Ninety-Three Years of Editorial Freedom V' LitFI13U IE aIIQ Precipitous Cloudy today with a high in the mid- 40; 50 percent chance of rain tonight with a low in the mid-30s. XCIII, No. 142 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, March 31, 1983 Ten Cents Ten Pages Surprise testimony implicates Klan sman in murder By GEORGEA KOVANIS A surprise witness yesterday testified that former FBI informant Gary Thomas Rowe did not kill civil rights worker Viola Liuzzo 18 years ago in Alabama. Flossie Creel said in U.S. District Court in Ann Arbor that Ku Klux Klan- sman Collie LeRoy Wilkins shot Liuzzo. Her testimony contradicts earlier statements by Wilkins and her ex- husband, Klansman Eugene Thomas, who said Rowe fired the fatal shots. LIUZZO'S FIVE children are suing the government for $2 million, charging' that the FBI inadequately supervised' Rowe when he was working as an un- dercover informant in 1965. The Liuzzo children say Rowe was responsible for their mother's death. Creel testified that shortly after the shooting, Thomas told her "the truth." "(Thomas) called me into the bedroom and said, 'come here, I want to talk to you,' " Creel told the court. * When I looked at him, he had tears gunning down his face," she said. "He 'said Wilkie (Wilkins) did it." 4CREEL SAID her former husband felt just as guilty as Wilkins becaue he had instructed Wilkins to shoot at Liuz- o's car. Liuzzo, a Detroit housewife, drove the family car to Alabama in 1965 to par- ticipate in the voters rights march bet- ween Selma and Montgomery, Ala. She vas driving a black march worker to Selma when shots coming from a passing car struck her. Rowe, Wilkins, Thomas, and Klan- sman William Eaton were in the car from which the shots were fired. ACCORDING TO Creel, telling the story was an emotional experience for Thomas. "I don't hardly remember ever seeing him cry about anything," she said. "It was very unusual for him to cry." Creel, who revealed her story for the first time ever in the courtroom yester- day said there were "lots of reasons" See NEW, Page 5 I Reagan reduce offers to nussiles WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan spelled out yesterday an offer to cut back on the deployment of nuclear missiles in Europe if the Soviet Union will dismantle part of its inter- r adiate-range arsenal. He bemoaned -'s refusal to scrap those weapui.. entirely, but said that shouldn't "further darken our search for peace." Reagan proposed that the United States cut back the planned installation of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles late this year if the Soviet Union agreed to reduce the number of warheads on medium-range missiles throughout the world. Both superpowers would be limited to an equal number of warheads on medium-range weapons. Reagan did not propose specific limits, and a senior administration official said that would be open to negotiation. REAFFIRMING HIS ultimate goal of eliminating all medium-range missiles, Reagan said "it would be better to nave none than to have some. But, if there must be some, it is better to have few than to have many." Speaking to NATO diplomats invited to hear his address, Reagan said, "If the Soviets will not now agree to the total elimination of these weapons, I hope they will at least join us in an in- terim agreement that would substan- tially reduce these forces to equal levels on both sides." Reagan said he was willing to con- sider any serious alternatives put on the table by Moscow. "THEIR FAILURE to make such a See U.S., Page 3 Reagan ... few better than many Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Carole Post of Women Against Pornography speaks at a conference on por- nography yesterday in Hutchins Hall of the Law Quad. Conference criticizes pornograp in media Defector says Andropov 'devoid of human worth' By JAN RUBENSTEIN Pornography - in films, magazines, and advertising - gives women no identity other than their sexual parts and promotes male domination in relationships with women, a representative of a New York-based anti-pornography group said last night. - Opening a three-day conference on "Pornography, Censorship, and the First Amendment," Carole Post, of Women Against Pornography, said that male sexuality today is based on dominance and aggression, a stuation promoted by the existence of pornography. POST presented a series of slides of magazine and advertising photos, billboards, and movie posters, all of which use bondage, sexual objec- tification, child pornography, or even "snuff" pornography - in which women are mutilated or killed - to relay their message. One- slide showed a billboard promoting the Rolling Stone's album Black and Blue, in which an attractive woman is bound and beaten and says, "I'm black and blue from the Rolling Stones and I love it." Post cautioned viewers against the See PORN, Page 5 By JODY BECKER The highest ranking Soviet official ever to defect.told a crowd at Rackham last night that Soviet Premier Uri An- dropov is "a man devoid of human worth." Arkady Shevchenko, former Undersecretary General to the United Nations, told the crowd of about 300 that Andropov "seems to work like a computer, but with some sense of humor and a sharp mind." Shevchenko said Andropov is unusual among Soviet leaders in two respects: He was chairman of the KGB (Soviet secret police), and has been successful in establishing him- self as the top figure in Soviet politics with amazing speed."It is almost as if Brezhnev's 18 years of rule never existed," he said. DESPITE Andropov's peculiarity, Shevchenko stressed that there is nothing "new" about the current leadership in the Soviet Union. He said the same 13 members of the Soviet Politburo still control the government. "However," he said, "I