YEAR IN REVIEW See Editorial Page Y r e l1 iCtta D~Ait F I KEY High--33 Low--1 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVi, No. 82 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, December 12, 1975 1 0 Cents I - Twelve Pages Ne u genetic research under fire E_ u '1 GUSEE N1 5k~PPENUISiY Something to crow about The battle between the Ann Arbor man whose pet rooster crowed his neighbors awake and the city has ended in a draw. The charge against Bill Strauch, 59, of illegally raising a rooster within the city limits was dismissed yesterday. Last September Strauch's neighbors complained to po- lice about the early morning crooner. Police found the bird tied to Strauch's parked car. Strauch told the officer he had been keeping the rooster inside his house, but said he tied it outside when it began to make too much noise. The rooster had formerly slept in Strauch's bedroom, police said. Strauch was cited for a city code violation but charges were dismissed when Strauch moved the rooster to an area outside the city limits. CRISP Remember the long lines waiting to CRISP last September? According to the Registrar's Office, the process now averages 10 minutes. About 20,000 students have been processed through CRISP. During vacation, students will be able to CRISP without appointments. Permits will be available January 4 for Dropping and Adding on Sunday afternoon and Monday and Tuesday (January 5 and 6) evenings. From January 7-16, permits should be obtained from individual schools. Beginning January 19, permits will not be required. So now you know. Ta to And as another snowy fall term slowly sinks into the horizon, we bid you all a fair adieu. It is time for all us staffers to once again pretend we are in school and wing our way through those final exams. Although it is probably too late for us to salvage this term, we nevertheless wish you all the best of luck for a glittering GPA and a fun-filled Christ- mas vacation. For those of you who will be eating oranges in the glorious sunshine of Miami, we say good luck, go Blue, and may you- be stricken with an insupportable sunburn. Until next term . Research grants Faculty research grant applications are now available, so professors who want funding for pro- jects beginning next May should drop by Room 1020 Rackham (764-4405). The forms are due at the Graduate School no-later than Friday, January 30. Take a break from grading all those finals. Happenings.. .. have tapered off, so students can devote more time to cramming. But psychologist and Jesuit priest William Sneck will speak about psy- chological, physical, spiritual and political heaing at 8 p.m. at Canterbury House . . . Tomorrow WRCN will broadboast a radiothon from Briarwood. The money they raise between 9:30 a.m. and 9:30 p.m. will go to the Washtenaw Tuberculosis and Health Association . . . The Renaissance Revival Arts and Crafts fair and open market will be in the Union Ballroom from 10 a.m. Ito 8 p.m. Satur- day . . . A Woman's Bazaar featuring books, records, information and art will be at the Guild House, 802 Monroe, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. . . . The Fred Harris for President campaign commit- tee presents a game night at Corntree Coop, 1910 Hill, beginning at 8 p.m. Bring your own . . . Faruk and the Griot Galaxy present "Cram Jams" at Trotter House, 1443 Washtenaw, from 10:30 p.m. until ) a.m. Donations will be accepted at the door. . . On Sunday, the Renaissance Revival fair will open again from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. ii the Ball- room . . . the Fred Harris campaign committee will meet at Corntree at 12:30 . . . From 1 p.m. to 5, you can join "Country Christmas at Cobbletone Farm." Tours of the building, 2781 Packard, will be conducted. Decorations and entertainment fea- ture the theme of Christmas past on Michigan farms . . . Professional Theatre Program presents Broadway Spirit at 8 p.m. The original musical revue featuring music by Foster, Berlin Cohan and Porter. Admission is $1 for students with I.D., $3 for others. For more information, call the box office, 764-0450 . . . Finally, Shoo-be-Doo and the Utilitarians will entertain at Trotter House from 10 p.m. until 3 a.m. Pizza lobby There's a lobby for every cause and product in Washington, D.C. And now there's the frozen pizza lobby. The lobbying organization, called the Na- tional Frozen Pizza Institute, represents some 30 pizza producers and "allied" firms such as equip- ment manufacturers. The group wants to get you the cheapest possible pizza and is trying to pro- mote relaxation of federal quotas on imported cheese. The pizza institute contends that the quotas have helped drive up domestic cheese costs by 40 per cent since the start of the year, thus sharply increasing producers' costs-and in turn upping the retail price of pizzas plucked out of supermarket frozen food bins. On the inside ... ... Arts Page features a review of The Pirates of Penzance by Jeffrey Selbst . . . the Sports Page looks at sports during vacation . . . and the By PAUL HASKINS If they get an expected go-ahead from a federal scientific advisory board, University genetic researchers will plunge into a virtually uncharted and potentially trecherous scientific frontier sometime next spring. And while scientists extol the anticipated benefits of "recom- binant DNA" research, a number of critics assail the work for what they see as prohibitive physical and ethical risks. THE CONTROVERSY sprang up in June of 1974 when a Stan- ford microbiologist, Paul Berg, worked out a way to create en- tirely new biological organisms by combining the genetic informa- tion from different organisms and chemically inducing reproduc- tion. Berg, president of the National Academy of Sciences at the time, feared the possibly damaging effects of the research if ade- quate guidelines weren't first established. At the urging of the NAS, the nation's human geneticists and microbiologists agreed to put off the research until ground rules were set up. AFTER AN eight-month investigation, a committee of the National Institute of Health (NIH), a branch of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), this week produced a final guidelines proposal. According to Dr. Ernest Chu, a University human genetics professor and NIH committee member, the proposal dealing with :acility and biological safety factors "will be presented to Donald Frederickson (NIH director) for approval. It will take three or four months. Last week the Board of Regents approved a measure to allow researchers to apply for a $300,000 federal grant slated for DNA research-related laboratory renovations. THE REGENTS also agreed to use University funds for the renovations if the government, through the NIH, refuses the grant request. In the wake of the Regents' move, a number of reservations over the ethics and safety provisions of the research have sur- faced. Though the nation's scientists have all agreed to honor NIH verdict on safety guidelines, there is presently no enforceable Levi GEO files complaint against 'U' By JAMES NICOLL The Graduate Employes Or- ganization (GEO) has charged the University with failure to comply with federal affirmative action guidelines, in a com- plaint filed yesterday with the Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare (HEW).E, The complaint asks HEW to reconsider its approval of the University's affirmative action program because of "the failure of the U-M to include GSA's (Gr-aduate Student Assistants) in the plan," and the alleged "high degree of underutilization of women and minorities in the GSA workforce." ALTHOUGH the complaint has not been received by the HEW regional office in Chicago, offi- cials who were informed of its contents indicated that it would probably be rejected. The University has obtained H W aproval for its overall affirmative action plan, which does not include GSA's. Accord- ing to the Univeristy, HEW does not require a graduate student affirmative action elan, but only the collection and analysis of data. The University does have an affirmative action program for GSA's, as required by its con- tract with GEO. But GEO has ojections to this plan. THE MOST serious omission in the University's plan, accord- See GEO, Page 8 proposes FBI way to sanction researchers who choose to ignore the restrictions. AND SOME critics say the results of that sort of abuse could be disastrous. According to Susan Wright, Associate Professor of Humanities, "There's reason to believe many of these techniques could be dangerous. If you transfer some of the information on in a tumor virus, let's say, to a bacteria, it's possible that that bacteria could take hold in a host organism. Nobody knows how DNA recombines in host organisms." Genetic researchers here admit there's no legal clout behind he NIH precautions, but they feel professional and financial con- straints should keep people in line. "HEW WOULDN'T. give (researchers) any money if they didn't abide by the rules," says Charles Overberger, University Vice-President for Research. Microbiology Department Chairman Frederick Neidhardt explains, "Every grant request for work in this area would go to a committee (under HEW control). They would make sure each request met NIH guidelines before they certified." See SAFETY, Page 8 u S 1Iul eR Call's fo"rmerN Bureau tactics outrageous WASHINGTON M--Atty. Gen. Edward Levi said yes- terday proposed Justice Department guidelines for the FBI forbid the agency from conducting domestic security investigations of non-violent groups which do not intend to deprive persons of their civil rights. The guidelines would establish the first departmental limits on the FBI's domestic security investigations. "THE ATTORNEY general would be required under the draft guidelines to put a stop to any full investigation whose justifica- tion did not meet an established standard," Levi told the Senate intelligence committee. He said the draft guidelines also would place strict controls on the use of any technique by the FBI which goes beyond the gathering of information. Testimony before the commit- tee has disclosed instances in - which the FBI attempted to thwart activities of groups it considered extremist by employ- ing a wide variety of tactics to discredit leaders and disrupt or- ganizations. LEVI SAID those tactics, in- itiated under the late director J. Edgar 'Hoover, ranged from the foolish to the outrageous. He said in the future the FBI would use preventive action only in circumstances involving an im- mediate risk to human life or to "extraordinarily important" functions of the government. The draft guidelines require any preventive action proposal AP Photo to be submitted to the attorney general, who could authorize the action only if violence was im- Beirut's minent. military "The preventive action would ook over in all cases have to be non-vio- T -lent," Levi said. Agency loses on bowl trip By DAVID BLOMQUIST Unusually sluggish sales will result in a several thousand dollar loss for the operator of the University's official faculty- staff-student Orange Bowl tour, a travel company executive in- dicated yesterday. "We will definitely lose money on the student tour," said Thomas Conlin, president of Conlin-Dodds Travel Ltd. Con- ln refused comment on exactly what the final tour deficit would be. But a -cost estimate gathered by The Daily placed the loss at over $13,000. CONLIN-DODDS, a subsidiary of Conlin Travel Co., 2763 Ply- mouth Rd., booked and sold the official tour under the auspices of the University's Office of Student Services (OSS). The University, however, is not re- sponsible for -any tour deficit. Based on past Rose Bowl sales, University officials orig- See TRAVEL, Page 12 Beirut guerrillas huddle Left-wing Nasserite militiamen plan their att ack strategy on Phonecia Street, in fashionable hotel district. Luxury hotels in the city have been used by insurgents as bases. The rural Nasserites recently joined the left-wing Moslems, who yesterday t the Phonecia Hotel and surrounded the right-wing Christian Phlange-occupied Holida3 three sides. y in oni UAW LOCAL DIVIDED: Fight looms over union HE SAID that some proposed guidelines still are under dis- pute within the Department of Justice. Earlier, Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) said the committee should listen to tape recordings of FBI wiretaps on Martin Luth- er King Jr. to determine if the bureau was justified in spying on the late civil rights leader. vote By ELAINE FLETCHER The upcoming election of officers to the University cleri- cals union is sparking another round of debate between factions within the new United Auto Workers (UAW) local. A set of- new union bylaws and next year's contract demands will probably be the dominant issues in the January contest between the Unity Caucus and C l e r i c a 1 s for a Democratic Union (CDU). BOTH SIDES are already hint- ing strongly of a strike over the contract, to be negotiated next spring and summer. "T h e University probably won't consent to our demands without a strike," said Carolyn Weeks, CDU candidate for union president. "We want clericals to be so well informed on the process of the negotiations that when it comes time to vote, they will know just whether they want to go on strike or not." "We're going to take the Uni- versity all the way to the wall," asserted Susan McGee, an inde- pendent candidate for the bar- gaining team. "If the clericals know what they want and the bargaining team asks for it and the University won't give it to us, then we'll go on strike." Wheeler's tough leadership angers GOP council members By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI and DAVID WEINBERG Last of a series When Albert Wheeler began campaigning for the Mayor's seat last spring, he immediately became known for his gentle and un- assuming demeanor. Slight in stature and apparently mild man- nered, he didn't seem capable of using political strong-arming to run the city. It-didn't seem possible that he could lose his temper. One couldn't imagine him raising his voice. But in his seven months in office, Wheeler has quietly ruled _ the city with an iron hand, proving beyond the shadow of a doubt that he has what it takes to be a commanding mayor. SOME observers say that Wheeler has become too powerful, HOWEVER, as the two politi- cal factions scramble for their electorate's approval, a separate movement to withdraw from the UAW altogether appears to be gaining strength on campus. Approximately 400 of the 3,200 clericals within the local have signed cards in a withdrawal drive, according to Pat Burris, one of the clericals coordinating the effort. Another 700 signatures would have to be collected by March or April, however, before the Michigan Employment Relations Commission would be authorized to call for a University-wide clerical vote on the issue. MUCH OF the dissatisfaction with the union which has led to the withdrawal drive can be traced to the bitter controversy between CDU and Unity Cau- cus, both sidesagree. The debate has centered on the bylaws, which will define the union's b a s i c governing structure. CDU recently won approval for a set of bylaws which places the highest authority of the lo- cal in the hands of the mem- bershin and permits payments