Wednesday, September 2, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Academics-Page Three t Classified research: 'U, and the U.S. military By DAVE CHUDWIN Military research, the subject of accu- sations, committee investigations a n d a mass sit-in three years ago, is alive and well at the University,. Although the amount of classified and unclassified researchr for the U.S. Depart- ment of Defense done by the University has declined somewhat, the University re- mains one of the largest contractors for military research among educational in- stitutions. The Defense Department provided al- most a quarter of the University's $62.1 million research budget inr 1968-69, the latest period for which statistics are avail- able. While not all projects funded by the military are classified, the University ac- cepted almost 40 new grants totalling over $4.2 million from the Defense Department in 1969 for classified research. Forced by the 1967 furor to give up con- tracts such as a $1 million counter-insur- gency project in Thailand, University re- searchers continue secret work in elec- tronics infrared technology, sensing devis- es, seismic detection, radar, and missile radiation phenomena. In fact, the Uni- versity has won the title of "the Eyes of the Army." Most of the University's military re- search is performed by units of the In- stitute of Science and ,Technology (IST), an integral component of the University under the jurisdiction of Vice President for Research Geoffrey Norman. The largest and most controversial unit of IST is the University's Willow Run Lab- oratories. Located in Ypsilanti, 17 miles from central campus, the Willow Run site was acquired by the University in 1946 from the federal government for one dol- lar. Early work at Willow Run included the BOMARC (Boeing Michigan Aeronautical Research Center) missile, giving the Uni- versity the distinction of being the only school in the country to have a missile named after it. Willow Run's largest research effort over the years has been Project MICHIGAN. Founded in 1953 to "advance the Army's combat-surveillance and target-acquisi- tion capabilities," Project MICHIGAN pioneered infrared and radar reconnais- sance techniques for the military. The project, which received a new $600,- 000 grant a year ago, has been so success- ful t h a t it's former director received a medal from the federal government in 1964. The citation accompanying the medal noted that Robert Hess had "succeeded in establishing and maintaining the Univer- sity of Michigan as the leading free world authority in surveillance technology." Among Willow Run Laboratories' pres- ent activities are:t " The Ballistic Missile Radiation Anal- ysis Center (BAMIRAC) which serves as a national clearinghouse for "the collection, analysis and dissemination of information on the radiation from ballistic missiles." This classified project, which received two grants totalling almost $500,000 from the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the military last October, does important technical research concerning missile defense. * The VELA Seismic Information Anal-' ysis Center (VESIAC) which coordinates and studies information on "detecting, lo- cating and identifying underground nuc- lear explosions." This classified center, in its tenth year of operation, is sponsored by ARPA and uses information from project VELA, a nationwide military program to monitor nuclear blasts. * The Infrared Information and Analy- sis Center (IRIA) which is a clearinghouse for information on infrared and sensing technology. Also a classified project, IRIA received a $174,000 grant from the Navy in March. Infrared sensing allows t h e' military to pinpoint enemy soldiers at night or through foilage, 0 A classified and annual radar sym- posium which is in its sixteenth year. This radar conference received a grant from the Air Force last December. A security clearance and a "n e e d to know" is necessary for access to the sym- posium, as well as to other classified IST reports. Almost one-half of IST's research reports in 1968, the lateset period for which figures are available, were classified as "confidential" or "secret." * An annualrconference on remote sens- ing of the environment, the sixth of which was held last October. Unlike the radar symposium, parts of the remote sensing conference are open to the public. Infrared and other types of sensing can be used to map the environment, count wildlife and find mineral deposits - in addition to the military function of lo- cating troops and supplies. Besides these five on-going projects, re- searchers at Willow Run are engaged in a number of other research programs with significant military implications. Titles of some of the studies include, "Countermeasures Against Advanced In- terceptor Missiles," "Seismic Wave Propo- gation," "Acoustic Surveillance System," and "Single Station Location Techniques." While most of the University's military research is performed by IST, other Uni- versity units, most notably the engineering college, also have classified Defense De- partment contracts. Professors in the electrical engineering department received over a half-million dollars in new grants for classified re- search during 1969 while a single professor in industrial engineering received $340,000 during the same period. Before the 1967 controversy over mili- tary' research the University had no ex- plicit criteria for judging whether a specif- ic project was appropriate for an educa- tional institution to sponsor. Norman alone reviewed proposals for the administration. A committee, chaired by chemistry Prof. Robert C. Elderfield, was appointed to in- vestigate the University's research policies, and in its report issued in January, 1968, the group of 16 faculty members and re- searchers generally approved of classified research but urged that a new review com- mittee be formed to approve proposed re- search projects. The Elderfield committee proposed that the University not take any classified pro- ject that prevents the disclosure of "the existence of the contract or identity of the sponsor ... and the purpose and scope of the research." The committee also urged that the Uni- versity not approve any project "the pur- pose of which is to destroy human life or to incapacitate human beings." The recommendations of the group were adopted by the University and since Sep- tember 23, 1968, all proposals for classified projects have been reviewed by the Sen- ate Assembly's classified research commit- tee. This faculty-student committee, which Norman has veto power over, has approved practically all proposals for classified re- search submitted to it during the past two years. Thus the University continues to quietly perform research, some of it classified, for the military establishment. But there are some indications t h a t there will be a renewed effort by radical groups against classified reserach this fall. Not everybody is happy that the Uni- versity is the undercover research. capital of the Midwest. 'U'teaching fellows attempt to untiontize By HESTER PULLING In an attempt to protect themselves from "the whims of our departments" University teaching fellows are beginning to organize a union. Reasons for the ,proposed union range from large classes and poor pay to not enough say in the determining of the curriculum-- "And the list of horror stories could go on forever," Peter Archi- bald, a sociology teaching fellow, lsays. Presently, teaching fellows have no contracts with the Uni- versity. "We pretty much have to do anything the departments want us to," Archibald says. The idea of the union was first discussed last fall, and in December a petition drive began. The petition called for a referendum to determine if teaching fellows wanted to be represented by a union for collective bar- gaining purposes. This past March, teaching fellows presented their petition to the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC), but lacked the required number of signatures. According to Michigan law, a petition must include 30 per cent of the constituency the proposed union wants to represent before MERC will hold a hearing to consider recognition of the union. When the teaching fellows began collecting signatures, they were told by the administration that there were 1,417 of them at the University. However, at the hearing in March, 1,554 teaching fellows were listed on University payrolls. University officials later said the disparity in numbers was due to new teaching fellow appointments. The University then asked MERC to determine whether the proposed union "is in accord with the purposes of the Public Em- ployment Relations Act considering the temporary nature of the employment of teaching fellows." Allison Hayford, the teaching fellows' steering committee chairman, argued that "there is a high turn-over rate in many unionized industries, such as the telephone company." In May, the proposed union came up against yet another obstacle. While the petition was signed at that time by the required 30 per cent of the proposed constituency, "there was no presentation in the petition as to why a union is appropriate," 'U' officials said. "Of all the unions on campus that the University has recognized, each one has demonstrated their appropriateness," the University argued. As this supplement goes to press, the teaching fellow union is in a state of limbo. The University and the union are both prepar- ing their cases, and will appear before MERC again later in the summer. Although not affiliated with the proposed union, teaching fellows in the political science department organized a "mora- torium on duties" last March to protest lack of student consulta- tion in major department decisions. For one week, about 85 per cent of the departments teaching fellows cancelled their classes or held them outside the building. The issue centered around the faculty executive committee's decision to hire three new faculty members at the expense of the department's teaching fellows. 'U' scientists engage in expensive research By LINDSAY CHANEY Research at t h e big 'U' is big business - to the tune of $62 million each year. Some people f i n d this fact terrifying and immediately think of classified research de- vising new and better ways to subjugate and control oppressed people around the globe. Oth- ers picture University research as breaking the chains of hu- man ignorance and leading mankind into the light of free- dom through knowledge, or some such thing. But no matter what is thought of research, the fact is that it is here at the University and will no doubt stay for a long time to come. Most research at the Univer- sity is done by contract with or grant from a sponsor. That is, a faculty member and an or- ganization sign a contract, the faculty member agreeing to do specified research and the spon- sor paying a certainamount of money to cover the costs. The Federal government pro- vides most of the research awards at the University. Last year Federal govern- ment funding amounted to $45 million, or over two-thirds of the total research funds. Other research funds were provided by private foundations, industry, and s t a t e and local govern- ments. The University itself also provides substantial funding for research activities - last year, $5.5 million. Sponsored research at the University started around 1920. By 1940, the total volume was still less than a million dollars. A decade later, there was $2.5 million being spent on research. By 1955, the figure had jumped to $9.0 million, five years later it was $22 million, and now it is $62 million. T h e steady increase in re- search funding, however, seems to be leveling off, at least tem- porarily, since the volume has stood at $62 million for the last two years, and there is no like- ly prospect of an increase in the coming fiscal year. Research activities at the University are affiliated with either an academic department or one of several separate re- search institutes. Thus, under the Department of Aerospace Engineering is the Gas Dynam- ics Laboratory, the High Alti- t u d eaEngineering Laboratory and the Hypersonic Wind Tun- nel Engineering Laboratory. All projects within each laboratory report to the laboratory director who in turn reports to the chairman of the Aerospace de- partment. The same situation applies to other departments within t h e College of Engineering as well as to departments in other schools. Laboratories w i t h i n each department have several projects, the project directors report to the laboratory direct- or, and the laboratory director reports to the chairman of the department. Other research projects are affiliated \ not with a depart- ment, but with one of several research institutes. The largest such institute in the University is the Institute of Science and Technology (IST) which does most of the University's classi- fied and defense-oriented re- search. Another large unit is the Institute for Social Research (ISR1. Both IST and ISR report di- rectly to Vice President for Re- search A. Geoffrey Norman. Although there are some 148 research units such as the lab- oratories under each depart- ment and the institutes, a sub- stantial amount of research is also done by individual faculty members unaffiliated with any of these units. T h e s e faculty members report directly to their department chairmen. Coordinating all research at the University is the Office of Research Administration (ORA). This office reviews all proposals for compliance with University requirements before the proposals are submitted to potential sponsors, and, in ad- dition, has t h e administrative apparatus to help find a spon- sor for a faculty member who has an idea for a project and needs someone to.finance it. A faculty member who would like financial support for a pro- ject comes to the ORA and ex- plains his idea. ORA personnel 27 per cent, followed by physical sciences (20 per cent), social sciences, (14 per cent), and humanities (one per cent). The trend over the last several years has been away from de- fense-oriented research and to- ward the life sciences and social sciences. For example, in 1963 the -defense department sadp- ported 14 million dollars worth of research, while the Depart- ment of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) only provided eight million dollars. Last year, defense research stayed at the same level, but HEW contracted for $17.6 million. Classified research during the middle 1960's earned for the University of Michigan the title "The Eyes of the Army." Although it is not officially recognized as such, some work done for private industry is of a secret nature. This research usually involves company trade secrets which the sponsor does not want made public. In "order to protect professional secrets, the sponsor usually requests a copy of the project report be- fore it is published elsewhere and makes deletions or changes to disguise any information which would be detrimental to him were it made public. Research, in general, is con- sidered by the University to be a private matter between the sponsor and the faculty mem- bers or laboratories which do the work. The University. therefore, does not keep reports issued by each project. Distribution of project reports or whether any reports are to be published at all, is agreed upon by the re- searcher and the sponsor. One of the underlying justifi- cations for research is the edu- cational experience - it can pro- vide for students. Research pro- jects try to employ graduate and even undergraduate students to assist the principle researchers whenever possible. Last year, there were 2,100 graduate and 1,500 undergraduates who assist- ed in research, and approxima- tely 300 doctoral these resulted from this work. Although research in the sci-; ences is the most prominent, the oldest continuous project at the University is in the area of humanities. This project is the Middle English Dictionary which came to Michigan in 1931. Un- der the editorship of English professor Sherman Kuhn, re- searchers are compiling a dic- tionary of all Middle English words-which were spoken be- tween 1100 and 1500. The project was actually be- gun at Cornell in 1925. By the time it came to the University, all known Middle English words had beencollected, alphabetized, and filed. The task at Michigan was to take each word and study the instances in which it was used to determine its exact meaning. Since Middle English words are often spelled In dif- ferent ways and may have more than one meaning, the task is complicated and often tedious. According to a rough estimate, there are between 100,000 and 15'0,000 words in Middle Eng- lish. The words are decoded one at a time, and the amount of time spent on each word varies between five minutes and six weeks. A staff of nine is working on the project, and at present, the job is about half finished. -Daily-David Baker then suggest sponsors w h o might be interested in his idea,y and sometimes provide prelim- inary research funds f o r the faculty member, thus enabling him to prepare a thorough pro- posal for potential sponsors. The faculty member then pre- pares a proposal and the ORA, after reviewing it and obtaining appropriate signatures f r o m University officials, submits it to the selected agency. As of March 31 of this year, there were 1001 proposals out- standing - proposals that had been submitted to various po- tential sponsors. Director of Re- search Administration Robert Burroughs estimates, however, that perhaps only half of these proposals will be accepted by a sponsor. Also as of March 31, there were 1500 projects that were re- ceiving money from sponsors. Each of these projects has an account number with the Uni- versity, and the money spent is carefully recorded. Life sciences,-which includes medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, and public health, received the largest percentage of research funds last year-about 34 per cent. Engineering was next with FOLLETTS FOIBLES By E. Winslow A coed customer of ours who reads, Plays chess, and dresses in tweeds Was one night caressed, And gladly confessed, oM = "Folletts supplies almost all my needs". i I i MEDICINE DENTISTRY NURSING I PUBLIC' HEALTH BOOKS and SUPPLIES our store is specially equipped to fill your every need, and a well informed staff, including MEDICAL and DENTAL students will serve you. 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