4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 2, 1987 Students (Continued from Page 1) has slipped beneath the surface since 1984, when University President Harold Shapiro returned the code to its original promulgators: the University Council. The council, a nine- member panel composed of three students, three faculty members, and three administrators, is authorized by a Board of Regents bylaw to formulate rules governing officials differ on the University Community. SINCE then, the council has attempted to write their version of the code. Although Regental bylaw 7.02 guarantees MSA approval of any code draft, student members of the council fear that increased frustration in the administration will prompt it to override the bylaw and pass its own version. "If the University Council doesn't write their own code by the end of the summer, I predict that the administration will lose patience and write their own," said Donald Rucknagel, former co-chair of the council. "It's like we have been given a choice - either you write your own or we will write one for you," said Weine. IN reality, the University already has a code, but officials say it's virtually impossible to use. Passed by both the student body and the regents in 1973, the Rules of the University Community were intended to control demonstrations from the University's more radical code days. Such a demonstration was the Black Action Movement Strike in 1970, which shut down classes for more than a week. Although students at that time felt they would be treated more fairly in a University system than the civil system, it appears that such sentiment no longer exists. Much of the University Council's work has been frustrating and tedious for members because student members are adamantly opposed to a code with academic santions, but are forced to write a version instead of accepting one from the administration. BUSINESS PUT YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE TO WORK. 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Paul Laxalt said yesterday he doubts President Reagan is ready to renounce the U.S. arms-sale initiative with Iran, despite the Tower commission's condemnation of that policy and Reagan's subsequent replacement of White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan. Laxalt of Nevada, one of Reagan's closest longtime political confidants, said that in his address to the nation later this week, Reagan should admit "this was a flawed policy ... a trip that shouldn't have been taken.... I'd like to have him do that, but I don't think he's there in his own mind yet." Reagan acknowledged in his Jan. 27 State of the Union address that "serious mistakes were made," but he has never conceded that the administration was seeking to trade arms for hostages. Southern twister kills eight LAUREL, Miss. - Residents and cleanup crews worked under a sunny sky yesterday to recover belongings and clear up wreckage from a tornado that left eight people dead, nearly 500 families homeless and millions of dollars in damage. "Everybody is tired, but things are looking up," said Carl Carlos, Jones County Civil Defense director. "It's just a matter of cleanup and get back on our feet now." The tornado left at least 145 people injured as it cut a 20-mile-long, 2-mile-wide path of destruction across mostly rural Jones County in southeastern Mississippi on Saturday morning. Some residents camped out overnight at bonfires beside the piles of splintered lumber and brick that had been their homes, and the National Guard blocked off 15 roads and highways. Mississippi blacks boycott schools, white businesses CANTON, Miss. - Blacks in several Mississippi towns have revived a tactic of the 1960s by boycotting schools and white-owned businesses in what they call a last resort to achieve political goals. "I think this is something we felt we had to do," said Rev. Michael Cathey, a leader of a black parents group that wants a black assistant superintendent of schools in Senatobia. Blacks set up an economic boycott because, "Nobody was listening. And we will be out until they do." In Canton, where Martin Luther King Jr. once organized against white supremacy, blacks postponed an economic boycott set for Friday when the town's mayor promised to put a black on the school board. Damaged ski lift kills five TARBES, France - A damaged chairlift pitched dozens of skiers onto rocks and snow far below yesterday, killing five of them and badly injuring 25 at the Pyrenees resort of Luz- Ardiden, officials said. Sixty other skiers on the lift suffered lesser injuries. Some victims reportedly fell from heights of up to 130 feet. The accident occurred about 4:30 p.m., but the cause was not clear. Local news media gave conflicting reports, saying the lift cable snapped, that it jumped off a pulley, or that a support pylon may have collapsed. The lift could carry 200 skiers at a time. The chairlift, on the resort's upper slopes at an altitude of nearly 10,000 feet, was new and opened.just two.w Mks ago. EXTRAS Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa, men have maimed you CHICAGO - A computer analysis of the Mona Lisa shows that Leonardo Da Vinci originally painted her wearing a necklace and that an art restorer obliterated a distant mountain range beside her, a scientist says. "After more than 450 years of deterioration, the image of the lady is barely a soiled caricature of the original," John Asmus of the University of California in San Diego said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. His analysis, in which a computer was used to reveal hidden details in a high-resolution photograph of the masterpiece, revealed a row of dots on Mona Lisa's neck, suggesting she once wore a necklace. The famous smile has also been reshaped slightly by art restorers. A physician proposed last month that Mona Lisa may have suffered from bell's palsy, an uncommon condition resulting in paralysis of one side of the face - and perhaps the unusual smile. Asmus challenges the assertion. "We don't have the mouth Leonardo drew, so I don't think you can say it's Bell's palsey." If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. 4 4 430 S. Michigan Ave. Chkicago IL 60605 r! Address City State Zip Home Phone Business Phone El '1 mm. 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For Information and Application rid call: 301/653-3083 (days) and 301/363-6369 (evenings and weekends) TRIPP LAKE CAMP 3635 Old Cart Rd., Suite 306 BALTIMORE MARYLAND 21208 / I * * Factory Trained Field Engineers Local Ann Arbor Office * 10 years experience serving Computers and Word Processors * Loaner Units Available * Circuit Board Repair Shop * Quick On-Site Response * On-Site, Depot, Carry In, and * After Hours Service * Eight Years Experience Meeti of Servicing the University Also Featuring * IBM PC's and Printers * Compaq PC's I Mail-in Service Plans ng the Requirements of Michigan Demand for our graduates exceeds supply 2 tol. What more can we say? ...except that college grads come from as far as Hawaii and Alaska to take the Institute for Paralegal Training's acclaimed 4-month program. We train them in any of 7 specialized fields, including Administrative and Public Law and International Trade Law. And our placement service helps them get a job in the city of their choice - a service backed by a unique tuition refund plan. Right now our students are in demand by banks, cor- porations, government agencies and law firms nation- wide. Four months after you graduate college, you could be, too. Call 1-800-222-IPLT. In PA., call (215) 567-4811. We'll be on campus March 5 Contact your placement office to arrange for an interview or group presentation.. GSL lons Merit I Mail this coupon to: Editor in Chief.......................ROB EARLE Managing Editor ............AMY MINDELL News Editor .....................PHILIP I. LEVY Features Editor.............MELISSA BIRKS NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Eve Becker, Steve Blonder, Rebecca Blunenstein, Jim Bray, Brian Bonet, Scott Bowles, Paul Henry Cho, Dov Cohen, Rebecca Cox. Hampton Dellinger, Leslie Eringaard. Martin Frank, Pam Franklin, Stephen Gregory. Edward Kleine, Steve Knopper, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Loranger, Michael Lustig, Jerry Markon, Edwin McKean, Andy Mills, GarywMull, Eugene Pak, Faith Penmick.Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp. Louis Stancato, Steven Tuch, David Webster, Jennifer Weiss, Rose Mary Wummel Opinion Page Editors.........PETER MOONEY HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Muzammil Ahmed, Tim Bennett, Peter Ephross. Paul Honsinger, Tim Iuet. Lisa Jordan, Jeffrey Rutherford, Caleb Southworth, Mark Williams. Arts Editors.........................REBECCA CHUNG SETH FLICKER Books.......................SUZANNE MISENCIK Features...............................ALAN PAUL Film.................................KURT SERBUS Music..................................BETH FERTIG Theatre......................LAUREN SCHREIBER ARTS STAFF: V. J. Beauchamp, Lisa Berkowitz, Vol. XCVII.--No. 102 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. 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