WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1969 Three University Profs Consult with IDA (Continued from page one ) publicity. “Although IDA very much values the contribution made by the universities through the years.” King told me, “the fact is that its need of direct university backing and advice has lessen ed somewhat over the years as it has become established as an organizaton which can stand on its own.” Indeed. IDA has continued its recruitment of scientists from the academic _ community, as institutional membership in IDA had never been a prerequisite for employment as a consul tant. Muzzled Protests The change in corporate structure did, however, virtually muzzle student protests. It tainted any further attacks on IDA as an intrusion on academic freedom, since the universities were of ficially out of the game and only the pro fessors, who may consult or research tor whomever they please, remained. At Col umbia, Rudd was caught mouthing the rather hypocritical notion that “academic freedom docs not include the freedom to perform secret research for the Pentagon in 1968.” Implicit in the SDS rhetoric, of course, is an almost rcligous belief in American militarism, and a simultaneous committment to cut off its research base, even if that means dictating the rights of some professors. “It’s not a question of doing the stuff (military research) here,” SDS correspondent Buckley said last year at University Park. “Penn State is in the goddamn body. It’s an insidious branch o£ research for the Department of Defense. What they’re doing is faking academic skills to the criminal business of govern ment. It’s a question ot making the University complicit with the war machine.” Wells H. Kcddie, an assistant pro fessor of labor studies and the facultv ad viser to SDS at Penn State, is a ruggedly handsome man with the sharply detined features of an outdoors.man. He agrees with Buckley, although his voice remains calm and his face relaxed when discuss ing the subject. “This is one more way to harness the needs of the military to the universities,’' Kcddie said of IDA. “It is an abomination. It js immoral to research how to kill people, how* to put down the national ambitions of people.” Most of those who would disengage the academic institutions from the Department of Dclense arc equally warv of dictating the rights of professor* who individually choose to do defense research or consultation on their own time. “There are times. . .when the best brains in some particular specialty are to be found on a university campus.” Walker wrote in his letter to USG. “and the individual involved is willing, or even eager, to help his government. In such cases, his decision is. and I believe should be. an individual matter. As long as the work he performs docs not intcrlere with his teaching or other academic duties, he should, in my opinion, be permitted to do as he sees fit.” Indeed, a case can be marie for the universities’ encouragement of extracur ricular research, especially lor a prestigious think-tank like IDA. Universities are ranked academically. not by the caliber of their students, but by the reputation of their faculties, which attract the students. Major Coup The selection of a professor to work for IDA. and particularly ior Jason, one Penn State professor said, is a major HERSCHEL W. LEIBOWiTZ Professor oj Psychology coup for a univcr>ity. It is perhaps one of the best indications of laculty expertise. No Penn State faculty member has e\er been chosen as a Jason scholar. Most of the unflattering fuss directed against IDA has concerned Jason and its highly classified work o n coun terinsurgency. infiltration and guerrilla warfare. SDS claims this work con tributes to the manipulation of foreign governments and people. The Jason work, however, is con ducted during the summer months and. Norman L. Christcllcr, recently retired IDA vice president and general manager, emphasizes, olf campus. Indeed, a Jason summer session held in Massachusetts in 1967. according to IDA literature, dealt with the scientific aspects of counterinsurgency, infiltration and guerrilla warfare. And the meeting was so .secret. Science magazine claimed, that the janitor had to receive a high security clearance before he could clean the building. Criticism of IDA’s activities, of course, is not limited to Jason. All other divisions in the institute are engaged m weapons research and evaluation, and some sponsor studies or foreign govern ments. populations and foreign policy—all of which gives SDS plenty of ammunition. llenry S. AVbinsVi, an associate pro fessor of political science at Penn State and a recent addition to the IDA rolls, is acting as a consultant on a classified IDA study of Australian and New Zealand foreign policy. Sponsored by the Economic and Political Studies Division, the research, in the context of current L\ S. involvement in Southeast Asia, could contribute to American political