see this as some kind of an im- provement. During the last five years, Brezhnev was nothing more than a living corpse. He died, in my opinion, not last year, but fives year's ago." In explaining the fundamentals of contemporary Soviet government, Shevchenko said the Soviet Union maintains "no democratic institutions in the Western sense" and that the Soviet Supreme (comparable to the U.S. Senate) is primarily a figurehead organization which meets twice. a year to sign budget and policy proposals that have been drawn up within the Politburo, a group which he says wields "a tremendous over-concentration of power." "HE FURTHER stated that the media portrayal of An- dropov as a more liberal and dovish leader is largely due to hype" created by American journalists. "The non- aggression pact, suggested summit - these are nothing ew, but the same as the provisions of the NATO and Warsaw pact agreements." The diplomat, whose defection surfaced allegations of a drinking problem and liaison with an American woman, as reported by the New York Times, spoke primarily about general political issues rather than his personal reasons for political dissidence and his decision to seek asylum in the United States. See SOVIET, Page 6 Prof. says comparison * of SATs unnecessary By JAN RUBENSTEIN The American College Board's an- nual release of state-by-state averages for students who took the Scholastic Ap- titude Test (SAT) serves no educational purpose and creates unnecessary com- petition among states, according to a University education professor., "I don't see any particular good that comes out of knowing whether Michigan students score higher or lower than Indiana students or Ohio students," said Frank Womer , a professor in the School of Education. "I don't see states or educational systems in competition with each other." 'WOMER > SAID the state-by-state SAT averages are often misused and misinterpreted by the media and some educators. This results in false pride for the 20 to 25 states that score above the national average and unnecessary cries to upgrade the quality of education in states which score below the average. The problem, Womer said, is that states with a low percentage of students taking the SAT almost always have a higher average, simply because the students who do elect to take the test are among the most capable. Similarly, when 30 percent or 60 percent of studen- ts take the SAT, a large proportion of those students cannot be among the highest achievers in the state. "I do not know of any systematic testing that is designed to compare the achievement of students within the various states," he said. "Changes (over time) in SAT scores can be meaningful but comparisons cannot be." According to Lance Erickson, associate director of Undergraduate Admissions, the University ignores the state-by-state SAT averages. "IF IT was used appropriately, that knowledge would always be of value. But there are inappropriate com- parisons made, frequently by politicians rather than public educators," Erickson said. When people make declarations z bout the educational superiority of their state based on these averages, "it makes somebody look good. The state's Secretary of Education looks good. That's a political statement, not an See SAT, Page 2 Mayoral candidates debate as election nears By THOMAS MILLER Though clearly the forgotten man in this year's mayoral race, American In- dependent Party candidate Paul Jen- sen stole the show at last night's can- didates' debate by reading from John F. Kennedy's 1960 inaugural address. Jensen, who added little to discussion of the issues, joined Republican incum- bent Louis Belcher, Democratic challenger Leslie Morris, and a crowd of about 150 people gathered at the Michigan Theater for the debate. AS USUAL, much of Morris' speaking time was devoted to assailing Belcher, especially on his supposed mishandling of the Ann Arbor Airport expansion. "We have a weak mayor form of See CANDIDATES, Page 5 Doily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Mayor Louis Belcher and councilwoman Leslie Morris, his Democratic opponent in this year's mayoral race, argue the issues at a debate last night at the Michigan Theater. ToDAY - * Glowing discovery STUDENTS WORRIED about that little surprise their roommate has beenpromising them for the last few days can breathe a little easier now. The Potentially radioactive exit sign stolen from the Michigan Union last week has been returned safe and snnd. The thieves annarentlv abandoned the sign at the Arthur Solari with the University's Radiation Control cen- ter. Can-it NEXT TIME YOU make a beer run, pick up a couple of cans of corn or pears. Not for you, silly, but for the hungry of the county. The Michigan Student Assembly and the registrar's office have launched a campus-wide canned food drive for the Salvation Army and need your support. You'll find food barrels placed at the front desk of all dorms Michigan Union's Pendleton Room. Shapiro will be inter- viewed by reporters from the Daily and the Ann Arbor News and a faculty member. Audience members also may submit written questions. Next week, Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost will be the guest, followed by Prof. Mary Ann Swain, chairman of the Budget Prioritees Committee, on April 14. E " 1955 - At a state hearing discussing plans to re-name Michigan State College, University President Harlan Hat- cher said using the name Michigan State University "would be an ethical and legal infringement on the name of the University of Michigan." " 1963 - The University announced plans to install a "Centrex" phone system which would allow direct dialing to 10,500 phones which were previously accessible only through the University operator. - I k I i