=Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 23, 1986 Campus group discusses ethics and ' - (Continued from Page 1) administration) ignore us any more than they ignore any other group that they ask advice from." At the same time, Chamberlin says he really isn't sure what happens to the ideas generated by CIVS and Steneck's work. Still, he says, "CIVS plays a fairly effective advisory b role." CIVS member Carl Cohen, a philosophy professor Is equally confident that CIVS is effective in its relatively insular manner. "CIVS fer- . tilizes the atmosphere. I don't think its word spreads much, but it creates an ambience around those who par- ticipate," he says. Chamberlin says, "Nick Steneck seems to spend a lot of time writing up documents, so I assume they are read and do affect thinking." Steneck himself wouldn't be so sure. "We're talking about very dif- ficult areas where almost nobody has any impact. It's hard to have any im- pact." * * * * * * The University of Michigan is what Derek Bok, president of Harvard University, refers to as a. "multiuniversity" in his book "Beyond the Ivory Tower: Social Responsibilities of the Modern University." Bok articulates his fun- damental belief that a University should not project any one or set of values onto the greater society. "In recent years, the sharpest con-. flicts have come when activists have urged the institution to respond in some collective fashion to the social needs and problems that are not of it's own making," according to Bok. Bok further contends that, "Those who administer universities must also try to demonstrate their concern by seizing the initiative and identifying ethical issues before they emerge from the pages of the campus newspaper or the demands of some community group or student faction." Like Harvard, Michigan is recognized internationally as a "cen- 'ter of excellence"-one of the premiere research institutes in America. The University maintains strong links with both government agencies and private business and in- dustry, the research and development phases of a vast variety of technologies are carried out in University laboratories and offices. Those ties represent the source of significant financial backing for research conducted at the University. But the research recognition is not without cost to the University com- munity, warn some faculty mem- bers. IT may also offer an explanation for the relatively low profile and inac- tivity of CIVS. Where moral issues clash with money issues, the silence can be deafening, some say. Although Bok's book takes a con- servative perspective, he thoroughly examines the dilemmas a respon- sibilities of the "multiuniversity." Says Bok, "Society can legitimately ask that universities be responsive to social needs in return for the public support they receive. But what society has paid for and what it expec- ts in return are educational programs and new discoveries reather than boycotts or political campaigns." From an office in the Fleming Building on Regents Plaza, Frye echoes the voice coming from Har- vard Yard. According to Frye, the University is in the business of preserving academic freedom, not making moral statements. "The University is not in the position to deny people the privilege to think as they want. The overwhelming concern of the Univer- sity," says Frye, "is to protect freedom of inquiry-and we're rarely able to judge morality." "When it comes down to arms issues, the CIA, the University must be extraordinarily careful," Frye says. I wouldn't say never, but only under the most extraordinary cir- cumstances should the University take a stand, because nobody really knows. FRYE SAYS there was "relatively little feedback from the faculty" regarding Sept. 20 regental resolution "encouraging" Strategic Defense Initiative research on campus. "What I'm really upset about," says Political Science Prof. J. David Singer, a CIVS member, "is that Billy Frye really believes that most political issues are really matters of value and morality, and not subject to scientific scrutiny. My own research is a beautiful counter-example," says Singer, who is the Director of the Correlates of War Project. "Some weapons systems like the MX have been slowed down tremen- dously," says Singer, pointing to the potential of CIVS in critically scrutinizing the advent of SDI resear- ch on campus. "Thoughtful, well organized groups could conceivably stop this weapons system (SDI) before field testing starts. Many pros think that on balance the missile defense system is disfunctional and threatens national security. Of course the evidence is never all in regarding the consequence of a decision," says Singer in reference to the regents' Star Wars resolution, "but if we're always waiting for all the evidence we'll be perpetually immobilized." ' * * * * * * Behind the combination-locked door and through a maze of identification- only access hallways sits professor1 Bill Kerr, director of the Phoenix Project nuclear reactor on North Campus. Kerr has been director of the Project, dedicated to the peaceful uses of nuclear energy since the 1960s. "Appalled isn't quite the right word," says Kerr, "but close," in registering his reaction to the "so- called objective at the University that any values are all right as long as you've thought about it. Freedom of, inquiry is not the be all andendrall. I think it's important, but there are some occasions where some things, override it." Faculty dependence on research funding from various government and business concerns distorts the University's function, according to, Kerr. "I think perhaps we do not put enough emphasis on an integrated undergraduate environment," he says. "The bright, aggressive ones (undergraduates) who really work at it can do well, but it seems to me the The University of Michigan Club of New York invites The Class of '86 to start reminiscing at THE BIG CHILL REUNION principal motivation for people here is research and publishing, and the un- dergraduates just get in the way." Says Kerr, "the