2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 3, 1995 Denied promotion, U. of Vt prof files reVerse discrii nation suit The Minnesota Daily MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. - A white University of Minnesota professor who claims she was bypassed for a job at the University of Vermont in favor of a minority candidate is seeking help from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportu- nity Commission. Economics Prof. Beth Honadle has filedareverse-discrimination complaint with the University of Vermont and the Vermont attorney general's office. The commission served charges on behalf of Honadle against the Univer- sity of Vermont in mid-October. Honadle alleges that she was over- looked in favor of a less-qualified can- didate for the position of head of the school's community development and applied economics department. "The president (of the University of Vermont) can overturn the earlier deci- sion," said Honadle, who has taught applied economics at the University of Minnesota since 1990. Honadle said she is expecting a re- sponse from University of Vermont President Thomas Salmon. But University of Vermont officials aren't saying anything about the spe- cific issues raised in Honadle's com- plaint. "The case is still pending before the EEOC," said the school's news and information director, Enrique Corredera. Corredera said school offi- cials deny that Honadle was treated unfairly. At the University of Vermont, de- partments that hire minorities receive additional money from a special fund. Honadle said she thinks the additional money is used as an incentive to en- courage minority recruitment. The university gives half the amount of a newly hired faculty member's sal- ary for five years to departments that hire a minority, Corredera said. The University of Minnesota has a different policy to encourage minority recruitment. Florence Funk, assistant to the senior vice president, said the University of Minnesota has some funds that can be used by departments to temporarily sup- port the newly hired minority faculty member. But eventually departments have to use their own funds to support minority hires, Funk said. Honadle said her discrimination com- plaint is not against affirmative action policies. She said she is protesting the way the department head was selected. Don't Panic!! Ifyou think you're pregnant... call us-we listen, we care. PROBL EM PREGNANCY HELP 769'7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours- Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. Divine 91ntervention helps so does a professional looking resume. Resume Package for only $6.00 * 15 copies ofyourresumreon your Choice ofpreium npaper *25blanksheet'sofmathing paper -20 matching envelopes Expires 12/31/95 Good with ad only No other discounts apply Re igjous Services AVAVAVAVA ECKANKAR Religion of the Light and Sound of God "Reading Past Lives to Unwind Your Karma" Sunday, Nov. 5 at 11 a.m. NEW Center 1100 N. Main St. #208 995-7614 LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH Lutheran Campus Ministry (ELCA) 801 S. Forest (at Hill), 668-7622 Sunday Worship lOAM Wednesday Evening Prayer 7PM Thurs. "Listening for God" 7PM Friday Free Movies 7PM PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH. Contemporary worship services at 9:00 am and 12 Noon on S , Bible study for students at 10:30 am. 2580 Packard Road. 971.0773. Small-Group bible studies and student activities weekly. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 663-0518 (2 blocks north and 1 block west of intersection of Huron and State) SUN AY; Eucharists - 8a.m. and 10a.m. Adult education - 9a.m. Call for weekday service times, to get on mailing list, or if you have questions. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL, LCMS 1511 Washtenaw, near Hill SATURDAY: Worship 6:30 p.m. SNr EDAY Worship 10:30 a.m. Pastor Ed Krauss 663-5560 The Vermont school conducted an open and competitive search but didn't choose the best candidate, Honadle claims. Honadle said she was the search committee's preferred choice. A num- ber of instructors, including a member of the search committee, told her she had superior credentials, Honadle said. But the chairman of the search com- mittee, Al Gilbert, who is an associate professor in resource economics, said the committee didn't rank the candi- dates. The committee interviewed four candidates and selected three finalists, Gilbert said. He said the dean made the final decision. Although the University of Vermont's Office of Affirmative Ac- tion, Equal Opportunity and Diversity Programs rejected Honadle's complaint, the attorney general's office saw a legal basis to initiate discrimination charges, said Seth Steinzor, an assistant attorney general for civil rights. But the attorney general's office didn't evaluate the strength ofHonadle's charges, Steinzor said. Honadle's case was forwarded to the EEOC's Boston office.The attorney general's office has an agreement with the EEOC to prevent duplication of efforts, Steinzor said. But the director of the Boston EEOC, Bob Sanders, refused to talk about the Honadle case. Sanders said that, in general, if the plaintiffs charge is upheld, the EEOC will try to negotiate a settlement. In extreme cases, the issue may be taken to court, he said. -Distributed by University Wire (PR INT ING s LOWEST PRICE$I HIGHEST QUALITY FASTEST SER VICE! ® 1002 PONTIAC TR ® 994-1367 Cancer gene may cause other tumors WASHINGTON -- The gene responsible for hereditary breast cancer might also play a role in the noninherited tumors that are far more common - by somehow getting lost inside cells, new research suggests. The gene BRCA1 is thought to suppress cancerous growth when it works properly. Women who inherit a mutated version are at increased risk of getting the hereditary form of breast cancer. - No one has ever found mutated BRCA I in noninherited breast tumors, indicat- ing it might not be important for most women. But now University of Texas researchers have made the surprise finding that otherwise normal BRCA1 seems to get lost in some women with noninherited breast cancer. The discovery, reported in today's journal Science, "means a mechanism we're already learning about may be much more broadly important than our initial thought that it would affect just a small group of families at high risk," said