news@michigandaily.com The Michio;;n naily - Tiiacrinv Mart--h A ')nna - q newsmicigadail. crn hc~ ~irh~~ fl~~i,- Ti~c~~iftAiv,4 Q )ACA -I I P..IVI II I6L4 "ally I IICUaUUJ IICAIL.II y, ..J'Jt-3 Prestigious faculty honor to be presented today The annual Henry Russell Lecture will be held today at 4 p.m. in the Rack- ham Auditorium. History professor Mars Vinovskis will give a lecture titled "Compensatory Education Policies from Ronald Reagan to George W. Bush." The Russell Award, presented to a faculty member who is distinguished in his or her field, is one of the highest honors for faculty at the University. Patriot Act put under spotlight by speakers Various student groups, including the College Republicans and the Under- graduate Political Science Association, will host a series of speeches regarding the USA Patriot Act. Speakers include Barbara McQuade, assistant U.S. attorney for the U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of Michigan; and Bseth Hazen, FBI dis- trict counsel in the bureau's Detroit Field Office. McQuade will discuss exactly what the Patriot Act stipulates and Hazen will address how the act has helped the FBI fight the war on ter- rorism. The event will take place Thursday at 8 p.m.. in the Vanden- berg Room of the Michigan League. Book talk centers on issues of race and segregation The Center for Research on Learning and Teaching is sponsoring a discussion of Beverly Daniel Tatum's book "Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? and Other Conversa- tions About Race." The event will take place today from 3 to 4 p.m. in the Anderson Room of the Michigan Union. The discussion is part of the commemoration of the 50th annivesary of the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling. Please register by sending an e- mail to crlt@umich.edu. The book is available at the Ann Arbor District Library and the Ypsilanti Public Library and is also being offered for a discounted price at several local bookstores. Performances reveal struggles of Imprisoned women The Prison Creative Arts Project presents "And Here We Remain" at 7:30 p.m. tonight in East Quad Audito- rium. Through a series of monologues, seven women and their stories, feel- ings, struggles and courage are shared. Admission is free. Feminism project links women from around the globe Professors Abby Stewart and Jayati Lal will present the ongoing work of the Global Feminisms Project today from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Room 2239 of Lane Hall. The event is sponsored by the Insti- tute for Research on Women and Gen- der and is free and open to the public. This is the second year of the three-year project, which is a comparative study of the histories of feminism, the women movement, and women's studies in China, India, Poland and the US. The talk will provide an overview of the work that has been done thus far and highlight the critical issues that have emerged out of the project. 'U' event stresses that 'Food Loves * Your Body' As part of Love Everybody Week, an event titled "Food Loves Your Body" will be held tomorrow from 4 to 7 p.m. in the Pendleton Room of the Michigan Union. The event encourages positive body image and a healthy relationship with food by providing free food, recipes and information related to eating and body image. Campus departments, organiza- tions and student groups will be avail- able to provide information and resources. Dance investigates of dance, health and technology The Life Sciences, Values and Soci- ety Program, in partnership with the Duly wed: Seattle admits gay couples Mayor welcomes 6 same-sex couples subigfor right to mary SEATTLE (AP) - This left-leaning city joined the gay marriage fight yesterday, with the mayor announcing that City Hall will rec- ognize unions of gay city employees who tie the knot elsewhere and six same-sex couples suing for the right to wed. Mayor Greg Nickels issued an executive order requiring the city to recognize same-sex marriages by municipal employees. "Seattle has often been in the forefront of protecting all its citizens regardless of sexual orientation," Nickels said at a news confer- ence. He also proposed an ordinance to extend protections for gay married couples through- "What he's about to do is anarchy - taking the law into his own hands," Forcier said. "People cannot be recognized as married in one jurisdiction and not in another." Elsewhere, the city of Asbury Park, N.J., started issuing wedding licenses to same-sex couples, with the first couple married in City Hall on Monday by Deputy Mayor James Bruno. "As a show of support to the city's gay com- munity and the gay community nationwide, the City of Asbury Park has determined that it will commence the issuance of licenses to same-sex couples and the solemnization of marriage between same-sex couples, immedi- ately, as a matter of fundamental civil and constitutional rights," City Clerk Dawn Tomek Palestinian medics wheel In a wounded boy Into a hospital In Deir EI-Balah in central Gaza Strip on Sunday. Israeli troops traded heavy gunfire with Palestinians In a raid near this refugee camp Sunday. Israeli minister calls for faster roadblock checks out the city. Meanwhile, six same-sex couples who applied for marriage licenses at the King County Administration Building were rejected because of a state law that defines marriage as the union of one man and one woman. But King County Administrator Ron said in a statement. "I was not going to stand with my arms crossed and my hand up. We do not have equal protection in this state when it comes to marriage:' In Portland, Ore., supporters of same- sex weddings won a legal battle when a judge ruled yesterday that the state's most populous county can continue issuing mar- riage licenses to gay and lesbian couples. The Defense of Marriage Coalition filed a lawsuit against Multnomah County last week, - Ron Sims King County Administrator JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel's defense minis- ter endorsed a plan yesterday to speed up checks at West Bank roadblocks, but also make them more permanent - a sign that crippling travel restrictions on Palestinians will not be lifted soon. The plan includes a code of conduct for sol- diers, high-tech devices and a special lane for