The Michigan Daily- Friday, November 15, 1991 - Page 5 Conference will tackle real P.C. issues This weekend, the University will hold a conference to talk .What goes on inside the buildings ofNortb Campus? by Andrew Levy Daily Staff Reporter The Union. C.C. Little. The Bur- ton Tower. East Quad. The Diag. CCRB. Hill Auditorium. Crisler Arena. Just say these words, and anyone even remotely associated with the University - student, faculty, alumni - knows what you're de- scribing. But as they are walking down the street in front of Hill Auditorium, people see those lumbering gray- and-blue buses stop in front of the Dental School, with destinations at mythical places like "Northwood," wherever that is. "Northwood. Isn't that a city next to Novi?" Just so you know... the buses do go somewhere. "Wait... I think I know where..." The Commons. G.G. Brown. Dow. Baits. NCRB. Bursley. The Chrysler Center. For anyone who doesn't know, doesn't care,tdoesn't care to know, or just tries to avoid it at all costs, these are all places on... ".North Campus, right?" Yes, that's right. North Campus. That 800-acre enclave someplace after the lab's stint as a brick stor- age facility, it was taken over by the ion beam people. "Those guys back there generate neutrons. They have a 14 million- electron-volt nuclear source. All I know is that when they generate neutrons, we stay away," Damcott said. They don't just generate neu- trons, they measure them, compare them, and bombard targets with them. That, in particular, is called Ion Beam Assisted Deposition (IBAD). "In IBAD, what they do is make thin coatings of things, and observe it when you blast it with ions," she said. And that's not all that goes on in this stealthy structure. "This building is shared with naval architecture and marine engi- neering, but there's two nuclear en- gineering labs. This one, and the Plasma lab next door," Damcott said, and then she whispered, "Theyl used to do fusion in there. They1 don't anymore." t 10:30 a.m. Aerospace1 Engineering Building Across the street from the ion beam lab, there is a building whosei shape defies reason. From one side ofi the Aerospace Engineering Building protrudes a tube about 200 feet long, winding around the building, gradually getting wider. Just what it's for is not certain. And, though this building has a number of doors, the vast majority of them are locked. Just inside one of the few un- locked doors, there is a mock-up of a General Electric jet engine, designed in part at the University. Within the dark, quiet building, there is re- search going on related to every- thing from jet propulsion to grain elevator explosions. Gary Gould, an engineering tech- nician in the building, pointed out a tube suspended from the ceiling. "That tube stretches the whole length of the building," Gould said. Into the tube, they put flour or corn starch and ignite it, in order to fig- ure out how they can prevent grain elevators and silos from exploding. "There's a cloud of dust, and some little spark triggers 'em off, and 'Boom-bo!' When they set that off, it makes a huge crash," Gould said. "It's kind of hard to under- stand, 'cause I don't even understand it." Ken Buch, a post-doctorate in the Aerospace Engineering department, pointed out some of the applications for the jet propulsion research going on there. "There's applications for... pol- lution control, and other environ- mental issues. Like trying to remove nitrous oxide from burners, and stuff like that." Yeah... stuff like that. 11:15 a.m. Space Research Building It is interesting to note that this building has a number of doors, all of them unlocked and easy to find. "We do everything from weather up through comets and planetary atmospheres in here," said Ned Snell, a graduate student who works at the University's Space Physics Research Laboratory (SPRL). about P.C. You know, as in "womyn," "people of color," or "thought police." Or as Newsweek magazine put it in its in- depth cover article, the "New McCarthyism." But that's not what the debate's politically correct, Stephen H ,rd ,A , 3 ., t> 4 else in Ann Arbor where engineers go to CRISP, and where one will find first-year students who send in their housing forms late. But, even for those who do know that it exists, few people have any idea just what goes on deep inside the curious buildings of North Campus. 9:30 a.m. The Michigan Ion Beam Laboratory On Hayward Street, a sign on a hill reads, "Michigan Ion Beam Laboratory." The only building re- motely near that sign sticks five feet out of the ground and has no doors. No doors, and no lab to be seen. But it does exist. The lab is se- curely tucked away underground - two receptionists, a few graduate students, and a couple of stairwells away. And, if that isn't enough dis- couragement, signs on the door to the lab read: "CAUTION: Radia- tion Hazard," and "Flammable Solvents." On the inside is a vast space, filled with tin-foil covered vacuum chambers and machines sporting red LED numbers. "This used to be the cyclotron lab - probably before we were born," said Debbie Damcott, a grad- uate student in the nuclear engineer- ing program who works in the lab. But after the cyclotron got sent to Michigan State University, and Clockwise from top right: Associate Engineering Dean Dwight Stevenson stands in the METN control room. The foil-covered IBAM apparatus at the Michigan Ion Beam Laboratory. The lab has "sent up" 26 satel- lite instruments, including the High-Resolution Doppler Imager that recently was launched on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satel- lite. All of them were developed on campus. "Our lab competes well with NASA's Jet Propulsion Labora- tory," Snell said, adding that one of the lab's current projects is a sub- contracting job on "an Antarctic balloon that NASA is developing." In another room, stuffed with meters, desks, computers of all dif- ferent sizes and shapes, and tons of other equipment that the average person couldn't identify, Snell paused, pointing into a lab where some researchers were working. "It looks like they're doing some power supply development for another satellite," he said non- chalantly. Each room in the building is a different lab for a different space- related purpose. Tong Shyn, an SPRL research sci- entist, was studying atmospheric gases. "We are doing basically atomic physics for the space program. That includes taking cross-sections of atmospheric gases. It is vital to the space program," Shyn said. 1 p.m. G.G. Brown Building There are about a million labs on the third floor of the G.G. Brown Building, or so it seems. The corri- dors are endless, filled with doors that have ominous scientific warn- ings like "CAUTION: Biohazard." And on