10A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 11, 1999 NATION/WORLD ustices hear license, nude dancing cases The Washington Post yesterday, and some of the justices sug- records, only to control what is relea WASHINGTON - The Supreme gested that if the court struck down the nationwide, potentially putting live Court heard oral arguments yesterday drivers' privacy law, other federal legis- risk. in two decidedly different but similarly lation would be in jeopardy, including Justice Anthony Kennedy vigorot enthralling cases: whether states can be minimum-wage and overtime protec- questioned whether Congress 1 barred from disclosing the personal tions, authority to regulate the states thisv information drivers provide to get a Federal appeals courts are divided and said the law might "blur the line license and under what circumstances over the constitutionality of the drivers' power between the states cities can ban nude dancing. privacy law, and in the case before the Washington. Justice Sandra I The first case centered ona 1994 fed- justices yesterday, the 4th U.S. Circuit O'Connor was similarly concer eral law that forbids states from selling Court of Appeals had ruled it invalid, about whether the federal governm the addresses, telephone numbers and saying Congress was improperly forc- was encroaching on core state functi other information that motorists pro- ing states to administer a federal pro- - keeping motor vehicle data -. vide to obtain licenses. The Driver's gram. The law provides numerous suggested that if the court were to str Privacy Protection Act was passed in exceptions for when states can turn over down the law it might have to revisi the wake of congressional concern information, for example for public important 1985 case that allot about stalkers who use motor vehicle safety and anti-fraud purposes, and Congress to subject the states to records to track down their victims. The some states argue it is complicated to labor standards, law clearly also reflected privacy con- run. In the second case of the mom: cems in a era where technology allows The practical reality of the law, South the justices reviewed constitutio for the instantaneous dissemination of Carolina attorney general Charles standards for whether nudity is expi data. Condon told the justices, is that it sive conduct worthy of F Because South Carolina challenged requires states to take on a burdensome Amendment protection. I the law as an infringement on state administrative effort. He said it effec- Pennsylvania Supreme Court threw, authority, the case offers the Rehnquist tively forces state workers into national the city of Erie's ban on nudity sayin Court an opportunity to continue its service. was too broadly written. pattern of curtailing federal power. In But in his appeal of the 4th Circuit In oral arguments, the justi recent cases, a narrow, but consistent ruling, Solicitor General Seth Waxman expressed some reservations ab majority of the justices have struck emphasized the threat to privacy from even getting to the merits of the ci down several federal laws that the disclosure of personal information appeal because the adult establishm encroached on the states. into "the national economy." He said that challenged the law has since g The question of congressional power Congress didn't want to interfere with out of business. The case might was at the forefront in the arguments how states run their motor vehicle moot. Paying respects sed s at ,usly had way "of and Day ned tent ons but rike t an wed fair ing, sal res- irst The out g it ces out ty's ent one be Kmaart. settles flag tax case withN.. ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- Kmart Stores will pay to distribute booklets on American flag etiquette after charg- ing untold amounts of sales tax on Old Glory, a violation of an often over- looked provision of state tax law. The major retailer will pay $8,500 to two veterans groups to distribute the manuals on how to display and handle the flag and to provide flag- graves of veterans. Although thousands of flag sales have apparently included state and local taxes at Kmart stores across the state, returning as little as 7 cents to thousands of customers was consid- ered impractical, said Assistant Attorney General Matthew Barbaro, a Vietnam veteran. Flags sold there range in price from $lIto $30. Many stores in addition to K probably charged sales tax on fl , said Al Carpenter of the American Legion Department of New York. "It's just a policy they were ignorant of." New York is one of seven states in which there is no sales tax on flags and three other states exempt tax from some sales, according to the National Flag Foundation in Pittsburgh, Pa Kmart, whtich launched a national campaign mn September to improves image, had no immediate comment on the agreement announced by the state attorney general's office. Kmart, based in Troy, Mich., stopped charging the tax as soon as possible after the state