NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 1, 2004 - 9A U.S. Supreme Court hears sexual harassment case WASHINGTON (AP) - Police dispatcher Nancy Drew Suders says she had no choice but to quit her job after enduring months of verbal abuse and harassment from male co-workers. She wasn't thinking about the finer points of employment law when she walked out, although she quickly learned that getting fired would have made her sexual harassment lawsuit much easier to pursue. Suders's case came to the Supreme Court yes- terday as an example of the problems that on-the- job harassment can cause for employees, employers and a legal system struggling to draw rules fair to all sides. Day in and day out, Suders says, her male co- workers at a Pennsylvania State Police barracks taunted her with lewd talk. Suders says one offi- cer repeatedly grabbed his crotch in front of her and others told dirty-jokes. "She was subjected to horrendous conditions at work;' and got nowhere when she sought help within the police agency, her lawyer, Donald Bai- ley, told the court. Suders's supervisors deny any harassment. They claim she was disorganized, often late and overwhelmed by her duties. They note she never told anyone about the alleged abuse until just before she quit, and that she left the job in 1998 after being accused of stealing results of a com- puter test that her supervisors told her she had failed. She was not charged. The Supreme Court has said employers can be on the hook for lawsuits over sexual harass- ment that results in some clear punishment for the employee, such as getting fired or demoted. The court also has said that an employer can avoid such suits by showing a sincere and effective policy aimed at preventing and responding to harassment. Suders wants the justices to conclude that in cases like hers, quitting is really the same thing as getting fired. She shouldn't be penalized because she didn't wait around for further abuse or pun- ishment, her supporters argue. "Sexual harassment is all too pervasive in the workplace and can amount to a situation where an employee feels she has no effective choice but to resign to escape it," said Jocelyn Samuels, who helped write a friend of the court brief supporting Suders for the National Women's Law Center. "That's very much a real-world problem, and one that employers ought to be liable for." Although perhaps sympathetic to Suders her- self, several justices seemed unwilling to go that far. There is a real-world consideration for employers, too, they noted. The state of Pennsylvania, the Bush administra- tion and business groups want the high court to overturn a lower court's ruling in Suders's favor. If Suders wins, "employers could have reason to be nervous every time someone quits," said lawyer Ellen Dunham Bryant of the U.S. Cham- ber of Commerce. "We want employers to be encouraged to have (anti-harassment) policies, and we want employ- ees to be encouraged to report harassment," Bryant said. "We feel everyone benefits in that situation." Suders was aware of the state's anti-harass- ment policies and procedures to complain but sought no help until two days before she quit, lawyers for the state argued. Although Suders's allegations are presumed to be true for the pur- poses of this case, the lawyers noted that Suders's former supervisors and co-workers deny them. Nearly half of all working women have experi- enced some form of harassment on the job, and harassment affects women in all kinds of jobs and at all levels of employment, according to the National Women's Law Center. Drill bit may tie Nichols to Oka. City bombings McALESTER, Okla. (AP) - Prosecutors at the murder trial of Oklahoma City bombing conspirator and Michigan native Terry Nichols used a drill bit yesterday to try to con- nect him to the theft of blasting caps and detonation cord from a rock quarry. Two expert witnesses testified that a bit seized from Nichols' home after the April 19, 1995, bombing made the distinctive markings found in a drill hole in a padlock at the quarry near Marion, Kan. "That was the drill that was used," said James Cadigan, a retired FBI tool-mark examiner. A variety of explosives, including detonation cord and blasting caps, were stolen from the quarry less than seven months before the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. The quarry was about 25 miles from Nichols' home in Herington, Kan. Prosecutors say detonation cord and blasting caps were among the components of the 4,000-pound fertilizer-and-fuel bomb that destroyed the federal building, killing 168 people. George Krivosta, of the Suffolk County Medical Examin- er's Office on Long Island, N.Y., said he was certain the one- quarter-inch drill bit made the markings "to the exclusion of any other tool ever manufactured." Their testimony was attacked by defense attorneys, who questioned procedures for examining the evidence and whether a comparison is possible based on cuts and grooves left by a drill bit. "You are basing your conclusions on these bits and pieces?" defense attorney Barbara Bergman asked as a pho- tograph showing microscopic detail of the drilled-out