one door is a sign that says, "Bioprocess engineering: BUGS 'R' US." The phrase "bioprocess engineer- ing" appearing on the same sign as the word "bugs?" It almost sounds like another sequel to "The Fly." What kind of mutant insect could they possibly be developing in there? The answer is none. "Each one of these (bioengineering) labs has their spe- cific thing. This one deals with bac- teria - 'bugs,"' said Prashanth Ma- hendra, an Engineering senior. "I'm trying to make microcap- sules that we will eventually put cells inside of to do tests on. Some of the grad students have been able to get the capsules down to a half- millimeter in diameter," Mahendra said while holding a beaker full of the purple microcapsules. Jaime Ramirez-Vick, an engineer- ing graduate student who works in the lab, explained that the main ap- plication is in isolating a specific item needed to make a certain drug. "How viable your product is re- lies on only one step. If that is the most expensive step, then they can't sell the drug because it is too expen- sive," Ramirez-Vick said. "That step is usually the separation step." The capsules are useful, the sci- entists said, because they can encap- sulate a "magnet" for these impor- Library, is an unwelcoming double steel door with a sign that reads "Michigan Engineering Television Network" (METN). The University has a television network? Yes. Along with the ion accelerators, jet engines, and satel- lites is a television network. Dwight Stevenson, an Associate Dean in the Engineering school and the director of METN, commented on why the network keeps such a low profile. "This facility was constructed really about. And this weekend's conference was put together to dispel that kind of mockery and misinterpretation in order to get to the real issues at stake. "You're not going to see a lot of fighting over catch-phrases this weekend," said Richard Campbell, a conference organizer and professor in the communica- tions department. "This is a chance to debate." It's a little late in coming, and probably not enough to do the job thoroughly, but still, I think it's a good idea. For at least the past year and a; half, anyone eager to bash liberal ideas has had to do little more than scream "P.C.!" to dismiss legitimate debates about our changing society. By conjuring up the stereotype of a birkenstock- wearing, inclusive-speaking threat to free speech and the establish- ment, they successfully reduce important arguments to meaning- less banter. Instead of discussing why we should or should not include ethnic minorities, women and people of differing sexual orientation completely into our society, we end up talking about gender-inclusive language. Or, instead of arguing about expand- ing the classroom view of history, we talk about whether we should say "people of color" or "minor- fi 4' -# I tant suostances in tne microcap- sules, easily isolating them for other uses. 3 P-M Herbert Dow Building As far as North Campus build- ings go, there are an awful lot of people in the Dow Building. The place is huge and confusing, with more endless hallways. On the third floor, the image of a student at work appears through the tiny, vertical window on the door of a lab. A long, thin tube extends about two feet off the table, and there is a steady stream of bubbles rising through whatever fluid is in- side the tube. But, as with many things seen through windows on North Cam- pus, this set-up is far from being the most important thing in the lab. "We're examining how fluids pass through porous rocks," said Matthew Miller, a chemical engi- neering graduate student and re- searcher for the Porous Media Re- search Group. He pointed to a more complicated apparatus with gauges, lights, cylinders, and computers that probably require a Ph.D. to un- derstand. "It is mainly for enhanced oil recovery applications. "We're basically trying to make thA nrne ._nana and - oa1 I,, after the building was already here. In fact, the two main things that are down here are the engin library and METN," Stevenson said. The North Campus METN grew out of the former studio, located on Central Campus. "We were the first public Uni- versity to broadcast graduate engi- neering courses directly into indus- try. We started that in 1969," Stevenson said. "We built this stu- dio from scratch starting in 1985." METN broadcasts live lectures from a specially-equipped lecture hall to outside organizations, and controls student response through a computer system. Beyond that, it uses its $900,000-plus of hardware to help students and faculty produce video presentations. "That's a good illustration of a function. A grad student wants to make a presentation for promotion, research, or teaching staff," Steven- son said. Stevenson said one University professor uses the facility to help students with their homework. "It was created so a professor critiques a particular assignment in the textbook, and the tapes are all on reserve in the library," he ex- plained. 6 p.m. ity. We talk about semantics instead of substance, and images instead of issues. It's a lot like something the f Rev. Al Sharpton talked about when he spoke here two weeks ago. He said that too often in New York, debates over racial tension * revolve around him instead of the underlying reasons for the tension itself. The issue has become Al Sharpton and his personal actions,. he said, while the city's racially divided neighborhoods continue to boil over. Of course, Rev. Sharpton hasn't often been someone who shuns the media spotlight. But I find a good deal of truth in what he said, and a pretty strong parallel between that and the P.C. debate. It's time to focus on the the issues themselves, and to forget about the icons. That's what this conference is all about. Though two discussions about the P.C. backlash itself will take place tonight, the rest of the weekend will be devoted to debates on affirmative action and curriculum changes, among other engaging topics. And while we take part in the exchanges this weekend, I hope we can all be tolerant of every view expressed, no matter how offensive or inappropriate it might be. A truly open debate would have to recognize the value of everyone's input, and these issues are too important for anyone to be silenced. Campbell, the conference organizer, said he thinks the program will be educational. "I'm looking forward to an open debate this weekend," he said. "And I'm going into it with an open mind. I'm willing to listen to opposing views, and I may even change my mind about some things." Campbell added that he hopes the conference will spark a continuing campus discussion. As someone who rarely, if ever, declines a good argument, I'm alo lnnkirny fnrward tn this I Ii