LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday. December 10. 1998 - 3A *RESEARCH Services for cancer patients available online Cancer patients looking for reli- able medical information online can now turn to a new Internet site creat- ed by University Hospitals' Cancer Center. The Website includes information on cancer research and medical services, which previously has been difficult to access from home. Cancer Center Director Max Wicha said the Website provides links to send e-mail to the University's Cancer AnswerLine nurses and patients can receive case-specific answers to cancer care questions. The nurses can also refer patients to appropriate physicians for treatment. The site's Guide for Patients pre- pares people for visits, provides helpful telephone numbers and includes maps to the University Health System. Health professionals can find information in another section about ongoing research projects, educa- tional opportunities, and a referral guide. One area of the site allows cancer patients and survivors to share motiva- tional stories, thoughts and images with others. The Website is located at http://wwwcancermed.umichkedu. 'U' services help *with holiday season stress On average, Americans gain six pounds and face increased stress levels between the Thanksgiving and New Year's Day holidays. Several University services offer resources and advice for surviving the rest of the year. Lizzie Burt, a culinary arts profes- sional with the M-Fit program, is the author of a book containing traditional holiday recipes in low-fat and high- fiber versions. Kathy Klykylo of DrinkWise, a pro- gram that helps avoid excessive drink- ing, said the holidays don't necessarily need to include hangovers. DrinkWise offers tips for celebrating without drinking too much. Exercise psychologist Audrey Hazekamp warns people not to for- get their exercise regimen over the holidays. Exercise can reduce both weight gain and stress, Hazekamp said. Caroline Mandel of the Preventive Cardiology Program said people need to find a balance during the holiday season. Mandel advises focusing on a long-term diet, exercise and stress management program. Cancer Center director named to new professorship Max Wicha, founding director of the University Cancer Center, has been appointed Distinguished Professor of Oncology. After Wicha steps down from his p osition as the center's director, the professorship will be named after him. During his tenure as director, Wicha has taken the center from its beginning stages to being one of the premier can- cer centers in the nation. Wicha has gained national recog- nition as a researcher in the field of breast oncology. He has authored many notable scientific articles and book chapters, reviewed scholarly publications,, and served on boards overseeing many national cancer organizations. Outside of his position as Cancer Center director, Wicha is a profes- sor of internal medicine in the Medical School, where he special- izes in treatment of breast cancer patients. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Nick Bunkley. GEO continues search for compromise By Paul Berg Daily Staff Reporter As students' thoughts drift past finals toward holiday feasts, University negotiators and gradu- ate employees must ponder new recipes for com- promise to bring to a deadlocked bargaining table when they return for next semester's contract talks. All of the proposals the Graduate Employees Organization has emphasized since negotiations began Oct. 21 remain unresolved, and a middle ground on graduate employee wages seems dis- tant. "I don't know of any revenue source that can handle this increase for any employee group," said Associate Academic Human Resources Director Dan Gamble, the University's chief negotiator. Following GEO's 37 percent pay increase pro- posal that met with the University team's flat denial of a change in the contract language on wages, GEO responded with an income counter- proposal that rearranges economic priorities. GEO Chief Negotiator Eric Odier-Fink said the GSls will agree to drop the proposed wage increase to 27 percent, but in exchange they want to recalculate their pay system to better reflect the number of hours they work each week. Thev also want to do away with an graduate employee regis- tration fee. The University previously said in its proposal funding for these two improvements, among oth- ers, would come out of any wage increase. This still amounts to a 37 percent pay increase, Odier-Fink said. The similar net result of GEO's counterpro- posal to its earlier wage increase initiative did not escape the University bargaining team's notice. The recalculation is "out of the ques- tion," Gamble said. "They packaged it differently, but we have to look at the cost, any way you slice it" Gamble said. Beyond income concerns, all of GEO's major issues remain unresolved, including compensation for international graduate student instructor train- ing and an extensive affirmative action platform to diversify the GSI hiring pool. "We still do not consider GSI trainees to be employees Gamble said. "As as aimffnartie action, we believe our Office of Equit and Diversity takes care of many ofG('s needs' Despite difficulties, Odier-Fmuk said some of GEO's proposals seem to be nakln headway. "Our