*CAMPUS " U.S. Rep. to give Wallenberg lecture tonight U S. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) is *cheduled to deliver the University's Wallenberg Lecture tonight in Rackham Auditorium at 7 p.m. Lewis, who serves as a member of the House Ways and Means Committee and is chief deputy Democratic whip also co-chairs both the Congressional Urban Ciucus and the Congressional Caucus on Anti-Semitism. He has been involved in social movements and the human rights struggle in the United States for more then three decades including being a founding member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee which was responsible for sit-ins and other student activi- ties. The annual University Wallenberg Lecture was established in 1985 to commemorate University alum Raoul *Wallenberg, who is known for saving the lives of thousands of Hungarian Jews. Prof. Pollock named to Herrick Professorship Industrial and Operations Engineering Prof. Stephen Pollock was appointed to the Herrick Professorship Of Manufacturing by the University's Board of Regents. Potlock, who served as the chair of the industrial and operations engineer- ing department from 1981 through 1990, is an internationally recognized scholar known for his work in the mathematical modeling of systems and his operations research in public sys- tems. Pollock joined the University fac- Slty in 1969 after graduating from Cornell University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with degrees in physics and operations research. The Herrick Foundation of Detroit established the professorship in 1995 to honor accomplishments in the field of interdisciplinary manufac- turing education and research. .Center for Japanese Studies presents lecture Bernard Faure, religious studies professor at Stanford University, is scheduled to present the lecture "A Gem of a Woman: Nagas, Jewels and Transgressive Women in Medieval Japan" on Thursday. The :vent will be held in room 1636 of the International Institute and begins at noon. Faure will focus his discussion on the relationship between medieval Japanese Buddhism, women, local cults and "imperial" ideology as shown through the various biogra- phies of medieval Japanese women. Family reading, cience program launched The University's Exhibit Museum of Natural History and the Ann Arbor District Library have teamed upt sponsor a family reading and scierrce initiative which began this m9rrh. The emphasis of the pro- grarj will be mystery rocks and eriuptions and will feature hands-on Wscience workshops. Registration for the program's workshops is required in person or by phone two weeks prior to each session. ssThe workshops will be held at the LOvJig Branch Jan. 15, Feb. 5 and ,March 18 from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., at the Exhibit Museum on Jan. 30, Feb. :27 and March 26 from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. and the West Branch on Feb. 19 *nd March 11 from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. iThe programs are being funded by a $43,000 grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. The :grant will help develop a multi-year ' family reading program which incorporates informal science edu- cation. The goal of the partnership between the Exhibit Museum and the Ann Arbor District Library is to combine and *enhance the two existing programs. Jo Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter JseGingrich. LOCAL/S TATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 10, 2000 - 3A EMU lecturers receive bargaining nghts- By Marta Brill Daily Staff Reporter In the wake of the decision by members of the Michigan Employment Relations Commission to grant lecturers at Eastern Michigan University union status, University of Michigan lecturers are coming together to organize as a group. Sandra Palaich, a Romance Language lecturer, is a member of the newly formed Lecturers Employment Organization. They are working in conjunction with the Graduate Employees Organization to collect information and seek sup- port from lecturers from different LSA depart- ments. LEO is hoping to combat many of the same issues that prompted EMU lecturers to file a peti- tion in April 1998 requesting union status. EMU chemistry lecturer Julie Frentrup said with collective bargaining rights, the EMU Lecturers Organizing Congress hopes to accomplish a greater consistency of salaries across departments, higher overall salaries, a better health care plan and more imput in the curriculum. Since previously no official avenue existed for lecturer's imput in designing the curriculum, Frentrup said, there was no effective way for lec- turers to have an impact on their courses. The difference between the 700 tenure track fac- ulty at EMU and the 400 EMU lecturers is found primarily in their contracts. Lecturers have similar