The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April 2, 1991 -Page3 Court rules on election of jurors WASHINGTON (AP) - White defendants are entitled to new tri- als if convicted by juries from which Blacks were excluded be- ause of their race, the Supreme ourt ruled yesterday. By a 7-2 vote, the court said prosecutors violate the Constitution if they bar prospective jurors for racial reasons - even when the defendant and the ex- cluded jurors are of different races. The justices ordered further lower court hearings to determine whether Blacks were barred unlaw- -ully from the Ohio jury that con- victed Larry Joe Powers, who is white, of two murders. The court is expected to decide in 1992 whether the jury violated that man's First Amendment right to associate with whom he pleases. In the Powers case, Justice Anthony Kennedy said for the court that racial discrimination in *ury selection violates the constitu- tional right of equal protection un- der the law and could undermine public confidence in the judicial system. "The purpose of the jury system is to impress upon the criminal de- fendant and the community as a whole that a verdict of conviction or acquittal is given in accordance w ith the law by persons who are Mair. A criminal defendant suffers a real injury when the prosecutor ex- cludes jurors at his or her own trial on account of race," he said. Yesterday's ruling requires the prosecutor to prove an absence of racial bias regardless of the race of, the prospective jurors or the defen- dant. Legal observers say most cases in which racial bias is al- *eged involves exclusion of Blacks from juries. Kennedy said racially biased jury selection violates the rights of excluded prospective jurors as well as the rights of defendants. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist joined a dissenting opin- ion by Justice Anthony Scalia, who said the ruling is so broad it 'makes no sense." Volunteer week gives students taste of service" by Bethany Robertson Daily Staff Reporter A former professional football player could use force to get his point across to a crowd. But former New England Patriot and Los Angeles Raider Brian Holloway used the power of words to present his message about the individual's potential for com- munity service at the keynote speech for Serve Week last night. The speech kicked off a week of events intended to focus campus awareness on community service opportunities. Holloway encouraged individu- als to recognize the qualities within themselves that allow them to help other people. "It doesn't take a whole lot to make great strides in your own per- sonal lives and in the lives of oth- ers," Holloway said. "Like the rip- ples of waves, you will affect many, many lives in your lifetime." Holloway, now director of community relations for New York State for Youth, stopped playing professional football when he real- ized he had to take the responsibil- ity for helping others. "I was going along with the masses, and all of the sudden, I real- ized the masses were in trouble," Holloway said. "In times of chal- lenge, the easiest thing to do is jus- tify reasons why you can't achieve. That was a quality I never pos- sessed." Holloway's speech presented the message that the coalition of cam- pus service agencies sponsoring events are trying to send to stu- dents. Events will include: "The Battered" - a documen- tary film at noon today in the Union; an AIDS education workshop tonight at Stockwell; 'It doesn't take a whole lot to make great strides in your own personal lives and in the lives of others' - Brian Holloway Out REACH day - a collec- tion of supplies for the homeless throughout residence halls Wednesday night; and a Huron River cleanup Saturday morning. Project SERVE Director Anita Bohn said hands-on events like the Huron River cleanup are an easy way for people to test out community service. "If you give people a taste of service, they usually want more," Bohn said. "It's only a one-day commitment. It's a safe way to try it out." LSA senior Jennifer Armstrong, who attended last night's speech, said Serve Week helps students make the first move toward corm- munity service. "I think most people feel they would like to join a service organi- zation but don't take that extra std to do it," Armstrong sai4. "Holloway was just here to say, 'Take the extra step, and don't be afraid."' In addition to hands-on events, several fundraisers are being held this week. University Students Against Cancer (USAC) is raffling off a hot-tub rental to benefit their cause. USAC members will hot-tub' on the Diag today to promote ticket sales. A Quarters for