12
B3 stul dents -TSnid reg2S nons a .- .. -- · -1------- By Norman D. Sandler WASHINGTON - As the nation's capital adjusted to the resignation of Vice President S piro Agnew Thursday, At torney General Elliot R . h ardso n defended the Xh o n o rabilitty" of his ~ettlement of the Vice President's criminal case. R i c h a rdson said charges leveled against his office that Agnew was given a light sentence because of his political position wvere not wholly unjustified, but added, "every individual will have to make up his or her own . mind on the justice done by thtis judgment." At a news conference R, Richardson said members of his staff anticipated varied reaction to the settlement by government prosecutors that stipulated further investigation of bribery and corruption charges against ' Agnew would end if the Vice, F President pleaded guilty to one charge of tax evasion and resigned from office effective im mediately. TFhe Attorney General said t h e three year suspended sentence Agnew received was fair, in view of the disgrace the former Vice President and his fi:",!y suffered f,',~m Agnew's forced resignation. The first bargaining sessions. Richardson said, were initiated byi Fred Buzhardt, counsel to the President. The Attorney General explained that at no time after Buzhardt's initial telephone call in early September did anyone in the Justice Department initiate a dc ( i t i o nal bargaining sessions.- The plea bargaining also put an end to the question 'of impeachment of the Vice President, and Richardson said the case was settled partsl in order to prevent Agnew from the embarassment of lengthy criminal proceedings-either in a public court or in Congress. Richardson said all criminal investigation of Agnew's past de a lings with Maryland contractors will now end, and refused to say whether Agnew will be called by the government to testify against others involved in the alleged ring of bribery and corruption involving a number of public officials in and around the city of Baltimore. 'US District Attorney George V In this lIssiue., ; What elses' there? Middle East, /? Agnew' . ............... p.: 4 Edgerton .-......... .. p.6 "Continuous News Service Since 1881" VOLUME 93 NUMBER 38 MIT, CAMBRRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS Beall, who directed the grand jury investigation of Agnew, said 'his office will continue pressing for indictments against other Maryland public officials involved in bribery, corruption and kickbacks. Richardson added the Justice Department will look into reports of similar corruption in political circles in other states, including New Jersey, New York and Illinois. eactions at MI By Mike McNamee and Paul Schindler Reaction at MIT to the Wednesday resignation- of Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew was mixed, according to telephone interviews conducted by The Tech that afternoon. News of the resignation was usually picked up from television and radio reports, and spread by word of mouth. Most people contacted by The Tech after 3pm Wednesday, one hour after the vice president resigned, were aware of his resignation, although the details were not well known. Dr. Louis Menand III, Assistant to the Provost and an expert on constitutional law, gave The Tech the following definition of nolo contendre, which was Agnew's plea to charges of tax evasion: "It means that a charge has been made, and that the person charged does not choose to fight it, refute it, or defend himnself. "It is different from guilty or not guilty, in that you neither accept or deny the facts and allegations being presented. You leave it to the judge or jury to decide the case." Agnew was found guilty, and sentenced to three years probation and a $10,000 fine. Menand added that he was "glad to see the legal system is functioninlg, to a considerable extent, as it is supposed to function," fie felt, however, that the resignation looked like a case of plea bargaining," and stated, "I don't like the implications of plea bargaining." Possible reaction by the Nixon administration was also a part of people's thought; Jerome Lettvin, Professor of Biology, said, "I'm sorry it happened. K n owing the taste of the Administration, they've only got worse things in store for us." (Please turn to page 2J Photo by David 3,. Breuer By Bill Conklin Thirteen MIT students, out of a group of 33 who applied for voter status for the Cambridge City Elections, were denied reg- istration in a session held tlis week in the Student Center. The session was run by Carn- bridge Election Commissioner Edward Samp, who also ran sim- ilar sessions last year. David Sullivan of the Cam- bridge Committee for Voter Registration gave two possible reasons for the low turnout. "People are afraid of the hassle after last year," he said, "and it's only a city election." Last year only 83 out of 165 applicants were allowed to register at that time. Many appealed and were later registered. Failure to prove "domicility" in Cambridge was the major cause for rejection, as it has been in the past. Sullivan felt the increase in percentage registered wvas due to the fact that mostly graduate students applied. "It's almost impossible for an undergraduate to get registered, except maybe a senior." All of those turned away were undergraduates. After last year's session, there were many complaints about the relevancy of questions asked and the fairness of tAhe decisions reached. "They're using the same kind of questions they used last year," said Sullivan. "They haven't changed a bit." An observer said of the ques- tions, "Some of them seem to be irrelevant." Joel Suttenberg of the Attor- ney General's office watched the registration procedings and lis- tened to the questions asked. "The Attorney General will eval- uate our findings and decide what action would be appro- priate, if any," stated Sutten- berg. Stittenberg explained that the observation was in response to complaints filed at the Attorney General's office regarding ai- legged violations of students' voting rights in Cambridge last year. Most of those turned away were dissatisfied with the ques- tioning. "The whole deal was unfair," stated Richard Stern '77. James Eisen '77 felt that "what I'm doing for the next five years is none of his [Samp's] business." Derrick Vlad, co-president of the Undergraduate Association, expressed concern about the lack of change in questioning procedures from last year. "Some people in the government don't seem to think there's a problem, and obviously there is," said Vlad. "I'm looking for- ward to seeing what action the Attorney General's office, will take." There will be another session in the West Lounge on Monday, October 15 from 1I-:30am to 2: 30pm. ai- -ided e sva cidepc ,7ft .eart By Mike McNamee Many of the problems that students now face when they attempt to register to vote in Massachusetts will be eliminated in future elections, if Represen- tative John Businger (D-Brook- line) has his way. Businger is the sponsor of the Uniform Voter Registration Bill, which would provide for a uni- form affidavit that all potential registerees would have to fill out. The affidavit would contain spaces for name, date and place of birth, present residence, previ- ous residence, and time spent at current residence. There will also be a statement of citizenship. T hat's all. Businger stated that he thinks the bill "will eliminate the domi- cilary residence question once and for all, and thus remove most of the obstacles that face a student who wants to register to vote." Under the current Massachu- setts law, there are four require- ments for voter reEstration: age, citizenship, residence in the voting district for thirty days, and domicile. The last require- ment, domicile. has been the source of much of the trouble Cambridge students have had with registering in the last two years. Registration was refused to i3 undergraduates out of 33 ap- plicants at a session held at the Institute Wednesday. Businger told The Tech that the Uniform Registration Bill is now in a subcommittee of the Committee on Election Laws, of which he is a member. fie ex- pects it to be reported out of committee next week. "I think the bill is going well," Businger concluded. "It has a simplicity and. at the same tinie, an impact that makes it a very worthwhile law." sew :romep s< g X,,..'0 :i~~~~2Tr }/, ~ i · ',~-.4, · ,c: l t , i ` i . tW u g ?;, ~ ' M %:;i~~~~. hfT, G' > "a'"- P % .'hi;{'. %: ouse. Story Page 6. Photo by DavidM. Brevet By Paul Schindler [ First of two parts] A long-smouldering controversy over the status of computer scientists at MIT may erupt into a system crash during the current search for a new Electrical Engineering (EE) Department head. The controversy has existed, according to department sources, almost as long as the specialty. According to Chancellor P'aul E. Gray '54, the idea of separating Computer Science from EE first came up in 1966 or 1967. It was proposed by President Jerome Wiesner, who was provost at that time. The discussions have run hot and cold in the intervening years. Last spring, when Professor Louis Smullin stated he would step down as head of EE, letters were sent to Dean of the School of (Please turn to page 6) I , i ki 1- ,. . L, ,- 1 ,,t d F k,; rF liha~xrds deiemds , ; mem' setit:, elnen 9TS . eS " eu fefrefre eStsf{on bc'ie shouid -rem-Fe obstacles

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Page 1: eS B3 -TSnid nons a

B3 stul dents -TSnid reg2S nons a

.-

.. - -· -1-------

By Norman D. Sandler

WASHINGTON - As thenation's capital adjusted to theresignation of Vice PresidentS piro Agnew Thursday,At torney General ElliotR . h ardso n defended theXh o n o rabilitty" of his~ettlement of the VicePresident's criminal case.

R i c h a rdson said chargesleveled against his office thatAgnew was given a light sentencebecause of his political positionwvere not wholly unjustified, butadded, "every individual willhave to make up his or her own

. mind on the justice done by thtisjudgment."

At a news conferenceR, Richardson said members of his

staff anticipated varied reactionto the settlement by governmentprosecutors that stipulatedfurther investigation of briberyand corruption charges against

' Agnew would end if the Vice,F President pleaded guilty to one

charge of tax evasion andresigned from office effectiveim mediately.

TFhe Attorney General saidt h e three year suspendedsentence Agnew received wasfair, in view of the disgrace theformer Vice President and hisfi:",!y suffered f,',~m Agnew'sforced resignation.

The first bargaining sessions.Richardson said, were initiatedbyi Fred Buzhardt, counsel to thePresident. The Attorney Generalexplained that at no time afterBuzhardt's initial telephone callin early September did anyone inthe Justice Department initiatea dc ( i t i o nal bargaining sessions.-

The plea bargaining also putan end to the question 'ofimpeachment of the VicePresident, and Richardson saidthe case was settled partsl inorder to prevent Agnew fromthe embarassment of lengthycriminal proceedings-either in apublic court or in Congress.

Richardson said all criminalinvestigation of Agnew's pastde a lings with Marylandcontractors will now end, andrefused to say whether Agnew

will be called by the governmentto testify against others involvedin the alleged ring of bribery andcorruption involving a numberof public officials in and aroundthe city of Baltimore.

'US District Attorney GeorgeV

In this lIssiue.,; What elses' there?

