The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 9, 1984 - P e 5 O A **.* .C%3 W l)¢Y.%YC~ ~~:Y P Y Yn.. n .... ...... .......n \ 3t rule out the use of force if the Soviet eighter that tied up in Corinto Wed- - sday was carrying a cargo of Soviet iG-21s. NICARAGUA flatly denied the ship as carrying the high, performance viet fighters, but insisted on its right 'buy jets to protect itself. p U.S. officials still did not have any rm evidence whether the Burkiana irried MiG-21s and a defense source yid other military equipment may ave been packed into MiG-21 crates ecause of their availability. x Barricada, the voice of the governing andinista National Liberation Front, aid yesterday that the U.S. naval ac- .on meant President Reagan had a alleges U "passed from threats to actions" against Nicaragua. The Sandinista leaders have said for several months that the United States is planning to invade their country. In California, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the administration also was concerned about the presence of at least two other .5. spying Soviet bloc ships in and around Nicaragua. He said a Bulgarian ship carrying helicopters was spotted off the Nicaraguan coast on the Atlantic side and that another communist ship of un- specified nationality was sighted in Corinto, apparently emptied of its cargo. 1 I ___ COUPONN_ THIS ENTIRE AD GOOD FOR TWO $3.00 TICKETS .--------.....-...----------------------------------aaaiaaaa iNiNUUUUSUUUWWUWWWWI I WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW i DANNY DeVITO MICHAEL DOUGLAS Cod covers KATHLEEN TURNER I fabulous : adventure... protesters, Romancing TheSTONE S apiro( ®CNUR-O FRI 1:00, 7:00, 9:00, 11 P.M. SAT. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00,11 P.M. ll :SN.10.30,5:0 :090 The Sexiest Movie of the Year! GENEVIEVE KEITH BUJOLD * CARRADINE CHOOSE ME 0 " . " " " " _S SAT. 12:50, 3:00, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30,11:30 P.M. SUN 12:50, 3:00, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30 uu v v teLM IIor (Continued from Page 1) pampus each year. Shapiro said every other organization :and firm has special conduct rules 'which its members must follow. In response to that remark, someone shouted "Yeah, where? The Kremlin?" SHAPIRO SAID he would not rule out the possibility of changing or bypassing regents' bylaw 7.02, which guarantees the Michigan Student Assembly's right to veto the conduct rules, in order to pass the code. ". . if you're asking whether studen- ts will have veto power on the rules of conduct, they may or may not. That remains to be seen," Shapiro said. His remarks drew sneers and shouts from the crowd, which spilled out into the hallway and in the aisles. Prof. Martin Gold, chairman of the Univer- sity's Civil Liberties Board and a mem- ber of the forum's panel, said he hadn't sen the auditorium filled with so many students since the first teach-in on Vietnam. "I AM personally tremendously delighted to see you all here and hear you all here," he said. Gold pointed out several objections to the Civil Liberties Board has to the proposed code: Som descriptions of prohibited conduct are too ambiguous; students should be tried by a panel of their peers rather than by a five- member board consisting of two students; and it might be used as a -{vigilante system to invent sanctions for - crimes not prosecuted by the civil cour- k ts. Gold also warned Shapiro and the 1" administration against bypassing MSA's right to veto the code. ' "Recognize where you must retreat .and only go that far," he said, calling a bylaw change a "bad retreat." "IF IT MEANT that there couldn't be a code, then so be it. That's the way it ought to be," Gold said. ,, s But in his closing remarks Gold suggested taking the proposed code and critiques of it from various groups back -to the University Council, the group that originally formulated the code, to -iron out the problems. ,. Eric Schnaufer, chairman of MSA's code committee and the third member of the forum's panel, said MSA would #.not discuss alterations on the code with - -the administration unless Shapiro first guaranteed that he will not ask the regents to bypass the assembly. The regents have final say on changing the hv12ws hut thev usually follow recom- imssuuwwwwwNONwwwwwwwNwNwwwvwwNwwvwwvNwwwwww Start a career, not just a job! We are The May Department Stores Company, one of the largest department store retailers in the nation, currently seeking College Graduates to enter our Business Management Training Program. 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