4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 29, 1994 Ule Libigatn &dlg 'All he wanted to do was bring in his porn research buddies.' -Communication Prof Richard Campbell, speaking about the recently departed chair of the communication department, Neil Malamuth Late 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JEssiE HALLADAY Editor in Chief SAM GOoDsTIN FLINr WAINESS Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necesarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. '8! Purging, with tenure Tenure is a gift. Therefore, according to tion department, only to later be denied at the logic of the University, public records the College level. These professors, accord- need not be kept about who is denied tenure. ing to Associate Dean for Academic Ap- Moreover, goes the same line of reasoning, if pointments Richard Chamberlain, fulfilled the University, say, wants to break up the two of the three requirements for receiving Communication department, isn't it counter- tenure: solid records in teaching and com- productive to give tenure to any professor not munity service. Chamberlain says that the in line with this mission? The answer is yes, reason they were denied tenure was because but there are two questions that must follow: their scholarship didn't adequately advance first, isthe University's reasoning forwanting theory. But most Communication depart- to break up the Communication department ment professors are not theorists. Richard elitist, and second, does denying a faculty Campbell, for instance, is a media critic. member tenure solely onthe basis of his or her When he came to the University, he was not agreeing exactly with the LSA dean over essentially told that to obtain tenure, he had what the mission of his or her department is to finish one book, write a good portion of amount to a breach of contract? In answering another and have a third planned. He has these questions, it is necessary to remember done all of the above, as well as published what the University so often forgets: this is a numerous articles, been honored with the public university that survives on federal dol- prestigious Faculty Recognition Award in lars. Therefore, it is not only ethically dubi- 1992 and received acclaim for organizing ous, but quite possibly illegal, for the Univer- national panels on literacy, political cor- sity to deny the public a list of who (by rectness and labor issues and the mass me- department, by field of study, by gender, by dia. race and by ethnicity) is denied tenure. Unfortunately, his accomplishments This is precisely what the University has drowned in the tidal wave created by Dean done. University Chief Freedom of Informa- Goldenberg's popular culture purge. And this tion Act (FOIA) Officer Lewis A. Morrisey is merely the most blatant manifestation of rejected the Daily's request for a list of the what many faculty members have held true names of people denied tenure at the College for a long time: the University devalues popu- level. In a similar vein, Dave Cahill, who is lar culture studies. Professors who focus their representing Political Science Prof. Jill Ann scholarship on television, music or other im- Crystal in her on-going gender discrimination portant forms of modern communication are suit against the University, was turned down scoffed at. Tenured and non-tenured faculty in his FOIA request for a copy of the minutes members alike hold this to be true, and the from the departmental faculty meeting that University only makes it self-evident when it recommended Crystal for tenure. He was told denies tenure to professors with distinguished that the minutes did not in fact exist. Later, scholarly records on the grounds that their under the pressure of a court proceeding, the scholarship wasn't solid. From 1989-1994, University admitted that they had the min- approximately 94 percent of faculty members utes, and turned them over to Cahill. from the natural sciences have been approved It is quite understandable why the Univer- for tenure by the College. sity has decided to keep its tenure records In the humanities and social sciences the locked behind ivory doors; the facts don't percentage falls by more than 10 percent. speak well for the University: from 1977- As Robin Kelley, an assistant professor 1993,11 percent of the men recommended by who began studying popular culture only an LSA department for tenure have then been after he was given tenure, said, "... for denied by the College. Thirty-one percent of cultural studies to be accepted seriously as women recommended by their departments an area of inquiry, we have a lot more have been denied. convincing to do." In the last two years, all but one faculty The University is suffering from the member denied tenure at the College level has Whitewater syndrome. It thinks that instead been either a woman, a member of the Com- of coming clean with past mistakes, and get- munication department or both (the once ex- ting on with its business, it should deny its ception was a minority from the Art History mistakes and then compile them by releasing department). In a vacuum, this isn't incred- no information to the public - currently, all ibly meaningful. But consider a 16-year that is released is a nameless statistical break- pattern of glass ceilings for women and down that includes only gender and whether students of popular culture. Consider LSA that teacher comes from the humanities, so- Dean Edie Goldenberg's autocratic seizure cial sciences or natural sciences. of the communications department. Con- "Physician, heal thyself," is a nice motto, sider, moreover, that both Richard Campbell but its getting old. Students and faculty alike and Holli A. Semetko were recommended must demand that the tenureprocess is opened unanimously for tenure by the Communica- up. Chaos intheCm dept. SA Dean Edie Goldenberg paid more In addition, the Dean declared the han $300,000 to bring Neil Malamuth to department's five-year plan unacceptable head the University's Department of Com- and suspended the search for new faculty. munication, supposedly in an attempt to pro- She said she would be appointing a commit- vide order and a sense of focus to the school's tee to recommend what the future of the sixth largest department. department should be. Now, nearly three years later, the Concurrently, an advisory committee will University's investment has turned foul - be formed to try to reach a consensus on what leaving the dean with a department in even an ideal Communication curriculum at the greater turmoil, Malamuth back at his old University should consist of based on inde- position in California, a multimillion dollar pendent research and discussion with both lab that is collecting dust and a demoralized faculty and students. faculty uncertain about its future. This unprecedented move by the dean The history of the Department of Com- smacks of the micromanagement that has munication paints a sordid picture of a dean afflicted the University in recent years. For who thrives on micromanagement and takes faculty, this meant frustration at the lack of extraordinary measures to hide her mis- ability to come to agreement on what a liberal takes. A department in limbo, the fate of the arts communication curriculum should con- department lies not with the faculty mem- sist of. For students, especially students im- bers most concerned with providing educa- mersed in fields that don't fit the orthodox tion to students, but with administrators far quantitative mode that Goldenberg seems removed from the lecture hall. The story to want for the department, this meant an involves, among other things, ethical ques- academic future in jeopardy. The depart- tions in how the University dealt with Shira ment is saddled with few tenured and ten- Orion, a student of Malamuth's at UCLA ure-track faculty, and continues to receive who followed him to the University and funding that pales in comparison to that lived with him in University-subsidized received by other social science and human- housing. Goldenberg approved a sweet deal ity departments, while remaining one of the that provided Orion a teaching assistant job largest concentration programs within LSA. 1 / I' I 1 ' CifET 1}E 'PASS Ito AND RUN AI>CK-M-ROLL2' To 5AM""" ANt' SVRe YOU'RE '_EA1ZIN - A C NDOM. s 'SN 1w 'Separate entrances' To the Daily: Related to the privileging of a "quantitative" over a "qualitative" (i.e. humanistic) approach in setting out the goals of the Communication department; perhaps LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg should have referred to some "penile cuff" data before hiring Mr. Malamuth. This would have certainly served the best interest of the University in the light of the ethically compromising situation created in accommodating the needs of his temporary "significant other." How does the same "party line" that favors hard social research over the sentimentality of non-quantifiable discourse, that prefers theoretical abstraction over a straightforward and sometimes metaphorical language understood by a non-academic audience, explain the bestowing of teacher's assistantships and Law School tuition waivers on the basis of personal relationship rather than academic merit? This seems particularly problematic and contradictory in that it shows a disturbing disregard for those already in the Communication department "quantitatively" proven more worthy. I assume this is the same kind of logic that denies professors like Richard Campbell tenure. With the flurry of construction going on around the Central Campus area one wonders what new "separate entrances" are taking shape in the name of cutting edge scholarship. RANDALL TESSIER Graduate student Department of English Racist evidence a little farfetched To the Daily: It seems at least once a week, I can look forward to some type of an article whining about the subjugation of a given race and how society (in one form or another) is to blame. Eugene Bowen's column "Looking for racism and finding it" was no exception. Regarding your comments about "Boyz N the Hood", the film was an attempt, I believe, to show life in the "ghetto" and how uncaring society tends to be toward its violence and problems, not to demean a group of people. Concerning the women of the film, perhaps some women are actually like both groups described in your article. Whom would you rather young women (or men for that matter) emulate? And the claim that boys with fathers succeed while those without fail being a slap in the face of black single mothers? COME ON! It pointed the finger squarely at absentee fathers. I doubt John Singleton is so naive to allow such atrocities to take place in a film he directed. The most outrageous claim in the article however is that pertaining to "Terminator II." Your interpretation of Sarah Conner's beating of the black scientist indicates a hyperactive imagination. The scientist was presented in a very positive role throughout the remainder of the movie (giving his life for the cause). I guess from now on, any movie with an act of violence committed by a white against a black, has a pro-slavery platform - and if the violent act is committed by the black, that just perpetuates the stereotype of the uncivilized black, right? Also, the quote about "you people" is taken out of context (especially in your article, where you take the liberty to abridge the line one sentence later). "You people" refers to the group who made the cyborg. Sure, if one looks hard enough for anything one can find it, but one should look objectively. GARY SCOTT Dental student sleepers unite! "Good morning," my roommate says to me every afternoon when I stumble out of bed. My roommate is a morning person, and the phrase, spoken at 2:00 in the afternoon, hasjusta touch of irony to it. I am not a morning person, yet saying "Good night" at 11:00 or 12:00 - when I'll be up another four hours - doesn't have the same ring to it at all. This is an injustice of epic proportions. Forget patriarchy-the most unjust of all dictatorships