Five sue By JOHN GOYER Five men who sought firefighting positions with the city have filed a lawsuit in Washtenaw County Circuit Court, claiming they were discriminated against in the hiring process. The city has agreed not to hire any more firefighters until the suit is resolved. THE FIVE MEN, all city residents, claim many of the questions on the job application are illegal. They also claim they should have been placed higher on the eligibility The Michigan Daily--Tuesday, July 24, 1979-Page 3 city over fire dept. hiring policy list, which rates job applicants and un- the basis of which the men claim they formed after the city's April mayoral derlies hiring decisions. should have been hired, comprise only election, when city voters for the first They are asking that the city be for- one part of the application process. He time used punch cards to vote. ced to show adequate reason for not added that other considerations include Supporters of the new method claim hiring them. If the city fails to produce an oral interview and a test for physical the punch cards, which are processed reason, they will demand jobs. agility. by computer, are faster and cheaper CITY ADMINISTRATOR Sylvester "A person can pass the written test than the voting machines used in the Murray conceded last night that many and not end up on the agility eligibility past. questions on the city's job application list," Murray said. were probably illegal. He said the city JAMES HENSE, James Schuler, MOST COMMITTEE members and is revising its job application. He also Michael Kostinis, Phillip Reiser, and Co c I member sad said the city asks for personal Mark Koernke are plaintiffs in the suit. Council members last night said they background and financial information Meanwhile, City Council last night machines, since they thought the on its applicants. . met with the punch card voting analysis machineswsemoe seyure. But Murray said the written tests, on committee, a nine-member committee machines were more secure. School board votes not to appeal Black By ELEONORA DI LISCIA With the help of Ann Arbor School Board President Kathleen Dan- nemiller's swing vote, the Ann Abor school board Saturday night reversed its decision to appeal the Black English ruling. The school board originally voted last Wednesday to appeal U.S. District Court Judge Charles Joiner's ruling that the Ann Arbor district must come up with a plan within 30 days to take in- to account Black English speakers and use that information in teaching stan- dard English. But Dannemiller voided the vote, saying the school board had violated state open meeting laws by ap- proving the appeal in private session. SUPERINTENDENT Harry Howard expressed displeasure with the school board's reversal. "I recommended it be appealed because some questions were raised when the judge said teachers were not guilty. As far as strengthening the programs he spoke of, this could have been done out of court. We already have a number of programs in the humaneness area we could have reviewed," Howard said. "If there are areas in that that needed strengthening we could have strengthened the policy." Lee Hansen, administrative superin- tendent for curriculum and instruction, said she recommended appeal because most material dealing with teaching F todaY English case dialect-speaking children is more "governed by opinion than by research. There is no clear direction. I think it is unwarranted intrusion to mandate ex- perimenting." School board members Wendy Barhydt and John Powell voted against the appeal. "We've put several hundred thousand dollars into reading programs and teachers. I think we're doing everything possible . .. My first con- cern is the kids, and I really do not feel this would benefit the kids," said Barhydt. JOINER SAID in his decision that Black English is not a barrier in teacher-student communication until a teacher fails to take the dialect into ac- count when teaching standard English. The case was brought by attorneys for 11 children from the all-black Green Rd. housing project who attended Ann Arbor's Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School. The attorneys charged that the children had been mislabeled as having emotional or learning disabilities. Joiner's decision has been hailed as a "landmark." Kenny Lewis, attorney for the children, said he was delighted that the school board had decided not to appeal, since an appeal could have extended the case for months. "It represents on their (school board members') part that they could help and do it in a meaningful way." Defending the defender Trial lawyer F. Lee Bailey, right, leaves Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa., with the lawyer defending him in a libel suit. Bailey is being sued for $3 million by a Philadelphia attorney for remarks Bailey allegedly made during a trial in 1967. Foiled freebie Some ten people were disappointed yesterday when they went to Tech HiFi on E. William St. to receive a free pair of tickets to the new film More American Graffiti, a T-shirt, and a soundtrack album. They found only the tickets were available. The promotional idea, sponsored by JBL, manufac- turers of stereo equipment, was touted in an ad in a Detroit newspaper Sunday which told area freebie- hunters to just walk into participating Tech HiFi stores, ask to see JBL loudspeakers, and receive all the goodies. Plans went astray, however, when the fortune-seekers got only the tickets. "JBL didn't ship (the other items)," said store manager, Bill Leber. Leber added that he expected the other items to be available today. Action Line in Lansing The state Senate, in an effort to be more ac- cessible, has installed a toll-free "Action Line." Constituents can leave a message for a state senator between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., and that message will be forwarded to the Senator's office twice a day. The line provides "a simple, economical method of contacting me about any state government issue," said Sen. Edward Pierce (D-Ann Arbor). "I want to help you with any problems or questions you have regarding state government." The number is 1-800-292-5893. There is a catch, however-the state legislature is in recess until September. Happenings . ... pay a leisurely visit to Mark Sedgeman's exhibition, entitled "Portraits of Family and Fren- ds", which is open to the public until July 28 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. at 107 N. Main St.... join a brown bag lunch and panel discussion on "Teaching in a Black College" at the Center for Research on Lear- ning and Teaching library, 108 E. Madison S., at noon --- Eclipse Jazz presents Antares and Earth- works Jazztet at West Park from 2 p.m. until 4:30 ,p.m. ... A Near ,asterp Studies department_ presents a lecture and discussion on "From Heritage to Actuality in Arabic Fiction-A Recent Novel" from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. in Lecture Room 1, MLB ... the School of Metaphysics offers a lecture and workshop on "Making your Dreams Come True" at the Ann Arbor Public Library at 7:30 p.m. ... Drake Koka, a South African exile, will speak on "Black Workers in the struggle for Southern Africa" at 8 p.m. in 1017 Angell Hall ... Music Prof. Marilyn Mason will perform on the organ at 8:30 p.m. at the First Unitarian Church ... FILMS: Ann Arbor Film Co-op-The Thief of Bagdad. 7 p.m.; Secret Ceremonv. 9 o.m.; both in Aud. A, Angell Hall ... Media Resources Center-Long Valley: A Study of Bereavement; Hospice; Living the Good Life; program begins at 7:30 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. On the outside All those 1960s Motown tunes about "summer in the city" and "hot fun in the summertime" could be played today with relevance. It'll be hot, hazy, lazy, with scattered thunderstorms. A bit of fog may ap- pear here and there in the morning. The high tem- perature will reach that familiar 90' mark; the lowa reasonable 66'... , . x - ,, - , ., _ - _ _. " . . a " . . . a " .. . . . .s f s x . + ... - .. - e . a .a ". . ; e r t r e ! . s r -a r . . . i . r, r e . " ! i 4 k