Proposed defense department " lab draws criticism Continued from Page 3) - a status quo that might itself harbor forces which, for all we know, could bring about some things we most want to avoid," Huntington said. "HOW DOES development of weapons software' advance the quest for truth and wisdom?" he asked. But in a separate interview, Bill Lucas, director of Ann Arbor's High- technology Task Force, said the University's role will be very in- significant in the defense department project. "A University program is not what the Defense Department wants," said 0 Lucas. "I see the main emphasis of the institute instead in the private sector." GEORGE GAMOTA director of the University's Institute of Science and Technology, said that the main reason the University is so interested in SEI is the possibility of "having a high-tech effort in the area - one that will dictate the future of software." According to Lucas, the defense department plans to assemble "100 or * so of the best minds in the country" and develop a new computer language - called ADA - that will be applied to all computers. "And the DoD is in the position that if they want their language to become the standard, it will become the standard," Gamota said. 'U' to appeal By PETE WILLIAMS University attorneys said yesterday they plan to appeal a federal judge's decision that found the University guilty of not affording due process when it rescinded a former student's degree. In her 85-page opinion, U.S. District Court Judge Anne Diggs Taylor said the University "...proposed to rescind his degree without due process of law." She ordered that a Master of Science degree again be awarded to Wilson Crook. * CROOK WAS accused by the geology department of fabricating the date for his 1977 Master's, thesis. He claimed to have discovered a new element, "texatite," which was later discovered to resemble a synthetic compound missing from a professor's lab. "The University did everything possible to deny him due process," Crook's Detroit attorney, George Bushnell said. "The court found the conduct of the University utterly The Michigan Daily -,Friday, May 18, 1984 - Page 7 Up the creekAssociatedP Three Battle Creek residents paddle a Volkswagen down the Kalamazoo River on Wednesday. The car's wheels have been removed and replaced with air-filled drums which act as pontoons. They were practicing for the Battle Creek Jaycee's raft race which will he held on June 9. Tuition hike won 't exceed 10% (ContinuedfromPage3) as acting art school dean to fill the tar of the Center far Afroamerican and The regents also voted to lease a par- position vacated by Dean George African Studiles. cel of land on Washington Heights to a Bayliss' resignation, and Prof. William * Prof. Donald Lewis was named to group planning to build a Ronald Mc- Lewis was named acting associate the mathematics department chair- Donald House, a facility far families of dean. manship children being treated at the Univer- The regents approved the following * The communications department sity's Mott Children's Hospital. appointments: wl ecardb rf onSees Prof. Wendell Beers was appointed * Prof. Thamas Halt is the new direc- wl ecardb rf onSees Plans OK'd for electric doors at Union (Continued from Page2) University's bus system for the han- dicapped, Luckey said. Student Services assistant Jim Kubaiko said summer service on the wheelchair-carrying busses was exten- ded by one hour in the evenings to run degree ruling reprehensible." University counsel Roderick Daane said Bushnell's complaints may have arisen because the defense failed to respond on time to the charges against Crook. Daane said he sent a detailed list of charges to Crook's attorney in June, 1979. INSTEAD OF responding by the August 1 deadline, Daane said, Bushnell replied on September 19 - three days before the hearing. "This generated the claim that he hadn't had adequate time to reply," Daane said. The University will appeal, but Daane refused to speculate on what the U.S. Court of Appeals might do. "It's like making book on the weather," he said. The trial centered on the question of whether Crook was afforded due process, and it did not address the legitimacy of his thesis. from 7:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. The fall hours have not been decided, but Kubaiko said an agreement will be reached by August 1. Beginning in September, Luckey said, the coalition will lobby for graduate fellowships for disabled students and handicapped accessibility to all University buildings. He said the coalition plans to create a system for monitoring complaints against professors who "do not know how to deal with disabled students." QtUrcb 1iIatw0Iip 'eruite0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS FOUNDATION 502 East Huron., 663-9376 (Between State and Division) Sunday Worship 9:55 a.m. May 20 Sermon: "Peace Makers." Childcare provided. John Reed, Director; Janice Beck, or- ganist. Pastor and Campus Minister, Robert B. Wallace. Associate Minister, Terry Ging. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (Between S. University and Hill) Sunday Worship Services 9:30 and 11:00. Wednesday Night Fellowship, 8:00. Communion at 9:30 Campus Minister - Steve Spina * *s* CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Ct. A Campus Ministry of the Christian Reformed Church Pastor: Reverend Don Postema 668-7421 Sunday Morning 10:00 a.m. Service: Guest Speaker Willis De Boer, Profes- sor at Calvin College. 6:00 p.m. Evening Worship. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Robert Kavasch, Pastor 663-5560 Sunday 9:30 Worship Service. LUTHERN CAMPUS MINISTRY at Lord of Light (LCA-ALC-AELC) 801SS. Forest at Hill St. 668-7622 Pastor: Galen Hora Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120 S. State St. (Corner of State and Huron) 662-4536 Sunday 9:30 and 11:00. "Freedom" by the UMYF Choir. Ministers: Dr. Donald B. Strobe Dr. Gerald R. Parker Rev. Tom Wachterhauser Education Director: Rose McLean Broadcast Sundays9:30a.m.-WNRS, 1290AM Televised Mondays 8:00 p.m.-Cable Chanel 9. . PSN hearings continue The trial of 11 Progressive Student protest military research. Network members who were arrested Judge S.J. Elden will not rule on last March for trespassing became Lady's motion until June 22. bogged down in the quagmire of the Lady also criticized PSN attorney legal process yesterday. Martin Blank's assertion that Elden David Lady, the prosecuting attor- had ruled transcripts of police ney, filed a brief in the 15th District discussion about the case should be Court protesting PSN's claim that they provided to the PSN. Lady claimed that were enforcing international law when no such transcripts are available. they held a sit-in at Prof. George Had- - Eric Mattson dad's East Engineering laboratory to