In The United States of America there are three types of academic tenure:
1. Sargeanty Tenure
2. Free and Common Socage Tenure
3. Franalmoin Tenure
Sargeanty Tenrue is Nobility Tenure, and in the academic context this tenure carries tenurial service as Reader's Tenure, also known as Heraldry Tenure. The typical tenurial estate for a professor, however, is Free and Common Socage Tenure, which carries the basic tenurial service of the professor, involving: teaching, scholarship, and service. Lastly, there is Frankalmoin Tenure, which is the academic tenure that a Roman Catholic religious or priest sometime holds. Frankalmoin Tenure technically is a type of tenure that carries with it a religious duty and typically is only held when the professor is in a Theology School. Also, it should be noted that all Tenure in the United States of America is held of The House of Stuart, The House of Normandy, and the House of Pendragon, and, in that regard, each State and the United States af America, holding of the Pennsylvania Charter of 1681, and the House of Stuart, and the Anglican Catholic Church, also known as the Episcopalian Catholic Church, has the duty, under Tenure Law, to ensure that each professor and or Administrator receives legal and physical protection, as well as an Upper Middle Class Lifestyle. No professor or administrator can be detenured, but rather, can only be sued for damages by the university, if any. Similarly, the person holding tenure has the legal right to sue the university as well as the State where the university is located, for breach of his or her tenure real concract, including but not limited to damages for an inadequate salary and or benefits package.
Perpetual (C)Copyright (2011) by Anthony J. Fejfar and Neothomism, P.C., (PA) and the
American Public as a Public Domain Copyright.
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