TIRE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE DINE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINE 11 t ronte 11 11 iding this sort of overall on and coordination be- a heroic undertaking. ng a course for the re- program, even keeping the f state on an even keel, is, row a phrase from a crusty onomics professor describ- nsumer studies, a little like ig gravity by examining a lling from a tree during a ane in the dead of night. the job falls to Vice- ents Heyns, Pierpont and tn. for has it that all roads o Roger W. Heyns in the of Academic Affairs. Coun- nors from other quarters Pierpont in the Office of ass and Finance as a toll- or at almost every point.: way (or both), it's .con- Analogous Heyns is in a position analogous to the former dean of faculties. He works closely with the deans, department chairmen and center and institute directors in estab- lishing new academic programs, overseeing current ones, hiring faculty and, most importantly, controlling the University's aca- demic budget. Heyns' principal direct involve- ment in research is delegated to Norman, who directs or at least 4# keeps tabs on research programs,' research appointments and relat- ed problems of space and admin- istration. The Officedof Research Administration directed by Robert Burroughs works as his staff. In a university as decentralized as this one and with the faculty always hypersensitive to threats imagined and real to their peroga'- tives, Norman's Jobis a tricky one. So far he has avoided the numerous pitfalls The Office of Research Admin- istration is largely an administra- tive mechanism that has grown up piecemeal over the years to deal with problems of research grant and contract supervision and control. It must act in restraining, chan- neling negotiation and mediation roles to keep 1000 researching fac- ulty from galloping off In 10600 different directions leaving the tenuous administrative ,ad fi- nancial threads that hold the Uni- versity together to collapse into a heap of paperwork. Both Ends. And it is Pierpont that keeps those financial threads taut and tied down at both ends. He has, in accordance with his theories of decentralization, delegated his orge-image among researchers to A. B. Hicks, who supervises the Sponsored Research Business Of- fice. Some would say he does this in order to find time to think up new ways of bothering the fac-, ulty with bureaucratic problems. Pierpont and Hicks would reply, however, that they aren't here to make friends, that there are 1600 research projects at the Univer- sity, all of which have accounts that require supervision with pur- chases that have to be audited, personnel that have to be paid- as government auditors require in- creasingly complex records of where federal money goes. There are, in any case, fairly large areas of overlapping author- ity between the Office of Research Administration and Hicks' Spon- sored Research Business Office and the resulting problems are being worked out slowly and pain- fully: There isn't any open fight- ing, just subtle warfare, as in so much of the University. What generally happens is that each faculty member will manage after a period oftrial and error to establish some small entrance to this great bureaucratic mechan- ism, generally through a personal contact. It may be someone in ORA, one, of the vice-presidents, a knowledgable and influential dean or department chairman, or an obscure assistant somewhere in the system. Once such a contact is set up the faculty member hangs on to it for dear life, using it to get him whatever is needed to keep the bureaucrats happy and as far away from him and his research and his graduate students as pos- sible. Life goes on. Research Centers Superimposing a $42 million re- search program onto the old Uni- versity structure has created ex- citing new possibilities that may make the administrative problems worth it in the end, but certainly the disciplined old departmental system will never be the same. Interdisciplinary appointments, centers and institutes and study programs have proliferated, and imany have the most tenuous of relationships to any 'of the de- partments connected with them. The largest and internally most cohesive unit at the University is the Medical Center, even though in this case the term refers to geographical arrangement and not to administrative organiza- tion. . (The Medical Center is more of a cohesive, well-structured unit to undertake a variety of related tasks than most administrative units to which the term center is actually applied.) Presided over by Dean William Hubbard, a figure comparable only to Pierpont for suavity and disci- plined control of an organization, the Medical Center operates al- most autonomous from the rest of the University. Growing Fast Research in the biomedical sciences is growing faster than in any other field. This fact, cou- pled with the tremendously high level of financial support given to medicine in general in the United States, makes research at the Medical Center exciting, expand- ing, productive and expensive. After the Medical Center the Institute for Science