100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 13, 1973 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-02-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

41

Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, February 13, 1973

WAR RESEARCH

'U' andI
(Continued from Page 1)
University money in that sense."
"But these funds came to the
University for the purpose of the
Willow Run Laboratories and we,
the executive officers, thought that
it was appropriate if the Labora-
tories were going to continue as a
non-profit institution the equip-
ment ought to be used for the
purpose which the government
gave us the money."~
The research project headed by
Raney, which involves University
faculty and graduate students, is
not a classified study. It was con-
tracted by the National Science
Foundation to explore the use of
remote sensing devices- for urban
and regional planning.
The project is an interdisciplin-
ary study involving students and
faculty on more than an individual
basis. It draws personnel from the
radar and optics division at ERIM,
plus the University departments of

Willow

Run:

Ties still

not broken

geography, urban planning, eco-
nomics and law.
The area of professional consul-
tation by University faculty for
ERIM remains largely undefined.
According to Vice-President for
Academic Affairs, Allan Smith, in-
dividual departments in the Uni-
versity establish their own policies
regarding the amount of time a
professor may spend on outside
consultations.
He said, however, that from two
to four days a month devoted to
outside interests is considered the
upper limit such obligations. Only
one month after the separation,
professors a r e spending large
amounts of employment time at the
Laboratories.
The non-reaction to the present
situation contrasts sharply with the
University scene of several years
ago, when a demand for an out-
right ban on classified research
was a cause celebre in the radical

community. Administration buildings were tak- people were entering into the fight
Sporadic protest took on the en over several times. for survival.
character of a- continuing crusade By September of that year, fac- "Everybody was happy about it
in October of 1967. A four-part ulty resentment had grown so for because they were behind the war
Daily news series introduced the midable that Senate Assembly, the effort. Societal values change with
type and extent of classified re- faculty's representative body, pass- the pressures of external environ-
search conducted at - the Univer- ed a proposal that called for a vir- ment. Now that there is not total
sity, at a time when growing dis- tual ban on all secret research. support for the Vietnam War, sup-
content with the Vietnam War was After the proposal was submit- port for classified research has
bringing to light such local issuestfallen
as ROTC, -and military recruiterstethRensaiowscrpfle.
on campus. pled throughaseries of delays.A "Of course anybody who's in re-
The University at the time was vote was finally taken Feb. 19, search knows military application
engaged in some $21.5 million of 1972. In an emotion - packed ses- of basic principles can't be pre-
Defense Department research, $9.7 sion, the Regents rejected the pro- vented."
million of which was secret. The vote was somewhat anti-cli- Apparently, despite years of pro-
Dubbed by the Army, the "free matic however ,as President Rob- test, debate, organization, and
leader in (combat) surveillance," hard work by concerned parties,
the University was third only to Fhemng the involvement of University fac-
Stanford and the Massachusetts In-d the University's intention to ulty in applying those basic prin-
stitute of Technology in total De- March 13, 1972, the Regents fin- ciples can't be prevented either.
fense Department research fund- ally passed a research policy that
Foe b m i incorporated many of the key pro-
Fcreasingly 1967,damanprotestOv became in- visions of the Senate Assembly TON IG H T
course of four years the LSA and proposal. No research wouldre- and THURSDAY
main classified for longer than a
year, and no research would be al- NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP
N lowed whose "clear and foresee-
N -1 4-Cha n inn z tori. nr n- -PRESENTS--

Planitary Cycles (of Uranus and
Beyond) and Their Relationship
to th Dawning of the
Age of Aquarius
By RAY MERRIMAN, Astrologer
Wednesday, 3-5 p.m., Modern Language Bldg. Aud. 3
Sponsored by Office of Religious Affairs
as part of Dimensions of Religious Experience Lecture
NEXT TUESDAY: Communication in the Biotic World-Cleve Backster
c

