--- Begin Forwarded Message ---
Date: Tue, 10 Oct 2000 16:03:17 -0500
From: "Dr. Brian J. Keay" <keayb@ci516372-a.nash1.tn.home.com>
Subject: Several First Amendment issues.
Sender: "Dr. Brian J. Keay" <keayb@ci516372-a.nash1.tn.home.com>
To: ellen.friedkin@senate.ucsb.edu
Reply-To: "Dr. Brian J. Keay" <keayb@ci516372-a.nash1.tn.home.com>
Message-ID: <200010102103.e9AL3Hv04367@ci516372-a.nash1.tn.home.com>
Dear Prof. Friedkin:
It was suggested to me that I try writing to you (and the other
members of the Academic Senate at UCSB) to bring to your attention
a very alarming situation, one in which I would have never imagined
could occur in the United States. (I tried writing previously to various
members of the Senate and the administration, but
I received few responses.) Just in case you didn't receive my previous
letter, I'm a physicist who
as a graduate student worked on a series of ground breaking
experiments at UCSB's Free-Electron Laser (FEL) Center
from 1991 to 1995. These experiments included the first observation
of photon-assisted tunneling in semiconductors and were among the
most important involving semiconductors in recent years. They have
also led to a revolutionary new kind of laser, the Quantum Cascade
Laser, invented at Bell-Labs (http://www.bell-labs.com/org/physicalsciences/projects/qcl/qcl.html)
and discussed frequently in scientific journals. Several companies
throughout the world are now pursuing the commercial development of
these new lasers which could potentially earn the companies tens of
millions of dollars in the near future. The response to my work,
however, and my role in the discovery of the principles that helped
lead to these revolutionary new lasers, has been systematic harassment
and intimidation. The last eight years have been a nightmarish
experience, one which has been reminiscent of McCarthyism.
The source of this nightmare has been Dr. Jim Allen, director of the
FEL program at UCSB. In 1995, after many years of
hard work and many outstanding results which brought UCSB's
FEL program international recognition, Dr. Allen threatened to
cut me off financially with no warning whatsoever. My main concern
at that time was to find a job. I had been looking for over a
year and I could not find a single job in spite of many outstanding
results, publications in some of the most prestigious journals,
invitations to speak at the most prestigious conferences, and
even though I had sent over three hundred resumes to
research labs and universities all over the world. My inability to
find work is even more alarming if one considers that several of my
references expressed positive opinions of me--without me
inquiring--and that scientists with my experience are in extremely
high demand by the semiconductor industry.
To Dr. Allen, however, I was a competitor and he believed it was not in
his interests for me to have a successful career. He was obsessed with
the ownership and domination of the scientific results and he was
particularly threatened by the fact that I wanted to publish a paper
which gave an interpretation of photon-assisted tunneling that differed
from his. He made it clear that I would not find employment until I
ceased any further discussion of my interpretation. "You can't have
your cake and eat it too" were among his comments on my search for
employment. The paper was finally submitted for publication in January
1996 against his direct warnings not to even to talk about the subject.
For him, his ability to control whether or not I found employment
became a bargaining chip to be used to prevent me from discussing my
interpretation. Four years later he is still able to prevent me from
finding a job and this fact is still being used to try to silence me,
although now I believe he is trying to prevent me from talking about
my experiences, some of which are now described on my websites:
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Bridge/4116/
http://science.jumpeducation.com
http://physicssanctuary.members.easyspace.com.
http://www.homestead.com/physicssanctuary/files/
http://members.home.net/keay/
It has been clear that potential employers have been contacted by
someone on Jim Allen's behalf. Indeed, while I was in Santa Barbara
I overheard by accident Dr. Allen himself making an unsolicited
phone call to a potential employer telling them, among other things;
"You might be hearing from this student.....Well, he has back-to-back
Physical Review Letters [a very prestigious journal], but he's just
not there as a researcher". This incident only confirmed that
the subtle threats he made against my career were not a bluff.
