The Michigan Daily -Friday, March 8, 1991- Page 3 PIRGIM wins $100,000 for University in lawsuit by Gwen Shaffer Daily Staff Reporter The School of Natural Resources (SNR) was the biggest winner in a lawsuit brought against the city of Detroit by a student-based environmental group. As a result of a consent decree between the Pub- lic Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) and Detroit, SNR will receive a $100,000 windfall that will be used to expand environmental protection education and research. The 1988 suit filed by PIRGIM charged that De- troit had violated the Clean Water Act by refusing to release information concerning toxic discharges into the Detroit sewer system. The lawsuit also ques- .#ioned the city's lack of action in prosecuting illegal dischargers. Both industry and the city were supportive of the settlement being used for educational purposes, said PIRGIM lawyer Andy Buchsbaum. "So when I say PIRGIM has won this lawsuit, it does not mean the city and industry have lost," Buchsbaum said. The consent decree released yesterday guarantees PIRGIM and the public the right to inspect and copy records necessary to identify toxics being discharged into the Detroit sewer system and to evaluate how Ithe Detroit Water and Sewerage Department is en- forcing the Clean Water Act. SNR will use the money to expand an existing environmental program involving Detroit area high schools. The SNR currently assists high schools in monitoring the Rouge River for conventional pollu- tants and toxics. The program is intended to expose students to a variety of disciplines. "It will look at things not only ecologically, but also on the science and social stud- ies levels," Resource Planning and Conservation Prof. William Stapp said. Making high school students realize that their lifestyles have an impact on the environment is an important aspect of the project, Stapp added. By exchanging information via computers about contaminants "the work that is done on the Rouge River can be shared with students and teachers all over the world," said Mare Cromwell, Director of the Global River and Environmental Education Project *(GREEN). The newly obtained funds will be used to expand the number of schools participating, purchase new equipment, and set up an advisory committee. The funds will also go toward research projects. - I TAs propose new contract, plan picket by Stefanie Vines Daily Faculty Reporter1 The Graduate Employees' Or- ganization (GEO) met last night to discuss a financial settlement package with the University andl plan to picket to inform the public about the union's bargaining is- sues.l The settlement package in-' cludes a proposed 12 percent salary increase for 1991-92 and a 9 percent raise for 1992-93. The package is a response to the Uni- versity proposal which calls for a 3.5 percent raise for 1991-92, an-i other 3.5 percent raise in 1992-93,a and a 5 percent raise in 1993-94. GEO will present its settlement package at a bargaining session today at 4:00 p.m. in the LSA building. A rally is scheduled at 3:30. A hairy situation LSA sophomore Allison Ayres shops for barrettes in the Afterhours Boutique in the Galleria Mall on South University. 'U' hosts Women's Studies conference this weekend a strike, the less chance there is of having one," said GEO bargainer John Robb. GEO president Chris Roberson added the union would enter into a period of mediation before any steps toward a strike are taken. "What's likely is going into al period of mediation anywhere from: 10 days to three weeks from now. There will be at least 10 days be- fore any mediation occurs," he said. Alan Zundel, a GEO bargainer, explained GEO's settlement pack- age by dividing it into economic issues and measures toward pro- tecting job security. The financial issues include pay increases and issues relating to special economic needs within the union. Job security issues include the number of TAs losing jobs and ways for the union to monitor these issues in the future through better information and pay. Zundel said these categories represent GEO's reaction to the University's proposed contract. "Basically what this means is that... when it comes time to tightening belts we are looked on (by the University) as the fat around the waistline," he said. Zundel predicted the Univer- sity's perception of GEO will af- fect the passage of a new contract. "They (the University) thinks graduate students are insecure and overworked, so therefore it is too hard for them to stop and take time to deal with bargaining," he said. "They are counting on you (graduate students) thinking that it isn't worth the sacrifice and that we aren't united." Zundel added four specific steps GEO