' The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, December 5, 1995 - 7 A7ATIoN/W711 Court: Colorado can't deny public fimds for abortions : r EARN $$$ FOR THE HOLIDAYS!! TRAVEL ABROAD and work - Make up to DETROIT BOUND? $25-45/hr. teaching basic conversational The only international Hostel (Y.H.A. nerican Photo Marketing has weekend English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No approved) in Detroit, located in Foxtown at d evenings work available during teaching background or Asian languages Historic Park Avenue House has student cember. -General office work and/or data required. For information call: 206/632-1146 lodging discounts with proper student ID. ry. -For more info. call Dee at 677-3832 ext. J55983. One night - $12.00. Secured entrance and ing the hours of 10:00 a.m. -4:00 p.m., UNIVERSITY LIBRARY-Seeking students parking. Walk to theaters, concert and nday - Friday. to work in our campus libraries. Positions sporting events. 5 minutes from Amtrak FLEXIBLE WORK HOURS available in the Taubman Medical, Graduate' 3o 3For more information call 313/961- n_..., VA n___A A . * - 4Z,4, Adh4 ibr i s Flexible shifts 8310.2305 Park Avenue, Detroit, MI 48201. Great Food Good Atmosphere su can be one of the TEN buspersons :ded for the Martha Cook Bldg. We are a nen's residence hall loc. on the comer of nth U. & Tappan SL Work hrs. can be ged to fit in your class schedule. If this iks your interest call Jan or Paula at 763- 85 to arrange for an interview. GIFT SHOPS UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Cashier experience helpful 8-18 hrs., eves., weekends, holidays some daytime hours available $5.75 - Call 936-5971 after 12 Noon Work Study Students qualify. Science, ana Omer orares .imm iu are available as well as specific shifts, such as Sun. 10 p.m.-12 a.m., Wed. 9 a.m.-1 a.m., Thurs. 9 a.m.-11 a.m., and 12 noon-2 p.m. at the Taubman Medical Library. Positions start now and continue into the winter term. Please apply at Library Human Resources, 404 Hatcher North. EOE. $6.25 AN HOUR WENDY'S HAVE WE GOT A GREAT OPENING FOR YOU! Openers (7 a.m. to 3 p.m.) * $6.00 Lunch (11 a.m. to 4 p.m.)* $6.00 Closers (up to 1:00 a.m)* $6.25 25C Raise after 1 Month of Employment *Times are approximate and Scheduling is Flexible *Minimum of 12 hours per week We offer: REAT SUMMER JOB opportunity as panion to 11 and 13 yr. girls Mon.-Fri. rm. & board plus pay. Must have car. 15 '. drive from campus. Call 761-7487. REENPEACE JOBS. Canvass for the ost dynamic environmental group. Call 1-1996. YMNASTICS instructors wanted. Must be thusiastic, energetic, have teaching ex- ence & transportation. Mon. thru Fri. 30 pm. -7 pm. &oSat. 9 a.m. -noon. 971- OLIDAY BREAK POSITIONS Nat'l im expanding for the holidays. Full & part- openings. Earn $10.25 starting. Flexible ules. May become permanent after New ears. M-W 11-4. 971-6122. -HOME CHILDCARE +/- cleanup for vcious 18 mo. girl, Bums Park, 38+ hr./ k,7:15 am.-midnite, Mon.-Sun., min. 1 yr. 7-9094. ICHIGAN TELEFUND is accepting s. for Winter '96. $6/hr. for talking on the e. Fun, friendly environment. Speak .th Alumni, raise money, build your resume interpersonal communication skills. Stop 611 Church St. #304 or call 998-7420 for ore info. O ,THER'SHELPER, "odd jobs" $5/hr., hr./wk., 747-9094. OVER'S HELPERS. Begin @ $7.25/hr. rogress from there. Part-time. 485-6111. ATIONAL PARKS HIRING Positions now available at National Parks, Forests Wildlife Preserves. Excellent benefits + uses! Call: 206/545-4804 ext. N55982. EEDED LOCATION photographic assis- t to carry heavy equipment. 665-5988. OTEAKERS needed. Seniors and Grads. 5-7/hour. Excellent part-time job. A ly at rade A Notes at Ulrich's Bookstore, Second oor, 549 E. University Ave. UR FIRM IS looking for individuals who ant to gain comprehensive management ex- erience next summer. Earn $6000 to 10,000 per summer. Positions available in lect Detroit suburbs, Ann Arbor, Lansing, rand Rapids, and more. 800/887-1960. STAL & Government jobs $21/hr. + efits. No experience. Will train. Call 313/ 13-5082. STAL JOBS $15.90/hr. plus full benefits. job training. For application/info. call 18(764-9048 ext. 6002. RESCHOOL HELP. Love children, eaning, pets & yard work. P.M., eves. & e Saturdays $6-8/hr. 996-4748. ETAIL FOOD SALES. The Moveable east at Kerrytown. Bakery/cafe. 2-8p.m. Marc 663-3331. EMEN DONORS NEEDED, O negative. or this blood type, $120 is paid per accep- ble donation. Write APRL, P.O. Box 2674, nn Armor Ml 48106. EME DONORS NEEDED for an es- blished infertility clinic. Male students or raduates 20-40 yrs. old are sought. Donors re paid $60 per acceptable donation. Write, PRL, P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, MI 8106. OC STUDENT looking for female volun- rs for case-study on women's health care sues. Would involve a confidential 30 min. teview. You