Philanthropists donate to aid helping paws I 4 Oregon Daily Emerald An independent newspaper at the University of Oregon www. dailyemerald. com Since 1900 | Volume 107, Issue 68 | Wednesday, November 30,2005 ■ Tracking Department of Defense funds Campus military research underfire University Senate will hear a motion that could make research funded by the U.S. military public BY EVA SYLWESTER SENIOR NEWS REPORTER Is brain research funded by the U.S. Army being used to con trol the thoughts of soldiers, or only to teach dyslexic children to read? Is making the Internet faster in tended to help communications between doctors and rural pa tients, or to help pilot robots that will kill people? These questions are part of a larger debate that sprung up this year on campus concerning the University’s use of U.S. Depart ment of Defense funding for re search, although administrators say the University has been accept ing this funding since 1965. This afternoon, the University Senate will hear a motion related to DoD research. If passed, the motion will require public forums to be held, where Univer sity researchers and administra tors will discuss the nature of military research projects taking place on campus. University Senate President Peter Keyes is also planning to create an ad hoc committee on issues related to research policies, which would report to the Senate and to Vice President for Research and Graduate Studies Rich Linton. Keyes said the motivating force behind the motion has been emeritus professor of biology Frank Stahl. Stahl said he became interested in investigating mili tary research following the ac tions of peace studies graduate student Brian Bogart, who is spending the academic year sit ting in a tent across the street from Johnson Hall in protest of military research. Keyes, an associate professor of architecture, said the proposed hearings and the ad hoc commit tee could lead to faculty mem bers, including himself, becom ing more informed about the issue of military research. “I know nothing about it,” he said. “The military doesn’t fund a lot of architecture research.” Funding Currently, 19 DoD grants are being used in many departments, including psychology, economics and physics. These grants com pose about 2 percent of the Uni versity’s total research budget of nearly $84 million for the 2004 2005 fiscal year, according to data obtained from Linton. Despite slight year-to-year fluc tuations, University Federal Af fairs Director Betsy Boyd wrote in an e-mail that DoD grants have consistently accounted for about MILITARY, page 6 FRANK STAHL BIOLOGY PROFESSOR EMERITUS Frank Stahl, biology professor emeritus and American Cancer Society Professor, is part of the campus movement against military research. Stahl grew up in Boston and attended Harvard University. He earned a Ph.D. at the University of Rochester and did post-doctoral work at the California Institute of Technology. After a year at the University of Missouri, Stahl came to work at the Universi ty’s new Institute of Molecular Biology in 1959. When Aaron Novick, the in stitute’s first director, recruited Stahl, he emphasized that the University was not doing mili tary research, Stahl said. Novick helped develop the atomic bomb during World War II and after ward became very opposed to military research, Stahl said. Stahl said he was primarily focused on his own scientific research for most of his career, so he did not know a lot about campus military research until recently. His research focused on genetic recombination* the process in which two parent organisms create an offspring containing DNA from each parent. Stahl retired in June but still has an office on campus. In late 2002, Stahl tried to get the University Senate to pass a resolu tion against what was then a possible war in Iraq, on the grounds that the war would divert national resources from education. The senate refused to vote on the issue, so Stahl circulated a petition to have a faculty assembly. He and his partner Jette Foss enlisted the help of Concerned Faculty for Peace and Justice to collect the necessary 500-plus faculty signatures, and have been involved with the group ever since. Stahl said he has been interested in removing the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps from campus for years as a statement against militarism and the military’s homophobic policies. He said he became specifically interested in military research when graduate student Brian Bogart came to campus and shared his ideas with him. — Eva Sylwester UNIVERSITY RESEARCH FUNDING 2004-05 Source: Rich Linton Department of Defense funding Chris Todd I GRAPHIC ARTIST RICH LINTON VP FOR RESEARCH AND GRADUATE STUDIES As the University’s vice president for research and graduate studies, Rich Linton works to find grant funding for University research. Linton grew up in Pennsylvania and earned a bachelor’s degree in chemistry at the University of Delaware, Newark in 1973. His college years were during the height of the Vietnam War, and Lin ton said he attended a few anti-war protests in Wash ington, D.C., at that time. After earning a doctorate in chemistry at the Univer sity of Illinois, Linton was hired as a chemistry profes sor at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. He said his research inter ests were similar to those of the Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute in the realm of surface analysis. He said he did not have military funding for his re- __ search projects, but he knew researchers who did, and he col laborated on projects that were funded by the Office of Naval Re search. During the mid-1980s, Linton also served as the University of North Carolina system’s assistant vice president for research and chief research officer. Linton came to the University in 2000 to be the vice president for research and graduate studies. He is also technically a chemistry professor but said he is too busy with administrative duties to teach. Linton said his mission is to make the University successful, and he enlists external support as needed. He said his personal political views, which he declined to describe, are not involved in his decisions about funding sources. “In my capacity as the research vice president, politics certain ly is part of the job, but political persuasion and orientation on is sues like that are peripheral to the mission of my office,” Linton said. “I try to maintain professionalism in the work of the office. ” — Eva Syl wester Oregon holds out hopes for BCS bowl The football team will go to the Holiday Bowl if it is not selected for the prestigious matchup BY MEGHANN M. CUN1FF NEWS EDITOR When a football team goes 10-1 during the regular season, it’s a reason to celebrate. But University officials are hoping for more than just a celebration for this year’s team. They’re hoping for an all-out fiesta. The Ducks are one of at least three teams in the running for the two at-large berths in the Bowl Championship Series’ Fiesta Bowl. If they don’t go to that bowl game then they’re assured a spot in the Holiday Bowl, which takes the third runner-up in the Big 12 and the Pacific-10 runner-up. Invitations to the BCS games will be announced Sunday afternoon. The difference between the two bowl games is tremendous. On paper, it comes down to the money con ferences get.if their teams make it to a BCS bowl. Travel expenses — estimated at $1.2 million by the Athletics Department — for the team and support personnel are paid with money from the earnings, and the rest is split between the 10 teams in the conference. The first team from a conference chosen for a BCS bowl earns between $14 million and $17 BCS, page 5 Hillel hosts lecture on Israel's need for peace Omer Caspi gave his opinions on actions that could resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict BY NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER The Israeli’s sacrificed their homes as their part of the peace process and now the ball is in the Palestinian Authority’s court to do its part, San Francisco’s deputy consul general to Israel told about 20 people Tuesday night at Oregon Hillel, the foundation for Jewish campus life. Omer Caspi discussed the history of peace movements between Israel and Palestine and encouraged Palestinian authorities to take the next step to end terrorism. “The only way for Israel to survive in the Middle East is to sign peace treaties with our neighbors,” Caspi said during the presenta tion, entitled “Beyond Disengagement: Israel’s Quest for Peace in the Middle East. ” Oregon Hillel hosted Caspi’s speech, which SPEAKER, page 12