.4 11395f THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIV 11. 962 ~lE ICHGAN AILYPAGEFIV UNIVERSITY RESEARCH: U.S. Sponsors Experiments (Continued from Page 1) terns. In particular its surveys of voter attitudes have been acclaim- ed for their consistent accuracy. The, group dynamics center is interested primarily in group be- havioral problems and the inter- action of individuals within the group. One of its efforts last year was a comprehensive study on the causes of war. Studies Mental Health Occupying its own building since' 1960, the Mental Health Research Institute studies the basic factors in mental illness; mainly by test- ing the actions and reactions of human and animal brains. One of its major projects is a five-year study of schizophrenia. The Institute for Industrial Health, the Institute of Public Administration, thearea centers (studying linguistic and. cultural aspects of countries, in the Near, Middle and Far East), the Center for the Study of Higher Education, the Institute for Human Adjust- ment, the Legislative Research Center and, the Statistical Re- search Laboratory: 'these and other centers disseminate to pub- lic officials relevant research find- ings and, indirectly, strive to en- hance the University's image as a public service institution. Biosystematics Another of these facilities will be going up early next year when a five-floor addition to the Mu- seum of Zoology will be built to house a national center for re- search into animal biosystematics, financed 'by a $1 million grant from. the National Science Found- ation. Underneath the bustle and ser- iousness of research probing, the faculty man's conscience , my sometimes be troubled by the pos- sibility- that his research forces him to. neglect his students and his courses, and it may also dis- turb him that the academic world sometimes rewards, good research more than it 'does'good instruction. A University, Senate, Subcom- mittee on the, Proper Role of the University once addressed itself. to the question. of how -research fits into the overall .educational aims. of the campus, and conclud- ed: "Obviously, this question is of the variety: which is more impor- tant, the heart or the brain? "With due awareness of the or- ganic relation, we suggest that, at the extreme, the student is more important than research. Re- search is the derived product. When scholars are not replaced, scholarship ceases ..." "We have researchers who shun teaching" and teachers who shun research, the committee continued. It also tackled the rather difficult problem of distinguishing between research, preparation for instruc- tion and personal inquiry, claiming that teaching involves at least five aspects- informing, creativity, critical analysis, theory formation and texting, and conclusion form- ing. Teacher-Researcher "It seems clear to us that not all kinds of teaching . .. demand a teacher-researcher, and further that not all courses will or need to incorporate all five aims. "It appears necessary to recog- nize a greater independence be- tween teaching and research than is usually admitted, and it may be entirely feasible, indeed in the best interests of the University, to engage in one of these activities without being personally and di- rectly involved in the other." The report thus highlights the fact that each individual profes- sor is involved with research, as much on his own level- as is the omnipotent center or institute. The Office of Research Admin- istration estimates that 20 per cent. of the faculty's paid time is dedicated to research. And when a department is viewing the qual- ifications. of a man considered for promotion, number and type of publications is inchlded .in the cri- teria and' information demanded of him. In fact, the University has its own publishing agency-Uni- versity Press - to print books, scholarly works and research pa-, pers produced by campus faculty members.' Administrators, deans and de- partment chairmen are persistent, however, in flatly denying they exert pressures of "publish or per- ish" and assert that themain con-. sideration in promotion is quality of instruction and knowledge of the academic field. Besides creating a dilemma for more than a few faculty men, re- search has another drawback: it costs money. University Problem The University has been having some trouble in keeping down in- direct (facilities) costs only par- tially or not at all provided for in research grants or contracts. Of- ten these indirect costs amount to as much as 30 per cent of the direct (salary and equipment) cost of the project. And it is often not very easy to find enough space to handle the facilities and men conducting the research project. For instance, when the social work school last summer received a $200,000 grant from the Health, Education and Welfare Department for a study on how to prevent and cure ju- venile delinquency, there was dif- ficulty in obtaining rooms in which the faculty could work on their project. The need for space often necessitates an unpleasant shuffling of room allocations. The cost problem was given some national air during the sum- mer when Defense Secretary Rob- ert S. McNamara rapped Michigan Republicans for blocking a state income tax, thus depriving the University of funds it needs for research facilities. National Ramifications And so the University's research activity has its national as well as campus ramifications. Whether research will consume an even greater proportion of the .academic efforts of students and faculty, no one knows. But there is little doubt of its effect upon the past 10 or 15 years of the University. The com- plex of laboratory centers, the multi-million dollar projects stand as physical evidence of the post- war campus revolution. Research indeed has taken its place along with academic instruc- tion as a prime function of the University. The Regents recognized this in 1959 when they created the vice-presidency for research, and named Ralph Sawyer to fill it. The technical director of the first atomic bomb test following World War II on Bikini Island, he is the man who now must over- see activities of equally explosive content for the University. TOUGH PROBLEM - Group study rooms provide an opportunity for consultation on problems which the individual is not able to solve. Scenes like the above are especially common in the Engi- neering Library located on the third floor of UGLI. E, :Y ' ,,. , . , . . i 'c "'. ..t : fr? Sc £ .' +">:S~ix: : :r :* ". V.V..fl.W.V.',t~ . .WA..,... . .::::>: :::' rom R. KAYSER M t - f : STUDY DATE-Although studying is the activity which consumes the most time of students at UGLI, socializing comes in a close second. The study date is a weird mixture of the two. This couple seems to be getting some studying done, although it is not neces- sary on a study date. ky "h 4 " , + .' f ' a #" Vitt a,. t . 1 . w ,. " { ' F> ::;, . #. . r ; . f .< y ' L: >'' .z. s .. # r { ;{: . : . ARTEMIS ROGERS SCHRANK I'i s: i DARNER MAIDENFORM GOSSARD LBALI NEMO REO COFFEE BREAK - Students take a rest from studying in the lounge. The lounge contains vending machines selling a variety of hot and cold beverages. The lounge is popular and is always crowded in the evening. l KA lkCAYSER HOSIERY SABURY ,FLOBERT .A.R'EMIS : :..:.:.....: