I The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 24, 1981-Page 5 Banner protests 'U' research By KATIE STREICHER Although Michigan lost to Ohio State Saturday, it was still a banner day for car dealerships, beer breweries, and a campus activist group. The Committee for Research on In- telligence and Military Endeavors spent $300 to fly- a plane over the stadium Saturday displaying a banner stating "U of M Military Research Kills." Many fans were taken aback by the banner which flew among other banners advertising Budweiser beer and Ford care. LIZ GALST, coordinator of CRIME, said flying the banner was in protest of University involvement in research funded by the Department of Defense. "We are trying to make an issue of this on campus," she said. "When something is going on in Ann Arbor it's easy for students not to realize it. We are gust trying to make students more aware." Galst said the University schools and departments are conducting "systems design, data processing, and com- bustion research for the military, in addition to efforts trying to develop more refined techniques to support op- pressive regimes in Third World nations." SHE SAID THAT CRIME is primarily concerned abut military research in the engineering college. One researcher there is studying the basics of detonations and explosives and another is researching ocean acoustics which could later be used to help the Navy's sonar systems track enemy targets, she said. University policy prohibits all research projects leading directly to the destruction of human life and will not accept contracts restricting publication of research findings beyond one year, thus preventing researchers from conducting more classified research. Galst said that classified research guidelines are rarely enforced. "They are basically just paper guidelines, failure to follow them is rarely reprimanded," she said. CRIME RAISED the money to fly the banner by sponsoring a party two Saturdays ago. "We had a great tur- nout," she said. "Over 100 people showed up." She said flying the banner was much more effective than handing out flyers. "We acquired both positive and negative reactions in a shorter amount of time," she said. Galst said CRIME members were confronted with some unusual problems at the Willow Run Airport. "One flight attendant stated that per- sons had offered him over $300 to prohibit the banner from being flown. "Overall, the endeavor was quite successful," Galst said. 0990 14 et e'er ~ Questions raised over sale of Alle WASHINGTON (AP)- National security adviser Richard Allen wrote in a government financial disclosure statement that he sold his consulting firm in January 1978, but now, accor- ding to a White House lawyer, says the sale actually took place early this year. Questioned about the sale date, White House Counsel Fred Fielding said Allen sent him a memo last week stating that he had mistakenly put down the 1978 date and had meant to write January 1981. IN THE disclosure statement, filed last February, Allen said he no longer was president of Potomac International Corp. as of January 1978, and added in parentheses "sold business.". But Fielding could not explain why, if the sale of Potomac International had occurred in January 1981, there was no mention of either the sale or Allen's 9s firm AP Photo_ A DOWNCAST TIP O'NEILL leaves a meeting of House Democratic leaders yesterday after President Reagan vetoed the Democrats' emergency spen- ding resolution. The president later signed a Republican-backed resolution that allowed the government to operate at old spending levels until Dec. 15. Battle over, budget' leaves government temporarily closed recent ownership of the firm under the income and assets section of the finan- cial questionnaire. BOB FLYNN, an official of the Government Ethics Office, said yester- day that if Allen had made a capital gain on the sale of the firm, that amount should have been listed under income. Flynn also said federal regulations require that nominees list on their disclosure statements any interest in a business held at the end of the preceding calendar year. Peter Hannaford, owner of the Han- naford Corp., has said the firm acquired Potomac. International on Jan. 18, 1981, two days before President Reagan's inauguration and three days before Allen received at least $1,000 in cash from a Japanese journalist who had interviewed first lady Nancy Reagan. 