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Page 2: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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'BRUSSELS 490''. 410LENINGRAD 598 SyDN'G.'. ' 33.DR.ID' 658 ' S,.- LE'-. 338-PARIS.- .538., .' vO -'118-.-:

Taxes & surcharges not included: s': : '_:; D: forg..*** Itts not too late Ito boo~ yl :,:ketsnome or.the holidays for ode LO fares..! ~:::

Also: EU RAILPASSES ISS UEDHNTHEISPOT'Work StudyAbroa,?ms~temaional Student

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TOD'ANEREAN:!CANCER'i9OCIETAY-46',

This space donated by The Tech

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Each reporter spoke about per-sonal experiences and then field-ed questions from- the audience.All four panetilists -agreed that thegulf war was, -by most accounts,a journalistic failure. :

Fialka gave statistics compar-ing the.number of reporters inthe gulf war to wars in Korea,Vietnam and the beachheads. ofNormandy. The gulf war saw al-most 150 reporters in the field at.any one time, uwhich was morethan twice the coverage of anyprevious war," Filaca said.

"But I would say from the out-set, we didn't do a very good job-in covering the war. There arelarge gaps in our knowledge .d..huge tank battles that. weren'tcovered by anybody," he con-tinued.

Other panelists faulted thetight security limitations and cen-sorship imposed, '"sometimes un-fairly,".by the army. The Marineswere praised, though, in part tothe successful public relationstactics used by its officers.

The panelists blamed the gel

By George IpeThe MaIT Communications Fo-

rum. and the Defense and Arms:Control Studies Program spon-sored a discussion last Thursdayfeaturing four' joumast. .who rem

ported from the Persian Gulfwar. Members of the MIT, corn-.m/nity, along with a contingentof cadets from the'US Military-Academy at West Point, filled theBartos Theatre in the Wiesner'Building.

Political Science ProfessorHarvey M. Sapolskcy, who is di-rector of the Defense and-ArmsControl Studies Program, moder-ated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of NationalPublic Radio, Rick Davis of NBCand John Fialka of The WallStreet Journal served in the presspool in Saudi Arabia in themonths preceding and during thegulf war. The fourth panelist,Trudy Rubin of The PhiladelphiaInquirer, worked until thevery last days prior to war inBaghdad.

.. .. .. : ; · ' : . ... .:. ._. -,..:' .:;7 ~ ~ , - ;(: . . . f . .

. .Personal experiene s of .. . .;, ._ war' coverage shared .

Fialka andsthe others described the .almost "dg'eat-dog " world: of.journalism in comic det.ai' lThe "byzantine. scheming :and in-i:trigues of press pool politics al-lowed for much wrangling forthe60 slots allotted for frontline reTporters by the Pentagon,n Fialka.said.

When questioned about therole of journalists in war, thepanelists were quick to defendthemselves. "How can. atrocitiesbe truthfully reported? Whatabout.failures in battle?-The pub -

lic has the 'right to know...-.This is fundamental in a democ-racy," Davis' said.. . -

:Rubin' told of the last days,before she and other potentialhostages" were- evacuated. fromthe fated Baghdad. She spoke. ofhow the "common Iraqis. anx-iously wanted to know what .was-about to-happen."' She describedhow she was Surprised to find or-dinary kraqis who were concerned.-about her safety approach her,'"thinking she was "one -of thoseWesterners somehow left. behindin Iraq." "They offered help,"

After leaving his post S dean

After leaving his post as dean,de Monchaux will remain on the

zge I)of Ar-by -theshould-

nmittee,

(Continued from pa

uates in the Departtmentchitecture are impactedchoice for dean, then theybe represented on the contoo.

No undergraduates appto dean. search eomm

tenured professor.was not available

faculty was aDe, Monchauxfor comment. sne saiU.

EVERYTHURSDAY EVERY-'THURSDAY EVERYTHU:RSDAY :

r '-: ' EVERY THURSDAY: "" '' ' > 4Etadent: .X- ~:EVERY THUR 10;

A[ X n er - 1-2 nd:olFr

e ;0\ tde~tEl~ ent~·Ier~-;;: a ;- st - AERftTN EVERYF--THURS:

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.S.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j1~~~M VERY-THURSIA "-:: :'.YT:. " ' X::::

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pointeddttee

·The. Undergraduate Associa-ltion Committee on Rules -andGovernance was upset that 'theadvisory committee did not"in-elude any undergraduates. Chair-man Ronald D. Peters '94 said he'wan " .4-4n;tAlv .di. annointed'.that~l Q~ ~.~& a ,..*j, ~ trr at ................................... ;: ........

no undergraduates were assigned.to the.committee."

Peters explained, that the:"Dean-,of Architecture affects'Urn-, .dergraduates and graduates." Pe-ters said he wishes -at least -oneundergraduate were on the cornm-mittee in order to make the num-ber of undergraduate and gradu-ate students on the committeeproportional to the number ofthose types of studeits majoringin Course IV.

The absence of undergraduatesis an important issue to the UAgovernance committee because itis "seeking the student perspec-tive," said committee memberHans C. Godfrey '93. Godfreyexplained that students "see is-

sues from a different perspec-tive" because the students live atthe school and are affected-daily

.by occurrences within their de-partment, whereas the faculty seeMIT and the School of Architec-ture in a different light.

David W. Hogg. '92, anothermember of.the governance com-mittee, agreed. He said that MITseems to be. seeking a balancebetween research and teaching,which leads him to believe thatthere should be some advisorycommittee members who willrepresent those concerned aboutteaching in the School of Archi-tecture. But, Hogg said, -faculty,graduate students and .outsideprofessionals are concerned withresearch, not teaching, which un-dergraduates certainly are inter-ested in.