will have access to the results fteproject.HELP T HE CAUSE!!! Please all Iahna @ 747-9956 or e-mail 1ea,umich.edu UMMER BUSINESS. Are you an nGreat opportunity with low r-up cost. Management training, earn up $600/wk. Vehicle req. Call Greenland Ir- ation 1-800/361-4074. SPRING BREAK TRAVEL FREE with Sun Splash Tours. Highest commissions paid, lowest prices. Campus Reps wanted! Sell Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas, Florida, Padre. Rates & info. call 1-800/426-7710. FROM o Bfoe FROM D e - T 9 9c . ' 1 5 f o r : $ 9 wd s Per Person Per Peson rI ncruddng Ar SPRINGnBREAK Acapulco $499, Bahamas $509, Cancun $540. Reps Wanted. Call Dan, Regency Travel 665-6122, 209 S. State. STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on Continental $159 or $239. Bring your Con- tinental voucher & AMEX card. Arlene at Regency Travel, 209 S. State, 665-6122. WORLDWIDE LOW FARES Euro-rail passes 665-6122. HERB DAVID GUITAR Studio 302 E. Liberty, 665-8001. Instruments, instruments, books, books, books. Not just guitar. * * * * * * Scholarship Program Paid Vacations Free Meals and Uniforms Fully Paid Training Excellent Wages Advancement Opportunities Crew Activities Crew Incentives Store located on AATA & U of M Bus Route The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court yesterday refused to allow Colo- rado to deny public funds for abortion in cases of rape or incest. Without comment, it rejected the state's appeal of a lower court ruling that its abortion policy violates federal Medicaid law. The Supreme Court's order in Weil vs. Hern creates no na- tionwide precedent but sends a mes- sage to states that they must follow Congress' lead on the use of federal funds for abortions. "We acknowledge that Colorado has a legitimate interests ... in protecting the life of the fetus that may become a child," the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had ruled last June. "But be- cause Colorado has decided to partici- pate and accept federal Medicaid funds, it must do so on the terms established by Congress. So long as Colorado contin- ues to participate in Medicaid, it cannot deny Medicaid funding for abortions to qualified women who are the victims of rape or incest." The Medicaid program, jointly fi- nanced by federal and state govern- ments, provides funds for medical ser- vices to low-income people. Since 1976, the so-called Hyde Amendment, named for chief sponsor, Rep. Henry Hyde (R- I11.), has barred federal funds from be- ing used for abortion. Until 1993 it had an exception for cases in which the life of the mother would be endangered if the baby were carried to term. In 1993 the exception was revised to coverpreg- nancy that resulted from rape or incest. A physician and three women's clin- ics had sued Colorado officials over its policy of denying funds for women impregnated through rape and incest. The state argued that the Hyde Amend- ment was permissive and that Wash- ington had left to the states the decision of whether to pay for such abortions. Los Angeles Times fer as to newsworthiness," the state court said, "the issue is one for the trier of fact," namely the jury. "We recognize that the private lives ofcelebrities and those associated with them are matters of interest to large segments of the population. There- fore, they are generally newsworthy," the state court said. However, "we cannot say as a matter of law that the details of a celebrity's financial sup- port of his child and Ms. Hood's are newsworthy." The Supreme Court's refusal to hear the appeal in National Enquirer vs. Hood, 95-469, comes as no surprise. The justices rarely intervene before trial in a case involving damages. "It's disappointing," Washington at- torney John G. Kester, who repre- sented the Enquirer, said of the Su- preme Court's refusal to review this judgment. "This is an issue they (jus- tices) will have to face sooner or later. California's law on this is extreme. They throw it up to the jury to decide the 'social value' of a news story." But attorney Gary L. Bostwick coun- tered that the media should not have the rightto reveal personal details about Hood and her son Christian who "sought only tobeleftalone in the privacy oftheirlives. "In September 1992, the National Enquirer shattered (their) privacy," he told the court. "States must be able to place limits on the media's disclo- sure of private facts. Any other view is tantamount to abdicating to the editors of the Enquirer on the ques- tion of what is newsworthy." Justices send Murphy's tabloid case to L.A. jury "Wendy's The Employer of Choice" Apply in Person at: Wendy's U of M - Michigan Student Union 530 South State Street or call Cheryl at 1 (800) 292-0101 Extension #49 WAITSTAFF, CATERING STAFF, bartenders, host positions needed at Univer- sity Club. Apply in person, Room 1310, Michigan Union...Attn: Darla or Brian. WORK STUDY STUDENTS needed for part-time office work, 15-20 hrs./wk. in car- diovascular research office. Flexible hours. Call Lisa @ 763-5103 to apply. WORK STUDY STUDENT needed for general office position at Student Publications. We're looking for a punctual, energetic student for assisting with mail, phones, filing, and cash receipts. 8-10 a.m. daily. Begins Jan. 10. Call 764-0550 for in- formation or apply at 210E Student Publications, 420 Maynard. WORK-STUDY in cancer reserarch lab. Laboratory Assistant position with flexible scheduling, $6.50/hr. Call 763-4165. If no answer, call 763-0277. child care AFTERSCHOOL babysitter needed for 2 girls, ages 5 & 9. 3 days/wk. Start January 10. Need own transportation, ref. Non- smoker. 761-6906. ALL PURPOSE nanny for newbom, 4,6 & 8 yr. old kids. Must drive. 9964136. BABYSITTER NEEDED in my home for 1 or 2 mornings a week. Care for Alexander, 10 months. Students only, references required. Call 313/741-8113. BABYSITTER NEEDED. 1-2 nights/wk. Must be reliable & have own transportation. $6/hr. Ref. req. 665-2161. CHILD CARE NEEDED-- Loving person to care for our 6-month old daughter and oc- casional after-school care/driving for our two sons, 12 and 9. Looking for someone who loves babies-- who likes to be with infants, and has had some experience caringfor them. Four days, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m., some flexibility in hours. Transportation needed. References required. Excellent wages. Lo- cated near North Campus in Ann Arbor. May be willing to hire two people to split hours. Starting immediately. 9>6-2849. DAY CARE ASSISTANT Tues., Thurs., 15 hrs./wk. Own transportation. Start now or in January. Call Emily @ 663-1737. friend Tamara Hood, not because its story was inaccurate, but rather be- cause it told too much about her private life. For example, the judges cited fi- nancial details in a September 1992 article, such as that Murphy "set up a $1 million trust fund" for his son Christian and bought "a $376,000 house" in Los Angelesfor him and his mother. The Enquirer maintained its edi- tors should decide what is newswor- thy. But the state appeals court said that decision in a close case should be made by the jurors. "When reasonable minds could dif- DISNEY BAHAMAS cruise: Overbought special to public. 7 days- $149 per person. 407/851-6008 ext.18. FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion in private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800- 263-6495 ext. F55983. PREGNANT? Considering adoption? Loving couple seeks a baby to love as their own. Please call Mike and Kim at 1-800/891- 9592. Court to hear arguments on redistricting I^ MALE ROOMMATE needed in 7 person house. 5 min. to central cmps., free Idry., prkg., kitch., double room. 994-3655. The Washington Post WASHINGTON -Since Congress enacted the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to assure blacks access to the ballot box, the Supreme Court has granted the federal government broad authority and lent a hand to compensate for bias against minorities. But today a more skeptical court will hear arguments in two major redistrict- ing cases. In decisions over the past two years many of the justices have ex- pressed doubts about one of the most common remedies for past discrimina- tion: the "majority-minority district" with boundaries drawn to ensure that blacks or Hispanics have enough votes to elect one of their own. "What's at stake is whether we're going to continue to have an integrated Congress," said Theodore Shaw, a law- yer with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, defending mi- nority districts. Of the 39 black mem- bers of Congress, he said, only three were elected from districts that were majority white. Shaw warned that if the court rules against minorities in today's cases from Texas and North Carolina, eventually the black members of Congress "could meet in the back seat of a taxicab." But Daniel Troy, one of the lawyers for the Texans who say minority dis- tricts unconstitutionally segregate vot- ers, countered, "Do you advance the 6What's at stake is ... (if we will) have an integrated Congress. - Theodore Shaw Lawyer with the NAACP cause of integration by further balkanizing along racial lines?" The cases are the important unfinished business of decisions in 1993 and last June. They will test the practical effects of the court's tough new standard for redis- tricting along racial .lines: Can a state show it had a "compelling" interest to draw boundaries as it did. In today's Texas case the focus is on whether a state's efforts to protect incumbents meets the test. In the North Carolina case the issue is whether a state's desire to comply with the Vot- ing Rights Act of 1965 rise to a com- pelling interest. The court is sharply divided over how to reconcile America's