,

Mass. prisoners hol

II

By Reuters and AP trying to restore the prison routiner
WALPOLE, Mass .-Inmates set to normal.
small fires in the maximum secur- At a news conference last week,
ity section of the Massachussetts Prison Superintendent Raymond
Correction Institution here last Porelle said that a prostitution ring
night, in a second day of rebellion. had been operating for privileged
Firemen and heavily armed po- inmates in the prison hospital, with
lice were sent to the prison, where girls being brought in for "dates."
there have been numerous riots Porelle charged that organized
and seven murders in the past crime was operating within the
year. prison, both in arranging for pros-
"There were several fires in the
maximum security blocks," prison ::.:::<:.:",:;:::..:.. :<;:;.:..<:.
system' spokesman John MacLean k A ILY FF' .
said in a statement. DA ILY OF)
He said state police remained on r
standby alert at the prison, but,,..:.::::.:::.:::::;:::<::::=: ::::::":
said they had not been called in- TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13
side. He said corrections officers DAY CALENDAR
from three nearby state prisons Music School: Wind instrument dept.
were "geared up" and pressed in- recital, SM Recital Hall, 12:30 pm.
Future world Lecture Series: Poalo
to duty to help put the troubles Soleri, architect, "Future of Aesthe-
down. tics," Hill Aud., 3 pm.
Last Saturday, a spokesman rep- LSA Coffee Hour: Geology, 4011 CC
resenting an association of in- Little, 3 pm.
mates warned that the institution Physics Seminar: J. Ekin, Rutgers
rtes frarnedothat theA tia.tAtnCollege, "The Electron Phonon Umk-
"was ripe for another Attica." At- lapp Interaction," 2038 Randall Lab.,
tica, New York State prison, was 3 pm.
the scene of an uprising in Sep- Physics Seminar: F. Henyey, "Impact
tember, 1971, during which 32 in- eParameter Description of Multiparticle
tembr, 171, urin whcivilins & Elastic Scattering & an Application
mates and ten guards and civilians to the Multiperipheral Model," P &A
were killed.' Colloq. Rm., 4 pm.
The association said it was pro- Ctr. for Russian & E. European Stu-
testing "cruel and inhuman. treat- dies & Japanese Studies Ctr.: I. Laty-
testig "crel an shev, Inst. of Oriental Studies, Academy
ment" of the prisons 575 inmates, of Sciences, USSR, "views of Soviet
who were locked up for five weeks Japanologists on the Basic Problems!
in their cells late January and of the Recent History of Japan," Com-
early February, during a search mons Rm., basement, Lane Hall, 4
pm.
for drugs and concealed weapons. Council on Black Concerns: speakers:
The search for contraband ended Bobby Seale, Ricardo Sanchez & John
last week, and the new trouble Sinclair, Power Ctr., 7:30 pm.
eruped a prion fficals ere Music School: Baroque Trio, Rack-
erupted as prison officials were i ham Aud., apm.
-CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT
, = 3200 SAB
POW s arrive MANAGEMENT INTERN PROGRAM,
iI.JV~ City of Phoenix, Ariz.: Professional
training prpogram in city government
admin., open to students who will have
in P il n 1a iM degree i Pub. Admin., Econ., Poi.
pp Science, or related by July 1. Deadline
in1 Philppies in this office
for applying: March 2. Details avail.
(Continued from Page 1) ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES INSTI-
(Coosiallnti nd romfPag t o TUTE - COLGATE UNIV.: June 14 to
hospital planes and the flight tO Aug. 24; Inter-disciplinary, Includes
Clark Air Base. field work - 9 hrs. credit; deadline:
The first of four hospital planes- March 1.
three from Hanoi, one from Saigon ANTIOCHGRAD SCHOOL OF EN-
VIRONMENTAL bog EDUC., Harrisville, N.
-ferried in 40 prisoners. It brought H. offers teacher certification & Mas-
them from the North Vietnamese ter's degree in outdoor educ.
capital, where they had filed FELLOWSHIPS: $1500 fellowships for
through a wire fence and moved grad, students plus room and board
5U yrdsacros te tamacto'in an SAE Fraternity House- in ex-
50 yards across the tarmac to change for tutor-in-residence respon-
board their flight to freedom. sibilities, anywhere in USA. See info in
During the flight, they appointed Career Planning & Placement.

