I- 6 Page 8-C-Thursday, September 9, 1982-The Michigan Daily Welcome to Roboticsland tate leaders ee savior in 'U'will . i h technology dark economic cloud has centered if over the state of Michigan. Fac- es are closing their doors, and in- tment dollars - as well as the jobs go with that money - continue to v southward to the highly-acclaimed belt states.. . he short-term solutions to higan's economic crisis have been ;e cuts in public spending and a tem- ary increase in the state's income- N THE MIDST of this disaster, higan's public and private leader- p has decided upon a long-term nedy to get the state back on its feet. prescription that Governor William liken - with the consent of the state islature, business leaders, and many er University administrators - has ided on is high technology industry. L University Will play a key role in development of the state's program' attracting robotics and molecular, logy firms to the state. n September, 1981, Milliken issued plan to increase the high technology nponent of Michigan's economy. ' liken said his goal was to create a 1-employment environment in the te. Michigan's leaders want a long- ting industrial base of jobs and they n on "agressively stimulating the in- duction and expansipn of high hnology businesses in the state," ac- ding to the plan, iver since the 1950s, Michigan momists have advised political ders to diversify the state's momy, and now that the economic ps are down the politicians are atedly taking economists' advice. e hope expressed by Milliken and the gh Technology Task Force he ated to study the issue is to make chigan a world-class center of ex- lence" in robotics and molecular l''-. IOBOTICS IS the science o creating ots for manufacturing purposes with vanced computer programming built o the machine's circuitry to enhancet "intelligence." The aim is to have >otics machines carry out a wide- ige of manufacturing tasks without ving to be programmed. Because >ots with multi-faceted computer in- uctions can perform varied functions, h more accuracy, durability, and s cost than human laor, Michigan's anufacturing productivity is sup- sed to increase v ith the use of robotic stems. ' )ne assumption behind Michigan's >ve to robotics manufacturing-is that v labor productivity in relation to gh wages is the culprit behind chigan's economic woes. Another smption is that the state will gain >re jobs for workers who will make e robots than will be lost by workers ose jobs are replaced by the echanical marvels. A third assum- on is that robots will be more advan-, geous to- industries in Michigan - pecially the auto industry - than to e businesses of other states. But creating a robotics industry in Michigan is only half the story. While efforts to make Michigan robotics a reality continue, the state is also scheduled to be a leader in molecular. biology, also known as genetic engineering. GENETIC ENGINEERS implant altered genes from animals into fast- grow bacteria. The bacteria with altered genes creates chemicals (en- zymes) or chemical reactions with useful applications. Some genetic engineers have developed genes which, will create insulin for diabetics. Other bacteria with-altered genes can help us clean up oil spills by "eating" petroleum. The University's molecular biology -program is still in the preliminary, reserach-oriented stages and commer-. cially viable projects have not yet begun. Although the development of a molecular biology industry is not first on the state's priority list, the High Technology Task Force sees the in- dustry as having great potential growth --possibly even greater than robotics. The present agenda is to reap the benefits of robotics in the near future. and then pursue a program for genetic engineering. THE GOVERNOR hopes that technological advancements in robotics and molecular genetics, along with the availability of engineering graduates (especially from the University) trained in high technology fields, will attract many of the new companies that are popping up to take advantage of America's high technology boom. It is through the attraction of the coveted ''high technology entrepreneur" to Michigan that Milliken hopes to gain the most economic enrichment.' , The leadership role in Michigan's high technology push has been given to the High Technology Task Force, a group of mostly private industry and finance people such as Michael Blumenthal, president of Burroughs Corp. and former President Jimmy Carter's Secretary of the Treasury, and William Agee, chief executive officer of Bendix Corp. Two members of the high technology task force who are not in private business are University President Harold Shapiro and Univer- sity School of Business Administration Prof. Paul McCraken, a conservative economist who advises President Reagan. Some observers have criticized the make-up of the task force. They believe Milliken is relying on the same people who put Michigan in an economic mess to find long-term economic solutions to get the state out ot it. THE FIRST concrete action for developing Michigan's robotics poten- tial was the creation of the non-profit Industrial Technology Institute (ITT) headed by Arch Naylor,,a University engineering professor on sabbatical. ITI is the state's link between the University, which will carry out See STATE, Page 9 Doily Photo by MARK GINDIN A PROTOTYPE of what manufacturers call America's best worker of the future demonstrates its abilities at a Detroit convention last March. Critics of robotics development wonder if these "big, agile, intelligent" machines will put too many people on the unemployment lines. Some analstss students not ready to hop on the robotics bandwagon ignite high technolo flame Michigan's political leaders see the University as an important contributor to the state's future economic prosperity. The University, along with the surrounding Ann Arbor community, is expected to be the intellectual center for the development of high technology industries in robotics and molecular biology. Looking to California's Silicon Valley on the west coast and Boston's Route 128 on the east coast-two fast- growing and