Wednesday, September 22, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pc~rqe Nin~e Wednesday1 September 22, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY COCKREL SPEECH: Protesters to gather in. Students asked to attend protest Detroit for Nixon visit Research Policy Commitee gives report in Detroit against recent deaths By JIM KEVRA (Continued from Page 1) In preparation for the visit-the first by a President to Detroitj since the August 1968 appearance; of President Johnson at a Veterans of Foreign Wars convention-over 60 rooms in the Sheraton Cadillac hotel have been taken over by theI Additionally, rooms at the Met-I ropolitan Airport Hotel are also reportedly being o c c u p i e d by agents of the secret service. T h o u g h Michigan's dominant labor organization, the United Auto Workers union (UAW) decided j Monday night not to support the (Cont"nuedfrom Page7 tories engaged in classified re- search prepare annually for the Classified Research Committee a definitive statement outlining the objective and goals of the laboratory with regard to its classified and unclassified re- search activities and, endeav- oring . . . to put the classified research program objectives in context of the laboratory's en- tire research program. The Committee recommends that in the event the Classified Research Committee is unable to provide the Vice-President for Research a favorable or un- favorable recommendation on a particular classified proposal and the proposal is forewarded to a proposed sponsor by the Vice-President, that this f a c t be reported to Senate Assembly by the Vice-President for Re- search. (The committee's final ap- proval was that procedures be set up for summary statements of non-classified projects and review of any non-classified project that might violate Uni- versity policies.) Ken Cockrel, a member of the Black Workers Congress, ' called for the students of Michigan to shut down the Black Studies Program tomor- row in sympathy for a protest march being held in Detroit. about 200 in Rackham Aud. last night, C oc k r e1 asked that all students involved in the B la c k Studies Program stay away from classes tomorrow and attend the Detroit march. The march is being held, according to Cockrel, to pro- test the license to kill of the white, para-militaristic organizations." Cockrel also called for an alter- ation of the Black Studies Pro- grams at all universities away from a "historical approach" to Black Studies. Instead, he said, the program should include a "scientific study of the basis of how this country is organized." Only through a scientific study of the enemy-the capitalist sys- tem-can black people and revo- lutionaries discover how to over- throw that system, he explained. Cockrel said that black people are being miseducated concerning the revolution on two fronts. The first of these fronts is the Univer- sities and school systems which tend to teach only the causes of black problems and not the solu- tion. The second front is misguided reactionaries who preach "incor - rect paths of struggle". The primary aim of all black organizations, he added, is "at- tempting to engage in a struggle with one objective-the defeat of what we define as a personal enemy to all people who are strug- gling. That enemy is imperialism." Cockrel also charged that the United States Government is guil- ty of condoning the present day: "capitalist - imperalistic" society. which he defines as a social or- ganization "where all the means of control are in the hands of a very, very small percentage of the country." . f j Secret Service, White House aides ; AFL-CIO call for demonstrations, and communications specialists support for the picket grew last from the Army Signal Corps. night when top Michigan Demo- crats joined the AFL-CIO in blast- ing the wage-price freeze as unfair Trotter center toAporker.ss conference attended rGM A PH I Sby Secretary of State Richard Aus- A to open tis1 faftin, former Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh and 1970 guberna- & Would Like to Meet You Continued from Page 1 i torial candidate Sander M. Levin, bidding funding would pass at this state Democratic vice chairman So Come on Over and See time." Kenneth N. Hylton said that "Pres- The activities of the Trotter ident Nixon would be welcomedW tWe're Like House will be decided by a board more warmly in Detroit this Thurs- of directors, to be composed most-i day if he were to bring with him ly of students with some faculty a plan designed to help the ma- W VE ID INESDAY Yand ]FIH iILIRSDY and staff. The first activity pro- jority of Americans, not just a posed is a career planning work- few." shop, organized by black students Nixon's economic program, said September 23 and 24 employes of the University's place- Hylton, "demands continuing sac- ment services office rifices from consumers, wage earn- 1520 S. U iversity The three story house at 1020 ers and our six million jobless South University is named for the while rewarding businessmen with 761-1520 editor of the first black civil generous tax benefits and tveedom: rights newspaper, the B o s t o n to maintain and increase profits Guardian, and founder of the Na- and dividends." tional Equal Rights League.d es. grOp4 of irls liing together because they Donations from students and x They all called for a "fairer" ike to do things together. fund raising activities will sus- method to solve the nation's eco-le to do thins tour then, tain the house's funding. nomic ills htt . --_-_UOpposing the demnstraytorda, -r- UAW spokesman said yesterday, - --___ ;1 1 i 1 * 1"We believe there are more effec. N igiht O wlbus tive and productive ways to oppose Mr. Nixon's economic game plan discontinued than to picket Cobo Hall." The UAW left the AFL-CIO in (Continued from Page 1) 1968. is the University's reason for de- Locally, plans for the Nixon ciding to discontinue operation. demonstration are to be laid at an The Night Owl first flew across , open meeting tonight at 7:30 on the darkened campus during an in- the second floor of the SAB. crease in security programs two yeas ao fte a eres f Ui- Norman McKay of the Detroit years ago after a series of Uni- council AFL-CIO will address the versity-area murders.metgacdngtasokmn Figures quoted for the first three meeting, according to a spokesman months of 1970 showed the rider- for the Ann Arbor Nixon Demon- ship to be: for Jan., 4,900; for Feb., stration Coalition. 