-- I

_ .' PAGE 2 The Tech TUESDAY, OCTOBER-22, 1991

a .o r~ers: diSGUS,~~~~~~~~~~~ ' '

Repo0,r., r s. ...r i-sc uso ..

Dean committee-chosen

Page 3: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

-7777777~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ oR I

- @ i lo~7

¸,killed at, least, 10 people and caused jamage estmae, at~r ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~$1:s billion..Turn. ....EvMenc .~ thrown6 o 'ut becauseTurners~~,~. .. , .. .,. % :~:,..'~.. . . . . ''c ' ' , :.. . . . , ~~~~~~~~City officials, said, that the brush fire was contained, but

Americ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ay dostag jeS?'re 'a arc o . di ; s r :eetveontkn o p alrh-aeady swept 'through the affluent h i l o vroking San

and is .headed to Damasc'Jiis,,. Syti'a.o to. a,?,;. US ' Afederal. court. judge.:in ProvidencR..ia.trw'Fanso'By chasing'thousands of people .from theirspokeswoman. She spoke after severalfho'urs of uncertain- ·.- '' ' · .. ' o u t 'e~~~~~~~~idence in ~~~~adrug case becase 'the detectve did. not ho e.iad~~~~~~~~~~~~~houteidnes In, a d d uiv~ition to the 10 deaths, 10 others are also

ty regrding Tume's'whe~eab°t~e~ubli' c News gencyspeak'Spanish, US District Judge R~ayimond Pettine said missing amid the thick, black smoke and charred ruins.Earlier yesterday, thletsnP. '-,.-.'ha oie'we z d i 'iieb tteplc eetvscu

yesterday 'at, approximatei~~2 p m 'E a s t ern h y's,_te"poli'A ddeectiv:s0e0nybrknSshduigtea,..said that~~~urner had bee .1reed in Beirut,,'.Lebanon.. i.An,-

port' could n~~~~~~~~~-fot-be, c0Aied. a~.&s toevuide:ence,; :g:ns Carres't ~ Gaviria becaimse he ddi o nwh;;a gvn' -. .so normrlaatr~g fr~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~om'ni pa Enlish k-avidi s?.nappers Colombia.yest d:~ ~~~~~~~~~~ o ie "rmisint serc 'aybag he wastecrrying. Co edr6 dru, aenfo rcemrenotAency trying to

marlzd-, ;_ b . ._,,_1,7ie wasfoudne a hrged.w t posseson wtheprosacht stopigid o ateaa ament. TeMa

~~~~~~~~.. <whhave4 boghmateriaclas usull used.fot owg he.wa:giinlogo l an teen wreas ao mosargean, arming

Thlie juderisaidtahewhocke to searc ha nojaa indor s he wE as card eenr n. Cop-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sate poie offiersar lun inrpn ish Heallents ato ree reprcat.So egadly ceteryin arnew naeg

mcajohrcmn i nnsae lieRoude sand Weet einthe feeal supeasrCe~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ase-timed it poseson wih b e 'ing inedoobmrjunafrmrseheMim

Turner,-~~~~.. fro Boispani popuatio, was growingJa. State Prolice ColoeE-s -to~~~~;on d himhandnentt dstribue that hethstine seaindthat Gaii' one of-

Thereiite mur'srims posng ah plices.. Theeraldsepoir tweed thatero theDrgEforcemseakpnis.Bt Agensacty is nor-'

pubicofheCronat r uioal. rightaginghst int' earhsnWs, iolaed srofn'h pie....ople,.....three ity- Col- -dering garde~~~~Bron centers peinto ive-he!h name

Cro.'Aaf teen, h gards hosstar'g~teasatlsaonbovnk Ptin e ' whison beav6usehth matectials usuoeall useasd Ther's ganewSprting th:ietalrac.oreThe~~~~~judge s~~~~~alfrid a shovkedrnor Jerry that anoa ubbed this effrtdidea-

R~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sae police offo o~idicaers tatreh fluent iscmngsm Spanish. uhe. coaeed, thatving Snih-paleng.g..

dome-ienated Sebs ing uhatelmd betwiterbin mpajorshortcoming Caaiiyin staw-nfteliet Rhoday isladonee tHelln that femocraltsuatibpo b icnsetieo

milit~~~~~iasan. Cro7;;a s m btinta. a a ro-fais o th la *' ir b~~e' ' h oc pasSTh~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~estre pawer mor t h people . B r own aish Bthe s~tiixths naotan

Cz:feechl athriteeot'i~atig,:?,idat forcsi the. Deemsocitre ~... hatcnd''f'sation. he' isyugosl~ ~ ~ ~ ~~' -:--- " '; ; (?i:~.en:iBown risnchdue to srec:uk."tHi:'ay t'nonn the nq

puli oCoaiawigtin-ha 17,teniedar-ound thic er ci forceAuthorities in c~~~ch~o~~i~Vi~'it':!w'eUSeAtorney fi a ting:!s Al:m:ieond said O that here: Sematight appealstonCr~~~~~~oatian~~~~~~~~ guards foDcebr st.t~.te~atdton~birvi.1 ,2~ ~ -Th~~fiere"s ane'siity in ,, :resi:dent::;ia. race. Forme

R:-eaortol apprentice;omanderein -o:it-hae cTy-wl is, gaioring Gvror Jae.rrfiy s&6t6e Eannounced-his plansdti!da-;:

134 planei:,initialy~~~~~~~9mi heanding onSpiin'Granih makin~~~~~~~~~~~acion-theI-- gu i socmber ASpantishquthe cocddspecals sag:iandtopaahtes fin:eche forba Une t ~rin ' ta-h gu coelrbiawoi h asrmyc is$5i0.Ry-?-

ghoi hfeeyetrainPialpa.- He tol a rall at. .... pe.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~lweircmnt-:e offcrsi imortant.s In hi-ors -A::'...:':'~} : ~': ~ ~:' a...sh sedtieagnokill' Oswabldt in lawenforcement toda isthanae c

C zeh autho~._...dsridtdes negtat : : rcing ~J~h F.Knnd..ar:.s.m _;o :,A! ,'? _ ,..

