A SENIOR EDITORIAL: See editorial page 'Cl r 111k igzrn ~IaitF CLOUDY, WARMER W-11-57 Scattered showers. expected in evening. Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL LXXVIII, No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1967 SEVEN C(ENIS TWELVE PAGES Conductronics: co EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last of a four part series by a team of Dal yre- porters on military research at the Uni- versity. By NEAL BRUSS "Why isn't the University doing more for local industries?" frets multi-mil- lionaire Keeve M. Siegel, a former pro- fessor in the University's electrical engi- neering department. "I think the Uni- versity has a conservative position on supporting local industry." Despite the University's "conservative" posture, however, Siegel has done a top- notch job in bringing the University and outside business closer together. Siegel founded and until last February was president and chairman of the board of Conductron Corp., probably the most successful defense research spinoff firm Michigan has ever seen. Because the University's military re- search laboratories are in the develop- ment business-not the production busi- ness-a natural opportunity for commer- cial enterprise arises out of campus re- search activity. So in November, 1960, Siegel formed Conductron after resigning his post as head of the electrical engineering de- partment's radiation lab, a post he had held for four years. (Siegel retained his E.E. professorship.) In the interveni E seven years, "Kip" Siegel, as both friends and enemies call him, buit Conductron into a $50 million a year business and made at least $5 million personally. Shares which Con- ductron founders bought at a penny are now selling at $41 a share on the Ameri- can Stock Exchange. This means six figure profits for key personnel. igs#NiNi~i N#2lm#E~i~im~s I-1 3' Twenty-five University staff members joined the original Conductron staff in 1960. Of the 25, ten had been University professors, project engineers, or research department heads, 15 had worked in the WRL, seven in the E.E. department's radiation lab (taking overlaps into ac- count). Until this year when Siegel left Con- ductron to start a new firm called KMS Industries, Conductron maintained a close relationship with the University: * While at least six Conductron staff members were on the University faculty the firm purchased about $250,000 worth of research work and services from the school. Included were the use of WRL laboratory facilities for research work. The University also made up equipment for Conductron under a "job shop" arrangement. A At the same time Conductron has taken $39,000 in business from the Uni- versity, including a $35,000 sub-contract from the Air Force to test radar ab- sorbers. * Conductron scientists who were on. the University staff used technology they developed at the school to build devices for the firm. \ Conductron was founded with Uni- versity support. Siegel says that Univer- sity President Harlan Hatcher gave him permission to start the company which was originally backed by Paramount pictures. irsein But Vice-President for Research A. Geoffrey Norman points out, "The cir- cumstances of the birth of Conductron are a little bit questionable. They used University facilities at Willow Run ex- tensively in the beginning. For example, Conductron didn't have an analog com- puter, so it bought the services of ours. "A job shop arrangement developed in a few things where they didn't have the people to do the job," Norman says. "They would give it to us. "Things got to a point," Norman says, "where I wouldn't let them do anything at Willow Run laboratories without knowing about it personally. Obviously there was a situation where they (Con- ductron) were competing with Willow Run." But Siegel says,, "Conductron never in its history has competed with the Uni- versity." Indeed Conductron and the University have had a close working relationship over the years. Conductron has given the University $250,000 in business, includ- ing a contract of $28,000 to the aero- space engineering department in March, 1966, and an $11,000 contract to the mechanical engineering department in December, 1966. Among other business Conductron has given the University is a $10,500 contract to the Institute of Science and Technology in June, 1965 and a $2,100 contract to the electrical engineering department in January, 1963. See CONDUCTRON, Page 7 'U Spinoff (I M MILITARY RESEARCH AT MICHIGAN Conductron produces radar and op- tical devices, flight simulators, gas air conditioners and many other products. Many of its key staff members came from the electrical engineering depart- ment and the Willow Run Laboratory. Important products, such as radar ab- sorbing materials (used to get planes past enemy radar undetected) were in fields where the University had made research breakthroughs. -, j-Thor us R. C Opl Keeve M. Siegel Pentagon Reinforces, Students Jar Country Board of Governors End Wisconsin Students,.Faculty Move To Continue Boycott By RICHARD WINTER At a mass rally last night, over 7000 University of Wisconsin students voted to continue a boycott of classes which began yester- day. An estimated 200 teaching fellows, striking in sympathy for the students, also voted to continue their walkout. Meanwhile, faculty members rejected a proposal to condemn the University of Wisconsin's administration for calling in riot-train- ed city police to break up a student sit-in. The sit-in which took place Wednesday was in protest of campus recruitment by the Dow Chemical Co., manufacturers of napalm being used in Vietnam. Sixty-five demonstrators and three policemen were injured as the police used tear gas and riot sticks to disperse the crowd. Thirteen student leaders of the