child care and dental benefits concerns look like they arc going to get settled to our satis- faction:' Odier-Fink said. "I think we're on the same wavelength with den- tal benefits, but there's still some lnguage to work with;' Gamble said. "I think we're also very close on our hours gnievance proposal. which would cor- rect problems in the early phases of the grievance procedure" Odier-Fink said graduate employee support for nearly all of the GEO proposals on the table is strong, and it will be hard to settle on a contract unless these proposals are resolved. "Workinu without a contract is working without a net," Odier-Fink said. "A sinke is always the last thing you want to do, and you don't play that card unless you're forced to. "The administrators know that everything we have proposed is possible. but they make their decisions based on whether they think our union is strong enough:? he said. "An institution that'bas morality written on its major buildings shouldn't act like a capitalist in this instance:' The meeting structure itself recently underwent some changes due to a GEO Stewards Council vote to open the bargaining sessions to all of their membership. Gamble said no problems occurred in the first two open meetings, but cited the reia- tively small numbers as a reason. "I'm not concerned with 18 people, but if it gets too crowded, it may reach a point where it would be pointless for (the University team) to partici- pate," Gamble said. Odier-Fink said the presence of additional GEO members has yet to change the meetings substan- tially. "In caucus, we have more brains" Odier-Fink said, but felt the level of efficiency in the meetings remained unchanged. Both negotiating teams will sit down Jan. 7to schedule the bargaining meetings for the month, and three weeks of negotiating time remain before the contract expires Feb. 1. Kevorkian to face dInUer one WATERFORD, Mich. (AP) - Dr. "This could never be a crime no mat- Jack Kevorkian was ordered yesterday ter what the words say on paper." to stand trial on charges of murder and Kevorkian told reporters after yester- assisted suicide in a disabled man's day's ruling. "Do you think I'm a crim- death that was videotaped and broad- inal? If yes, you're happy. If no, what cast on national television. am I doing here?" District Judge Phyllis McMillen Youk, of Waterford Township, had turned down the defense claim that the suffered from Lou Gehrig's disease for assisted suicide advocate could not be four years. He was confined to a wheel- charged with both first-degree murder chair, was fed through a tube in his and plotting a suicide. She also ordered stomach and had little mobility of his Kevorkian to stand trial on a charge of arms and hands. delivering a con- In court yesterday, prosecutors trolled substance. ,. showed the unedited tape Kevorkian Prosecutors said produced. In its first segment, the videotape Kevorkian asks Youk several questions, Kevorkian made of then has him sign a form that said he Thomas Youk's wanted to end "my intolerable and death Sept. 16 and hopelessly incurable suffering" with later supplied to "direct injection." CBS' "60 Minutes" "That's it Tom. I'll go ahead and help was the case's cor- you when you say so," Kevorkian says nerstone. The tape on the tape, "You're sure you thought shows a figure - Kevorkian about this very well?" Kevorkian's face is "Very well," Youk says softly. not shown - injecting Youk with a Kevorkian convinces Youk to wait a chemical that stops his heart. week, but apparently came back the If convicted of murder, Kevorkian next evening. Kevorkian later told "60 could face life in prison. Minutes" that he injected Youk with "We've never had as compelling evi- three chemicals - a prescription barbi- dence as this, Oakland County assis- turate to put him to sleep, a muscle tant prosecutor John Skrzynski said relaxant, and potassium chloride that after yesterday's hearing. "It's a cut- stopped Youk's heart. and-dried case." Youk's family called his hospice Although prosecutors have been nurse, who testified yesterday that chasing Kevorkian for years, this is the when she arrived she found Youk dead first time he has been ordered to stand in his bed. trial on a murder charge. In ordering Kevorkian's trial, On two previous occasions, murder McMillen rejected defense arguments charges were dismissed. Three previous that Kevorkian had meant to ease trials on charges of assisted suicide Youk's suffering, and his death was just ended in acquittals; a fourth ended with a side-effect. a mistrial. "The intent to kill was premeditated Kevorkian, who has acknowledged and thought-out beforehand," the judge some role in about 130 assisted suicides said. since 1990, had dared prosecutors to David Gorosh, Kevorkian's legal charge him. He said what he did for adviser, had argued that murder and Youk was right - even if it broke a law assisted suicide charges were mutually - and compared it to letting women exclusive, and that the assisted suicide vote and drinking during Prohibition. charge should be dismissed. Senatet seves anti-hate crime bill Meet the Prez LOUIS BROWN/Daily University President Lee Bollinger mingles with students from his class after the last lecture of the semester yesterday. Thisi semester marks the second time he has taught an undergraduate class on freedom of speech and the press at the Universitt. 