I Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, October 9, 1983 Johnson's offbeat style hooks class By BARBARA MISLE Nobody wants to be in Cheryl Joh-. nson's English class - and she knows it. But it doesn't bother her. Johnson's i job is getting students out of her class. EVERY SEMESTER Johnson works with 16 students whose English placement exam scores were not high enough to earn them a spot in a Fresh- man Compositon class. Although the class is more commonly known as "football English," Johnson maintains the seven-week Writing tutorial course is not for "slow" students. Johnson says her students are bright some even received "'A"s in high PROFILE school English classes - but their \writing skills weren't up to English Composition Board standards. IN ENGLISH 100, students and professors are not pitted against each other with students trying to pin down exam questions. Johnson is attuned to students' ner- vous anticipation about the course's final exam and tries to quell their anxiety. She empathizes with students' fear that if they don't pass the test, they'll have to take the tutorial over. Class often is sidetracked with questions about the final exam. One student asks, "When will we find out if we passed?" Another queries, "Will they be looking for style or structure on the test?" INSTEAD OF skirting these questions with vague hints, Johnson tells her students exactly what they need to know. "They'll definitely be looking for structure," she warns the class. "They want to make sure you know how to put something together that is logical and consistent." "And don't get fancy," she adds. "It's better to be practical, clear, and to the point than to be fancy." IN THE FIVE years she has been an ECB lecturer teaching English 100, Johnson's methods have proved suc- cessful. Only four of her students have failed the final exam and a good num- ber place out of Freshman Com- position, she said. Johnson is smooth, controlled, and confident, when she teaches. She paces the floor, looks directly at students and adds an "all right?" or an "okay?" to the end of her sentences to make sure they are listening. After a few weeks in Johnson's class, students usually stop resenting being placed in a tutorial. They fin!h erb non: traditional teaching style a welcome change from more rigid English teachers who are fanatical about verb tense disagreement or split infinitives. "I GUESS I'M just not that kind of person. , I point out (grammatical errors), but not to give a sense that your whole world will fall apart if you split an infinitive. "I don't like to intimidate writers," she says. And Johnson's students are quick to back her up. "SHE'S NOT like most professors where you feel low compared to their high. She's on your level and she wants V VU, Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON English Lecturer Cheryl Johnson teaches Writing Tutorial for students who don't qualify for Freshman Composition. Despite students' disappointment with being in a tutorial, they say Johnson's enthusiasm for writing is contagious. our opinions," says LSA Freshman Rick Bancroft, one of Johnson's studen- ts. Adds Greg Cain, also an LSA fresh- man, "She doesn't slice through your papers with a red pen. She's down to earth. You can say anything to her - she might not agree with you, but she'll listen." Yet Johnson's laid-back personality doesn't make students regard her as a "blow-off" teacher; her informal style works in her favor. ths, married, barefoot and pregnant, and heating up pot pies - if they knew how to do it. It would be rough, though." Teaching isn't the only area of John- son's life she has approached in a non- traditional manner. Unlike many of her high school friends who marriedand had children soon after graduating, the 33-year-old Johnson said she is con- tent to live on her own. But the path she has chosen has not been an easy one. 'I had something to prove...that I could come from my environment, from my poverty, and do whatever I wanted to do.' - Cheryl Johnson English lecturer my own. I had to sit there in that big; cornfield and come to terms with some things." "I HAD something to prove, not to my family, but prove to myself, that I could do it. That I could come from my en- vironment, from my poverty, and do whatever I wanted to do," she explains, But in the process of pursuing her career goals, Johnson was treading on ground that for the most part was previously unexplored by black women. Even now there are few black women professors at the University, which Johnson says is disconcerting. "I GUESS IT bothers me that there aren't more black women here on cam- pus. I'm not exceptional. I like what I do, and I think I have something to con- 'tribute, but there are so many more. Why aren't they here? I don't know," she said. But success can be a "double-edged sword," according to, Johnson. When she returns to' Atliita, there is 'more distance between her and her family because they live in such different worlds. In spite of the obstacles she has over- come and still has to deal with, Johnson is content with her