Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 5, 1984 High court debates WASHINGTON (AP) - The legitimacy of setting laws, but not all of them mention prayer. aside daily moments of silence for student prayer or BATON ROUGE, La., lawyer John B meditation in the nation's public schools was debated ding the Alabama law for Gov. GeorgeP yesterday before a sharply divided Supreme Court. it does not coerce students to pray. In a case as politically charged as any on their "No one knows whether fellow s docket, the justices must decide whether state laws praying, meditating or vegetating," he s allowing public schools to provide such periods may But Mobile, Ala., lawyer Ronnie W mention "prayer" as one possible activity during the trayed the law as a "blatant attempt" to; silence. 1962 Supreme Court decision bannin a Baker, defen- Wallace, said tudents are aid. lilliams por- get around a g organized hool prayer which does not mention prayer - would not suffice as well, Baker said many people did not realize they could spend the silent time praying. "MANY PEOPLE are under the impression that students don't have the right to pray silently," Baker said. Chief Justice Warren Burger appeared sym- pathetic to Baker's contention, at one point asking Williams, "Is a teacher telling students anything more than what the Constitution guarantees - that they have a right to pray silently?" But Justice Thurgood Marshall, suggesting that the law's real purposes was to promote prayer, asked Bator: "Didn't students have the right to pray silen- tly before the statute was passed?" THE 1981 Alabama law was challenged by Ishmael Jaffree, an agnostic whose three children attend public schools in Mobile. The court will take a preliminary, secret vote in the case today, and announce its final decision by July. NUMEROUS political candidates this year - in- cluding President Reagan - called for a return of organized prayer in public schools. Regan administration lawyer Paul Bator told the high court that laws such as Alabama's "enhance the opportunity for students to bring silent prayer as part of their activities at school" as he defended an Alabama law that allowed moments of silence for "meditation or voluntary prayer." At least 22 other states have moment of silence prayer sessions from public schools. A FEDERAL appeals court struck down the Alabama law, ruling that it violated the con- stitutionally required separation of church and state. But Baker said the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals was wrong, and added that the invalidated 1981 law merely "accommodates those who by conscience feel compelled to open their school day with prayer." When Justice John Paul Stevens pressed Baker to explain why a 1978 Alabama moment of silence law - Protesters refuse to obey court order (Continued from Page 1) another form of protest. The jails are already overcrowded with "real criminals," he said. Residential College junior Mike O'Neill used an adaption of a song writ- ten by folk singer Malvina Reynolds to answer O'Brien's question. He sang: It isn't nice to ,go to block the driveway,. It isn't nice to go to jail, There are nicer ways to do things, But those nicer ways always fail. O'NEILL SAID he would return to Williams if "called by my conscience, and if joined by the other demon- strators, many of whom are his close friends. But O'Brien charged: "You don't seem to have any conscience, you're telling me about some folk singer. Are you moved by some kind of compulsion which forces you to do this? Or are you moved by your friends?" Doug Hamm of Ann Arbor, another protester, said the group has tried to talk to the plant's worers about the firm's military contracts. But because they refuse to enter a discussion, the group blocks their driveway in order to force them to think about the issue, he added. WILLIAMS requested the civil con- tempt charge in an attempt to end a series of anti-nuclear demonstrations which have resulted in 75 arrests since August 1983, said Dorothy Whitmarsh, a nurse in Ann Arbor. Under criminal contempt charges, protesters can serve out a 30-day sen- tence and return to demonstrate again, Whitmarsh said. She and four others have been arrested for blockades at Williams before. "If they ask to punish us for 25 to 30 days, then there is just a wave - a gr- owing wave - that will continue at Williams," she said. THE PROTESTERS said they expec-' ted the civil contempt sentence, but were undecided about what they would do, if anything, to shorten their senten- ce without promising to obey the injun- ction. "I'm scared to death of spending a long time in jail," Cortelyou said after the trial. O'NEILL SAID later that lawyers for Williams might ask to end his sentence if they feel he no longer poses a threat to the firm's workers. Last summer, Williams called for the release of five demonstrators who were jailed on civil contempt charges after they began a hunger