members should take to being more united. "We should get more people involved in this, we have to have a clear idea of goals we are trying to reach, we have to know why the fight is worth the trouble, and we have to show them we are united." by Melissa Peerless Daily Staff Reporter This weekend, the University will host the Eighth Annual National Graduate Women's Studies Conference. More than 500 graduate students representing academic institutions from across the nation and abroad will come to Ann Arbor to present papers, take part in roundtable discussions, and attend lectures and performances. The conference, is sponsored by the Rackham School of Graduate Studies and about 25 other campus organizations. Previously, this conference has only been held at Ivy League and other East Coast schools. "Two U-M students attended last year's conference at the University of Pennsylva- nia. They came back with glowing reports and requested that we host it this year," said the event's publicity chair, Kate Musgrave. "This is a departure from the usual loca- tion of the conference. We're moving it into the Midwest. We're coming down towards the corn fields," she said. Sandra Harding and Chandra Talpade Mohanty will be the two keynote speakers at the conference. Harding is a Professor of Philosophy and Director of Women's Studies at the Univer- sity of Delaware. Mohanty is Assistant Pro- fessor of Women's Studies and the Sociol- ogy of Education at Oberlin College. Other events include an art exhibit by University graduate students, a book display, and a performance Saturday evening in which Eleanor Antin will recreate her char- acter Eleanor Antinova, a Black ballerina with the Ballet 'No one wants a strike, but the more we prepare for a strike, the less chance there is of having one' - John Robb GEO bargainer The GEO strike committee pro- posed setting up informational ta- bles on Friday, Feb. 15 at various buildings on campus. A bake sale was also planned to sell economic "pies" to symbolize the GEO goals. Despite plans for the informa- tional picket, no official action has been taken toward a strike. "Nothing we have talked about so far is official. No one wants a strike, but the more we prepare for THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Sunday UMAASC Steering Committee, weekly mtg. Union, rm 4202, 1 p.m. Feminist Women's Union, weekly meeting. Call 662-1958 for info. Union, 4:00. U-M Chess Club, weekly practice. Call Tony Palmer (663-7147) for info. League, 1:00. Speakers Friday "Moral Reasons: A Confucian Per- spective," Kwong-Loi Shun of the University of California Berkeley. 2408 Mason, 4 p.m. "Diego Rivera's National Palace Mural," Leonard Folgarait of Van- derbilt University. Angell Aud. D, 4 "Japan's Security in a New Envi- ronment," Norman Levin of the Rand Corporation. Haven, Eldersveld Rm, 5th floor, 3 p.m. "Carribean Women Take Care of Themselvessand Each Other." League, Anderson Rm, 7 p.m. "lThe Gulf War: African American and Arab American Views," Sharon Blackmon and Karima Bennoune. Union, Anderson Rm AB, 2 p.m. "Anti American-Arab Activities: What Is Happening in our Com- munities?" Marianne McGuire. Guild House, 802 Monroe, noon. Saturday Swami Viditatmananda will present a series of discourses. Union, Pendleton Rm, 11:15 a.m. Sunday "Hope In A Despondent Age," Dr. Glenn Tinder. Hutchins Hall, Honig- man Auditorium, 7 p.m. Furthermore Safewalk, nighttime safety walking service from 8-11:30 Fri.-Sat., 8-1:30 Sun.-Thurs. Stop by 102 UGLi or call 936-1000. Northwalk, North Campus nighttime Friday U of M Women's Rugby Club, Fri- day practice. Call995-0129 for more info. Sports Coliseum, 8-10 p.m. U of M Ninjitsu Club. For info call David Dow, 668-7478. IM bldg, wrestling rm, 7-9. U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club, Friday workout. Call 994-3620 for info. CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 8-9. U of M Tae Kwon Do Club, Friday workout. CCRB Small Gym, 6-8:00. German Club Stammtisch, weekly event. Union, U-Club, 7-9:00. "Working Students," a panel spon- sored by the LSA TA Training Pro- gram. 4050 LSA, 4 p.m. Hymnfest, sponsored by College Ad- ventists for Re-Creation. Sorenson Residence, 7 p.m. International Women's Day Cul- tural Celebration. Church of the Good Shepherd, 2145 Independence, 7:30. GEO Rally for a Fair Contract. State St, in front of LSA Bldg 3:30. Grads and Young Professional Veggie Shabbat Potluck. Law Quad, Lawyers' Club Lounge, 7:30. International Tea. Martha Cook Bldg, 3:30-5. "Finding a Job Around the World - Working in Asia, Africa, or Latin America," workshop. Interna- tional Center, 3-5. Insights - Sharing Our Experi- ences as South Asian Americans, sponsored by