Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 26, 1976 DNA issue: doubts remain (Continued from Page 1) microbiologists approached the Regents at t h e i r November meetingrandrequested approval for the reconstruction and reno- vation of laboratories for the experiments. THE REGENTS approved the request, but news of their de- cision sparked a highly emo- tional reaction in the Univer- sity; by the time of the Decem- ber session, several individuals and groups petitioned them to wait until public discussion of the issue could be heard. The Regents agreed. Early in March a two-day pub- lic forum was held at Hill Audi- torium, in which speakers from both sides of the controversy clashed in furious debate. Proponents of the research spoke glowingly of the possible benefits it could bring to hu- manity: freedom from disease, new crops to feed the world's hungry, and perhaps bold new solutions to the problems of pol- lution. Aside from such prac- tical matters, they argued, the research would mean new knowledge, the breaking down of ignorance. THE CRITICS of DNA experi- *mentation, for their part, paint- ed a grim, apocalyptic picture of a world devastated by power- ful, unstoppable plagues; a frightening scene straight out of Crichton's "Andromeda Strain." to the research, the report of But we have precautions, the Committee B was reviewed and biologists countered. approved by several administra- The critics replied, what if tive and faculty organizations they're not enough? within the University, and was Later in March Committee B presented to the Regents. save its long-awaited verdict: Butithe Board, at the urging recombinant DNA r esaea rc h of- citizen groups, decided to should be allowed to proceed un- wait aonther month and listen der certain very stringent con- to more public input before ditions which it proceeded to making a decision. An open dis- outline in detail. cussion session, with the Re- gents. in attendance, was held YET THE Committee B . re- early in May; opinions differing port contained a lone voice of only slightly from those pre- dissent, that of History Prof. sented at the March forum were Shaw Livermore. Livermore op- heard. posed the research, not because On Friday, May 21, the Re- of any danger involved in it, gents met for their final deci- but on strictly moral grounds. stun. A motion to table discus- His minority opinion posed the sion of the research issue until delicate philosophical problem June (on grounds that expert of Humanity's responsibility in testimony against the research tampering with the fine mech- had not been available), was anisms of the universe. derailed, and the Board pro- Despite additional opposition ceeded to its vote. Six Regents voted to accept the Committee B report; only one refused. Recombinant DNA research at the University of Michigan was given the green light. PRESIDENTIAL GOLFERS FAR HILLS, N. J. (A -- A driver and a golf ball used by President Ford has been added to the US Golf Association mu- seum here. Ford is the eighth U. S. president to have some of his golfing memorabilia on dis- play at the USGA golf house. Ford's former equipment joins golf items used by Wood- row Wilson, William H. Taft, Warren G. Harding, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisen- hower, John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon. There is no admission fee at the golf museum. BERGMAN'S SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE WED. and THURS. MAY 26 & 27 MLB And. 3, 7 & 10 PEOPLES RICENTENNIAL COMMIsSION the "n arbor film cooperative TONIGHTI Robert Altman's 1973 THE LONG GOODBYE ,At m:a 's attempt tofinisah the myth of the private detective leves thima gasling but well at the end, a success every other w ay. Elliott GOuld's Marlowe is adrift in a corrupt and chaotic modero id ode upof a ssatchesot fcnversation aod strange rCseaontere . ofa a Altman'sc best, it tots deeper and wider every time you see it. Jim Bouton, Sterling Haydn, Mark ydeil.- AUD. A. ANGELL HALL 7 & 9 PM.--$1.25 Bloodshed continues in Lebanese war By The Associated Press Christians battled Christians and Palestinians fought Pales- tinians in Lebanon's bloody civil war yesterday as Presi- dent-elect Elias Sarkis sought to entice the various factions to roundtable peace talks. There were a half dozen other points of terror, tension and politics involving the volatile Middle East. A S U I T C A S E packed with explosives went off in the Tel Aviv airport, killing two persons, and United Nations Secretary - General Kurt Wald- heim left New York -for Da- mascus to try and extend the life of the U. N. peacekeeping force on the Golan Heights. At the United Nations in New York, the United States rebuff- ed an Arab attempt to have the Security Council deplore the establishment of Israeli settlements in occupied Arab territories. The 15-member council had been expected to approve a consensus statement expressing "anxiety," but sour- ces said America opposed at- tempts by Arab delegates to toughen a draft of the state- ment. Egypt had raised the issue, accusing Israel of mistreating Arabs in zones captured by the Israelis in the 1967 Mideast War. R A Y M O N D Edde, a mod- erate Lebanese Christian was shot in the leg by gunmen of the right-wing Christian Pha- lange party as Christian lead- ers tried to gain a united front against their leftist Moslem op- ponents. Edde was in good condition at the American University hos- pital in Beirut and the Phalan- gist chief, Pierre Gemayel, de- nounced the shooting. Earlier in Byblos, where Edde was shot as his car passed a Phalange roadblock, Phalan- gists and members of Edde's National Bloc fought a gunfight that left 18 persons dead. Byb- los is in a Christian enclave 20 miles north of Beirut. It was Palestinians against Palestinians in the southern port of Sidon where 11 gunmen were wounded in a shootout. It pitted Palestinians living in Lebanon and allied with the Moslem leftists against Syrian- based Palestinians of the Saiqa group. Syrian President Tafez Assad sent several thousand Saiqa Palestinians into Leba- non to try and enforce a cease- fire and their presence is re- sented by the Moslem-Palestin- ian alliance. r((4 "AN UPROARIOUS ROMP.-GOT THE AUDIENCE INTO ABANDONED GLEE" NORMAN GIBSON ANN ARBOR NEWS ann arbor inn, proudly prosents THURSDAYS-FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS AMERICA'S FUNNIEST" MUSICAL. A FUNNY / THING SAPPENED ON THE WAY To TIE FoRUM 2 Hour Musical Comedy. Cast of 14. 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