Middle East, /?Agnew' . ............... p.: 4Edgerton .-......... .. p.6

"Continuous News ServiceSince 1881"

VOLUME 93 NUMBER 38 MIT, CAMBRRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

Beall, who directed the grandjury investigation of Agnew, said'his office will continue pressingfor indictments against otherMaryland public officialsinvolved in bribery, corruptionand kickbacks. Richardsonadded the Justice Departmentwill look into reports of similarcorruption in political circles inother states, including NewJersey, New York and Illinois.

eactions at MIBy Mike McNameeand Paul Schindler

Reaction at MIT to theWednesday resignation- ofVice-President Spiro T. Agnewwas mixed, according totelephone interviews conductedby The Tech that afternoon.

News of the resignation wasusually picked up fromtelevision and radio reports, andspread by word of mouth. Mostpeople contacted by The Techafter 3pm Wednesday, one hourafter the vice president resigned,were aware of his resignation,although the details were notwell known.

Dr. Louis Menand III,Assistant to the Provost and anexpert on constitutional law,gave The Tech the followingdefinition of nolo contendre,which was Agnew's plea tocharges of tax evasion: "Itmeans that a charge has beenmade, and that the personcharged does not choose to fightit, refute it, or defend himnself.

"It is different from guilty ornot guilty, in that you neitheraccept or deny the facts andallegations being presented. Youleave it to the judge or jury todecide the case."

Agnew was found guilty, andsentenced to three yearsprobation and a $10,000 fine.

Menand added that he was"glad to see the legal system isfunctioninlg, to a considerableextent, as it is supposed tofunction," fie felt, however, thatthe resignation looked like a caseof plea bargaining," and stated,"I don't like the implications ofplea bargaining."

Possible reaction by theNixon administration was also apart of people's thought; JeromeLettvin, Professor of Biology,said, "I'm sorry it happened.K n owing the taste of theAdministration, they've only gotworse things in store for us."

(Please turn to page 2J

Photo by David 3,. Breuer

By Bill ConklinThirteen MIT students, out of

a group of 33 who applied forvoter status for the CambridgeCity Elections, were denied reg-istration in a session held tlisweek in the Student Center.

The session was run by Carn-bridge Election CommissionerEdward Samp, who also ran sim-ilar sessions last year.

David Sullivan of the Cam-bridge Committee for VoterRegistration gave two possiblereasons for the low turnout."People are afraid of the hassleafter last year," he said, "and it'sonly a city election." Last year

only 83 out of 165 applicantswere allowed to register at thattime. Many appealed and werelater registered.

Failure to prove "domicility"in Cambridge was the majorcause for rejection, as it has beenin the past.

Sullivan felt the increase inpercentage registered wvas due tothe fact that mostly graduatestudents applied. "It's almostimpossible for an undergraduateto get registered, except maybe asenior."

All of those turned awaywere undergraduates.

After last year's session, therewere many complaints about therelevancy of questions asked andthe fairness of tAhe decisionsreached. "They're using thesame kind of questions theyused last year," said Sullivan."They haven't changed a bit."

An observer said of the ques-tions, "Some of them seem to beirrelevant."

Joel Suttenberg of the Attor-ney General's office watched theregistration procedings and lis-tened to the questions asked."The Attorney General will eval-uate our findings and decidewhat action would be appro-priate, if any," stated Sutten-• berg.

Stittenberg explained that theobservation was in response tocomplaints filed at the AttorneyGeneral's office regarding ai-legged violations of students'voting rights in Cambridge lastyear.

Most of those turned awaywere dissatisfied with the ques-tioning.

"The whole deal was unfair,"stated Richard Stern '77.

James Eisen '77 felt that"what I'm doing for the nextfive years is none of his[Samp's] business."

Derrick Vlad, co-president ofthe Undergraduate Association,expressed concern about thelack of change in questioningprocedures from last year."Some people in the governmentdon't seem to think there's aproblem, and obviously thereis," said Vlad. "I'm looking for-ward to seeing what action theAttorney General's office, willtake."

There will be another sessionin the West Lounge on Monday,October 15 from 1I-:30am to2: 30pm.

ai- -ided e svacidepc ,7ft .eart

By Mike McNameeMany of the problems that

students now face when theyattempt to register to vote inMassachusetts will be eliminatedin future elections, if Represen-tative John Businger (D-Brook-line) has his way.

Businger is the sponsor of theUniform Voter Registration Bill,which would provide for a uni-form affidavit that all potentialregisterees would have to fillout.

The affidavit would containspaces for name, date and placeof birth, present residence, previ-ous residence, and time spent atcurrent residence. There will alsobe a statement of citizenship.T hat's all.

Businger stated that he thinksthe bill "will eliminate the domi-cilary residence question onceand for all, and thus removemost of the obstacles that face a

student who wants to register tovote."

Under the current Massachu-setts law, there are four require-ments for voter reEstration: age,citizenship, residence in thevoting district for thirty days,and domicile. The last require-ment, domicile. has been thesource of much of the troubleCambridge students have hadwith registering in the last twoyears.

Registration was refused to i 3undergraduates out of 33 ap-plicants at a session held at theInstitute Wednesday.

Businger told The Tech thatthe Uniform Registration Bill isnow in a subcommittee of theCommittee on Election Laws, ofwhich he is a member. fie ex-pects it to be reported out ofcommittee next week.

"I think the bill is goingwell," Businger concluded. "Ithas a simplicity and. at the sametinie, an impact that makes it avery worthwhile law."

sew :romep s<

g X,,..'0:i~~~~2Tr}/, ~ i ·',~-.4,·,c: l t , i ` i . tW

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ouse. Story Page 6.Photo by David M. Brevet

By Paul Schindler[ First of two parts]

A long-smouldering controversy over the status of computerscientists at MIT may erupt into a system crash during the currentsearch for a new Electrical Engineering (EE) Department head.

The controversy has existed, according to department sources,almost as long as the specialty. According to Chancellor P'aul E. Gray'54, the idea of separating Computer Science from EE first came upin 1966 or 1967.

It was proposed by President Jerome Wiesner, who was provost atthat time. The discussions have run hot and cold in the interveningyears.

Last spring, when Professor Louis Smullin stated he would stepdown as head of EE, letters were sent to Dean of the School of

(Please turn to page 6)

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Page 2: eS B3 -TSnid nons a

iNOTES* The Student Accounts Officewishes to announce that thosestudents who have not received theirstatements by October 13, 1973 maypick them up in the lobby ofBuilding 10 on October 15th and16th.

Statements that have not beenmailed or picked up will be mailed onOctober 17,1973.

* On Sunday, October 14 there willbe a meeting of The Association ofStudent Activities in Roomrn 407 ofthe Student Center at 7:00pm. Thismeeting will concern itself with spacefor activities. All activities whichrequested space as of June 1, 1973should be there.

We are in the process of puttingtogether a resource guide for activ-ities. If you or anyone in youractivity is interested, we definitelyneed your help. Simply contact meor leave a message at x3-2696.

* A $20.00 late payment fine isnow being assessed against thosestudents who failed to make theirOctober 1st deferred payment asscheduled, according to the SutdentAccounts Office.

* Any MIT Senior who wishes toapply for a Danforth FoundationFellowship should submit to theGraduate School Office (Room3-136) not later than October 20, abrief account (1-2 pages) of his or herplans for graduate study and anacademic career. On the basis ofthese essays, a few students will beselected for personal interviews andfinal nominees will be selected forthe national competition. Furtherinformation may be obtained in theGraduate School Office, Room3-136x3-4860.

* Lime Rock, Saturday October13: The $5000 Car and Driver Showr-room Stock Sedan Challenge. TwoMIT team Pintos versus 98 Pintos,Opels, Colts, Subarus, Datsuns,Toyotas, Fiats, and VWs. Admission$7 at gate. Contact Mitch Green DL8-510.

* The Student Center CommitteeMidnight Movie presents Die TimeMachinze. shown tonight, midnight, inthe Sala de Puerto Rico in theStudent Center. MIT or Weilesiey IDrequired. Seating on the floor, sobring your own blankets.

* The SCC Potluck Coffeehouse isopen Loday and Saturday from 8pmto midnight in the MezzanineLounge. Admission is free andrefreshments are provided.

* University of Virginia LawSchool will be recruiting on Mon,,Oct. 15 from 9am to lpm. Appoint-ments can be made in 26-244.

* Columbia Law school will bevisiting Tues. Octol6 from 10anm to12 noon, with a group meeting atlpm in 3-133. Appointments can bemade in 26-244.

* Stanford Law School will have agroup meeting for interested MITstudents Fri.* Oct. 19 from 3pm to4pm in 4-163.

Yale Medical School swill send Dr.Thomas Lentz of its admissionscommitte to speak to pre-mnedstudents in 3-163 at 4pmr on Wed.,Oct. 17

* Evening Scuba classes hlavebegun. Classes meet on Monday andTllhursday cvenirngs. Fee: $50. If inter-ested, x3-4291.

* A dedication to Pablo Neruda andChilec. Poetry reading, Kresge Aud.,Oct. 14. 7:45pm.

* Want experience? Help us!Cambridge School Volunteers; As aclassroom aid, with slow learners; as atutor, in libraries; in art, music,science, you nalne it. CamnibridgeSchool Volunteer Project 1700Cambridge Street (Rindge building)Catl or come in weekdays 9am -I pm or call 492-7046.

.- I . - - - - -- -

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Oldies and Good ies offer at Prudential Center, Church Park, Newton Cent re, Central Square. Harvard Square stores.

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PAGE 2 FRIDAY,OCTOBER 12, 1973 THETECH

(Continued from page I)Comparing the Agnew case to

the Thomas Eagleton affair of1972, Edwin Diamond, VisitingLecturer in Political Sciencesaid, "I never wavered in my'conviction that Agnew was amediocre, backroom politicianfrom a particularly odiferousstate," and added, ."Torn Eagle-ton kept his little secret in thecloset for less than a month;Spiro's rattled there for six yearsand we'll never know how gro-tesque it really was."