degrees and teach similar classes, but are hired on a term-by-term basis and are not eligible for tenure. They are also not required to do research. "The university claimed that we were casual labor with no connection to or interest in the uni- versity," Frentrup said. "The judge said we are a stable unit with an interest in our jobs and educa- tion." Frentrup said the administration at EMU also claimed the lecturers had a high turnover rate. "We are short-term because of the way the university sets up our contract,' Frentrup said, "not because of the way we perform our job." "I've been a 'temporary' employee for 15 years," Frentrup said. Frentrup said college administrators are trying to phase out the tenure system by filling professor spots with lower-paid lecturers. She compared the trend to sweatshop labor. University lecturer Brenda Gunderson said she has no complaints about her lecturer status, because it allows her to focus on teaching. Since lecturers are not required to do research, her pri- mary duty is to teach. "It's what I want to do and what I like to do. And when you like something, you do it well," Gunderson said. She said, unlike the lecturers at EMU, she is directly involved in designing the cur- riculum for her courses. EMU lecturers are the first in the state to receive collective bargaining rights, Frentrup said, adding that this reflects a nationwide trend, and will set a precedent for lecturers at other colleges and univer- sities. Palaich said the MERC decision to grant EMU lecturers union rights is "very encouraging." LEO. meets once a week, and right now is only made up: of lecturers in the Romance Language department, but Palaich says they are in the process of collect- ing information about lecturers in the other LSA:. departments. LEO wants to begin implementing changes by. doing away with the four-year rule in the Romance Language department, where lecturers can only stay,. at the University a maximum of four years. Palaich. said the department is constantly training new pea- pie, while qualified lecturers are forced to leave. "There are no exceptions to that rule. It hurts the, education process, it hurts the students, it hurts the department," Palaich said. I State lawmakers may pass few bills,~ in election year AP PHOT GOP nomination hopefuls, from left, John McCain, George W. Bush, Alan Keyes, Orrin Hatch, Steve Forbes and Gary Baur pose for a photograph at the New Hampshire Republican State Committee Party Fundraiser in Durham, N.H. yesterday. DEBATE Continued from Page 1A Michigan has 58 electoral votes, which is more than the first three pri- mary states - Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina - combined, Patru said. The debate offers the opportunity for all the candidates to share their views with the Michigan public, said Pat Rosenstiel, regional politi- cal director for Forbes. "We think (the debate) is real impor- tant to share our ideas with folks, gain momentum and gain support through- out the state, Rosenstiel said. "This is clearly a free horserace now, he added. There are "six people in the debate and that pretty well waters down the effect of the two main can- didates," Schwarz said, but added that having both Bush and McCain in the same forum will "get some repartee between the two of them that we have not seen before." Tim Russert, host of NBC's Meet the Press, has been chosen to moder- ate the debate along with panelists, Rick Albin and Suzanne Geha of WOOD-TV in Grand Rapids. The three segments of the debate include questions by the panelists directed to the candidates, candi- date-to-candidate questions, and then Russert will pose questions submitted by Calvin College stu- dents to individual candidates. The 7 p.m. debate will be held in Calvin College's 1200-seat Fine Arts Center and broadcast live on MSNBC and on radio stations across the state. GOP Debate Who: Six GOP candidates seeking the party's presiden- tial nomination What: A debate among the candidates on issues includ- ing taxes, health care, social security, education Where: Calvin College's Fine Arts Center in Grand Rapids. When: 7 p.m. tonight Look for additional cover- age from Grand Rapids In tomorrow's edition of The Michigan Daily LANSING (AP) - After a month long holiday break, state lawmakers return to the Capitol this week to pre- pare for an election year's load of work. Members are expected to dive back into a pile of issues left unfinished - when they adjourned for the year on Dec. 9 - more school improvements, farming concerns, pornography, high- way funding and a new state budget. But nothing is likely to happen fast. Although the Legislature is required by the state Constitution to gather on Wednesday, no formal action is sched- uled Lawmakers will scatter again after Wednesday, returning to listen to Gov. John Engler's Jan. 19 State