Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April 19, 1988 High Court to hear abortion rights case WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court heard the opening arguments of an abortion rights case involving the Roman Catholic Church yesterday and agreed to consider a lawsuit pending against Michigan officials. The Roman Catholic Church's tax-exempt status gives it an unfair advantage in the political battle over abortion, the court was told by a "pro-choice" coalition. The coalition want the court to keep alive an 8-year-old lawsuit that seeks to strip the church of its tax exemption because of its anti- abortion lobbying. The justices are being asked to decide whether the suit can go forward - not whether the church's tax exemption should be revoked. A decision is expected to be announced by July. If the suit against the government is kept alive, the church faces $100,000 a day in fines for its refusal to surrender documents sought by those suing. Marshall Beil, a lawyer for the pro-choice groups and individuals, said being free from paying taxes is a from of government subsidy that "is skewing the political process" in the national debate over abortion. Church officials and the Reagan administration urged the court to kill the lawsuit. Permitting such legal claims could "expose the government to untold suits by people interested but not affected by the outcome" of federal regulation, said Justice Department lawyer Alan Horowitz. Several justices hinted that the case could be sent back to a federal appeals court for clarification of that court's views on the pro-choice coalition's legal standing to the government. In other court action, the court will try to clarify the issue of when a federal civil rights law may be used to sue states and their agencies. The pending lawsuit accuses Michigan officials of denying a promotion to a state employee because his brother was a political activist. The justices will review a ruling that threw out a suit against the state police and its director. Ray Will sought promotion to a job as data systems analyst with the state police in 1973. He had been ranked second on a promotion list and moved up to number one when the applicant above him withdrew from consideration. ButhWill said he learned years later that he didn't get the job because a so-called Red Squad operated by the state police had investigated his brother, Charles, a student political activist. The Red Quad, which monitored campus radicals with subversive ideas, was held unconstitutional by a state judge in 1976. Will then sued his employers in state court under a federal civil rights law enacted after the Civil War. the suit named the state police and its director as defendants. A state judge in 1982 ruled that Will's rights were violated and awarded him more than $153,000 for lost wages, emotional distress, and punitive damages. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Hostage begs demands be met ALGIERS, Algeria - A man identified as a member of Kuwait's royal family spoke yesterday from the hijacked Kuwaiti jetliner and he said he hoped his government yields to the hijackers demands to end the two-week ordeal. Most of the brief radio message from the man the hijackers said was Fadel Khaled Al-Sabah was impossible to understand, except for the part about their demand that Kuwait free 17 pro-Iranian prisoners convicted in the 1983 attacks on the United States and French embassies in the Persian Gulf sheikdom. "I hope that Kuwait releases all the prisoners," the man said, speaking in Arabic in a feeble, halting voice. Kuwaiti officials insist they will not give in to the hijackers, who have killed two Kuwaiti passengers. The jumbo jet was hijacked while en route from Bangkok to Kuwait with 112 people aboard. Meese' s nominee may refuse position in Justice Department WASHINGTON - John Shepherd, Attorney General Edward Meese's choice to fill the No. 2 post at the Justice Department, told officials yes= terday to proceed with a search to fill the job, department sources said. While not yet closing the door on the post, Shepherd is on the verge of withdrawing from consideration for the job of deputy attorney general, the sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Less than two weeks ago, Meese hurriedly selected Shepherd, a former president of the American Bar Association, for the position without cus- tomary White House clearance and FBI background checks. President Reagan has not yet formally nominated Shepherd. In brief remarks to reporters, Meese said that he didn't expect to have a decision from Shepherd until mid-week. Panel wants 'air safety czar' WASHINGTON - A presidential commission concluded Monday that the United States air transport system is safe for the time being, but urged appointment of a "safety czar" who could initiate or block proposed air safety regulations in a newly independent Federal Aviation Administration whose officials would be insulated from political pressures. "The nation's air transportation system is safe, for now," said John M. Albertine, chair of the Aviation Safety Commission whose final report was issued after a nine-month study of the rapidly growing airline indus- try. The report said there was widespread public concern about the safety of air travel, coinciding with burgeoning technological advances and a back- log of safety improvements waiting to be written into government regulations. Surrogate contracts questioned LANSING- The state agency charged with looking out for those who can't look' out for themselves has broken its silence on the issue of surrogate contracts and recommended that Michigan give women who sign such agreements time to back out. While stopping short of declaring support for a proposal to outlaw pregnancy-for-pay, the Department of Social Services has issued a "statement of principles" that suggests prenatal child custody agreements shouldn't be honored. As it now works, women who agree to become surrogates sign con- tracts promising, before any child is conceived, that they will relinquish their custody rights after the child is born. Surrogacy typically involves a well-to-do but infertile couple hiring a woman to be artificially inseminated, carry a child to term, and then give up her parental rights. 4 Doily Photo by DANIEL STIEBEL Volunteer LSA Junior Myron Goldstein picks up test results yesterday at the Parke Davis Pharmaceutical company. Goldstein is volunteering to test drugs alrady on the market at the Warner Lambert Community Research Cen- ter. Ta es ' gives TAs three-month extension to pay Continued from Page 1 Since out-of-state and in-state TAs pay the same tuition after their waivers, the University's income from tuition would not be affected if all TAs were charged in-state tuition, according to a study by the Provost's Office, D'Arms said. An alternative to changing tuition status, D'Arms said, would be to make.all tuition waivers into non- taxable scholarships, a method the University of Arizona uses. The scholarship issue poses problems for research assistants, however. They are not members of the Graduate Employees Organization, the TA union, and are therefore not state employees. To include them under such an arrangement, the GEO contract, .which will not expire for another year, may have to be reworked, D'Arms said. But the RA proposal was not warmly received. Rackham graduate student Don Demetriades, president of GEO, said, "There's good reason to favor residency for TAs but not RAs," because of these differences. He added that the GEO has not discussed reopening contract negotiations, although the tuition waiver exemption would give them grounds to do so. Peter Smouse, professor of genetics, said changing the salary structure would force research professors to rely on grants to pay the increased cost of having an RA. Smouse said he and some of his colleagues would consider looking for lab technicians, which they could pay at a flat rate, if the RA salary structure were changed. Responding to a question from Anthropology Prof. Dan Moerman, D'Arms estimated that if the University would raise TA salaries to cover the tax it could cost from S1 to $3 million. i r t t i i f r i r T a T 1 Mandela degree proposal Z UW TA T7 - -T angers WIL KALAMAZOO (AP) - A re- quest to grant an honorary degree to jailed South African activist Nelson Mandela at commencement cere- monies Saturday has erupted into a controversy among Western Michi- gan students. The request, first made last month by the Committee for Nelson Man-. dela, has drawn criticism from the university's student newspaper, which is urging the board of trustees to reject the proposal. i newspaper In editorials, Western Herald Edi- tor Daniel Calabrees alleges that Mandela has advocated violent means of protest against the white suprem- acist government, demonstrating that "not all who oppose the repressive system of apartheid are angels themselves." Prof. Donald Cooney, head of the student committee, called the news- paper's allegations "character assas- sination" and demanded proof of the charge against Mandela or a retrac- tion. 9 -. FOOD BUYS SZE=CTHUAN WEST Specializing in Sze-chuan, Hunan, and Mandarin Cuisine DINING - COCKTAILS - CARRY-OUT * In 1980. Sze-Chuan West... /' THE DETROIT NEWS' choice as "the best new Chinese restaurant." * In 1986, Sze-Chuan West... VOTED BEST CHINESE RESTAURANTr IN "BEST OF ANN ARBOR" BY YOU, THE S' UDENT. * In 1988, Sze-Chuan West ... REMAINS THE FAVORITE CHOICE FOR ORIENTAL DINING. Open 7 days a week LSA Continued from Page 1 "It's an issue people were talking about in January. But it's also sig- nificant in that he's had a lot of ex- perience on committees in the col- lege; he knows the University and faculty and their needs; and he's in tune with the needs of minority stu- dents." Deskins, a professor of urban ge- ography and sociology, said he "hopes to participate as a responsible member of the academic community, but I don't carry in with me any agenda." The committee - which has the final authority over curriculum and hiring in the college - consists of six elected faculty members, five LSA assistant deans, and Steiner. Two new faculty are elected each year. After the LSA faculty voted on a slate of committee candidates in March, Interim President Robben Fleming made the final choice of Deskins and math Prof. Daniel Burns earlier this month. Steiner would only comment through his secretary, who said he "was delighted" with the selection. Fleming was unavailable for com- ment. The committee position won't be Deskins' first; he has served on the faculty's Senate Assembly, the as- sembly's Budget Priorities Com- mittee, the Scholarship Committee, and Human Subjects Review. EXTRAS $1,000 mail order mix-up proves honesty's the best policy GRAND RAPIDS .(AP) - When Alice Lisquez opened a letter and found a $100 bill, the thought of keeping the money never entered her mind. "It never occurred to me to take it," she said. A Georgia woman, planning to use the cash on her vacation, mistakenly sent 10 $100 bills along with an order for some plants. Lisquez, 47, usually spends her days opening about 1,000 orders for Michigan Bulb Co. In one she opened about three weeks ago was a $21.84 order from Mary Duval of Dahlonega, Ga., for flower seeds. The big bills also were there. Lisquez told her supervisor, Sue Barnstable, about her discovery, who then tacked down Duval. Barnstable sent Duval a $1,000 check to replace the cash. On Thursday, Lisquez received a $100 bill, a silk scarf, and two thank you letters from Duval as a reward. "Lord, it was the least I could do," Duval said. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. GTlie £ItIiigaut B aljj Vol. XCVIII- No. 135 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates for May through August - $6 in Ann Arbor; $8 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the National Student News Service. p I Mon.-Thurs. 11:30-10:00 Friday 11 :30-11:00 Saturday 12:00-11:00 Sunday 12:00-10:00 2161 W. STADIUM 769-5722 4 Served Monday-Thursday " Blue Corn Tamales- Filled with pork and topped with green chile sauce...,,,,,,....,... $4.95 " Chile Rellenos- New Mexican Chile Peppers filled with cheddar cheese, battered and fried; topped with green chile sauce......,..............,.$4.95 " Baby Back Ribs- 24 oz slab of baby back ribs, slow cooked, then grilled, covered with our house . a barbeque sauce & served with shoestring -~.. S7.95 Coming the end of April full service menu & bar 338 S. State St. Outdoor Cafe ---- --- --- ------ ---- ~ ---- If ~ f 1944 W. Stadium - 662-8621 -I I I I Editor in Chief..................REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Managing Editor........................MARTHA SEVETSON News Editor.....................................EVE BECKER City Editor..................................MELISSA BIRKS Features Editor..........................ELIZABETH ATKINS University Editor..........................KERY MURAKAMI NEWS STAFF: Vicki Bauer, Anna Borgman, Day Cohen, Steve Knopper, Theresa Lai, Kristine LaLonde, Eric Lemont, Michael Lustig, Alyssa Lustigman, Dayna Lynn, Andrew Mills, Peter Mooney, Jim Poniewozik, Liz Rohan, Micah Schmit, Elizabeth Stuppler, Marina Swain, Melissa Ramsdell, Lawrence Rosenberg, David Schwartz, Ryan Tutak, Lisa Winer, Veronica Woolridge. Opinion Page Editors............JEFFREY RUTHERFORD CALE SOUTLVHWORTH OPINION STAFF: Muzammil Ahmed, Sarah Babb, Rosemary Chinnock, Brian DeBroux, Betsy Esch, Noah Finkel, Joshua Ray Levin, I. 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