life, although she aspires someday to go to law school. "I'd like to be a revolutionary and get lawyers to stop using that horrible prose they use sometimes that no one understands. "I've come to terms with who and what I am, and insist on being accepted for who and what I am," she says. "And generally I am. That is rewarding." IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Mondale wins Iowa straw poii DES MOINES, Iowa - Former Vice President Walter Mondale won a presidential straw poll of more than 4,000 Iowa Democratic activists last night, winning 47 percent of the votes cast. California Sen. Alan Cranston polled 37 percent, followed by Ohio Sen.t John Glenn with 5.9 percent. Of the 4,143 votes cast, Mondale polled 1,948 to Cranston's 1,534. Colorado Sen. Gary Hart scored 3.5 percent, while former South Dakota, Sen. George McGovern, the party's 1972 presidential nominee scored 1.8 percent. Former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew and South Carolina Sen. Ernest Hollings each drew less than 1 percent of the vote, and 2.8 percent of the ac- tivists said they had no preference. The straw poll was conducted by The Associated Press. Both Mondale and Cranston had launched substantial organizing efforts to turn out supporters at the Democratic Party's annual Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner, where Jimmy Carter brought his name to prominence eight years ago. Two of the presidential contenders, Askew and Hart, told party loyalists yesterday that the party must change if it is to command a new national majority. Airline talks near settlement MIAMIA - A settlement reportedly was near yesterday in contract talks between flight attendants and Eastern Airlines, which went to the brink of bankruptcy before winning a truce with its labor unions. After a 13-hour bargaining session Friday, and negotiators reported un- precedented progress in the wage talks. Sources close to the talks said Eastern had dropped its demand for produc- tivity increases and the only remaining issue was pay. Full details of the pact agreed upon by Eastern and its three unions were not disclosed, but Eastern President Frank Borman agreed to drop the Oct. 13 deadline he had set for acceptance of the wage cuts. In return for the elinihation of the deadline, the unions promised to abide by the findings of two New York financial firms that will do a study on Eastern's financial condition. In another development, police reported a break-in at the offices of local 553. headuarters of the 5,800-member Eastern chapter of Transport Workers Union. Police spokesman Doug Reese said there was no infor- mation available on what was taken, if anything. Klansman clubbed in Lansing LANSING, Mich. - A man whom police identified as a KKK member was clubbed yesterday by counter-demonstrators who foiled plans for a rally on the Capitol lawn by the Klan and a neo-Nazi group. Three people were arrested and two were being held on felonious assault charges, police said. A man who identified himself as Bobby Patterson of Detroit said he was charged with disorderly conduct and released on $50 bond. In another Klan-related incident yeserday in Lanett, Ala. a black man was arrested yesterday after firing two shots at a robed Ku Klub Klansman who was handing out literature with other Klan members in the town square, police said. No one was hit by the flying bullets, police said. The only injury occurred when a scuffle broke out and the assailant allegedly struck the 18- year-old Klansman over the head with the gun, said Police Chief James Smith. Willie Truitt, a 52-year-old city employee, was arrested on a charge of at- tempted murder and placed in the Chambers County Jail in Lafayette under $25,000 bond, Smith said. The police chief said a dozen robed members of the Invisible Empire, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, were handing out literature in the town square and causing no problems until Truitt approached with a .38-caliber pistol at about 12:15 p.m. Reagan says Russian missiles in Syria justifies U.S. in Lebanon WASHINGTON - President Reagan, questioning Syrian claims of "peaceful intentions" in Lebanon, expressed concern yesterday over the Soviet Union's move to arm Syria with a new generation of mobile missiles. In his weekly radio address, the president said Syria "today has some 5,000 Soviet adviers and technicians and a massive amount of new Soviet equipment in its country - including a new generation of surface-to-surface missiles, the SS-21." With a range of 75 miles, the SS-21 missiles could hit major population cen- ters in Israeal and Lebanon - or ships of the U.S. Sixth Fleet offshore. Reagan asserted that the increased Soviet presence in Syria leaves no doubt about the need for the continued presence of 1,600 U.S. Marines in Lebanon He also accused Syria of reneging on an agreement to withdraw its troops from war-torn Lebanon if Israel did. In view of the Soviet arms buildup in Syria, he said, "we have to wonder aloud about Syrian protestations of their peaceful intentions." Reagan's radio address marked the first U.S. statement indicating that the mobile missiles were already in Syria. Reagan quoted a lette that he said a "young Marine corporal" stationed in Lebanon had written to his hometown newspaper. In his letter, the soldier wrote: 'It is our duty as Americans to stop the cancerous spread of Soviet influence wherever it may be, because someday we or some future generation will wake up and find the U.S.A. to be the only free state left, with communism upon our doorstep. And then it will be too late." Reagan commented that "the corporal may not have spelled out the specifics as to why it was in our best interest to be there in Lebanon, but he was certainly correct in his conclusion that it is our business." 14 .4 "There is a certain distance, you still know she's a teacher and you respect her," said Cain. "YOU KNOW YOU'D never blow off an assignment," adds another student, Jennifer Buchanan. Johnson shares her passion for good writing with students and her en- thusiasm is contagious. "If prose is lucid, if your prose is cogent, if it's coherent, consistent, comes together just right - love it," said Johnson. SO GREAT IS her love for words, she quips that despite her strong feminist views, a skilled persuasive speaker "could probably have me in two mon- AFTER PUTTING herself through Spellman College, a small, black women's school in her home town of Atlanta, Ga., she received a master's degree in English from the University in 1973. Johnson, who is completing her doctorate in English and education this year, then taught at Northern Illinois University in Dekalb where she lived on her own for the first time. Away from the insulated support of her large family Johnson had to make her own decisions and deal with people who rejected her simply because she was black or from the south. "I had no one's shoulder to -cry on for the most part, but 4 China to purge 3 million Mao followers 4 (Continued from Page 1) PEKING (AP) - Chinese leaders will purge at least 3 million of the Communist Party's 40 million mem- bers in a re-registration campaign aimed at expelling adherents to the late Chairman Mao Tse-tung's radical views, diplomatic sources who requested anonymity said yesterday. China's state-run press refers to the three-year campaign as a "rec- tification," a housecleaning to rid the party of leftist opponents to the policies of China's ranking leader, Deng Xiaoping. But official accounts have never specified how many party mem- bers are likely to be expelled. DENG IS THE ranking member of the party's ruling Politburo and chair- man of the Military Affairs Com- 1 mission. He rose to power following Mao's death in 1976. In contrast to Mao, Deng has allowed peasants to engage in limited private enterprise, invited foreigners to invest in China, reinstituted aptitude testing in colleges, shifted the economic em- phasis to consumer goods and made state-run industry more accountable for profit and loss. These changes have angered party members who adhere to Mao's philosophy of unending revolution, class struggle and self-reliance. Many of these members were able to join the party during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, a chaotic period inspired by Mao's radical directives aimed at ex- pelling those he considered rightist "capitalist roaders" - such as Deng. WHEN THE intention to conduct a rectification was announced in Septem- ber 1982, party General Secreatary Hu Yaobang said the emphasis would be on re-education and "curing the illness to save the patient." The party leadership is trying to ease fears of members who recall the bloody purges of the Cultural Revolution. At that time, many of Mao's suspected op- ponents, including Deng and his associates, were stripped of their authority. Experimental rectifications already have started in provinces. Accounts in the state-run press say that some have and presents SWEET DEELSFOR DI nro CA / A C + nne -, r :-n +k. m n nAA n; .-i- k n rI iCa OAAn, r+., n encountered resistance. "THERE ARE signs that local of- ficials are hanging on, protecting each other, and the central authorities are not able to dislodge them - that's why this may require three years," said one foreign analyst. Hu told a delegation of Japanese socialists last week that "troublesome elements" left over from the Cultural Revolution will take up to 10 years to eliminate. "I have the impression that this time it will be very strict," said Masashi Ishibashi, head of the Japan Socialist Party. Publications cover left, ri ht center (Continued from Page 1) The Review is funded by private con- tributions from students, alumni, business people with "an interest in Ann Arbor," and a grant from the In- stitute for Educational Affairs in New York, Mathieson said. The Michigan Student Assembly's nublication. MSA News. returned to Vol. XCIV - No.29 Sunday, October 9, 1983 (ISSN 0745-967X) 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. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 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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