Ninety-Three Years of Editorial Freedom C I tr Lit iau 1IaiQ Shiver Partly cloudy with a chance of flurries. High in the mid-20s. Wol. XCIII, No. 134 Copyright 1983; The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, March 22, 1983 Ten Cents Eight Pages A Facultypasses research p By LISA CRUMRINE The faculty Senate Assembly voted yesterday 40-15 in favor of an amended version of non-classified research guidelines drafted last month by the Research Policies Committee. The new guidelines prohibit faculty from conducting any University research of which the "substantial pur- pose is to destroy or permanently in- capacitate human beings." The policy also calls for the schools and colleges to review their own faculty'sresearch, rather than for a central University oversight committee, which some professors had advocated. THE RESOLUTION asks the central administration to appoint a central committee to monitor the procedure adopted by the individual schools and colleges. The vote capped an 18-month, examination of the University's policies regarding military-sponsored resear- ch. A Senate Assembly member originally asked in August, 1981, that the body look at the possibility of in- creasing Pentagon influence over University research. Critics of defense research called yesterday's action a weak resolution of the long debate. They had supported the idea of a central oversight Committee and retention of the University's present guidelines that prohibit research "the clearly foreseeable and probable result of which ... is to destroy human life." SOME 80 people gathered outside the Rackham Building before yesterday's meeting. About 60 critics of defense research competed for attention with about 20 supporters of the new ilicy guidelines, most of whomwere from the engineering college. Research Policies Committee Chairman Robert Moyers defended his committee's recommendation before yesterday's vote. "The majority of our committee feels the new resolution responds ap- proximately to the charge given us, in terms of freedom of inquiry and ap- propriateness of research at the University," said Moyers. But Ben Davis, one of the student members of the committee who issued a minority report, said, "The proposal is not a compromise. Instead, it reflects the opinion that no restrictions should be imposed on research. We must have more than defined procedures. A See FACULTY, Page 2 Daily Photo by WENDY GOULD Students march to the Rackham building after an afternoon rally to protest military research, while pro-academic freedom signs left by other students decorate a snowman, prior to the faculty senate's meeting yesterday afternoon. I Family blames FBI for fatal shooting of mother 4 By GEORGEA KOVANIS The children of civil rights worker slain 18 years ago in Alabama in an Ann Arbor courtroom yesterday that an FBI in- formant killed their mother. The five children of Viola Liuzzo are suing the federal government for $2 million, alleging that Thomas Rowe, who worked as an FBI informant on matters involving the Ku Klux Klan, was respon- sible for their mother's death. THE SUIT, brought by Tony, Tommy, Sally, Penny, and Mary Liuzzo, charges the FBI with negligence in failing to prevent Liuzzo's death. The plaintiffs also say the FBI didn't provide enough super- vision and training to Rowe and let him participate in illegal activities. Liuzzo traveled to Alabama in March of 1965 to participate in a voter rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala. The Detroit housewife used her car to shuttle march leaders between Selma and Mon- tgomery. Liuzzo was killed by gunshots which came from a passing car containing Rowe, and Ku Klux Klan members Collie Leroy Wilkins, Eugene Thomas, and William Eaton. It was first believed that Rowe only pretended to shoot, and that the bullets came from one of the KKK member's guns. THE CHILDREN, however, now believe differently. They think Rowe fired a gun and that it was this bullet which killed her. "This, your honor is negligence . . . (which) produced the death of our clients' mother, Viola Liuzzo," the Liuzzo children's attorney Dean Robb told Judge Charges Joiner. Attorneys for the plaintiff also showed a brief film depicting the mood of the voting right march. Sally Liuzzo burst into tears upon seeing the film clip, which showed pictures of her mother and contained an interview with Rowe. Ann Robertson, representing the FBI, countered the allegations, saying "the presence of Gary Thomas Rowe in that car solved the crime." Robertson said she ex- pects to show the court that the bureau did a thorough job of investigating Rowe