Only after intervention from the chairman of the physics department
at the University of California did I receive two job offers in the
last week of March, 1996, more than three months after I
successfully defended my dissertation. Remarkably, both those job
offers were to work at Vanderbilt University. In total, I've mailed
nearly a thousand resumes during the last five years to research
labs, universities, and corporations all over the world. During that
time I have received a total of three job offers to work at
Vanderbilt University and zero offers to work any where else in
the world. Vanderbilt University has been willing to consistently
offer me jobs, yet no one else in the world has been willing to
consider me. It is evident that Jim Allen has had an influence at
Vanderbilt University and that is why I've been kept here. Besides
coming to Vanderbilt several times himself and attempting to get
me to work with him again, Jim Allen's ability to exert a negative
influence over my work environment at Vanderbilt has been clear.
Since I arrived here in Nashville my life has been made very
difficult. I believe my efforts to do experiments, for example,
were consistently undermined by dubious equipment failures. It is
truly remarkable, for example, that at the same time Vanderbilt's
FEL program was in the process of winning approval from the Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) to perform brain surgery, the laser,
which is run by a staff of engineers, would consistently crash and
fail during my experiments. While some of the "crashes" I'm sure
were legitimate, some of them obviously were not. These types of
incidents happened for months on end. How could they win approval
from the FDA to perform brain surgery, yet for me the FEL would
consistently not function? This made progress almost impossible,
but at the same time I was told that I must use the FEL in my work.
I was also threatened to be cut off financially while at Vanderbilt
and I was even suspended without pay for two months for reasons
that changed from one week to the next. First I was told that the
entire Medical FEL program in the United States had been cut, then
I was told that there was funding and there were other reasons for
terminating my employment. I believe this was part of an effort to
silence and intimidate me. At the same time I've been pressured to
work again with Jim Allen, who has been here several times and once
told me I would be "rich and famous" if I worked with him again. I
have rejected his advances and instead of "rich and famous" I am
unemployed and slowly approaching financial destitution. The choice
has been apparently to either work with him again or he would
continue to pursue the destruction of my career. I would be
astonished if a law has not been violated, but at the very least
Dr. Allen's behavior has been extremely unethical. Using career
opportunities and federal research funds as weapons to suppress the
free expression of ideas is extortion and blackmail. It is also a
violation of the American Physical Society Guidelines for Professional
Conduct, the University of California Policy on Integrity in Research,
and a clear violation of the Federal Research Guidelines. Retaliation
for reporting misconduct is also a clearly stated violation
of these guidelines.
Although Jim Allen has been the obvious source of the harassment and
intimidation, it is also clear that he would not be able accomplish
his goals without help. When I arrived at Vanderbilt I was told by
the former director of Vanderbilt's FEL program, Dr. Glenn Edwards,
that several members of the national FEL program, run by the Office
of Naval Research, were under investigation for misconduct. He did
not say who was under investigation or for what, but I can't help
wondering if my experiences are related to this investigation.
Congressman F. James Sensenbrenner, Jr., Chairman of the U.S. House
of Representatives' Committee on Science suggested that I might
wish to contact the Inspector General of the appropriate federal
agency with my concerns. I have contacted people at the Office of
Naval Research (ONR), which oversees the FEL program in the United
States, but I have not received any response regarding my objections
to Dr. Allen's behavior. A new commander, Rear Admiral Jay M. Cohen,
took charge of the ONR on June 7th, 2000 and on July 8th I sent a
another letter, similar to this one. In addition to reporting my
concerns again, I tried, unsuccessfully, to verify some of the
things I was told about the Medical FEL program. In particular,
whether the Vanderbilt's FEL program was cut 100%, as I was told.
I also inquired whether it is true that there is an investigation
of misconduct, whether the investigation is still ongoing, and who
is conducting the investigation? I haven't received a response to
any of these questions.
