LaGROC case to be held next semester by Karen Akerlof Oaily Staff Writer A case brought against the Michigan Student Assembly by the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee will not be considered by (he student judiciary until January, assembly General Counsel John Coleman said Tuesday. A lawyer for LaGROC said the group will not contest the delay of their trial. The case will be heard when a new panel of students are named to the Court of Common Pleas next semester, a lower court of the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ). "I think we are just going to wait," said LaGROC legal counsel Jamie Marsh. "There is nothing else for us to do." LaGROC filed a complaint in October with CSJ. The group charged that MSA's recognition of the Cornerstone Christian Fellow- ship was illegal under assembly's Compiled Code because the fellow- ship discriminates against gay men and lesbians. The Code forbids recognition of groups with discrimi- natory membership policies. Groups must obtain official MSA recognition before receiving Union office space or assembly funds. LaGROC requested that the judi- ciary overturn the assembly's recog- nition of the fellowship and called for the resignation of the 21 MSA representatives who voted in favor of CCF's recognition. The delay was precipitated by the assembly's failure to vote earlier this semester on a selection committee's appointments to the Court of Com- mon Pleas. As a result, MSA never noticed that no graduate students were among the appointments, a re- quirement of the Compiled Code. The error wasn't caught until Sunday, when an MSA representa- tive brought it to Coleman's atten- tion. Coleman, who is representing MSA in the case, said he then thor- oughly read the Code and decided the court was clearly invalid. Marsh said he was concerned that Coleman could declare the court in- valid. "It disturbs me that the lawyer for the other side can declare the court invalid," Marsh said. "You can always find something wrong if you look hard enough." Coleman said, "I'm fully confi- dent I'm going to win the case. But if we are going to battle it out, it should be in a valid court so no one can question the decision." CORRECTIONS The Daily misrepresented the views of independent Michigan Stu- dent Assembly candidate Dale Car- penter in Wednesday's paper. The er- ror was the fault of a person imper- sonating Carpenter. The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 1, 1989 - Page 3 Czechoslovakia to destroy Austrian border barriers A Salvadoran soldier puts his rifle to the head of a suspected guerrilla yesterday. After several minutes of questioning, he was taken into custody. His fate is unknown. Americans flee El Salvador: Church condemns a SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador The Lewis' home, and up to 30 (AP) - Hundreds of Americans fled or 40 others in the exclusive Escalon this embattled country yesterday, neighborhood in the city's western fearful of the combat by rebels that sector, had been taken over before has shattered the tranquility of their dawn by guerrilla forces. upscale neighborhoods. The rebels from the Farabundo ,oMarti National Liberation Front, or The Roman Catholic Church's FMLN, observed a six-hour truce Legal Aid office, meanwhile, issued FMgNningsarvea m. x(7 ur m. e a report concluding that government beginning at 6 a.m (7 a.m. EST) in soldiers carried out the November 16 their 20-day offensive to permit massacre of six Jesuit priests and evacuation of all those who wished their two domestic employees. to leave. "I'm not coming back," said Kate "The FMLN is maintaining a Lewis, a teacher at the American constant siege of the capital, which School, as she carried her 8-month- the neurological center of the nation. old baby Cassandra down Mirador The fuse of a social time-bomb has Street to where a U.S. embassy offi- been lit," said the insurgents on their cial was waiting for her and her bare- clandestine radio. foot husband, William. About 20 U.S. citizens left on Other Americans on their way the first two charter flights arranged out flashed a V-for-victory sign at by the U.S. Embassy. They included the international Airport and embassy employees and dependents, shouted, "We'll be back after and Americans residing in El Sal- Christmas!" vador for other reasons. rgmy In a report on the massacre at the Simeon Canas Central American University, the Church Legal Aid of- fice said that "all the evidence and indicators establish that those re- sponsible for the murder of the six Jesuit priests and their two domes- tics were members of the armed forces." It cited as crucial facts that: the attackers wore army uniforms, ac- cording to a witness; they spent at least an hour shooting up part of the campus in the middle of a dusk-to- dawn curfew; the zone around the UCA campus was militarized, with scores of troops guarding southern access to the nearby headquarters of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; sophisti- cated arms, including flame throw- ers, were used by the assassins, who also burned some of the priests' of- fices; and the priests" residence was raided and searched by army troops two days before the massacre. PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) - The government said yesterday it will tear down the fences on its bor- der with Austria, and members of Parliament proposed the repeal of tough laws used to imprison and fine dissenters. The Communist Party said it would announce a new program to include "an objective revision" of its attitude toward the "Prague