highly prosperous high technology industrial areas-the state's leaders would like to see Ann Arbor become the nation's next high tech boom town. SILICON Valley became the world's leader in electronic circuitry develop- ment during the 1960s with the help of Stanford University professors, many of whom started their own businesses in silicon chip production. The new in- dustries that litter Boston's Route 128 feed upon the intellectual talent of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The University of Michigan's answer to its counterparts on the coasts is the Center for Robotics and Integrated Manufacturing, more affectionately known around the engineering college as CRIM. CRIM's purpose is to research and develop automated manufacturingj systems that can be controlled by a computer and use robots for produc- tion. The Center will work on all stages ~ of development for these systems, from conception to manufacture and even delivery..In addition, CRIM will look at the management side of the new technology it produces. CRIM, WHICH was created by the Regents in October, 1981, is being paid for initially by grants from the state and the National Science Foundation, College of Engineering funds, and some minor industrial gifts. In order for the Center to survive, however, it will be seeking millions of dollars from private industry and the federal government, especially the Department of Defense, Last November, the college requested $.2 million from the Aif Force to get CRIM rolling. Although the specifics of the grant are still being worked out, it is expected that CRIM will receive about half the money it@ requested. Critics of defense-sponsored research on campus fear that CRIM's reliance on military money will mean the Univer- sity's innovations will be used for making bombs-rather than comme'- cial products-more efficiently. CRIM's sponsors respond that the Cn- ter's work will involve the same con cepts and production regardless of the source of funds. THE CENTER will rely on industry6 in addition to the Pentagon, for resear- ch money. That relationship is essential and inevitable, according to the Cen- ter's administrators. Still 'unclear, however, is how closely tied the University will be to private cor- porations in future years and how much See UNIVERSITY, Page 9 Ann Arbor is enthralled by high technology. Families, workers, businessmen, educators, and students are all entranced by the futuristic possibilities of robotics, genetic engineering, computers, and video technology. But Ann Arbor and the University's students are known for looking at the future from both the positive and the negative sides, and not all the speculation about high technology is favorable. WHILE THE University plunges head-long into the high technology boom as a solution to both the state's and its own financial problems,'more cautious observers question ,whether high technology and the close in- dustry/University ties it will foster, will do all the good desired. Around the country serious questions about the propriety of university/cor- porate bonds are being voiced. Some observers fear that large corporations will use their financial power to take control of technological innovations at the nation's universities. Such relation- ships, they say, run contrary to the best interests of education and the main- tenance of academic freedom. THEY FEAR that the universities will find themselves working directly for the private sector rather than for the general public good. In addition, faculty participation in private industry raises several conflict of interest questions. Will faculty members have the interests of the in- stitution or the corporation in mind when conducting their affairs? What happens when a faculty member has a financial interest in the decisions of his school or department?. Criticism of the University's -in- volvenient with high technology has been multi-faceted but comes from a rather small base of support. THROUGH robotics, "the University has the possibility of becoming a job shop for private industry," said Jon Feiger, former president of the Michigan Student Assembly and a leader of last year's small student movement. "I don't think that will fur- ther the educational capability of the University," he told a student- organized. robotics conference last March. Students have been asking the University to remember the social con- sequences of high technology. "As a University, we are in a unique position to do the engineering and robotics as well as social impact (research)," Feiger said. Another issue concerns the Pen- tagon's influence over the University's high technology developments. Some students fear the defense department- a prime supporter of the nation's technical research-will skew the University's work away from human needs toward military designs. BUT MANY of the questions about high technology concern much more than just its effects on the University. Although the state's push for robotics and high technology is intended to diversify Michigan's economy away from its reliance on automobile manufacturing and related industries, some observers feel that the state is trading in expertise in one specialized area-autos-for expertise in another- robotics. "I think high technology is a great idea for Ann Arbor, but not for Detroit," said Dan Luria, a United Auto Workers union economist, at the high technology conference last March. "I would- not put all my eggs in one basket." LURIA POINTED out that Michigan is not the only state that has hit on the idea of robotics development. "Everybody is doing it and there will be lots more losers than winners," he said. See ROBOTICS, Page 9 This series of stories on Ann Ar- bor and high technology was written' by Daily staff writer Scott Stuckal. I Manufacturers demonstrate the - latest in industrial robotics design in Detroit last March. Robots will be h able to weld (above) or put together automobiles on an assembly line (center). Although researchers are still working to perfect visual capabilities for robots, one machine (far .right) already can distinguish h0* -a' s. ..J _ - I ', U i IAl