Dr. William Wood of Emory University. The finding might also eventually help doctors tell how far cancer has spread before it appears malignant under the microscope, so they can better treat women, he said. Between 5 percent and 10 percent of the 182,000 breast cancer cases diagnosed each year are genetic. BRCA 1 is responsible for half of these inherited tumors, as well as some hereditary ovarian cancer. Scientists also have found that in some women, normal BRCA1 can mutate to cause noninherited ovarian tumors. House rejects plan to cut back EPA's power WASHINGTON - Rejecting efforts by its own Republican leaders to relax environmental regulations, the House of Representatives yesterday abandoned a controversial plan to sharply restrict the power of the Environmental Protec- tion Agency. Three times in barely three months, the House has tackled a series of 17 legislative proposals, or "riders," authored by conservative Republicans to restrict the environmental agency's authority to enforce some of its most stringent limits on air and water pollu- tion. The House voted in August to kill the riders, reversed itself on a second vote four days later, and then, yester- day, reversed itself yet again. The latest tally was 227-194, and reflected the sharp divisions within Congress when environmental regula- tions come up against the anti-regula- tory fervor at the heart of this year's Republican legislative agenda. The turnabout means that for at least another year, the EPA, despite sharp cuts in its funding, will be allowed to carry out regulations limiting hazard- ous emissions from sewage plants,oi- refineries and other industrial sites. Powell investment stirs potential debate WASHINGTON - As potential ri vals begin to size up Colin Powell's possible vulnerabilities as a presiden- tial candidate, an item topping their lists is the then-general's investment a decade ago in a Buffalo, N.Y., televi- sion station. Powell's possible adversaries do not suggest any impropriety on his part. And an examination of the deal does not indicate that Powell's profits - roughly 7 percent per year over a de- cade - were out of the ordinary, al- though he has declined to release the sort of detailed information that would allow a full picture of his finances. Nonetheless, the investment, and the help Powell received from a wealthy benefactor, does have aspects that con- trast with the up-from-the-bootstraps themes of Powell's autobiography. I ISTABLISH D 1983 IN CHARLESTON, ILL., TO AID STUDENTS G.A. AND GENERAL DATING ABILITY "A COLLEGI CAREER" WITH JIMMY JOHN S LEARN MY BUSI- NESS AND OWN YOUR OWN STORE. WORK 1 YEAR PART-TIME AND PROVE YOU RE THE BEST. WE LOVE THE BEST. ANN ARBOR 929 EAST ANN STREET OPEN 10 AM TO 3 AM 7 DAYS A WEEK SIX GOURMET ALL MY GOURMET US33 AREf 9 INCHES OF HOME-BAKED BOk VEGGIES AND THE BEST MEA CHEESES WE CAN L3UY! #1 THE PEPE SMOKED HAM AND PROVOLONE CHEES WITH LETTUCE, TOMATO. 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More at- more than I tacks can still occur." pected ofgiv Police raided homes in Paris, Lille was in offic and Lyon on Wednesday night and yes- Among th terday, seizing guns, grenades and com- were about puters as well as a homemade bomb conglomera apparently intended to be detonated, gave more tf perhaps in a car, at an open-air Sunday whose busir market in Lille, in northern France. contracts du Debre identified one of the 10 suspects ministration in custody as "a central figure" in a Ahn, desc three-city terrorist network. tion of Roh The announcement was sure to give a day as unsati, boost to French efforts to end the car- ecutors wou nage. The French government, which interrogating has stationed tens of thousands of also said pro heavily armed soldiers around Paris, location of has been increasingly frustrated by its $242 millior inability to make important arrests orto from his slug prevent the attacks that have killed 7 and injured more than 170 since July. - an presidentia md criticized South Korea - Prosecu- oised yesterday to launch s of South Korean busi- who contributed to a $653 dential slush fund, as civic one opposition party de- arrest of former President Min, chief of the central department ofthe Supreme Office, said some of the 100 business people sus- ing money to Roh while he e would be summoned.. em, other prosecutors said, a dozen heads of giant tes who reportedly each han $13 million to Roh, or nesses were awarded big uring Roh's 1988-93 ad- ribing a 16-hour interroga- on Wednesday and-yester-. sfactory, declared that pros- id summon Roh again after g the business people. He secutors had confirmed the all but $49 million of the n Roh admits to having left sh fund. From Daily wire services II li wrt' l Rui~ttilmr Th Miciga NlfgDldiy (ISS 45~-967t) is publihed Mon~ldy trhrough ridaiuy durinig LteIfli ~l awitr terms bye students at the University ofMichigan. Subscriptions for fall term.starting in September.via U.S. mail are, $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $165. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY: Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu EDITORIAL STAFF Michael Rosenberg, Editor In Chief NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines. Andrew Taylor. Scot Woods. STAFF Stu Brlow. Cathy Boguslaski, Kiran ChaudhriJodicohen, Sam T. Dudek, Jeff Eldridge. Lenny Feller, Jennifer Fried. Ronnie Glassberg, Kate Glckman, Jennifer Harvey. Amy Klein, Stephanie Jo Klein, Jeff Lawson, Laurie Mayk. Will McCahill, Heather Miller, Gail Mongkolpradit, Laura Nelson, Tinm O'Connell, Lisa Poris, Zachary M. Raimi, Anupama Reddy, Megan Schimpf, Maureen Sirhal, Matthew Smart. Michelle Lee Thompson. Katie Wang. Josh White. CALENDAR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, James Nash, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Adrienne Janney, Joel F. Knutson. STAFF: Bobby Angel. Patience Atkin, Zach Gelber, Ephraim R. Gerstein. Keren Kay Hahn, Judith Kafka, Chris Kaye, Jeff Keating, Gail Kim. Jim Lasser, Ann Markey. Erin Marsh. Brent McIntosh. Scott Pence, David Schultz. 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Hlarwin, Josh Herrington, Kimiberley Howitt, Elizabeth Lucas, Jennifer Petlinski, Elan Stauros, Matthew Steinhauser, Prasrailt Tamaskar. Ted WattsMichael Zilberman. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITOR:Mark Friedman. i I 11