C, br Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, November 12, 1986 4v 4/ol. XCVII - No. 50 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ten Pages U' prof injured in plane crash By ROB EARLE A University physics professor is in critical but stable condition after his private plane crashed into Lake St. Clair yesterday morning. William Williams, 49, and his wife Shelly were taken to Bicounty Hospital in Warren,-Mich. after the Coast Guard pulled them out of the lake shortly after 8 a.m. Prof. Williams, the associate dean for research in LSA, is suffering from hypothermia. Mrs. Williams is in fair condition. COAST GUARD Lt. Mark Feldman, a member of the rescue team, said the Williams's floated in the 47 degree water for about half an hour before the rescuers arrived. The couple, flying a single-. engine Cessna 182, left Ann Arbor airport about 7 a.m., before the control tower opened, on a trip to New Haven, Conn. Feldman said ice formed on the plane's carburetor, cutting off fuel to the engine. The plane went down on the Canadian side of Lake St. Clair, about 15 miles southeast of Selfridge Air National Guard Base, which is near Mt. Clemens. FELDMAN said the rescuers at See PROF'S, Page 5 Forum. researe reviews a By MARTIN FRANK University faculty members, students, and administrators faced off last night in an emotional showdown over the University's policy covering the $150 million in research that goes on here every year. Those in favor of retaining the "end-use" clause, which prohibits research that can kill or maim human beings - and is in the current guidelines for classified research - fear that the amount of military research done at the University would rise dramatically if the clause were eliminated. OTHERS FEEL that the clause is not necessary because it either limits academic freedom or it is not required to preserve openness among the University community. Openness, as prescribed in the majority report released by an ad hoc committee which reviewed the current guidelines, normally means that all research results be made publishable one year after the sponsor's funding period has ended. The majority report "virtually bans classified research," according to committee member Rebecca Eisenberg. Besides the openness factor, the majority report allows researchers to have access to classified documents, but the results must be published five years after the funding period has ended. IT ALSO requires that research contracts be made available for public inspection, which, according to Eisenberg, makes the current review panels - the Research Policies Committee and the assessment, though, including Michigan Student Assembly military research advisor Ingrid Kock, who said the review panels are necessary because their elimination "removes faculty and students from the decision-making process." IN THE proposed guidelines, department heads, deans, and the Division of Research and 'I have the same foals of those who oppose military research-I don t want a nuclear winter-but I believe in a strong defense to accomplish that goal.' -Mark Jaffe, engineering student Classified Review Panel - obsolete. The ad hoc committee feels that the availability will serve as the enforcement mechanism. "The current regulations on classified research fail the openness test, and the proposals of the majority report meet the standards of other universities," said Eisenberg. Not everyone agrees with this Development Administration make the ultimate decision about any project that violates the rules. The current guidelines leave these decisions up to the review 'panels and the Vice President for Research. The proposed guidelines are currently being reviewed by campus groups such as MSA and the Research Policies Committee. See 'U', Page 2 Remembering Associated Press An unidentified man leans against the black granite Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. yesterday, seemingly in grief. The man was one of many people who visited the memorial on Veterans Day. The Studen directo vacant Dar Career Servic Mich., TH deeme hidden dream the Un Handicap servi By BRIAN BONET adding that she plans to make the University's Office of Disabled University's services "fully functional t Services has appointed a new and more operative." r, filling a position that has been Roselle Wilson, assistant to the vice for 14 months. president for student services, said, lys Topp, director of both the "We're really happy to have her accept Center and Handicapped Student the position. There's a real depth of es at Hope College in Holland, experience that Ms. Topp can bring to will assume the post Dec. 3. the University." E NEW YORK Times has Topp, who had her right leg and hip d Hope College's program "the amputated due to a rare form of cancer, jewel for the handicapped." "My has worked at Hope College for eight is to have a program as good at years. She has been the director of the iversity of Michigan," said Topp, college's Handicapped Student Services co es fills year-old since 1981 and was the assistant director aspect of the program," she said. for Handicapped Student Services at The University's Office of Di California State University from Student Services has been ru January 1975 to June 1978. temporary appointees since the TOPP CREDITS her success in director left in August 1985. D dealing with disabled students her this time, the quality of service ha personal experience and her college gone down, "but we were not a education, which focused on take new initiatives, design