The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 15, 2002 - 3 Letter sent to judge alleges judicial misconduct By Karen Schwartz Daily News Editor Although the Center for Individual Rights plans to appeal the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals 5-4 decision on the University Law School's admissions policies to the U.S. Supreme Court soon, the May ruling regarding the use of race in admissions is already in question. U.S. House Judiciary committee chairman James Sensenbrenner expressed his concern in a recent letter regarding the way the appeal in the case was handled and in procedures he said "may have improperly influenced the outcome of the case." In a June 26 letter to 6th Circuit Chief Judge Boyce Martin, Sensenbrenner referred to Judge Danny Bogg's dissenting opinion, in which Boggs accused Martin of mishandling the case. "According to the procedural appendix con- tained in Judge Danny Boggs's dissent those pro- cedures included (1) substituting yourself for another judge on the panel when any substitution for that judge was required to be accomplished at random and (2) failing to circulate the appellee's Petition for Initial Hearing En Banc until after two judges had taken senior status, preventing them from subsequently participating on the en banc panel," Sensenbrenner wrote. "The participation of those judges on the panel could have reversed the outcome of the case," he added. Georgetown Law Prof. Susan Low Bloch said she did not recall a past situation comparable to this and that it is unusual on many levels. "What started all this was Judge Boggs had an angry dissent where he accused the majority of manipulating the calendar. Its unusual for the court to be that acrimonious - everybody was surprised by that dissent," she said. "The misconduct that's alleged is that the court timed the scheduling of the case so that two of the more conservative judges wouldn't partici- pate. Normally you don't schedule a case with that in mind - which judges will hear a case. If they did time it that way, it'd be misconduct," Bloch added. Sensenbrenner said he was "compelled to review credible evidence of judicial misconduct" and asked Martin for a copy of related documents be handed over by July 12 for further investiga- tion. Though The Michigan Daily was unable to confirm whether Martin turned over the materi- als on time, Jeff Lungren, spokesman with the House Judiciary Committee, said earlier that a response was likely. "We don't have any reason to believe that the judge wouldn't respond," he said. "We are in charge of overseeing the courts. The letter is an over sight letter." Hispanics not receiving proper care By Matt Randall For the Daily At local health care centers around the nation, Hispanic children and their parents are being faced with the ever grow- ing dilemna of substandard or nonexistent care. A paper released July 3 in the Journal of the American Medical Association by the Center for Child Health Research calls for reform in the way Hispanic children are dealt with by the health care profession. "The health care system isn't meeting the needs of the His- panic community," said Antonia Villarruel, associate professor of the University's School of Nursing and article co-author, highlighting the lack of Hispanic professionals in the health care field. "There aren't enough there, there aren't enough doctors, nurses and dentists across the whole system" Villarruel also talked about problems stemming from a lack of professionals who have a linguistic or cultural understand- ing of the Hispanic community. "There aren't enough health care providers who have the necessary skills to deal with Lati- no patients,"he said. LSA junior Miguel Pineda said he feels Hispanic patients "need different kinds of attention that they can't currently get." Another issue of great concern is the lack of coverage for Hispanic children because some believe it can have a deleteri- ous impact on the quality of health care available. "Some Hispanics go to clinics that ... don't have sufficient services. They miss problems," Pineda said, adding that the lack of resources means that necessary tests are not conducted as they should be. This is a part of a larger problem in the health care commu- nity, said Social Work student Jose Melendrez, the community outreach coordinator of the Student Organization for Latina/Latino Social Workers. "There's no plan to provide cov- erage to any low income children," he added. Compounding the problem are large cutbacks in funding for services that are needed by the Hispanic community. Melen- drez said there is a "need to determine where our priorities lie," and call for a unified effort to deal with the problems involving the government, insurers and health care providers. One issue of particular concern to Melendrez is that the sta- tus of many immigrants is in limbo since Sept. 11. He said he believes the medical profession and society as a whole should focus more on the needs of Hispanics. "This country has been able to supply a lot of things to a lot of people. We can't forget them," Melendrez said. TOss DING/Daily Ten-year-old Alec Glanville sits In a vintage show car at the Ann Arbor Rolling Sculpture Car Show Friday. Haddad hopes to seek asylum in United States *1 P.:1 By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily News Editor Ann Arbor Muslim leader Rabih Haddad's fourth public hearing last week had a presence not seen in his previous three - print and television reporters. Due to an April decision by U.S. District Court Judge Nancy Edmunds that declared the closure of immigration hearings unconstitutional, Haddad had his first open hearing since his Dec. 14 arrest for visa viola- tion charges. Lawyers from both sides were present at Tuesday's 10-minute hear- ing, as was Haddad via the presence of a closed circuit television from the Monroe County Jail. The main pur- pose of the hearing was for Haddad's attorneys to present an application for asylum in the United States on Haddad's behalf. "(The Haddad family) has been motivated to stay in America by the vast and genuine outpouring of com- munity support," Haddad's attorney AshrafNubani said in court. Phillis Englebert, an Ann Arbor Adhoc Committee for Peace member and a Haddad supporter, said she thinks Haddad's lawyers feel his returning to Lebanon might not be a positive experience, considering what he has gone through in the past seven months. "The situation created by his arrest could possibly cause him prob~ M EX I CAN C AF E New A els lems (there) she said. lyE.uHehim.pAobAr Milkshakes $3.25 Everyday special of setI a n JudgeEa g forAug 27.erStrawberry, Two Medium Cheese Pizzas $10.99 Until less than a month ago, Had- MeXican Style Food Caramel, Extra Items $1.20 each per Pizza dad was in the custody of the federal Chocolate Chip, government, being detained in the Vote nest:uCoffee, Only $7.99 Monday thru Thursday Special Chicago Metropolitan Correctional MexicanResta ant Mint, One Large Pizza with Center. Some believed he was wait- M l& Raspberry, Cheese & 1 Item ing to be called in front of a grand Pineapple, jury for questioning about the charity W D yand Banana Extra Items $1.30 Each he co-founded, the Global Relief OPEN UNTIL 4 A.M. Foundation. But four weeks ago, the 0P0r0 Porchaseromustipay sales tax for both specials federal government transferred Had-......-.....t.-...-.....-...... mum Deliery $6.00 Price subject to change Corner of State and Packard dad back into the custody of Immi- gration and Naturalization Services in Michigan. Yo Limited Delivery Area - COUPON - At the end of January, a group composed of the American CivilFR E D L RY 1 2 4 Pizzas Liberties Union, U.S. House Rep. With any order over $7.00 John Conyers (D-Detroit) and two16 49 Detroit newspapers sued the federal $1.00 Delivery Charge government to open Haddad's immi- For orders less than $7.00 additional toppings extra gration hearings. After Edmunds' I subject to change April ruling, the federal government rCATERING " EAT-In " TAKE-OBT appealed to the 6th Circuit Court of Tax not included r -- Appeals, where a hearing is now set - COUPON for Aug. 6. Asim Ghafoor, 605 East William spokesman for the saite to 734-669-6973 Ann Arbor MI 481Lb4 $2 off any $15 Free Rabih Haddad, said the open 7 4- -973 We acct order or more hearing was a partial relief for Had-rs.-66 -1Ic h We accept dad and his supporters. -- ! -y 'iNtt ecobndwt subject to change "It shows that our guy is not the Fax- VISA70 Not to be combined withi super secret dangerous ... terrorist that Sorry, no personal checks any other offer the government tries to make him appear," Ghafoor said. daily Mond0y00tu10a..S 00d'y00