The Michigan Daily - Tuesday October 4, 1994 - 5 eCourt tells doctors to continue baby's life Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court, acting yesterday in a case that has alarmed emergency medical pro- fessionals, let stand a lower court ruling that requires hospitals to admit and resuscitate comatose patients, even when doctors say there is no hope for recovery. 0 The ruling grew out of the case of a baby born in 1992 in Fairfax County, Va., with most of her brain missing. Although she was deemed by doctors to have no chance of long-term sur- vival, she was placed on a ventilator and has been repeatedly revived at her mother's insistence. Doctors disputed the wisdom of such aggressive treatment, but a di- Oided U.S. appeals court ruled in Feb- ruary that federal law requires medi- cal professionals "to provide stabiliz- ing treatment" to a hopelessly ill pa- tient, even when they "consider it morally and ethically inappropriate." Lawyers for several national medi- cal groups, who pressed the case be- fore the Supreme Court, said the rul- ing expanded greatly the prevailing interpretation of an 1986 federal law Sat barred hospitals from refusing to treat poor patients. Unless overturned, it could require hospitals to treat dy- ing patients of all ages aggressively, no matter what their chance of sur- vival, they said. But "In the Matter of Baby K, 93- 2076," the justices left standing the lower court ruling. In response, law- yers for the medical groups say they qill ask Congress to amend the law. "This is the first time to my knowl- edge that a court has ordered physi- cians to render medical care over their protests," said Stephan E. Lawton, an attorney representing the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Soci- ety of Critical Care Medicine. "Clearly, this is not what Congress intended, but the case is being cited now all over the country," he said. 0 The Supreme Court's action yes- terday does not set a binding legal rule. But as a practical matter the precedent in the "Baby K" case is likely to be followed elsewhere. Often, the justices refuse to take up an appeal unless the lower courts are split on the matter. Lawyers said the ruling in Baby K's case marked the first time the 1986 law had been deemed to andate a level of medical treatment at was not recommended by doctors. The U.S. appeals court in Rich- mond, Va., noted that Baby K "lacks a cerebrum (and) is permanently un- conscious." Doctors recommended the baby be allowed to die peacefully, but the mother, citing her strong reli- gious convictions, said she wanted everything done to keep her daughter alive. The baby continues to be cared r at a nursing home, but has been returned to the hospital several times for resuscitation. "It is beyond the limits of our judicial function to address the moral orethical propriety of providing emer- gency stabilizing medical treatment to anencephalic infants," wrote Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson for a 2-1 major- ity siding with the mother. EXERCISE, CUBED Clinton stumps for Senator Robb in close Virginia race Democrats hope the president Is more of a help than a liability in race against Republican North, who is ahead in polls Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Virginians don't care for Democratic presidents in general. And the polls show most of them don't like President Clinton in particular. Yet in an election year when he is avoiding many conservatives states, Clinton yesterday made his first po- litical foray into the the Old Domin- ion on a hunch that he could raise money and deliver Democratic voters for beleaguered Democratic Sen. Charles Robb. The key: The many uncommitted Black votes that could still enable Robb to edge ahead of front-running Republican candidate Oliver North - and perhaps save Democratic con- trol of the Senate. In a year when congressional con- trol is at stake, the Black vote is im- portant, said Joan Baggett, the White House political director. "We're reaching out for it wherever we can." Clinton's appearance for Robb at a pair of fund-raisers underscores a broader imperative facing the Demo- crats as they try to hold the congres- sional seats needed to ensure Clinton's future viability. In race after race, they need to energize a Democratic core that is big enough to be decisive in the year's many tight races but has sharply cooled to. Clinton since the Demo- crats' season of hope two years ago. The importance of the party base is always magnified in mid-term elec- tions, when only one-third of regis- tered voters are expected to show up, compared to the roughly one half who vote during presidential election years. The no-shows tend to be people lower on the socio-economic scale - "read, Democratic voters," said Mark A. Siegal, a newsletter publisher and former Democratic Party official. This year there is abundant evi- dence from primaries and polls that while many conservative voters are feeling jazzed by the election, such reliable Democratic groups as the la- bor and black voters are torn by an ambivalence that could severely de- press their turnout. Union members, while pleased at Clinton's advocacy of health reform, were disappointed at its failure. And they actively fought the administration's efforts on behalf of two big trade agree- ments in the last year. More than 70 percent of Black voters approve of Clinton's perfor- mance as president, the polls show, compared