PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DA '11,V M' 't? Tb/Cl71.Alt A "tt" A T1f hdr.. l/l1 M! +AGE IX TUF M a~ltc V L}.Ai THiURSDAYI , OCLTOBER 26, 1967~ SPLIT OUT. Well go 50/50 with you on the USA. I More Schools Spurn Military's Secrecy M TWA 50/50 Club: your half- : price ticket to all the action, from coast toX coast. Most any time, t 7anywhere-you're on for just half our regular r 1 Coach fare. And you'reW r in for the full treatment. Aty mealtime, plenty of good food. On many long hauls, stereo and hi-fi music to. make time fly. On cross-country non-stops, new movies, too. There's more: you'll get reduced rates at all Hilton and .:r Sheraton hotels in the country. Plus a club Newsletter to fill you in on other discounts-here and abroad. The whole deal will set you back a grand total of $3 for your 50/50 Club card. If you're under 22, move fast. Stop into your nearest TWA office and get your card, today.f Continued from Page I versity on a consulting basis. Many schools tend to discourage secret research but permit excep- tions when the particular inter- ests of their professors touch on areas related to national defense. Some schools, however, are mak- ing fewer exceptions than in the past. Last spring, after the Penn controversy, trustees of New York University, on the recommenda- tion of a faculty committee, adopted a policy requiring that1 all classified projects have theE "written approval" of the presi- dent. Prior to that move, approv- al of such contracts was left to individual department heads. A Contract Is Dropped Already the new policy has re- sulted in the scaling down of some secret research. NYU re-j cently declined to renew a $44,- 000 Defense Department contract to evaluate chemical warfare weapons systems. "We discontin- ued the project after deciding it wasn't in line with the humani- tarian purposes of auniversity." says John R. Ragazzini, dean of the school of engineering and science. To keep secret contracts at a minimum, Stanford University's faculty early this year inaugurat- ed continuous, case-by-case re- view of new proposals for classi- fied research. Says William F. Baxter, professor of law, who headed a group that recently pro- posed tougher restrictions on such research: "We want to head off the contracts that make you lie about the kind of research you're doing." H eadds: "There have been cases where the Central In- telligence Agency has attempted to negotiate contracts here that would have made us deny the existence of the project." Faculty concern about secrecy has already prompted Stanford to refuse some Government con- tracts. The school recently de- clined an Agency for Internation- al Development (AID) contract to start a graduate program in physics at an Argentine univer- sity. The proposal called for two Stanford professors to set up the program while, in exchange, sev- eral Argentine students attended Stanford. AID wanted to review all research performed by parti- cipants, professors and students, with the right to bar publication if it chose. AID also wanted the right to demand recall of Stan- ford professors on the project if it chose to do so. "These terms simply were unacceptable," says a Stanford official. Despite such cases, some Fed- eral agencies claim they're trying to ease contract restrictions. "We're attempting to eliminate some problems by expediting de- don't always satisfy an aroused faculty or student body. This month faculty members at Cornell University voted to rec- ommend that the school sever ties with the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, an autonomous Cor- nell-owned facility that does a: good deal of secret military re- search. Controversy developed this fall when it was learned thea lab had a classified $1.5 million contract with the Defense De- partment to help plan counterin- surgency projects in Thailand. Cornell's Center for Interna- tional Studies, which has a re- search team of its own in Thai- land, charges that the lab's proj- ect "may inflict irreparable dam- age on the university's teaching and. research throughout thej world." The Cornell administra- tion is currently considering the; faculty recommendation that the school disassociate itself from the lab, and observers say it's likely the university will take steps in this direction. Perhaps to head off such troubles, Columbia University earlier this fall turned over to a newly formed nonprofit corpora- tion classified research previously performed at the school's Elec- tronics Research