and Tech- nology is the largest University research unit. Established in the late 1950's after the Sputnik spur to education, IST has never really gotten off the ground as an or- ganized, driving force for re- search and education largely be- cause there was never enough thought ,given to exactly how it would fit into the University. Most programs'in the fields of science and technology are more easily fitted to old departmental patterns than wrenched out and placed in a separate institute with other programs with which they have very little in common. It was thought for a while that the institute could fall back on a program of aid and encourage- ment for Michigan industry, but there has never been much in the University that could be related directly to Michigan's economic development. Not Enough IST does have a productive In- dustrial Developnjent Division, but there isn't enough there to fill a program on the scale set up Science--Antithesis N SUGGESTING ways of in- troducing students to the scientia of our time, I have not accounted sufficiently for the evolutionary nature of culture. Because scientia, like tech- nology, is perpetually in a state of becoming, an education that merely indoctrinated students in the structure of images at a given moment would be passive and conservative--the mirror or the servant of dominant intel- lectual forces. This education ought to be rather their critic and genera- tor, and that is a demanding higher education into new paths always has imparted to its institutions inertial forces powerful enough to, carry pre- vailing images far beyond their useful life span, to the point at which their obsolescence is evident to even the stuffiest academic minds. Furthermore, the prevail- ing scientia not only may be hostile to images different from those it promotes, but consciously or unconsciously it mission. The effort required to direct may organize its education so that criticism is frustrated This deficiency would explain some of the paradoxes of con- temporary higher education, which, in being designed to promote empiricism and tech- nological specialization, inci- dentally manages to stiffle phil- osophical synthesis and ethical speculation. In proceeding from a broad survey at the base to a narrow parochialism at the apex, the university curriculum not only trains efficient spe- cialists. It also protects obsolete scientism from being subjected to effective criticism by ob- structing from the advanced student a commanding view of the topography of his culture. At the root of these prob- lems is the preoccupation of, twentieth-century scientia with function and process, and with the nature of observation, which is a cause as well as a result of the insecurities of our time. It has brought extraordinary progress in science and scholar- ship, and radical changes in the arts, but it has not sought or promoted solutions to the major dilemmas of human existence and behavior, nor even provided the means of assessing the ,value of its own achievements. It is because of its concern with process that our scientia has exalted the technician and thus actually has blurred the distinction between technique and scientia that I am attempt- ing to revive. The reaction of Response intellectuals to a scientia with- out values has been increasing- ly restive but-because the is- sues have been wrongly defined -quite undirected and often merely nostalgic. It erupts oc- casionally in attacks on science and scientific method-attacks that ignore the underlying sim- ilarity in the attitudes of the scientist, the artist, and the humanist-scholar. If our scientia, and the edu- cation that sustains it, deserves criticism, it is unlikely to re- ceive it from without, since it encompasses all creative thought in our time. It will not give way to a com- peting system but will evolve, as scientia always has, by gen- erating its own antitheses and responses. For this reason, I am con- vinced that the healing of pres- ent illnesses in our culture can be effected only by those who are committed to it and versed in it, as well as in its traditions, and not by those who reject our most distinguished and characteristic products -- the work of the Wittgensteins, de Koonings, Beckets -- on the grounds that they somehow lack the old humanistic values. -JAMES S, ACKERMAN In Daedalus, the Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences every aspect of information sys- tems, biological systems and social systems, from artificial models to human subjects. "Theory," often expressed in some sort of mathe- matical modeling of the essential elements of a real system, is a common word-game theory, com- munications t h e o r y, systems theory, information theory, "com- munications theory of urban growth," and others. As with ISR, the excitement generated by the critical mass of researchers working at MHRI has spilled over into many depart- ments and schools, serving to at- tract good students and faculty, generate Students for a Demo- cratic Society and teach-ins, and generally to throwing off sparks in a great many directions. Schools and Colleges It was in the