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November 16, 1971 - Image 7

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-11-16

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Tuesday, November 16, 1971

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Informational Meeting
Junior Year in Fraiburg
to be held
NOV. 16 at 7:30 p.m.
in room 3051 Frieze Bldg.
Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors Welcome

Flemings statement on research

SENATE ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE
Faculty unit seeks bargaining

(continiuedl from Page 4) committee machinery, strictures
3 Section V (a) of the pro- on the "philosophical" views of
posed policy contains conditions the members? In other contexts
with respect to the appointment of such a device would surely be sus-
members of the Classified Re- pect. Is it somehow more accept-;

search Committee which would
not normally be imposed on such
appointees.
It is stated that two members
are to be engaged in classified re-
search, and two are to be "philo-
sophically apposed" to such re-
search. I would have supposed
tthat the statementthat "The
Committee shall be broadly repre-
sentative of the University com-
munity" would be sufficient.
Does the Senate Assembly really
wish to start enacting into the

able here?I
4) Section VI does not appear,
in its present form, to fit in with
the balance of the draft. If it is
truly a statement of intent, one
would suppose that it would sim-
ply be included in the letter of
transmittal.
If it is not a statement of in-
tent, but a mandate, one would
suppose that the first nine words
of the Section should be stricken
and it should simply read: "No
proposal for classified research
shall be forwarded to the sponsor
by the University Administration
that has not been formally ap-
proved by the Review Committee."
Which is it supposed to be?

In making this statement as to
fthe status of Willow Run, and!
raising questions about the lan-
guage of the proposed policy, I do
not want to be misunderstood.
The existence of classified re-
search on a university campus is a
source of uneasiness. As a matter
of preference, all of us would
doubtless be happier if it did not
exist.
Since it does exist, and sincef
some of our colleagues may have
academically legitimate interests
in it, my concern is that any poli-<
cy which is, adopted be rational,
fair to all of our colleagues, and, t
if it changes existing conditions,
thrP cnha n.b time-nhsing 90

(Continued from page 1)
tee's reluctance to propose bar-
gaining a lo n g the industrial
union model.
The specific program sug-
gested in the report, Reed said,.
would maintain the traditional
colleague relationship between
faculty and administration, while
serving as a "reasonable device to
arrest the decline in faculty sal

time, it would expand the roles of anism by which salaries could be
existing committees on campus increased.
planning, development and re- Others, however, argued that
source allocation, and the place of there wasn't enough money in the
the University in society. general fund to make substantial
Such a move, according to Reed. differences.
is in line with proposals by presi-
dent Robben Fleming, who has
emphasized the desirability of Cent
more long-range planning by the
University. er pen

aries." By proposing faculty committees
While saying he had not read to deal with long-range questions,F
the committee's specific report, he said, the committee is "endors-
Vice President for Academic Af-. ing" Fleming's proposals w h i 1 ej

for women

fairs Allan Smith commented lastI

trying to assure "faculty participa-

II

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e" night; that he strongly favors in- 1101n.
that individuals who may be ad- creased faculty input in the area Although action by the assem-
versely affected are reasonably of salaries and fringe benefits. bly on the committee's proposals
protected. Due to the University's tight was put off to a later date, the
budget, however, Smith said he debate following the presentation
doubted that faculty salaries could of the report raised several ques-
be greatly increased by such a tions.
ZISIS CENTER device-even though "salaries have Some members of the assembly
been given a high priority" al- asked if the proposed mechanism
Di eady. of "consultative ne go ti at i on"
(PEN C Charged last February with de- would be strong enough to halt the
HIGAN UNION "sing means by which the faculty deterioration in faculty salaries.
'GA UN N"might more decisively effect fi- I eetyasteUiest
nancial and organizational decis- has slipped from svennivesit
0 a.m.-Midnightions of the University the com thirty-first in the American As-
0 Mmittee reported on faculty role in sociation of University Professors'
3-3241, 6 p.m.-8 a.m. maor decision-making as well as system for rating pay scales.
on salaries,.ytmfrrtn a cls
iendly ear for women The document called on Senate Participation by the faculty in
'; sseblyto reae cmmitee tosetting budgetary priorities, ac-
:Asembly to create committees to cording to philosophy Asst. Prof.
--consider such areas as the future Terrence Tice, a member of the
r I_ * -_ of the University. At the same committee, would provide a mech-

i

subscribe to Ihe Daily
Phone 764-0558

WOMEN

'S CENTER

Meeting to discuss plans and use of new
Women's Center in Mich. Union.
TUESDAY-7:30 P.M.
(old Pendleton Library, 2nd floor, Mich. Union)
ALL WOMEN WELCOME
--- - -- - --
Zero Population Growth, Inc.-Ann Arbor Chapter
PRESENTS A
Is Overpopulation a Problem
"Ein the United States?"
PRO: Raymond H. Kahn, M.D., Prof. of An-
atomy
CON: Roger Avery,dResearchAssociate in the
Population Studies Center
MODERATOR: Walter Rench, School of Na-
tural Resources
WED., NOV. 11-7:30 P.M. 331 THOMPSON

(Continued from page 1)
the street.
Women can obtain legal aid,
emergency medical assistance for
rape and assault cases through the
center. Weekly self-defense classes
will also be started soon,
In addition, the center pro-
vides an evening escort and ride
service staffed by women who can
talk or drive other women to their
destination.
The center received $500 from
SGC for initial funding for ad-
vertising and phone service. The
organizers hope to raise more
funds through donations and a
proposal to the city.
Operating on a walk-basis from
10 a.m. to midnight, the center's
telephone line is open from 6 p.m.
to 8 a.m. The center is tempor-
arily using SGC's telephone (763-
3241) for a week until they get a
permanent number.
For the student body:
FLARES
by
Levi
Farah
Wright
j Lee
SMale
CHECKMATE]
State Street at Liberty
Daily Classifieds
Bring Results

THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
SAKS FIFTH AVENUE

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The Housing Office feels that all students should be free to concentra
academic (and other) pursuits without added worry of dietary requirem
Therefore, University Residence Halls offer "Optional M e a I Contracts
any University student.
" available at all Halls
* select one convenient location
* initiate or cancel contract at your request
* select lunch, or dinner, or both
* reasonable prices (lunch and dinner meal contract for a year would cost
$2.91 a day). Re-serves on nearly all foods. Salad bars, soft drinks, and soft
serve ice cream available for both meals.
CATCH 22-not really, but we should mention that there are
nneified dininn knur sat each residence.

te on
ents.
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