Reaction from other parts ofthe Institute cormmunity ranged

from disbelief to joy. Severalstudents replied, "You're kid-ding," when informed of theresignation, One student inBuilding 38 said he felt that"now the dam is going to burst."

A secretary interviewed byThe Tech said, "It's a very goodthing; it should have been donelong ago. The next question is,'When is the other guy going tcoresign?'"

Similar feelings were statedby Jon Halberstadt, a candidatefor the Cambridge City Council:"It's about time: I'm awaitingNixon's resignation." Nixon and Agnew on Inauguration Day '73 Photo by David M. Tenenbaun,

By Fred HutchisonNUTS & SCREWS

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From out of the fifties comes Brigham's Rock and Roll replay. Ask dad for the keys and shag on downto Brigham's for some sensational swinging soirees.

The sounds abound, and you pick the platters on the juke box for just a nickel a throw. Rock and rollmusic. any old way you choose it.

Monster hits from the golden age of rock provided by the curator of New England's most spectacularwax museum, the main man of Skippy White's Record Shop, Mr. Skippy White himself.

And when your goodies are gone, you might make off with , :one of the golden gassers we'll give away every 30 minutes. ,:,

The whole gang's gonna make this scene, and we're // ,]

making the whole bit even better by bringing back the ,-,half dollar date.

A heavy order of fries and a cooling cola are only a quarter duringBrigham's rock and roll replav.You don't even have to roll down yourwindows. Just roll into Brigham's between 8 and 1 1, midnight on Friday and Saturday, for oldies and goodies. Baby. it's the ginchiest.

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THETECH FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12: 1973 PAGE 3

SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY ,l

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(Continued from page 1)E n gineering Alfred Keil byseveral EE faculty, suggesting adivision into two departments.Keil replied to these suggestionsin a letter sent to all EE facultyon June 28. The letter has beendescribed by several computerscience faculty as "insensitive"and "indicative of very littlethought."

In it, Keil stated that "adivision of the presentdepartment would greatlydecrease the flexibility of theDepartment's faculty membersand would increase operatingcosts... I have asked the SearchCommittee to seek candidatesspanning both electrical engine-ering and ... computer.."

Keil told The Tech recentlythat he acknowledges "theunique strength" of thecomputer science faculty, but is"concerned about the questionof separation."

His concern is deep enoughthat he recently met for a half-day session with the computerfaculty to discuss their aspir-ations and objections. And hestated that he would have othersources of information for hisdecision about the new EE headbesides the search committee.

But Keil also noted that aseparate Computer ' Sciencedepartment would "make newwalls. I am against that in prin-ciple. The SuCCeSS of EE hasbeen its wide spectrum ofdifferent interactive interests."

lie also said, "expense is thelast thing we colsider, after edu-cational questions."

Gray concurred: "The recordwill show that even in ourcurrent financial straits, as newprograms are seen as needed, wefund them. The issue with aseparate C o nputer Scienc(department is not money, it iswhat makes sense academically."

Gray noted that he did notfeel close to the current contro-versy, adding, "it's not thatcurrent."

Strong feelings are evoked onboth sides by the' issue of aseparate department. ProfessorWilbur Davenport, who headsthe Search Commrnrnittee. summedit uLp: "There is fervance on the

, topic. it is very important to alot of people.

·~ "They are tkinking about it-'. hard. I would hope whatever: way things go, the resolution

ameliorates the very realtensions that exist around heren OW."

; Davenport continued, "Badplanning and bad actions couldmake this situation pretty awful.It has the potential to be'bloody,' It doesn't have to be."

H e concluded, "Yet thenterests of too many people are

involved for the question not tobe out in the open."

Why have a department?Much of the need for a new

. department has to do with imageand self image. 'They are theniggers of the institute," onecomputer scien ce faculty

Computer science faculty saythat one reason they are pushingfor a separate department is justsuch student complaints over theirrationality of their having totaske the electronics core.

Davenport said, "I accept thefact that in an entirely softwareworld, you don't need to knowthe difference between anelectron and an elephant. Butsomeone has to designcomputers, and some peoplehave to know both the coreideas of computer science andsome semi-conductor theory."

According to Smullin, "In aseparate department, they couldget away with a computer-science only curriculum. Byhaving a single department, it ispossible - for US to serve asfriendly internal critics .' argueagainst a policy that we feel iswrong."

This leads, along with otherthings, to the "nigger" feeling,according to one facultymember. "We are patronized andprotected from making mistakesthat would, at least, have thevirtue of being our ownmistakes."

Professor Edward Fredkin,head of Project Mac, theorizedabout one reason MIT mighthave for resistance to a separatedepartment.

"They don't know what ourfuture will be. Are we going tobe like t he field ofcomnmun rications, w.hich has kindof' petered out, or like math orphysics, which have proven to beopen-ended, in a sense.

"I think the answer is that,like physics, computer science isa way to explain the universethat no one thought of before,and that it has plenty of future."(In Part Two of this series, thequestiolns raused b, the spec;'eof two departments, and theconcept of a new school housingwhat is now the EE departmentwvill be discussed. Reaction totoday's article will also beinclhded. - Editor)

member at another universitysaid of MIT.

Whether it is true or not, ifpeople feel that way, it can be aproblem. Accordind to anotherf a culty member, all peopleoutside MIT who were offeredcomputer science positions lastspring refused them.

He attributed this, in part, tothe fact that the persons beingoffered positions had to be toldthey would become professorsof Electrical Engineering. "Whenthey come to MIT, they meetnon-computer science peoplewho will be running theirdepartment."

Keil said that he did notpersonally know of any facultywho did not come to MITbecause of any "second classstatus" on the part of computerscience.

Smullin is dead set againstsplitting the department, as isKeil. Associate EE head RobertFano is "not willing to buildwalls unless it is necessary toachieve important goals."

The computer science facultyhas not given its undividedsupport to the idea of separatingfrom EE. While a recent show ofhands at a meeting showed 2-1support of a · separatedepartment, many facultyrefused to vote on the issue.

SolutionsThere are probably some

reforms on the way which willalleviate the surface problemnsnow plaguing relations hetweenthe twxo sections of EE.According to Srnullin, someprofessors are already officiallydesignated as professors ofcomputer science, and that allwho should have the title willhave it soon.

He -'also suggested thatongoing curriculumn reform maywell alleviate some of the majorstudent complaints about anunnecessary burden of"electron-pushing" courses inthe computer science curric-ulum.

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PAGE 4 FRIIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1973 THE TECH

_

Lc�

'oL XCITI, No. 38 October i2,19 October 12, 197.7-

David Tenenbaum '74; ChairmanPaul Schindler'74;Editor-iz-chief

Norman Sandler '75;Executive EditorStorm Kauffman ' 75; Mantaginlg Editor

Stephen Shagoury'76;Busizess ,lianager

- �---~~- �� ll"�~~"lL~-�~��1~�~0�----·--···-�--�---· --

---- 1

ted and then came down hard or Balti-more's black leadership during the riotssparked by Martin Luther King's murder.Before the Republican convention in1968, Agnew was a Nelson Rockefellerman... right up until Nixon tappedhim. He was the perfect complement toRichard Nixon - a border stategovernorwith an ethnic background. Never mindthat Nixon spent as much time checkingMcGovern out, as A-new spent checkingout Taom Eagleton. (Nixon aide: "any-thing in your past that might hurt us?"Agnew: thinin' g: everybody is.on thetake in Mllaryland ... ); "Oih no, Mr.

,Erdehnx-!an . .. ").When he undertook his big crusade

against the television networks and thenational newspapers in 1969, it was alldone with mirrors -- and ahost writers.Agnew railed against CBS and theWashington Post but the words -"impudent effete snobs," "nattering na-bobs of negativism" - were written in theWhite IHouse for hin by PatrickBuchanan and William Safire. The Agnewcampaign never came to grips with any ofthe real faults of the Amercan press, norwas it ever intended to be seriouscriticis m.-- Ail of this we learned belatedly. Butby then Agnew 'had built up aconstituency of sorts among peopleconfused and frightened by the upheavalsof the sixties. Agnew made it respectableto hate again - hippies, yippies, Panthers,weathermen, SDS, revolutionaries, toquote his own litany of the lawless forcesloose in the Republic.

And now the law and order man hasfallen . . . or has he? Even as he wasadmitting wrongdoing;, in cort, (,vhere no

cameras were allowed), he was preparinghis public case. Outside the court, beforethe obliging cameras, he had turned thespotlight around again; The news media,he suggested, would cause harm to thecountry by reporting any long drawn-outtrial. So he had put the national interestfirst. In a few days, he said, he would goon national television and explain more.

You can bet last year's Maryland roadtaxes that the cameras an dmicrophones will all be there to broadcastthe performance, free of charge.

(Edwvin Diamond. a Visiting Lectererin the Political Science Department at,lIlT. is a Corn1 m7en ta tor r ttte,Post-Ne;'sweek Stations. Wash ing tonD.C.- Editor)

tE IZRD OF ID -THE: WIHZARDkf DF ID

Sraffj Ca nzdidatesPrvodutction

Russel Nevins'77, Alan Levin '77,Bill Bryne '77, Tom Strat '77 .

David Wizda '7 -I E ~Photfography

Robert Olshaker '76, Sherman Wang'76.Kou-Mei Chuang '77. Tom Klimnowicz '77, i

Marc Reitman '77, Richard Reihl '77 Dave Relman '77

Second Class pos.tage paid at Boston, Massa-?chusetts. Tihe Tech is publishled twice a week}during the colleg e y ear, except during collegei.vacations, and once during the first wveelk iln-August, b- Tlhe 'i'ech Roo>ml W20-483, MT1111Student Center, 84 Massachusetts Avenue, kCamnbridge. Massaclhusetts, 2!139. Telephone:. Area Code 617, 253-1541. Ulnited States Mailtsubscription rates: S5.00 for one year, $9.00lfor two vears. f

M ,,"' W'M , 33 I N ~ i,"F: -.. II. c~

0

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(Thle plblicationl of this list for tlheiznformnation of the IMIT community. It isnot an invitation to attend meetingswhich are normally closed to the public.However, many of these visiting

I

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mumble dormitory to yourself) Thus.o costly to the effects of rent control.5 October Third, rent control was sought. I feelread like compelled to comment that to most of us

'he article living in Northgate apartments, theits by Mr. motivation seemed clear - they wantedfluation or to be free to set rents without theal points interference of the rent control board.ere further Interest in evicting ''non-MIT-affiliates"erved your appeared to be aimed at shoring up their

contention that the apartments reallysuggested were like dormitories or some such and

nsideration thus were exempt from rent control.Westgate In closing, I suggest that part of the

Northgate poor tenant relations stemmed fromapartment MIT's continuing refusal to appreciate

k to the tenant skepticism in regard to MiT'-d around claims of benevolence or good intentionsw, no new Sincerely

acquiring Greg LeeP.S. Tech Talk, I suppose, would never

exemption have mentioned MITSDS.lations inNorthgate

ertion thatthe samecollege

to 177-183ldings, and

To the Editor:"MIT to sell Northgate: 'to(

keep,' " which appeared in theissue of your newspaper,something in Tech Talk. Tconsisted largely-of statemenWadleigh, printed without evacomment. There are severtouched on by the article whecomment would have better sereaders.

First, phrases in the articlethat the units under cotresemble the Eastgate andc o m plexes. In 'fact, theproperties are a variety ofbuildings, some dating badnineteenth century, scattereCambridge. As far as I knovconstruction was involved inthe Northgate properties.

Second, MIT enjoys anfrom rent control regulCambridge on most of itsunits, based largely on the ass(these units are exempt underprovision that exemptsdormitories and the like. (Go tHarvard Street, look at the buil

(Professor of Political Science Bloomfieldis a regular commentator at WGBH-TV.This is the foreign affairs commentary hedelivered Wednesday night -- Editor)

By Lincoln P. BloomfieldWhen the fourth round between Arab

and Israeli began last Saturday it seemedlikely that the Egyptions were making aKamikaze attack that might produceanother Israeli victory but would force achange in the stlemate over the areasoccupied since 1967.

But as the days stretch on without thyexpected overwhelming Israeli victory,limited Arab objectives could become lesslimited, even reverting to the old holywar theme of driving Israel into the sea.

In addition, the cautious May 1972Nixon-Brezhnev Moscow summitagreement not to let third-area quarrelsinterfere with detente could give way tomore open Soviet backing of its Arabclients and would-be clients. Substantialshipments are already reporteqd vto Syria,and the US will surely resupply'Israel.

Third, Hussein may not be able tohold back with his potent Bedouin forces,and Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia mayturn off the oil taps.

One major casualty already in the UNSecurity Council which in the pastMi d-E ast battles always musteredsufficient support for ceasefires in place.The key is of course its members, and thistime only Britain favored an immediateceasefire. The US, Austria and Australiawant a return to last Friday's boundaries,which clearly favors Israel. Ten othermember states favor a ceasefire only afterIsrael goes back to the pre-1967 lines,achieving the full aims Egypt says it seeksin this war. And China, in perfectrevolutionary spirit, is against anyceasefire at all. By adjourning Tuesdaynight without action, the SecurityCouncil confessed full impotence, at leastfor the present, despite pleas by theSecretary General.

The situation is full not only oftragedy but of irony. Israel. shocked outof its post-1967 overconfidence, no-wmore than ever will listen to its domestichawks who say buffer areas are clearlyneeded against another treacherous Arabattack. But perhaps negotiations. wereonly possible, as Mohammed Heykal, theinfluential editor of the Cairo daily A lAhraut wrote after the I967 war, afterand Egyptian battalion had won a victoryover an Israeli battalion and thus wipedout the 1967 humiliation.

The longer it goes on, the morepressures the region as a whole, and onthe two superpowers. Particularly ifRussia's clients demand help, detentecould suffer, along with the prospects,never bright, for a genuine peace in the

Middle East. The best outcome I can seenow is a ceasefire on lines that wouldapproximate a compromise settlement ifone were ever reached. But that in turnwould require Arab moderation andIsraeli generosity, particularly on theissue of Palestine nationality. Both seemmore remote than ever.

'(Bloomfield was interviewed on October8 by the Boston Globe. We reprint someof his statements here. -. Editor)

MIT Prof. Lincoln Bloomfieldlinked the outbreak of hostilities tothe emergence of Saudi Arabia overLibya as a major supporter of Egypt.

"The only plausible explanation isin the new Egyption relationship withSaudi Arabia. The Saudis are like'WallStreet. They hate uncertainty.I n stability is their enemy bydefinition," said Bloomfield.

"The Egyptions will be able to saywe tried everything, and thennegotiate and will have something tonegotiate with," Bloomfield said.

By Edwin DiamondSpiro Agnew has fooled us all again.

All these weeks when he was proclaiminghow he was going to take hiis case to theAmerican public via television, it nowturns out, he and his lawyers wereactually engaged in plea bargaining withthe Justice Department. Theprotestations of innocence. the vows thathe would not resim (the constitution, noless, forbade it!), the shower ofsubpoenas to a dozen news organizations-- aftll of it was Intended to get the bestdeal possible for him from theprosecutors and the courts. Agnew andhis lawyers were saying, "matke a dealwvith me, or we'll create as much chaosand worse, embarassment - for theNixon Adnministration as we can ., . ."And it worked on1 all levels; Agnewactually had the news media ducking andtaking cover this week. Reporters showedup Wednesday in Baltimore court withtheir own lawyers ready to defendthenselves from subpoena only to findthat while they were crouched waiting forthe Veep's strong right hook, he hadthrown in the towel the night before. Theverdict was light. Elliot Richardson andcompany had also flinched: rather thanrisk a real fight, they made the deal.

It wasn't the first time Agnew hadfooled us all. fie first appeared on thescene as the liberal candiate for Governorof Maryland, running against the law andorder conservative Mahoney ("A man'shome is his castle . . ."). Agnew got elec-

Carol McGuire'75, Steve Wailman '75,John Hanzel '76, Jim Miller '76;

Nigh t Edito :'sMichael McNamilee '76, Barb Moore'76;:

VNeIvs EctdirosNeal Vita!e '75 ;.4 rts ' editor

Sandy Yulke '74. Fred Hutchinson '75:Sports Edit'o rs

Roger Goldstein '74, David Green '75:Phoe t(,gp'ap7hy Editors

J olln Kavazanjiani a. dvertising ilaageri-Tim Kiorpes: Cu7twribttiang Editor

Robert Ellkini ;lalzageriu .C IonsuitaniTorm HIopkins '76 ;, cco zr ts Receivcable

David Lee '74; Ciricula tion Maiag'r

Bill Conklin '77, Margaret Brandeau '77-4 ssociate News z Editors

Julia Malkie '77;A1ssociate Niigh Editor

Robert Elkin; Mllanagerial ConsultantTo i Hopkins '76; A ccoun zts Re ceivable

David Lee; Circularioln

Production Staff'Ken isaacson '75, Frank McGrath '75,Larry Appelman'76. To m Bir3mey '76,

Michael Graves '76, Robert Nilsson '76Cathy Medich '77, Vincent Rich nman '77

Newss StaffHoward Sitzer'74, Curtis Reeves '74

James Moody '75. Ken Davis '76Wendy Peikes '76, Henry Frechter'77

Steve Keith '77, Stephen Mallenbaurnm '77Jules Mollere '77, Alan Shapiro '77

Vincent Stanton '77Sports Staft)

Paul Bayer'73, Randy Young'74,Dan Gantt '75, David Katz'75

Donald Shobrys '75,Glenn Brownstein'77Photography Staff

Sheldon Lowenthal '74,Sherry Grobstein '74, Craig Reynolds '75,

Tomrn Vidic '76Circulation Stajf'

David Gromnola '74, Doug McLcod '77Ed itorial StaffM ark Fish man

committees of the MlT Corporation doencourage student input. Further infor-mation mnay be ob tained from tlze depart-mnental headquarters involved. -

IEditor)

Metallurgy and Materials Science - Mr. Hanley, Chmn.October 12

Aeronautics and Astronautics - Dr. Davison,Biology - Dr. Thorn,

, Psychology - Mr. Shepard,

Chmn.Chmn.Chmn.

November 7,8November 15, 16November 18, 19

December 7December 14January 10, 11January 18January 24, 25January 31 /February 1i

Quarterly MAee ting of the CorporationMedical- Mr. Whitaker,

Sloan School of Managemnent - Mr. Keyser,Chemistry - Mr. du Pont,

Civil Engineering - Mr. Kerr,Center for International Studies - Dr. Landau,

Chmn.Chmn.Chmn.Chmn.Chrnn.

Visiting Comm1ittees tentatively planning meetings include:

Foreign Literatures & Linguistics - Mr. Smithn, Chmn.Marchl/Aoril

by Brant parker and Johnny hart

J zO~A41rTa 5 N WA-,

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The Wizard of Id appears daily and Sunday in The Boston Globe

Reaction to - oo

0 10 a-lA- as[]i CI d Z

Continuous News Service

Since 188 ff

Sinlce 1881

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PAGE6 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1973 THETECH

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One of the trade-offs thePresident mentioned was the

. environment. He said energyshould be developed in a waythat "will not despoil the envi-ronment," but hinted thatfederal pollution standards andother environmental measuresmay have to be suspended ormodified to meet the demandfor fuel this winter.

