Monday, August 29, 1983The Daily Tar Heel11 A
Garrow continues bid for reappointment despite series of failures
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V
David Garrow
Libraries list
times to study
Ah, well. How soon the carefree
days of summer are behind us.
UNC's libraries are a good place to
begin chapter one of all those newly
purchased textbooks.
For the soon-to-be studious,
library hours and locations follow.
Departmental libraries are open at
various hours it's best to call and
check the schedule.
UNDERGRADUATE LIBRARY
Monday-Thursday 8 AM-2 AM
Friday 8AM-9PM
Saturday 9 AM-MIDNIGHT
Sunday 10 AM-2 AM
WILSON LIBRARY
Monday-Friday 8 AM-1 1 PM
Saturday
Sunday
9AM-5 PM
2PM-11PM
. Art Library
1 14 Ackland Art Center 962-2397
Botany Library
310-ACokerHall 962-3783
City and Regional Planning Library
New East 962-3983
Chemistry Library
269-Venable Hall
Geology Library
120 Mitchell Hall
962-1188
962-2386
Library Science Library
1 1 4 Manning Hall i . 962-8365 1
Math-Physics Library
365 Phillips Hall 962-2323
Music Library
106 Hill Hall 966-1113
Health Sciences Library
Pittsboro Road 966-21 1 1
Institute of Government Library
030 Knapp Building 966-538 1
Law Library
Van Hecke-Wettach Hall 962-1321
Pharmacy Library
117 Beard Hall
966-1122
Carolina Population Center Library
123 W. Franlin St.,
5th floor, NML Building 962-308 1
SociologyPolitical Science Library
271 Hamilton Hall 962-7502
Zoology Library
213 Wilson Hall
962-2264
Begin
From page 1
By STUART TONKINSON
Staff Writer
Five months after the UNC political
science department voted not to rehire
Assistant Professor David J. Garrow, the
appeals process is finally winding to a
close.
According to the Tenure Document, the
next and last step in the process involves a
hearing before the UNC Board of Gover
nor's Committee on Personnel and
Tenure. Garrow must submit a written
petition before President William C. Fri
day asking for a hearing.
Friday said on Sunday he had not yet
received a petition from Garrow. Garrow,
on a speaking engagement in Washington,
could not be reached for comment.
Garrow said the UNC Board of Trustees
voted Aug. 19 to stand by the decision not
to rehire him. Garrow said he had
presented his case before a three-man com
mittee of the BOT. He declined to com
ment on what reasons the BOT might have
had for opposing his appeal.
The appeals process began after the
political science department voted 10-9 not
to rehire Garrow when his term ends in
1984. Garrow is the first political science
professor not to receive a recommendation
for reappointment after a probationary
term.
Garrow appealed to David H. Moreau,
the then-acting dean of the College of Arts
and Sciences, claiming that the political
science department had not followed the
procedure specified in the Tenure Docu
ment in making their decision. Moreau
denied the appeal.
According to the Tenure Document
there are three impermissible grounds for
recommending nonreappoinfrnent: the
faculty member exercising his right to
freedom of speech; discrimination based
on race, sex, religion or national origin;
and personal malice.
Charging that the decision was based on
one of these grounds, Garrow brought his
case before the Faculty Hearings Commit
tee, a standing committee of five pro
fessors. The committee could not find
evidence of wrongdoing on the part of the
department, and therefore ruled against
him, Garrow said.
Garrow then brought the case before
the Board of Trustees, claiming that the
Faculty Hearings Committee had shown
clear and demonstrable error in their deci
sion. This, too, failed.
"With each step in the process, it gets
harder and harder to prove wrongdoing,"
Garrow said.
Garrow has retained the services of
lawyers Judy Miller and Gregory Craig,
members of the Washington-based law
firm Williams and Connolly. Garrow said .
the firm is providing the services free, but
would not comment further.
Administration officials have declined
to comment on the case, citing statutes
prohibiting state employees from discuss
ing personnel matters.
"The event has not been completely un
pleasant for me," Garrow said. Although
final figures have not yet been compiled by
UNC's Department of Records, Garrow
said that enrollment in his Civil Liberties in
the U.S. course and his American In
telligence Agencies course is far higher
than normal.
Garrow, who participated in the week
end march on Washington com
memorating the anniversary of Martin
Luther King Jr.'s 1963 march, has written
several works on the subject of civil rights,
including two books about King.