strike. For the second day in a row, the demonstrators went home instead of to jail, despite their fears that they would be incarcerated. Reflecting on his two days of unexpected freedom, O'Neill remarked, "All I know is that I don't feel very free." IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Gas leak kills 1,000 in India BHOPAL, India-The poison gas leak from a pesticide plant has killed 1,000, people, doctors said yesterday, and many of the survivors in this central In- dian city are threatened by blindness and sterility. The doctors said many of the dead were children and the elderly, who were not strong enough to withstand-or outrun-the lethal cloud that spread over 25 square miles of this city of 900,000 on Monday. The methyl isocyanate gas had began leaking at 1 a.m. from an un- derground storage tank at a Union Carbide pesticide plant in a poor area of Bhopal. The lead was stopped after 40 minutes, but the gas seeped silently over the city through the early hours of the morning. Police on Monday arrested five plant officials on negligence charges and sealed off the factory. Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, who toured the city., yesterday, said it would never reopen. Police teams searched house to house, stepping over the carcasses of water buffalo, dogs, and birds that dropped in the streets when the poison overcame them. The police often had to break down doors bolted from the , inside by frantic victims in a vain attempt to keep out the gas. The gas slowly dissapated into the atmosphere through the day, but air samples yesterday still showed traces of the poison in the air. Tutu calls Reagan polcy evil' WASHINGTON - Black Anglican Bishop Desmon Tutu called President Reagan's South African policy "immoral, evil and totally un-Christian" yesterday and offered to meet with the president before flying to Europe to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. Reagan's chief spokesman said no meeting was planned. "We are talking about a moral issue," the bishop-designate of Johan- - nesburg said, declaring that South Africa's apartheid policy of racial segregation "is evil, is immoral, is un-Christian," Tutu said. Twenty-two people, including seven House members, have been arrested during a 2-week-old series of demonstrations outside the South African em- bassy here. The protest spread to New York on Monday, where four arrests were made at the nation's consulate, and organizers said it will extend to other U.S. cities where the Pretoria government has diplomatic offices. Panel finds violations in Ferraro. financial forms, won't take action WASHINGTON-The House ethics committee found that Geraldine Ferraro violated the Ethics in Government Act at least 10 times but is not recom- mending any formal House action against the lame-duck representative, a congressional source said yesterday. The committee voted 8-2 Monday to adopt a staff report that says the 1984 Democratic vice presidential nominee failed to provide complete infor- mation on her required financial disclosure statements since entering Congress in 1979, according to the source. But because the New York lawmaker is leaving office when the 99th Congress convenes Jan. 3, the 12-member panel plans no further action, said the source, who spoke only on condition he not be identified. Normally, when the ethics committee finds a House member in violation of the ethics law, it issues a statement of alleged violation, which the mem- ber has 21 calendar days to answer. Hijackers seize Kuwait jetliner 4 RABBINICAL SCHOOL -GRADUATE SCHOOL -SEMINARY COLLEGE OF JEWISH STUDIES-CANTORS o JEWISH STUDIESZ Q ATANY LEVELx IN JERUSALEM-IN NEW YORKr a . i Visit for a semester with credit z or enroll in a degree program.T Open to all academically qualified s students. For information on opportunitiesz call or write. mvif The Jewish Theological Seminary of America DM;H T 1lI 3080- BROADWAY. NEW YORK, NY 10027 cOsuED (212) 678-8832K . r101'.)131-\OIlt'2lSltilTGV t10OH.SA VG NI WYNdfOlfd-NIAV'IVI-S:7N3A 3 HS3M0GI1"-'IOOH)S MSA supports dental school minority recruiter Rabbi Morris Allen, Director of Recruitment, will be at Hillel to answer questions and with information about JTS programs. AU *,. _Nt ', THURSDAY, DEC. 6 1:30-3:00 for appointment call 663-3336 1429 HILL ST. ki For Li ini ys (Continued from Page 1) The dental school currently has 9 per- cernt black enrollment, according to Linzie's letter, falling only 1 percent short of the University's goal. The school's entering freshman class has 15.7 percent black enrollment, the letter said. MSA members are concerned that eliminating Jones' fulltime position will be threatening to minority enrollment in the school. If the University is successful in eliminating the present position, two WINTER BREAK Help us sponsor your school's winter break ski trip and ski free! (800) 368-2006 TOLL FREE mas, shop The gowns, robes and ties, slips, camisoles, able