and of training him. REV. FRED Shuttlesworth testified that he met Liuzzo at the march, and described her as a "beautiful, young, lady and we thought she was tremendously concerned with human rights." Former klansman Eugene Thomas, who See SLAIN, Page 7 Spring Skiing Liuzzo ... claims FBI was negligent Nancy Benish and Kerry Brayton take advantage of yesterday's unusually seasonal weather by skiing down State Street on their way to the Arb. i Dow denies exerting pressure on EPA ,WASHINGTON (UPI)-Dow Chemical Co. President Paul Oreffice said yesterday pressure to delete material critical of his firm in an EPA report on dioxin contamination came from Washington, not from Dow.. Oreffice, interviewed on NBC's "Today" show and ABC's "Good Mor- ning America" program, also said "there is no health problem" in the Midland, Mich., area around a Dow plant where dioxins are generated in the manufacturing process. He said the first Dow knew of the study when it was leaked to a Canadian newspaper. Acting EPA chief John WHernandez is accused of letting Dow delete portions of the report critical of the firm. "PEOPLE STARTED calling us about it. We asked the EPA for some in- formation about it. They sent us a draft' and asked us for a scientific opinion," he said. Oreffice said review by a firm is not unusual, and in this case "most of the technology in that report was developed by Dow scientists." Such reviews, he said, are common in the context of "peer review" of scientific work. Portions of the report critical of Dow were eliminated, and Oreffice, asked how much pressure Dow might have applied to Hernandez to permit changes in the report, replied, "For our part, none." "WE MADE one comment to the Chicago EPA. Our scientist spoke to one of their scientists" suggesting some changes. "The next thing we knew there was pressure coming from Washington," he said. The pressure, he said, was "strictly internal" and from "someone in Washington. We applied absolutely no pressure." Oreffice conceded the final report was less critical of Dow than had been See DOW, Page 7 JU3e0 At u8 o~y&&t i 5 not con Frat party draws f accusations of racism By GLEN YOUNG Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity's annual "Jungle Party" has drawn criticism and accusations of racism from leaders of the University's black community. At the fraternity's event last Satur- day, at least three partygoers painted their entire bodies black to look like jungle natives. The party's theme calls for people to come as some character from the jungle, and fraternity mem- bers said yesterday that there was no racial slur intended. BUT BLACK leaders -contacted by the Daily yesterday said they were of- fended, but not surprised, by the ac- Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK See BLACKS, Page 3 Some of the attendants of the an- nual Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity 'Jungle' party came dressed as jungle natives. The native dress has drawn charges of racism from leaders of the black student community. TODAY Congressional comparisons Y OU'D THINK that in a 13-hour congressional de- bate, like the one the House had the other day on a proposed nuclear weapons freeze, lawmakers careless chess game." Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.) said the resolution, in calling for what amounted to both a freeze and a reduction, had become "a carnivorous vegetarian." Speaker Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass) didn't offer an analogy; just some fractured English. He kept referring to the "mutual and verifiable" freeze as "a variable freeze." Secret spirits THE VILLAGERS in Aaseral, Norway were in fine spir- its recently - until their sober elders discovered an answer calls for 12 businesses because of an error in the new telephone directory. Southwestern Bell's 1983 Yellow Pages correctly listed Millerman and Millerman's telephone number - but then gives the same number of 11 other agencies in an joint ad by the Independent Insurance Agents of Abilene. Southwestern Bell spokesman Jay Allen said that the data was either entered incorrectly into a computer or at the book's printer. Nothing can be done about the numbers now, and the 12 insurance agencies will have their money refunded, Allen said. O * 1976 - The University's DNA research policy group gave the go-aheaad for professors to engage in most forms of controversial genetic research. * 1977 - A $39,000 study commissioned by the Mayor's Blue Ribbon Committee on Fair Rental Practices con- cluded that Ann Arbor housing is expensive, scarce, and of low quality. O On the inside... .I i i