2- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 5,1993 Court opens new term; Ginsburg opens mouth WASHINGTON (AP) - The Su- preme Court began its 1993-94 term yesterday withan avalancheof paper- work and an assertive new justice whopepperedlawyers with questions from the bench. The court, issuingprders in nearly 1,500 cases, denied review to most. It agreed to decide whether convicted murderers may insist thatjurors choos- ing life or death sentences be told that parole is impossible. Justice Ruth BaderGinsburg asked 17 questions through the first hour- long argument. She asked her first question nine minutes into the session. The two mostjunior ofher eight colleagues- Justices Clarence Thomas and David Souter - had waited one day and three weeks before uttering anything from the bench. Ginsburg, appointed by President Clinton, also asked plenty of ques- tions in the two other cases argued yesterday. The justices said they will study a South Carolina death row inmate's argument that he was sentenced un- fairly because a trial judge refused to tell the sentencing jury that a life sentence would carry no chance of parole. In other matters, the court: Rejected an appeal by officials seeking to bar students from forming areligion club and meeting for prayer and Bible study at a Renton, Wash., high school. 0 Cleared the way for an avowed white supremacist's third trial in the 1963 murder in Mississippi of civil rights leader Medgar Evers. The jus- tices turned down Byron De La Beckwith's arguments that forcing him to stand trial again violates his constitutional rights. Agreed to decide whether a Missouri town violated the free- speech rights of a woman who was told to remove a sign protesting the Persian Gulf war from her house's front window. Refused to lift mass murderer John Wayne Gacy Jr.'s death sen- tences for the sex killings of 33 young men and boys in Illinois. Refused to block a trial in which the Chicago Fire Department must defend its efforts to promote more blacks and Hispanics against a racial- bias challenge by white firefighters., Turned away the appeal of a men-only Elks lodge in St. George, Utah, forced to let a woman become a member or give up its liquor license. The court rejected Nancy Ezold's arguments that a sexually biased "glass ceiling" is why she wasn'tmade a partner of a Philadelphia law firm. RUSSIA Continued from page l high-security Lefortovo Prison. Escalating their defiance of Yeltsin's dissolution of parliament on Sept. 21, armed hard-liners cap- tured the Moscow mayor's offices and tried to take Russia's main televi- sion center Sunday. Parliament lead- ers urged supporters to topple Yeltsin. Yeltsin spent the day closeted with his closest aides in the Kremlin, where he had remained overnight since rush- ing there by helicopter during Sunday's street fighting. Late yester- day, he returned to his country dacha. He struck back just after dawn yesterday with the assault on the par- liament building. "All that was and still is going on in Moscow - was an armed revolt planned in advance," he said on na- tionwide television. "It was organized by Communists seeking revenge, by fascist leaders and some of the former lawmakers...- There can be no forgiveness, because they lifted their hand against peaceful people" in Sunday's rioting. Authorities had no firm figures on casualties from the 10-hour battle at the White House, but soldiers stacked dozens of bodies outside the building. Russian television reported that Sunday's battle at the TV complex alone left 62 dead and 400 wounded. Yeltsin at first told Russians and the world he would not to use force to break the deadlock with the Soviet- era parliamentket reforms. He changed course after the hard-liners rioted Sunday and tried to seize the television center. The army struck the White House with deliberate and overwhelming force at7 a.m. Atleast 10heavy battle tanks, seven light tanks and 25 ar- mored personnel carriers fired on the building while paratroopers and com- mandos stormed into the lower floors. Papers floated out of windows shattered by explosions, and flames and thick clouds of black smoke soon gushed from several parts of the build- ing. Theheavy boom of the tank attack could be heard throughout central Moscow, and many residents stayed home to watch live television reports on the assault. Hundreds of others rushed to the scene for a first-hand glimpse or scoop up battle souvenirs. Soldiers and civilian medical per- sonnel dragged dead and wounded away from parliament while machine guns blasted from a neighboring ho- tel and apartment house. A U.S. Marine was hit in the neck by a sniper bullet at the American Embassy, across the street from the White House. He was in stable condi- tion after surgery. About 400 em- bassy employees took shelter . During a lull in the fighting, De- fense Minister Pavel Grachev pulled up in a black limousine and met in the middle of the bridge with a group of hard-liners. They came out of the White House waving a white flag. Russian TV said Grachev handed the parliament supporters a piece of paper, believed to be an ultimatum to surrender or face destruction. Troops loosed one last barrage of heavy fire on the parliament, and law- makers and their supporters began trickling from the building at 4:50 p.m. Soon a steady stream of hard- liners filed between rows of soldiers to buses and trucks. 3 - 'U MOSCOW ST. PETERSBURG MOSCOW I INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS BOSTON UNIVERSITY I I - - - ---x3cx3cEz The Moscow Internship Program Experience Russia Firsthand t A U - ) I A r -I- FLYERS Continued from page 1 While fees forUniversity and other students are less than those for non- student club members, Beaton said money scares a lot of people away on the average, getting licensed costs about $3,500. Beaton said he took out a lot of loans to start his flying hobby and was also working a variety of jobs. After a few years of watching his flight in- structor move up in the ranks - to commuter airlines and then up into the major commercial airlines - he decided to focus on flying full time. Beaton said about half of the Fly- ers are sailing in the same direction- toward a commercial airline. The rest, he said, just do it for fun. Welcome Students and Faculty!! "We Cut Hair To Please" " 6 Barbers * No Waiting THE DASCOLA STYLISTS For program dewib complete de coupon below and mail it to: Boston University International Programs 232 Bay StaaRoad Box R, Boston, MA 02215 " 617/353-9888 Aneewo pet~assirj.0ma live acioninstiuion Continued from page 1 money, and have no way to boost their spending, even if voters in their districts were willing, he said. Early indications are that Engler will push hard for schools of choice and charter schools. King described schools of choice as "a tempest in a teapot." He added thatMinnesota's experience suggests that most parents send their children to different schools mainly for conve- nience. On top of that, surveys have found most parents would prefer to see im- provements in their neighborhood schools rather than putting their chil- dren in a different school, he said. King said the MASB was waiting to see the details on Engler's charter schools. Such schools would be setup outside the public school system by universities, companies, or groups, but get public funds. He added that he hopes the gover- nor tackles every possible school is- sue - including teacher strikes and competitive bidding ofhealth services - in his speech. "My fear is that some place along theline, people aregoing to say, 'Well, we fixed that,' and not do anything about schools for several years. We've been more fearful that there would not be enough done, rather than too much done," he said. LAW 1SCHOOL? PrepMaster Review is the most effective. up-to-date and cost-efficient LSAT prep course available. Success rate: average 14 point improvement on the 120- 180 LSAT scale. 1-800-325-LSAT \ EUZABETh UPPMANIDi Steve Fish and Claudia Bruno interrupt their bike ride to answer a hospital page on their cellular phone. Moscow ST. PETERSBURG Moscow I would like to receive more information on your Moscow Internship Program. 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