Ninety-five Years of :Editorial Freedom C I be Lit an if ail Shiver Variable cloudiness, breezy, and cold. Twenty percent chance of snow showers. Expected high near 20. Vol. XCV, No. 75 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, December 6, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages U___ ___ ____ ___ India death toll from poison gas tops From AP and UPI BHOPAL, India - The death toll from a poison gas cloud climbed past 1,600 yesterday amid fears of epidemics from hundreds of decomposing bodies and warnings of long-term health problems among the thousands injured in the world's worst chemical disaster. Injured wandered the streets, many of them blin- ded by the chemical that spread over their city as they slept Monday morning. An estimated 50,000 have been treated in hospitals overflowing with the suf- fering. THE DELAYED effects of the gas continued to claim more victims with more than 1,000 people still hospitalized with blinded, or inflamed eyes, seared lungs and vomiting. Authorities have confirmed 670 deaths, but poin- tedly added that they are not disputing the unofficial counts by doctors and newspapers. Doctors have said some of the injured, many of them children, may still die, be permanently blind or become sterile. THE MASS-CIRCULATION Hindustan Times newspaper, quoting unnamed doctors at Hamedia Hospital, said survivors who breathed the gas could develop lifelong lung, kidney and liver problems, and said pregnant women who were affected may give birth to retarded children. Officials said the collection of human bodies and thousands of animal carcasses was being hampered because the lower caste people who normally handled such tasks in India were among the worst affected by the accident. Teams of volunteers searched for bodies left in the stricken slum and carted them away along narrow, muddy paths as medical teams assessed environ- mental conditions and watched for any outbreak of disease. VASANT SATHE, minister of chemicals and fer- tilizer, said there was no shortage of medicine in 1,600 Bhopal and that the government was trying to fly in oxygen from New Delhi and Bombay. Union Carbide Corp. President Warren Anderson was due to arrive in India today with a team of technical experts and medical personnel from the United States. A preliminary investigation determined that 25 tons of deadly methyl cyanate spewed out of a U.S.- owned pesticide plant and engulfed Bhopal Monday, after a "runaway chemical reaction" caused a pressure buildup in an underground tank. AN INDIAN GOVERNMENT official called on Union Carbide, builder of the pesticide plant where the leak occurred, to provide relief for the thousands of victims "as it would have done had this accident occurred in the United States." A technician with Avasti said a safety valve failed to close and the flow of gas had to be stopped manually. See DEATH, Page 3 CIA faces camp us protests By KERY MURAKAMI . Sixty-three students who participated in a CIA protest at Brown University last month faced expulsion last night as they were brought before that Univer- sity's Council on Student Affairs. According to Brown senior Juliet Brodie, one of the protesters, fifteen minutes into a CIA recruitment meeting on November 14, demon- strators blew a whistle and made a citizen's arrest of the two represen- tatives. THE BROWN protest, like other demonstrations on college campuses around the nation including the Univer- Daily Photo by DAN HABIB sity of Michigan, illustrates the W indow pain growing opposition to the government intelligence branch's recruiting efforts. Michigan forward Richard Rellford lays-in two of his 20 points off the glass Last month at this University, a in last night's game against Youngstown State. Rellford led all scorers as the group of about 200 students demon- Wolverines beat the Penguins, 103-73. See story, page 8. strated at a CIA presentation at the 'U' takes two steps toward new diem, facility Modern Language Building, chasing the three agency representatives off campus. The protest at Brown forced the can- cellation of a CIA informational meeting, much like the protest here, but unlike Brown, no disciplinary ac- tion was taken or even publicly con- sidered for the University demon- strators. OFFICIALS at Brown are expected to make a decision on the possible ex- pulsin of the protesters by this morning, according to Brucie Harvey, a univer- sity spokesperson. The disciplinary panel is made up of faculty, administrators, and students, Harvey said. She said the protesters are being charged with "disrupting the exercise of others at their basic rights to which they are entitled to on campus." While the Brown incident has gained a considerable amount of media atten- tion in the last few weeks, it is just the latest in a string of protest at the nation's colleges. IN OCTOBER at Tufts University in Boston, twenty students formed a human chain between the CIA representatives and 50 students who came to hear the presentation. After a 45 minute stand-off, the recruiters left, but came back to con- duct interviews a few days later. A Tufts judicial committee found nineteen studentĀ§ guilty of creating a disturbance during the incident, but issued no punishments. JOHN ROOSA, who participated in the protest, said the committee recognized the motivation of the group and didn't take any formal disciplinary action. The protesters did not recognize the repercussions of their action, Roosa said. "We just thought that what we were doing was good, and didn't even think we would be punished for it." Unlike the Tufts demonstrators, Brown protesters were aware of the consequences. "We knew that we could face dismissal or suspension," Brodie said, "but we felt it was worth it." BROWN protesters said they were merely upholdinig the law by attem- pting to stop what they consider illegal activity by the CIA in countries like Nicaragua. "Our action wasn't just a symbol," Brodie said. "We felt the CIA should be held responsible for their actions." "They were soliciting students to commit illegal