The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 16, 1478-Page 5 COURT DECLINES GAYRIGHTS QUESTION Refuses to hear N. Carolina case WASHINGTON (AP)-The Supreme Court yesterday -refused to call into question the authority of states to outlaw homosexual acts between con- senting adults. The court, with two jnstices disagreeing, left untouched a North Carolina sodomy law dspite argumen- ts that it violated the privacy of rights of homosexuals. CIVIL LIBERTIES lawyers had urged the justices to use the case to study the rights of homosexuals for the first time in more than a decade. In the sodomy case, Eugene Enslin of Jacksonville, N.C., was convicted in 1974 to havng oral sex with a young U.S. Marine from nearby Camp LeJeune. Enslin, owner of a com- bination massage parlor-adult bookstore, was sentenced to orte-year in prison and served nine months before being paroled. Enslin's lawyers argued, "This case involves the question whether the government may cpnstitutionally prohibit private consensual homosexual activity between adults." THE NATION'S highest court has not considered a case involving the rights of homosexuals since $967, when it ruled thathomosexual aliens could be deported as "person afflicted with a psychopathic personality." That finding was later refuted by the American Psychiatric Association, which in 1974 eliminated homosexuality as a mental disorder and reclassified it asa "sexual orientation disturbance." 'Justices Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan were alone yesterday in voting to here Enslin's appeal. Returning from, its last two-week recess of a term scheduled to end June 19, the court handed down hundreds of orders and several decisions. In other matters, the court: * Agreed in a New York case to decide whether states mayrefuse to hire resident aliens as public school teachers. Past Supreme Court decisions have barred states from discriminating against aliens in various occupations, but last March 22 the court said states may refuse to hire aliens as state police officers. " Left invalidated a New York law that had barred aliens from practicing medicine unless they become naturalized citizens. They also sent back to California for more study a ruling that state and local governments may not bar aliens from becoming probation officers. " Ruled by a 6-3 vote that state courts may interneve in labor disputes in- volving alleged illegal picketing on private property.Since 1959, state cour- ts have had little authority to intervene if the National Labor Relations Board might become involved. * Ruled 7-1 in a major decision on In- dian tribal sovereignty that tribes are immune from civil suits alleging sex discrimination. * Told a Moylan, Pa., Quaker who from 1969 to 1972 withheld portions of his federal income taxes as "war crime deductions" that he has to pay those back taxes. " Decided by a 7-2 vote that the results of a telephone wiretap in a criminal investigation are admissable in court even though most of the calls overheard by police were not relevant to the probe. The majority said a one- month wiretap on a home phone in a narcotics investigation was legal even though only 40 percent of the calls were found to be related to drug transac - tions. Justice William Rehnquist, writing Hearst returns to prison to finish bank robbery sentence SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-An "ex- tremely depressed" Patricia Hearst went back to prison yesterday to com- plete her seven-year sentence for bank robbery. Hearst, 24, in a station wagon driven by a security guard, arrived at the minimum-security prison facility at Pleasanton, 30 miles east of San Fran- finement. DURING HER previous incar- ceration, Hearst spent several weeks at the campus-like Pleasanton facility but was transferred to a San Diego prison. after her attorney, Al Johnson, com- plained of threats on her life. . She was freed on $1 pillion bail in November 1976, eight months after she " Patricid Hearst: "extremely depressed" about her return to prison S time of her kidnapping, Hearst was an art student at the University of Califor- nia at Berkeley. The Harrises, among the few remaining survivors of the tiny band of revolutionaries that gained inter- national attention with the Feb. 4, 1974, abduction, were her companions during her 19 months as a kidnap victim and fugitive. HEARST WAS captured in San Fran- cisco in September 1975. At her two- month trial, she tearfully recalled her life on the run, saying the Harrises threatened her and instilled in her a fear of the FBI. She testified her cap- tors told her she would be killed if she refused to participate in the bank rob- bery, which netted the terrorists $10,960. PRE PARE FOR. 4t MCAT*DOAT *LSAT " GRE GMAT "OCAT "VAT " SAT ECFMG-FLEX-VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours Tere ISa difference' KAPtAN ____EDUCATION~AL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For Information Please Call (313) 662-3149 For Locations In other Cities, Call. TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 C ntr's n Ma o, USCities loronto PuronHn5,,and Lio, atter0 for the majority, said that "blind reliance on the percentage of non- pertinent calls intercepted is not a sure guide" to the legitimacy of the wiretap. In a sharply worded dissent, Justice William Brennan, who was joined by Justice Thurgood Marshall, accused the majority of eroding the right of privacy. OUTDOOR BIVOUAC has a complete selection of shorts to suit your needs, whether you're JOGGING or HK ING or PLAYING TENNIS. Our GYM SHORTS are 100% cotton and ovoil- ohle in o wide selection of colors. We hoe o complete line HIKING SHORTS from Woolrich & Sportif, all with six useful pockets. Avail- able in both mens and women's sizes. Our SWEAT SHIRTS ore dust the thing to keep the active outdoor person warm this spring. They are available lined or unlined in navy, red, forrest green, or gray. Our SWEAT PANTS re 100% cotton and are available in navy or gray. Just the thing to break the chill. Great for tennis, hiking, jogging or baseball. anywhere on earth clothes NICKELS ARCADE Mon.-Sot. 9:30-5:30 Thurs. & Fri. until 8:00 761-6207 cisco, at about 4 p.m. PDT, 90 minutes after leaving her parents' home in Hillsborough, 30 miles away. HEARST FOR 18 months while un- successfully appealing her conviction, will have to spend at least 14 months there before being eligible for parole next year. Hearst reportedly spent the past week at San Sineon, the fabled coastal estate built by her late grandfater, newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, 200 miles south of her suburban Hillsborough home. She was described as "extremely depressed" about her return to prison. The Times of San Mateo quoted uniden- tified family sources as saying she-was especially concerned because all 15 days of her -previous 14 months in custody were spent in solitary con- was convicted of joining her Sym- bionese Liberation Army (SLA) kid- nappers in an April 1974 armed holdup of a quiet residential branch of the Hibernia bank in San Francisco. While free on bail, Hearst was protec- ted by private security guards and kept a low public profile. LAST MARCH 24, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review her conviction, and District Court Judge Wiliam Orrick, in a secret agreement with her attorneys, declined to modify his seven- year sentence. Hearst has cooperated with authorities since her September 1975 arrest in San Francisco. She is scheduled to testify for the prosecution when SLA members William and Emily Harris go on trial in October in Oakland on charges of kidnapping her. At the