... " i'rr .1": :tiff {': 1:ti":":::::r: J:v::":":: ti":": t:: ff': " . "r . ::rJr::%:':ti':":ti.......... r, ":':: l.:::: :::"::"r r".V J" ti":Y::":tiff tif:: "{. 11'':"" .{"1f}. 1hJti4' ::tif.:rtifi:":'{ .:V":ir.1Vr:.i rr ""rr:r::"rii: '": ":: tr :.""i ". }}1":':: r " :::.{:" ti ":;:: ". " ".y ,1 ...... . .: Yr ...: .: ::.{":..:.r": IColorado students S Ddefeat suicide pIl proposal * __ FBI break MIAMI (AP) - The FBI arrested eight people yesterday in what it called a plot by exiled businessman to assassinate Honduran President Roberto Suazo and take over that Cen- tral American nation's government in a coup financed by cocaine profits. Joseph Corless, special agent in charge of the FBI's Miami office, said the suspects were rightists economically and politically. "I BELIEVE they were just in- terested in putting in a man favorable to them," Corless told reporters. In Washington, FBI Director William Webster said the bureau learned of the alleged plot last July from a U.S. citizen and placed an undercover FBI agent in the scheme as one of the triggermen. Webster said the FBI had seized 760 pounds of cocaine Sunday at a remote airstrip in southern Florida. The drugs. which Webster said are worth $10.3 million wholesale, were to be used to finance the overthrow, according to a By NANCY DOLINKO Students at the University of Colorado yesterday defeated a referen- dum asking their health service to stockpile cyanide pills in the event of a nuclear war. Fifty-eight percent of the student body voted against the referendum pat- terned after one passed recently at Brown University in Rhode Island. The idea of suicide pills was developed to make people think of nuclear war as a form of suicide and to raise con- sciousness about the issue, said Brown organizer Jason Salzman. "THE MAIN problem was we didn't get the word out," said Colorado student David West who co-sponsored the bill. "Most people didn't understand that there weren't going to be any pills. We weren't as well organized as we should have been." Student body president Jill Hanauer said, "I don't believe it's a reflection that students aren't against the freeze. Two favorite words for this referendum were 'pessimistic' and 'cynical.' You can't take Boulder's liberalism for granted." Hanauer said they will continue to move ahead and hope to put it on another ballot in the spring. "IN A SENSE we won, however, because we got people to think about it," she said. No other schools have yet succeeded in putting a cyanide pill referendum on their school's ballot but Columbia University is considering a proposal and the Michigan Student Assembly will decide in two weeks whether to add a referendum to April's ballot. The referendum would be non- binding, therefore the University would not have to act upon it. HEALTH Services Coordinator Caesar Briefer said the University has no intentions of following through on the bill if it were passed. It's not morally or ethically possible," Briefer said. "We're into life, not death. Stockpiling pills is contravention to any medical ethics that I know of." Brown's health service has not stocked pills even though the students passed their referendum, he added. As another way of raising con- sciousness and challenging voters to think about the nuclear movement, students at Brown have urged colleges nationwide to participate in rallies today. Nineteen colleges, including Ohio State University, Harvard, Nor- thwestern, and Brown are expected to stage rallies, said Brown spokesman John Bonifaz. The University will not participate because the rally falls too close to last week's visit by Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale which drew such a large crowd, said LSA senior Karen Mysliwiec, spokesperson for Students Against Nuclear Suicide on campus. The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 2, 1984 - Page 3 CounCil hesitan on free zone (Continued from Page 1) challenging the proposal's con- stitutionality. She said she "didn't see much of a point in the city suing" if other parties file suit. She said having to contest the free zone would be a waste of taxpayers' money. However, Epton 'said filing a suit won't do any good against the proposal. "I think the suit would be thrown out of court," he said, explaining that the law would only restrict classified research and that is not protected by the first amendment. Epton also said until the proposal is determined to be constitutional, not ap- pointing any committee members would be against the law. All the other councilmembers contac- ted last night said they would agree to wait to appoint commisson members until a ruling on constitutionality is handed down. Also yesterday, Citizens for a Nuclear Free Ann Arbor, the group pushing for the free zone proposal, released a study showing that the city would not be affected economically by the free zone. The study stated that nuclear weapons research amounted to less than one-tenth of one percent of the total University research budget and that only five research firms in the city have contracts related to nuclear weaponry. The study said that not a single one of these five companies depends on these contracts for its only source of revenue. The study was conducted by mem- bers of the group with the assistance of Econ. Prof. Thomas Weisskopf. fi vx: "A".1'"". : 4.. 3 .}Aye\ ti . ' . .......::..".......... .}J L .fi. ...:.' . .. ... .. .. ... ....."LY.Y:J}:-. .x:L .......................L:::.Y::: }}:"}i}}}w::.: ;:::.Y::.::w::?"::"'"}}:v. :..:.Y:w.: :::. :::.tiY: a:. ::. A".::::. s up Hondi statement released by the FBI. WEBSTER SAID a Honduran general. Jose Bueso-Rosa, 47, the military attache posted to the Hon- duran embassy in Santiago, Chile, was among those named in a criminal com- plaint filed in U.S. District Court in Miami. Corless said arrangements were being made to bring Bueso-Rosa to the United States. Webster said the conspirators plan- ned to have Suazo killed and to use the resulting civil unrest to take over the Honduran government between Oct. 15 and Nov. 15,1984. THE COMPLAINT alleged that the conspirators plotted to acquire weapons, explosives, night-vision equipment, tanks and airplanes and other military gear to be used in the assassination and overthrow. Webster said the FBI undercover agent was to be paid $300,000 for the assassination of Suazo, with $100,000 of that to be paid in advance. tras coup attempt The undercover agent and would-be and results in death, injury or property assassins were to independently make damage," Webster said. their way into Honduras where they "Yesterday arrests of these would-be would receive further assistance from assassins clearly indicate our resolve others involved in the plot, the FBI and capability to achieve this goal. We said. are not determined that in combatting "I have said many times that the such lawlessness - in this instance overall goal of the FBI's terrorism both terrorism and narcotics traf- program is to detect and interdict a ficking - we will continue to be a potent terrorist action before it is carried out force within the Constitution." D Support the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION - HSSPACECON RBUTED BYTEPUBLSHER CHAPPENINGS. Highlight Spend an evening with the Residential College Players as they present Thirteenth Night tonight at 8 p.m. in the Residential College Auditorium at East Quad. Films AAFC - Cruel Story of Youth, 7 & 8:30 p.m., MLB 4. Performances University Choir 11a.m., Hill Auditorium. Dance - annual faculty concert, 8 p.m., Studio A, School of Music. Farm Labor Organization Committee - benefit concert, Hugh McGuin- ness, 8 p.m., Halfway Inn, East Quad. Performance Network-Dance Theatre II, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington. PTP-Die Fledermaus, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, Michigan League. Music - Clarinet recital, Janna Skates, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Speakers Engineering- Jim Loudon, "Discoveries on the Moon and their Im- plications for the Future," 3:30 p.m., 107 Aerospace Engineering; J.M. Car- penter, Nuclear Engineering Colloquium, 3:45 p.m., White Aud., Cooley Bldg.; I.J. Ha, "Robust Tracking in Nonlinear Systems and Its Application to Robots," 4 p.m., 2031 East Engineering. What Crucified Jesus? - Talk about church-state relations, 3 p.m., MLB Lecture Room 2. Near East/North African Studies - "Islam in History & Today," 7:30 p.m., 921 Church. Anthropology - James Sphuler, "The Divergence of Apes & Humans," 4 p.m., 4051 LSA. Meetings Chinese Students Christian Fellowship - 7:30 p.m., Memorial Church, Hill & Tappan. Chinese Bible Study Class - 7:30 p.m., 1001 E. Huron. Korean Christian Fellowship - 9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Academic Women's Caucus - noon, 350S. Thayer. Duplicate Bridge Club - 7:30 p.m., basement, Michigan League. Miscellaneous Folk Dance Club - Serbian dancing, 7:30 p.m., 1608 S. University. Distribution Support Club - 8:30 a.m., 3100 Michigan Union. Women's Field Hockey - Michigan vs. Iowa, 3 p.m., Ferry Field. Women's Volleyball - Michigan vs. Purdue, 7 p.m., CCRB. I-. I' To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 ., CASH FOR COLLEGE AVAILABLE .. . 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