THE CLASSIFIED RESEARCH QUESTION See Editorial Page Y a1ir~lia 741aitjjj REGRESSIVE High--44 Low--25 Windy and cloudy, chance of snow flurries VoL XXXI, No. 133 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 16, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pages Universities ban secret research By DAVE CHUDWIN Managing Editor Many of the most prestigious univer- sities in the country have either banned or placed strict restrictions on classified research, a survey by The Daily shows. Of the top 10 universities in the American Council on Education's rating of graduate programs, at 1e a s t six schools have stopped accepting classified government research. Six of the Big Ten schools have pro- hibited contracts for classified research and among the Ivy League schools only Cornell still accepts such projects. Among the universities in different areas of the country that told The Daily they had policies against classified re- search are: -In the East, Yale, Harvard, Brown, Princeton, the University of Pennsyl- vania and the State University of New York at Stony Brook; -In the M i d w e s t, Northwestern, Michigan State, Western Michigan, Iowa State and the Universities of Wiscon- sin, Minnesota, Indiana and Iowa; -In the West, the Berkeley campus of the University of California, Stan- ford and the Universities of Colorado and Oregon; and -In the South, the University of North Carolina -at Chapel Hill and Georgetown University. At some of these schools, however, the definition of classified research is different than that used by the Univer- sity's Office of Research Administra- tion. Here, if any member of a research team requires a government security classification, even to look at classified publications, the project is considered classified. But at some other universities con- tracts are considered classified only if the data and results of the project can- not be published. Thus, investigators can consult classified documents without the project being labeled classified. Under this definition, nine of the 42 classified contracts here might not be considered so at other institutions. "It has been over a decade since any classified research was under way on the Princeton campus and the univer- sity policy has been to discourage such research," Lyman Spitzer, chairman of Princeton's University Research Board, says, explaining his university's policy. Brown University, states Malcolm S. Stevens, vice president for administra- tion, since after World War II "has had a policy of accepting only unclassified research with the result that all of our r e s e a r c h results may be published openly." Joseph S. Warner, director of grant and contract administration at Yale, says the university has no classified con- tracts. The school does not accept classified research because ". . . one part of the university's essential purpose, to impart See SCHOOLS, Page 6 A SIGN marks an entrance to the University's laboratories at Willow Run, scene of much of the classified research carried out here. i ..... /7'' r ;:::;= ::'i .... 5i::r2"ia ;ii:;- 2:i :::::=:::::t;'i: i .... . :. .:.:: s::. ::: } ...... - ..... ... .......:tQ .::::: ....:: .i S >i :;i . ARI1V Z'ODY " . ................... .. ... ......... . ............ .. :.............................................:......... {:... .. Black teacher hitssuspension By JUANITA ANDERSON Charging that she was suspended because she iS black, Rebecca Vanderhorst, a teacher at Forsythe Jr. High School, will appear today at a preliminary injunction hearing to pre- snt charges against the Ann Arbor Board of Education. Vanderhorst has filed suit in U.S. District Court in Detroit against the Ann Arbor school board for "depriving her of her civil rights and discharging her without procedural due pro- cess as afforded her under the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution," said Frederick: McDonald, Vanderhorst's at- torney. School officials said that Vanderhorst was suspended, pending investigation, for "causing student-teacher mis- " understanding and unrest and Senate studies research By MARK DILLEN Senate Assembly began con- sideration yesterday of the re- newed controversy over Uni- versity classified research with the presentation of the an- nual report of its Committee on Classified Research. Although Assembly, the faculty representative body, heard only the initial stages of the scheduled review of classified research, ad- vocates and defenders of revising or abolishing such projects will present their case again tonight. They hope Assembly will recom- mend ending classified military research to the Regents, who must approve any .changes in policy. The committee's report, com- ing on the heels- of increased crit- icism of the nature and applica- tion of University research for the military - especially classified projects - contains for the first time a minority report attacking the work of the committee. Read in part to the 70-member body by its author, committee member Michael Knox, Grad, the minority report echoed the senti- ments of those involved in the re- CLASSIFIE cent protests against classified re- search. Knox charged that: (left) pres -The Classified Research Com- yesterday, mittee "consistently violates" its looks on. policy forbidding approval of classified contracts "whose spe- cific purpose is to destroy human life or incapacitate human be- -The committee, contrary to its policy, is "not broadly repre- sentative" of the University com- munity; -The committee has "isolated itself" from public opinion in the community; -Those on the committee have Senate become "allies of classified re- a proposed search." and approving a -The' committee "has never The