I Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 9, 1984 'U' delays proposal on code talks The University administration will not make a proposal tonight for negotiating with student leaders on the proposed student code for nonacademic conduct, according to Scott Page, president of the Michigan Student Assembly. Virginia Nordby, director of Affir- mative Action, was scheduled to make a presentation to MSA at tonight's meeting, but MSA asked the ad- ministration to hold off until student leaders sit down others to discuss might be handled. with Nordby and how negotiations Bill would make 'U' code illegal (Continued from Page 1) public colleges and universities in the state include the following provisions for students: " Unrestricted use of an attorney during all stages of a disciplinary proceeding; , " A formal hearing before a jury of the student's peers. A studenemay also preside over the hearing; * The right to cross-examine all wit- nesses; " The right to appeal the decision of the hearing panel to the school's gover- ning board; " The right to confront accusers in all hearings; " The right to avoid self- incrimination; and " A formal hearing process that follows the state's rules of evidence. Eric Schnaufer, chair of MSA's code committee, said Bullard's legislation would make several provisions of the University's proposed code illegal. The latest revision of the proposed code, for instance, limits the par- ticipation of attorneys during a hearing process and sets up a hearing board of administrators and faculty members as well as students. THE PROPOSED code also does not follow the formal rules of evidence which restrict the information that may be used'to convict a person. The rules also say a person's guilt must be proved "beyond a reasonable doubt." Instead, the University would only require "clear and convincing" eviden- ce and leave a hearing officer to sort out what kinds of evidence may be used to reach a decision. And although students are given the right to question their witnesses under the code, students would have to appeal a decision to the judicial system ad- ministrator rather than the regents. THOMAS Easthope, associate vice president for student services, said Bullard's bill applies criminal law procedures to a civil law situation State and federal courts, he said, have already upheld the right of universities to use the mechanisms for trying students described in the University's proposed guidelines. "The courts give the universities a great deal of leeway in setting up con- duct codes. As long as these codes don't violate your legal rights, the courts pretty much leave (the schools) alone," he said. The legislation, if passed, might be thrown into court because it contradicts previous court rulings, Easthope said. THE BILL will be formerly in- troduced in the House of Represen- tatives Nov. 13. Nextifall would be the earliest any ac- tion would be taken on the bill, Bullard said. No companion bill has been introduced in the Senate. Bullard said the amount of force he uses to push the bill will depend on whether the University's ad- ministrators and students can iron out their differences over the code. "The real process of working out the code has to go in the University com- munity," he said. "But if it doesn't then we will continue to pursue that issue on the state level." UNIVERSITY President Harold Shapiro yesterday sent Page a letter that reaffirmed the administration's of- fer to enter "good faith" negotiations over the guidelines for governing student behavior outside the classroom. Two weeks ago MSA adopted resolutions setting conditions for talks on the code. Assembly members asked the administration to guarantee that they would not ask the regents to change their bylaw which gives MSA the right to veto a code. MSA also asked that the regents not separate the code and the judicial system. That separation would allow the administration to pass the judiciary without student approval. After a meeting last Thursday, MSA asked administrators to make a proposal for negotiating on the code at this week's meeting. "I was short-sighted when I said make a proposal Tuesday," Page said. "I should have said 'Let's sit down and work out some type of proposal that the whole assembly can at least talk about." -Laurie DeLater DELTA TAU DELTA & CONLIN TRAVEL Present R Q Y A L f A Las Vegas Night Friday, October 12, 1984 8:00 P.M. Michigan Union Ballroom Grand Prize: Trip for 2 to Ft. Lauderdale; Spring Break '85. Disngished faculty honored (Continued from Page 1) faculty members received awards totaling $22,500 for outstanding scholar- ship, teaching, and service. Five faculty members received the $1,500 Distinguished Faculty Achievement Award: Biological Stanley H. Kaplan The Smart MOVE! PR EPARATION FOR: For Information, 0"_. Please Call: KAPUN 662-3149 TOfCT 203 E. Hoover Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Chemistry Prof. Bernard Agranoff, History Prof. Albert Feuerwerker, Art Prof. Geald Hodge, Internal Medicine Prof. Kenneth Mathews, and Social Work Prof. Rosemary Sarri. Another five faculty members received the University's Faculty Recognition Award, worth $1,000. They are: History Prof. Michael Geyer, English Prof. , Lemuel Johnson, Biological Chemistry Prof. Rowena Matthews, Math and Economics Prof. Carl Simon, and Peter McDonough, who is an adjunct associate professor of political science and associate research scientist at the Center for Political Studies. The Michigan Annual Giving Fund of the University's development office provides money for the two awards. Another $1,500 prize, the AMOCO Foundation Good Teaching Award for outstanding undergraduate teaching, went to: English Prof. Enoch Brater, Political Science Prof. Zvi Gitelman, Math Prof. Wilfred Kaplan, History Prof. Gerald Linderman, Arabic Prof. Raji Rammuny, and Physics Prof. Marcellus Wiedenbeck. History Prof. John Fine received the University Press Book Award. IN BRIEF Compiled from Assocoted Press and United Press InternaTional reports Congress faces credit crunch WASHINGTON - Senate and House members itching to leave the capital to campaign are facing what will likely be the final week of the 98tp Congress, with the federal government due to run out of cash at midnight today and out of credit a couple of days later. The bill containing nearly $500 billion