Kids collection will benefit homeless children. Pledge money gathered by partici- pants in the Huron River Cleanup will go toward Students Working Against Today's Hunger. Organizers of last night's speech said they were hoping for a larger turnout, but Holloway said the size of the group was unimportant. "Out of a group like this, there will be key people at certain pointis in their lives who will be affected by things I've said," Holloway said. High noon Ann Arbor resident The Gypsy celebrates his own version of the Hash Bash a few days early at noon yesterday. The official Hash Bash is scheduled for Saturday. Trotter House ramp nears completion for graduation by Lari Barager t Daily Staff Reporter "I'd like to think it will be done buildings around campus don't have Construction is nearing comple- tion on an access ramp for persons with disabilities at Trotter House - the University's minority student cultural center. Trotter House Director Michael Swanigan said he regrets having to turn people away from events in the past because the building was not yet accessible for persons using wheelchairs. "Anytime you provide services for the public you want to be able to provide for them," Swanigan said. Each year the Trotter House holds a graduation reception for about 500 minority students and their families. for the graduation reception on May 4," Swanigan said. Architect and Project Coordinator James Yu said, "If it isn't (finished byMay 4), I'll be very disappointed. That's a good target date." The construction of the ramp is one of many projects the University is undertaking to free campus build- ings of barriers which restrict the activities of persons with disabilities. Yu explained that architects must now comply with a law re- quiring newly constructed build- ings to have accessibility for per- sons with disabilities. The old the facilities to accomodate people using wheelchairs. To combat this problem, the University has set up an Accessibility Task Force which ad- vocates the interests of persons with disabilites and recommends methods for improvement of University facilities. "I can't enumerate the projects I've done specifically. They range from filling out a work order for grab bars in a shower or the barrier- free design for the ramp (at Trotter House)," Yu said. "This task force is interested in following up actions which would resolve handicap ac- cessibility issues. Students try to save 'Sociology of Love' by Stacey Gray Imagine a class where one of your assignments was to design and complete a project which would prevent your class from being can- celed. That is exactly what has hap- Wened to many of the students in Sociology 102 section 015, "Sociology of Love." The class has been offered the past four winters and fills up dur- ing the first three hours of CRISP. It was cancelled earlier this year be- cause of funding difficulties, said Sociology Chair Mayer Zald. Each winter, students in Professor Luis Sfeir-Younis' "Sociology of Love" are assigned group projects. After hearing the course had been canceled, students in TA Susan McDonald Black's three sections decided to use their projects to try and keep Sociology 102's heart beating. "We're writing letters to the news director of Channels 4,7, and 2, to see if they would be interested in doing a story on our class," said Gianna Mason, an LSA senior in the class. The group has also arranged some meetings with the television stations and contacting newspapers. McDonald Black said every student in the class wrote their own personal letter to University President James Duderstadt about why the class should be kept. Copies of these letters will also be sent to Zald. Other projects include designing and hanging posters, gathering sig- natures on a petition, contacting talk shows, and speaking at the next University Board of Regents meet- ing. Although he was not previously aware of the projects, Zald said, "I don't make these decisions by my- self. (The projects) can't hurt, it would certainly play a role." Topics such as rape, pornography, prostitution, gender, homosexual- ity, romantic and exchange love, and self-actualized love are included in the course's syllabus. Students and TAs are concerned that the class is being canceled because the University doesn't find the subject material "educationally valuable." McDonald Black said, "I think it is being canceled because the Sociology department doesn't see it as belonging at a University of this type." Supporters of the Democratic Party of Albania rally in front of the Democratic Headquarters in Tirana yesterday one day after the first free election in Albania in 