Laboratory. Co- lumbia officials say the new cor- poration, called the Riverside Re- search Institute, will have no cor- porate or financial connection with the university. Drawing the Line How to draw the line between justified and unjustified classified research for weeks has plagued a faculty committee at the Univer- sity of Pittsburgh, whose faculty senate later this month will con- sider several possible resolutions suggested by the committee. The resolutionsrange from a sug- gested ban on all secret research to a proposal that each depart- ment frame its own policy. "We couldn't agree on a defi- nite recommendation," admits Richard Tobias, an English pro- fessor who is co-chairman of the committee. "At first, I wanted to abolish all classified contracts, but now I see this issue is com- plicated beyond all expectations." The Pittsburgh committee was formed after disclosures of classi- fied projects ranging from re- writing of technical reports on weapons development to work on quality-control procedures to check bomb release mechanisms developed by industry. Some faculty members say they became more receptive to such projects after Thomas Donahue, a professor of physics who is working on a secret project of his own, argued that "it isn't a question of good ornevil." Says Mr. Donahue:; "By no means all secret research is aimed at kill- ing people, much of it is defen- sive. And there are circumstances where it must be done in a uni- # classification where it's reason- Just this Monday 30 Princeton able to do so," says a Pentagon students were arrested for block- spokesman. But a Stanford offi- ing entrance to a campus build- cial says: "We're experiencing ing housing a university-affili- greater efforts by the Defense ated corporation that specializes Department and other Federal in secret military research for the agencies to insert 'right to review' Defense Department. The stu- provisions into research contracts dents, members of Students for a that normally wouldn't be classi- Democratic Society, a New Left fied. This is sort of the backdoor organization, were protesting approach to classification." Princeton's role as one of 12uni- Getting Around the Problem versity sponsors of the corpora- In some cases, universities have tion, the Institute for Defense attempted to get around the prob- Analyses (IDA), headquartered tn lems posed by secret contracts by Arlington, Va. A Princeton forming off-campus affiliates or spokesman says the communica- wholly-owned, but independent, tions research division of IDA laboratories where such research leases a building at the univer can be done. But these effortssugh yprassertsthat IDA isn't legally part of the uni- versity and that its research is independent of the school's. He observes, however, that "special- ly trained people in the (Prince- Al WIEU~. SABBATH SERVICE Friday at 7:15 P.M. Dedicated to Mr. Osias Zwerdling, founder of Hillel TORAH SERVICE read in the triennal cycle with music by John Planer Oneg Shabbat Program: DR. GERDA SELIGSON Associate Professor of Latin "The Thought of Rabbi Leo Baeck" One of the great leaders of Jewish liberalism in Germany and a personal friend of Dr. Seligson. John Planer, cantor with the choir led by Steven Ovitsky, John Spitzer, organist. ton) environs may be in a posi- versity. A complete ban on classi- tion to help in the studies it (the fled research would be morally Sdivision)conducts." indefensible." -iI YEA KIDS! 'I P.S. Attention College Bands, Combos, Vocal Groups. Don't forget the National Championships at the 1968 Intercollegiate Jazz Festival sponsored by TWA. For Information Write: IJF, Box 246, Miami Beach, Florida 33139 *Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Movies presented by Inffight Motion Pictures, Inc. Welcome to the world of TransWorld Airlines Tnc. ...the all-jet airline BUCKET DRIVE-TODAY HI1 1429 Hill Street All Welcome t j, Welcome Northern High School Students to U-MP COMMUNITYCENTE PRJC FRATERNITY-SORORITY EUROPEAN CHARTER FLIGHTS ELIGIBILITY-ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS MAY 5-JUNE 17 NEW YORK CITY to LONDON PARIS to NEW YORK Boeing 707 Jet $230* * REBATE WHEN PLANE FILLS SIGN UP MON.-THURS. 3-5 at IFC-Pan-Hel Offices 60 Work in Job Training, Recreation, E ducation SS EETI G FAO UNION-LEAGUE UNION-LEAGUE SYMPOSIUM '68 The New Moods of Dissent announces Petitioning for Central Committee Positions PUBLICITY CAMPUS COORDINATOR ADMINISTRATIVE ARRANGEMENTS SPEAKER RELATIONS '9 Thursday, October 26 7:30 P.M. A .9