engineering col- lege that research at the Univer- sity first got started back before World War II, and a great deal of the research program is still there. Aerospace The aerospace department, much in the news this summer, presides o v e r a considerable amount of space research spon- sored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Air Force. Myriad projects are or- ganized into the Space Physics Research Lab, the High Altitude Research Lab, the Propulsion Lab, and the Wind Tunnel Labs. (The engineering college has, a penchant for organizing endless numbers of "labs," of which these are some of the larger. They arise as one or two faculty in a par- ticular area gather in considerable research support and a graduate student following. This is com- bined with lots of specialized equipment, so a shingle over the door, soon follows.) Elsewhere in} the engineering' college there is a lot of research that falls on the line between basic and applied. This has put the engineering faculty into a position of continually having to defend itself against the "purists" across the street in Randall Lab, for instance, or in various literary college departments. Many Projects The chemical and metallurgical engineering department, one of the very fine ones in the country, has numerous projects underway. Prof. Donald L. Katz has also done a great deal for the -Univer- sity through his work in establish- ing a computer curriculum for engineering undergraduates and in helping to guide the Univer- sity's general involvement in com- puter use. n g for the institute. So the director, Prof. James T. Wilson, is left with; a beautiful building and various1 programs picked up from odd places in the University, none ofI which really fit together. These include the Biophysics Lab a n d the Electro-Optical Sciences Lab, the only original1 products of the attempt to make IST a real science institute. And the Electro-Optical Sciences Lab has in fact proved a tempest in a teapot within the IST organiza- tion, as Prof. George W.. Stroke,' its head, almost had a large part of the University's research appa- ratus in orbit before he was final- ly shifted to the electrical engi- neering department and settled down with some generous research grants. The other part of IST is the Great Lakes Research Division- which existed long before IST and still has a life of its own-and the Willow Run Laboratories. Willow Run. The Willow Run Labs were added on to IST in 1960, in hopes of some sort of mutual benefit which hasn't really materialized yet, though there are still hopes. Willow Run work is very defense oriented and is usually classified. There is a minimum of relation- ships with either faculty or stu- dents from the University, most of the work being done by pro- fessional researchers. The Institute for Social Re- search is probably the most spec- tacularly successful of the inter- disciplinary operations. However, this very success must be troubl- ing to administrators because of the unlikelihood of duplicating within the University the con- ditions that have made IRS pos- sible. This institute is a product of. the labor and genius of Rensis Likert, its director, who founded it in the early 1950's. ISR was started in connection with the burgeoning pseudo-science of sur- very research. From meager be- ginnings -the University offered Likert and his colleagues heat, light and space but no money for operations and salaries - Likert built the institute into one of the greatest social science operations in the world, with some outstand- ing theorists, economists and as- sorted interdisciplinary types on the staff. It was one of the Uni- versity's great bargains. Stimulus Even more important than ISR's own research has been the stim- ulus it has provided to other parts of the University. The people and work there have proved to be a powerful attraction to draw in new programs in social science fields, along with excellent fac- ulty anxious to be a part of the "critical mass" of talent that comprises ISR. The economics and psychology departments have certainly benefitted, while the most spectacular "spin-off" has been the Mental Health Research Institute, variously identified as a bastion of systems theory and a spawner of radicalism. MHRI's innocuous title masks one of the most exciting and di- verse centers of activity at the University. Prof. Anatol Rapoport professes to be in a field called mathematical biology. Prof. Kon- stantin Scharenberg is in neuro- pathology; Prof. Merrill Flood is another mathematical biologist and Prof. Ralph Gerard is .in neurophysiology. Prof. McConnell has incensed many psychologists with his well- publicized studies of planaria, and Prof. Richard Meier studies, among other things, communica- tions systems in cities and holds down an appointment in the con- servation department in the nat- ural resources school. Staff-60 Altogether the academic staff with PhD's numbers about 60. Research at MHRI delves into VICE-PRESIDENT NORMAN Other active departments are numerous: civil engineering, elec- trical engineering, mechanical en- gineering, meteorology and ocean- ography, naval