conventional wisdom tells us that the great teachers are the ones who are rolling back the frontiers. In some cases that's true, but then some couldn't care less." Bassett snubbed by CIVS By JODY BECKER For years, David Bassett, associate professor of internal medicine, has been actively pushing for the Univer- sity to address issues of values and science. Though he has expressed his interesthon numerous occasions, Bassett has not been nominated for participation in CIVS. In November 1983, Bassett requested the formation of a con- ference on potentially harmful research. "They decided that it might be wiser to change the name of it,'' says Bassett, "and so they created the committee on Academic Freedom and Academic Responsibility (AFAR)." Bassett describes the function of AFAR over the past three years as "a very strange thing. We met vigorously for about three months," said Bassett: But the group, which was headed by CIVS director Steneck, is now defunct. BASSETT POINTS out that the very language used in naming the group was an issue. The main sticking point was form ally addressing research with a "harmful intent." "That's when we have to sort of wade through the words and finally get to the issues some of us wish the University would grapple with. I have the impression that Nick (Steneck) is willing to give more attention to academic freedom than to academic responsibility." Bassett contends that most professors' overriding concern is to avoid antagonizing potential sources of funds. "Time after time I'm fin- ding the bottom line is dollars," says Bassett. The assertion that the University is or should be a "values free" in- stitution, as Frye advocates, is misguided, according to Bassett. "It's not really (values free). Academic freedom is the ultimate value, at the pinaccle," Bassett says. "There have been historically some compromises of academic freedom. But the Univer- sity must address how does it, should it or can it decide," when to restrict research. Bassett is the author of an article which argues that the ultimate values of the physician should render him- morally opposed to military activity and war. The article has been rejec- ted by three medical and scholarly journals. "It could be that the article is too long, verbose, that the ideas aren't important," says Bassett. "Or there is a resistance to airing these sorts of controversial issues." If Bassett's ex- perience in trying to introduce his concerns to the University's machinery is any indication, his second guess might be more accurate. "My question is, are those in the administrative positions hearing what the public thinks, believes or feels," says Bassett, who has expressed con- cern with the recent selection of engineering prof. James Duderstadt as vice president for academic affairs and provost when Frye departs later this month. "My view is that- most people, as they move into the higher echelons, find it easier to separate 'think' and 'feel.' The feeling component is aborted." Statements such as Frye's, that CIVS must be a place for University faculty to "think critically," are distressing to Bassett, who has been aggressive in his attempts to get the University faculty and administration to deal more directly with what he considers the urgent issue of academic responsibility. Bassett con- tends that those who might make ap- peals outside of the realm of a strictly academic or intellectual context are not welcome in any "serious" discussion. "This is talking among colleagues and friends with equal intellectual capacity," says Steneck. "We stay away from impassioned arguments." "You can be defamed if you show any emotion," says Bassett. "I think it's part of the heart of the problem." IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Soviets claim 5 U.S. planes downed in Libyan mission MOSCOW - The Soviet Union, in what one diplomat called an attempt to convince Americans "their government is lying to them," charged yesterday the United States has hidden the true extent of its losses in the raid on Libya. The United States has acknowledged that one F-111 fighter-bomber was lost in the April 15 attacks on Tripoli and Benghazi, and five other F-ills and two A-6 carrier-based jets aborted their missions because of mechanical failures. But Foreign Ministry spokesman Vladimir Lomeiko said yesterday that Soviet intelligence using "national technical means" - intelligence methods such as spy satellites - determined at least five U.S. planes were lost in the raid. "Two aircraft were discovered on the ground and two were lost, as it was regarded by national technical means," Lomeiko said. British round up 21 Libyans LONDON - Twenty-one Libyans, including a pilot who volunteered to form a suicide squad to attack U.S. targets, were taken into custody yesterday for "revolutionary activity" and the government vowed to quickly deport them. Also yesterday, a judge refused to set bail for suspected Palestinian terrorist Nezar Hindawi, charged with attempting to blow up an Israeli El Al jetliner last week. Hindawi, whose hearing in Lambeth Magistrates Court was held under extremely tight security, was ordered to appear in court again on May 1. Explosives experts blew up a car suspected of containing a bomb but the threat turned out to be "a false alarm," police sources said. The 21 Libyans, many of them students, were rounded up during early morning raids across the country. A Home Office spokesman said they will be flown back to Libya "very shortly, as soon as the logistics of flights can be arranged." U.S. to comply with SALT 2 WASHINGTON - President Reagan, avoiding more complications to a superpower summit, will comply with SALT 2 when a new Trident sub- marine goes to sea next month but reserves the right to exceed arms limits if militarily necessary, officials said yesterday. Administration officials said Reagan will order two older, 16-missile Poseidon submarines dismantled when the Trident, the USS Nevada, begins its trials and pushes the United States past SALT 2 limits on multiple-warhead