for most departments of the goveri nment over the next 51 weeks is entangled in a running dispute over U.S. aid to rebels fighting the government in Nicaragua. One compromise being studied by negotiators would allow the aid to continue for only a few months. The measure would authorize enough credit presumably to last through', next Sept. 30. The Treasury Department says the present credit ceiling of $1.573 trillion will be reached before the week is out. Unless the debt limit is raised, the government will havp no authority to continue borrowing the $21 million an hour it needs to make up the difference between taxes and spending. This catch-all spending bil became necessary because Congress failed to' approve nine of the 13 regular appropriations bills that provide money for, the government. Shuttle's relay system blacks out CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The 13th space shuttle flight was hit by morel" bad luck yesterday when a cosmic ray burst knocked out the radio relay satellite used to send most of Challenger's voice communications and all of its radar pictures to Earth. More potential trouble developed when tropical storm Josephine formed' over the Atlantic Ocean east of the Bahamas and started moving slowly , toward Florida, threatening to disrupt Satdrday landing plans for the seven astronauts. The satellite, in an orbit 22,000 miles higher than the shuttle, was blacked out more than seven hours by the radiation shot from the sun. That limited the crew to only brief periods of communication with mission control as the. ship passed over a handful of tracking stations each orbit. Among the experiments conducted by the astronauts yesterday was another satellite refueling exercise by Leestma and Sullivan. The transferred toxic hydrazine between two tanks in the shuttle's cargo bay. Bomb rips U.S. missile makers BRUSSELS, Belgium - A bomb tore through a European headquarters of the U.S. defense contractor Honeywell at dawn yesterday, wrecking fur- niture, ceilings and halls but causing no injuries. The blast, just several hundred yards from NATO headquarters, was the, third in a week against foreign businesses in Brussels and was claimed by the same mysterious group calling itself the "Communist Combatant Cells.".. In a letter delivered to a Brussels television station, the group said the Honeywell offices were bombed because it "actively involved in the con-. struction program of (U.S.-made) cruise missiles."- NATO deployment of the weapons in Western Europe has provoked massive protests across the continent. Lawrence said American divisions of Honeywell make radar alternators for cruise missiles to control their altitude during flight and is a subcontrac- tor for in-flight stabilization mechanisms for the Pershing. Iraqi attack on tanker kills 6 ABU DHABI,'United Arab Emirates - Iraqi warplanes yesterday at- tacked a Hong Kong-owned supertanker 40 miles south of Iran's main oil exc port terminal in the Persian Gulf, killing six crewmen and injuring nine others, officials said. Iraq, which has been at war with Iran for more than four years, claimed its warplanes destroyed "two large naval targets" but shipping sources said they knew of only one attack. Lloyd's of London and Gulf sources said the Liberian-registered World Knight was attacked at 11:15 a.m. as it headed for the Kharg Island oil ter- minal to pick up Iranian oil. The attack shattered a three-week lull in the so-called "tanker war," in which an estimated 40 commercial vessels have been damaged since March. Iraq made clear it would enforce its blockade of Iranian oil exports, aimed at cutting off Iran's oil revenues and forcing Tehran to the negotiating table. Peres, Shultz discuss economy WASHINGTON - Shimon Peres, the new Israeli prime minister, opened talks yesterday with the Reagan administration on his country's economic problems and prospects for withdrawing Israeli troops from Lebanon. Peres, who took office less than a month ago, began the three-day visit to the capital with a 2/2-hour meeting with Secretary of State George Shultz, who is an economist. Israel's soaring inflation, now about 400 percent a year, is the principal topic of the three-day Peres visit. The Reagan administration is seeking assurances that Israel is addressing its problems in a satisfactory and com- prehensive way before deciding how to help. Among the measure under consideration are, U.S. underwriting of the weak Israeli shekel in world money market; stepped-up Pentagon pur- chases of Israeli military equipment, including anti-tank devices, artillery pieces and ammunition; and accelerated delivery of U.S. economic aid. The new government in Jerusalem has slashed $1 billion from its $23 billion budget and banned the import of automobiles, stereos and other luxury items. It may ask the administration to deliver later this month the $1.2 billion in U.S. economic assistance due in January. All proceedsSeneit: University of Michigan Hospinls Dept, of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 18 or Older to Gamble $3 00 Entrance micudes chips Cash Bar Perwoal Limitation of $500 in Wininso; Raffle Prizes not1 inludoed.. MichiganDaily DollarBilCopying WIOB A ALL0ROCARE OPORTU'NITIES 0 Step up to the first string at the National Security Agency.' 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Meade, Maryland 20755. 01 beffiftbigan ttil Vol. XCV - No. 29 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: September through April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate and College Press Service, and United Students Press Service. .4 On Campus Recruiting Dates Oct. 18, 1984- Engineering Oct. 19, 1984- Liberal Arts Editor in chief .....................BILL SPINDLE Managing Editors..................CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Associate News Editors ............ LAURIE DELATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor.......,..............SUE BARTO Opinion Page Editors..................JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG NEWS STAFF: Marcy Fleischer, Mario Gold, Thomas Hrach, Rachel Gottlieb, Sean Jackson. Carrie Levine, Eric Mattson, Tracey Miller, Kery Murokami, Allison Zousmer. Magazine Editor....................JOSEPH KRAUS Associate Magazine Editor .......... 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