architecture and marine engineering and nuclear engineering. The naval tank, run by Prof. Richard Couch is a par- ticularly interesting operation. Ship designs are tested in it by towing models up and down a long pool. Prof. William Kerr heads up both the nuclear engineering de- partment and the Phoenix Pro- ject, which was started after World War II through private contributions. T h e University's post-war leadership in the de- velopment of peaceful uses of atomic energy, particularly in the uses of isotopes, was a result of this undertaking. In the electrical engineering de- partment, where Prof. Hansford Farris recently succeeded Prof., William Dow as chairman, Prof. Fred Haddock is active at his Radio Astronomy Observatory on Peach Mountain near Ann Arbor. In the literary college there is a fantastic variety of work going on (though, in fact, that college as an entity is more fancy than fact): astronomy, botany, chem- istry, economics, geology and mineralogy, mathematics, physics, psychology, sociology, zoology, communications, conflict resolu- tion and museums work. This is what the scientific ex- plosion is all about. Meanwhile, t h e University's bulwark against severe imbalances among the various disciplines are various intra-University sources of funds, which are carefully par- celed out for maximum return among projects that can't find support from timid sponsors, or are given to younger, less exper- ienced but promising faculty or to, the poorly suported fields. Take a brief look next at other parts of the University's research: --Prof. Paraskevopoulos in the architecture and design college is working with his students on the design and construction of cheap plastic houses, one answer to gen- eral methods of building construc- tion that are still in the 19th century; -Prof. Larson in the same sthool has studied city planning and looks forward to the world city; -The business administration school has a great many industrial and' economic studies going that begin to get at some serious prob- lems in hospital administration, industrial relations and economic development; -The dentistry school, with its excellent faculty and library collections, has long been severe- ly restricted by space but will soon be housed in the finest new building on campus; -The public health school un- der Dean Myron Wegman has quite an ambitious program in public health economics, commun- ity health service, environmental health, epidemiology, and indus- trial health, enhanced by a recent Ford Foundation grant for inter- disciplinary population studies. Knowledge and the Future The money is going to continu to flow. The demands for new knowledge by a society that makes rapid economic expansion the rule are going to increase tremendous- ly. Society is going to be more and more willing to lay out huge sums for research and development as it learns that the returns from money invested in knowledge and theories of how to deal with it- work with it and make it work for society-will be far greater than for ,money invested in steel mills or airplanes. It has been estimated that over 65 per cent of the net worth of the United States is in peoples' brains, not their equipment, as opposed to 35 per cent before World War II. That's where IBM's worth is. Value no longer rests in the applications of knowledge, and less and less in the knowledge it- self, but in its creation, in new discoveries and methods and theories that keep countries ex- panding, enable Lyndon Johnson to foresee the coming of the Great Society, and put universi- ties and their research programs in the very center of a social revo- lution wrought by information and its communication. Iii THE MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB' I - It,1 ii IT'S A GROWING TOWN IN A CHANGING WORLD! BE REASSURED - deal with a nationally known, long established record shop FIND AMPLE HELP and guidance in choosing from an evergrowing selec- tion of record entertainment. ENJOY SHOPPING where music and artists on records retain their high intrinsic value. BE REASSURED in knowing that the pricing is competitive. FIND A BROAD SELECTION of the best in recorded music. SO JOIN YOUR FRIENDS - Shop where music on records is our pleasure, as well as our business. ANNUAL TRYOUTS ... AUG. 30 ... 7 P.M. .. . MICHIGAN UNION THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN takes pride in pre- senting The University of Michigan Men's Glee Club, recognized as one of the nation's outstanding glee clubs. Under the direction of its well known conductor, Philip A. Duey, the Club has gained na- tionwide recognition through appearances on radio, 1959 the Club was the first American choir to ever win the male choir competition. In 1963 the Club took first place by winning over 20 groups from 11 different countries. THE ACTIVITIES for the coming academic year will with the New York University Men's Glee Club. The Club will also be engaged in concerts throughout southeastern Michigan. The year's activities will be climaxed by the Club's annual tour which is tenta- tively scheduled for Canada and northeastern United States. i I 1' 1