and economic policies toward that area in the next decade. Albinskt, who was not eager to talk about the project, said his will be a dual role of consultation with IDA people dur ing the researching and writing of the THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA paper, and analysis and criticism when the paper is completed. “It is one of the more sedate things I can do with IDA,” he said with a chuckle. Albinski did say that the report will be a projection of the forc'gn defense policies of the two Pacific island nations in the future, and an overall prognosis of developments in that part of the world. An example of the methodology, hr said will be a study of the inspirational and motivational ieaturcs which influence foreign policy decisions. Contrary to the simplism of inherent evil in every defense-sponsored project, not all IDA or Defense Department research has completely military nr manipulative overtones. It is a sad com ment. in fact, that often the greatest ad vances—with broad implications for the uplift of society—arc at the same time the most potentially dangerous militarily, and would not have been made if not for its military potential. This is the dilemma which the scien tist faces. The classic example, or course, was the work on nuclear iissmn during World War 11. the immediateness of which could not have fooled even the most absent-mined professor. But the same energy which culminates in mushroom cloud can just as easily mean undreamed affluence lor the entire globe. Look at Future “Every technological advance can be used for humane or inhumane uses,” Hcrschcl W. Leibow itz, professor of psychology at Penn State, said. “The military can take advantage of any technology. Every person has to ask himseir about the implicatons of his research. We have to look at the long range future. Will the advance be of benefit or detriment to society?” Licbowitz was faced with such a fun damental choice three years ago. Ap proached by IDA. he was asked to do unclassified research on visual perception as it related t o infrared imagery. Translated, the Department of Defense was interested in exposing camouflaged Victcong and material infiltrating down the Ho Chi Minh trail. Infa r o cl pholnrec onnaissance. then being researched al Michigan, offered the .'insw'cr and LcibowHz was recognized as one who could contribute to its develop ment. Lcibowitz is a lanky man. maybe 6 Feet 3 inches tall, with wisps of gray run ning through his long black hair. He speaks in short bursts, struggling to fit words and phrases into the meaning he is trying to convey. And unlike many scien tists. his words reveal a troubled con science over the uses of his contributions. “Sure, there are military uses for in formed imagery.” he said uncomfor tably. “It’s being used right now in Viet nam.” Infrared imagery, essentially, is a new tcchnologv which makes it possible to develop a thermal map of terrain. From a plane, an infrared camera can pinpoint the location of a camouflaged truck or a grouo of men in dense jungle, simply because both : nicks and men nro ducc a different quantity of heat than their surroundings. The same technique that can be used militarily to hunt down human beings, however, can be used to put food in the distended stomach of a starving Binfran baby. Infarcd technology, Lcibowitz ex plains, is “an extension of m/in’s senses.” It can be used to increase the food pro duction by exposing unhealthy groves of plants, which reflect less heat than healthy one*; it can pinpoint industries, and the water and thermal pollution they contribute: it can map cities, volcanoes and pinpoint hidden natural resources and underground fires. Wanted for Vietnam Infrared technology, then, has a diversity ot application literally as broad as life and death. But Lcibowitz did not have to fool himself. IDA wanted infrared technology for use in Vietnam. So the choice was not easy. It involved a look in to tlie future. And a personal judgment. “f believe the big problem of society is not war and peace,’’ Lcibowitz said. “It is finding natural resources. If we don't find them, we will create conditions which will lead to international tensions. "The big problem will bo population. We need more resources. We have the choice ol either establishing a lower population growlh rate, or increasing the discovery rate of our resources. This (in frared technology) may bo the only hope for increasing the discovery rate.” It likewise would be ditlicult to charge a case of military complicity against George M. Guthrie, a professor and colleague of Lcibowitz in psychology. Guthrie, a short, relaxed man with the beginnings of a slight middle class, mid dle aecd roll, will consult with IDA after (he conclusion of his three year study of the Philippines at the end of June. Guthrie’s study is supported by (lie Advanced Research -Projects Agency, (he Defense Department agency w h i c h sponsors most scientific