The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 4, 1994 - 3 *Michigan Supreme Court to hear oral arguments on assisted suicide LANSING, Mich. (AP) - For 19 months, cancer patient Teresa Hobbins has been part of the legal battle over assisted suicide. She'll be listening intently today as six lawyers take turns trying to convince the Michigan Supreme Court o agree with their side on the issue. Yet, the Lansing woman knows :she might not live long enough to hear :a final answer, from the U.S. Su- preme Court. "I hope that's not the case, but I know it's a possibility and to be quite candid, the disease has taken a turn for the worse. That's OK. That's ex- pected," said Hobbins, 44. "I've held out for eight years. I can only hope it's going to be another eight, but it's not going to be, it's just not going to be." Hobbins, her friend, Marie DeFord, and Ken Shapiro, of East Lansing, joined a number of medical professionals in a civil lawsuit chal- lenging the state's ban on assisted suicide. The American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan filed the lawsuit on their behalf. Lower courts and the Michigan Court of Appeals have struck the law down on technical grounds. In its 2-1 ruling on May 10, the appeals court also refused to find a constitutional right to assisted suicide. Along with the civil lawsuit, the seven-member court will hear argu- ments on three criminal cases involv- ing Dr. Jack Kevorkian, who has been present at 20 deaths. One of them is whether the 66- year-old retired pathologist should face two counts of murder for two deaths before the assisted suicide ban took effect in 1993. Kevorkian is expected to be at today's two-hour arguments, the first of the court's 1994-95 session. Hobbins and Shapiro, also a can- cer patient, said they expected the high court to strike down the law as unconstitutional on technical grounds, and hope the justices would agree that there's a right to assisted suicide. "How can you have Roe versus Wade as the law of the land, entailing a third entity and have abortion legal, when this involvesjustone individual, who, no matter what is done, is going to die? How can one be legal and not the other?" Shapiro said. "The person who's going to pay the price is me. I have the ultimate price to pay, so I should be able to choose," Hobbins said. "I'm compe- tent. I've made the decision. I'm not going to let that disease kill me the way it can." "1 tjiink you almost have to come up with a different category as op- posed to using the word suicide. I don't think suicide is what I'm talk- ing about and I don't want to put it in the same class as suicide. I am dying. we need to deal with death and we need to deal with inevi- table death. DeFord said it enrages her when those who don't know Hobbins call her a coward or say allowing assisted suicide will lead to depressed people seeking it out. "That's not fair. We've got spe- cial issues here. We're talking about an entirely different group of people than a teen-aaer whose girlfriend just broke up with them," she said. "I think it tends to diminish their pain or their agony." Students, faculty recall former 'U' English faculty member for 25 years died last summer, remembered yesterday at Union By RYAN FIELDS4 For the Daily The English department yester- day held a memorial service for Prof. James Gindin. Gindin died at his home July 30 at age 68. More than 100 faculty and stu- dents crowded the small room in the Union to pay tribute to Gindin. Gindin began teaching in the En- glish department at the University in4 1956. Tenured as a full professor in 1968, he made a mark on the Univer- sity, colleagues said. As a professor and as chairman of the English Honors Program for 25 Crown of the H years, Gindin was remembered by Warner C. R many of the people he touched. sor at the Unive During the brief time he assumed the English Dep the role of director of the University- remembered hi wide Honors Program, Gindin coun- derful friend. seled students while overseeing the "He was one program. department. Hi "It was delightful to have him with canny ability to us. Professor Gindin was a wonderful remembered for man to have around," said Eleanor a wonderful mar dept. chair OWN.., ated with." During his career at the Univer- sity, speakers said Gindin touched many people's lives. "He was abso- lutely essential in the life of the En- glish Department," said Lincon Faller, associate chair of the English Depart- ment, "but moreover he was an excel- lent colleague." Outside the University, Gindin was a noted literary scholar and critic. He authored numerous essays, reviews and several books, most recently "John Galsworthy's Life and Art: An Alien's Fortress." His reputation as a scholar stretched internationally. Gindin was a recipient of a Fulbright lectureship, a National Endowment for the Hu- manities Senior Fellowship, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. From 1954 to 1955, he was on the staff of "The New Yorker" magazine. The memorial service featured speakers associated with Gindin in his tenure at the University. Martha Vicinus, the current chair of the De- partment of English, called Gindin an "extraordinary human being." Gindin's daughter, Katherine- Gindin, read from one of her father's works, "The English Climate." onors Program. dice, a former profes- rsity and chairman of partment for 20 years, s colleague as a won- of the stalwarts of the s work ethic and un- touch others will be r generations. He was in to have been associ- Science adviser to President Clinton M.R.C. Greenwood addresses a crowd at Rackham Amphitheater yesterday. Clinton aide calls for focus on science, math education Demby starts 'Investing in Abilities' week events By MARIA KOVAC Daily Staff Reporter M.R.C. Greenwood's science lec- Jre in the Rackham Amphitheater yesterday wasn't filled with formulas or molecular structures. Greenwood, associate director for science in President Clinton's Office of Science and Technology Policy, came to the University as a guest lecturer for the second in