pad- lock was displayed on television monitors for Nichols' jury. "I looked at all the marks that were left," Cadigan said. The drilled-out lock was found shortly after the Oct. 3, 1994, burglary and was turned over to the FBI after the bomb- ing. The drill and drill bits were seized from Nichols' home during an FBI search on May 3, 1995. Bergman questioned Cadigan at length about his experi- ence and about the accreditation of the FBI laboratory's tool mark unit. Somethugfr/zy Karzai calls on countries to continue aiding Afghanistan BERLIN (AP) - Afghan President Hamid Karzai urged the world to stay on track in helping his country toward democracy and stability as a donors' conference opened with appeals to make improving security in the war-ravaged nation a top priority. Secretary of State Colin Powell offered $1 bil- lion in aid on top of the $1.2 billion the United States has pledged this year, and promised "the United States will not abandon you." "Afghanistan's success is the only option for the United States and for the international community," Powell said in a speech. Karzai came to Berlin with a plan seeking some $28 billion in aid over the next seven years, and he asked the officials from more than 50 countries to recommit themselves to "the vision of a stable, secure and prosperous Afghanistan" that could be self-sufficient within a decade. "That requires your sustained assistance," Karzai told the conference. Afghanistan has made great strides since the 2001 U.S.-led bombing campaign ousted the Taliban regime, but regional warlords have yet to be disarmed and a stubborn Tal- iban-led insurgency persists in the south and east. The country remains among the world's poorest. "The first challenge is the presence of pri- vate militia forces," Karzai said. "These forces are not only a challenge to security and stability in Afghanistan, but they also are a cause of drug cultivation." With opium production accounting for about half of Afghanistan's economy, Karzai's government is launching a fresh drive this month to destroy poppy fields. But further international help is needed to make the pro- gram work, he said. "Drugs in Afghanistan are threatening the very existence of the Afghan state," he said. While the conference will focus on how far rich countries are willing to commit new aid money, Afghanistan's progress on democratic reforms and the security threats overshadow- ing planned September elections are on the agenda. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan urged the gathering of foreign ministers and senior officials from more than 50 countries to renew a "firm, long-term commitment" to helping Afghanistan, including the "enor- mous" task of organizing the elections. "Much has been achieved," said German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, the confer- ence host and leader of a major aid-giving nation. "The security situation in the country has improved - but it is not yet what we would like it to be in some parts of the country," he said. "It is important that the international com- munity today stress its commitment to a secure, free and democratic Afghanistan," he said. Annan said the election date put pressure on the Afghan government and the interna- tional community. "Objectives that have eluded the country for two years must now be achieved in a very short time," including greater security to allow all Afghans to vote as well as greater political freedoms, he said in a message read to the conference by his envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi. "Security assistance remains one of the most important contributions - if not the most important - that the international com- munity can make," Annan said. Karzai himself highlighted "the desire of the Afghan people for provincial reconstruc- tion teams, for the expanding of the Interna- tional Security Assistance Force," the NATO-led peacekeeping force. LAURA SHLECTER/Daily Ann Arbor resident Joy Strawser wears a fish costume yesterday to inform people about the health hazards of mercury as part of Earth Day on the Diag. I. i NEW SUMMER BUSINESS INSTITUTES AT UCLA The Anderson School of Management offers 2 unique opportunities for undergraduates: Entertainment and Media Management Institute June 28 - July 23 / 4 weeks This institute offers an insider's look into the rapidly changing film, television and multimedia industries. The 4-week program combines two upper division courses with presentations by L.A. indus- try executives, excursions to media com- panies, tapings/filming of media content as "4: well as career- building workshops. Co- sponsored by the UCLA Center for Communication Policy and Enter- tainment/Media. Business and Management Institute June 28 - July 23 / 4 weeks Led by UCLA Anderson School's award- winning faculty, the two upper division courses in this institute immerse students in the fundamentals of business, providing exposure to topics covered in any premier MBA program, while also offer- ing hands-on career development work- shops and sessions that bring students in contact with the executives working in one of the world's foremost economic centers. N IlL