demonstration were re- Pro testers Rock, Three U16,S. Cities By MM HECK t Wt. etii, zo policemen from the Brooklyn area formed a flying wedge last night to break through a barricade of 2,000 Brooklyn col- lege students blocking the path of a paddy-wagon carrying 46 ar- rested youths. Eighteen Chicago area students were arrested yesterday when they attempted to enter a downtown Chicago armed forces induction center hoping to block inductions. Restrained pickets brought peace gesterday to antidraft demonstra- tions at the armed forces induc- tion center in Oakland, Cal., after tl'ree days of mass arrests. But picket leaders warned of more civil disobedience today. In Brooklyn one girl was re- ported hit by the fleeing paddy- wagon when the police managed to break a path through the crowd. Two policemen were injured, one seriously. Jeff Gordon, the spokes- men for the rioting students was reported unconscious after being hit by a billy club. Students at Brooklyn College congregated yesterday when po- liceman came to arrest Gordon, a student who was attempting to pass out anti-Vietnam war liter- ature next to a Navy recruiting booth set up at the school. When a college security chief asked Gordon for his identifica- tions, he refused. Assistant Dean Rebertta Baker then reportedly called in Brooklyn area policeman to arrest Gordon. Gordon resisted . portedly expelled. Neither univer- sity officials nor city authorities have acknowledged initiating the order for the use of riot sticks and tear gas. Rumors indicated that several tenured professors had resigned in protest while other unverified reports stated that some of the striking teaching fellows had been suspended from their jobs. Faculty m e m b e r s narrowly passed a motion to view films of the demonstration and the police actions in an effort to determine responsibility for the bloodshed. Pickets marched in front of numerous university buildings on the Madison campus, although students wishing to attend classes were not stopped. Chancellor William H. Sewell said the university would prefer charges against the leaders of the demonstration and suspend them from school, referring their cases to the student conduct commit- tee. Students have the right to appeal their suspensions. The university has been sharply criticized by the Wisconsin state legislature for its policy of exces- sive permissiveness toward stu- dent demonstrators. The legisla- ture called for the expulsion of students "whenever necessary." Kenneth Greenquist, president of the university's board of re- gents, issued a statement affirm- ing the board's "complete confi- dence in President Fred Harring- ton and Chancellor Sewell to cope with the present crisis." Atty. Gen. Bronson C. LaFollet- te, however, has asked for creation of a special committee to investi- gate the violence. He seeks repre- sentation of police, the student body, the governor's office, the legislature, and the attorney gen- r Washington Braces For War Protest By DAVID KNOKE Paratroopers began landing in Washington yesterday as military officials initiated a defense-of- the-Pentagon buildup in prepar- ation for tomorrow's anti-Vietnam war march. Although the Department of De- fense refused to acknowledge that the paratroops were being brought in specifically because of the dem- onstration a vanguard of 120 men of the 82nd Airborne Division from Ft. Bragg, N.C., flew in yesterday. Several other planeloads were scheduled to arrive later last night. Air Force officials indicated that as many as 100 C130 troop trans- ports carrying 6,000 men could fly into bases near the nation's ca- pital to guard the Pentagon. The Air Force officials empha- sized that the Defense Department is gearing to bring in whatever troop force is necessary to main- tain law and order. Reach Permit Accord Sponsors of the march and government agencies yesterday reached final agreement on per- mits for a rally, parade, and dem- onstration. The General Services Adminis- tration, which represents district service agencies, has indicated that it will rely on the 200 civilian Pen- tagon guards to keep unauthorized personnel out of the office build- ing where United States war policy is made. "We support the right of orderly dissent," said one official, but we cannot permit anything to inter- fere with the conduct of our busi- ness." Sponsors of the march have refused to rule out possible at- tempts to sit-in at the Pentagon. Troops in Reserve The paratroops will probably be held in reserve at nearby bases, but some 850 military police might be stationed inside the Pentagon, according to sources. Saturday of- fice personnel drops to about 3,000 from a week level of 27,000. En- trance to the building from 6 p.m. Friday to 7 a.m. Monday is re- stricted to persons with passes. Persons will be allowed to enter a grassy mall in front of the Pen- tagon's main entrance between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. tomorrow. THIRD DEPARTMENT TO ACT:I Econ Alters PhD. Requirements By JILL CRABTREE The faculty of the economics department yesterday voted to eliminate language requirements for its Ph.D. candidates, effective next fall. The economics department is the third department in the liter- ary college to take such action since the Executive Board of Rackham Graduate School voted recently to turn over the matter of determining graduate lan- guage requirements to the indi- vidual departments. The psychology and psycholog- ical-social work departments had previously taken similar action. The faculty decision came after consultations earlier in the day between the Executive Committee of the economics department and a group of elected representatives of economics graduate students. The economics graduate stu- dents met early last week and decided unanimously that