~~~~-y a ol hia k r tion ay ast noonnna c c v.,.....- ~:

.'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~b '"-i .?i&s' t'"Authorities 'in zecho-st~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~voidA ttj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g as:"''t ..

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'' '''"'' nnig tis w il

M~oaerall tsing l~enuFUU Ad MM Ad __

be the rule for the next several days as a largeridge of high pressure at the surface moves slowlyoffshore. Winds on the, western side of thisanticyclone will advect much warmer air from the

southeastern United States.later in the week. In themeantime, a weak cyclone will pass by to the northof the area giving portions of northern Maine a bitof rain and perhaps some snow.

In the medium- to long-range outlook, above-normal temperatures are anticipated.

Tuesday: Partly sunny and cool. Winds southeast.5-10 mph(8-16 kph). High 65° F (330 C).

Tuesday night: Partly cloudy and cool. Low 48° F(16 C).

Wednesday: Partly sunny and milder. High near

70° C (38o C). Low 50° F (18 ° C).Thursday: Mostly sunny and mild. High 70° F-

75 ° F (38 ° C-43 ° C). Low 50°F-55° F (18° C-23 °QC).

Forecast by Michael C. Morgan

-~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ., I 1 --~~~~~~~. 11 1

-7'_-Operation Rescue'wonfollow permanent injunc,

Officials of the anti-abortion group Opersaid that a permanent injunction will not keeblockading abortion clinics. Spokeswomanmacher Said that the court order is..a ,pap,said that the temporary injunction'was issubut hundreds of people' were. arrested forEtests after that. She said that most of those;had no jail time and -a few were jailed for' two.

Schumacher said that her groupis gearingblockades -planned on November second. Adlesex Superior Court made the injunction pweek. The judge said that the court orderMassachusetts.

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The Teh? Je/i -teus- at okurl ec:; .. s... ..n. ::riDe W' ipose~ine Lea iy our' 'coontinue to be 253-1541.) [

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:--TUESDAY",:, OCTOBER 22, 1991 ' -TheTech PAGE 3.~~~~~~~ ~~~~ I , ... ,; "5,. --7 .'-:.:'- ,?::.: .c!7 ' : :/;:): :, ,-::.i.;.i.: i.:7i.7:';-:-:.!: :'':. 4; ?;;,7;!'::.,.; ,::":":7:7;7...',: ' ,: 77.:.:, ." :",:.:,... :, .' .

-ii--..::..F resin, California, kill I10P:'irie -ruciks scre'amed through the streets of Oakland,

Calif., yeSterda'y in a battle to control a wildfire that has

... ' .... Ex-hostage Edward Tracy -: --_ ......' --'" nder treatment' -E

- - A Boston veterans h o kesmanl said that former-American hostage Edward'Tracy is still under treatment

Itt -more than two months after.his release. The 60-year-old-Tracy was released. in August by Shiite Muslims in Leba-

,tion non. -He was taken. hostage five years ago yesterday.ration Rescue Tracy was admitted to Boston Veterans Administrationep them from Medical Center when he returned to the United States. ItMarch: Schu- was his first US visit in 26 years. The hospital spokesmaner tiger." She said that Tracy is healthy, but is undergoing psychiatricued last May, evaluation and:treatment. He said-that Tracy-isin a gemr-:'abortion pro oral i~ychiatriNcward wifll other patients,:.and is not

iarrested'have allowed,:to travel outside the ward. Spokesman Williamonly'a day or Burn-ey said that his treatment is not something that can

- -~ ' be discussed publicly..up.fIor clinic : -Whe' released, Tracy' appeared disoriented and had

judge in Mid- trouble completing sentences. An attorney said that his)ermanent last family is to meet with doctors this week ,to discuss hiscovers all of condition. His mother, Doris Tracy, lives in South Bur-

lington, Vt. , with her daughter's family.. -; :. , .;. .

Compiled by Joey Marquez

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Page 4: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

L le-a~ga, -~Wrse~a~s~ab~Fs~--··PB~a~p~rs~- ~ I ~ · P~sllb~BeP as rsrrn

k~s~k" I I 'B~aP9·B13~P~·P-~B ~ .. I , I

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Volume 1 1 1, Number 44 ..... Tuesday, Octobe(.22, 1991

Chairman ................. L..... ....... Lois E. Eaton '92Editor in Chief .......... ............. Reuven M. Lerner .'92 Business Manager .. ............ Mark E. Haseltine '92Managing Editor .....:. ...... .......Josh Hartmarn n 93:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...News Editors .............. ......................;..... Karen Kaplan '93

.- ,,::- Brian Rosenberg 1'93- . > . Katherine Shim '93.

Night Editors ............... ......................... Daniel A. SidneyG- .. f. ~ -David A. Maltz;'93

Jeremy Hylton '94¢Opinion Editors ........... . ... Bill Jackson '93

Matthew H. Hersch '94Arts Editor .................. ;,.............. ;Deborah A. Levinson -'91Photography Editor s ....... ....................... . Vipul Bhushan·G

. 1 ~ 3Douglas D. Keller '93Contribu ting Editors ............................... Peter Dunn G

; '· iMichael J. Franklin '88~ ,~i . - RussellWilcox '91

' Dave WattAdvertising Marnager ..... ........... Benjamin A. TaD '93Production Manager .......................... Marie E. V. Coppola '90

control neededwould commit a crime or develop mental problemsA computer network would be set up with the re-cords of anyone who wants to get a license.

