Battling AIDS Speaker ignites crowd. See Page 3 ®lip Sally ®ar MM www.dailytarheri.com DTH/ARIEL SHUMAKER A student walks over the fence in front of Hinton James Residence Hall. The fence was torn down by irate students Monday night. Bush Pursues 'Finality' From Supreme Court On Friday, the Bush team will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn Florida court decisions and end state ballot recounts. The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court should “forestall an impending constitutional crisis” over Florida’s 25 electoral votes, lawyers for George W. Bush argued Tuesday, while A1 Gore’s lawyers said the court should not interfere. Bush, whose appeal the high court is set to hear Friday, said the justices can bring “legal finality” to the presidential election by overturning the Florida courts and ending any further bal lot recounts. Florida’s decisive 25 electoral votes were awarded to Bush on Sunday night. Gore is fighting to overturn results of the Florida election and claim those electoral votes, and with them the White House. “By acting now to reject the Florida Supreme Court’s unwarrant ed intrusion into the regulation of the manner of appointing electors, this court will eliminate the potential for a constitutional crisis" over who picks the electors and how, Bush’s lawyers wrote. Gore’s team called the Republican arguments “insubstan tial” and said the Florida court “played a familiar and quin- tessentially judicial role” in interpreting state law. They asked the justices to affirm the ruling and avoid trampling on what is supposed to be a matter of state law. “Principles of federalism counsel strongly against interference by this court,” the Gore legal team said in its brief. At the same time, the vice president is asking a Florida judge to undo the sec retary of state’s certification of Bush as the winner. That certification came after the Supreme Court agreed to take Bush’s appeal. It is not clear how a high court deci sion would affect the case now. “It’s very complicated, and I don’t think anyone knows for sure,” said Gore lawyer Laurence Tribe. If the justices think they do not have enough time left to decide, they could opt not to hear the case after all. Bush’s filings Tuesday, however, argued that the court still has a role to play. Bush asked the justices to overturn a Florida Supreme Court ruling that allowed hand recounting of votes to con tinue past a state-imposed deadline of Nov. 14, saying the manual reviews opened the door for Democrat Gore to continue legal contests for weeks more. “The Florida Supreme Court’s deci sion, which conflicts with both federal statutes and the federal Constitution, will thus continue to affect, and has the theoretical potential to change, the out come of the presidential election in Florida, and thus the nation,” Bush argued. He wants the results of ballots recounted since Nov. 14 omitted from the official state election tally. That would give Bush a 930-vote margin instead of his cur rent 537-vote lead. Get your facts first, and then you can distort 'em as much as you please. Mark Twain