"We face the possibility of afuel shortage . . . in the north-eastern part of the United Statesthis winter. We believe that wecan find a way to meet thatproblem," Nixon said.

However, he added that"those who particularly andexclusively... concentrate onthe need for clean air [and] ab e t t e r environment, wouldrecognize the truth that if onefreezes to death, it doesn't makeany difference whether the air isclean or dirty-"

- | h in | h i;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,

By Norman D. Sandler o r d e rWASHINGTON - Institute problej

Prof. Emeritus Harold E. "Doc" HoweEdgerton was among 11 leading scientilscientists presented with the effortNational Medal of Science througWednesday in ceremonies at the traditWhite House. upwarc

The Medal of Science is the total fehighest award given by the 'Th

'federal govern ment to individuals been rw h o m a ke "outstanding c o mncontributions to knowledge in contritt he p hysical, biological, de f e rmathematical or engineering commLsciences." Selection of the way asaward's recipients is made by the playedPresident and an advisory defensecommittee of scientists. United

"Doc" Edgerton is best Inknown for his achievements in civilianthe field of stroboscopic and researchigh-speed photography. Prior to prograWorld War Two he pioneered dependresearch which led to the reservedevelopment of the modern day warinelectronic flash, and since then "Th has perfected the use of the Xndust

strobe in "stop motion" contin"

photography. an uncIn more recent years which

Edgerton worked on application timeof stroboscopic photography to majordeep-sea exploration, and he be toworked with French undersea energy,explorer Commander J.Y. HeCousteau on several expeditions could cin the Mediterranean and the scientifAtlantic. tary a]

Edgerton was honored by did. SoPresident Nixon for "his vision Nixonand creativity in pioneering in peaceftthe field of stroboscopic and wo

photography and for his many T'heinventions of instruments for nation'exploring the great depths of the be anoceans." Nixon,

The presence of at least one wouldMIT affiliated scientist was offs inapparently expected by Nixon. become

"The award winners cover sourcesthis country geographically," thePresident said in remarks to the .. ' It

scientists and other invited 'vi :guests. "Ali~ of the brains don'thappen to be in New England, or ' 'for that matter in California. ?.JXBecause, as you will find outthere are award winners fromCalifornia, from Texas. fromFlorida, from Illinois, and, of course, from IMIT in New v ;England." %-* ~';'

For a president who has beensharply criticized for a disregardof science and scientists ingeneral, Nixon expressed a greatdeal of concern for theimportance of promoting more ,;

s cien tific research anddevelopment.

The President called for a -;Doc" ctransformation of scientific White Hpriorities to peaceful areas to

T neve g

to solve immediatems facing the country.yver, he credited theific community for itsts in defense research;h the years, which hastionally accounted fords of 5 percent of theederal R&D budget.hrough the years it hasnecessary for the scientificm nunity to make abution in the area ofnse, the scientificunity need not be in anyshamed of the role it hasI in helping to develop the;e capabilities of theI States," Nixon said.turning from military to

areas for scientific:h, Nixon called for aam to minimize USdence upon foreign energy-s, especially in light of thethe Middle East.-e United Staes, as a greattrial po wer, cannotue to be dependent uponcertain source for energycould be cut off at anyThat is why one of thegoals of this Nation mustbecome self-sufficient in," the President saii.said the energy situationopen broad new vistas forfic research, as the mili-nd space programs both)lving the energy shortage,said, opens "a great newul challenge to the men-men of science."

road to solving theIs fuel shortages will not

easy one, according towho admitted there

have to be some trade-priorities if the US Es to

e self-sufficient for energy

Nixon said a largerproportion of the nationalincome would have to beallocated to basic research if hiscivilian R&D programs are to besuccessful. He pledged tosupport the transformation"from war to the works ofpeace," and added, "by doing sowe not only make acontribuition toward thescientific community anddevelop the scientific capabilitiesof our people, but we also willmake a very great contribution

'to a better nation here athome."

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3, when there. Diamond is a contributingtended its editor of New York magazineg. as well as the Post-Newsxveek

the first stations.i by Craig Both Dyett and Diamond)avid Olive recommended that the group at-(The Tech, tempt to break out of the static). The pair mold which holds all currentmunity re- television news efforts.cept of a "If you come up with a newce for the way to tell the news, you might

be able to sell the idea," Dyettthe first said, "because several stations

to an out- are looking for new formats-"currently Diarnond concurred and re-

black and commended his recent article, no office "Death of the Anchorman"

ned organ- from New York. He also dis-cussed ideas for a television pro-

,re Edwin duction seminar, cataloguing theecturer ill potential educational benefits of

Lnd Lovell the group's plans.ociate. The "We'll have access to the stu-

in which dio on October 22, and I thinkreservoir of we'll start our first productionence to the very soon after that," Olive re-

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kSTARTSWEDNESDAY, OCT. 171 [BENEFITTHE AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIESUNION

,-;z~~~~~~ or ox~~~~On of, recive s de-lic the1 C

Environmental Film SeriesThe Barker Engineering Library is presenting a fall program of

environmental films. Each film will be shown twice in the Library

Conference Room 1 0-400) on Thursdays at 5:00 pm and again

on Fridays at noon. Coffee will be served.

October 11-I 2 Air PollutionThe Terrible NewsAir is for Breathing

Ocotber 18-19 Water Pollution

Rise and Fall of the Great LakesRiver with a Problem

October 25-26 Noise PollutionNoise: Polluting the EnvironmentNoise: The New Pallutant

November 1-2 Oil Spills

Santa Barbara: Everybody's Mistake

Oil Spill!November 8-9 Solid Waste M1anagemnent

The Real ities of RecyclingSanitary Landfill' 1 part Earth, 4 parts Refuse

November 15-16 Chremical-Biological Contamination

Pesticides in FocusParidise ListOf Broccoli and Pelicans and Celery and Seals

By Paul SchindMITV News was

born as an organizatioday night, Octoberabout 35 people attorganizational meeting

The impetus formeecting was providedReynolds '75 ;nd D'76. both of Chi Phi. (September 1 4, 1!973)hoped to gauge comraction to their conctelevision news servicMIT community.

Their remarks atsession were limfitedline of the facilitiesavailable (a smallwhite studio at CAESspace) and the planrizational structure.

Also present weDiamond, Visiting LPolitical Science, aDyett, a Research Assspair described waysthey could serve as a rknowledge and experiefledgling gnroup.

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THE TECI F FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1973 PAGE 7

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spent two years in Chin, along with severalVietnamese political

vith was captured inetnam in 1966, andly six years as a POW.release last March. heed with "collaborationenemy," along with

er former POWs. Theainst them were drop-Larry Kavanaugh, one

:harged. killed himself

whole reason that weVietnam was immoral.-.. " said Chenowith,

he had enlisted six-ior to his capture, anddrafted. When ques-

bout this point, het his ideas had changediw the war, and that heme disillusioned. He;ed the real motives for,olvement.

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responslbliltles. we have a well-organezed program to help our engineers keeptheir skills up to date.

This year we especially need advanced-degree candidates in EE and ME in our hardware design systems and analysis areas. Some of the activities. include communications, controls, propulsion, and structures.

a It may be that more than one employment area of our company will berecruiting on your campus on the same day. Please try to sign up on the schedule that is most appropriate for you. It will not be necessary to have

0 more than one interview, although you may if there is time.

O CCampus nterviews October 15, 16For additional information, please contact your College Placement Director,or write: Mr. Daniel Stewart, College Relations Coordinator, Space andCommunications Group, Hughes Aircraft Company, P.O. Box 92919 Airport L10 B

B Station, Los Angeles, CA 90009. e a

63 1

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HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANYU.S. citizenship required Equal opportunity M/F employer_ _ _ t _ t ______ __ l

5 SD : =SS=C :lS&lzQDCS31El35i2CR1WI g33D2 =a: it: CI~3 BQ1 3E3=GgzEa: 39=

ilding of tiger cages byorces used to imprisonetnamese is a majorof the Indochina Peace

Debris described thed said that they area prison camp neariese cages are made ofand are too short for atand upright. Debristhe continued buildingvices.discussed the plight ofited 200,000 politicaltill held by the ThieuSouth Vietnam. There

documented reportsling torture and mur-Vietnamese villagers,yden, which are sus-the US involvement.

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US still inFoi8~e in As"I a

state Fonda adBy Barb Moore peace. He

The Indochina Peace Cam- Hoa prisopaign is conducting its fall tour, hundredappearing in the Boston area prisoners.twice last week. Led by Jane ChenouFonda and her husband Tom South VieHIayden, the group is hoping to spent neardraw attention the the continu- After Irising situation in Southeast Asia. was charge

Fonda stated in a press con- with theference last Monday that "al- seven othethough Americans have been charges ag;told the war is over, there has ped, whennot been a day of peace in South of those cVietnam;" This national cam- last June.paign is aimed at informing the "The vAmerican public of the present were in hrole of the US in Indochina. and wrong

Traveling with the group are however Jean-Pierre Debris, a French months pr:school teacher held prisoner in was notSaigon for over two years, and tioned atRobert Chenowith, an Ameri- stated thatcan POW for more than five once he sayears. had becoi

The basis of the new cam- then realizepaign is the fact that, as Fonda the US inv,stated, "South Vietnam is nowthe largest police state in the The buiworld. The US government is US labor f,paying much of the salary of South Viethese police, and until the FJS objection cstops this financial interference, Campaign.the people of South Vietnam cages, andwill not have their freedom." 'built at

She cited the fact that the Saigon. ThJanuary Peace agreement calls concrete, afor stopped support from a for- man to seign country (including the US) protested tto the Thieu regine or any other of such devgovernmental faction. The sup- Fonda cport of the US to Thieu directly the estimaviolates this agreement, stated prisoners sFonda. regime in S

. Debris described his capture have beenas a political prisoner in Saigon of continuin 1970. He was then a school der ofteacher, and was arrested for stated Haypassing out leaflets advocating tained by

abouPIt1!5We offer you a bright future in satellite comrmunications, a vigorous new

industry that will just begin to hits its stride in 1980. And we're theacknowledged leader. Whenever you see "Via Satellite" on your TV screen,the satellite was built by Hughes.