'U' signs first contract with GEO in six years From AP and UPI WASHINGTON- Thousands of workers were sent home, buildings were closed and services were cur- tailed yesterday as non-essential operations of the federal gbver- nment from coast to coast were brought to a halt by the battle over the budget.. Congressional action late in the af- ternoon'appeared to. pave the way for a return to normal business, but the shutdown already had started. PRESIDENT Reagan told Cabinet members to suspend most operations after he vetoed an emergency spending bill, passed by Congress in an attempt to keep the government going. Following' the veto, the House passed a Republican bill to keep federal spending at the old level un- til Dec. 15. The Senate was expected to approve the measure quickly and Reagan said in advance that he would sign it. Earlier, White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes told repor- ters 60 percent of the White House staff has been temporarily axed and the president, who makes $200,000 annually, would not be paid until a new spending bill was approved. A SPOKESMAN for the Office of Management and Budget noted, however, the Constitution provides the president's salary "shall not be diminished" during his term. Congress had already passed an appropriations bill funding itself. The bureaucracy- technically ran out of money at 12:01 a.m. EST Friday when a temporary funding bill expired and Congress was hours away from approving a replacement. Since government of- fices are closed during the weekend, the funding expiration had little ef- fect. Among those who kept working during the temporary shutdown were employees of the Internal Revenue Service, doctors and nur- ses, prison guards, and Treasury Departilent officials. Reagan had promised that Social Security and other benefits would be paid on schedule, and the Postal Service continues operations. Members of the military also were unaffected. (Continued from Page 1). teaching assistants. GEO WILL RUN the teacher preparation sessions, Marker said, but it wants the University to supply facilities for them at no cost. The salary hike is needed, Marker said, because "We're the second or third lowest paid TAs in the Big Ten." A 51/2 percent staff pay hike this year ended up as "a zero percent increase' for TAs because of the 18 percent tuition hike, he said. GEO and the University will also have to decide, what implementing the retroactive (1976) contract will mean," Marker said. Issues will include whether the University's refusal to assist GEO in collecting union dues means "the Diversity owes us back money for those dues," Marker said . ANOTHER ISSUE the GEO will bring up is whether damage suits could be filed over any alleged University violations of thecontract during the last five years, Marker said. "I think the University has been livingunder the terms of thehcontract over the last five years," Forsyth said. Under a memorandum tacked on to the 1976 contract, any salary hikes negotiated will not be retroactive over the last five years, when graduate assistants were without a contract. YESTERDAY'S signing of the con- tract came after the Michigan Em- ployment Relations Commission or- dered the University to recognizethe contract and collectively bargain with the GEO members as employees. The University had previously refused to negotiate with the GEO on the grounds that graduate student assistants are students receiving work- study financial aid, and are not em- ployees. After a two-hour closed executive session last Friday, the Regents and Shapiro decided not to appeal the MERC decision. Daily staff writer Janet Rae filed a report for this story. Daily ee Classifieds Get Results - Call 764-0557 Something's Gappeninq at the GU-Club! GREG7GRE MUSIG 61D11 N~mb PAIRTY with D. J. Michael Kremen } Every i'uesdal . 8:30-12:30 caribbean ' QDrink Specials! Grhe GUniversity club Git's here for you! Spending resolution puts government back to work (Continued from Page 1) against it. It was Reagan's first veto, and it stuck. A bitterly divided Congress had sent him late Sunday night a $428-billion emergency bill, expiring next July 15, after it had toiled for days to resolve scores of differences. The House, to which Reagan returned that bill unsigned, made no, effort to override the veto, but con- centrated instead on shortening the expiration date. Meanwhile, just hours after Reagan decreed "as quickly as possible, people should be sent home," workers streamed out of federal buildings, their work in- terrupted, their pay discontinued. Many offices were closed entirely. But the compromise that was passed by evening calls for those who were suddenly furloughed to recover the lost pay. n MAPLE I AGE SHP CTR V V V V V PAT fly i C1 .'17D1Ai " " MON - FRI $2 r6l 6PM HANDMADE FILMS Prments TIME BANDITS ...they didn't make history, they stole it! xs 7 20I Paul Gaulin Mime Company Tuesday, November 24, at 8:00 Power Center Tickets at $9.00, $8.00, $7.00, $5.00 i