to about 40 percent for the votes as a whole. Yet if they approve of him overall, their passion has been cooled by Clinton's advocacy of bud- get-cutting, capital punishment, prison-building, and free trade. And "you could make a good case that the (Black) turnout - or lack of it - could decide five or six elec- tions," says Siegal. These, he said, could include close Senate races in California, Minnesota, New Jersey, and Massachusetts. But it is not always a simple mat- ter to turn out the Democratic core without mobilizing the opposition at the same time. Highly visible appearances by the president, Hillary Clinton or other national party leaders will bring out the Democratic fans, but they may also energize the Clinton-haters and potentially turn some swing voters as well. First-year School of Music students Justin Depuydt (right) and Jessica Cauffiel put an unconventional spin on the cube yesterday. A 'softer' Newt ready to take GOP reins next year Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Officially, Newt Gingrich's tenure as his party's leader in the House does not begin until the new Congress takes office in January. But in many ways, the Gingrich Era has already dawned. With the Capitol dome as a back- drop, the combative Georgia Repub- lican last week led 300 GOP incum- bents and challengers in signing what they described as their "contract with America." It is a 10-point program of proposed legislation - largely unfin- ished business of the Reagan revolu- tion - that the Republicans promise to enact if they win control of the House this November. A GOP majority is something that body has not seen since the 1950s. Not a single Republican now serving has wielded the gavel during a ses- sion of the House, or even presided over the most lowly of subcommit- tees. A Republican takeover of the House is still a longshot. But for the first time in decades, no one is laugh- ing off the possibility. If Republicans do win a majority of the 435 seats, it will be due in no small measure to public disgust with Congress - a political brush fire that Gingrich has stoked throughout his 16 years as a legislator. Or, as the would-be speaker put it: "I've spent much of my career reporting accu- rately on a Congress that's worthy of being despised." At a minimum, a soured electorate appears poised to give the GOP enough additional seats for the fire- breathing Gingrich and his forces to forge a working majority on many close questions. The prospect has sent shudders up and down the Democratic ranks and would seem to represent Bill Clinton's worst nightmare. But as Gingrich steps closer to center stage, some of his colleagues believe they are seeing - could it be? - a kinder, gentler Newt. Indeed, if the Gingrich acolytes who make up the current crop of fresh- men Republicans have any complaint about their hero and role model, it is summed up by Richard W. Pombo (R-Calif.) "At times, as a member of the leadership, Gingrich is softer than a lot of the freshmen want him to be." Soft? Newt Gingrich? The man who once called Senate minority leader Bob Dole, (R-Kan.), "the tax collector of the welfare state?" "He's absolutely shifted gears sig- nificantly in the last year," said Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.) a one-time rival for the top House GOP post whose 1993 ouster from the leadership was engi- neered by Gingrich. In Gingrich's view, the affable and well-regarded Lewis represented the old-style Republican -the kind whose pragmatism and noblesse oblige would keep GOP House members in the shadow of the Democrats forever. But now that he is the second- ranking Republican and heir appar- ent to the minority leader's job being vacated by retiring Robert H. Michel (R-Ill.), Gingrich is confronting the realities of heading a party that still is 40 votes short of a majority in the House, and probably will remain at least 15 behind. If Gingrich is to get anything done, Lewis pointed out, he will need at least a handful of conservatives and moderates on the other side of the aisle. In their private dealings, the Demo- cratic leadership with which Gingrich will have to work has already seen a shift. 'He does tend to be very con- structive in meetings. He's very dif- ferent from his image outside," one top aide said. "He's been like a Jekyll and Hyde," said Bill Richardson (D-N.M.). "When he decides to be bipartisan, he is bipartisan, but then he also has the capability of wanting to tear down the institution. The real Newt Gingrich is still unclear. I don't think he's de- cided what his strategy is." At first, Gingrich brushed off sug- gestions that he has mellowed, saying he's merely getting older - he's 51 - and warning, "I'm told that at a later point in my life, I become more irascible." But then he turned to aide Tony Blankley and asked, "I'm kind of cu- rious about this. Do you think I've significantly changed?" "You pause before you act," Blankley replied. After pondering the question him- self for a moment, Gingrich concluded: "One thing that really has changed is I've learned to listen a lot more than I did 10 years ago, or even five years ago. ... When I was younger, I was a back bencher, and to get heard at all, you had to virtually scream." you had to virtually scream." I I I SUBWAY TwVo for Tuesday Buy any footlong Sub and get your second for with the purchase of a medium drink Every Tuesday in October A Y! I 617 Packard 1315 South University i