Of course, we also offer everything else an engineer could want. Thedynamic Southern California environment. We pay top dollar. Our officesare modern and attractive. Our laboratories are loaded with the latestequipment. But most of all, we offer you a chance to grow. We're expandingrapidly. We need new graduate engineers who can step up to riew

Friday Oc-L'-ber 112f 073

Lobster with Butter

Corn on the Cob Tossed Green Salad

RoHD and Buter

Dessert ana-ld mverage

plus tax

I 1,~-Pg

5pm to 7pr

Page 8: eS B3 -TSnid nons a

'PAGE 8 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12,1973 THE TECH

School St Camera

'7� 7-7-77-M-7 --I'V1717 � � 7� 7;76A-,OtTYc'W __Z;, �g� � ,� Trvl-1171111= 715 American, M;2".

By Alan Shapiro"The Coop meets competitive

prices on identical items withinits shopping area. You may shopat the Coop with confidencethat what you are buying is notavailable elsewhere at lowerprices."

Thus goes the inscription onpage three of the calendar givenout annually to members of theHarvard Cooperative Society.The Coop has claimed for yearsthat, in addition to the six per-cent patronage refund, its pricesmeet those of any store in theCambridge-Boston area.

Competitive pricing by TheTech shows that the Tech Coopis charging relatively high priceson simple appliances. A Pana-sonic RQ3095 cassette tape re-corder sells for $39.95. Lech-mere's (88 First Street, Cam-bridge) sells the identical itemfor .$35.88, and Jordan Marsh

(450 Washington Street, Boston)has it for $36.88.

Kodak 35 mnillimeter colorfilm (35 exposures) sells for$2.07 (slides) and $1.80 (prints)at the Coop. Other stores seemto give better deals:

$159.88, Lechmere's - $159.88,Brookline Typewriter [667Washington Street, Brooklinel -155.00).

Sporting goods seem to beanother Coop weak point. A boxof four Tretorn tennis balls sellsfor $3.59 at the Coop. AtJordan Marsh the same box sellsfor $2.88. It is $2.68 at Lech-mere's, $2.9! at Brine's (HarvardSquare), and S3.00 at the Tennisand Squash Shop (67a Mt.Auburn St., Cambridge).

An

whichCoop,

AMF Voit volleyball,sells for $6.99 at the

is only $4.95 at Brine's(Boston). A Wilson "In-destructo " basketball (B1322),$10.00 at the Coop, is only$7.88 at Lechmere's, and underten dollars at most stores. ASportscraft volleyball, $5.95 atthe Coop. sells for $4.99 at FinnMickey's (511 WashingtonStreet).

Levi's blue jeans (bell bot-tom) are $9.52 at the Coop.Jordan Marsh, Filenes (426Washington Street), and Gil-christ's (417 Washington Street)all sell the mn for $9.30.

Automatic exstinguishingdevicesin the fan hood at the LobdellGrill put out a grease fire thaterupted there Tuesday morning,but not before the windowlessCenter's efficent air conditioningsystem spread the odiferoussmnoke all over the building. The6-10 pieces of Cambridge fireequipmrent that responded didnot arrive until after the smallfire was out. The second floordoors were left open to helpclear the smoke.

"", v s s ot~o X,

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slides $2.07-prints $1.80

Jordan Marsh Lechmere's (315 Washington St.$2.36$1.58

-:e $2.09$1.69

$1.98$1.60

A Sony TV-750 television set The Coop does have its strongsells for $1 29.95 at the Coop. points. It has equal or lowerLechmere's has it for $119.88, prices than its competitors inand EMF Electric Supply Co. many departments. Books, text-(120 Brookline, Cambridge), an books, calculators, and recordsofficial Sony outlet dealer, seem to be among these. But thequotes the price at $118. comparitive pricing done here

A 12" Smith-Corona Electra would seem to contradict claims120 typewriter is sold at the that all Coop prices are corn-Coop for $ 169.00. Other stores petitive.have it for as much as fourteendollars less (Jordan Marsh -

Biology Prof., Jerome Y. Lettvin spoke on the concept of the myth as it has been presented [::.- *-.~__-.;~.through the years by authors --and screenwriters at a lecture -. ,,,:-Wednesday entitled "Myth and t;s.," ".Knowing." The lecture was thethird in a series of Concourse

:'Oen Ing o an&CertLensY-sces or ru ecs }e,,Inche-',d uld to D &:zembe

research. They are to be hiredover the next three years.

Sixty professional staff mnenm-bers and technical assistants willalso be included in the workforce of about 150 persons.Luria notes that there will alsobe some limited opportunity fordepartment graduate students towork in the labs.

According to Dr. David Balti-more, American Cancer SocietyProfessor of Microbiology atMIT and member of the center'sstaff, the new center will focuson four major areas concerningthe development and growth ofcancer.

Researchers in the field ofdevelopmental biology, whostudy development of the cellsand the oranism from the ori-ginal fertilized egg cell, willinvestigate a possible block inthe cell division process whichmay cause a normal cell tobecome cancerous.

Chemical carcinogens, sub-stances that can cause cancer,will be studied at the centter. Butof the three main carcinogens -viruses, chemicals, and radiation -identified to date, viruses willbe the primary area of research.

In the third major field ofinvestigation, immunologists willresearch the theory that thebody becomes susceptible tocancer by a breakdown in theimmunological system, whichnormally expells carcinogens andcancerous cells.

Cell biologists will study thecomponents of the cell and themanner in which they function.They will try to determine ifcancer is caused by the cellfailing to interpret the signalfrom its environment to stopdividing.

By Stephen KeithPartial completion of the MIT

Center for Cancer Research isslated for early December, saysPaul F. Barrett, superintendentfor engineering and constructionin the Institute's Physical PlantDepartment.

The center will be housed onAmes Street in Buliding El17,which has been underreconstruction since mid-April.

The center, to be headed byDr. Salvador E. Luria, MIT'sNobel Prize-winning biologist,will occupy five of six floors inthe building. The fourth floorwill house the expansion fromBuilding E-18 of theArteriosclerosis Center's clinicalResearch facilities, according toBarrett.

Sharing the third floor withthe cancer center will be a cellculture facility to be headed by'biology Professor Phillips W.Robbins. Robbins explains thatthe facility, funded by theNational Science Foundation, isto be a regional center for theexpensive process of growingcells and viruses for use byinvestigators.

Funds for the building arederived principally from theNational Canicer Institute andthe Seeley G. Mudd Fund. E-17will be named the Seeley B.Mudd Building in honor of thelate physician. educator, andphilanthropist who contributedmore than $ I0 million to col-leges and universities in his life-time, and who se will establishedthe Seeley G, Mudd Fund forthe benefit of higher education.

The cancer center will even-tually staff twelve researchers offaculty rank, who will teach inaddition to working in cancer

coop ConpeutIt Iv pricing

agaainst th coxnpethn Ion

10~~~~~~~~~~~~P

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I7 ~ ~~~~~ Mat tt~~~~~~ty

s o tan is meore than jutst

arnoeher studnt activty--

Page 9: eS B3 -TSnid nons a

=Mgm-- I % _., --RECHUC- I --~~~1 A--t_-~~~- - o ue RSERC SBJCT

-L -I~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_ -- _- -- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - --- M

There will be hearings for the COMMITTEEs on:Educational Policy - October 16

Nominations Committee - October 17and CuTrriculun -October 24

All those undergraduates interested in apply-ing for the above committees must schedule ahearing at Room 403 of the Student Center,x3-2696, no later than 4pm the day of the

i

I, I - - -Y :,_,...-- - ----- --- I---- - --~~~, ;,

1l0/8/736: 1 5pm. Report of two

breaks at Ashdown House. Ac-cess gained by breaking glass inbattery powered alarm - alarmdefective - nothing taken fromeither room.

10/9/7310:50am. Kitchen fire stu-

dent center dining area.10/9/73

5:15pm. Report of moneyremoved from a wallet in alocked locker at MIT Boathouse.Close inspection indicated lockhad been picked.

10/9/73Student's observation and

action prevented bicycle theft atStudent Center rack. Studentrecovered bolt cutters from sub-ject.

10o/1/73!2:30amni. Patrol recovered a

portable car seat and pocket-book on Vassar St. previouslyreported stolen from a vehicle inthe West Garage.

10/1/738:25am. Larceny of $12 from

cash box at Student Center cof-

.~:.~ I? ? '.': .;.Al M.

A e~elatXil

CAMBRIDGE- E SOCIETY FOR EARLY MUSICIva Dee Hiatt, Afllsic I)irector'

3 Extraordinar ConcertsSanders T1heatre, Camrbridge M.onday-s, 8-30 p.m.

Ocotber 15 October 29 Novcember 19

jTHE FiVE CENTURIES THE BRANDEIS CHAM-i IVA DEE HIATTI CON-E

ENSE.NMBLE: B3ER ORCHESTRAL DUCTS "Music for a Fes-

"Three MIasters of the '"Mlusic of Mozart and his tive Occasion," fesrival 17th Centurtr," Heri Contemporaries, " fcatu- cilorl-us including Perotin,d'anlebert, Claudio ing the "Mozart" for- Bach and HandelMon teve rdi, Henry i tepiano and the C.P.E.Purcell Bach double concerto for

harpichord and piano.

Also on sale at the Harvard Coop and at the door-- """""" -- ~R~ -- ~-~ ~- ~---~`- "--p - I----"---LI--~ ------- --- ~-- II- -- Ii~~rr~~wc~~a rarr~~~~ ~l e u~~~.~~n~ * ar~~~uas~~- · l· - a~~~~s ~

Twin 2/6.50Ful ...........................2/7.50Queen ....................... 2/9.50King ..........2...... .... 111.50Cases...................2.75/pkg.Over-sized cases..3.75/pkg.

