2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 21, 1997 NATION/WORLD LAWSUIT Continued from Page 1 of the Americans with Disabilities Act is the portion of the law that covers state and local government." The act also states that employees can- not be forced to accept medical leave, Herron said. "There is no doubt the University cannot put anyone on medical leave," said Thomas Dunn, chair of the Senate 'Advisory Committee on University Affairs. "(Cloyd) did not feel it was necessary to go on medical leave:' Cloyd was allegedly contacted at her home by Vicinus on March 6, 1995, and informed she had been relieved of her teaching responsibilities and placed on immediate medical leave. "Under ADA, reasonable accommo- dations must be made. Emily requested additional teaching assistants and the request was not met," Herron said. "Under ADA, employers are limited on when they can send employees out for medical testing." Dunn said the issue at hand is how much accommodition the University needs to provide for its faculty. "The case is one concerned with the rights of faculty and part of the question of much accommodation the University needs to make for them," Dunn said. Meetings with the University began during winter term 1995 when Cloyd met with Vicinus, who was still new as department chair. The two met to dis- cuss the lack of accommodation and the effect it was having on Cloyd's ability to teach her classes, Cloyd said. In the first meeting, Vicinus alleged- ly agreed to provide Cloyd with photo- copying and clerical assistance and committee relief, but refused to provide her with the graduate student assistance that she had previously received between 1990 and the summer of 1994. "The (previous) chair was always interested in how things were going for me. In making sure my students were protected if I were disabled temporari- ly," Cloyd said. "I wish I hadn't had to do this. I don't roll over easily. The University should make a practice of acting courteously toward its faculty, staff, and students." Cloyd was hired by the University in 1967. After undergoing extensive back surgery between 1985 and 1990 she began receiving accommodations including extra teaching assistance and an ergonomic chair, the lawsuit states. Cloyd is presently on medical leave because of an injury she received while moving into her new office. Vicinus and Chamberlin could not be reached for comment. .C. Higher wage passes state Legislature LANSING - Bills boosting Michigan's minimum wage for the first time in 16 years won final approval yesterday ini the Michigan Legislature despite some Republican opposition. The Senate voted 27-11 to send one bill to Gov. John Engler. The House sent the second measure to Engler's desk on an 89-15 vote. All those voting against k package were Republicans. John Truscott, a spokesperson for Engler, said the governor had not yet exam- ined the measures in detail, but would "most likely" sign them. "On the face of it, it seems like a fair compromise," Truscott said. Final passage capped weeks of work and negotiation on the issue. The legisla- tion follows last year's passage of an increase in the federal minimum wage. "It was the reasonable and correct thing to do," said Sen. Loren Bennett, (R- Canton), sponsor of the Senate bill. The bill had bogged down earlier when several of his GOP colleagues protested a 13-cent boost in the minimum wage for workers who receive tips, to $2.65 an hour. "Even some Republicans were embarrassed" by the GOP criticism of wa e increases for tipped employees, said Tim Hughes, spokesperson for the Michi State AFL-CIO. Yesterday's approval "shows they finally came around to the view society has had for some time." After all the research and writing 1. b I :f r li2j5 lg> bidsa , We clan bind you.r report Now you ccan celebrate.... With mnirntes to spaire. r. - 1 11 11 1 - , 11 1 momposomm" OFFICERS Continued from Page 1 Faculty administrators retain rights to sabbaticals they have earned as non- administrators. Paid leaves are solely to be used for research and academic prepara- tion. When a faculty administrator is reassigned within the University, he or she should be compensated at the mar- ket rate for that position. E If the new salary for reassigned administrators is significantly less than their administrative salary, the salary may be gradually adjusted downward over a three-year period. Bollinger said he plans to dis- cuss all contracts and salary increas- es with the regents before they are finalized. The regents unanimously endorsed Bollinger's new policy. "The president will talk to the regents," Power said. "The policy will avoid any repetitions of past problems that arose with agreements President Duderstadt made, but did not share with the regents:' Duderstadt said he is "vaguely aware" of Bollinger's proposal. "This is certainly his prerogative and RELIGIOUS $ERVLC0S G.I..AI CAMPUS CHAPEL Christian Reformed campus ministry 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421 Pastor: Rev. Don Posterna 662-2404 SUNDAY WORSHIP 10 am: "Complete & Utter Failure" 9 pm: University Student Group Ms. Kyla Ebels, Student Ministry CANTERBURY HOUSE Episcopal Ministry at the University of Michigan 721 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI. 48104 (313) 6654060 The Rev. Matthew Lawrence, Chaplain SUNDAYS: Holy Eucharist followed by supper, 5:00 Lord of Light Lutheran Church 801 S Forest Ave. Student Run Bible Study for students not afraid to ask questions every Thursday at 6:45 PM at Canterbury House KOREAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR 3301 Creek Dr. 971-9777 SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. English, 11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Korean ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 6630518 (2 blocks north and ? block west of intersection of Huron and State) SUNDIfAY Eucharists- am and l0am Adult Education- 9am Call for Weekday service times, to get on the mailing list, or if you have questions. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL, LCMS 1511 Washtenaw, Near Hill SUNDAY: 10:30 a.m. Lent Devotions, Weds: 7:00 P.M. Bible Classes As Announced Pastor Ed Krauss 663-5560 it should be any president's,' Duderstadt said. "Although I tended to follow the practices of my predeces- sors, a president should be free to move in new directions if they believe this is appropriate. "In the end all such policies will be evaluated in terms of the quality of peo- ple attracted to these important posi- tions;' Duderstadt said. Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R- Ann Arbor) said the most significant part of the plan is that everything is all laid out in the open. "The problem we had in the past was that no one was aware of what was going on" Newman said. "The fact that now it is all out in the open is what is different from the past." Kinnear said that, in the past, the regents gave the president sole discre- tion in making contract arrangements with the executive officers. "I think that left some things ambiguous to what was appropriate and what was not," Kinnear said. "I think what the new policy does is to clarify certain guidelines for the presi- dent to operate under and keeps the regents informed of the president's actions." -Daily Staff Reporter Katie Wang contributed to this report. WOMACK Continued from Page 1. "Dr. Womack initiated it - I wholeheartedly approved of it," said University President Lee Bollinger. "We were very quickly able to settle it:' The news of Womack's retirement was a surprise to many administrators, said Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison. Womack would not offer further comment about his request for a sub- stitute contract or his future plans. Other stipulations of his employ- ment agreement with Duderstadt include: A full-time appointment as a pro- fessor in the School of Education when he left his administrative post Dec. 31, 1996. The option to maintain the fac- ulty position for as long as he wished. A one-year furlough at full pay when he decided to retire. During his eight-year tenure as chief financial officer, Womack over. saw an increase in the University's investment endowments from $300 million to $1.6 billion. "(Womack's) financial acumen and leadership in higher education are leg- endary," Bollinger said. "Thanks to his splendid leadership, the U of M is rec- ognized as one of the most financially sound universities in the United States. Chandler Matthews currently serves as interim chief financial offi- cer. A search committee has been formed to find a permanent replace- ment. - Daily Staff Reporter Heather Kamins contributed to this report. Doctors discuss possibilities of pot WASHINGTON - Smoked marijua- na almost certainly has medicinal uses, but proving that will be a hard and expensive task. Nevertheless, such research is probably worth the effort, because many people are already using the drug as medicine and may have unre- alistic expectations of its usefulness. Those were among the observations made by scientists and physicians who concluded a two-day meeting yesterday at the National Institutes of Health to discuss what's known - and not known - about marijuana smoke's pharmacological properties. "I see the maior problem here is get- ting good scientific data," said William Beaver, a researcher at Georgetown University School of Medicine who was chair of an eight-person panel that lis- tened to scientific and personal testimo- ny about marijuana's medical'uses. "You can argue politics all you want, but if you don't have the data showing that marijuana is therapeutically effective it KIM, doesn't matter what you say' The panel will write a report for Harold Varmus, the NIH's director, out- lining among other things the most fruit- ful areas for future research on marijua- na. Varmus organized the meeting r voters in California and Arizona l I approved controversial measures that permit doctors to prescribe marijuana to patients, who must obtain the drug on their own. 