Page 2-Friday, October 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily You Can Stil Make A Diference While careers in public service may not be as fashionable as they were a decade ago, such careers can be very rewarding and personally satisfying. After just three months of intensive training at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you will be prepared to work in govern- ment agencies, public serviceorganizations and lawfirms as a Legal Assistant in the fields of Administrative and Public Law or Criminal Law. You will do work traditionally performed by attorneys. You will work in the dynamic field of govern- rment legislation and regulation and be involved in such areas as: Environmental Law, Food Drug and Health Law, Criminal Justice, Equal Opportunity, Welfare, Epergy, and Product Safety Law. Furthermore, you will earn graduate credit towards a Master of Arts in Legal Studies through Antioch School of Law for all course work completed at The Institute. We are the nation's first and most respected school for paralegal training, and since 1970, have trained more than 4,000 college graduates from across the country. If you are a senior of high academic standing and looking for a meaningful career, contact your Placement Office for an interview with our representative. We will Visit your campus on: Wednesday, October 22 The Institute ; 235 South 17th street for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 Paralegal (215) 732-6600Y Training a (Operated by Para-Legal, inc.) Approved by The American Bar Association Programs Earn Full Credit Toward M.A. in Legal Studies through Antioch School of Law. Marwil decides not to appeal; ends tenure reviiew battle By HOWARD WITT - Jonathan Marwil's year-long battle against the University formally ended yesterday when the former assistant professor announced he would not ap- peal a federal judge's decision denying him reinstatement to the faculty. Citing the time and expense involved in his federal district court fight, Mar= wil said, "I am compelled to put this matter behind me." MARWIL HAD CLAIMED in his suit against the University that he was un- fairly denied a review of his qualifications to receive tenure after six years on the faculty of the engineering humanities department. U.S. District Judge Philp Pratt ruled September 23, however, that depar- tment administrators had not broken any rules in allowing Marwil's contract to expire in May, 1979 without a tenure review. University General Counsel Roderick Daane said yesterday the University would not press its legal request for at- torneys' fees and court costs. Such a request is considered routine when defendants ina civil suit win. IN A STATEMENT released yester- day, Marwil said the decision not to ap- peal was painful, "for it is natural to pursue relief from injustice until every forum has been tried." Before he took his case to the courts, Marwil had sought relief from every available forum within the University,, finally making an unsuccessful appeal to the Regents to intervene on his behalf. Marwil originally sought more than $1 million in damages or reinstatement to the faculty pending a tenure review. HIS UNPRECEDENTED suit named as defendants the' Regents and three members of the humanities department administrative committee. Marwil charged the committee members deliberately sidestepped department and College policies and customs requiring that he be granted a tenure review in his sixth year as an' assistant professor at the University. Pratt, in a ruling that could have far- reaching implications, said that no policies were violated in Marwil's case and that the popularly-regarded "custom" of sixth-year tenure reviews "finds only tenuous support in the fac- ts." The 40-year-old former professor said he has. been searching for another teaching position with little success. He added that he believes his suit against the University has stigmatized his ability to find work in the academic world. INBRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and Uniteh Press International reports Abscam defendants may be sued WASHINGTON-Congressmen and others convicted of accepting bribes from FBI undercover agents in the Abscam scandal may face Justice Department civil suits seeking recovery of the money, a department official said yesterday. Irvin Nathan, the deputy assistant attorney general who coordinated prosecutions in the probe, told UPI the department's civil division is "ac- tively considering" filing suit against Rep. John Jenrette (D-S.C.) and for- mer Rep. Michael "Ozzie" Myers (p-Pa.). One Justice Department official, who asked not to be named, said it *ould be -worth the government's legal costs to recover the more than $300,000 allegedly accepted by more than a dozen Abscam defendants. Non-nuclear weapons treaty signed GENEVA-Negotitors from 72 nations yesterday agreed on the terms of an arms control treaty designed to protect civilian populations and targets from non-nucler horror weapons. The treaty, along with three protocols on different types of "inhumane" conventional weapons, will be opened for signatures in six months after en- dorsement by the U.N. General Assembly. It represents a partly successful outcome of the U.N. "conference on ex- cessivly injurious conventional weapons" which began last year-partly successful because the original aim was to ban the use of such arms against combatants in a war as well as civilians. Kelley defends Proposal E decision LANSING-Attorney General Frank Kelley, a staunch supporter of the proposed income tax hike for new prison construction,.upheld yesterday the measure's right to appear on the November ballot. The state Constitution bars from ballot test bills "appropriating money"-a provision which has been used in the past to block conservative groups seeking to force referenda on gas and weight tax increases. Kelley, Gov. William Milliken and other supporters of Proposal E say the measure is a, must for a prison system faced with the threat of a court takeover because it is jammed with nearly 2,000 more inmates than it was designed to hold. Courts held the hikes, linked to funding for transportation, were appropriations. Scientists announce fertilization breakthrough WASHINGTON-Government scientists yesterday reported develop- ment of an egg transplant procedure that may provide an alternative to test tube fertilization for women unable to conveive because of blocked Fallopian tubes. The procedure may be particularly suitable for women who have had their tubes tied surgically as a voluntary sterilization measure and who then decide they want to bear children after all. Fallopian tube blockage is the most common cause of infertility in women. It has been estimated that hundreds of thousands, and perhaps millions, of American women have blocked tubes. Valuable paintings stolen. from Monte Carlo apartment MONTE CARLO, Monaco-Thieves looted a luxury Riviera apartment of $6.4 million worth of paintings, including Picassos, Renoirs, Madiglianis and utrillos, and police yesterday arrested the butler. Police charged Ronald Headford, a 49-year-old British butler, as an ac- complice in the theft from the apartment of the late Sir Charles Clore, one of the richest men in Britain. Headford, a butler for Clore, continued to live in the 30-room apartment after his employer died a year ago. Clore, called "the man with the Midas touch," had a financial empire that included Selfridges department store in Oxford Street,-British Shoe Corp., a chain of betting offices. Son of a Jewish tailor, Clore was a strong supporter of Israel and also donated large sums to charities. The paintings were stolen over the weekend and police said they charged the butler after he several times changed his story of the theft. Bendix v.p. resigns amidst rumors SOUTHFIELD-Mary Cunningham resigned yesterday as Bendix Corp. - vice president, citing "unfounded rumors" she became one of the nation's top women executives through a romantic relationship with Chairman William Ages. Cunningham, vice president for strategic planning for the nation's 88th- largest company, said in a statement that the rumors "substantially im- paired" her ability to function as a corporate executive. Cunningham's friendship with Agee became a subject of national gossip when, on Sept. 24, Agree announced her latest promotion and told a meeting of some 600 headquarters employees that her rise in the company stemmed from her Ability and not from any personal relationship. I 01 A?, HAVE DINNER WITH, Charley THIS WEEK A bowl of chili, a slice of corn- bread & house beverage for $1.50 Special is from 6-8 pm, M-F Good TimesCharleys bF1140 South University-668-8411 01 uac mini-course: art SIX WEEK SESSIONS $15 beg. oct.14or20,7-9or9-l1 sign up at ticket central - 763-1103 01 I I wm oZZpse PHitiP @1 L5 B"t 0 he t gan a -I Volume XCI, No.,32 Friday, October 10, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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I ..'C: 3 Tickets $7.50 reserved Editor-in-Chief.......,............MARK PARRENT Managing Editor.................MITCH CANTOR City Editor.......................PATRICIA HAGEN University Editor.................TOMAS MIRGA Features Editor..................BETH ROSENBERG Opinion Page Editors,................JOSHUA PECK HOWARD WITT Sunday Page Editor.............ADRIENNE LYONS Arts Editor.......................MARK COLEMAN DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor.....................ALAN FANGER Business Manager...........ROSEMARY WICKOWSKI Sales Manager... _ ............KRISTINA PETERSON., Operations Manager..........KATHLEEN CULVER CO-Display Manager............... DONNA DREBIN Co-Disply Manager.............ROBERT THOMPSON x Classified Manager..-.......-.........SUSAN KLING4 Finance Manager-. ...-..... . ...GREGG HADDAD Nationals Manager................-LISA JORDAN Circulation Manager..........TERRY DEAN REDDING* Sales Coordinator............ E. 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