Report asks changes in research plan By GENE ROBINSON A yet-to-be-released report by a faculty committee recommends several major changes in Senate Assembly's proposed restrictions on, classified re-' search, The Daily learned yesterday. Excerpts from the Committee on Research Policies' report appear on today's Editorial Page. The report, prepared by the assem- bly's Committee on Research Policies, would allow the acceptance or research contracts providing the results could be. openly published within one year of the projects' completion. The report, currently under study by the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) - the faculty executive body - is the latest development in a long controversy over the presence of classified research at the University. The committee's chairman, biology Prof. Isadore Bernstein, last night de- clined to answer questions about the report. The committee's proposal is far more lenient than the previously- approved Senate Assembly resolution on classified research, which would ban almost all projects which had lim- itations placed on the publication of their findings. The same committee issued a re- port on classified research last sum- mer, which was bypassed by the as- sembly, in favor of the final, stronger anti-research resolution. The new report's recommendations apply equally to both federally-spon- sored classified research, and indus- trially-sponsored proprietary research. The publication of the results of pro- prietary research is often restricted by the sponsor. The report recommends that re- searchers be allowed to restrict the publication of figures, which are deemed inessential to the open publi- cation of the results. This would allow many projects to continue that would be banned by the Senate Assembly plan. Often, such as in the case of anti-missile projects, the figures represent the operating frequency of electronic devices em- ployed. The report retains Senate Assembly's ban on research which has the "spe- cific purpose, or clearly foreseeable re- sult to destroy human life or to in- capacitate human beings." However, it adds that the provision is to be judged in "the more limited sense" as to what can be judged as the "probable" effects of such re- search. The proposed Senate Assembly pol- icy on classified research was de- layed last month when several regents and President Robben Fleming ex- pressed a reluctance to deal with the resolution until the assembly provided recommendations for a policy on pro- prietary research. Supporters of the Senate Assembly plan, however, argued that classified and proprietary research should be treated as two separate issues. SACUA has finished final delib- eration on the proposal, and although the Research Policies Committee will meet once more on the report, Janice Downs, SACUA's administrative as- sistant, said she expects "no substan- tive change" in the report. Downs said she expects the report will be delivered to Assembly mem- bers next Tuesday. SACUA Chairman Warren Norman said he liked the document. He said he thought the major dif- ference between the report and the Senate Assembly proposal was it "makes it possible to also include pro- prietary research without weakening sanctions on federal classified re- search. Norman noted that federal contracts are seldom if ever classified only for a specific amount of time, and claimed that the one-year time limit will only effect proprietary research. WILLOW RUN LABORATORIES, site of University's classified research projects. almost 90 per cent of the MILLIKEN'S PROPOSED PRIMARY See Editorial Pag Yl r e 4i t I!3UF A& 43atly NORDIC High-14 Low-8 Partly cloudy, chance of snow Vol. LXXXiI, No. 80 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 15, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages City police unit suggested for U' PESC to ; 4; New security proposal backed by Milliken, Fleming, Krasny By PAUL TRAVIS' President Robben Fleming has apparently reached an agreement with Governor Milliken on a plan for the Ann Arbor Police Department to continue patrolling the University. The plan suggests the establishment of a "University Unit" of the Ann Arbor Police Department, with the University paying all costs. In a letter to Mayor Robert Harris, which outlines the proposed plan, Fleming states, "He (Milliken) has authorized me to say that he would be supportive of the kind of rela- tionship which this memorandum proposes." Milliken last year demanded that the University end its payments to the city of Ann Arbor for police and fire services, citing that Ann Ar- bor was the only city in the W oiesaie state that received such pay- ments from a college it houses. The State's main objection to iP uthe University-city arrangement. however, was the University was paying a flat 18 per cent of the I Police Department's budget, says Walter Krasny, Ann Arbor Police Chief. Under the new plan. the Univer- WASHINGTON (A') - Wholesale sity will only be paying for those prices shot up eight-tenths of one services and men that it actually! per cent last month following the uses. easing of the price freeze, the gov- The new plan came as some- ernment said yesterday. what of a surprise since last The increase was nearly as high, month Fredrick Davids, Univer- seven-tenths of one per cent, when sity director of safety, presented figured on a seasonally adjusted a model to the Regents of a sep- basis to eliminate normal month- arate. independent University po- to-month variations, lice force. The Nixon administration has Most observers felt the Univer-C sity was moving in that direction. predicted for months that a Fe gspooa em ost "bulge" would show up in prices Fleming's proposal seems to sat- with the end of the 90 day freeze isfy the governor's request in that last Nov. 14. it suggests the establishment of a las~ t hov.14. v nseparate "University Unit" of the Meanwhile. the g'overnment re- A... -,-nI- - -IF1 ;., continue de spite program Smith' statement ivcuvu,Lu viiuc G1 Ann Arbor Police to dagl full time ported yesterdaysthat the nation's with University security. e c o n o m y was much weaker According to the plan, Davids through the first nine months of would determine the total num- 1971 than originally estimated. ber and makeup of "fll-time duly By the third quarter of the year, sworn" police personnel. the recovery that began in Janu- These men would be assigned -Daily-Robert wargo The Airplane takes off Thousands of people yelled and cheered as the Jefferson Airplane performed in concert at Crisler Arena last night. The band, the crowds, the smoke, and the music made for a great evening which will be reviewed in tomorrow's Daily. - - -- - -- - SEX BIAS CLAIMED: Report charges HEW, with jbdiscri_mination By DANIEL JACOBS The Program for Education- al and Social Change (PESC) has accelerated its plans to open University courses to the public free-of-charge despite Vice President Allan Smith's statement Thursday that such a program violates University policy. At a meeting of PESC members and supporters yesterday, psychol- ogy Prof. Richard Mann dismissed Smith's statement as "ranting and raving," and said it held little weight. A PESC publication says that all PESC courses are "open to all, and free to non-University people." Smith Thursday described" such a policy as being "not within the province of the program personnel nor the individual professor." PESC members, both students and faculty members, agreed yes- terday to step-up the publicity of their program-as originally con- stituted. Hoping to squelch opposition to the idea of free auditing of courses by those not enrolled in the Uni- versity, PESC will begin referring to the community auditors as "re- source people" or "colleagues," rather than "students." In addition, PESC is urging its supporters to appear en masse at Monday's meeting of the literary college faculty. Mann also revealed that he and six other PESC members had met with the LSA Executive Committee and Dean Frank Rhodes Thursday to discuss PESC's structure and funding. While PESC presented its request of $4,600 from the $50,000 fund earmarked for "innovation" in LSA, the committee offered no definitive responses, according to Mann. However, English Prof. Robert Super, a member of the LSA com- mittee, said that the funding ques- tion had assumed no importance in the meeting, whose primary purpose was the edification of the committee members with respect to PESC. The LSA committee had present- ed PESC with a number of ad- ministrative questions, many of which were answered 'at yester- day's PESO meeting. For exam- ple, the question of whether com- munity participation in the courses See PESC, Page 8 ary, 1971, had lost so much pep that the economy was growing by. only 2.7 per cent, the Commerce Department said. Earlier, the department had peg- ged third quarter growth at 3.9 per cent. Reporting new figures for Gross National Product, output of the nation's goods and services, the government also noted a substan- tial slowing in the rate of infla- tion. In the third quarter, the infla- tion rate rose by 2.5 per cent, the lowest since the 2.2 per cent dur- ing the second quarter of 1967.1 The inflation rate was 5.4 per cent dur- ing the first three months of 1971. It was during the middle of the third quarter that President Nixon * imposed the wage-price freeze. full time to the University unit; and the University would provide them with their own command structure. The University would also cover the cost of salaries, fringe benefits, and direct oper- ating costs for the unit. Fleming's letter asks Harris to discuss this plan with his staff. Police Chief Walter Krasny, and City Council. If tentative approv- al 'is given, the University and the city will still have to work' out the details of the plan. After the plan is drawn up, fi- nal approval will have to be ob- tained from Council. the Regents,; and the State