Famous name irregular

3a .......... 1..79Hand ..................... 996Washcloth ...............79,

Hlen's Boutique Clothing

MiIsses' and Junior's Sportswear

Art Prints and Posters

Popular and Cl:assical Records

This is only a partial fisting

�m �n�m�ua;r·ar �i-rara�Bac�rruP--�-·-a�.���a ----- �---rar��p--

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THETECH FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1973 PAGE 9

Police Blotter is a compilationf colmlunllity.

10/4/73Larceny of a 3Smm camera

valued at $66 from the BurtonHouse thrid floor. An intruderwas observed in area just prior tothe theft. Patrols alerted.

- t t1014/73Patrols observed a man acting

in an irrational manner. Subjectquestioned and transported toHQ where contact was made

'with parents. Father indicatedson was missing since previous

; evening and required hospitali-zation. Subject released to

'father.10/5/73

!2:05amr Cruiser apprehends; three subjects on second level of

Albany St. Garage. Subjectsknown car thieves.

10/6/738:40prm. Oven fire in Litchen

i at Burton House.10/6/72

4:05. Two students reportarmed robbery on Mass AveBridge. Two assailants showed aknife and a gun. Took moneyand personal property fromstudents then fled on foot toBoston. MDC Police investi-gating.

10 /8/73lain. Patrol asked to invest-

prepared 'by Campus Patrol to report crimes occuring in the MIT EARN $$$ FOR PARTICIPATION IN ONGOINGRESEARCH ON THE

PSYCHOLOGY OF HYPNOSIS

Currently enrolled students 21 or older ONLY!For appt. call Perceptual Studies Unit, B.U. Med. Ctr.

262-4200 x6384-6385

feehouse. Unknown subjectreached into cash box and re-moved paper currency. Severalpeople nearby gave chase to noavail.

1 0/1/735pm. Larceny of camera

equipment from car parked onMemorial Drive near HaydenLibrary. Entry gained by break-ing vent window. Equipmentvalued at $389.00.

1 0/2/7310:30pm. Report of candy

sellers in East Campus areas.Patrols dispatched to enforce nosoliciting rule due to usualreports of thefts following visitsof door to door salesmen.

igate annoyingEast Campus.Burton Housesolved.

phone calls toCalls traced toand matter re-

interview.Starting in November, hearings will be sche-dluled for the Committee on Student Env/ron-menit, Talbot House Commnittee, The Use ofHumans as Experimental Subjects and others.All hearing dates will be announced in news-paper ads and will be kept on file in Room403 of the Student Center, x3-2696.

ITHE NOMNN ATIONS COMMI ETTEE

Simple,straight-forward,

classic -out of stepwith today's

throwaway culture.Refillable cartridge,ballpoint or fiber tipmarker in basic tan

or navy blue.$1.98: not bad for a pen

you may use therest of your life.

Information:2 5 3-4006 (day)864-553 0 (eve)

Series tickets: $15 and $1 0Single concerts: $5 and $3.50Box 336, Cambridge 021 38

Famous name solid print

BHegT

Now available at

L I"

i,4,461

c

-17

��4le � S , t 0 i;� 6

$X 98

A F BY NEEL YOUNGFOR YO URH OAE. V

1001 Mass. Avenue, Cambridge 868-3600

�,O', - 77-A'' 19 JRLD PRERMERE BER T-01

Page 10: eS B3 -TSnid nons a

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-By Vtice Stanton

Several MIT groups will beobserving and conductingexperiments in connection withthe spectacularly visible CometKohoutek coming late this year.

The major research effort is-being conducted by AssociateProfessor of Earth and PlanetarySciences Thomas McCord, inconjunction with several MITgraduate students and severalu n dergra d uates working onUROP Projects.

In addition to this, MITundergraduate physics studentswill collectively be operating acomet information center,according to Eric Bogatin '76,Course VIII.

According to Alan GoldbergG, a member of the McCordgroup, this project group will betaking three distinct sets ofobservations.

They will be looking at thecomet with a dual bea mphotometer, an instrument thatmeasures the intensity of asource of light in the sky relativet o another source,, anddifferentiates the light intothirty different colors or wavelengths.

These observations, accordingto Goldberg, will be taken at theGeorge A. Wallace Ir.Observatory in West field,Massachusetts, where a 24-inch

CYRIL CUP£KLAN HOLM

MICHAEL BOYSTONVMEN MERCHAN

TERENCE PImyAX-IL ROGEER

IN ----

KATHARINE HEPBURNPA(UL SCOFIELD

!LEE REMI1CKMATE REID

JOSEPH COFIENBERTY BL&IR

EDWARD ABEESS

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PASGE 10 FR I DAY .CTOBE R 12 1973 THE TECHI

Room 6-209, the Corridor Laband the Undergraduate PhysicsOffice. The SPS, according toBogatin hopes to print asemi-weelkIy newslettercontaining information on theComet's progress, and what thevarious MIT groups are doing.

The group also plans toorganize several seminars for

interested students who are notinvolved in any projectsconnected with CometKohoutek.

T h e c o m e t - g r o u pheadquarters, in Room 6-209,will function as an informationcenter which will keep track ofw h o 1 s w o r k i n g o nKohoutek-related projects.

automated telescope and al6-inch telescope will be usedthroughout the duration of thecomet's visible life, from lateOctober 1973 until the end ofMarch 1974.

The comet will not be visibleto the naked eye until the end ofNovember, and it will only bevisible in the morning untilDecember 28, After that date itwill be visible in the evening; theperiod of visibility will movecloser and closer to sunrise andsunset as the comet approachesthe sun. In February, the cometwill no longer be visible to thenaked eye.

Goldberg characterized thegeneral goal of the group as aneffort to obtain better, moreaccurate quantitative knowledgeof the physics and chemistry ofcomets and of the interaction ofcomets with the interplanetarymediumn, particularly the sun.

The Student Physics Societywill be trying to bring togetherUROP. interested students,interested faculty and outsidespeakers and groups, accordingto Bogatin.

The group will start officiallyon October 24, when they hopeto have an outside speaker.

lowever, their first newsletterwill corne out October 13. It willbe available in Room 26-100,

LEE fV1NFREDRJC MARCH

ROBSEI RYANJEFF BRIDGES

BRADFORD D3119lANEUGENE OCNEILS

ZERO MOSrELGiENE WILDER

AND KAREN BLACK

EUGENE IONEScOYS_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

--,eN~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a-- 11 Ir~lw

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-A F"LI DIR8ED BYN

TOM OrHORGiANST4.!LyA Y Bymfw-

JULUAM BARRY-A FILM DLRBCTUE Boo-~

PETER HALL

-A F 1i DARIECTED BY E

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LARENK:E QLJMERJOAN PLOWRIGHT

ANTON CiEKHOV

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RYMNYD D STJMr-WES

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HUGH GRIFFITHJOHN OSBORNES

._ A.; E ,--\5

ALAN BATESjE-<CkFADY

RICHARD O 'CAL IAGHAN

SIMaO GPAYS

--APAFUM Wd1nBrJ BYee

DAIELW .NEN

ALFRED HAYES

-i- A FI DIREM, ED BY -G(U (GREEEN

-- SCREECHA Y BY "*EDWARD ANHAST

By-A FIV1 JM DR 5F,-

FVROLD PNTERPA FIMM DIRBEfF-D eBY

LAURENC:E OLAAER

Great plays transformed intogreat new movies by your

kind of writers, directors,Seats are limited. Get down tothe box office (or Ticketron)

stars.

One Mo/inday and Tuesdaya month, October throughMay. Four showings, twoevenings and two matinees,and that's it.

Starts Otober 29th andOctober 30h at a local

a popcorn fadory (see theatre

[31

C7.

mm

Mond-ay Series

Oct. 29,19473Nov.-12, 1973Dec.. 10, 1973Jan. 21,1974Feb. 4, 1974Mar. 11, 1974

April 8, 1974May 6, 1974

Tuesday Serie!

Oct 30, 1973Nov. 13,1973Dec. 11. 1973Jan. 22,1974Feb 5,1974Mar. 12, 1974

,April 9, 1974Mav 7, 1974

I,z

I=7-17il M MCZ-71-5 C-7171,11,277 m m m m 0 m m =177,11 m m m m m

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WANTED - ASTHMATICS

Aged 21-3D, to participate inpuimonary research project,Involves several visits, good pay, '

Please call 262-4200, ext. 6436

An Equal Opportunity Employer

esearazefi@s ppreDae o .O @'-cevm@ ercomm

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·re �t�r�Lg EYi3 �I� �t�S-?i

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touch and metat some greatpeople everybody else.

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I ,1 1 - I I --- - -

yvatepolo0 a 5-1 recrd,_-mplcmged y iuz®Reai plaugd by lamu ls

f;,P- 7

We're looking for part-timehelp to promote the campusmarket for film developing.Our rep will distribute pro-mnotional materials, posters,"free" processing coupons,etc. No photo experiencenecessary.Good money-maker! Yourefforts backed by collegenewspaper ads. Don't passthis one up.

yP ue oo u Es ED = e rD as E c m m DEE 9a

i~ ~ '~'s Ms Ronda Tvler i~.m.J'a ~ .~ 100 Summers St I'

It "C;~b~ ~'"~ U ~0oo lville. Ohio 45723

Yes, send me the information:

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THETECH FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1973 PAGE 11

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still out of action, and is notexpected to play until the NewEnglands. His absence causes alarge gap in 'the defense, despiteOblath's competent play.