A person would have to pay for and attend class-es on gun safety and maintenance and pass anexam. A~person would have to pass a physical ex-amination. A person would have to take a targettest - just to make' sure that he can hit what he'strying to shoot at, instead of people and buildings.If he fails, he will have to pay' for a remedial class.Failure to pass any of this would result in denial ofa license.

A one-month waiting period would be imposedon the purchase of any new Aguns. All gun purchaseswould be recorded and anailyze d bY_ a computer forany suspicious buying patterns, like -buying fiftyGlock 17s.

Illegal sales of guns would result in a severe andlong prison sentence. -T fkei :0f !-20

years. Then again, why not 25:?'But : I doubt mostpeople would like that.) If iyou're'ggaing to be in-volved in the death trade,- you'have to take -therisks. All crimes committed with·.a gun should re-sult in years being tacked on to'the offender's time;murder committed with a gun should be punishable by death (I like decapitation, buy-erdoubt most peo-ple wouldclike that,. either),:? X current licenseswould be voided, aid 'present t1 klcs holders wouldbe required to meet the new re'qiuirements.

You might be saying that too many people ownguns already, and that any attemrpt: at gun controlwould be impossible. Well, guns can't be fired with-out ammunition. Eventually it's got to run out, anda grace period could be established with incentives

(Please turn to page 7)

Jae H. Nam is a junior in the Department ofMechanical Engineering. .; ....

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An armed man has an insane iihatred of 'women.He goes into a building filled with people. He startskilling people. Sound familiar?

It should. A candlelight ceremony at MIT washeld- last year because a madman went on a ram-page in a Canadian university. In Texas last week,another madman with a similar intent committed asimilar crime with a similarly horrifible result. Sowhat should we do? Should we hold another can-

. dlelight ceremony? How many more of these shouldwe be prepared to hold? Frankly, it's not going tostop unless we decide to get serious about gun con-trol, but Congress is on the National Rifle"Associa-tion's payroll.

So, what do we do? Write letters to your Con-gressmen. Ram 'em down their throats. Don't votefor them. That way, they'll know what it's like to beon the receiving end instead of living their privi-leged lives, giving themselves raises, bouncingchecks, getting parking tickets fixed, niot paying forbills and not being subject to some of their ownlaws.

I do not have a favorable opinion towards ourright to bear arms. I wouldn't be saddened at all ifno one were allowed to carry guns, but that's-obvi-ous!y way out of the mainstream. True, you have-aright to bear arms, but only as long as yep use itresponsibly. So I suggest that only those who havethe business of carrying guns to be allowed-to carrythem: law enforcement, armed forces and hunters.No one else has any business with a gun. The com-mon citizen should still be able to buy guns forhunting and sporting purposes, but the procedurefor obtaining a license should be rigorous.

If I were in charge, anyone with a serious crimi-nal offense would not be given a license and neitherwill anyone with psychiatric problems. Anyone witha license would have it stripped from him if he

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PAGE 4 The Tech TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1991

instead. The Regulars. then' confer in hushed toriesuntil the confused "student:gives a long nod of a:-ceptance and slaps his forehead like in an old "V-8"commercial, all the while-rolling his eyes at his ownstupidity. ..

A few rows back sit the :Recording Secretaries.These are the people who take perfect notes, inTechnicolor and 3-D; When the-lecturer draws apicture on the board, they break out the watercol-ors and set up an easel. They are so anal aboutwriting everything down that they take parentheticalstage directions about the lecture, so when they re-view their notes they read lines like, "Then you takethe (professor sneezed -heie) Poisson distributionand graph it." It, is not desirable to be a RecordingSecretary, because they tend to wind up laughing tothemselves in a small room. somewhere, mutteringto themselves, ,I couldn'- hear what he said. Imissed that last part. Whatvdid he say?" On theother hand, it is extremely desirable to be friendlywith a Recording Secretary,--because their notes cansave you from having to bother with lecture at all.

Next are the Munchers, who see lecture as aprime opportunity to enjoy a five-course meal.They arrive at five after the hour, balancing fooditems in their hands, and settle into a chair. Luckilyfor the amusement of the :rest;of us, the architectsof most MIT lecture: hlls designed the little desksto sit at just the right angle so that a ten-ounce cupof coffee slides toward the;coffee drinker at the rateof 1.5 inches per second. --

The Muncher sits down,cputs down her books,pulls out her desk, and places liher Dunkin' Donutscup on the angled surface. She-then reaches downto get a notebook and the cup begins to-crawl to-ward her. She pulls out the notebook and books upjust in time to catch the coffee. and set it back at thetop of her desk. She then- eaches down'to get apencil and the cup again makes- its move. -Again she

-looks up to, catch it just in -time.: This' ti itm e , s h e putsit down on the desk hard and holds it there-a mYo-ment; as if she's "training" -it to be good. It doesindeed stay where- sher p uts, ii, :- a"fi beast; :ufitii --she-turns around, at which time it makes another kami-

- kaze' run for::her tip."This- rlth-imat-ely.:resultss inh:'.ither, (1) a .stain which ;makes there loki-likd offie'r ?-"before" picture in a Depeind undergarments. com--mercial, or (2) one damn obedient cup of coffee.

Of course, there are many I'm forgetti-ig, such asthe common species Correctus D. Professorus and:, ':those::people who take the back row (BOP --Bring;Your Own Pillow). I- cxuld- go on and on...

Oops, lecture just eiided. IIe goft to stop writing:-now.

- Contrary to the attitudes of. most:(MIT/ under-grads, I enjoy going to lecture. I appreciate-the.chance to catch up on my reading, sleep and gener-ally organize my life. Not to mention scribblingcolumns for The Tech on the back of my notes.