the National Research Policy Lecture Series. She addressed issues raised in the elinton administration's newest sci- ence policy, "Science in the National Interest," before the faculty-heavy audience. The policy's agenda proposes goals for maintaining and increasing the United States' competitiveness in science, mathematics and engineer- ing. This is to be done, Greenwood said, by raising public interest in re- 'if we are not able to reach our educational goals in increasing scientific literacy, we are at risk.' - M.R.C. Greenwood Clinton adviser search and putting more emphasis on math and science education. "If we are not able to reach our educational goals in increasing scien- tific literacy, we are at risk," Green- wood said. She reasoned that it is essential for the average citizen to understand sci- ence that is related to their own health or other aspects of everyday life. Greenwood insisted that it is a critical time to be concentrating on research despite budget constraints. With the end of the Cold War, the United States has decreased defense research and increased other aspects of scientific study. "I'm here to solicit your help," Greenwood said. Greenwood spent the morning in class discussion with University sci- ence students. "I listened to your undergraduate students tell me about their research opportunities. They think they're go- ing to change the world and I believe they will," she said. The President's Committee of Ad- visors on Science and Technology hopes to institute the goals of the policy through suggestions of the scientific commu- nity and other interested parties. Greenwood's lecture was sponsored by the University's Office of the Vice President for Research. By BRAD SPARKS For the Daily Bill Demby is a Vietnam veteran, a father, a world-class athlete, and a motivational speaker. He is also handi- capped, having both of his legs ampu- tated from the knee down. Demby kicked off the University's Investing in Abilities Week with a speech to 40 people at the Michigan Union yesterday. He first gained national promi- nence in 1987 when he was featured in a commercial for DuPont, playing basketball on his artificial legs. Demby, who lost both of his legs during the Vietnam War, has com- peted in many wheelchair marathons and road races. He holds national amputee records in the shot put, dis- cus and javelin. He is also a certified ski instructor for the Handicap Sports and Recre- ation Association. Demby spoke about the problems and barriers that handicapped people face everyday. "We're trying to close the gap between you and us. I think (people with disabilities) have two problems. One, architectural barriers, stairs, curbs, doors that are not wide enough. ... Four inches to us is like a mountain to you. We want to be a part of your world; we want to share it. The sec- ond problem we have, attitude." Demby considers the 49 million handicapped people in this country to be the newest minority on the block. Just like other minorities, they must fight for their rights and respect. "If you're gonna judge me and I can't get a good job, I can't send my daughter to a nice school like this. We all want the same things." Demby was a high school basket- ball player who dreamed of playing in college and competing professionally someday. His high school counselor told him he wasn't college material academi- cally and that he should try to get a job in a factory. Today, Demby has a college de- gree and travels the nation as a spokes- man for both disabled people and Vietnam veterans. He took part in the 1988 Paralympics - the Olympics for disabled people - in Seoul, Ko- rea. "My dream is one day that we will compete not against, but side by side our Olympic athletes. I will not see that in my lifetime." Demby told the audience that Americans must band together to help fight for the rights of handicapped people. "Itis not important that Bill Demby lost two legs; what is important is what he is capable of doing and that you give him a chance. You're the ones that can make the difference, helping us to make the changes," he said. # orrection and Clarification SNRE first-year student Shawn Bobick was quoted in the Monday, Sept. 26 issue in a story about drinking titled, "Under 2l and drinking? Lots of rules, few punishments." He was quoted as describing his own drinking habits. Bobick did not make these statements about drinking. These statements should have been attributed to someone else. The Daily regrets the misquotation. Group Meetings Q U-M Gospel Chorale Rehears- als, School of Music, Room 2038, 7:30-9:30, 764-1705 Q Thai Students Association Weekly planning Meeting, Michigan Union, Michigan Room, 6 p.m., 663-7299 Q University Students Against Cancer Mass Meeting, Michi- gan Union, Kuenzel Room, 7 p.m. Q U-M College Republicans Meeting, Michigan League, Henderson Room, 6:30 p.m., 763-3886 Q U-M Medical Students Panel, exhibit, North Campus Com- mons Atrium, 7 a.m.-l 1 p.m. Q "People with Disabilities: In- formation from Insiders," Michigan Union, Pond Room, 3-4:30 p.m. Q "An Attempt to Teach Skepti- cism to Identify Humbugs and Development and Use of the Extra-Corporeal Membrane Oxygenators," Prof. Richard L. Malvin and Prof. Robert H. Bartlett, Denatal Building, Room G378, 7:30 p.m. Q Anne Le Claire, Reading and book signing, Borders Books and Music, 612 E. Liberty St., Q Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; events info., 76-EVENT; film info., 763-FILM. 1 North Campus Information Center, 763-NCIC, 7:30 a.m.- 5:30 p.m. J Psychology Academic Peer Ad- vising, West Quad, Room K103, walk-ins welcome orcall 747-3711 for appointment. Q Safewalk, 936-1000, UGLi lobby, 8 p.m. - 2:30 a.m. Q Career Planning and Place- ment, M-LINE info session, Angell Hall, Aud A,8:10-9 a.m., Writing .EffectiveCover Let- U-M Part Time Students There's a special grant for you! The Michigan Adult Part-Time Grant Benefits Michigan Residents Who: * have been out of high school for more than two years y< * demonstrate financial need '= :_-- A TWIhT T/"'I A rTTf'-.T T-%T- A '1-T TXTT1