Shapiro nominates new man to top Flint post By KAREN TENSA Marvin Roberson will be recommen- ded to become acting chancellor of the University of Michigan-Flint until a permanent replacement for the late Conny Nelson can be found. University President Harold Shapiro ' will ask the Regents to approve the recommendation at their meeting next month. FORMER chancellor Nelson died on May 2, of cancer. Roberson has been vice-chancellor for University Services in Flint since September 1980. "Dr. Roberson's work has been of great value to the Flint campus," Shapiro said. "He is respected by students and faculty throughout the } University of Michigan community." ROBERSON said he was honored by Shapiro's recommendation. "Although I'm uncomfortable with the circumstances surronding my ap- pointment, I'm looking forward to con- tinuing the prorama salreadyhat U-M Flint," aaid Roberaon. "I have no major agenda changes of my own to make." According to Roberson, Shapiro will be forming a aearcb committee anon to find a permanent auccessor to Nelson. The panel will include students, faculty members, administration, and Flint citizens and may also be announced at the Regent's meeting in June, he said. "Hopefully, the administration will have their candidate selected by January 1, 1984," said Roberson. S-Roberson said it is unlike ly he would be a candidate for the permanent position, but said if he was selected he would ac- cept the job. Before his first position with the Univeraity at Flint, he was an inatruc- tor at Flint Southweatern High School. He was a pupil personnel consultant for that diatrict juat prior to joining the University staff as director of atudent services. Roberson was a student at U-M Flint in 1956 - the year it opened, and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1959. Doily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Jerome Smith accepts his appointment as the new director of the Industrial Technology Institute at a press conference in Detroit yesterday. Smith will take charge of the Ann Arbor-based high-tech institute in August. Local high-tech institute appoints new director By DAN GRANTHAM win, praised the new appointment. tive ways to integrate humans with Special to thenaily "Without a doubt, Smith is the perfect their electronic colleagues. DETROIT - A local company active candidate for this job," he said at an in- Naylor said one of the institute's in bringing robotics to the University stitute meeting yesterday in Detroit. major accomplishments was the got a new director yesterday, who will Irwin also praised the out-going building of a model factory in Ann Ar- lead the center in providing resear- Naylor for the gains the institute has bor equipped with the latest technology. chers with more than $68 million dollars made since its creation in 1981. "(Un- He insists that the advent of new in grants to develop robots in Michigan. der Naylor) the institute has made technology in factories will not mean an Jerome Smith was named to head much more progress than we ever end to human involvement. Resear- the Industrial Technology Institute, a would have believed possible," he said. chers suggest that electronically con- multi-corporate-sponsored center THE INSTITUTE was founded as part trolled machines can eventually be based in Ann Arbor. Smith, currently of a program sponsored by the state to used where people cannot work safely the Technical Director of the Office of lure new high-tech business to or comfortably. Naval Research of the U.S. Navy, will Michigan. Funds for the institute are Russell Dawby, chairman of the replace the Institute's Acting Director, provided by the Dow, Mott, and Kellogg board of trustees of the Kellogg Foun- University Engineering Prof. Arch foundations. dation, enthusiastizally endorsed the Naylor in August. Although the company does some of institute. "It represents a significant "I'm here because I think this (the its own research, its main goal is the in- pooling of resources with the common institute) is an exciting prospect," said tegration of computers and robots into objective of establishingMichigan as a Smith. "The idea is right for the time." all phases of manufacturing. Irwin said center of excellence in selected areas of The institute's president, Samuel Ir- the institute also studies the most effec- emerging high technology." Committee to develop ethics guidelines By GEORGEA KOVANIS A committee of University faculty members will meet in September to spell out "ethical research guidelines" for their peers, said Alan Price, the University's assistant vice president of research. The guidelines have been labeled as an attempt to discourage faculty and student researchers from falsifying data, or stealing other researchers' infor- mation, and will follow a trend set by other leading universities across the country. EDUCATORS have been considering committees and guidelines like those the University has proposed for several years, Price said, adding that the American Association of Universities has strongly recommended adoption of ethical research guidelines "for two or three years." The University's committee was first proposed in February 1982. Since then, faculty members and ad- ministrators have recommended possible committee Faculty panel to review research members to a faculty panel through the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs, (SACUA), according to SACUA Chairman Herbert Hildebrandt. Price said that the panel will not be "an oversight committee," and will not monitor research on cam- pus. But it will, he added, examine the campus research environment to see if there are factors at the University that might cause researchers to cheat. PRICE STRESSES that the formation of the com- mittee is not an implication that dishonest research has been conducted here. Although researchers at other schools have falsified data, Price said there have been no incidents of"fudging" results at the University. "We haven't had any cases on this campus and I hope we don't," he said. The University faced the issue of cheating on research projects in 1980, when University graduate Wilson Crook was accused of basing research on a make-believe mineral and fabricating data while he was a researcher with a major oil company. THE REGENTS revoked Crook's master of geology degree. While he hopes the guidelines will serve as a reminder to reseachers not to cheat, Price added that no organization can stop professors and students from falsifying data. "I don't think it's something you can prevent," he said.