclosure would be an invasion of privacy. MtU IS CURRENTLY involved in a lawsuit regarding the disclosure of name-linked salary data and can not legally release the information. Con- sequently, the Appropriations Commit- tee decided to wait until the case is set- tled before further requests for data were sent to the University, according to Senate Appropriations Clerk Amy Schnetzler. No salary data from any school will be released until all colleges have sub- mitted name-linked information, said Schnetzler. The -committee is not cer- tain what it could do to force the University to release information, she added. Aides for both Hart and Faust have said it is the public's right to know how it's money is spent to pay public em- ployees, MANY UNIVERSITY faculty mem- hers, adhering to the University's traditional policy, say such a disclosure would violate their privacy. But those who favor disclosure assert that if in- dividual salaries were made public, many salary inequities would be discovered. Several of the state's 13 public colleges and universities have never considered name-linked salary infor- mation private. At Lake Superior State College, lists of employee names, positions and salaries are posted in the school's library, according to a spokesprson for the college. i~ Doily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY Bank employees strike A small group of employees at the campus branch of the Huron Valley National Bank walked off the job Tuesday in hopes of winning a 27.5 per cent wage increase. Management says the picketers have not caused any slowdown in business during the traditionally busy first week of the term. The demonstrators, who claim to represent the feelings of most of the 185 employees at the seven branches of tie bank, say mangement has not responded to their request for a pay hike. Sa moff und ecidedon" filingr suit aainst 'U' Hospitals Handicaps Aging Personal Growth and other Community Services If Interested: Corn. To- OUTREACH MASS MEETING WED. SEPT. 12 7 PM-HILL AUDITORIUM Questions: Call 764-9 179 or come to 554 Thompson St. ~ 'x _ v.,, . r- .W 0 ,P ..._ . _ _ s 4 *~ we 11 .: p / / t / / _w.. / f l fl/ 4 f 0 qg , .4I By NICK KATSARELAS Former University assistant political science professor Joel Samoff, who was denied tenure in a case that became a cause celebre for student groups, said yesterday he has not yet decided whether to sue the University as his next recourse. Rather, Samoff said he will wait for the outcome of a suit filed last month by Engineering professor Jonathan Mar- wil, who was denied a tenure review hearing after his appointment at the University expired in May. SAMOFF'S CASE differs from Mar- wil's in that Marwil never had his tenure formally considered, while Samoff's tenure was considered various times by various review boards and was denied every time. "The basis for my suit," Samoff said, "would be whether or not the evaluation of my work was done fairly and objectively." Samoff said he has been waiting for the semester to begin so he can meet with friends and supporters to deter- ,mine his next move. If Samoff decides to sue, he will ap- peal to the Senate Advisory Review Committee (SARC) which Samoff hopes will be "a more neutral body." SARC appeal procedures allow for ap- peal on substantive grounds, while LSA rules allow appeals only on procedural basis. SAMOFF, A MARXIST political economist and expert on African af- fairs, was denied tenure by a vote of tenured faculty in the Political Science Department. Last November, his colleagues in the political science department . decided not to reopen Samoff's case. The LSA Executive Committee also denied his appeal last May. SAMOFF'S POSITION as assistant political science professor terminated last May 31. He is now a lecturer in political economics and Afro-American studies. Samoff Under LSA procedure, no reason need be given for tenure denial. But backers of Samoff charge his tenure was denied because of his Marxist political beliefs. Supporters of the African expert for- med the Samoff Student Support Com, mittee, which has been the most vocal group in the controversial issue. Last year, the committee urged students to boycott all political science courses ex- cept those taught by Samoff and those initiated by students. They organized a Diag rally in support of Samoff, and last November presented the Board of Regents petitions with 1200 student signatures demanding the political science department rescind Samoff's tenure denial. HP Makes professional calculators students con afford. Now when you think "professional calculator:' think "affordable" Specifically, think Hewlett- Packard Series E-a full line of professsional scientific and business calculators designed for a student's needs and budget. Easy for study. All Series E calculators fea- ture a large, bright LED display with commas to separate thousands. 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