communication studies. programs, or formalize exi As a result of the appointment, linkages," Wilson said. Wilson is expecting notable TOPP SAID, "When I kne improvement in the quality of services position was open a year ago offered to disabled students. "We are timing wasn't right." But when sh anticipating improvements in every what disabled students were sabled un by e last uring as not ble to new ternal w the o, the e saw going vacancy through without a director and that the post was still open a year later, she decided to apply. "The need was there as far as the University was concerned, and my interest was there," said Topp. Wilson said it took the University so long to find a new director because the salary is lower than salaries for similar ~positions at other colleges. One applicant was offered the position last summer, but rejected the offer because See NEW, Page 5 Students at Brown to vote on Reagan impeachment plan By KELLY McNEIL Students at Brown University will vote today and tomorrow on whether to endorse a proposal to impeach President Reagan for alleged violations of U.S. and Winternational law. A group called Students for Ethical Government recently gathered more than the 500 signatures required to place the issue on Brown's student ballot. In a statement released last week, the group charged that the Reagan administration has disobeyed specific congressional orders in an attempt to overthrow the Nicaraguan government. THE STATEMENT also said Reagan approved a disinformation campaign to mislead the American media on U.S. relations with Libya. Students for Ethical Govern- ment's most serious claim is that the Reagan administration is hiding critical information about the Korean Airlines crash in 1983, which killed 269 people. The group recruited retired State Department official John Keppel, who is investigating the matter, to speak on the issue. Keppel told a standing-room- only crowd Monday night that the plane, which was shot down by Russian warplanes after it wandered into Soviet airspace, was actually a spy plane-as the Soviets charged-and that the Reagan administration approved the spy mission. John Bonifaz, the founder of Students for Ethical Government, said the size of the turnout is evidence that the Brown community is taking the impeachment issue seriously. HOWARD VINN, a well- known legal historian and political science professor at Boston University, endorsed the impeachment proposal during a speech yesterday and said he shared the group's opinion that the Reagan See BROWN, Page 2 Winter fashion Yesterday's chilly temperatures forced students to break out their winter wear for the first time this fall. LSA senior John Hanlon, above, wards off the cold with a genuine racoon cap he bought in Toronto. LSA sophomore David Soliz, upper left, relies on an orange hunting cap to keep the frosty air from nipping his ears. But Magir Shir, lower left, a staff member of the University's biology department, seems oblivious to the frigid temperatures as he munches on an ice cream cone. Temperatures are expected to be even colder today, but will rise by Friday, according to the National Weather Service. Doily Photos by PETE ROSS 'U' will allianvi publicC By PHILIP I. LEVY The University will participater in a group or 12 major publicf universities created to improve the quality of undergraduate education,c an administration spokeswomanl said yesterday. The creation of the group, thee "Alliance for Undergraduate Education," was announced yester- day at a meeting of the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges in ! Phoenix, Ariz. THE ALLIANCE will serve as a forum for ideas aboutt undergraduate education, according to Robin Jacoby, the University's representative to the group and assistant to the vice president for1 academic affairs.l Jacoby said the exact nature of the group has not yet been T determined, but she assumed the organization would identify important issues and then set up task forces to discuss them.t loin I Sof ~olleges The member universities would have their choice of which task forces to join, but Jacoby said the group probably could make any decisions mandating action by other participants. THE UNIVERSITY, how- ever, could be prompted to imitate other participants' policies. Jacoby speculated that one such change could be the creation of a University post to oversee all undergraduate education. The idea for the alliance began at Pennsylvania State University and the University of Minnesota 18 months ago, said Jacoby, and then progressed last summer. Other members include Ohio State University, the University of Illinois, the University of Wisconsin at Madison, and the University of California at Berkeley. The Associated Press contributed to this story. TODAY- Gobble 1urkeys are the focus of much attention this month, with the big feast and all. Although the INSIDE runners can enter at the CCRB, NCRB, or IMSB for $1. dollar.. Matchmaker, matchmaker T he advent of a new dating service took the campus by surprise last week in a Daily classified ad, offering free matchmaking services to anyone expect any response, but Evan does," Selinger said. If they receive no response, they plan on dropping the idea. It seems that Selinger has been receiving flak from the ad because his address was listed. "People from down the hall will come to my room asking if I really put that ad in the paper. They aren't too ready to believe we actually did." 77 POLITICAL FORUM: Opinion says MSA should take responsibility for its actions. See Page 4. M , e