7,300; and for Mar., 5,800. For the same three months in 1971 the figures are: for Jan., 1,200; for -Saturday- Feb., 2,900; and for Mar., 2,200. The bus service last year cost Sept. 25 the University about $12.000, which went to the AATA at the rate of See Youa Mao $10 an hour. + Use Daily Cicssifieds + the Peace-of-Mind Supplement -Daily-Denny Gainer ,Ken Cockrel REPORT RELEASED: Committee seeks limited research policy changes (Continued from Page 1) be revised as projects came up forj renewal. Though committee members, have hesitated to comment ony contents of their report before As- sembly discusses -it, members ap- parently sought to avoid recurrent discrepancies between researchers' pre-proposal summaries - which3 contain plans and aims for pro- posed projects - and the final "work statement" - the sponsors' description of what the project was actually used for. The report states: ".. . study revealed, however, that the 'summary of the pro- posal' as prepared by the appli- cant-researcher and presented in; the Pre-proposal Summary Form did not appear always to convey adequately the desires of the sponsor .-. "Conceivably, the additional, more .detailed information (of the 'work statement') might have al- tered the decision of CRC." Recognizing the "difficulties" in making the accompanying "moral"' judgments, the report emphasizes that "revision in operational pro- cedure rather than in policies will likely be more successful in pre- venting research which is unac- ceptable for the University." In general, the report advises that policies, now applicable only to classified research, be applied to all University research. Proposed in the continued CRC "project by project" review of classified research are several oth- er recommendations for alleviating recent point of criticism. One such sore point is the ac- tual benefit to the University of Willow Run Laboratories -where most of the University's classified defense research is carried out. At Willow Run, the report points out, educational "resources" are "less available" to the University as a whole than at other Uni- versity laboratories, where there is also a larger involvement of stu- dents in research projects. The report asks a study of Wil- low Run's "location and adminis- trative structure" to "the mutual advantage of the Laboratories and the University." Further, the 11-page report calls for yearly detailed reviews of in- dividual research laboratories' ob- jectives, to be done by the labora- tories themselves and to be sub- mitted to CRC. The o f f i c i a 1 sponsor of the The woodrow wuson Natonal Detroit march is the "State of Fellowship Foundation has a n - Emergency Committee" which is nounced seven Woodrow Wilson composed of the Black Workers Fellows who will pursue t h e i r Congress, the Wolverine Bar As- graduate study at the University. sociation, and other black organi- The Foundation this year s e - zations, and has affiliations with lected only 305 students f r o m organizations such as the National over 10,000 candidates who were Association for the Advancement ! nominated and has called t h e of Colored People and the Repub- group "the most carefully celect- lic of New Africa. ed in the history of the program." mti~ 1(]l1_r9 l~nnrntyZ~tilcn -and- PRAVDA the first and latest films by Dziga-Vertov collective of God- ard and Jean - Pierre Gorin. "Pravda is Godard's best and clearest film."-Village. Voice NAT. SCL. AUD. double-bills 7 & 9 p.m. $1.50 ARM/UM Film Society Another proposal is that in the The march is being held to pro- case of a failure of CRC to agree test the "murders" of a number of on proposals, this fact would beb-l reported to Assembly rather than black people including the black be given administrative approval prisoners killed at Attica, George without consent, as has happened of two young blackrteen-agers by in the past. police last Friday. Though all 14 members - threepTheprstra.a graduate students and 11 faculty The protest march begins at 12 members - of the Research Poli- noon in Cass Park in downtown cies Committee signed the report, Detroit and will march to the three addenda follow it, explaining Kennedy Square area. minority views on the committee. One, signed by four members, objects to any restrictions on fac- ulty research as "moral censor- ship." The other two advise stronger controls on classified re- search, more provisions for access to proposed contracts and stress the undesirability of submitting contracts which are not first ap- proved by CRC. The 1971-72 Woodrow wison Fellows attending the University and their fields of study are: Bro- ther Anthony Cavet, linguistics (elected 1970); Rebecca J. Court. English: Alan W. Milsap, Ro- mance languages and 1iterature;i Thomas G. Ricketts, philosophy; Mrs. Joanna E. Shiller, sociology (elected 1968): Ann E. Sloan, psy- chology; and Linda V. Pound, music. k fj 1 , . i l Name one Li kT M The Research and Policies Com- mittee is predominately compris- ed of engineers and scientists. -FRIDAY- Sept. 24 Jefferson Airplane Eldridge Cleaver Tonm Hayden in a "f iction - documentary of the New American Revolution." 1 p.m. Godard-Pennebaker MIDWEST PREMIERE ARM/Michigan Film Society 1st Presbyterian Church 1432 Woshtenw (off S. 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