46 years. Communists claim S11 victories in Albanian THE LIST Iraqi forces advance on Kurdish rebels What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Recycle U-M, weekly mtg. 1040 Dana, 7 p.m. Kaffeestunde, weekly German con- versations. MLB third floor confer- ence room, 4:30-6. German Club, weekly mtg. MLB, Rm. 2004,7:00. Anthropology Club, weekly mtg. Dominick's, 7:30. Time & Relative Dimensions in Ann Arbor, weekly mtg. Call 971-2072 for info. 2439 Mason Hall, 8:00. Ultimate Frisbee Club, weekly mtg. Fuller Park, lower fields, 5 p.m. Students Concerned about Animal Rights, weekly mtg. Dominick's, 7:30. Take Back the Night, weekly mtg. League, Conf. Rm 4/5, 7:30-9:30. Asian American Association, work- shop mtg. Trotter House, 7 p.m. Project Outreach, informational mass mtg. Angell Aud A, 6 p.m. Speakers "Capetown Adventures of an Earthwatch Volunteer," Judith Judd. p.m. "Negotiating Peace for El Salvador," Salvador Sanabria, advisor to FMLN negotiating team. 4560 LSA, 8 p.m. Furt herm ore Safewalk , nighttime safety walking service. Functions 8-1:30 a.m. Sun.- Thurs. Call 936-1000 or stop by 102 UGLi. Also at the Angell Hall Com- puting Center 1-3 a.m. Sun. - Thurs. Call 763-4246 or stop by the courtyard. Northwalk, North Campus nighttime walking service. Functions 8-11:30 Sun.-Thurs. Call 763-WALK or stop by 2333 Bursley. ECB Peer Writing Tutors available Sunday-Thursday, Angell/Haven Computing Center, 7-11; 611 Church Computing Center 7-11. Free Tax Preparation. Sponsored by VITA until April 15. Union, 3rd floor, 9-5. U of M Taijiquan Club, weekly prac- 'ice. Cube, 5:15. "Sex, Lies, and AIDS," public forum. East Quad, rm 126, 7-10. Carillon Auditions. For appointment, OUTSKIRTS OF DOHUK, Iraq (AP) - Kurdish rebels yesterday retreated on foot into their tradi- tional mountain strongholds, sur- rendering more urban centers under a steady onslaught by Iraqi loyalist forces. Also yesterday, Iraq said it cap- tured documents proving the com- plicity of more than one foreign government in unrest designed to unseat, Saddam Hussein -and ac- cused the United States of 92 "provocative" reconnaissance flights last weekend. Baghdad said its troops had re- taken Dohuk, Erbil and Zahko. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds fearing government reprisals were fleeing by any means possible into the mountains along the Iranian and Turkish borders. Many women and children were forced to walk. Some laid on the roadside without food or water. trol of Erbil and Dohuk, and have also moved against rebel forces in the Zahko area along the Iraqi- Turkish border. U.S. officers said Iraqi troops had crushed uprisings by Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq, and some units were being redeployed north to put down the Kurdish up- rising. "Whoever is revolting is los- ing," said Lt. Col. John Kalb whose 3rd Armored Division units operate a refugee camp inside al- lied-occupied Iraq. Senior U.S. Army commander along the border area, Col. Bill Nash, said some Iraqis arriving at the camp or nearby checkpoints claim to be resistance leaders and have askedrfor arms to combat Saddam's forces. The Bush administration last week said it would not help the rebels, although it remains hopeful TIRANA, Albania (AP) - Communists claimed a convinc- ing victory yesterday in Albania's historic multiparty elections, but the opposition scored wins in all major cities and beat President Ramiz Alia in his parliamentary race. Official results were not yet available, however. The Democratic Party, the main opposition, conceded it had garnered fewer than one- third of the seats in the legisla- ture, but predicted the Communists wouldisoon lose their grip on power anyway. Sunday's election effectively ended one-party rule in Albania, which had been the last hard- line Communist holdout in Europe. The Balkan nation is strug-: gling to emerge from nearly a, half-century of Stalinist rule and international isolation. The Party of Labor, as the;. A Communists call themselves;- said it won about two-thirds of. the 250 seats in the People'sdi. Assembly parliament. . Communist spokesperson Xhelil Ghoni said the results showed the party is "the major political party in our country,, and it enjoys the full trust of the people." The opposition was hopeful late Sunday as initial results showed it doing well in Albania's cities. But it soon be- came clear the Communists would keep the power. io 50 ..... . ...... .... ... ... ... ....... ... ... ... .... ... ... .............. kv ........... : Business --_ - ot1fJB urn ham Associates Monday Fdy :3 -4- 3 m SPECIAL sAThRDAY HOURS < 11:00 ~m. 3:0 p:m h