contacted the company, said Christine Von Dohlen-Pritchard, a spokesperson for Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. Spitzer's investigation began in J c with a call from Patricia Barnett, a- mer Vietnam War protester from Kingston who took on a new cause. Barnett said she was outraged when she tried to buy a small flag for the grave of her childhood friend who died from a sniper's bullet to his head in Vietnam. She informed the clerk at the Kingston Kmart that the sale shouldn't be taxed. She was passed to a customer service clerk who disputed the point. Barnett then demandeno talk to the manager, who she said refused to talk to her, and instead told a cashier to give Barnett back her 7 cents AP PHOTO Ann Lee of Sibu City, N.C. places a poem on the Women Veterans Memorial in Washington D.C., yesterday in honor of today's Veterans Day. Budget bargainers reach deal for new teachers WASHINGTON (AP) - Under pressure from the White House, Republicans agreed yesterday to a new installment of President Clinton's plan to hire new teachers as the two sides worked toward a budget deal that could send Congress home for the year next week. The administration and Republicans also agreed to restore $11 billion in Medicare cuts to hospitals and nursing homes enacted two years ago, and neared a deal to let the International Monetary Fund step up its debt-relief efforts. But as congressional and White House bargain- ers met into the evening, they gave up hope of fin- ishing in time for Congress to adjourn Friday. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) sent the Senate home for Veterans Day and planned no votes there until at least next Wednesday. "There's no way we can get this done tonight," Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) said of the bargaining. The two sides agreed to a second year of Clinton's seven-year plan to hire 100,000 teachers, said people from both parties. The White House has made that proposal its highest-profile issue in this year's budget fight. Clinton had requested $1.4 billion for the pro- gram for fiscal 2000, which began Oct. 1, and negotiators agreed to $1.325 billion. Twenty-nine thousand teachers were hired in the first year of the program and Clinton's request would have provid- ed money to hire 8,000 more in fiscal 2000. Bargainers also agreed to let school districts use 25 percent of the program's funds for teacher training and other education programs.That limit has been 15 percent, and Republicans have wanted school dis- tricts to have more flexibility in using the money. Teachers hired under the act would have to be certified, and schools with at least 10 percent of uncertified teachers could request waivers to use the money for training instead of hiring. "I'm pleased," said Rep. William Goodling (R- Pa.), chair of the House Education and the Workforce Committee. "Would I have liked more? Yes. Would they have liked more? Yes." The two sides also exchanged offers on an effort by conservatives to restrict overseas abortion lob- bying. Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) still was insisting "Would I have liked more? Yes. Would they have liked more? Yes." - Rep. William Goodling (R-Pa.) chair of the House Education and the Workforce Committee on letting coal mining companies dump waste into valleys and streams by suspending provisions of the Clean Water Act. Language doing that tem- porarily was being considered, said a Democrat who spoke on condition of anonymity. Republicans did agree to add $1.45 billion for labor, health and education programs, compared to $2.3 billion that Clinton sought earlier. House Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-Texas) said he was nearing an agreement with Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers over international debt relief. Armey had opposed an administration effort to let the International Monetary Fund sell up to 14 million ounces of its gold and use the extra money to help multinational banks forgive some debt owed by poor countries. Helping some of those countries' economies by easing their loan problems has become an administration priority. Armey said the two sides are moving toward an agreement to let the IMF re-value some of its gold at more than the $48 per ounce it is currently valued and use the extra capital for, debt forgiveness. Included would be "iron clad" language limiting the use of that money for debt forgiveness, Armey said. Republicans are considering a package contain- ing perhaps all five incomplete spending bills for the new fiscal year that might reach the House floor by tomorrow. A fight over paying nearly $1 billion in overdue United States dues to the United Nations - which conservatives have linked to the overseas abortion issue - was not resolved. "1 The Green Hornet Radio Show 2 songs off our lawabur 50 minutes of Cofucionism Your Site for Digital Audio, Free Audio Software and Other Things to Stick in Your Ear. .com The World M LlteM5g I . ( t