strategic missiles. But that message, conveyed to U.S. allies this week before Reagan heads to the Economic Summit in Tokyo, is qualified by a warning that SALT 2 limits will be exceeded in the future if there are clear military reasons to do so. "What we're really doing is putting the onus on the soviets," said one official, "We're saying, 'We went the extra miles last June, we're going an extra half-mile now and we've given the Soviets some extra time to decide whether they will reciprocate.' Prices decline .4% in March WASHINGTON - Another big dip in gas prices knocked retail costs down 0.4 percent in March for the second straight month, and prices declined at an annual rate of 1.9 percent in the first quarter - the largest drop in nearly 32 years, the Labor Department said yesterday. The quarterly drop in consumer prices, due almost entirely to a collap- se in oil prices, was the largest since a comparable fall was recorded in the third quarter of 1954, when the index fell back by 2.1 percent. White House spokesman Larry Speakes called the report part of "the continuing good economic news," but used the occasion to rebuke Congress for overspending. "The president will continue to urge Congress to take responsible action and keep the positive economic momentum building," he said. The Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers, adjusted for seasonal variations, declined by 0.4 percent in both February and March following a 0.3 percent gain in January, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. W. Germany expels diplomats from Libyan mission in Bonn BERLIN - West Germany, under U.S. pressure to take steps against Libya in response to terrorism, will expel most of the 41 diplomats and employees at the Libyan mission in Bonn, government sources said yesterday. The disclosure came as West Berlin authorities said a link "can be deduced" between Libya and a Palestinian man arrested in connection with the April 5 bombing of a West Berlin nightclub. But a spokesman for the West Berlin Justice Department said Ahmed Nawat Mansur Hasi, 35, who had lived in the U.S. occupied sector of West Berlin for some time, probably was not the mastermind of the attack on the popular dance club. The suspect, who carried a Jordanian passport, is the brother of Nezar Hindawi, also 35, who is being held in London for a foiled attempt to plant a time bomb aboard an Israeli jetliner. 01Ihe Mich~igan Dat6ig Vol. XCVI - No. 139 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. Thursday, May 15 at 9 p.m. to ? The Cat Club. 76 East 13th Street Between 4th Avenue and Broadway, New York City $6.00 per person for you and your guests all night. Please alert fellow Wolverines about this event. Students need to present I. D. For information about party, call (212) 689-4522 For information about Club, call (212) 675-4303 ' II Last chance to eqtI X\1t one your Now that you've made it through college, ask your parents for a graduation present to help you get through life. A Macintoshmpersonal computer. If you're headed off into the business world, we highly recom- mend our new Macintosh Plus. Between its one megabyte of RAM, 128K of ROM and double- sided 800K internal disk drive, it lets you put all the power of a comer office on a single corner of your desk. If your parents buy the idea of a Macintosh, but feel like maybe they've donated enough to your future the past four years, there's always our newly en- hanced Macintosh 512K with its added 800K internal disk drive and 128K of ROM. It's considerably more afford- able, yet still has enough power to run hundreds of leading software programs. Besides, you can al- ways upgrade your Macintosh 512K up to a Macintosh Plus later. Of course,with either Macin- tosh, you get our advanced point- and-click mouse technology that makes using them easier than passing Pinball Theory 101. So you can immediately be pro- ductive, without taking a course. in remedial computing. To learn more, visit your campus microcomputer center. Soon. paront money i Editor in Chief .............. ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor ......... RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor ............... JERRY MARKON Features Editor.............CHRISTY RIEDEL NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Marc Carrel, Dov Cohen, Adam Cort, Laura Coughlin, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Amy Goldstein, Susan Grant. Stephen Gregory, Steve Herz, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Amy Mindell, Caroline Muller, Kery Mura- kami, Jill Oserowsky, Joe Pigott, Kurt Serbus, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Cheryl Wistrom. Opinion Page Editor ........... KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor. . HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Chinnock, Peter Ephross, Leslie Eringaard, Gayle Kirshen- baum, Peter Mooney, Susanne Skubik, Caleb Southworth. Arts Editor............... NOELLE BROWER Associate Arts Editor..........BETH FERTIG Books................REBECCA CHUNG Film............. ..... SETH FLICKER FeatrecAi AN PfAMl Sports Editor ............... BARB McQUADE Associate Sports Edttors. . DAVE ARETHA, MARK BOROWSKY, RICK KAPLAN, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL SPORTS STAFF: Emily Bridgham, Debbie deFrances, Liam Flaherty, JoncHartmann, Darren Jasey, Christian Martin, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Duane Roose, Jeff Rush, Adam Schefter, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan. Business Manager.. ..DAWN WILLACKER Display Sales Manager ...CYNTHIA NIXON Assistant Sales Manager.. KATHLEEN O'BRIEN Classified Manager ...... GAYLA BROCKMAN Finance Manager.......... MIKE BAUGHMAN Marketing Manager ........... JAKE GAGNON DISPLAY SALES: Eda Benjakul, Diane Bloom, Phil Educate, Albert Ellenich, Debbie Feit, Mason Franklin, Heidi Freeman, Traci Garfinkel, John Graff, Jennifer Heyman, Beth Horowitz, Debra Led- erer, Parker Moon, Carol Muth, Debra Silverman, David Zirin. MSU lifts 'film ban 1 J i A