Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII-- NO. 115 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - THURSDAY, MARCH 19,1987 COPYRIGHT 1987 THE MICHIGAN DAILY B AM takes action against ' Picketers hold Union boycott By WENDY LEWIS and EUGENE PAK In one of the largest protests on campus this year, more than 350 Black students converged on the Union yesterday to begin a new Black Action Movement. BAM organizers called for a 24-hour economic boycott of the Union, which ends today around 1 p.m. The protest began with a march and rally from the Rackham building to the Diag and ended three hours later after students had formed a revolving human chain around the front and north side of the Union. At the rally, BAM organizer Charles Wynder read off the 11 demands which they presented to the office of University President Harold Shapiro Tuesday. MSA minority affairs chair Lannis Hall said the administration has forgotten promises made after the 1970 BAM strike. "It's a memoir on the mantle; they have just left it to die." As members of the audience shouted "Black Power is real power," spokespersons for the movement said participation in the struggle is important at this University. "There is no one on this campus who will stand up for you unless you stand up for yourselves," said BAM organizer John Simpson. Michelle Johnson, a LSA junior, told the audience of another racial incident against Blacks on campus. As Johnson and a group of friends stood outside of South Quad last night a group of White males shouted, "You goddamn Black bitches," she said. "This University is going to be free for everybody or it's going to be free for nobody," said graduate student Anthony Henderson before students marched toward the Union. Loren Siebert, an engineering senior who was at the Union during the boycott said, "I think some of See BAM, Page 3 Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON. Lee Rudolph, president of Omega Psi Phi fraternity, gives the Black power students to the Union for a 24 hour boycott yesterday. BAM wants the ad- salute as he and other Black Action Movement (BAM) members lead over 300 ministration to act on their eleven demands to improve Black student life. X X; :.. ~-. !Tenure review extended, By WENDY SHARP Recent suggestions to extend the tenure review period from seven to 10 years has prompted heated debate among deans and faculty.1 With the University's present tenuTe review . process, faculty members must be notified by the seventh year if they will be granted tenure. They are allowed to remain with the University- for one year after the decision. If this period is extended, faculty would be reviewed in their ninth year. Gilbert Whitaker, dean of the business school, supports the extension. Whitaker said the extension would give administrators more flexibility when granting tenure and give faculty more opportunity to take part in "risky" research projects because they would have more time to complete them. William Stebbins, chair of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, holds the opposite view: "If you give (faculty members) three more years, they will expect three more years of scholarship," Stebbins said. "Six or seven years is plenty of time to judge a faculty member," he added. Whitaker believes more faculty may be given tenure if the period is See GROUP, Page 2 Regents will discuss rules for research ... .. ..,.. . . : . ' ..v.. ... ........x . .. . ...:: . .. . . .. ..... :: v ... .. v.. ": v}}}: : :::}}-} ;" .; .;:i "i: :;....... ..... .. .. ... ...v...: . .. . .. ............ .. .. ,. ..... .. .... .... .. .. ..... .. ..... .....:. ....... .... .:: :::.:"}i:r}C*.}}.*ii Res1 ents . about city services By JERRY MARKON f S Ann Arbor Mayor Ed Pierce was put on the defensive last night by First Ward residents concerned ab- out the city's rising crime rate, al- legedly poor city services, and law enforcement. The residents, at a forum for mayoral and city council candidates held at Community High School, charged that the city's Building Department failed to prevent Kappa Delta Rho fraternity from illegally leasing a house in the First Ward. The fraternity moved into a house at 711 Catherine Street last By STEVE KNOPPER Although the Board of Regents is not expected to vote on proposed changes in the University's classified research guidelines until next month, it will hold a special discussion on them before their meeting tomorrow. "There will be plenty of discussion in the next few days," said Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor). "We'll have to wait and see" about a vote on the guidelines. The agenda for this month's regents' meeting does not include a vote, according to Assistant to the Secretary of the University Doris Estep, but, she said, "nothing's ever certain." MEMBERS of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, the Michigan Student Assembly, and the ad hoc committee which was formed last term to review the current guidelines are expected to speak at today's discussion. The current guidelines for classified research utilize the "end- use" clause, which prohibits research that can be applied to killing or maiming human beings at the University. Non-classified research, however, has no such restrictions. In 1985, President Harold Shapiro appointed a 12-member ad hoc committee to review the current guidelines. Nine members signed the majority report, which eliminates the end-use clause in favor of a policy requiring researchers to publish all results within one year of completion of the project's funding period, except in special cases. All research contracts would also be made public. These rules would govern all forms of research, classified and non-classified. The other three members proposed the minority report, which stresses "academic freedom": the researcher's right to study any topic, and leaves individual decisions on controversial research up to the regents. Last term, SACUA, MSA, and the Research Policies Committee made their own recommendations for new guidelines. SACUA and MSA proposed extending the end- use clause to all forms of sponsored research, and the RPC recommended the majority report with a few revisions. The four student members of the RPC resigned in protest of the issue before it voted on its proposal last December. INSIDE The United Coalition Against Racism demands are justified. OPINION, PAGE 4 The Decline of the American Empire lacks shocking sexual revelations, which makes the film quite boring. ARTS, PAGE 5 Fonir Michioyan wrestlers shoot ELECTIONS September without obtaining a pspecial city permit required under zoning laws. Neighbors said they complained to the Building Depart- ment last fall, but were told the city would not enforce the zoning law. They also said fraternity members have caused noise and litter prob- lems. Wendy Rampson, a zoning coordinator for the Building Depart- ment, said the zoning law was not enforced because the city has not Speaking out Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Two women read their demands concerning Lesbian and Gay Males to University President Harold Shapiro yesterday in the Fleming Building. The demands, presented in response to anti-gay violence, call for measures to combat discrimination against homosexuals. See Story, Page 2. Shapitroj By STEPHEN GREGORY Special to the Daily LANSING - University President Harold Shapiro's request for increased state funding for the University yesterday turned into a discussion of the social advantages of racial harmony. Addressing the state House. Subcommittee on Higher Education, Shapiro only briefly touched on the appropriations request, saying he report discw He spent most of his 15-minute report discussing the social challenges presented by a rapidly changing world. Shapiro, an economics professor, said the nations of the world are becoming more interdependent, so the United States' culturally and racially diverse population will be invaluable in preparing this country for the challenges such interdependence will bring. B E F O R E the United States can be "culturally sensitive" toward other nations, sses racism officials are meeting daily with both campus and non-campus groups to discuss racial problems. Committee chairman Morris Hood (D- Detroit), who sharply criticized Shapiro for a lack of contact with students at the March 5 racism hearing, asked Shapiro to outline the steps the administration was taking to ensure student grievances reach top officials. Shapiro said the administration has posted