O'Connor joins Supreme Court The Michigan Doily-Saturday, September 26,1981-Page 3 Court to decide on abortion WASHINGTON - Sandra O'Con- nor became the first woman on the Supreme Court yesterday, pledging in a solemn and historic ceremony to defend the Constitution and "do equal right to the poor and to the rich." , President Reagan and an elbow- tonelbow audience of 400 people jammed the courtroom to watch Chief Justice Warren Burger swear in Mrs. O'Connor as an associate justice of the nation's highest court. '"JUSTICE O'CONNOR,'welcome to the court," Burger said at the con- clusion of the oath. "I wish you a long life and a long and happy career in our common calling." She then donned for the first time the robe of a Supreme Court justice - actually the robe she wore as a member of the Arizona appeals court - and became the 102nd' member of the high court dating bacl to its 1790 founding. Earlier, Mrs. O'Connor and her husband, Phoenix attorney John O'Connor, rode with the president and first lady Nancy Reagan up Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House to the Supreme Court, located just east of the Capitol. On arriving, she went to the privacy of the'justices' oak-paneled conference room, where she took a Judicial Oath from Burger. There she pledged, in part, "I will ad- minister justice without respect to persons, and do equal right to the poor and to the rich." After taking theoath, Mrs. O'Con- nor was helped into her judicial robe and led to the seat traditionally oc- cupied by the court's most junior justice - to the far right of the bench as viewed from the courtroom. O'Connor had served as an Arizona appeals court judge since late 1979. She previously served as a state court trial judge and majority leader in the Arizona Senate. The Senate.. approved her nomination by a 99-0 vote Monday. The court's members previously were known as "Mr. Justice," as in "Mr. Justice Stewart." However, last November they dropped that title in favor of simply "Justice." It. was assumed that the change an- ticipated the naming of the first woman to the high court. for raped child i OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)- The State Supreme Court was asked yester- day to decide whether the state can overrule a mother's religious beliefs and order an abortion for a 12-year-old girl who was gang-raped by three boys on her way home from school. The court was told the child contrac- ted veneral disease from the incident and a doctor says her life is in danger if she completes the pregnancy. The girl, in her 10th week of pregnancy, told a lower court she wants an abortion. THE CHILD'S mother opposes an abortion on religious grounds. "She is a member of the Church of Holiness," said Michelle Porta, court- appointed attorney for the mother. "The mother believes abortion is taking a human life and that if God wanted a child aborted he would abort it." State' attorneys argued an abortion would be legal on two grounds-that a state court could order it for a child in its custody and that the child had the right to an abortion regardless of her mother's wishes. A THREE-JUDGE panel headed by Vice Chief Justice Don Barnes conduc- ted an emergency hearing only hou-s: after the petition was filed, and Barnes said the full court would issue a ruling Monday.:4 Thomas Ray Jr., assistant public defender, told the court the child was so traumatized by the rape she ran away from home. When the girl was found the welfare department assumed custody on grounds she was a deprived child. The child is a resident of north Oklahoma City and attorneys said she was walking home in what were con- sidered good surroundings when she was raped. The rapists, described as in their teens, were not apprehended. Attorneys said the mother did not ob- ject to treatment of the veneral disease, gonorrhea. AP Photo AFTER ROBING AND being sworn in as an associate justice of the Supreme Court, Sandra Day O'Connor walks down the U.S. Supreme Court steps with Chief Justice Warren Burger yesterday. r. . s .... .'">. "":: . S".. .. .. n}. ....r ... :;¢}"}:+.Yr?{'?}}.::{:. . . ..}}:"}{{{+n'%{. .. .h v.. h . .. r : s.. h..... n... ...{'{'r.., r. ..*..*...*.*.'....*.... .n.....{. .:. ; ; Fake drug peddle rs "may face LANSING (UPI) - Makers and ped- dlers of phony "lookalike" drugs, who have found'an eager and naive clientele in the state's schoolyards, would face tough criminal penalties under a new measure proposed yesterday. Sen. Phil Arthurhultz announced he will introduce legislation slapping pur- veyors of the copycat pills with the same sanctions they would face for pushing the real thing, warning such traffic is a health hazard and a hin- drance for law enforcement. "IF PERSONS in the business of manufacturing or selling the lookalike drug can pretend it's real, then they can pretend they're doing time in jail for hustling the real thing," the Whitehall Republican said. Arthurhultz, appearing at a; news conference with state police Lt. Joseph Young, said the lookalikes are designed to resemble controlled amphetamines but contain only caffeins and other mild substances. Manufactured in Chicago and Pennslyvania, they cost distributors only about $30 per thousand but are sold on the street at a huge markup, he said The pills first ,started appearing in the Flint area and have recently crop- ped up in Kalamazoo, Detroit, Lansing, Grand Rapids and Gaylord. YOUNG SAID the traffic is a problem in almost every school district now, ex- cept some in northern, areas of the state. Attorney General Frank Kelley has moved against some distributors on consumer fraud charges, but criminal sanctions would be a greater deterrent and enable officers to confiscate the goods, Arthurhultz said. The young Republican said his bill will be patterned after one used in Delaware and said he hopes to meet soon with U.S. Rep. Guy VanderJagt, (R-Mich.), to discuss possible federal legislation. "The only way we will be able to really stamp it out is with a federal law," he said. stern laws Education leaders vow to fight Reagan'scuts WASHINGTON (AP) - Education leaders vowed yesterday to fight President Reagan's attempt to cut even deeper into school programs and said they have the votes to block his plan to dismantle the fledgling Department of Education. "We certainly intend to head him off at the pass, even though he's a pretty good cowboy,"-said Scott Thomson, executive director of the National Association of Secondary School Prin- cipals. "PRESIDENT REAGAN is on a course that will destroy public education," charged Bernie Frietag, vice president- of the National Education Association. Thomson ,and Frietag were among the leaders of a dozen school groups- who called A news conference to vent their displeasure with Reagan's latest plans to scale down federal spending on education. They said the new cuts he outlined Thursday - when coupled with the 25 percent cuts he called for last spring - would amount to a $3 billion reduction in school aid and lunch programs. ALTHOUGH Congress refused to reduce education budget ceilings by the 25 percent Reagan called for last spring, the appropriations bills have yet to pass and the administration is pushing for most of the cuts it originally sought. In theory, at least, the final ap- propriations could be much lower than the budget ceiling. Meanwhile, Education Secretary T. H. Bell was telling his 5,600 employees by letter that some of them are likely to be fired. Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS Get the Point This angular skylight of the new underground law library should help brighten diligent law students' subterranean studies and sharpen their knowledge of the law. Bell . , warns education employees HAPPENINGS HIGHLIGHTS The Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) is sponsoring a conference today entitled "Staying Alive: A Conference on Teaching For/By TA's." The program will be held on the fourth floor of the Rackham Building with the morning session beginning at 10:30 a.m. and afternoon sessions beginning at 1 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. The conference is free, open to the public, and child care will be provided. Special invitation is extended to teaching assistants and graduate students. The "Ann Arbor Science Fiction and Fantasy Fair" will be held today at the Michigan Union in conference rooms 2-6. The fair is open to all from 11 a.m. until 11 p.m. Admission is $3. Several science fiction writers including Lloyd Biggles Jr., Murray Yacu, Tefe Reynolds, Lynn Abbey and Robert Asprin will be appearing. In addition, science fiction and fantasy films will be featured and there will be exhibits, panel discussions, games and con- tests. For more information call 971-3705. FILMS Second Annual World's Worst Film Festival-Plan 9 From Outer Space, 7 p.m. Harlem Rides the Range, 9 p.m.; Little Shop of Horrors, 11 p.m., Michigan Theater. Cinema II-Carrie, 8:45 & 10:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Mediatrics-Stir Crazy, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. AAFC-Groove Tube, 7 & 10:20 p.m.; Kentucky Fried Movie, 8:40 p.m., MLB4. Cinema Guild-Raging Bull, 4,7 & 9 p.m., Lorch Hall. Alternative Action-The Kids are Alright, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 3. PERFORMANCES Professional Theater Program-Mirandolina, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Ark-Concert, Jim Ringer & Mary McCaslin, 8 & 10:30 p.m., 1412 D4ill St. The Stage Company-Hold Me, 8 p.m., Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State St. MISCELLANEOUS The Japan Club-Opening Party, 6-8 p m., International Center. Grad. Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m., Michigan League, Rm. D. SYDA-Week-long Siddha Meditation Intensive on "The Gura," 8:30 a.m.- ALk5 n m. 902 Radwin Engineering TA fired (Continued from Page 1) job) had not taken the class before or was even enrolled" in it at the time, Frisque said. Gardella has refused to comment on this teaching job. y Engineering school Dean James Duderstadt said a student in Frisque's class complained to him that Gardella was unqualified. "I intended to speak to Chairman Haddad about it but our communications got shuffled. As soon as Haddad became aware of the situation, he handled it immediately," Duderstadt said. STUDENTS IN Gardella's section have not yet been formally notified of their TA's dismissal, but their reaction to his teaching was not generally favorable. "I have nothing against Joe. He's a good programmer, but being a good programmer doesn't qualify you to teach," said Scott Weidner, a junior in computer engineering enrolled in the class's other section. "He was enrolled in the class. That should speak for it- self." "I was disappointed at first," said. John Rosenberg, a junior in Gardella's discussion section. "I was worried he didn't know the material and the discussion would not be as effectual." BUT, ANOTHER of Gardella's students said had Gardella not been hired he would have been unable to enroll in the class at all, and for that reason he was glad Gardella was hired. "It was better to have him (Gardella) there and be able to take the class," for lack of junior Doug Durham said, adding that Frisqte and the other TA would have been available to help had Gardella not been familiar with the subject. Haddad said undergraduates are sometimes hired to assist lecturers but that those students have always been familiar with the subject matter. "It is not unusual to have very qualified senior level students help with begin- ning courses," Haddad said. Associate chairman Irani said that it is an acceptable practice to hire un- credentidals dergraduates as TAsbecause they do not assign final grades. Aides do, however, grade students' computer programs, which are con- sidered as a factor in determining the students' final grades. Frisque said the discussion section Gardella taught will not be closed because the TA was dismissed. Instead, Frisque said that he will teach the sec- tion himself until a replacement for Gardella can be found. HARPO'S PRESENTS THIS SUNDAY, SEPT. 27th TEENAGE HEAD WITH R. U.' R. 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