of the State address. The real legislative session won't begin until Jan. 25. "You'll see a very heavy education theme, more freedom for parents and stu- dents," Engler spokesperson John Truscott said of his boss' wish list for the year. He said the administration will make another run at approving more charter schools, an effort that floundered last month. But this year's elections may put a damper on legislative action, as law- makers' attention turns toward cam- paigning once summer nears. Hot issues often are shelved until after the November election. "Campaign years always mean fewer bills are passed," Truscott said. The election will affect the House - where all 110 seats are up for grabs - more then the Senate, whose members aren't up for election until 2002. "It matters more in the other chamber than ours," said Senate Majority Leader Dan DeGrow (R-Port Huron). But he .: A added it only takes problems in one chamber to sidetrack a key issue. Two major issues are looming over the Legislature as it returns: -- Tax cuts: Engler may propose fur- ther tax relief in his State of the State, address; Truscott said "we're looking seriously at it." - Electricity deregulation:* Michigan homeowners and busi- nesses would get more freedom to select their electricity supplier. A coalition of utilities and business is pushing legislation putting now-vol- untary deregulation into statute, but' the matter remains in a Senate com- mittee and final agreement has not been reached. House Speaker Chuck Perricone (R-Kalamazoo) said there won't be much action this week, but the House Constitutional Law and Ethics Committee will meet Wednesday to discuss a package of bills to restrict adult entertainment. I Privacy experts: Laws fail to protect family history --r-- LANSING (AP) - Keeping genetic information in the hands of patients and out of the hands of health insurers is a step in the right direction, many privacy experts agree. But passing a genetic privacy law in Michigan won't really offer much pro- tection if health insurers can routinely ask for family history, say critics, including Cindy Hughey, director of the Michigan Jewish Conference. "An insurance company could still take you and put you in a high-risk cat- egory" based on your family history, even if you have no symptoms of can- cer or other health impairments such as heart disease, Hughey said. She wants the bills now before the Legislature changed to ban health insurers from asking about family history. Insurance companies say they already ask for family history and should be allowed to continue, even though coverage decisions usually rely more on an applicant's current health. "Family history, just like ... whether you're old or young, whether you have dangerous hobbies, whether you're a smoker, whether you're the ideal weight, all of that is used to figure out what the risk is," said Larry Kish of the Life Insurance Association of Michigan in Lansing. "If you, the insurance company, don't have all the information you need to decide (a person's risk level) ... you make bad decisions on what to charge." The issue has been the topic of sev- eral heated discussions during House committee hearings. The package of genetic privacy bills already has passed the Senate, and is likely to be taken up by the full House soon after lawmakers begin the 2000 session this week. A 1996 federal law already bars insurers from considering a genetic pre- disposition as a "pre-existing condi- tion" for anyone who buys through a group health insurance plan, unless the disease is active when the person signs up. But that doesn't help the nearly 13 million Americans nationwide who buy health insurance on their own. Following the recommendations of the Michigan Commission on Genetic Privacy and Progress, lawmakers are trying to make genetic protection the same for all. The Michigan bills affecting insur- ance are part of a package that also requires patients give their informed consent before genetic tests are taken, and that bans employers from requiring genetic tests or information as a condi- tion of employment or promotion. The insurance bills would ban health insurers and health maintenance com- panies from requiring customers to sub- mit to genetic testing or disclose genet- ic information in order to get their health insurance renewed or to get health insurance in the first place. They don't ban insurance companies or HMOs from using genetic test results they obtain in other ways, including through a patient's medical records. "It's certainly a good effort, but they don't go far enough," said Wagenheim, the ACLU's legislative affairs director. 100s of Listings from Area Landlords,. General Information and Advice about Finding Off-Campus Housing, Reps from over 50 Rental is tth Companies and Housing 'OCpuss'nl OrgnizHous'sing air ° + , . f ii