co met its responsibility" to m a k e Thun ci summary statements of classified Council (U projects as required. Istrators,2 Knox, along with philosophy campus. T] Prof. Frithjof Bergmann, spoke judiciary n briefly in support of changing re- The U search policy to be "beneficial" TeU rather than involved "in the kill- the Regent ing process." between As Though the discussion occupied Governmen only the final 25 minutes of the Assembly 21/2 hour meeting, there was also a of the propos brief rebuttal to Knox's c h a r g e s tonight. from another Classified Research Committee member, pathology In soundly Prof. Arthur French. which could h "It is irrelevant that students members fro reject some parts of the Univer- Assembly ye sity's mission to the people of the form rulese state," French said. "The Univer- members of sity's mission properly includes Imuity--a military research." . lying the rul French, apparently expressing The rules) the viewpoint of many on the 12- same actions man committee, explained h o w gent's Interi "students are protected by Uni- disruption of versity developed instruments: the use of p University remote sensing de- another mem vices have been used by the U.S. communityF military extensively in the Indo- damage, or china war where, according to the property. Department of Defense, they have However, been "invaluable in ... battlefield RulestheU surveillance and target acquisi- R ' tion." cific maximu Assembly debate on the issue is lude the po scheduled to resume at 7:30 to- These may night at Rackham Amphitheater. slated to Fasters plan a Diag rally at noon to urge attendance at the open today by com meeting. See FA( ass embly Alas sified question Recruiting, discussed by OSSPB By MARCIA ZOSLAW contributing to the disruption of a learning environment." However, Vanderhorst did not receive a hearing or a notice of charges set against her before her suspension. Because the case involves charg- es of deprivation of constitutional rights, it is being heard in the U.S. District Court in Detroit since both Vanderhorst and McDonald felt the teacher could not obtain a fair hearing in Washtenaw -Daily-Tom Oottlieb D RESEARCH Committee Chairman Gerald Charbeneau ents his committees's annual report to Senate Assembly while Assembly Chairman Gerhard Weinberg (right) ~utydiscusses rlt cipline rules By CARLA RAPOPORT Assembly yesterday began a scrutinizing review of set of conduct rules for the University community a small part of the proposal with a few changes. nduct rules proposed last month by University C), a committee of students, faculty and admin- are aimed at stemming disruptive actions on 'he rules would be enforced by the University ow under consideration by the Regents. C rules will replace the Interim Rules enacted by s last April if agreement on the rules is reached sembly, the faculty's representative body, Student it Council and the Regents. The Office of Student Services ou Policy Board (OSSPB) last night Vanderhorst was suspended on created a subcommittee to imple- Feb. 4, just prior to Black History ment the board's original policy Week, for which she had been denying the use of University working with black students in Placement Office facilities to cor- preparing a program. .0rations operating w h e r e dis- The suspension followed an in- crimination is legally enforced. cident at Forsythe School. The The creation of the subcommit- building had been closed when a tee followed the rejection of two number of black students began other recruitment proposals made mingling in the corridors to dis- by board members. cuss a flyer she had printed. The first proposal, put forth by In the flyer, Vanderhorst stat- Jerry De Grieck, SGC executive ed that she would no longer be inj 'ce president, and Lottie Piltz, charge of the Black History Week student government advocate, said program because ,of opposition that the OSSPB's original pro- from teachers whom she charged posal should be used as a means tore down signs advertising t h e of implementing and expanding program. the moral stance of the regental A meeting of parents, teachers, proposal. The Regents' ruling only students, and other people inter- barred from University facilities ested in the case was held 1 a s t, crporations hiring for jobs in Wednesday to "raise issues relat- countries where discrimination ex- ed to the whole problem of racism ists legally. in the Ann Arbor school system," The second proposal, introduced said Alvis Adair, spokesman for by Robert Knauss, vice president the group. for student services, stated that "Miss Vanderhorst represents the Regents' proposal definitely the image of a black teacher, very did conflict with the OSSPB's concerned about black students, Qiginal p r o p o s a 1. However, who was very vocal in expressing. Knauss' measure said that the. her feelings on problems in the Regents could not be defied, but Ann Arbor school system," Adair rather should be persuaded to ex- said. pand their policy along the orig- "In the process, as other black inal OSSPB lines. See TEACHER, Page 10 Newfighting reporte N.Viets shell base at. -Daily-Tom Gottlieb PROF. HAROLD CRUSE lectures yesterday as part of Black Liberation Week. Cruse pointed to the difficulties of maintaining a black culture in a predominantly white society, emphasizing the need for . the formation of a black "critical school of thought" in judging art. Cruse e-mphasizes 'need to mintan black, culture By GENE ROBINSON "It is difficult for black culture "The black American has pro- to exist as a separate lifestyle duced an overwhelming tradition in without being absorbed into white the art forms," history Prof. Har- culture,d Cruse asserted. He em- old