history of race discrimination with the modern ideal ofa color-blind nation. A five-justice major- ity has suggested that the notion of equal opportunity for public office gets cor- rupted when legislative districts are drawn by purposely grouping together people on the basis of their race. "It takes a shortsighted and unau- thorized view of the Voting Rights Act to invoke that statute ... to de- mand the very racial stereotyping the Fourteenth Amendment forbids," Jus- tice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote last term as the court struck down a black district in Georgia. While these new cases require the justices to broadly review the 14th Amendment's guarantee of equal pro- tection of the laws, they also demand a close look at the nitty gritty of political compromise. The U.S. Justice Department has en- couraged states to draw as many major- ity-minority districts as possible to sat- isfy the Voting Rights Act. But, it ar- gued that Texas recent redistricting was justified on other grounds as well. "In practice, the lines of (a Dallas district) were the product of compromise among three incumbent elected officials: Eddie Bernice Johnson, Martin Frost, and John Bryant." Johnson, a prominent African American leader, was then in the Texas Senate and thus in a key position to draw a majority-black seat that could help her get elected to Congress in 1992. In defending the spotchy Texas map the Justice Department said veteran Democrats Frost and Bryant, both whites, fought to keep enough black Democrats in their districts to ensure their re-elec- tions. 31 YEAR OLD attractive professional male seeks an attractive Muslim female 20 to 30 years old for a long term serious relationship. Please, respond to P.O. Box 4053 Mount Pleasant, NMl 48804. The University of Michigan Department of Dermatology is seeking volunteers ages 16-30 years to test a new therapy for Acne. Eligible participants will be compensated $125 for their time and effort. For more information please call (313) 936-4070 Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. O1University of Michigan ---== Medical Center EAM RECRUITER. Make corporate )ntadts. Enthusiastic & outstanding, w/ rong, communication, organizational, & iblic speaking skills to recruit corporate rticipation for large non-profit fundraising ent. Reliable transportation req., full-time mporary. Send resume to M.D. Personnel 1915 Pauline Blvd. Suite 400 Ann Arbor, 1 48103. 761-6331. ENTHUSIASTIC, warm, responsible care needed for 1 yr. old boy. Mon., Wed., Fri. afternoons. (3-4 hrs./day) Some Sat. evenings. Start in Jan. Good pay. N-smkg., own car, experience & references required. 971-5768. EXPERIENCED part-time child care provider for 9 & 6 yr. old. 2 afternoons & 1 morning. Up to 10 hrs. Non-smoker. Own car, ref. Call 761-1453. LIVE-IN CHILD CARE provider wanted for 2 school age girls in home of Burns Park family beginning February. 25 hours/week during school year, 50 hours/week in summer. $5/hr. + room and hoard. Car provided. 1 year commitment. Non-smoker. Call Chris @ 995-1212. ** SPRING BREAK 96 Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas, Florida. Lowest prices around! Book by Dec. 15 to save $. Only $25 deposit. Call now to reserve your spot. Josh @ 995- 2256 or Kim @332-78631 ***** SPRING Break early specials. Bahamas party cruise 7 days, $279! 15 meals/6 parties! Cancun & Jamaica from $3991 Panama City room w/ kitchen $119! Key West! Daytona! Cocoa Beach! Prices in- crease 12/15! 1-800/678-6386. 'GUYS CA&. & U e4 Iternative Litestyy~es 1-313-976-3000 I t r1-313-976-400 s IU17FREYi-i$23?-2221 CreditCard Billing-S AVES MONEY . 1.313.237-1100 LOOKING FOR LOVE?? Don't just look. Take action!! Take or leave messages. Touch tone 1-900-950-3950 Ext. 2031 $1.99/min., 3 min. average, age 18+. FISH DOCTOR'S- Everything for your aquarium! Next to Putt-Putt Golf on Washtenaw. 434-1030. PET HEDGEHOGS hand-raised and very gentle. $75. Place your Christmas order. 313/ 269-2509. f Michigan Alumni work here: The Wall Street Journal The New York Times The Washington Post The Detroit Free Press The Detroit News NBC Sports Associated Press United Press International Scientific American Time Newsweek Sports Illustrated USA Today Because they worked here: Aver - 4LA&+ -r ---- % -.*-- IE MICHIGAN DAILY display staff is king for a photographer. Flexible hours. ATTENTION SPRING BREAKERS! Book Now! Jamaica/Cancun $389, Bahamas $350, Florida $129. Sell Trips, Eam Cash, & Go Free! 1-800/234-7007. Every 45 seconds in this country someone is sexually assaulted -over half a million women and children a year. The American Medical Association wants this nightmare to end. Dr. Lonnie Bristow the President of the AMA, believes that "victims are scared into silence 1~ nm. t rn a f raa" Totm i~.~~,,...n 1.headThe AMA hni icntifipdin~ pul r.. . i I