IPASC. Union, Kuenzel Rm, 2-4. Saturday U of M Shotokan Karate Club, Sat- urday practice. CCRB Small Gym, 3- 5:00. Spring Dance for Lesbian and Bi- sexual Womyn. $4 donation. North Campus Commons, 10-2 a.m. "Elements of Ritual," workshops for women. Call 665-5540 for location,1 11-3 p.m. Sunday Sunday Social, weekly event for in- ternational and American students. In- ternational Center, 603 E.Madison, 6:30-8:30. Israeli Dancing. One hour of instruc- tion followed by one hour of open Student cheaters at MIT convicted by Melissa Peerless Daily Higher Education Reporter Over one-fourth of a 250-student Computer Engineering course at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) were caught sharing answers to homework as- signments over electronic mail. The 78 students were sentenced last week in the largest cheating incident in MIT history. Last April, a student informed course instructor told Prof. Nigel Wilson that other students were cheating. "The student who spoke to me felt that the people who were col- laborating on their work were rais- ing the average scores on graded assignments and making the class mean unfairly high," Wilson said. Wilson and his teaching assis- tants designed a computer program to track students' collabora- tion.When they analyzed the class assignments they found about 100 identical solutions. "The code that is the solution to the problem required more than 250 commands. It is impossible for more than one student to come up with the exact same code," Wil- son said. Wilson notified the students suspected of collaborating on the assignment by confidential note. He and the TAs met with each stu- dent and finally submitted a list of 78 names to MIT's Committee on Discipline in May 1990. "We determined students' roles in the incident and punished them accordingly. All of the students in- volved failed the assignments in DAILY. Religious Services AVAVAVAVA CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Church at U-M) 218 N. Division (at Catherine) SUNDAY SCHEDULE Holy Eucharist-5 p.m. at St Andrew's Supper-6 p.m. at Canterbury House The Rev. Virginia Peacock, Ph.D., Chaplain Call 665-0606 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER 502 E. Huron SUN.: Worship-9:55 a.m. WED.: Supper & Fellowship-5:30 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIANACHURCH 1432 Wash tenaw Ave. (Between Hill & South University) SUNDAYS Worship-9:30 & 11 a.m. Campus Faith Exploration Group-9:30 TI URSDAYS: Campus Worship & Dinner-5:30 p.m. For information, call 662-4466 Amy Morrison, Campus Pastor LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA 801 South Forest (at Hill Street), 668-7622 SUNDAY: Worship- 0a.m. WEDNESDAY: Worship-7:30 p.m. Campus Pastor: John Rollefson ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH (A Roman Catholic Parish at U-M) 331 Thompson Street SAT.: Weekend Liturgies-5 p.m., and SUN.:-8:30 a.m., 10 a.m.,12 noon, and 5 p.m. FRI.: Confessions-4-5 p.m. TUIIE.. Mar. 12: Peer Ministry Information Session-7 p.m. SUN. Mar. 17: Book Sale and Pancake Breakfast-9 a.m.-1 p.m. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw SUNDAY: Worship-10:30 a.m. WEDNESDAY: Lenten Worship--9 p.m. .1 The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC Sun. Mar. 10 Tues. Mar. 12 Thur.-Sun. Mar. 14-17 Fri. Mar. 15 Sat. Mar. 16 Sun. Mar. 17 Michigan Chamber Players Richard Beene, bassoon; Hamao Fujiwara, violin; Armando Ghitalla, trumpet; Jeffrey Gilliam, piano; Paul Kantor, violin; Fred Ormand, clarinet; Harry Sargous, oboe; Stephen Shipps, violin; Ellen Weckler, piano Copland: Quiet City for Trumpet, English Horn, and Strings Bassett: Metamorphoses for Solo Bassoon Bart6k: Contrasts for Violin, Clarinet, and Piano Chausson: Concerto for Violin, Piano, and String Quartet School of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. University Chamber Choir Jerry Blackstone, conductor Mark Conley, assistant conductor Barber: Reincarnations Britten: Choral Dances from Gloriana Bassett: Almighty, Eternal Brahms: Motet, op. 29, no. 2 Music of Weelkes, Warlock, and Wilberg Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Sparling/Fogel Works UM Institute for Humanities' 11istories of Sexuality Series Tickets: $7, $5 (students) Dancc Building, Studio A 8 p.m. (Thur. Sat.), 2 p.m. (Sun.) Concert Band H. Robert Reynolds, Dennis Glocke, conductors Jacob: Giles Farnaby Suite Bassett: Colors and Contours Hartley: Sinfonia no. 4 Turina: Five Miniatures Yontz: Five Works Leemans: March of the Belgian Parachutistes Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Piano Masterclass by Robert Jordan School of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m. Guest Piano Recital by I I. I - -1 r [