acts like the mining of harbors in Nicaragua," she said. See CIA, Page 3 3: By LAURIE DELATER The University took two significant steps toward building a riew classroom and laboratory facility for the chemistry *department after receiving the go-ahead from the state legislature and a $1.5 million gift from Dow Chemical Com- pany. Dow's gift, announced yesterday, is the first major con- tribution made toward the new facility and renovation of the existing chemistry building. The project is $60 million, ac- cording to Roy Muir, director of the University's capital ' ampaign. LAST MONTH the state legislature's Joint Committee on Capital Outlay approved the selection of an architect for a new 270,000 square foot chemical sciences building and allocated $472,600 to prepare initial technical drawings of the building. Construction is expected to begin in about two years, according to Prof. Robert Taylor, assocaite chairman of the chemistry department. So far only $20,000 has been raised from private donations, Muir said. Dow's donation is the largest single contribution the company has ever made. COMPANY spokesman Manson Carpenter said Dow, the second largest chemical company in the nation, has had long- standing ties with the University through research grants and scholarship and fellowship programs. The University is also a key recruiting ground, he added. "(The gift) had to do with the feeling that this is a very im- portant undertaking and the management has been very im- pressed with what the University is trying to do," Carpenter said. Money for renovation and expansion of the chemistry de- See DOW, Page 3 ... .......... ...... .. :..... ....................*.*..*.... .. .. .. ..*.. . .: : . . ... . :...... .. * . :... . .. .. .. .................,.......... .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................. . . . . . . . ........5.. . .. . . . . . :: : .:<:.. >: ..................................................................::...:.............. ........................ ...""............ . . . .....".... . . ... ........ .. ........... ... ...................... . . . ... ...... ...... . .................... ..-........... . . . ..........*....,...... . . . ** Former official G'U,' By ARONA PEARLSTEIN A former director of the University's Trotter house minority center, who claims he was unfairly fired from his job, has reached an out of court set- tlement with the University eighteen months after filing suit. John Powell was given a monetary award and his personal records were cleared of any mention of his firing. POWELL, WHO also served as Assistant Director of Community Ser- vices, was allowed to place a letter of resignation in his records with the University. Powell was fired in May, 1983 on charges of misconduct by the Univer- sity, including allegations that he bought food and liquor with University funds for staff at the Trotter House and permitted students in the house to make long-distance phone calls with Univer- sity funds. "I have never purchased food or liquor for anyone (at Trotter House). There were only one or two instances of problems with the long-distance phone calls," said Powell, now an ad- ministrative assistant with the See U, Page 3 Ik E. 3Y' NO,, Associated Press Thank God Even six inches of snow can't cover the praying hands sculpture at the City of Faith Hospital in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Yesterday's cold spell around the country was the first snow of the season for the area. r:5^: 'tu ry. ' wins case against 'U' 3S ..:................:.....t.. 1.. ..... .....t":::.. :"": ":::..."..4.....41".}:::.::.:::::.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..:.. .... . . . . ..:..: ::"::":"::.:.::........ ::::::...;. :::::Y:::l"{":.::i;'.i "L..:":" ::..:4.1.:1..." ... .4..v:::".......................................................... TODAY Fire alarm frustration T WAS NO TIME to be standing outside, especially with very little on. A fire alarm at South Quad flushed dorm residents out into the small sidewalk area in the 20 degree weather during lunch yesterday. A recent rash of fire alarms at the dorm have frustrated the students to the point that they have one favorite adjective to describe the situation. Yes, that favorite "f word." In showed his wisdom when he stated, "day alarms are never false." He was correct indeed. The cause of all the students' misery was an elevator engine that had overheated, according to fire department officials. Scrooge A PARTY STORE AND GAS STATION ON THE MAIN drag in Christmas, an Upper Peninsula Village of 300, won't be Santa's Post Office this year. Santa's helpers say the U.S. Postal Service pays worse than Scrooge at $1 a year. Dick and Sharon Miller, who own the store, have 12,000 greeting cards bearing the Christmas postmark and then routed through the Munising Post Office. Even though the Millers aren't doing the handstamping this year, there will still be greetings with the familiar post- mark. Al Gruetzmacher, Munising postmaster, has taken over the job but without the Santas and wreaths. Next year, however,-Gruetzmacher hopes to have a new com- munity contract station in Christmas. The job will be open to bidders, but won't be awarded on time for this year's holidays. Dick Miller, citing his experience, is among the bidders. But he says he wants more than $1 a year. supermarket parking lot told Chemung County Sheriff Deputy William Fitch "it was the first time she ever wore it and she wouldn't wear it again." Fitch answered a call of a "hysterical" woman trapped in a car in Elmira, N.Y. Sunday. Braving a stream of verbal abuse, the deputy climbed in the passenger's side, jabbed the buckle's but- ton a couple of times and managed to set the woman free. "She was rather highly upset," Fitch said. "She was very critical of the new law. I told her I didn't make the new law and I was just here to enforce it." Fitch said "it took a little doing" for him to open the belt buckle because it ap- parently had never been used even though the car ap- i I I I i