Cruse said yesterday in a lec- phasized the necessity for the ture on "The Significance of Black formation of a black "critical Culture." , school of thought" by which art Cruse spoke in conjunction with forms could be judged. Black Liberation Week, a week of Cruse also discussed the rela- black arts and culture sponsored tionship between black nationalism by the University's Center for and black culture. He cited as one Afro-American and African affairs. example the views of Ron Karen- ga, a black nationalist who says Cruse said there was a "concep- that traditional blues music must tual problem of exactly what black be forgotten because blues signi- culture consists of, since black peo- fies black submission and repres- ple live in a predominately white sion. society.' "Such an approach," Cruse ex- plained "implies that in order to be a black nationalist, one must d in L ao s0 disown certain aspects of black culture." Crusealo said that all people San h are a product of an acculturation, or absorption of an outside culture to a certain extent. This accultura- tion, he maintained, affects all Brig. Gen. Pham Van Phu, black people regardless of their commander of South Vietnam's political beliefs. 1st Infantry Division, said the Cruse discussed the so-called North Vietnamese were moving "Harlem Renaissance" of the two regiments into the area 1920's and its effect on black cul- around Lolo. The base is the 19r.'seend iedtha culr main operations center for South ture. He explained that cultural Vietnamese troops now sweeping flowering came when blacks be- the western-most section of High- came urbanized, thus producing way 914, a branch of the Ho Chi such writers as Langston Hughes Minh trail that winds southeast and Countee Cullen. from Sepone. Mahler Ryder, one of the black Pathet Lao forces also overran artists scheduled to participate in a government position at Muong the symposium on black art on about cultural history which must be answered, he said, probably most successfully through a black studies program. Cruse will conclude his discus- sion of black culture in a second talk scheduled for tomorrow after- noon. Today's activities in the week- long program include a symposium on the "Technological Needs of the Black World" and an appearance at Hill Aud. by Amiri Baraka (Le- roi Jones), black poet and play-S right, and Olatunji, an African mu- sician. will continue its review ed rules at a meeting defeating a motion have exempted faculty = possible suspension, sterday supported uni- and sanctions for all the University com- aajor principle under- es. prohibit many of the prohibited by the Re- m Rules. These include University functions,' physical force against nber of the University and the defacement, theft of University unlike the Interimj UC rules contain spe- m penalties, which ex- ssibility of expulsion. ximum penalties are come under attack amunications and com- CULTY, Page 10 'U' banch meets new chancellor By ART LERNER William Moran, recently named to the post of Chancellor at the Uni- versity's Flint branch, was form- ally introduced to that campus yes- terday at a student and faculty convocation. Moran, new assistant executive vice-president at the State Univer- sity of New York at Stony Brook, will officially became chancellor July 1. Flint administrators said Mo- ran's experience in long range ex- pansion and financial planning was important in his selection as chan- cellor, as the Flint campus has just received title to 17 acres of land for expansion. Students at Flint said that hope- fully the appointment of Moran to the newly-created chancellor post will help their campus gain some independence from the much larger Ann Arbor campus. "As it is now, with a dean coor- dinating things with Ann Arbor, we are just an extension of the Ann Arbor undergraduate program," student body president Ed Hoort said. "With our own chancellor we can become more of an indepen- dent college," he asserted. "If the new chancellor is on the ball, it will give us a lot more power and a lot more influence over our own program," he added. Moran agreed that his appoint- ment will help the Flint campus to gain more autonomy from the Uni- f-- RAISING CONSCIOUSNESS Fasters see, success SAIGON (P) - Fresh fighting *upted yesterday near Sepone, an important junction point on the Ho Chi Minh trail in South- ern Laos, while North Vietna- mese gunners laid down a heavy rocket and mortar barrage on the Khe Sanh combat base in orthwest South Vietnam. In Cambodia, fierce fighting also was reported between gov- ernment troops and North Viet- namese forces 13 miles north- east of Phnom Penh. forward supply point and flight center for the Laotian operation. Reports from the border com- mand post at Ham Nghi said that North Vietnamese artillery and tanks had hit hard at a fire sup- port base called Lolo, nine miles southeast of Sepone. Ground fighting was reported throughout the day near the South Vietna- mese regimental position. One U.S. helicopter was report- edly shot down in the action around Lolo, and sev oral others By SARA FITZGERALD Fatigued but exhilarated, faculty members par- ticipating in this week's fast against classified and military research at the University feel their ef- forts have been successful in raising the conscious- ness of the University community to the issue. "The fast," says history Prof. Raymond Grew," has been remarkably effective. It's an economical way of communicating the extent of one's concern to a lot of people." Grew, who will today present a resolution to Senate Assembly calling for an end to classified research, found that "even those colleagues who disigrpp -,rnglyr1 it~h mP ixwo'a iillinn- o isei q ElI