The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 1, 1985- Page 3 COMPUTERS Computers may open up politics to universities Associated Press 4 Pachyderm pull "Mardji," an 8,500-pound Asian elephant, pulls a fork lift out of the mud yesterday at Marine World Africa USA in Redwood City, Calif. The fork lift got stuck during moving and packing operations at the animal park. Hun- dreds of animals are being moved to the park's new home in Vallejo, Calif. Council promotes violence awareness LANSING (UPI) - Sen. William Sederburg announced yesterday the creation of a Higher Education Com- puter Forum - a unique high-tech network he said prefigures the future of political communication in America. The system - called an "electronic bulletin board" and a "public hearing ... held through a computer" - offers information and a means of ad- dressing important figures in higher Police Notes Clothes stolen Six hundred dollars worth of clothing was taken from a woman's room in Stockwell Hall over the weekend, according to Bob Peifer, assistant director of campus security. The woman had left for the weekend, Peifer said, and she discovered the missing clothes Sun- day when she returned. Car stolen- A 28-year-old Belleville man held a couple at gunpoint late Sunday night on the 400 block of East Liberty before stealing their car and leading police on a chase which ended at Arborland Mall, Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Jan Suomala said yesterday. Police captured the suspect after he tried to flee on foot from the scene. -Linda Holler education. Those wishing to participate may, if they have the necessary equipment, plug into the forum by dialing an East Lansing phone number, 517-355-3276. Once plugged in, they can review the proposed report of the Senate Select Committee on Higher Education, "vote" on its recommen- dations and leave messages to other participants. Among those who have agreed periodically to plug in and participate are Wayne State University President David Adamany, Grand Valley State Colleges President Arend Lubbers, Saginaw Valley State College President Jack Ryder and Sederburg, who chairs the select committee, and the higher education budget sub- committee. The project is being supported by the Kellogg Foundation. The advantages of such a system over traditional letterwriting, Seder- burg said, are speed, ease and greater informality. "This is probably the mode of the future as far as interaction is concer- ned," said Sederburg, a computer fancier who has a similar system for communicating with his constituents. Too often, he said, lawmakers deal only with the lobbyists and get a "filtered down, homogenized version of what's going on out there. "This cuts out the middle inter- preter." The system fizzled, however, in a scheduled media demonstration. Sederburg said press room phone lines "aren't sensitive enough." By AMY MINDELL In a special session last night, the Ann Arbor City Council unanimously voted to proclaim the week of Oct. 6 "Domestic Violence Awareness Week." Lowell Peterson (D-First Ward), who sponsored the resolution, said it was designed to show that the city's elected officials recognize the severity of domestic violen- ce. OCTOBER'S "Domestic Violence Awareness Week" has already been declared by Governor James Blanchard, and is a national observance sponsored by the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. This is the third consecutive year the council has ap- proved such a resolution. "It is something that has to be redone every year," sa- id Susan McGee, a member of the Domestic Violence Project/Safe House. The house is a non-profit corporation that provides shelter for battered women and their children and a 24-hour crisis hot-line. NEITHER the city nor the Domestic Violence Project Safe House, have specific plans for the week. "We do a lot for Rape Prevention Month in April," Peterson said. Included in the resolution were statistics illustrating the depth of domestic violence: " A woman is battered every 18 seconds in the U.S.d; " 35 percent of female homicide victims are killed by their husbands or boyfriends; " Domestic violence affectgs one in three families and cuts across race and cultural lines; and " As a group, college-educated males are more likely to physically abuse their wives than non-college educated males. "We have an illusion that battering doesn't occur in af- fluent areas - but it does," McGee said. A vigil will be held for the women that "have died at the hands of their assailants" Oct. 9 at 9 p.m. at the Federal Building, according to McGee. The vigil will be sponsored by the Women's Crisis Cen- ter in Ann Arbor. NEW REQUEST ACCOUNTS STILL AVAILABLE AT UNYNIU STUDENTS: Until this