research on ad vanced weapons systems. The study, though, is an unclassified, in terdisciplinary analysis of the impact of Stage, TV Entertainer To Speak at Colloquy Broadway entertainer and television personality Orson Bean will be the keynote speaker for the Colloquy “The Human Dimension of Educa tion.” Bean, who is the founder and director of a new* style school in Harlem, will speak Nov. 7 in Rec Hall on the future of pro gressive education in America. This year Colloquy also will sponsor a multimedia hap pening in Rec Hall Nov. 8 enti tled “In Search of America.” The light show under the direc tion of David Lloyd-Joncs is to be a total sensory experience. The show is constructed as a series of films, light shows and music tapes aimed mainly at involving the audience with its surroundings. A community dinner also has been scheduled for Nov. 9 as loquy wee) those involved in any aspect of the program will participate in the dinner meeting. The dinner also is open to all who are in terested in speaking with members of the Colloquy pro gram. This year Colloquy will be His story was censored... modernization on the attitudes, values and behavior of the Filipino people. The study has attracted social scien tists from Northwestern. Chicago, Haver ford, Swarthmore and Hawaii, plus a GEORGE M. GUTHRIE Professor of Psychology number of Filipino participants from Atcnco de Manila Universitv. In the Quarterly Letter Report of Jul y - September 1968, a few preliminary lind ings were released: “If there is one generalization we could oftcr at this point, it is that the impediments to the adoption of many lm- based totally on the residence! halls. All speakers and gufsts.'j as well as any participating j laculty members, will be hous- 1 ed either in residence halls, or I fraternities. ! At present the November, program has only the general theme “The Human Dimension of Education.” No concrete plans will be made until all 1 participants arrive on campus' and decide among themselves j what will be discussed at the ■ Colloquy panels. I "Support the Artists Series" A GIFT FOR VIP* ('Visa's Important People Our Members) But some got through. They’ll tell you their stories unabridged. Unabridged —that’s the kind of Europe we give you. Involvement with the total culture: talking, listening, meeting, sharing. Sure, you'll get the sights, the beaches, and some swinging parties and you’ll enjoy them. But then, anybody can give you those. We give you the facts behind the sights, the reasons behind the events. And we do it through the people. We dish up the real Europe from the mod up-beat action of Carnaby Street to the philosophical intensity of the Left Bank. You get the agony and the ecstasy; action and involvement. Because that’s what Europe is ali about. Institute of Cultural Education • P.O. Box 2388. Cincinnati. Ohio INSTITUTE OF CULTURAL EDUCATION P.O. Box 2388, Gwynne Building. Cincinnati. Ohio 45201 Please send me the full color, illustrated booklet. "European Dis covery— 1970 College Student Programs", available at no cost to Penn. State University Students CURRENT ADDRESS TELEPHONE HOME address p.S. We advise those desiring a hold-my-hand-from-monument-to monument student tour. to look elsewhere. Collegian Classifieds Bring Results • DECOR. • NEED A: • NEED A: yoi STOP Clio and mail this couoon today. (PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY) PAGE THREE provcments do not lie in the laclc of in formation or in inherently conservative attitudes of the people. There is a great awareness of the need for changes and of the changes possible in agriculture, health, education, government ad ministration and other fields as well. Im provements which almost every one desires are impeded by the extremely low income of a high percentage of the pcoolc. the dearth or absence of ap propriate models and the nature of person to person relationships within the society.” Contains Implications That the study has political impact and contains implications for future American po'icv pronouncements is evi dent from the eagerness of IDA to cmnlov Guthr’e as a consultant. And Guthrie him c elf concedes that there are rief'nite lessons to be learned from the work ”T would hope tint the American government and military personnel In a nosition of influence would read our books.” Guthrie snin. “The Philippines are on excellent place to study the in troduction °f tho American form of government into Southeast Asia. “I think.” Guthrie continued seriems lv “that our research should lead the Department of Defense to doubt the wisdom of spreading arms around the world ” Anti-Establishment testimony such as Guthrie’s is a melody to the ears of university presidents who defended their sponsorship of IDA because of its profess ed independence from the government. This is an important consideration in view of the controversy over the military fContinued from page five) W-QWK fm/mneiy-seven THE PROGRESSIVE ONE