Detailed market research by experts from MIT'sStallone School of Management and Rambo Moviesshows that just over 73 percent of MIT undergradu-ates read The Tech during lecture. Initially, Techstaffers were excited that students found the papermore interesting than they found their professors.However, this excitement was dampened when wefound out these same underrads were desperateenough for entertainment that they also read Cam-pus Calendar, College Monthly, U Magazine, BayWindows, Fax, The Thistle, Dianetics and a pam-

l~het. handed out by the Jews for Jesus- with Bart.SamPson discussing theology. (yes, such a pamphletaRctally exists.):; You may, in fact, -be in lecture as you read this

c:1umn. If so, that's wonderful, becauseI'd like tot~-~you for a tour of the sights you'll probably beable- to see from your seat. Those of you actuallyreading this on your own time, well... I'm sorryyou don't have anything better to do. Try to

-,remember back to your last lecture.Let's start at the front of the lecture-hall. Many

of the blackboards here at MIT are electric, andmove up and down under the control of buttons .orother controls located beneath them. They are sim-ple to use and -always do what they'ret ,old unlessyou are a professor trying to explain a complex, im-possible concept to 250 staring undergraduates. Inthat case the- boards will do exactly the opposite ofwhat they're supposed to and create a long, uncom-fortable pause, breaking the collective train of/h6ight- and confusing everyone in the room for theremainder of the lecture. However, these boards areworthwhile because after they cause this confusionand the students get lost in the lecture -they havenplentyof time/to copy down the incomprehensiblenotes that remain on the board, twenty feet abovefloor ievel.

Lecture halls vary widely. On one end is 6-120,the Ritz-Carlton- of lecture ;ha,-which leeps :154comfortably -in big, cushioned chairs. Or the otherend is 54-100, a dark-hall located too doamn farabove ground which, among other features, has-hard wood, chairs designed to leave you so numbthat you wouldn't notice -it if Clarence Thomaspinched your butt. .. <

In the front row of the lecture sit the Front Row!-Regulars. They sit in the front row during every lec-ture. Every time the professor, makes a major point,they nod, as if they know the professor won't go onunless the, students in the front row provide confir-mation of the material. Every once in a while, oneof the Front Row Regulars doesn't nod.-Jassertionand stares at the professor with a furrowed brow

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NEWS STAF .Associate News Editors: iice N. Gilchrist '94, Joey Marquez'94; Senior Writers: Andrew L. Fish '89, Linda D'Angelo '90;Staff: Lakshmana Rao G, Joanna E. Stone '92, Shannon Mohr

- '93, Judy Kim '94, Sharon Price '94, Chris Schechter '94, Kai-Teh Tao '94, George Ipe '9t, Sarah Keightley '95, Sabrina Kwon'95, Eric Richard '95; Meteorologists: Robert X. Black G, Robert'J. Conzemius G, Michael C. .Morgan G, Yeh-Kai Tung '93, MarekZebrowski.

PRODUCTION STAFFAssociate Night Editors: Matthew Konosky '95, Garlen C. Leung'95; Staff: Maya N. Federrnan '92, Jonathon Weiss '93, SashaK. Wood '93, Minh S. Le '95; TEN Director: Jeremy Hylton '94.

OPINION STAFFPawan Sinha G, Christopher M. Montgomery '93, Jae H. Nam'93, Jason Merkoski '94. :

SPORTS STAFFNick Levitt '94, Jennifer M. Moore '94.

ARTS STAFFMark Webster G, Manavendra K. Thakur '87, Michelle P. Perry'91, Sande Chen '92, David Hogg '92, Rick Roos '92, Roy Cantu'93, Kevin Frisch '93, Chris Roberge '93, Brian Rose '93, Nic Kel-man '94, David Zapol '94, Chris Wanjek.

PHOTOGRAPHY STAFFAssociate Photography Editor: Sean Dougherty '93; Staff: Mort-gan Conn G, Dan McCarthy C;, Andy Silber G, Jonathan Kossuth'92, Lerothodi-Lapula Leeuw '92, Michelle Greene '93, Sang H.Park '93, Hugh B. Morgenbesser '94; Darkroom Manager: Wil-liam Chu G.

FEATURES STAFFChristopher Doerr G, Jon Orwant G, Mark Hurst '94.

BUSINESS STAFFAssociate Advertising Manager: Shanwei Chen '92; AccountsManager: Jadene Burgess '93; Staff: Karen Schmidtt '95,Pradeep Sreekanthan '95.

ADVISORY BOARDV. Michael Bove '83, Harold A. Stern '87.

Tech Opinion Editor Bill Jackson '93 hopes that allof his anal friends who take good notes won't takethis personally and will still give him their notes.

PRODUCTION STAFF FOR THIS, ISSUENight Editors: .................. . Daniel A. Sidney G

Josh Hartmann '93Associate N!ht Editor: ...... ........ Matthew Konosky '95 :Staff: Vipul Bhushan G, V. Michael Bove '83, Deborah A.Levinson '91, Reuven M. Lerner '92, Bill Jackson '93, GarlenC. Leung '95.

The Tech (ISSN 0148-9607} is published on Tuesdays and Fridays during the academicyear (except during MIT vacations), Wednesdays during January, and monthly duringthe summer for $20.00 per year Third Class by The Tech, Room W20-483, 84Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139-0901. Third Class postage paid atBoston, MA. Non-Profit Org, Permit No. 59720. POSTMASTER: Please send alladdress changes to our mailing address: The Tech, PO Box 29, MIT Branch,Cambridge, MA 02139-0901. Telephone: (617) 253-1541. FAX: (617)258-8226.Advertising, subscription, and typesetting rates available. Entire contents © 1991 TheTech. The Tech is a member of the Associated Press. Printed by Charles RiverPublishing, Inc.