a protest
titution and in smuggling in con-
traband, but he declined to give
details.
The superintendent said the long
hunt for contraband within the
high-walled prison turned up more
than 300 illicit items, sometimes
with the aid of mine-detectors,
ranging from knives and black

capacitate human life."
The new policy, however, would
not apply to Willow Run, which
was scheduled to pass out of Uni-
versity jurisdiction by the end of
the year. The move amounted to a
clever way of preserving the status
quo.
In a recent Daily interview,
Overburger reflected on some less
technical aspects of the issue of
classified research. He said.
"In 1941 the country was attack-
ed. We went through a period of
time during World War II when
there was a marshalling of intel-
lectual and scientific resources to
survive.
"The academic and intellectual
community was a part of this ef-
fort. A very high percentage of the

I

$179m

plus 10%
service and tax

BAHAA

4

FREEPORT

based on quad occupancy

jacks to

illegal drugs.

IAL BULLETIN
Geneva, Ill. Opening for lifeguard/
swimming coach with Red Cross Life
Saving qualifications best for students
living in that area.
Career Center for Social Serv. N. Y.
C. Summer social work program avail-
able to undergraduates, seniors not
eligible. Full details avail. Application
deadline Mar. 1. Arbraham & Strauss.
Summer program for juniors. Openings
include assignments in merchandis-
ing, research, sales promotion & pub-
licity, and operations Mgt. Further de-
tails avail.
INTERVIEW : Register by phone or in
Iperson (763-4117):
Salade Foods, Boston, Mass. Will in-
terview here, Feb. 16, 9 to 5 pm. Open-
ings in Detroit area. Students from
liberal arts, bus. ad. and econ. Con-
tacting established firms. Merchandise
replacement and management contact.
INTERVIEW: Camp Maplehurst,
Mich. Coed. Will interview Feb. 19,
1:30 to 5 pm. Openings include gen.
counselors, specialists for riding (Eng.
or Western), waterfront, arts and
crafts, science coordinator.
SPECIAL
CASTENADA'S
JOURNEY TO IXTLAN
., 0
k~
n
4 q
v z
List 6.95 SALE 5.88o
Teachings of
Don Juan-1.25
o A Separate Reality-1.25 (1
3 BORDERS BOOKSHOPv
316 S. STATE
Open Mon.-Sat. till 140 m

'Per~ elr
V '1-K7"i l
9RingrStarrin
TECHNICOLOR*
Released by COMMONWEALTH UNITED
7:15 and 9:30 p.m.
modern languages aud. III
(E. Washington at Thayer)
ADMISSION $1.25

DATES: MARCH 3-10-MARCH 17-24-APRIL 21-28
Enjoy the Fascinating Bahamas while staying at the luxurious Hotel Shalimar
OXFORD TRAVEL

MI CHIGA N
UNION Couples Play
TUSDAYS
0N
0

3211/2 S. Main Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108

(313) 769-5860

I

a

FOR AFFINITY GROUPS OF 40 OR MORE

i1

r

r7-

- - - ---- m

1 01 ffmi

National firm seeks on-
pus representative to
velop student marke
photo processing serv

-cam-
/ -

t for
vices.