is this moral self-righteousness of the early risers of the world. Sleep schedules are one of the major things that divide college life from the rest of normal existence. I haven't had to get up early sinceehigh school, and consequently I haven't. In my dorm in college we had dorm meetings at 10:00 p.m., and few people went to bed beforeone. Parties start at 9:00 or 10:00 on weekends, and it's universally agreed that 8:00 a.m. classes should be avoided like the plague. This is one of the reasons the Real World scares me so much -any normal job would require me to get out of bed before 8:00, a fate worse than death. The real world just hasn't gotten the clue yet that getting up early is no fun. In college some of my friends' parents never got the idea of 10 o'clock classes and kept wondering why their kids sounded so tired when they called at 7:30. It also makes things very confusing when you go home, because just whenyou'reused to things waking up around the dorm, your parents go to bed and dare you to make any noise. During break my brother and I would stay up and talk until my mother would come walking in in her robe which she bought in 1975, squinting inthe light and asking something inane like, "What are you guys doing?" My brother and Iwould look at each other silently, wondering why the answer wasn't obvious. "Is this a trick question?" he'd ask. "Early to bed and early to rise," Ben Franklin told us hard-working, red-blooded Americans, informing us of the only proper way to live our lives. Somewhere along the line people who drag themselves out of bed at ungodly hours were accorded an almost religious admiration usually reserved for the Pope, the Virgin Mary and Nancy Kerrigan. The same self-serving morning person who made this rule also decided that sleeping late is "lazy," no matter how late you stayed up the night before. It'sgettingup early and goingto bed at9:00 that's admirable. "If you getup at 10:00 you'llbe three hours behind everyone else," claimed the uncle of a friend of mine. "No," my friend replied. "I stay up until 2:00, so I'll be 21 hours ahead." This the argument I've had over and over again with my parents-if I sleep the same amount of time, what does it matter when I get up in the morning? My parents seem to agree with the philosophy Garrison Keillor spoofs in his book Lake Wobegon Days: "If God had not meanteveryonetobeinbedby 10:30, He never would have created the ten- o'clocknewscast." It'sthe unwritten rule of the Central Time zone - right after the sports report, it's off to snoozeland. It's tyranny, I'm telling you. As I get older I am beginning to see some of the advantages of getting up before noon (seeing more than two hours of sunlight is, admittedly, agoodthing), but I still consider myself a crusader for the morning-disa4vantaged. Those of us who prefer a later schedule face a lot of prejudice. Not only arewe called lazy, but annoying people keep scheduling essential classes at 8:00 and 9:00 4.m. The only institution in the Westernworld which runs on my schedule is Meijer's, where I'm free to buy plastic cups and frozen pizzas at all hours of the night. Who let the morning people design the schedule of the world, anyway? Years ago I interviewed a doctor who was a sleep expert who maintained - no kidding -; that S S li Campbell The University doesn't know how to adequately evaluate interdisciplinary cultural scholars. The tenure structure evaluates tenure candidates in three categories: humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. If your work overlaps two of these boundaries, as Richard Campbell's work overlaps the humanities and social sciences, you're not rewarded for your rare ability to integrate research across disciplines, but instead you come up short for not meeting the criteria of a single disciplinary tradition. President Duderstadt frequently talks about the need for scholars to break down intellectual boundaries. This is precisely what Richard Campbell had done. In his six years here, he has generously shared his work and time with faculty and graduate students in communication, american culture, history, political science, sociology, english and several other fields. Currently, his research fa fl+ i'n.. - he.om of and tenure troubles new information superhighway. As a communication and american culture studies scholar, Richard Campbell is one of the few University professors who is prepared to address the implications of our rapidly changing communication system on the political process and the rest of American culture. The second shortcoming in the tenure review process is that it doesn't recognize public scholars. Richard Campbell is highly regarded across the country as an expert in news, television and popular culture. Let me give you an idea of his profound impact: Within the past two years, he has been interviewed or cited by the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, Detroit News and Free Press, the Jerusalem Post and the New York Tines. In addition to his two well received books and several academic journal articles, he has written five pieces for Tsavcer t° rt a--nA academic talent and public image, being a "public" scholar at the University of Michigan is often regarded as a detriment to your status. The incorrect assumption is that if you can actually make sense in explaining your research to the public, you must not be a serious academic. Finally, one of the most disturbing aspects of the tenure review process, particularly as it applied to Richard Campbell, is that his superb teaching seems to have carried little weight in the tenure decision. In 1992, Richard Campbell received the University's coveted Faculty Recognition Award. Although the University rewarded Campbell for his research and his work as a "tireless organizer, excellent teacher and nurturing mentor," he was denied tenure within a year. When the University denies tenure to one of its most innovative and brightest scholars and one of its best teachers, the meaning of the University's .: -. . , -f