Sgh yo ' I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·....S- tS. ou- see., in-, ,turesColumn by Bill Jackson ': !¥:

Harsh new gunColumn by Jae-H. Narn

Page 5: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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'Column~bv-JonaithanR R cmond -'" ,' ,* < ':.9..:You ae~hrey n- ,Karma and, wil be reincarnated as, mosqui--~ " /~~~-~~ ~~ ~ ..r: ~ : - ;. "'

,David:,A. z,~ M 9-,Yualeqtb`' 3.... ...sage bills? in fu~'ll,0Jil :fnd,-ousel-" te"' The cab lecr p' '. ~.-

sued' i, Cabrige Dstr ct Cou: ' t.: -endow, it withs 'acertaih';period' charml. TheAll I wanted to do' was look- at, some-qckfrunning water:is 'hotvinf itself objec-levs. !t'ssups edly sAo m ething One does' ;?ti nble.' ,The:New,..World---c010ial n. at

in Ne:-En~and durng tat aminhl .sa- .:,' generally' seem 'far, :-16'00. ,coni~rnid ; with,son the, local colonials-insist ,on naming-,-scrubbing. tesls ea'-tuderm"fall.'; In all my long years as an inmateof, .themselves of naiurai'body} oils-(arid dur-"'this .august institutioh, I'd never had the-.ra my c oleedays'in'the O.'0 'utyi

chac ,t indulge in .such, trivial -'pursut. would,-be a ,Yarec'Week ht.a ebte'but, granted the' remission -my PhD, had fi- more than'~once)., But-/put some 60 bopdes,'nally earned --,I de.termined·-to,-finally together in close confi'femnet, ,arid.-the rate.see what the fuss was all about,: BoYOod-cie'c

1, should have lknown,,better than·to heed cording', to--Bo's La*,--by anwekponential'.Maltz ~-a someWhatgoofY-ldoking. over,,.-function; -can present'a health hazard-in'grown BOy Scout of: h-ifellow- with ,',ar. the absence- f IstAeli~issue gsmsks: *":

han~~~~~~~. is:- be:The- cabin.haS three.!e'els, and then activ-,':'"nkore energyta is-bcomingo res.~tablie ,gentlefolk: when he 'assured~,i". Aites'of sleep are tobe 'ostemsibly conduct-

· th~th "Fal Cteri" ,rlP:planedby the-.,-,ed on -the, top, an-d'`,b~ttom.':h:oplvl 'MIT, Outing Club~in conjunction -with, the-' consisted of a--mas's 'of miattresse's'laid~'side-,\~Wellesley. Outing Club: would have, activi- b-ie ihntasdk-o ro ewe'ties suitable -for wimps and' cowards such them,- There -weren't .enough mattresses- for: '.

as me. But with. an'assurance that the treeseahbdino-srge oavoewould be, "in -fulblo"IaretoynO'~~~~~~~~ aoemking on-,then peilelyow. ,ture into thie unknown. Threwa n....tawi

The,c'lub!s Intier'valeCab in i~sseta half-,,. There --sno :mpintlwaiin hr ',thamter pilowmiie from-.the-parkimg' lo cos ~k'. Marfi0{tt this~ws :W~nbt-,· : ' ' < · ... ,"'and- fears'omie-forest,:d~xubtless'pop u la t ed I-an~ tees'bogt-y ''e'by~ bears, snakes and other outlaws from stidslkspams,polite society-, There "are several blood-andermedtosepBy3mhwevt h i r s t y .4 o u n d s t o b e e n cd o d et e rm ie dt se n r u e ,. B r y r e s,-ol ve v' w., a li g a p r;. ,.T h

specially trained so-i semed to sniff out,; sounds of guitars .beeing lazily strummedthe pa~tent smell of.well.-cooked MIT herd. filtred up from do-winstairs, to mix with'

Lavatprial. a'ctivities are ostensibly icon-. the operatic issuanceS. ~ of the Writhing 'and"dct-i a n~othos;repare. to-. Un- 0diferous'serp~entine line-up -of hibernating '

10ad" announces a ..sign;:,on the.--exterior,- bodies-ini-bags. -There were neither' ear-and .the ,advice-is -weli~-hepd~ed 'since, once muffs.nor' Israeli-issue--gas -masks-,'at-ha/fid."'inside,-it,' certaiply,:isn .. l'-! r~ow, -On 'the!:,~' :At -four the guitars c'eased their toll, and Joaha...mn/heTc

c~id.-blte~:nd riny.. evningof arrival. ',.- A::verntuired 'dow~nstairs, bgin-hand. A'- l- -The'" sven,~_iost Sheep'iu~ eunt Intervale (from left to rightJ:'-Outingamajority of males d i 1otfe, obliged. to , departed, the sleeperst: chorusaae t - Cib c-Presidents Allen lhn 9 n aidatz'3Elen Weinrep,

c0-mpletes-tlhe'blgaimage to ~thstructure =-- unite, in "Hallefujah:." - '"-: ' 'Stanislaw- areck 9~Caro- Fowler,--Eric Lamp and Astrid Richter '95.anunlit hill. 4Thatli'sthe prob:~ At'seven I foundsmyself plucked b~hg- -,' 'e nadve h naoslaec~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rowang .. , r v-' 'a'i'l' '·' ' -t:q'- 0y' " 'ufed tO jelly.

Iem-witli lare ou otmen , - 1...-...~....,~. . . . 'lrouginmte yZII[inds'~tcu1, pJillllaPS i'lsaalfalI~~, ' -,-~: "~' "p ~s" arl '-,Te m Ifi-Cloi scenery,, ever i changing, ".'I~e -t end,to'ims No .wonder ::fast~bouind-.Mat, ISuc 9 al to reof st.oll or...... Threserv~ 7. -- 'P ...-- ' - - - ... ' ,---' d'' ... l o it o just a whimsical srl rto he....."A '~ u;:¢.;r , fx,~,; ...... -evy non'. and~mling will--su-r-elv.'0nl¥y- lacrease-,the- '-aalitude was gainned, c9ud not........ -: ': ' -,,- 0,, .' , ........ d :in'-co' r Th-6ast- a "spell The 'evergreens,-ouczzleavpz om wihot, t- 7~1,say-,damages to 'be, awbydtd ... · ... . . . .

:' ,,breakfast whidhifot16Wed.--0ancakes with 'fresh water frpom the might before,esaitcnprybuomthmrowwhen altzan n oncedthe choices of rocksuch-things ass~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - p' ' anna, an ff W '

-:chocolate, bits was,"~ however,. extremely ceibntg, zm reJonatascd calent freen, theirleciuu brthren mamber ad tri-nbodywoudamtsfape. ~~~~~~~~~~~good. And the choice Darjeeling tea ! hadMyse~~~~~~~~~alenfro therddoush bretrnmd· v ysel brt~gh~ forfi~ Selfridges' made the'- a carpet that provided welcome repose for dsoiint~hslte pin

wo'- ld sem lke abtttr~plathe yes f no thefeet' A Mniatre wter- Left on an island, I reluctantly joined afall emerging 'from under-, ~i halo of leaveshingropbutwmledwnheoaEmma C. D~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~v~ikiggr, bttwo mileshdown the road

Emma Davi, th mush'06in~/omn, wa~ersied by Emilio Mayorga '92, and absconded, letting them flay their feethad been up since ditwn collectingt~he fun- ws-6Poecvlzdatv

ga;objects- of -her b-d'es'r. The'- tcntmlt -itas.ulnwieIorsdig~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~aloe wire I pusuedmre civlied i-troe se hd lovngl -ndartstcaly ds-charms. Malt', 'Spotting the sheep astray tries. First, there was the flush'-toilet to·-played on a board to).the side:was accore- from. the flock, 'beckoned us on and we fn:adoe,-,aeilzdi h otfind:rasd ofef.meialie. And then forth

panied by a ~ ~ ~ ~ citnued to 'interlope across this land- Cna odis~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Conay ftoeri offiche.a undten- cforaessary to .discourage the dismembering of scape governed by Nature, not by .Us. dieaoglaycutyraseup~

he d~dly-looking babies for a. "pancakeher~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~ de Tlhe last mile took us above the treeline tsweeoecudimla Ia7,_surprise."-,- ~and across a bar'ten and slippery rock face so n trltntrfoOxf~ ~ ~ : 'OdadC :ii e universities' ' lasipse. Mu :, .Oxfordand Cmbfid g . ... , ...- . ... - _- . _. .. ,.:~% .... ~...a ur enroachmnt.tArwelltersnhilenegioning ona McanaldsThe'tming to do in the count~ryside, of wihrplse u nrahet swl' l~~~~oinfi"E-xmining- B 0aiL rdwy wavlk- .English Exani~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~intio. "Us oureisto eit'herrambleg Courld prenetra te hamburger, They should put movingwakEnglis Examiation.Question ."Uecusisteihramlortr1,pefrwysn the hiking trails as well as escala-

'. the Othousenot the'snow," ompare.ably, pausing ' at an appropriate grassy 'here, so why ,should we?. At the summitwaso'knoll to..partaike of a'picnic~hamler from' 'hr m ay ae been no pub, but the sighttosuthhiIIhugt

anff'co~~~~ ~ ntrs th'iuaive: Us Gofanug Fortnuma. There 'were, 'ilw'~ever', only of endless miles of leaf-bleeding trees I was supposedly returning next to Bos-in this Statement with the alterntv:eo"ie"-n rmls rsrlst emd o astriin phtgahic back- ton, but went by the cabin' to pluck away

-. in he Othous, no in'he snw." hich found. But I took ·aiong my twveed jacket drop as, surrounded by loneliness, w eedo you, consider richer 'from a metaphori- an an aml upyo owiinbae ria oehra h o . promised a ride. Stanislaw was not yetcat point of,~ view? Elicidat/e -the different smokd salmn toampleastupprly of recifyan Satourdarial toethenin atd wthmoe peoplesmoed almn t iileat prtl retif an Satrda evnin an, wth orepeole back from the rock-climbing trip uponentailment' of "using" and "going" and ohrieiapof't mine n ethe consquencesfor a pst-moden the- therwis~inapparrivedmbience andisewarrivedrthencaintwaseurstingaththeahichohehadlsohoolishlgengage.DDinne

off n-te "egin~rs~nermdiae' ike seams. The MIT group had chicken stir- to lcwns fsiln oiscm-ory of litrary meanig.' Maltz as to'lead' fry' undrway, whil the troop frompetta g for the food in the confined quar-

Coopratin isdemndedin tis lace We had~- upa Montan thy relly Wellesley had spaghetti on the boil. The ters. And then the room divided in three:"As asignresolteb;declares: ,,We Work on h0ionitnsetable, besal~t pthes hns-rAs a sgn reolutelshoul, insall esalko's up hese -hings - ¢l hickenMaltzltokecooperze.v a eforeheeheatyfooverhe

anhonor Systemi, Freeloaders have bad -tlatspl ea hi'evc n got a hold of it, so he contented himself ls adpaiga ,scn n han at ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~leastsupl carsd-ayn caira servcend andth