Su cessful candidate will
distribute company pro-
vided promotional materials
with occassional direct
selling.
Our program insures im-
mediate rewards for the ag-
gressive individual. College
newspaper support avail-
able. Only one rep will be
selected per campus.
BEST
Apply to: PHM
Mr. Ron Tyler
Campus Promotions
100 Summers Street
Coolville, Ohio 45723
Include return address and
college attended.

t
I
i
. .
C
M
k
i

Navy Capt. Jeremiah Denton Jr.
of Virginia Beach, Va., to express,
their sentiments to the cheering.
U.S. base personnel, families and
newsmen on hand at Clark to gri
them.
Shop at
Folletts
for TEXTBOOKS
and SUPPLIES
State Street at North U.

SUMMER PLACEMENT
212 SAB
Announcement Geneva Golf Cllub,
The Community and
Junior College Journal
is available on a group sub-
scription basis for those prepar-
ing to teach or work in junior
or community colleges. Details
from:
COMMUNITY & JUNIOR
COLLEGE JOURNAL
P.O. BOX 298
ALEXANDRIA, VA. 22314

213 S. ST AT E ST.
U. of M. Payroll Checks
cashed here
Open Mon.Sat. 9-6 Ph. 761-8816
N O G AME S
SPECIAL COUPON COUPON ALL
2 oz. 250's 32 oz.
BARNES-H IND
WETTING VITAMIN C LISTERINE
SO$158ONWATCH ES
500 M.G. Family Siz DISCOUNT
No Limit Limit 1 Expires 2/19/73 Limit 2 Expires 2/19/73
COUPON COUPON SPECIAL CHANCE OF A
10's 2 oz. ALL LIFE TIME
CONTAC PERNOX OZON MICHIGAN STATE
COLD CAPSULES Hair Products LOTTERY
Reg f f cTICKETS
orn AVAILABLE
HERE
I Limit 1 Expires 2/19/73 Limit 1 Expires 2/19/73 No Limit
SPECIAL COUPON COUPON COUPON
16 oz l 6oz. 15 oz.
16 oz.R U V X
WELLA BALSAM Fanci-Ful VASELINE
HAIR CONDITIONER FEMININE SYRINGE HAIR RINSE INTENSIVE CARE LOTION
6$118
Limit 1 Expires 2/19/73 Limit 1 Expires 2/19/73 Limit 1 Expires 2/19/73
SYLVANIA SPECIAL 4 CUP COUPON
FLASH CUBES 10%.89c
OR ELECTRIC LIFE LINE
KODAK INSTAMATIC DISCOUNT HOT POT PROFESSIONAL
COLORCOUPOILTOOTH BRUSH
COUPON an
All Film Home$2/$100
9Processing Office
Limit 4 Expires 2/19/73
COUPON COUPON COUPON
39c 170's 89 ORAL FEVER
VICTOR'S EUCALYPTUS TTB THERMOMETER
SCOUGH DROPSI Q-TIPS CO TO ALS $139 000

--_

Who Is Frank Shoichel
! U-M law student, BA in Political Science.
! Once-active Democrat, served on Michigan Dem-
ocratic Party Political Reform Commission.
! Urban Corps intern, Detroit Model Cities pro-
gram.
* Movement organizer (Moratorium; support for
BAM, GM and U employee's strikes; Mayday).
* Active in HRP since September.

I

NOTICE
SPRING and GUMER
GRADUATES
The State of Michigan, Department of
Civil Service, announces the CLOSING
DATE FOR APPLICATIONS FOR COL-

r
r

... ..
i
t
i
k
i
I
I
{
I
i
r
i
i
i
i
i
r
I
I

LEGE TRAINEE

POSITIONS

with the

V

State. No applications for examination
will be accepted after
5:00 P.M., FEBRUARY 26, 1973*
Each year more than 5,000 college graduates apply
for positions as college trainees. An average of 300
to 500. of these applicants are hired every year,
following competitive examination.
COMPETITION IS SHARP-but if you will meet the
requirements by the end of August, you're still in
the running.
APPLY NOW-THE STATE'S GREAT!

;4.
*s

city
Council

3 nt
2nd
f
Ward
HRP

assm9nommomaw-

I

I

Ii

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan