STUDENTS WANT DEFENSE RESEARCH OFF CAMPUS Milita By PETE WILLIAMS Yes, Virginia, the University does do research for the Department of Defen- se. And the University does pocket millions of dollars a year for perfor- ming experiments ranging from microwave research to radar technology . The research is controversial and opinions and attitudes have clashed more than once. Some oppose the 'research because it can be used to wage wars. Others, however, believe that :'Professors should have the freedom to orsue any type of research they ihoose. ; THE ARGUMENT basically boils down to whether or not the University is the place for research that may help destroy life and whether or not faculty iembers have the right to investigate liny subject regardless of its im- olications. The Progressive Student Network is' at the forefront of the anti-military research debate. Members of this ac- ' fivist group have vehemently opposed the research. According to Chris Hil, a -;ESN member, people on campus don"t >64ealize the dangers involved with Imilitary research. "People have a distorted vision of 'what goes on in engineering buildings," Hill said. "They are not doing just basic research. It is applied weapons resear- ch." LAST FALL, a group of PSN mem- bers including Hill participated in two- sit-ins at laboratories in the East Engineering building. The group claimed that the research done in these labs, which is funded in whole of in part by the defense department, was morally reprehensible. They wanted it stopped. stElectrical and Computer Engineering Prof. Thomas Senior, whose laboratory was the subject of ry research stirs debate a PSN sit-in last fall, said he thought the act was an unfortunate occurrence, and that PSN's opinions could have been made known through better means. "I had talked with and met most of the individuals involved. I knew them, and though I didn't always agree with their intentions, these are people I respect," he said. Senior said although most of the protesters' hearts were in the right place, they are "extremely misguided" in their actions. proved the new guidelines as did several other organizations on campus. The regents, however, rejected the guidelines in a 7-2 decision saying that they were an unnecessary infringement on an individual professor's academic freedom. Senior agreed with the regents' decision. "Guidelines are very dangerous," he said. "Although you implement them for moral reasons, on- ce you start doing that. . . there is no end." 'People have a distorted vision of what goes on in engineering buildings. They're not just doing basic research. It is applied weapons research.' -Chris Hill PSN member seen constraints on the freedom of researchers. "Freedom of research is a fairly new idea," Aranoff said. "Now the ad- ministration makes it seem like it has always been that way-and it hasn't." SENIOR SAID that he would find it hard to believe that any professor at the University was doing direct or applied weapons research but that, arguably, every professor in the School of Engineering is involved indirectly in military research. He added any ad- vancement in the areas of engineering or electronics can be applied to the military, and the defense department does not have to give out defined and specific weapons related projects in or- der to reap the benefits of the advan- cements. "The reason research is done at universities is so professors can get published," he said. "If you get into ap- plied weapons research, none of that is publishable. I don't see how the Depar- tment of Defense, in all their wisdom, could allow that type of research to be published." But for other University researchers, the issue is not so clear cut. Prof. Isadore Bernstein, who has been criticized for defense department work with chemicals-including the effects of mustard liquid on the human skin- said he is caught in a no win situation. "War is definitely something we don't want to do, but we shouldn't sit back and allow out nation to become subservient to another philosophy," he said. "On the other hand, I believe the University is not a place where machines of war should be developed. "There just isn't a black and white answer. Maybe Tom Senior has a clear- cut answer," Bernstein said. "Maybe the people who are anti-war-and I don't believe they are anti-military research, I believe they are really anti- war-have the answer, but I don't." The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September6b, 1984 - page 11 ACACIA Cfe iebrating our 80th1 Annt'versarv. 805 (Ixforb 9rn4-unhi5 Ft N l..UE A SI }I 1 rt'~f'ffiP[{a' Your Campus Grocery Store 1352 GEDDES (At Observatory -near the Hill Dorms) IN 1972, THE University implemen- ted guidelines covering classified research projects. The guidelines state, in part, that the University will not take part in any research, ". . . the specific purpose of which is to destroy human life or incapacitate human beings." In 1982, there was an attempt to extend those guidelines to include unclassified as well as classified research. The governing body of the faculty ap- ACCORDING TO SENIOR, once one research project is stopped for moral reasons, there is nothing to prevent other projects from being stopped for another group's moral reasons. Before long, he said, all research freedom is gone. Nancy Aranoff, another member of PSN, disagrees with Senior's assessment. She said there have always HILL DORMS SOUTH 'U' GEDDES .. k I.- Guardian Angels plan on coming to campus 41. N *Beer & Wine *Deli Trays By LISA POWERS The city could get some divine inter-' vention in the fight against crime this fall if the Detroit chapter of the Guar- dian Angels decides to go ahead with tentative plans to establish an Ann Ar- bor group. "There's always been an interest to get established in Ann Arbor," said Curtis Sliwa, founder of the New York based organization. SLIWA SAID last lune the well- publicized student unrest that charac- terized the 60s, the city's high crime rate and its proximity to Detroit makes Ann Arbor a good candidate for the volunteer group. According to Sliwa, the Guardian Angels plan to make a public presen- tation to students this fall in order to explain the organization and possibly to sign-up volunteers. Sliwa described the Alliance of Guar- dian Angels, Inc. as a "service group 'In-state tuition frozen (Continued from Page 1) move. Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) called the freeze "an act of faith." She added that it was a "clear signal to Lansing, we are sensitive to what the voices in Lansing are trying to do." Shapiro agreed with Power. "I think that there is a good chance that at- titudes toward funding of higher education is going through a tran- sition," he said. Last year, tuition went up an average of 9.5 percent. In 1982, it jumped an average of 15 percent and in 1981 students received an 18 percent in- crease in tuition costs. KAPPA SIGMA FRATERNITY Welcomes You to The University of Michigan for the '84-'85 Academic Year. %A/C [IIVITC '%/f I T that particularly is ... patrolling the city and acting as a visual deterrent toward crime. Part of the program is escorting, sure, but we don't have people who just sit in the dorm and wait for a call to come in. If somebody's in need of an escort. . . we'll already be out there." WEARING T-shirts and berets, and carrying an identification card that certifies that each member underwent three months of training, the Guardian Angels would patrol the city in groups of two or more, Sliwa said. "If, in the course of patrol, we should see a crime in process," said Sliwa, "we would intervene and hold them un- til the police arrive. That is a citizen's arrest.' "As a citizen, you have the right to detain a person but if you try to move him against his will then you are violating his rights, and he, in turn, can have you arrested," Sliwa said. THE CONVICTION rate for people arrested by Guardian Angels is better than that of most police departments, Sliwa said. Out of 168 citizen's arrests the group has made in incidents where guns or knives were used, convictions and prison terms of six months or more were received in 89 of them. "Never once has a Guardian Angel been arrested for improper detention or using force," Sliwa said. Two Guardian Angels escort services have been started on the campuses of Ohio State and Northwestern Univer- sities. THE GROUP has met a great deal of opposition when trying to start chapters in other cities, much of the opposition coming from law enforcement agencies who see the Angels as a vigilante group. Sliwa said he will make a public presentation to students this fall even if he meets stiff opposition from University officials. "We're used to it," he said. The structure of the Ann Arbor chap- ter will not be formulated until Sliwa and the Detroit members evaluate the needs of the campus and the com- munity, and most importantly, get feed- back from the community, Sliwa said. "It is the decision of the students," said Sliwa. "They woii't be forced." " Fine Meats * Produce " Special Orders Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M. - 7 P.M. Sun. 12 - 5 P.M. 761-3900 , TM Jartran. 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