Friday, October 4, you can pick up a REQUEST ACCOUNT on MTS at the UNYN station in the Michigan Union. REQUEST ACCOUNTS ARE: Accounts that are "free for the asking" and will give you up to $50/term of MTS- based services to be used for any academic purpose. Graduate students doing thesis work may get up to $250/term. AFTER OCTOBER 4: You can still get a Request Account from the Computing Center's Business Office at the Computing Center on North Campus between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. weekdays. FACULTY AND OTHERS: Request Accounts are available to you too; up to $1200/year to Faculty, research scientists, and librarians. Call or visit the Computing Center's Business Office (764-8000) between 8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS PROGRAM FROM THE U-M COMPUTING CENTER AND THE VICE PROVOST FOR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. RPC approves classified conference proposal (Continued from Page 1) because he felt it may violate Univer- sity guidelines which prohibit resear- ch "the probable result of which ... is to destroy human life or incapacitate {human beings." ''MY CONCERN was that we were essentially giving a carte blanche to a series of workshops to develop military projects and we didn't even know what projects were going to be discussed," Isaacson said, adding that Sinnott had given the committee a preliminary agenda for the confere- nce only yesterday. Sinnott refused to comment on the agenda or any other aspect of his research, but Economics Prof. Thomas Juster, another committee member, said that vague agendas are common to scientific conferences. None of the RPC members contac- ted yesterday would reveal the name of the faculty member who cast the other negative vote on Sinnott's proposal. ACCORDING to University p guidelines, a Classified Review Panel, consisting of two faculty members and one student, must review every proposal for classified research. If any member of the panel vetoes a proposal, the guidelines state, the proposal will then go the RPC for con- sideration. ISA junior Ingrid Kock, a member of the Classified Review Panel, said she rejected Sinnott's proposal because she thinks it could threaten human life. In a written report submitted to the RPC, Kock outlined her view that some of the research discussed at the conference will investigate infrared surveillance technology, and armor shields used to protect tanks. "RESEARCH on anti-tank weapons will contribute to the destruction of the human beings who are controlling the tanks," Kock's report stated. "Research on infra-red sensing .. . will facilitate the destruction of enemy soldiers." In addition, Koch wrote, "It would be precipitous to make a decision on the 1986 conference before the final agenda is available for review." But RPC members who supported Sinnott's project doubted its military applications, and emphasized that its results will be published. "It's my belief that the conference involves the basic science of metallurgy and does not have im- mediate and direct military ap- plications," said Computer and In- formation Systems Prof. Thomas Schriber, who also serves on the RPC. Juster emphasized issues of academic freedom, saying the con- ference "is just a talk session. Scien- tists generally regardthese as useful, so it's hard for me to see why that should be troublesome." HAPPENINGS Highlight The School of Music's concert of the month, the Prism Saxophone En- semble, will be at 8 p.m. in the Pendleton Room of the Michigan Union. Films CG - The Seven Samurai, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. MTF - El Norte, 7 & 9:40 p.m., Michigan Theater. Speakers Business Administration - Lecture, J. Passino, "Strategic Use of In- formation," 4 p.m., K1320 Kresge Library. Geology - Turner Conoco Distinguished Lecture, Robert Newton, "Fluid Regimes & Evolution of the Deep Crust," 4 p.m., 4001 CC Little. International Center, Ecumenical Campus Center - Lecture, James Lewis, "Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras - The U.S. Connection," noon, 603 E. Madison. Chinese Studies - Brown Bag Lecture, Michael Yahuda, "China & Southeast Asia: Problems of Perception," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. Meetings Action Against A.I.D.S., 7 p.m., 1st floor, League. College Republicans - 7:30 p.m., Conference Room one, League. CEW - Job Hunt Club, noon, 350 South Thayer Street. Rugby Football Club - Meeting, 7 p.m., Tartan Turf. The Science Research Club - meeting, 7:30 p.m., Chrysler Center Auditorium. Miscellaneous Microcomputer Education Center - Workshop, Basic Concepts of Microcomputer Telecommunications, 3 p.m., 3113 SEB. 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