Spring" reform movement of 1968 and the Soviet-led invasion that crushed it. Spokesperson Josef Hora said the new policies might allow for read- mission to the party of half a mil- lion people expelled after the inva- sion. They include Alexander Dubcek, who was Communist Party chief and led the reforms. Hora said two Politburo members met for the first time with the oppo- sition Civic Forum group and stu- dents, who led 11 days of mass protest that toppled the old party leadership. He said the meeting occurred be- cause "we are just one of the politi- cal parties in this country, and we have to find our place." Civic Forum previously had met only with Premier Ladislav Adamec and other government officials. State radio began broadcasting twice-daily programs about Civic Forum activities, and also featured music by singers who had been banned for years. Government spokesperson Marcel Jansen said the Interior Ministry Comaneci reported to be in U.S. Embassy BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) - Nadia Comaneci, the Olympic gym- nastics champion who disappeared from her native Romania in an ap- parent defection, may be at the U.S. Embassy in Switzerland, her coach said Thursday. Embassy officials, however, de- nied she was there, adding another twist to the mystery surrounding the 1976 Olympic champion, who crossed the border into Hungary in the pre-dawn hours Tuesday. "As far as I know, she is proba- bly in the U.S. embassy in Berne," Bela Karolyi told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Stuttgart, West Germany, where he is coaching an American women's gymnastic team. would begin the "removal of techni- cal equipment" on the frontier with neutral Austria, which bristles with barbed wire strung between concrete pylons. He did not say whether similar action would be taken on the long, fortified border with West Germany., Hungary stated tearing down its border barriers with Austria in May, and tens of thousands of East Ger- mans fled across the frontier to the West before the East Germans gov-. ernment abolished travel restrictions.' The official news agency CTK said six political prisoners were re- leased and the President Gustav Husak granted amnesty to Stanislav Devaty, a former spokesperson for the Charter 77 human rights group who went underground weeks ago, and another activist. State radio said Marxism-Lenin- ism was being abolished as a com- pulsory subject at universities, meet ing a demand from students, and fac ulty members would be hired on te basis of professional qualifications rather than Communist Party mem- bership. Economist Valtr Komarek, a re; form-minded Communist some op. position leaders see as a possible premier, cautioned against too much compromise in negotiations for re form with Adamec. He spoke one day after Parlia- ment removed provisions from the constitution that guarantee the Communists a monopoly on power Religious' services CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Church Chaplaincy) 218 N. Division (at Catherine) Sunday Schedule Holy Eucharist-5 p.m. in St. Andrews Preacher and Celebrant: The Rev. Dr. Virginia Peacock Supper-6:00 p.m. Vido-6:45 p.m. "Faithful Defiance: A Portrait of Desmond Tutu" Call 665-0606 LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA 801 South Forest at Hill Street Sunday Worship at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday: Bible Study at 6:30 p.m. Worship at 7:30 p.m. Intern: Andy Rutrough, 668-7622 UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL Friday, Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. Sunday Bible Study, 9:15 a.m. Sunday Worship, 10:30 a.m. 1511 Washtenaw, 663-5560 UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron at Fletcher, parking on Ann St. SUNDAY: Community Worship at 10:30 a.m.. Red Army terrorists assassinate prominent BAD HOMBURG, West Ger- many (AP) - The terrorist Red Army faction, dormant for three years, killed West Germany's most powerful banker yesterday by blow- ing apart his armored Mercedes with a light-sensitive bomb mounted on a bicycle. Alfred Herrhausen was chair of the Deutsche Bank, West Germany's largest, and one of Chancellor Hel- mut Kohl's chief economic advisers. Police said the bicycle-bomb ap- parently was placed on a street of this spa town outside Frankfurt, where the banker lived, and was det- onated by a sophisticated light beam- device as he drove by on his way to West German banker work. They said it was the first time terrorists had used such a detonator in West Germany. Police with helicopters were searching for two men seen leaving the area. A stolen white Lancia be- lieved to have been used in the get- away was found abandoned in a Frankfurt suburb. "For a long time, the Deutsche Bank and Herrhausen in particular have been targeted by the Red Army Faction," said Hans-Juergen Foer- ster, spokesperson for the chief fed- eral prosecutor's office. He said the ultra-leftists accuse Deutsche Bank of financing a worldwide "military- industrial" complex. The explosion turned Her- rhausen's armored limousine into a heap of twisted metal. His driver, Jakob Nix, was seriously injured, but police said his condition was not critical. Security agents following in another car were unhurt. A letter found at the scene claimed responsibilityaon behalf of the Red Army faction, West Ger- many's deadliest terrorist group of which little had been heard since 1986. Federal criminal police are offer- ing a reward of up to $2.2 million, one of the largest ever in West Ger- many. 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