The Michigan Daily-Thursday, July 10, 1980-Page 1i REP. URGES NAVY PROBE Assaults reported. on ship C LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - A California congressman is urging the Navy to investigate reports that a gang called "The Dirty Dozen" is dealing drugs, loan-sharking and assaulting sailors onboard the USS Norton Sound. The missile test ship is already plagued by charges of lesbianism against eight sailors and of sexual hrassment against a male ptty of- ficer who faces a court-martial today. IN, ADDITION, Fireman's Appren- tice Bill Kenny claimed on Monday he was attacked by Dirty Dozen members on a street near Long Beach Harbor where the ship is in for repairs. Kenny was one of two crewmen stabbed aboard the ship at its Port Hueneme, Calif., berth in May. And some on the ship reportedly believe a woman's disappearance overboard nine months ago was mur- der, not suicide as the Navy ruled. "We have numerous reports about icidences of loan-sharking and drug- dealing - all unsubstantiated," said Deane Dana, an aide to Rep. Robert Dornan (R-Calif.). "There is definitely some sort of a thug-type element on- board, but whether it is organized we don't know." HE SAID Dornan's office heard the complaints while investigating the in- cidents involving Kenny, a constituent. "What we've heard is disturbing," Dana said, although he declined to be specific. Contract te policies quo (Continued from Page 3 the fall term of the final year of the con- tract that he or she would not be re- appointed at the conclusion of a con- tract. THE FORMER assistant professor said he had believed a reappointment review was customarily conducted during the final year of a contract, and that if the contract were terminated, the faculty member received a ter- minal, one-year appointment. Marwil derives his belief from at least one humanities department document titled "Policy on Contract Renewal for Non-Tenured Faculty." He claims the 1978 reappointment review - following hard on the heels of heated departmental meetings during which Marwil and Mathes clashed over the department's hiring policies - was unorthodox for two reasons: first, the review was not conducted in the final year of his contract, and second, the administrative committee - Mathes, Loomis, and Stevenson - conducted the review instead of an ad hoc group. THE UNIVERSITY maintains that the Standard Practice Guide is the final authority regarding contract ter- mination procedures. The defendants claim that the Guide does not proscribe reappointment reviews conducted prior to the year of contract expiration and that reviews conducted at such time are not subject to the department policy requiring the establishment of an ad hoc review committee. During his cross-examination, Ver- cruysse argued that throughout Mar- wil's six years on the faculty, the depar- tment had continually questioned his He added that should evidence from the lesbianism hearings - which get under way July 14 against three of the eight women threatened with dismissal - back up allegations made in the Ken- ny investigation, "Dornan would be remiss not to submit this information to the appropriate investigatory arm of the Congress." All investigations so far are internal. In San Diego, Navy Master Chief Jim McDonough said: "There are rumors of such a gang. So far we have not un- covered anything to substantiate the rumors." ON WEDNESDAY, Lt. Cmdr. Mark Baker confirmed a court-martial will begin today against Petty Officer Craig Norman. "Norman is charged with of- fenses concerning sexual harassment," Baker said. A woman who called The Associated Press on Friday claiming to be one of 61 women among the Norton Sound's crew of 375 said six women originally com- plained individually about sexual harassment. Those complaints were dismissed. "It took all six of us girls to get together and make a statement," said the woman, who would not identify her- self. "We told the captain that if something didn't happen, we were going to bring it out - call congressmen or something." AT A SECOND screening in- rmination estioned scholarly production. The attorney fur- ther attempted to show that Marwil's articles were published in journals of sometimes questionable scholarly value. Marwil said he realized his desire to produce books instead of frequent ar- ticles put him at odds with accepted department expectations, but added that he finally relented and wrote four articles for publication. The trial enters its fourth day today as Vercruysse resumes his cross- examination. Marwil's first witness following his direct testimony on Mon- day and Tuesday is expected to be called today. That witness will probably be Humanities Prof. David Hughes, who became a member of the department administrative committee in 1979 and opposed termination of Marwil's contract. LOWE$T CO$T FLIGHTS * Reliable - Flexible *Free European Stops SBuy Now For Summer And ave (212) 689-8980 Outside New York FE100223767 Tecent, Fo Student Tave 1140 roadway,N.Y.CNY 10001 'uir &hYear vestigation, the case was revived and Norman was eventually ordered to stand trial by court-martial, Baker said. The caller said she called the AP because the women were afraid nothing would happen at the court-martial. She said she and another woman stood night watch together because they were afraid. "We were up there on the fantail with knives because we were terrified," she said. Kenny, 19, said Monday's attack has merely increased the fear he has felt since the stabbing two months ago. Kenny was stabbed three times while asleep in his bunk the morning of May 2. HE CLAIMS he was attacked because he refused to be "muscled" by the Dirty Dozen. He said gang members have beaten fresh recruits with hammers and once tossed a bucket.of water on a man holding a live power line. At Dornan's urging, the Naval In- spector General's office is now in- vestigating the May stabbing. together. 1-t- qa Burning the midnight oil can be tough on your eyesight, pookie. (Didn't you know Ulrich's carries a full line of Luxo lamps?) And you say you missed that 8:00 class' AGAIN? (Ulrich's has alarm clocks, too -- or they can fix your old one.) And your roommate insists he CAN TOO hitchhike to Katmandu? (Get him a globe at Ulrich's. Maybe it'll help.) Ulrich's has everything you need, including the lowest prices in town (they guarantee it)! MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 East University at the corner of East U. and South U.