4 ..s j Page 10-Wednesday, October 19, 1977'-The Michigan Daily Pregnancy bill approved by State House " " Hurry, For My Wednesday Only Bonanza, 11 Big Hours To Grab These Bonus Items! LANSING (UPI} - The state House yesterday approved legisla- tion guaranteeing that working wo- men covered by disability insurance programs will not be denied pregpan- cy benefits. The measure, sent to the Senate on an 89-7 vote, is designed to clarify Michigan law in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court decision that employ- ers are not required by the Constitu- tion to cover pregnancy in their insurance plans.t THE BILL ALSO outlaws discrim- ination in pension plans. It is specifi- cally aimed at pension plans which pay lower monthly benefits to women because they generally live longer than men. , Rep. Barbara-Rose Collins, spon- sor of the pregnancy benefits bill, said the proposal is necessary to pro- tect the household income of families with working mothers. The bill does not require all em- ployers to offer medical insurance programs to their workers. It does, however, stipulate that those who do must offer pregnancy benefits as well as coverage for other medical conditions.. IN OTHER ACTION, the House re- jected a bill which would have restricted the number of new bar licenses issued by the state and a measure designed to protect home- owners from unwanted solicitations by real estate agents. The bar license bill, defeated on a 57-38 vote, would have changed com- munities' quotas from one license for every 1,500 persons to one for every 3,000. The effect would have been to drastically limikt the number of -new licenses being issued. Proponents said the measure was needed to deal with a glut of bar licenses that threatens the stability of some cities. OPPONENTS SAID the bill would only benefit those who have licenses now by making them more valuable. Rep. Gerrit Hasper (D-Muskegon) said the effect of the bill would be to "give everybody in the state who has alicense a $100,000 bill." "It's scarcity and the limit on the number of licenses that makes the value," he said. THE REAL ESTATE solicitation bill, defeated 50-43, is one of a num- ber of measures being pushed bya coalition of officials seeking to stem the tide of decay in urban neighbor- hoods. It would have given cities the option of establishing a list of home- owners who did not want real estate agents to solicit the sale or listing of their property. Realtors would have been re- quired to abide by the wishes of those on the list and could have lost their licenses if they failed to do so. The bill was designed to stop mass solicitations which can lead to panic selling. Proponents said the bill may have been hurt by the controversy surrounding other measures which would ban the practice. of steering real estate clients to or away from certain neighborhoods on the basis of race. Energy chief must (Continued from Page 1) wide differences in how to meet that goal and said they see a need for major compromises on tough issues. "WE'RE GOING TO have some difficulties, but I'm sure that men of good will can work out their prob- lems," said Rep. Harley Staggers (D-W. Va.), picked by unanimous vote to head the panel of 25 House members and 18 senators. "We come into this conference in a compromising mood. Almost a com- pliant mood," said Sen. Bennett Johnston (D-La.), speaking on behalf of Senate members of the panel. The Senate rejected or modified most of President Carter's major energy recommendations, proposals that had been approved nearly intact by the House. REP. JOHN Anderson (R-Ill.), said Republicans will "try to be as cooperative as we can in moving toward a compromise that obviotisly has to be achieved." I I In a national survey ranking the en- gineering schools, New Engineer mag- azine rated the University top in gradu- ate-level academics in three of seven fields: industrial engineering, engi- neering science, and "others."