Nation & world briefing High court joins affirmative-action frav Shannon McCaffrey Knight Ridder Newspapers (KRT) WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court set the stage Monday for what could be a landmark ruling on affirmative action, agreeing to decide whether universities can use ethnicity as a factor in admit ting students. The high court in recent years has chipped away at government af firmative-action programs dealing with such things as government contracts. But it has not spoken on the use of ethnic preferences in higher education in more than two decades, which leaves legal experts wondering how it will rule. At issue is whether the Universi ty of Michigan in Ann Arbor and its law school violated the Consti tution by rejecting white appli cants while accepting minority students with lower grades and test scores. If the high court strikes down such public university programs, it would be a near-fatal blow to the use of af firmative action, which was con ceived of as a remedy for discrimina tion. If it supports the university, it could provide a blueprint for how such programs should work. James Gott, associate director of the NAAGP’s Legal Defense and Education Fund, called the pend ing challenges to affirmative ac tion, both involving the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, the “most important civil rights cases to come before this court in a quarter of a century.” The high court’s rulings in the Michigan cases will apply directly only to public colleges and univer sities. But experts say all schools, public or private, that use ethnici ty-conscious admission policies are likely to take cues from the high court’s ruling. The white students who were turned away claim they were dis criminated against in violation of federal civil-rights laws that ban eth nicity-based bias, and the Constitu tion’s guarantee of equal legal pro tection. The university says its intention was simply the enhanced educational benefit that comes when students of diverse ethnic backgrounds live and learn together. The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati ruled in fa vor of the University of Michigan’s law school in a 5-4 decision hand ed down in May. The court heard arguments in the undergraduate case but has yet to rule. The high court’s decision to hear that un dergraduate case before the lower federal court had ruled is unusual. Attorneys called on the Supreme Court to clear up confu sion from its 1978 ruling on affir mative action. In that case, Allan Bakke, a white man, was turned down for admission to medical school at the University of California at Davis while minorities with lower scores were admitted. The school re served 16 percent of its admission slots for minorities. In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that such quotas were impermissible. But Justice Lewis Powell wrote in a separate opinion that schools could consider ethnic ity as long as they did not use quo tas. Universities often have used the late justice’s opinion as a benchmark for affirmative action. It also has been criticized as vague. Attorneys in the current case said there was a “sharp and sub stantial disagreement in the lower courts about the lawfulness of us ing race and ethnicity as a factor in admissions to achieve a ‘diverse’ student body.” The court is expected to rule by the end of June. © 2002, Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Venezuelans strike, seeking ouster of president Tod Robberson The Dallas Morning News (KRT) CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s political crisis deep ened Monday as business leaders, labor unions and millions of mid dle-class consumers joined forces in a nationwide strike — the fourth this year — to demand President Hugo Chavez’s ouster. The increasing radicalization of both sides, underscored earlier this year by a bloody military coup that briefly forced Chavez from power, has prompted calls from Washington and international mediators to find a ne gotiated solution quickly before the country explodes in civil conflict. Leaders from both sides as well as independent analysts acknowledged Monday that the prospect of re newed violence, possibly involving armed conflict, has reached danger ous levels. Chavez deployed troops on the streets of Caracas on Monday, four days after the dismissal of 15 high-ranking military officers who Were accused of encouraging civil disobedience. “There are indications that both sides are arming. The risk of vio lence is high,”«aid a Latin American diplomat who asked not to be iden tified. “If the country continues on its current path, Venezuela will be heading toward civil war. I’m not saying it will happen tomorrow, but it is a possibility in the future.” Chavez claims to he fighting for social and economic reforms and the redistribution of the nation’s oil wealth among Venezuela’s poor. The opposition says he is trying to introduce a Cuban-stvle commu nist system. Monday’s strike occurred without violence, although there were isolat ed reports of confrontation between opposition members and supporters of Chavez. Strike leaders announced late Monday that they would contin ue their general work stoppage at least through Tuesday. Earlier, the leader of the nation’s largest labor union, Carlos Ortega, appearing alongside chamber of commerce and industry leader Car los Fernandez, urged government representatives to return to the ne gotiating table after talks mediated by the Organization of American States were suspended over the weekend. Both leaders demanded that the government agree to a na tional referendum on whether Chavez should step down. Cesar Gaviria, the president of the Organization of American States and the chief mediator in talks between the two sides, said the talks had been advancing toward a negotiated solu tion until they were suspended over the weekend. He said he was opti mistic that negotiations would resume and that an accord was possible. Gaviria said he was trying to move both sides toward invoking elections that would setde the issue of Chavez’s legitimacy once and for all. Political observers doubted that the government would agree to an electoral solution along those lines. They said the opposition, likewise, has rejected any solution that would allow Chavez to remain in office. “Chavez is a proud man. He has made up his mind, and he would never agree to a vote that shows the country how much power he has really lost,” said Anibal Romero, a political scientist who supports the opposition. © 2002, The Dallas Morning News. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. boldiers kill two Palestinians, injure 37 in West Bank Christine Spolar Chicago Tribune (KRT) JENIN, West Bank — When Israeli armored jeeps pulled into the mar ket square Monday, Mutaz Odeh, a husky boy carrying a sack of nuts and seeds for his diabetic dad, moved too slowly to avoid the bar rage of bullets that followed. One sliced through the 15-year old’s back, and Odeh died before reaching the hospital. His death was one of two Monday in the West Bank — not remarkable in the two-year-old spasm of unrest between Palestinians and Israelis — but it marked a day of extraordinary calamity for Palestinian civilians. In Jenin, 23 people were injured by the bullets and shrapnel, accord ing to doctors there. In nearby Tulkarem, a 19-year-old was killed and 14 people injured by shrapnel and bullets fired Monday afternoon by soldiers chasing a suspected mili tant across a downtown area, wit nesses and doctors said. In both cases, army spokesman said Monday night, Israeli forces opened fire on Palestinians who were breaking curfew in the center of their cities and, in Jenin, one Is raeli soldier was lightly wounded. The Palestinian Red Crescent or ganization, which tracks death and injuries from Israeli gunfire each month, claims that, on average in the last six months, about 92 people are injured per month by live ammu nition. The West Bank injury toll on Monday comes close to about half of the average monthly total. Palestinians who saw the shoot ings in Jenin said soldiers moved into the market as people left their homes to shop for food in anticipa tion of Eid al Fitr, the first day after Ramadan. In Tulkarem, witnesses said, Israeli forces drove into a crowded market in search of a sus pect. Gunfire followed. Among the injured were four teen-age boys, a 10-year-old boy and a 39-year-old woman. “It’s one of the worst days of in juries and shooting that I can re member,” said Mahmoud Abu Gha di, director of the General Hospital in Jenin. “We haven’t had these numbers in Jenin for a while.” Ahmed Abu Bakr, director of the Thabet Hospital in Tulkarem, said people got caught trying to shop for the feast at end of Ramadan, likely to be Thursday or Friday depending on the lunar schedule. © 2002, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. Stomach illness strikes on third cruise ship, sickens 200 Tom Stieghorst South Florida Sun-Sentinel (KRT) FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The remarkable run of illness on cruise ships continued on Monday, with nearly 200 passenger* on the Miami based Fascination showing symp toms of Norwalk virus. Passengers disembarking on Monday morning said many people got sick, including some children, on their three-night cruise to the Bahamas. Vonda Mazzarella sat glumly after disembarking, still recovering from the effects of the virus. “Vomiting, di arrhea, chills like crazy. I couldn’t get warm,” said the Pittsburgh homemaker. Her husband, David, a computer consultant, said they vis ited the infirmary Sunday night. “There were 176 people signed in at 10 p.m., and they were still com ing in,” he said. Health authorities say they can’t find a common cause of the out break, other than sick passengers. Norwalk virus has hit at least three Premium Pour Bartending www.preniiym-pBBr.jcom More than just a school! 1010 Oak Street • Eugene, OR 97401 • (541) 485-4695 What we have to offer.. Want to get (give) the best gift this holiday? Gift certificates are available for all services. Open House Dec. 5th, 6-8pm Just stop in and check us out! Special Session class hours 11 am-4pm or 5 pm-lOpm 12/14 to 12/22 Special Rate Save hundreds with this one time offer. Graduates earn $18-$22 per hour 0154261 Why are you waiting?. ,.r You're ready to earn more $$£ am t yoy* r.. ,. ships in the past month. The ships, Amsterdam, Disney Magic and Fas cination, sail from different ports for different cruise lines. Holland America Line’s Amster dam left Port Everglades on Sunday after a 10-day scrubbing. No one was reported sick on Monday, spokes woman Rose Abello said. Norwalk is a common gastroin testinal bug spread by personal contact. It can also be transmitted through food or water contamina tion. About 75 percent of those sick on Fascination ate in one of two main dining rooms, but that could mean they infected each other, said Steve Williams, Carnival’s medical director. A spokeswoman for the U.S. Cen ters for Disease Control and Preven tion said it was investigating the Fas cination illness but it would be at least a few days before it could con firm it as a Norwalk outbreak. Carni val is treating it as if it is, said line President Bob Dickinson. Separately, the CDC boarded the Radisson Seven Seas Cruise ship Mariner when it docked at Port Ever glades on Monday morning, after it reported that 21 people fell ill from salmonella bacteria on the ship dur ing its 10-day Transatlantic voyage from the Canary Islands. CDC spokeswoman Susan Mc Clure said the agency was reviewing medical logs on the ship, but that the outbreak appeared to be over. © 2002 South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. If Take Ben Sherman home for the holidays! 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