the de- partment should not have a lan- guage requirement binding on every graduate student, but that the program should be made flexible to allow for differences in fields of concentration within the department. John Bishop, Grad, a student representative, said the students felt language skills were "irrele- vant" for many economics stu- dents, and that languages should be "strongly recommended"-but not required-for students plan- ning to go into fields where lan- guage skills would be a necessity, such as Chinese or Russian studies. Bishop said the faculty had been "very receptive" to the stu- dents advice. Department language require- ments recommendations are still subject to approval by Rackham Graduate School. However Prof. Harvey E. Brazer, chairman of the economics department, said he did SRC Claims Students Have Right To Set Conduct Rules' to Freshmen's By LYNNE KILLIN The Student Relations Commit- tee, a subcommittee of the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs, yesterday claimed that "students . . . have the pri- mary responsibility to develop sets of rules affecting their per- sonal conduct." The resolution passed by SRC stated that "the University for- mulated no non-academic pari- ental regulations for students liv- ing in non-university housing. "The need for regulations for students living in University own- ed or affiliated housing, there- fore, depends upon that fact alone. As housing conditions vary so may the necessary regulations." "The Committee believes that the students involved should for- mulate their own rules . . . al- though enforcement and adjudi- cation of such rules may well in- volve individuals other than stu- dents." The resolution further stated that "the University has a re- sponsibility to develop workable guidelines concerning general stu- dent conduct . . . these guidelines should be consistent with local and general law, and with broad educational purposes. They should not be considered as rules; except that such conduct considered in- tolerable to the educational func- tion of the university community should be subject to appropriate academic discipline. "The Committee feels that reg- ulations concerning organizations of students within the University are a proper sphere for joint stu- dent - university regulations, and for enforcement of such regula- tions." Roy Ashmall, Grad, a member not forsee any difficulty in get- ting his department's recommen- dations approved. The faculty has turned over to its CurriculumhCommittee the problem of what new require- ments, if any, will be made to re- place the language requirement. Brazer said new requirements may be made to take up the slack of the load reduction resulting from the elimination of language requirements. According to Brazer, these re- quirements could take the form of either a broader rar - - courses in economics or c outside the department, Bishop said the graduate stu- dents had discussed the issue of alternative requirements at their meeting last week, and had de- cided to postpone their decision until the entire graduate program in economics could be re-evalu- ated. It was decided that the student representatives should talk to individualdfaculty members to "get an idea of their stand" on graduate requirements. These ideas will be incorpo- rated in a series of "position papers" outlining alternative pro- grams, which will be presented at a meeting of all economics, graduate students for discussion. "The students will determine from these papers what position they will take vis-a-vis the facul- ty," Bishop said. MSU REVERSAL EAST LANSING (JP)-Mich- igan State University yesterday asked some of its students to pay less for their winter term courses and the Legislature to pay more for the 1968-69 school year. The MSU Board of Trustees yesterday approved modifica- tions in its controversial "abil- ity to pay" tuition plan and asked the Legislature to appro- priate nearly $55 million for general operation during the next fiscal year. The board adopted a mini- Asks lours Approval By Cutler Still Necessary Resolution Covers Residential College, Central Campus Units By JUDITH KOMISHANE In a pair of unanimous decis ions, the Board of Governors of Residence Halls yesterday adopted resolutions supporting the abolit- ion of all women's hours, for all University houses. The resolution for central cam- pus housing, introduced by Don 'P'-es heter, executive vice-president aer-House Assembly, takes try ":na of a .ecommendation to Vice-President 'Richard Cutler, who has the authority to imple- ment the proposals. "I immediately notified Cutler's office of the resolution," John Feldkamp, director of University housing, and chairman of the board, said "and I hope it will be implemented soon." Dr. Cutler claimed last night, that he knew nothing of the resolution. This resolution states that par- ental permission must be obtained by the individual women before hours will be waived. Student Government Council had previously granted houses the right to abolish women's hours. Stockwell has been one of several women's units to do so. Yesterday, a freshman girl ving in Stockwell attempted to b .t3, ; zer housemother a no-hours permission slip signed by her par- ents. The housemother refused to accept that slip, telling her that the housemothers have been told to disregard all slips, and that the rules would remain the same until official word was received from the University, the girl who handed in the slip claimed. But Mrs. Abrams, the house- mother, though confirming the in- cident, said that she had received no official notice on the matter from anyone. The parental permission clause was an amendment by the board to the original resolution which asked that parental permission not be required. In adopting the a- 0 4i