winter colors and veryday. Right now nated gown and robe , the gowns regularly to $124 and the robes ndfriendly sales staff to help you selectjust xfinishing touch, Gift wrapping staff members will replace him, eah on a part-time basis, Jones said. State can limit non- resident students (Continued from Page 1) If the state really wanted to enforce the law the University could lose a corresponding percentage of its state appropriations, Selanger said. BUT TODAY'S enrollment realities have forced the legislature to disregard the technicalities implicit in theUlaw, according to Richard Kennedy, Univer- sity vice president for government relations. Such realities include the dramatic drop expected in the amount of qualified University applicants. The number of high school graduates in the University's prime recruiting grounds is predicted to drop by as much as 23 percent and this trend isn't expected to change until 1994. State House fiscal analyst Ron Roott warns that the potential for state action against the University is there. "The budget process allows the leeway to slap hands very easily," Roott said. So far the legislature hashnot done this and that bodes well for the Univer- sity, Roott said. "If the legislature wanted to enforce the law, it would," Roott said. The University's apparent violation has had few negative repercussions over the years, but officials fear this trend may only be temporary. "They may well reverse themselves. I don't know what their considerations might be," said Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost. POLICE NOTES Break-ins reported A small amount of cash was stolen from a room in Alice Lloyd residence hall Saturday between 1 p.m. and 4p.m. Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Jan Suomala reported. The burglar pried open a locked door to get into the room, Suomala said. Acacia Fraternity house at 805 Oxford was broken into Monday between 2 a.m. and 8 a.m., Suomala said. The thief entered the house through an unlocked door, and stole a television valued at approximately $825, Suomala reported. -Molly Melby KUWAIT-Arab-speaking hijackers yesterday seized a Kuwaiti jetliner with 161 people 'aboard, including some Americans, and forced the pilot to land in Iran with threats to blow the aircraft from the skies. One passenger was reported killed and another injured in a fight on the nlane. Five women and 14 children were freed from the hijacked Kuwaiti Airlines Airbus at the Tehran airport after two of the hijackers agreed to negotiate with Iranian officials, IRNA, the official Iranian news agency, said. In Washington, the State Department spokesman Alan Romberg said "a number" of U.S. citizens were aboard the aircraft, which left Kuwait headed to Pakistan and was commandeered shortly after a stop in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. Airline officials said most the othe people aboard were Pakistanis. Palestinian terrorists take blame for Jordanian diplomat's death Y f VIENNA-A Jordanian diplomat with close ties to King Hussein was shot to death yesterday as he left his hotel to take his 5-year-old son to school, officials said. A Palestinian terrorist group claimed responsibility for the killing. The diplomat, Counsellor Azmi al Mufti, was shot in the head four times, a spokesman for the Jordanian Embassy said. His son, Said, was not injured, the spokesman said. Mufti's wife, Dina, was in the cafeteria of the Hotel Bucharest at the time of the shooting and ran out to the front of the building when she heard the gunshots and the cries of her son, witnesses said. The assassin was identified as Ahmed Moh'd Ali Hersh, 27, a student in Bucharest, the Romanian state news agency Agerpres said. A group claiming to be the Palestianian terrorist band Black September claimed responsibility for the shooting, claiming in an anonymous phone call to a French news agency in Paris that Jordan "plotted with the traitor Yasser Arafat against the Palestinian people." Vol. XCV -No.74 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: September through April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate and College Press Service, and United Students Press Service. , 0 r those truly personal gifts this Christn gerte Storefor the latest in designer g timate apparel. You'llfind famous name bras, pan hosiery and slippers in the most desir fabrics--all discounted 20% or more ei we have a limited quantity of coordin setsfor $29.90 to $69.90. Individually sellfor a suggested retail price of $50t for $46 to $95. Our knowledgeable an will also take the timet the right gift. And, as a we offer free gift boxes. Editor in Chief ....................BILL SPINDLE Managing Editors.............. CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Associate News Editors ........ .LAURIE DELATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor .................... 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