'Thief maes off with Cheers ' script BOSTON - It was the kind of high-society, black-tie benefit F&r Crane might have attended, whre sdtie of the guests wore feathered masks and the only way Sam Malone could have gotten in was by tending bar. At least one rogue "Cheers" buff apparently crashed the charity auction and made off with an autographed script of the last episode. Now everybody wants to know his name. IoOUNDTHE ..ORL. i;.; , China begins monung of Deng BEIJING - China began six days of mourning for Deng Xiaoping yesterday as officials announced plans for a grand but tightly controlled farewell to the man who reshaped China's econo- my. Deng will be cremated, and 10,000 invited guests will honor his memory Tuesday at a "memorial meeting" to be held in Beijing's cavernous Great Hall of the People. Deng requested that his corneas be donated to an eye bank, his body dis- sected for medical research and his ashes cast into the sea, his family said in a letter released yesterday by the official New China News Agency. "Comrade Xiaoping always believed in simple and frugal funer- als," Deng's family said in the Feb. 15 letter sent to President Jiang Zemin, head of the official funeral committee, and to the Communist Party's Central Committee. "We hope that the last thing we do for him will reflect the essence of his mental outlook, and express our grief in an utterly plain and solemn way." They asked that the casket contain- ing his ashes be covered with thekg of the Chinese Communist Party, h a color photo on top "that displays the superb mental outlook of Comrade Xiaoping ... and to express the solemn atmosphere.' Aibright defends, MOSCOW - Secretary of . Madeleine Albright sought yesterday to persuade Russian leaders that they have nothing to fear from the proposed expansion of NATO to the borders of the former Soviet Union, but some Russian hostitlity remained. As Albright flew into Moscow, on the sixth leg of her 11-day around-the- world tour, a senior foreign policy adviser to President Boris Yeltsin said the West was pushing Russia to d "an aggressive confrontation.' - Compiled from Daily wire reports. 111h 11 rnrit r th c -1 ^ " Ii's 3% - .l -~~I j 'U) r7 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September. via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95. yeariong (September through April) is $165. On-campus scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764-0552; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to dailyJtters~umich.edu, World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/. NEWS Jodi S. Cohen, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jeff Eldridge, Laurie Mayk, Anupama Reddy, Will Weissert. STAFF: Janet Adary, Brian Campbell, Prachish Chakravorty, Megan Exley, Maria Hackett, Heather Kamins, Amy Klein, Jeffrey Kosseff, Marc Lightdale, Carrie Luria, Chris Metinko, Tim O'Connell, Katie Plona, Susan T. Port, Alice Robinson, David Rossman, Ericka:M. Smith, Ann Stewart, Ait K. Thavarajah, Michelle Lee Thompson, Katie Wang, Jenni Yachnin. EDITORIAL Erin Marsh, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Paul Serilla. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Jason Stoffer. STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Kristin Arola, Ellen Friedman, Samuel Goodstein, Scott Hunter, Yuki Kuniyuki, Jim Lasser, James Miller, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Zachary M. Raimi, Jack Schillaci, Megan Schimpf, Ron Steiger, Matt Wimsatt. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Editor EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach, John Leroi, Will McCahill, Danielle Rumore. STAFF: Nancy Berger, T.J. Berka, Evan Braunstein. Chris Farah, Jordan Field, John Friedberg, Kim Hart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Knudsen. Chad Kujala, Andy Latack, Fred Link, B.J. Luria, Brooke McGahey. Afshin Mohamadi, Sharat Raju, Pransy Reddy, Sara Rontal. Jim Rose, Tracy Sandier, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Barry Sollenberger, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Brian A. Gnatt, Jennifer Petlinski, Editors WEKN. ETC. EDITORS: Greg Parker. Elan A. Stavros. SUBEDITORS:Lise Harwin (Music), Hae-Jin Kim (Campus Arts), Bryan Lark (Film), Elizabeth Lucas (Books), Kelly Xintaris (TV/New Media). STAFF: Dean Bakopoulos. Colin Bartos, Eugene Bowen, Neal C. Carruth, Anitha Chalam, Karn Jones. Emily Lambert, Kristin Long, Stephanie Love, James Miller, Aaron Rennie, Julia Shih, Anders Smith-Lindall, Philip Son, Prashant Tamaskar.kChristopher TkaczykMichael Z ilberman. PHOTO Mark Friedman, Sara Stillman, Edi STAFF: Josh Biggs, Jennifer Braoley-Swift. Aja Dekleva Cohen, John Kraft, Margaret Myers, Jully Park, Kristen Schaefer, Jeannie Serva Jonathan Summer, Joe Westrate, Warren Zinn. v,~ The Institute of Economic and Political Studies London and Cambridge, England This academically-challenging program for American undergraduates is an excellent opportunity to learn about the economic, political, historical and legal issues that shape our world. It is taught by recognized scholars who are specialists in their fields. Courses include such titles as Politics and Culture, State and Society in Contemporary Europe, International Business Cultures and The Political Economy of the European Union. The nrogram also includes: COPY DESK STAFF Lydia Alspach, Allyson Huber, Matt Spewak, David Ward, Jen Woodward. ONLINE STAFF: Julio Gurdian, Scott Wilcox. GRAPHICS STAFF: Lisa Bellon, Seder Bums, Sumako Kawai, Marcy McCormick, Erin Rager, Jordan Young. Jason Hoyer, Edito Adam Pollock, Tracey Harris, 1%As__ tIT! ri_ ^_/' _Ia'raii a I I