Monday, September 12, 2005 News 3A New York City remembers Sept. 11 with memorial Opinion 4A Elliott Mallen discusses counterintel on campus W O L V E R IN E S D R O P O N E ..yLIT E R A L L Y . S P O R s MN D AY One-hundred fourteen years ofeditoradfreedom Weather Arts 8A Arts editors battle over fall TV lineup It LOW:60 TOMORROW: --/63 @2005 The Michigan Daily - --------------- pill www. mk'Agandaiiy.eom Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXV, No. 144 LEO leaflets faculty event Union alleges that U' has misclassified lecturers, as well as missed payments to some employees By Michael Kan Daily News Editor More than a year after the Lec- turers' Employee Organization approved a contract with the Uni- versity that would provide lecturers with increased pay and benefits, LEO argues it are still not receiving the full benefits of the agreement. To voice these concerns, about 15 LEO members handed out leaflets outside the second floor ballroom in Haven Hall during the LSA all-fac- ulty reception, to remind the Univer- sity community of their grievances. "There were a lot of people who wouldn't have had a clue to what's been going on with the contract if we weren't there," said LEO Co-Chair Ian Robinson. While the University continues to work toward fully implementing the contract by Sept. 30, LEO contends two major roadblocks remain - a delay in lecturer payments and mis- classification of 30 lecturers. According to the June 2004 con- tract, lecturers can be classified under four categories with each cat- egory determining the duties and benefits of the lecturer. A faculty member grouped into a Lecturer I or Lecturer II catego- ry would be allowed only to teach classes. Faculty classified as Lec- turer III or Lecturer IV would also be expected to perform advising and administrative duties. LEO Co-Chair Ian Robinson said "WE STILL ALIVE. TEL KATRINA: TAKE THAT." -, TVA NDA JONES,'EACTE ea che in Ho sto ABOVE: Evacuees at the Astrodome are among more than 5,000 people staying in one of Houston's four major shelters. TOP (Left and center): Evacuees In Houston keep the spirit of New Orleans alive with the Second Line March, a New Orleans tradition to commemorate the dead. (Right) Ryan White, Paul White and Stanley Foley amuse themselves by playing drums with a basketball Inside the Reliant Center In Houston. "There were a lot of people who wouldn't have had a clue to what's been going on with the contract if we weren't there." - Ian Robinson LEO Co-Chair 30 lecturers are currently misclassified as Lecturer Is because they, also perform advising and administrative functions for the University. Robinson added that this would mean the lecturers would see a pay increase of 5 percent rather than the 7 per- cent given to faculty grouped into the Lectur- er III category. Elizabeth Axelson, a lec- turer in the Uni- versity's English City takes in more than 150,000 evacuees By Karl Stampfl Daily Staff Reporter HOUSTON - Some live with family. Others reside in the apartments of welcoming strangers. But five-year-old Diamondneshay Ward survives in a car with her mother. About 150,000 Hurricane Katrina evacuees remain in the country's fourth-largest city. As of two o'clock Sunday morning, 5,263 of the evacuees live in the city's four major shelters: Reliant City, Reliant Center, the Astrodome and the George R. Brown Convention Center downtown. At one point, Houston housed as many 25,400 evacuees in its shelters. City authorities and the displaced families say many of the evacuees who have moved out of the shelters dispersed themselves across the country to find more permanent lodging and jobs with friends and families. Many of the remaining evacuees plan to stay in Hous- ton for an extended period of time. Some say they will never go back to New Orleans and may make Houston their new home. Although there are tentative plans to condense the shelters into one, no one is sure which shelter will be used. "It's a very fluid situation,"said Frank Michel, Hous- ton Mayor Bill White's communication director. Regularly scheduled events have been canceled at the convention centers through the end of the month, Michel said. Until then, city officials are playing things by the ear. Efforts are being made to move the evacuees into more permanent housing. As of Friday, 50 of the city's largest property owners had signed leases agreeing to house evacuees but not to price gouge, a crime that relatively few have committed, Michel said. "We don't want to be in the shelter business," Michel said. Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco and other mem- bers of her legislative team thanked the city of Houston repeatedly during a press conference. "No state took as large a number, as heavy a burden, as did this state," Blanco said. "Y'all have redefined the word neighbor." But not all Houstonians are happy about their new neighbors. "There was concern about crime expressed early on by residents who saw people shooting at helicop- ters and television and thought: They're coming here," Michel said. "Some people made some assumptions." Volunteer Sue Diegard, who lives a block from Reliant City - an area encompassing the Astrodome and its surroundings - said they worry about the increased crime rates, as well as job and housing short- ages because of the evacuees. See HOUSTON, Page 5A Language Institute said the misclas- sification has also meant these lectur- ers would be restricted from advising students. Axelson, who is classified as a Lecturer III and participated with LEO in handing out leaflets on Friday, said currently six lecturers in the ELI are misclassified as Lecturer IIs. She questions why the Uni- versity misclassified her colleagues, when she performs the same duties as they do. "It's quite troubling and divisive. We have all been doing the same kind of work," Axelson said. The other reason LEO is still not con- tent with the University is that 100 fac- ulty members grouped into the Lecturer III category have been told that they will not see their increase in pay for another 18 months, Robinson said. University spokeswoman Julie Peter- son said the provost's office and the Uni- versity's different departments continue to work to resolve all issues with the contract before the Sept. 30 deadline. "Over the summer we met with them every week to work out issues with the contract," Peterson said. Peterson added that University offi- cials would need to closely look over +U- _r:ef - b 2n an t - c. ALEX DZIADOSZ/Daily Diamondneshay Ward sits in her mother's van In Houston where the two are living until they can find more adequate housing. 'Everybody lost Something By Karl Stampft He tested those survival skills just last week in the e Daily Staff Writer HOUSTON - The Hurricane Katrina death toll, once thought to possibly reach 10,000, is still uncer- tain. Yesterday, during a press conference in Houston, Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco said that the number will probably be in the thousands, but no reasonable estimate can yet be made. "Our city has come under siege by natural forces more powerful than our nation has ever experienced," Rlanrn sail "We can onlv hone the numher of dead aftermath of Katrina, which he chose to rude out alone. Hampton stole a car to escape from the city. He said it was necessary but damaged his pride nevertheless. "Everybody lost something," he said. "If you didn't lose your house, you lost your pride." Hampton lost his house, too. He counts himself lucky because all his friends and relatives survived. He has not yet heard directly from two of his sisters, but he said he knows they made it. Hampton described the scene in New Orleans with one word: "Water Water everywhere." he said. staring ... .. 5.5 :i n. ':..t" .., .. .. .:sXMf i.x .. n.. A - r