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May 05, 1982 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1982-05-05

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The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 5, 1982-Pagq15
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Members or the College of Engineering's graduating class sit before a ciutter or phony money they threw in honor of the
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7

Housing rehabilitation
to begin by mid-May I sM
tearing down the insides," Harrison 3 SU P S
By FANNIE WEINSTEIN said. , 201 E. Washington at Fourth
The city of Ann Arbor will receive The cities of Flint, Saginaw, Jackson, OPEN M-SAT, 9-
$500,000 from the Michigan State Monroe, Kalamazoo, and Lansing will OPEN FRI. 9-8
Housing Development Authority as also participate in the program which 994-3572
part of an experimental $3.6 million MSHDA hopes to eventually expand to.
housing rehabilitation program, accor- a statewide level, accordingeoEn
din tostae oficals

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ding to state officials. v
"The funds will be used to provide
loans to landlords at below-market
rates," according to Anne Harrison,
public information officer for MSHDA.
THE RENOVATIONS, to be done on
housing ranging from rented, single-
family homes to larger apartment
complexes, will include plumbing and
energy conservation improvements
and correcting building code violations,
Harrison said.
"It's rehabilitation that goes farther
than painting a house but not as far as

Q ~ G .1A LV~ , fV .ll .
Harrison.
THE CITY of Ann Arbor will con-
tribute "at least $166,000 and possibly
more" to the rehabilitation effort,
Harrison said. Flint and Saginaw will
be matching state funds, she added.
The city is seeking to stimulate
renovation in the downtown and central
areas, according to William Hampton
of the Ann Arbor Community Develop-
ment Department.
The city has been accepting
renovation proposals from landlords
for about four months, Hampton said.

Faculty delays decision
on military research policy
(Continued from Page 5)

"Look, Igor,
a Summer School
Summer Sessions
University of Pennsylvania
Penn welcomes discriminating characters of all
types in the summer. Choose from:
* Graduate Programs
e Undergraduate courses in the Liberal Arts,
Pre-med, Business, Engineering, and Nursing
* Special Institutes in Publishing and Writing
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Call or write today for the Summer Sessions Bulletin.
Summer Sessions
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Resources Prof. James Crowfoot sub-
mitted an alternate proposal calling for
the creation of a two student, four
faculty member review board to look at
funded research proposals that might
have wespons applications.
Research Policies Committee
Chairman Kahn said that a committee
such as the one proposed by Crowfoot
"smacks of McCarthyism" and would
be an unnecessary "police force" for
the faculty.
RUCKNAGEL responded that
researchers are, in a sense, "policed all
the time" by many in the research
community, including peers who decide
what should and should not be
published.
Much of the recent furor over
military research has been sparked by

a report prepared for the Michigan
Student Assembly by Bret Eynon, a
local historian and researcher.
Eynon's January report to MSA and an
update which appeared in April
strongly implied that several faculty
members are currentlyworking on
weapons-related research.
Assembly member and Engineering
Prof. Thomas Senior, one of those
named in the Eynon reports, told the
faculty it should regard Eynon's report
as "an interesting, not extremely fac-
tual" work that has "much truth, a lit-
tle half-truth, and a little untruth."
Senate Assembly Chairman Ron
Bishop, professor of internal medicine,
said yesterday nothing has been
organized yet to investigate the issue
and bring the two sides closer together.

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