Today at 7:30pm, MIT meetsBowdoin at home, and hopes toimprove on its 1-5 record. Wed-nesday, October 23 is the rivalry

The MIT water polo team,)lagued by injuries, was frus-rated again last Wednesday withn 1 i-4 loss to Brown. This was

d/IT's first dual meet of the;eason.

Brown outplayed the MIT:eam throughout the contest.;uperior ball handling and shots)n the goal were combined torve Brown the advantage theyweeded. The MIT offense never'eally got started, and thelefense, while doing a generally;ood job, had trouble protecting.he goal against Brown's many)reak-away shots.

The second quarter proved to)e the end of MIT's hopes for avin. Brown shade four goals in:he period, and MIT could onlynanage one. MIT went into the)eriod down only 2 to 1, but atalftinme, were at a 6-2 disad-rantage.

Goalie Steve Oblath'77 made;everal good saves, while makingi strong effort to fill the holes in

;he defense. Many shots were:lose and straight-on, and Oblathlad little chance of deflecting,hem, Brian Wellendorf '77;cored three of MIT's four goals,ind was the strong point in theffense. Wellendorf, however,

-efused to take much praise foriis play, saying, "If team has a)ad game, I've had a bad game."

Dave Schneider '74 playedvell despite a previous injury to-is ribs which prevented his)laying in the tournament last~eekend. All-New EnglandSoalie Dan Bethencourt '75 is

matchby thenamenHopefulteam wiable to

with Harvard, followedL New England Tour-at October 26-27.Ily, by then, the MITill be at full strength, andplay to its full potential. Photo by Fred Hutchison

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Page 12: eS B3 -TSnid nons a

PAGE 12 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1973 THETECH

3oWOy yre tIso

aoa' Ie ..bF ,TLast weekend's sailing action

was marked by three trophyregattas - the Danmark, theDonaghy, and the Oberg - inaddition to a dinghy invitationalat Rhode Island and a women'sinvitational at Wellesley.

In the Danmark TrophyRegatta, sailed at the CoastGuard Academy on Saturdayand Sunday, The Engineersplaced fifth in a tough, twelve-school intersectional fleet. Thefirst day of racing saw shiftywinds on New London's Thames.River, with the result that thestandings were at times some-what shuffled.

By the end of Sunday'sracing, the Coast GuardAcademy held an eight pointlead and the trophy. SteveC u cchiaro '74, with WalterFrank '74 crewing, placedsecond in A-Division, while PaulErb '76, with Chuck Johnson '76as crew, sailed in B.

Results of the regatta were:Coast Guard 88, Harvard 96,Stevens 101, Brown 102, MIT106, Tufts 1 06, New York Mari-time 114, Rhode Island 117,Yale 131, Dartmouth 180,Queens 184, and Connecticut223.

The Donaghy Bowl Regattawas held in light, variable windson Worcester's Lake Quinsig-amond on Sunday, with MITplacing sixth of eight schools.Randy Young '74, with BillRizze '76 crewing, sailed inA-Division: and Shelley Bern-stein '74 with Joan Pendleton'76 as crew, raced in B.

the results were: Brown 18,Harvard 30, Coast guard 31,Holy Cross 31, Tufts 35-2/3,

To the Editor:I have given up reading The Techbecause 1 have found its articlesto be wrong in matters of factand misleading in matters ofpresentation in virtually everyarticle pertaining to somethingof which I had knowledge. Yourreaders should realize that theyare not necessarily getting thefacts of flavor right.

As a member of MIT's heavy-weight crew I have found resultsas you print them to beinnaccurate and the sport eithermisrepresented or misunder-stood.

First, I resent the misrep-resentation of something im-portant to me. Unfortunatelythis act of poor journalism ishard to define. Perhaps the bestway to put it is that your articlesnot only do not approach adescription of the various asp-ects of the endeavor, theymislead. No one could begin tograsp "crew" from your articles.

Second, your factual in-accuracies are appaling. Forinstance, in the issue of 9October 1 973 your article listsme as a member of the class of1974, points out that I am theonly sure bet for one of our elitefours, and gives as a reason myrowing in Europe this summer.None of these is true. No one isa "sure bet" for any boat. And Icould row in the novice scullsevent if I chose.

A further example of yourmisrepresentation of the facts isyour statement that our captain'is a doubtful entry this yeardue to an injury he sustainedwhile walking . . ." It could

MIT 39, Boston College 39, andMerrimack 68.

The tech squad finished thirdin the tightly-contested ObergRegatta on Monday. Only threepoints separated the first threeplaces, with the final outcomedecided only in the last race:Tufts winning followed byHarvard and MIT. Cucchiaro,with Mike Thomas '74 crewing,took low-point honors inA-Division, Young and Rizziplaced third in B, and KevinSullivan '74, with Larry DuBois'76 as crew, placed second in C.

The results of the regattawere: Tufts 52, Hazrvard 54, MiT55, Northeastern 67, BostonUniversity 71, and BostonCollege 79.

George Todd '76, DaveJessich '75, Bill Critch '77, andSteve Ryan '77 sailed for MIT ina dinghy invitational at the Univ-ersity of Rhode Island onSaturday, placing fourth of sixschools. Results of the regattawere: Harvard 21, Tufts 27,Rhode Island 30, MIT 33,Brown 46, and Coast Guard 54.

The MIT women's teamcompeted in an invitationalregatta on Lake Waban atWellesley n Sunday. Barbara Belt'77 and Nina Gelband '77 co-skippered, sailing to a fourthplace finish overall. Resultswere: Salem State 7, Wellesley11, Newton 16, MIT 21, Rad-cliffe 21, and Stonehill 27.

Major upcoming eventsinclude the New England SloopChampionships at Coast Guardon Saturday and Sunday, theHoyt Trophy at Harvard onSunday, and the women's team'sMan Labs Trophy Regatta atMIT on Saturday and Sunday.

e a sily have been checkedwhether or not he is to row (andin what capacity). And it couldeasily have been stated that hishand was broken when he wasattacked. My contention is thatyou ought to tell either the realstory or no story at all.

I cannot speak for others, butI personnaly wish that youwould either do a decent job ofreporting (and/or analyzing) orstop reporting altogether. Yourpresent articles are often notactually reporting anyway.

Dustin P. Ordway

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Standings as of Octobex 7, 197:A League

B1 League

LCA 'A'SA E 'A'BSUDTDFIJI 'A'

DUSAE 'B.SPEAshdownMacG 'S'BTP

PLPPDT 'A'PDT 'A'EC 'A'LCA 'B'MettalurgyPlumbers

B3 LeagueChemE-Nucl, E.PKS1-!1-1 Baker Trojans

1-1 SC

1-2 ZBTChemistry

3-03-01-21-21-2

0-3

B2 League3-02-13-02-11-20-30-3

Ct LeagueTDCATOPDT 'Z'PDT 'A'PBE

C2 LeagueSenior HouseEC Jack FloreyHydrosPMDEC 5WMath

C3 LeagueBurton H. TooeyBurton 5 SmokersDPSAMTCEC&W

C,3-0 Baker 'C'2-1 BTB2-1 Conner 31-2 TEP-PKA1-2 Conner V0-3 EC 3E

C3-0 PSK2-0 AEP2-0 PKT 2592-0 TX0-3 Sloan 2

Student House

3-03-02-11-20-30-3

3-03-01-21-21-20-3

SAE 'C'SloanBexleyMacG 'H'FIJI 'C'MacG 'D'

EconomicsCPSNMacG 'A'DKEMacG 'C'

Ci

C

4 League

S5 league

6 League

'7 League

3-C3-'2-I -1--0-_

3-'3-C

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3-C3412- I

1-20-?-0-_3

3-C2 -2--2-I0-30-3

Weekdd footbR U re _B3

Sat Oct 6 & Sun Oct 7

A LeagueLCA 'A' - 19 BSU --- 6FIJI 'A' - 25 DTD - 6

SAE 'A' - bye

B81 LeagueDU - 22 Mac S - 0

SAE'B' -- 32 SPE - 0Ash - forfeit BTP - 0

B2 LeaguePDT 'A' - 6 LCA 'B' - 0

EC 'A' - 7 Mtlgy - 6PLP - 47 Plumbers - 0

B3 LeagueBaker Troj - 13 SC - 0

Chem E-Nucl E - 27 Chem - 19PKS - 34 ZBT - 6

C1 LeagueTDC- 24 KS- 13ATO - 6 PBE - 2

*PDT'Z' - 1 NRSA - 0*(forfeit)

C2 LeagueEC'JF' - 43 PMD - 0Hydros - 19 ECSW - 6

SH- 12 Math -6

C3 LeagueBurton Tooey - 14 TC - 0

Burton 5-14 SAM -- 12DP - 13 EC4W- 0

C4 LeagueConner 3 - 24 EC3E - 6

Baker C - 19 Conner V - 2BTB - 8 TEP-PKA - 6

C5 LeagueAEPi - 27 TX -- 0

*PKT - 1 S. Hse. - 0*PSK- 1 Sloan 2 - 0

*(forfeit)

C6 League**SAE 'C' - 18 Bex - 18

Mac H - 13 FIJi C - 0*Sloan - I Mac D - 0

*(forfeit)**(winner by virtue of

yardage gained in OT)

C7 LeagueCP - 21 Mac C- 0SN -- 24 DKE - 20

*Econ - I Mac A - 0*(forfeit)

Due to security problemswithing the swimming poollocker room, the use of theoutside doors along thesquash corridor will belimited to emergency exitonly. This will require divert-ing women's squash activityto Walker Memorial or the duPont Athletic Center.

People wishing to transfertheir locker assignments fromthe pool to du Pont, pleaserequest same at the du PontEquipment Room Mondaythrough Friday from1 0:00am to 6:00pm.

The new security programat the pool will commence onMonday, October 15, 1973.

The JV soccer team is now 0-0-3, having tied BU (0-0), Trinitylooking for their first win against Harvard on Saturday.

I series to Thae Te 1c

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