Source: Reuters Author: James Vicini Pubdate: Mon, 05 Oct 1998 U.S. HIGH COURT OPENS NEW TERM, ALLOWS DRUG TESTS WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court opened its new term Monday, acting on 1,700 cases that piled up during its summer recess and siding with school officials on student drug tests and the power to set the curriculum. The high court allowed a public high school to require drug tests for all students involved in extracurricular activities, and it let stand a ruling that limited the free-speech rights of teachers in selecting the curriculum for their classes. Formally beginning its 1998-99 term, the court also agreed to hear and decide six more cases next year, including an immigration dispute to clarify when some aliens may be deported despite fears they would be persecuted in their home country. As the justices returned to the bench for the first time since the end of June, hundreds of protesters gathered on the sidewalk outside the building across from the U.S. Capitol to demonstrate over the lack of minority law clerks hired at the high court. The protest, sponsored by the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), included demonstrators carrying signs that said, "Disrobe Inequality," and "Stop Giving Minorities the Gavel." Kweisi Mfume, the leader of the civil rights group, and 18 others were arrested when they crossed over the police barriers and went on the Supreme Court steps in an attempt to deliver the resumes of qualified minorities to Chief Justice William Rehnquist. Of the 394 law clerks hired over the years by the court's nine members, less than 2 percent have been black, only 1 percent have been Hispanic and fewer than 5 percent have been Asian-American. None of the clerks have been Native Americans and less than 25 percent have been women. Of the 1,700 cases that arrived over the past three months, the Supreme Court took the following action: - -- for the first time allowed a high school to require drug tests for all students who want to take part in extracurricular activities in a case from Rushville, Indiana. The justices previously have upheld drug tests just for student-athletes. The justices rejected a constitutional challenge arguing that the drug tests amount to an invasion of privacy rights and violate the constitutional guarantee under the Fourth Amendment to be free from unreasonable searches. - -- broadened the powers of school authorities to select the curriculum by denying the appeal of a public high school drama teacher in North Carolina who was disciplined after putting on a controversial play. The justices let stand a U.S. appeals court ruling that school boards have absolute control over decisions that affect the curriculum, and that a teacher has no First Amendment right to take part in the makeup of the curriculum. - -- denied an appeal by the news media seeking access to grand jury documents and closed court proceedings in connection with independent counsel Kenneth Starr's sex-and-perjury investigation in the Monica Lewinsky affair. The justices let stand a U.S. appeals court ruling that there is no First Amendment right under the constitutional guarantee of freedom of the press for access to secret grand jury proceedings. - -- let stand the conviction of Mexican drug kingpin Juan Garcia Abrego for smuggling huge amounts of cocaine and marijuana into the United States for nearly two decades. The justices rejected an appeal by Garcia Abrego, who once was considered the top cocaine trafficker in Mexico, claiming he had been denied a fair trial. - -- agreed to decide how difficult it should be for disabled workers to sue their employers over alleged discrimination after they apply for or receive Social Security benefits. The case involved a Texas woman who was fired from her job after suffering a stroke. - -- will hear a U.S. Justice Department appeal arguing that a Guatemalan alien should be deported because he committed "a serious nonpolitical crime" by burning buses and vandalizing stores as a student protest leader in his home country. A federal appeals court ruled that the deportation order must be reconsidered, saying there must be a balancing of Juan Anibal Aguirre-Aguirre's offenses against the danger he faces if returned to Guatemala. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake