Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom E L i t40 Iai1i Stasis More of the same today. Cloudy with a chance of rain early and late in the day. Temps in the fifties. Vol. XCV, No. 61 Copyright 1984, The Michigan iDailv Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, November 15, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages ..r .... J . ... Shapiro to ask 'U' Council to review code Protesters chase CIA By LAURIE DELATER and ERIC MATTSON University administrators will ask the academic conduct to draw up a new o copy of the code, University President Harold Shapiro said yesterday. The administrators will also submit By KERY MURAKAMI presentation yesterday at 4 p.m. in suggested revisions to the University A group of about 100 protesters forced preparation for the agency's recruitin Council, a faculty, staff, and student the cancellation yesterday of a Central appointments today. committee which 983, S ha si Intelligence Agency recruiting presen- But when they entered the MLB lee tsdn ,h o said.oc t tation in the Modern Languages ture room, the representatives encoun THE MOVE IS AN attempt to force Building and chased three agency tered a mock trial staged by protesters revisions which have been stalled by representatives to their cars parked ~ which featured the CIA as the defen the Michigan Student Assembly and the across the street. dant. administration, Shapiro said. In an apparent response to the "THE CIA IS charged with over The two groups have been unable to protest, the agency cancelled all of throwing the popular governments o agree on the conditions for discussing today's campus interviews out of "con- El Salvador, Chile, and Iran," shoute the code. cern for the safety of their personnel," former University student Tom Marx MSA has said talks would not begin said Deborah Orr May, director of dressed in judge's garb and standing in unless Shapiro promised not to ask the Care r g ay rct front of a blackboard which read, "The University's Board of Regents to CareONE CIA reresentative said it was People's Court: the people preside.' revoke the assembly's right to veto the the most persistent opposition the As the representatives stood in th code. But Shapiro has repeatedly recruiters have met in their tour of back of the room, Marx went on t refusedto begist aling several U.S. colleges, incing ng the "charge" the agency with "illega negotiations begin. University of California at Berkeley inining of harbors in Nicaragua; wit "It took six weeks jus akigabout Daily Photo by KATE 0'LEARY and Columbia University. illegal funding of (Nicaraguan) con whether to talk. It seemed silly," The three CIA representatives had tras; with publishing manuals en Shapiro said. Two CIA recruitment representatives are chased out of MLB yesterday by students protesting CIA activities, planned to give an informational See CIA, Page 2 See SHAPIRO, Page 3 see baAc oe s ,Speakers seek balance on arms control 'ightrope' - 9 's f d e e :o h 1- z- M- I t E l 2 1 By STEPHANIE DEGROOTE Regional conflicts in Afghanistan and Central America could pose major threats to achieving arms control agreements between the United States and the Soviet Union, former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski told an audience at Rackham Auditorium yesterday. "The Soviet Union would not mind American intervention in Nicaragua," Brzezinski said to the crowd gathered for the symposium on "New Weapons Technologies and Soviet-American Relations," which was chaired by for- mer presidents Gerald Ford and Jim- my Carter. "THEY KNOW that the cost to the U.S. would be enormous." The Soviet Union wouldn't feel the urge to step in, Brzeznski said, im- plying that the U.S. would have done enough political damage to its global image. The day-long symposium dealt with new weapons such as the Reagan's proposed "Star Wars" plan and their impact on U.S.-Soviet arms control r negotiations. The event was presented by the Gerald Ford Library. "The Soviet Union is a one- dimensional rival to the U.S. A rival only in terms of military strength," Br- zezinski said. THE SOVIET Union's one- dimensionality leads some experts to -look with hope towards arms control agreements. According to William Hyland, editor of Foreign Affairs, the "correlation of forces," how the Soviet Union views the balance of power, not only militarily, but also ideologically, socially and economically, has shifted to the favor of the United States. Richard Burt, Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Af- fairs believes that the shift of "correlation of forces" away from the Soviet Union should be more of an initiative to come to the negotiating tables. IF THE SOVIETS can find it politically possible to come to the negotiating table, Burt is optimistic See FORD, Page 3 Carter, Ford bring students to Raekham By JERRY MARKON Though arms control was the topic of discussion, fascination with former presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford brought many students to yester- day's symposium on Soviet-American relations at Rackham Auditorium. Seeing the one-time rivals together in person was a "once-in-a-lifetime op- portunity" for first year graduate student Jim Duncan, although he was "disappointed they didn't participate more in the discussions." RUSSIAN AND Eastern European Studies graduate student Leslie Wein- See FORMER, Page 3 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Former presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter address the press at Rackham Graduate School before a symposium on U.S.-Soviet relations and new weapons technology in Rackham Auditorium yesterday. v 1 ..*...;:..'...*.*..*..*.**..*.~..*........... Students fast for world hunger By AMY YENKIN Though many University dormitory residents regularly pass up cafeteria cuisine, nearly 2,000 students have decided to give up their evening meal one day this week to participate in World Hunger Day being held around the nation today. Dorm residents had their choice of skipping yesterday's dinner or tonight's evening meal so the money which would have been spent on dinner could be given to the Ann Arbor Committee Con- cerned with World Hunger and St. Mary's Student Chapel, which will pass the funds on to Unicef, Ox- fam America, or the Ann Arbor Hunger Coalition. ACCORDING TO Jean Cilik, campus coor- dinator for Committee Concerned with World Hunger, 1,999 dorm residents skipped a meal, raising $2,700. The percentage of money raised is down from last year,." Cilik said, "but we aren't soliciting as many dorms this year." The committee has also been collecting donations in the fishbowl this year and have raised another $55 so far. Cilik said collecting money in the fishbowl helps to bring off campus residents into the fight against hunger. WHEN THE students signed up to skip their meal, they were given the choice of whether the money would go to local or international hunger programs. Cilik said 55 percent of the students gave internationally, while the other 45 percent wanted the money to be spent locally. Ann Moreno, an LSA sophomore living in Mosher Jordan, skipped her meal last night. "It was not that much for me to give up to see the ben- efits of what others get," Moreno said. "The star- ving people will get something they woudln't get otherwise." Students at Harvard University are dining on rice and water, while several fraternities and sororities at the University of Illinois are giving their cooks a day off to raise money for the program. Inmates at a Texas women's prison plan to go without food today, and in Philadelphia, the proceeds of a three mile "hunger run" will be given to fight world famine. The Associated Press filed a report for this story. -TODAY- No animal house sity's vice president for student affairs banned booze from all Greek events this fall after two straight weekends of raucous partying which featured students hurling bottles and verbal insults at campus police. But under pressure from students the university settled on a compromise that allowed the monitored parties. Monkeying around AFTER ALMOST THREE months, authorities have finally tracked down a fugitive who nearly made a was kind of like watching a drunk. He finally just sat down and went to sleep." No, I'm more stupid D O YOU KNOW someone who needs a job that doesn't require much intelligence? If so, "Stupid" Steve Helton, a partner in Burglar Bar Manufacturing Co., may have work for him. Helton is running the following help- wanted ad for salespeople in the Pensacola Journal: "Earn $1,50 per week with ease and pleasure. Watch me do it. If you're twice as stupid as I am, then join our organization and make half as much. Call me. Stupid only be married in front of a "21" table. So Naomi Peake forsook her hand of cards and took the hand of Grady Phillips in a ceremony at a "21" table Monday at the On- slow Hotel-Casino. The Portland, Ore., couple's friends made the arrangement r Phillips proposed last week, but they knew little of w. At was coming when they stop- ped in Reno on their vacation this week. "When I knew we were coming to Reno to gamble, I said that as long as we're there, let's get married," Phillips said. "I had kin- da planned to go to the chapel." But his friends had other plans. While slot machines jangled and cards were dealt at other tables, Reno minister George Treat Flint joined the couple in holy matrimony. "I figure this is one gamble i I I | I