I have also contacted people at the U.S. Army Research Office, the
U.S. Department of Labor, the National Science Foundation, the
National Academy of Sciences, the National Research Council, the
Office of Science and Technology Policy, and the National Labor
Relations Board. While I have received several responses, as far
as I know, no action is currently being taken. The National Labor
Relations Board did give a response and advised me that I could
file a complaint, but without a formal complaint and an investigation
they could not determine whether my experiences fall under their
jurisdiction. My own belief is that without someone offering
information about being contacted by Jim Allen or admitting to
taking part in a process of harassment and intimidation, such a
complaint would be pointless. After witnessing first hand in Santa
Barbara how Dr. Allen was able to intimidate into silence a tenured
faculty member who wanted to talk to me about my difficulties, it
seems very unlikely that there would be much cooperation in an
investigation. Such a complaint I think would be analogous to a
blacklisted scientist filing a complaint against Senator McCarthy
in the 1950's.
Finally, I would just like to say that it is truly a tragedy that
a person's simple dream of studying science could instead lead to
such a nightmare. While my experiences are alarming, they are not
unheard of in academia. Enclosed with this letter is a copy of the
letter that I have sent to many members of the scientific community
and members of congress which discusses more generally the problem
of abuse of junior scientists in the United States. I have made a
considerable effort to raise awareness to these kind of outrages
and to try to seek help in my own case. And now I've even received
several threats from the @Home Network and others that my internet
service may be cut off for communicating this message (shown below).
There has been a lot of discussion in the scientific literature
recently about the plight of junior scientists and the National
Academy of Sciences released a report on September 11, 2000, a report
entitled, A Guide to the Postdoctoral Experience. What I believe is
needed to prevent this kind harassment and intimidation is strong
leadership. Just as the end of McCarthyism was brought about, to a
large extent, by the courage of one person, Edward Morrow, strong
leadership is needed both to expose these kind of outrages and to show
that they are not acceptable. Any assistance you could give would be
greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
Sincerely yours,
Brian J. Keay, Ph.D.
Enc.
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Dear X:
As your fellow scientist I am writing to you to express my concern
about the working conditions of junior scientists in the
United States. It is well known that we are entering an exciting
new age in which science and technology are becoming ever more
important in our daily lives. It is also widely recognized that being
competitive in science and technology will be essential to the
United States' continued economic prosperity. It is with great relief
that I see that many of our representatives in government take the
initiative in increasing our investitures in scientific research and
science education. At the same time, however, one of the most
important group of scientists are working under conditions that would
not be tolerated in other areas of society. A major portion of the
scientific research in the United States is done by graduate students
and post-doctoral researchers (e.g. Science 285,1513; 1999). These
young researchers are among the brightest and hardest working society
has to offer. To get to the Ph.D. level and beyond, they must take the
most difficult courses, survive academic selection processes, pass
advancement and qualifying exams, and then survive the rigors of
scientific research. It is on these people that much of our scientific
competitiveness and our future prosperity rely. This will be even more
true in the years to come. Yet as we enter this new age the number of
students that are pursuing graduate studies in science and
engineering has been declining since 1993 (see the Report to the
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation:
http://208.249.124.108/web/site/bbcharts/bbcharts/bb2.htm)
What is perhaps more alarming is that the "best and brightest" students
are also beginning to avoid science (e.g. Science 288, 43; 1999).
Furthermore, economists and industry leaders have cited the current
shortage of talented and highly skilled technology workers as the
biggest threat to the prosperity found in the new economy. Why,
then, are the young people who actually choose to study science
allowed to be treated so poorly? Graduate students, for example,
are expected to work at least sixty hours per week, yet many earn
a wage near the poverty level, typically between $8,000 and $15,000
per year. Few receive any health coverage from their respective
universities. I've never known of a graduate student researcher
receiving other benefits, such as unemployment insurance. The average
graduate student must work for over six years under these conditions
and the situation is not much better for some postdocs.
What is much worse, however, is that many students and post-doctoral
researchers end up leaving science, not because of the poor pay,
difficult courses and long hours, but because of abusive treatment
from their research advisors. I've known several graduate students and
postdocs, some of which were highly regarded fellowship recipients
and considered among the best in their class, who left science because
of pressure from, or poor relationships with, their supervisors. The
abusive attitudes that often lead to young researchers leaving science
are perhaps best summarized by the well known remarks of one Nobel
laureate described in "Nobel Dreams: Power, Deceit, and the Ultimate
Experiment" by Gary Taubes: "Physicists are like lemons, you squeeze
them for all they are worth and then throw them away." This particular
scientist won the Nobel Prize, but among his students, postdocs and
assistant professors:
One dropped out and went to business school. Another
dropped out and floated around the California drug crowd;
a third drove a cab in Cambridge for years: several just
disappeared. I found one working successfully in industry
in California, who told me that he had been in love with
physics until he met Rubbia, and that anything bad I had
heard about the man was probably true.
What distinguishes this scientist from many others is not that he
thinks crushing people and throwing them away is acceptable, but that
he is outspoken and famous enough that his statement was published.
My own experiences with my former Ph.D. advisor are another example
of a nightmare that can continue to haunt even after graduation.
What should have been an exciting and fulfilling time for me doing
research, instead was the beginning of some sort of Kafkaesque
nightmare. From 1991 to 1995, while I was a graduate student, I worked
on a series of ground breaking experiments which included the first
observation of photon-assisted tunneling in semiconductors. These
experiments were among the most important involving semiconductors in
recent years and have led to a revolutionary new kind of laser, the
Quantum Cascade Laser, invented at Bell-Labs and discussed frequently
in scientific journals:
(http://www.bell-labs.com/org/physicalsciences/projects/qcl/qcl.html)
A relatively new concept in semiconductor laser technology,
the quantum cascade (QC) laser, promises to revolutionize
laser technology in the mid-to far-infrared spectrum.
(Science 286, 2459; 1999)
My main concern by the time I graduated was to find a job. I had been
looking for over a year and I could not find a single job in spite of
many outstanding results, publications in some of the most prestigious
journals, invitations to speak at the most prestigious conferences,
and even though I had sent over three hundred resumes to research labs
and universities all over the world. What I received from my advisor
at this time was a threat to cut me off financially with no warning
whatsoever. This is an example of the total power the dissertation
advisor has over the career of their students. It is also an example
of the total and complete abuse of that power. To my PhD advisor, I
was a competitor and he believed it was not in his interests for me to
have a successful career. He was more concerned about ownership and
domination of scientific results than helping his student or science
itself. He was particularly threatened by the fact that I had an
interpretation of photon-assisted tunneling that differed from his
and he made it clear that I would not find employment until I ceased
any further discussion of my interpretation. "You can't have your cake
and eat it too" were among his comments on my search for employment.
For him, his ability to control whether or not I found employment
became a bargaining chip to be used to prevent me from discussing my
interpretation. Four years later, he is still able to prevent me from
finding a job and this fact is still being used to try to silence
me. Although now, I believe he is trying to prevent me from talking
about my experiences, some of which are described on the following
websites:
http://members.home.net/keay/
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Bridge/4116/
http://science.jumpeducation.com
http://physicssanctuary.members.easyspace.com
http://www.homestead.com/physicssanctuary/files/
It has been a nightmarish experience, not unlike what one would expect
from McCarthyism; and one that certainly has not been consistent with
the principles on which this country was founded. Using career
opportunities and federal research funds as weapons to silence the free
expression of ideas is extortion and blackmail. It is also a violation
of the American Physical Society Guidelines for Professional Conduct,
the University of California Policy on Integrity in Research, and a
clear violation of the Federal Research Guidelines. Retaliation for
reporting misconduct is also a clearly stated violation of these
guidelines. In my opinion this kind of behavior should be a crime. If
career assassination, harassment, intimidation and unemployment are
the responses to major scientific discoveries, made possible with
public money, then God help this nation.
I am certainly not alone in my nightmare experiences. I've heard many
other stories from several different universities that were just as
alarming as mine, some of which have received recent attention in
scientific journals (Science 285, 1516; 1999; Nature 399, 521; 1999).
These sort of incidents almost always result in the junior researcher
being forced out of science by the supervisor. On the other hand, I've
never heard of a case in the United States which ended in the
supervisor facing disciplinarian action; even in the cases in which
wrongdoing was found on the part of a supervisor. It is a system
which, in case of conflict, is designed for the graduate student or
postdoc to fail. These are the elements of an unjust society--one in
which there is an elite nobility, incapable of wrongdoing, and an
oppressed underclass in many cases exploited and abused.
I do not wish to vilify the average scientist or academic at any
level. Scientists are among some of the finest people I know. I
believe, however, that the moral character of scientists and academics
are no better or worse than society in general; rather, they are simply
a mirror image of that society. Scientific achievements also do not
signify moral integrity. As Thomas Jefferson once said, "I've never
observed a man's honesty to increase in proportion to his wealth."
Similarly, I don't believe a scientist's honesty increases in
proportion to his title, or even his scientific achievements. The
problem is not with the moral character of the average scientist, but
the attitudes and environment in which abuse of junior scientists has
been allowed. As another Nobel Laureate once described the problem of
how junior scientists can be mistreated, "Abused children grow up to
abuse their children." Everyone knows that abused children are more
likely to become alcoholics, drug addicts, and are less likely to be
healthy, happy, and productive adults. Why, then, has the atmosphere
of abuse towards junior scientists been allowed? Slavery was once
accepted. Ethnic jokes were once accepted. But condescending jokes
towards graduate students are still accepted. A relatively mild
example is the time a well respected professor gave a colloquium in
front of a filled auditorium. At some point he said:
...and my student brought me the result and I said,
"Are you sure?" He answered, "I'm 90% certain", and
I said, "Do you realize that you just told me that there
is a 10% chance that you aren't going to get your Ph.D.
with me?"
To which the audience broke into laughter. In this example, the
professor was just joking about firing his student. But I know several
cases in which the threats were real. One person from another
university told me that his advisor said: "You know, you don't need a
PhD", in order to force him to start a new experiment only a month
before his final dissertation defense. The professor needed the cheap
labor and he was prepared to use graduation as a bargaining chip even
though the student had completed his dissertation. This particular
professor was also having an affair with one of his graduate students.
This is not behavior that would be accepted in most other areas of
society. What if, in the example in which professor joked about firing
his student the word "student" was replaced with "secretary" and the
professor had said, "Do you realize you just told me that there is a
10% chance I'm going to fire you." Somehow it seems more cruel than
humorous. I don't know very many secretaries that would tolerate that
sort of treatment. But graduate students, under the current conditions,
have to tolerate that treatment and much worse, if they want to have a
career in science. A secretary can quit his or her job and find a
better one, but a Ph.D. is a several-year-investment. Quitting a Ph.D.
not only means throwing away that investment, but it usually means
giving up the dream of studying science as well. Some students and
postdocs literally end up trapped and enslaved--enslaved by their
desire to study science and the almost absolute power a supervisor
can have in determining whether the student will be allowed to achieve
that goal. This sort of power, even in the hands of the most decent
person, can have a corrupting influence. In the hands of an amoral and
ruthless supervisor, it can be disastrous. It is the passion for
science that often pushes students to endure the many years of poverty
wages, long hours, and in many cases, abuse. But everyone has their
limits. And the current system allows supervisors to push junior
scientists beyond those limits on the slightest whim, often with
tragic results. An example of a student who was pushed beyond his
limits, well publicized in the New York Times and discussed often in
scientific journals (e.g. Nature 399,521; 1999), was Jason Altom, a
promising fifth-year graduate student in the chemistry department at
Harvard University who killed himself by taking cyanide. Some of the
details of Altom's suicide note were described in the New York Times:
"This event could have been avoided," the note began.
"Professors here have too much power over the lives of
their grad students." The letter recommended adoption
of a three-member faculty committee to monitor each
graduate student's progress and "provide protection
for graduate students from abusive research advisers.
If I had such a committee now I know things would be
different."
(New York Times Magazine, November 29, 1998, Sunday).
I do not wish to give the impression that the majority of junior
scientists have abusive supervisors. Many graduate students and
post-doctoral researchers have wonderful experiences to look back on.
But too many have miserable, career-ending experiences that could be
easily avoided. To address these issues the National Academy of
Sciences' Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy
(COSEPUP), has recently issued a number of guides and policy
recommendations for students, postdocs, mentors and administrators
(http://members.home.net/keay/Ethics.html). These documents include:
* Adviser, Teacher, Role Model, Friend: On Being a Mentor to Students
in Science and Engineering (1997)
* Careers in Science and Engineering: A Student Planning Guide to Grad
School and Beyond (1996)
* On Being a Scientist: Responsible Conduct in Research,
Second Edition (1995)
* Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers (1995)
* Enhancing the Postdoctoral Experience for Scientists and Engineers:
A Guide for Postdoctoral Scholars, Advisors, Institutions, Funding
Organizations, and Disciplinary Societies (2000)
While "squeezing scientists for all they are worth and then throwing
them away" and "using financial support and career opportunities as
weapons of terror" were not included among the recommendations, there
are a number of other recommendations that would be very useful to
improve the working conditions of junior scientists. Like the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights, however, these documents will not
be worth the paper they are written on without the determination and
vigilence of the people. That is why I am writing to you.
I believe Frank Serpico's testimony before a
New York grand jury about the New York Police Department can be
applied towards society as a whole, or the scientific community
in particular:
"Ten percent of the police department is absolutely honest. And ten
percent of the police department is absolutely dishonest. The other 80%
is a vast gray area, most of which wish they were honest."
The goal, Serpico added, should be to create an environment in which
the dishonest police officer fears the honest police officer, instead
of what was the situation at the time, in which the honest officer
feared the dishonest officer. By the same token, the goal in science
should be to create an environment in which the dishonest and abusive
scientist fears the honest and supportive scientist, at any level.
It is not in the long-range interest of this country to support
abusive scientists, no matter what his or her title or record of
accomplishments might be, especially at the expense of the careers
of scores of young scientists who might never even be given
the chance to show their talent and potential as
researchers. The most prosperous nations in the world are
democracies--countries which are governed by the rule of law and the
largest proportion of people are given the opportunity to contribute
to society. People in these nations are also allowed to prosper for
their contributions, certainly not punished for them. In contrast,
many of the most miserable and poorest nations are dictatorships--
nations in which one or a few tyrants hold a death grip on power at the
expense of the well-being of the entire nation. The working conditions
for junior scientists can often resemble more those found in a
dictatorship than those found in a democracy. Whether their experiences
are the kind to look back on with happiness, or are miserable,
career-ending experiences depends too much on luck and the whim of the
supervisor. The people who abuse their students and postdocs depend on
public funding, are usually working under government contracts, and are
entrusted to train and educate young scientists for the benefit of
society. Instead, these public investitures are sometimes viewed as an
opportunity for egocentric self-aggrandizement, and students and
postdocs are little more than tools to meet that end. This, in my
opinion, is a total betrayal of the public trust as well as their
responsibilities as educators and scientists. Squeezing scientists for
all they are worth and throwing them away, while working on government
funded projects, should be a crime. Our nation simply cannot afford to
throw away some of our best and brightest minds. Our national security
and future prosperity depend on a healthy working environment for our
young scientists. Reforms and change to improve the working conditions
of junior scientists are long overdue.
Sincerely yours,
Brian J. Keay, Ph.D.
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