Legislature. According to Krasny, the plan is very workable. "The Universityl and the city stand to gain a great deal from this type of relation- ship," Krasny said last night. From Wire Service Reports Elliot Richardson, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. (HEW) yesterday released a re- port charging widespread job discrimination against women in HEW as well as in the rest of the nation. The study was prepared by HEW's Women's Action Pro- gram, a group of employes or- ganized by Richardson to elimi- nate sex bias within that agency. HEW is currently examining and implementing affirmative action programs in some 300 col- leges, including the University, to assure equity in hiring prac- tices. For three months last year, HEW withheld several federal contracts here, after which the University submitted its pro- gram, goals, and timetables to end sex discrimination. Last month, however, PROBE, a local women's group, charged the University with acting in "bad faith" in its progress, and urged HEW to reexamine the University program. According to yesterday's re- NEW LSA ASSOC. DEAN~ port, women make up 63 per cent of the HEW work force, but hold only 14 per cent of the top jobs. The study called for action to assure that women comprise half of each management intern training class, and recommended federal legislation requiring 'll HEW supported educational pro- grams not to discriminate by sex. "To date," the report stated, "the most active and effective efforts to combat sex discrimi- nation have come from the de- partment's Contract Compliance Division of the Office for Civil Rights." HEW is empowered to with- hold federal contracts if recipi- ents practice sex discrimination. Last year, at least $350,000 was held up at the University. Other findings of the report included: -The proportion of women in graduate school enrollments and candidates receiving degrees was smaller in 1970 than in 1930; -The median income of wo- men 65 and over is less than half the median income of men of the same age, $1,397 compared to $2,828; -Women are encouraged or *Witke: Meeting the -Associated Press King tribute asked Corretta King, widow of Martin Luther King Jr., whose portrait hangs on the wall behind her, says there ought to be at least one holiday a year in tribute to a black man. The Georgia Legislature has twice declined to do so in honor of King. Today is King's birthday. COUNTY DEPUTIES: Program to begin in community relations By PAUL TRAVIS The Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department, which has re- ceived . frequent charges of poor police-community relations, has announced plans to institute a community relations training pro- gram. Color movies, "case studies", lectures, and "peer group educa- tion" will be used to refresh the officers knowledge of citizens' rights, and to suggest improved methods for the police to interact with citizens. All Sheriff's Department Deputies will attend an eight-hour ses- sion being designed by three professors from Eastern Michigan Uni- challenge' Vets spark renewal of niwrprotests I By MARK DILLEN In a university where adding the title of "Dean" to one's name is often pictured as the goal of every ambitious professor, getting that title after only one semester on campus might seem unlikely, But such things do happen and classical studies Prof. Charles Witke is a case in point. After coming to Ann Arbor last S-ptember "My main concern," says Witke, "will not be with day to day administrative details of curriculum, but will deal with the larger im- plications - philosophical implications" of growth over long periods of time. "Expansion cannot continue indefinitely," he adds. "It would either introduce crypto-pro- fessionals or erode undergraduate education in other ways." By JANET GORDON "The war is much closer to us. We still feel it. Maybe that's why we have more energy," That statement from a local member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) per- haps best explains the recent re- newal of anti-war activity by cording to the Ann Arbor vet- erans, were meant "to put the, war on the front page where it belongs and tell people that it is still going on." "In absolute terms, there have been more people dying in the war under Nixon than under Johnson," states Mike Reade, a versity. The program will start sometime in February. The program will be funded by a $13,150 grant from the county, supplemented by a $23,550 fed- eral government grant. The deputies' training sessions will take up a full eight-hour day and are divided into four sections. The first part is a review of citi- zens' and civil rights legislation. After the lecture will come three two hour "case studies" of possi- ble situations. The cases will be filmed and shown to the officers. Afterward, those attending will discuss the procedures used by the police in the film and how they would respond if confronted with f -n c -m c n-i- ..: ;: q . .;: "":: " .. ;; 't'"' 3