ambulances, VIPs and foreigners, according to a Defense Ministry statement. One Israeli army commander recommended this week that Israel use millions of dollars con- fiscated from Palestinian banks to improve road- blocks, but it was not clear whether Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz adopted the idea. Israel set up dozens of roadblocks in the West Bank after Palestinian-Israeli violence erupted in 2000 to keep militants from reaching Israel. Sol- diers enforce frequent curfews and travel bans, crippling movement in the territory and harming the Palestinian economy. Palestinians often wait in long lines to be checked. Human rights groups have complained about Israeli abuses, chronicling cases of ambu- lances being held up or of soldiers beating inno- cent Palestinians. Israel has admitted wrongdoing some cases, denying others or attributing them to security needs. Israel insists the roadblocks are needed to stop suicide bombers and other Palestinian attackers. Suicide bombers have killed more than 450 Israelis. Altogether, in 41 months of fighting, over 2,700 people have been killed on the Pales- tinian side and 930 on the Israeli side. Mofaz's move to upgrade the roadblocks comes CLEMENCY Continued from Page 1 "We're asking volunteers to take these errors and make compelling arguments. "I've also found that students write better than lawyers. If you can give the women a voice, you can give them a chance," said D'Orio. LSA junior Joseph Kudia agreed the proj- ect was a great opportunity for students to challenge inequalities in the judicial system. at a time when Israel is proposing a pullout from all or most of the Gaza Strip if peace talks remain stalled. Palestinians fear such a withdrawal will be accompanied by a concerted Israeli effort to dig into major parts of the West Bank. The Defense Ministry statement said the changes were meant "for humanitarian improvements for Palestinians in West Bank," but also included "transforming all roadblocks into regular crossing points/terminals governed by a work plan," lan- guage that indicates permanence. The ministry did not immediately respond to a clarification request. Among the planned improvements are high- tech devices for identifying people to speed up passage - a significant investment for an army hard hit by government budget cuts and another sign of a long-term project. Another aspect of the plan is to alter the route of Israel's contentious separation barrier, also meant to stop bombers. The statement said humanitarian factors would be taken into account. Palestinians complain that the planned route of the barrier cuts deep into the West Bank and encircles towns and villages, cutting tens of thou- sands off from their fields, schools and services. They charge that the real purpose of the com- plex of fences, walls, trenches and barbed wire is to prevent them from creating a state. The Defense Ministry statement said gates in the barrier, meant to allow farmers access to their lands, would be open longer. Farmers complain that in the section already completed, along the northern section of the West Bank, the gates are frequently closed. "These problems are onset by poor public defenses," said Kudia. The Clemency Project believes that these women are not a threat to society, but rather have been treated unjustly and have a right to their freedom. "This event is about the women - that's what's most important to us. We're providing them with a voice when they can't speak out. We want to raise aware- ness. Even if it's a small group, it doesn't matter because this is about the women," said Shuchman. Sims invited the couples to sue him and the county, explaining that he supported the cou- ples' efforts but had no choice but to uphold the law. Sims, who is black, said he remembered images from his childhood of white govern- ment officials in the South blocking blacks from entering buildings restricted to whites. "I was not going to stand with my arms crossed and my hand up," Sims said. "We do not have equal protection in this state when it comes to marriage." The couples applauded Sims's remarks, then filed their complaint, which argues that the law violates the Washington Constitution's equal-protection clause. Seattle has offered domestic partnership benefits to its employees since 1989, but that process requires extensive paperwork - a step same-sex couples would be able to skip under Nickels's executive order. Nickels also said he will ask the City Coun- cil to protect gay married couples throughout the city from discrimination in employment and housing. If the council approves the ordi- nance, it also would require contractors doing business with the city to recognize gay mar- riages among their own employees. Rick Forcier, head of the state Christian Coalition and a critic of extending marriage licenses to gay couples, called the mayor's plan a clear violation of state law. saying officials had violated the state's public- meetings law by not holding public meetings before making a policy change. But Judge Dale Koch denied a request for a preliminary injunction, ruling that the plaintiffs were unlikely to prevail under the state's public- meeting law. Nickels said he lacks the legal authority to issue same-sex marriage licenses or certifi- cates like mayors in San Francisco and New Paltz, N.Y., have done. More than 3,600 same-sex marriages have been performed in San Francisco in the last three weeks, and hundreds of gay couples were granted wedding licenses last week in Portland, Ore. The marriages are being chal- lenged in court. New Paltz Mayor Jason West faces possible jail time for officiating at same-sex weddings for couples who lacked a license. On Monday, the prosecutor who charged him said he was also considering charges against two ministers who stepped in to marry gay couples in New Paltz. Although Unitarian Universalist ministers have been performing same-sex ceremonies for decades, the Rev. Kay Greenleaf said she signed an affidavit for the couples and consid- ers the ceremonies civil. Ulster County Dis- trict Attorney Donald Williams said it would take days to determine whether the ministers could face charges similar to those filed against West. 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