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December 04, 1969 - Image 8

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thursday, December 4, 1969

-P-g-e---ightIII THEIIMICHIGANIIIIIDAILY ThIursday, II D..e.em.be.r.4.,..1.96.9

STUDIES ALTERNATIVES:
U' considers Willow Run ties

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(Continued from Page 1)
ter-insurgency project in Thai-
land, the development of the
BOMARC (Boeing Michigan Aero-
nautical Research Center) missile,
and research into defense-orient-
ed remote sensing.
The decision to restructure the
relationship between the Univer-
sity and Willow Run has been
brewing for almost a year, and
reasons for the moves are num-
erous.
"We have been under pressure
from a g'eat number of places to
maximize the educational dividend
from the kind of activities that go
on at Willow Run," says Norman.
Some sources say privately Wil-
low Run has "outlived" its period
as a facility independent of the
rest of the University. To become
"viable," they say, it must become
more involved in teaching-asso-
ciated research.
Dissatisfaction is widespread at
the labs because the annual ex-
penditures have plummeted in the
last three years from $13 million
to last year's $9 million.
The decline in expenditures, due
principally to a general cut in de-
fense department spending, has
been accompanied by a tightening
of the types of research the DOD
will finance.
Willow Run labs, which thrived
during the 1950's on open ended
research grants, have been com-
pelled to seek contracts for speci-
fic projects whose aims are defined
in advance.
Moreover, there seems to be a
serious morale problem at the labs,
stemming mainly from the clas-
sified research controversy which
began in 1967 and culminated in
a report recommending guidelines
for secret research and the estab-
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IHA president seeks
resignation of officer

lishment of a classified research
committee to review contract pro-
posals s u b m itt e d by lab re-
searchers.
Norman says it has been "dis-
tressing beyond words for the re-,
searchers to find themselves looked
down upon as being involved in
an 'evil' business:"

A report compiled by five engin-
eering professors and Willow Run
researchers last September stakes
that "unless major changes are
made quickly, the labs will rapidly
deteriorate to the point where they
will be a University liability rather
than a major educational re-
source."

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iContinued from Page 1)
Myers was not doing a good job,"
he said.
"I decided to do it when I foundj
I was being duped like everyone
else about the legality of the elec-
tion." he adds.
Miss Johnson and Thee say
IHA's constitution requires a
quorum consisting of half of the
eligible membership. Only 16 of
the 68 possible members wore pre-
sent at the meeting which elected
Myers.
Myers thinks his election w a s
legal since he was elected under
a different constitution, but his
challengers say the definition of a
quorum is the same in the old
constitution as it is now.
In addition, Thee and Miss
Johnson -disagree with the way
Myers conducts the business of
the organization.
Mitchell urges
no knock' laws*
(Continued from Page 1)
cotics and Drugs yesterday pledg-
ed to wage "a campaign of infor-
mation and education that will
reach all the people of the na-a
tion."
He urged the governors, when
they return to their capitals, to
strike at the problem of d r u g
abuse in their states.
Nixon recited statistics stating
that some eight million Americans
use marijuana - one third of the
college students and one per cent'
of high school students.
Nixon said that in recent months
he has learned a lot about t h e
d r u g problem, noting that he
first thought the answer was more
penalties.
But when you are talking about
13 and 14-year-olds, he said, the
answer is not more penalties but
more information and education.'

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3. GOURMET DINING HALF PRICE MEALS !
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Eat in fine restaurants thruout LA and S. Cal. offering a wide range of prices. Also includes 2 for 1 tickets to Hollywood Discotheques, etc.
4. THE NEW YEAR'S EVE EXPERIENCE!
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5. TRANSPORTATION TO THE PARADE AND GAME
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"Myers has not called an execu-
tive board meeting, though they
are constitutionallysprovided for
once a week, he scheduled IA
meetings only aboutdonce every
two weeks, and he does not in-
form most of the members of any
of these actions," Miss Johnson
says.
"Consequently, IHA has not had
a democratic meeting all year
since a quorum has never been in
attendance," she adds. "And any
actions taken by IHA including
all appointments are therefore
illegal."
But Myers believes all these ac-
tions have been justified except
the lack of communication, which
he termed a "farce."
"I have tried to run IHA in a
manner so that it is not bogged
down by parliamentary procedure
and constitutional niceties in the
interest of promoting broader rep-
resentation and better discussion,"
he says.
IHA secretary Beverly Morse
agreed, saying she contacted about
50 house presidents for each meet-
ing.
But Thee and Miss Johnson are
no-t satisfied and will continue to
fight not only the proposed re-
placement for Johnson, Judy
Kursman, but vill attempt to get
members to hold new elections for
all offices before the term ends.
To do this they have sent a
letter to all house presidents call-
ing for high attendance at the
next meeting when they hope the
body will remove Myers.
DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
Continued from Page 9)
Placement Serrice
3200 S.A.B.
G;ENEIIAI.DIVISION
Holders of entrance passes to t h e
foreign service entrance examination.
Your notice from Washington did no
state that the exa mwill be given In
Auditorium D of Angell Hall.
Further information on these pro-
grams is available at Career Planning
Div., 3200 SAB, 764-6338.
Columbia University Graduate School
of Journalism offers Intensive one year
program, mnasters or St. in J}oun. with
extensive field work in N.Y.C. Fellow-
ships and field work studies in sc. writ-
ing, international reporting and inter-
racial reporting.
Thunderbird Graduate School of In-
ternational Management, Phoenix, Ari-
zona. offers aMters in one year po
BA program featuring int'l, commerce
area studies and languages.
SUMMER PLACEMENT
SERVICE
212mSAB, Lower Level
Caip Chateaugay, New York, Coed,
openings for gen. counselors, speciali-
ties in swimming, WSI req Tennis.
Sailing, Athletics, Creative Arts, a n c
Tripping. Contact John Steinberg, at
769-1533 or call SPS.
Argonne National Laboratory, Ill, of-
fern Student Aide Program for those
paist Jr. or Sr. year by June 70. Details
at SPS, Deadline Jan. 15.
Deadline for applications for lobs in
Federal1 Civic Service this summer is
Dec. 5,
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TRANSFERS TO
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OPEN MEETING
DRAFT LOTTFI
Explanation and Questions .
Answered by

RFY

TWO FLIGHT DATES:

DECEMBER 27-JANUARY 2
DECPEMBR 28-ANUARY 3

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