The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 25, 1980-Page 3 Firing decision 'not easy' By HOWARD WITT Special to The Daily DETROIT-Firing Jonathan Marwil was "not an easy decision to make," a visibly upset engineering humanities department administrator said yesterday in federal district court here. Humanities Prof. Ralph Loomis, a member of the department's administrative committee and defendant in Marwil's suit against the University, seemed to be fighting back tears as he explained he thought there was an element of unfairness in Marwil's case. LOOMIS VOTED TWICE-in May, 1978 and again in April, 1979-not to grant Marwil a review of his qualifications to receive tenure and not to reappoint him beyond his sixth year at the University. The element of unfairness, Loomis said, did not arise out of any violations of University rules by the administrative committee. Rather, Loomis said, "I felt he shared the predicament of all non-tenured appointees-he was on probation until the tenure point." LOOMIS TESTIFIED HIS overall concern was for the good of the department, which he thought would be best served by terminating Marwil's contract. Administrative committee members have cited what they alleged to be Marwil's frequently intemperate and contentious behavior, as well as questionable scholarly production and worsening him before his contract was completed. THE 40-YEAR-OLD former assistant professor, who has been off the University payroll since May 31, 1979, is suing the Regents and three humanities department administrative committee members-Department Chairman J.C. Mathes and Profs. Loomis and Dwight Stevenson-seeking a court-ordered tenure review. The University contends applicable University- wide policies on contract termination were followed in Marwil's case and that department administrators were justified in terminating him because of his detrimental effects on the department. Loomis, Stevenson, Humanities Prof. Thomas Sawyer, and former Engineering Dean David Ragone all testified yesterday there is no engineering college custom or rule requiring a tenure review in an assistant professor's sixth year of employment. The four, following similar testimony Wednesday by University President Harold Shapiro, also maintained there is no University rule that prohibited giving Marwil notice of non- reappointment in his fifth year at the University. See DECISION, Page 6 studentevaluations, as reasons for their concern about Marwil's effect on the humanities department. Marwil charges the committee members violated department and College policies and customs when they denied him a tenure review in his sixth year as an assistant professor and decided not to reappoint Bargaining progresses in AATA bus strike By ELAINE RIDEOUT As picketers marched through art fair crowds yesterday, bargaining of- ficials for striking transit workers and AATA management began to see eye to eye on some issues for the first time since the strike began four weeks ago. "We've made some progress," said Transportation Employees Union (TEU) Vice-President Shelly Ettinger after yesterday's eight-hour session. She said negotiations had reached a point where actual bargaining was taking place for the first time since the union contract expired June 30. ETTINGER SAID the two sides * moved closer together on an insurance package, although no agreement had yet been reached on disability compen- sation. "We made a lot of progress in the areas of transfers, filling work vacancies and management rights," she added. The union official said AATA presen- ted its second economic proposal in two days at yesterday's bargaining session, increasing its previous wage offer by 10 cents. "With that 10 cent wage increase we have currently been offered a total raise of 26 cents an hour," said Union President Harry Kevorkian at yester- day's Liberty Plaza rally. "That's not a decent wage." YESTERDAY'S rally was half- hearted in comparison with the spirited demonstration held at City Hall two weeks ago. Commenting on the low attendance of union members, Union Steward Mike Shane said that many have been forced to abandon the picket lines in search of See TRANSIT, Page 7 THESE MARIJUANA CIGARETTES are kept in supply at University Hospital for cancer patients' use. The joints help relieve nausea associatead with cancer chemotherapy. Hospital uses marijuana for cancer patient tests By MARYEM RAFANI For about a month, the University has been obtaining marijuana cigarettes from the U.S. government and distributing them to a select group of people. The University is not pushing drugs to the public. About six cancer patients at University Hospital are being provided with the joints as an experimental treatment for the nausea and vomiting caused by chemotherapy. DR. CHARLES KOLLER, medical school assistant professor and one of a group of Michigan doctors involved in the marijuana program, said, "We really haven't ob- served enough to draw any conclusions yet." One of the program's major goals is to discover whether marijuana itself is more effective in fighting the .chemotherapy side-effects than THC-a marijuana derivative that is still being used inother states. "The patient's response to the marijuana depends on whether he has smoked it before. The people who have smoked it before seem to handle it better. Some people in past studies were overdosed with THC and had some bad experiences that they would not have had with the marijuana," Koller said. THE MARIJUANA USED- at University Hospital is grown on a plot of land at the Research Institute for Pharmaceutical Services at the University of Mississippi, and rolled into cigarettes at the Research Triangle Park in North Carolina. The University program is part of a cooperative study by doctors from all over the state. Michigan is the only state in the nation to use marijuana in a cancer study-it is the only state to have a "Medical Marijuana" law which allows the use of pot for both research and treatment.