In a letter to Garrow, chairman of the
political science department James W.
Prothro described Garrow 's work as
"closer to investigative journalism than to
basic scholarship."
Garrow said in response that civil rights
is a part of political science. Coretta Scott
King, King's widow, added her voice in
support of Garrow in a letter to University
officials last spring.
Garrow said in an open letter that al
though he is disappointed by the decision
of the BOT, he remains optimistic. He
added that he feels there is some faculty
support for his cause.
He has said earlier that he would remain
at the University if he won his appeal.
Garrow received his Ph.D. from Duke
University in 1981. He won the 1978 Chas
tain Award of the Southern Political
Science Association for his book Protest at
Selma: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. His latest
book, The FBI and Martin Luther King,
Jr.: From "Solo" to Memphis discusses
the FBI's investigation of King. Garrow
was appointed to the faculty in 1980.
86 percen t of UNC law school graduates passing N. C. state bar exam on first time
By AMY TANNER
Staff Writer
There has been no substantial change since last
year in the number of UNC School of Law graduates
who passed the state bar exam in their first attempt in
July.
Of the UNC graduates taking the exam for the first
time, 86 percent passed. This represents 119 out of
138 students. In July 1982, 84 percent of the first
time bar candidates passed, or 123 of 146 candidates.
Dean of the School of Law Kenneth S. Broun said
the percentage of graduates passing the exam the first
time they took it has changed little over the past few
years. But Broun added, "There has been a slight
overall downward trend the past 10 years in the
number of people passing the test." In the early
1970s the percentage of people passing the exam
would have been above 90 percent, Broun said.
The downward trend could be caused by the fact
that the test procedures are somewhat more
sophisticated, Broun said. "They are making an ef
fort to make sure people are rninimally qualified," he
said. More graduates from out-of-state law schools
are taking the N.C. bar exam, and they may be less
qualified, he added.
Five out of 13 UNC graduates taking the exam
over in July passed. This represents a passing rate of
38 percent and is the same percentage reported last
July.
The total number of UNC law school graduates
passing the bar exam was 124 out of 151, or 82 per
cent. Last July the percentage of UNC graduates
passing was also 82 percent.
Of all students taking the N.C. bar exam, 69 per
cent passed. There were 574 people taking the exam
and 395 passed. Last July 69 percent passed the exam.
The N.C. bar exam is given in February and July
and takes place in Raleigh over a two-day period.
Duke Law School had 18 out of 20 graduates, or
90 percent, pass the exam in July. Wake Forest had
74 percent, or 96 out of 129 students, pass. Sixty-two
graduates from Campbell University ,r out of 86, pass
ed the bar exam, representing 72 percent. N.C. Cen
tral University had 40 law school graduates take the
exam and 24 passed, for a total of 60 percent.
Moshe Fidel, a farmer and opponent of
Begin's government, said that even if it didn't
mean the opposition Labor Party would take
over, he hoped for "at least some change in
this amateurish government."
The economy, suffering from triple-digit in
flation and a ballooning trade deficit, has
severely damaged Begin's prestige and led the
splinter TAMI faction to threaten to quit his
coalition unless the rich are more heavily tax
ed. There was speculation on Israel Radio that
Begin's move was a ploy intended to dissolve
the threat from TAMI the initials are from
the Hebrew words for National Tradition
Movement with a warning of early elec
tions, which TAMI opposes.
A senior adviser of Begin, who declined to
be identified, insisted "this is not a trick," and
said Begin fully intended to resign although he
was open to discussion.
If Begin quits, the opposition Labor Party
could claim first option on forming a coali
tion, since it is the largest faction in the
Knesset. But its chances of finding partners to
form a majority are slim, sincejnost of the
small parties lean toward Begin's nationalist
religious doctrines.
Labor has SO seats to Likud's 48 in the
120-member Knesset, and Begin governs in
coalition with 18 members of small parties.
The drama broke during a Cabinet meeting
that had dealt with routine reports on the
economy, Lebanon and the appointment of an
agriculture minister.
Just before noon (6 a.m. EDT) Cabinet
Secretary Dan Meridor emerged from Begin's
four-story, stone-facade office after the
meeting and read a terse statement that "the
prime minister informed the Cabinet of his in
tention to resign from his post."
Two-and-a-half hours earlier, Begin
reportedly had confided his decision to his
longtime personal secretary, Yehiel Kadishai,
but kept his announcement to the end of the
Cabinet meeting.
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