0r BusinesspersL on to serve tm MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) - A man who walked away from a Virginia prison farm 25 years ago and lived an, "exemplary" life as a Michigan busi- nessperson was returned to his home- town yesterday to finish serving time for a $10 drug deal. Alfred Odell Martin III was flown from Detroit yesterday, where he had battled extradition, to Martinsville for a brief appearance in Martinsville Circuit Court. He wore a business suit and was left unhandcuffed as he told a judge he will hire a private lawyer to defend him on escape and larceny charges, filed after he fled. Martin was booked and put into a cell to finish a sentence for selling a $10 bag of marijuana. "I know it was a very long night for him, and he was very cooperative, polite and well spoken," Martinsville Sheriff Steve Draper said. Martin's Michigan attorneys, Gregory Neidle and Guy Dobbs, said Martin will plead innocent during an arraignment tomorrow "Michigan may know him as the responsible businessman with a good record, but Martinsville knows him as a drug dealer," said Joan Ziglar, a Martinsville prosecutor. Martin, the fourth of 15 children, was arrested in 1973 in Virginia. At the time, he was working in a department store and doing free-lance photography in Martinsville. He was convicted of selling marijua- na and sentenced to 10 years in prison with nine years suspended. Counting time off for good behavior, he would have served only about three months had he not fled in 1973, Ziglar said. In 1976, Michigan's then-Gov. William Milliken refused to extradite Martin to Virginia, in effect granting him legal asylum as long as he remained in Michigan. There, he mar- tied, raised three children and went to work for a mortgage company in the Detroit suburb of Livonia. Martin said he never returned to Virginia during that time. His extradition became possible in the late 1980s as a result of a series of U.S. Supreme Court rulings that meant governors only have ministerial func- tions when they receive an extradition request, said John Truscott, Michigan Gov. John Engler's spokesperson. That meant that Martin was in trouble last month when police stopped him for driving with expired plates. A record check showed Martin was a fugitive, aid Virginia officials sought his extraditidn after learning his whereabouts. Engler signed Martin's extradition warrant on Dec. 4. On Monday, Circuit Judge William Cahalan in Detroit ruled he had no choice but to honor Virginia's request, even as he praised the life Martin had created as being "exem- plary" and called his family "a credit to Michigan." The Michigan Court of Appeals refused to block the extradition Tuesday, and Draper quickly dispatched two deputies to bring Martin back ona flight that departed Detroit at dawn. "It's not my choice to decide whether this is right or wrong," Draper said. "In Michigan he may have been law abid- ing, but he's got to pay his debt to soci- ety here." LANSING (AP) - Legislation designed to beef up penalties for assaulting homosexuals in Michigan was shelved permanently yesterday by the state Senate. The Senate's shunning of the bill came a day after a gay advocacy group made a last-ditch plea for the legisla- tion. By a vote of 20-18, the Senate passed a motion to delay until Dec. 30 action on hate crimes bill. The Legislature is scheduled to adjourn its two-year session later this week, thus killing the bill. It will have to be introduced again next year to see further action, "It addresses a very serious problem in our society," said Sen. Gary Peters (D-Pontiac) who moved to pull the bill from the Senate Judiciary Committee and begin debate on it. "This kind of behavior should not be tolerated by society." There was no argument in favor of delaying the bill, but the ruling GOP had not intended to take it up. The bill, which passed the state House last month, would add "sexual orientation" to the state's ethnic intimi- dation laws. Those laws were passed a decade ago and provide additional penalties for crimes based on race, reli- gion, ethnicity and gender. I - What's GROUP MEETING D AfrIcan American Alzheimer's Family Caregiver Support Group Meeting, Sponsored by A zheimer s Association, Ypsilanti Association of Women's Clubs, 319 S. Washington St., 6-8 p.m. SCircle K Weekly Meeting, Michigan Union, Anderson Room, 763- 0811, 7 p.m. 1 M al e aregver Disussdnio n Grou r- happening in Ann Arbor today Michigan Union Program Board, INFO, info@umich.edu, and Michigan Union, Mall on the www.umich.edu/~info on the ground level, 7-9 p.m. World Wide Web "Panama Deception: Film and 11998 Winter Commencement Discussion," Sponsored by Information, find it at Revolutionary Anti-imperialist www.umich.edu/~gradinfo on the League, Michigan Union, Pond World Wide Web. Room, 7 p.m. 12Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley "Physics of Eternity" Sponsored by Lobby, 8 p.min. 1:30 a.m. SAS-- Student Astronomical 2 Psychology Academic Peer Advising, Society, Michigan League, Hussey 647-3711, East Hall, Room 1346, Room, 7:30 p.m. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. "osilu... a .4. ba(. u..n....n F6wMaik . 3-1000. Shanirn Librarv -4 I