. ., '~ ', ' r~--' ' ' ..... ' ' ' ~a~~iith inhalina .snaghetti instead, while di- sounds of laid-back guitars and a mando 7· .... ~ "::"' '" : r e c ting the masses t~~~~~~~~o the co~mpulsory lin issuing from the end of the room. Itt!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rcig thCampfies touthiecOampfire outside. ~~was oh-so wairm and jolly, and. I hadn't

c~~~~~~~~~~ee had to take any exercise to earn my'Puff the Magic Dragon," "Kum-Ba- eeYa," "Guantalamnera," assorted symupy plctBea~tleg songs ~followed, the' sort of A fire was lit outside, and a crowd

ichmltznoboy~it, amitto ejoyngwalked out to examine the star-spatteredbut wich-ast~.a wam Lins blnketsky so full of bright-glowing objects that it

' :., -- ,, ,;:'- ;~.' ;'-:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ar~oun~iild-6'mh u ia bilaze-.' A regression was -surel y ,,,,,.

~r.':: .,~~of childish innocence, not mathematics.' Adtea h vnn rwoiBr. light, well-exercised faces, lit up in song;dandomettSaiswhdsilntVI~ ~~~~;~-~: problem sets .and other problems were left., returned; and neither had Maltz nor a sub-"~':~'~'~'' " many a miled away; the grey of infinite .stantial number of others. And the next'~ '· : "'lonely corridors Was gone. moettig wr uee a'nit e

"One of the colonial -fellows knew the scneonterwdowocredagqlldold loalit sng,"Llyd Gergethe rock climbers' perhaps unintentional

· - : ............. '~ ~d-::~:~no~~~~~~~~~~~~~s My:Father,'-,:but mY- attempts to in-. iapaigat":- ,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~oe.4: ~:t "vk':'~thre e -pat on-of.Lno'e-pit'rcundf _Ld6do~s A group took 'off to alert Conway

Barlri~drw te teaherus espnseofMountain Rescue; whom they joined todt-i'Bur, Le~it urn`withode-Scour the dark in, a vain search for se-,.en

· '"~' ~'~"~ '~mailds ,to '/~~~~~~~~~~Call the-,Engines, Call the (Pes unt ae 7)

"~' ": > ' '~ '~;'¢"~'~:"~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ poled the~serest of 'the masses Jonrithan. Richmond, who' received his~;~?,>~?~:!i}~.;:??:i·:,. ,~~Ift, 'fa"o-PhD degree from MIT in June 1991, is a

" .... '~ '" "~"" ' ,ards: :trip .:On ~~~~~~~~~~the morrow. We would~me- former arts editoradsnoeitrfTh""~" '; ":'/::??~ ",'?';: ,!::: .: ::?':; ',, r - ': t~r~i~ugh te counryside-with the heat-'h the count s ~~~~~~~~~Tech.

"Inside the, MlT00tn lft~:l pt intrvaeNwm she

~^;-.r I " I ..... I

Page 6: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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Shad OZ-8000 Organizer.In. tday's vWod, a busy Ifst~yl is a popular lilstyl. Sharpmaks R eair to-remarbr all the details -km qpecal Ovea to num, addrems, phonenwars, memos and cuiesards. Pluls,, k comes wig a dock, world dok,calendar, sid*, outline procsoi"r and calcul atoreures 32D characterscrew, typowkr styety keyboard,128KB, optio IC cards, builinsnHELP screesand so much morel-..... 34 .. ...9.

C~~ity s~i t alcf~~s 0 orb00at;-ntOunitafin 0 ie an- . (Cntin e',;'pi'ge'~N . ^ ' -;-.. ' ':gae sn .uich . trn rget c,n a ltogehe , :'r shared'clothing At -fist light we

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plaifibng '.greoup.ws~ofter:' and'~'.ewh-~:il-e.~r"~'-fl'-.:nob~,~oin-X~~t-f'ohet' thamontanfoud te"ighotailanXaFin eopes'eye. -~ : : , :.,,,,.'-,,~t~~k~yt'ju cto,;emsle p .a~sigtnbds ke d'r oms, ferebigsuddonult

come, dowm, ito wasn decied, that, sleepw',s in',. weUotnu',ao: fo a wie, an rel hoo ee postedfran e.,"' meri

ations would bere-com~menced. hree i~altz.' :,'-'. -. ,-' -A Matogethemougtlytheangers c two'ays psohmugsb volnted togdiven~:u offiA' aiet.. o-thatune: 'id "S'e, 'dd -h.od .Itheirn hon.- e-hd ae.'ahohr od onec

earthly hor to eheckif dawn~ha brotigh O.: fond apryoteced. as-,,reuwith an 'nie' .bi tes-Uclohs adeprecdo uunoightha, clmad sense.wo;' ro-ae'.-wrne ;. n~it' ie~'aantthe.~c'ad.hadd a esfu thaI c t he was nowidr'gicldseenthe .other's 'ras till. o,X,Afteibrokas da,' ''s'''-laf'.e,.'id-he ','-Gory-gory,-,ad 'g 'up as fued*Ture plan ed Clum- edewt.-have enduroed' prosl~ inaa ,..he tem intri'.ahd-.(imbs e S-,up. -djescribint- the,f` rater of ' h'atum'nale grouproutand the,:mwill getsl ost'-re. toesia,sc.,..4ezidedc.' - i ,ir H ,,:.' fte' una dpy -chinb,, dareok-h Wile,,in, -. smg :he alf~ frm w hl ot indhem he said.be

be good or the haracterand, enourag -n atoo sprthes.0~ Tis as-nen tral besta in pancakes' - withthm t~i ftreea'c~nads~a~. .,gopsI'eevr ~rkd ili .. } ohDri e headqat sep prono

urers inf -: th a

adouthouseswith passenger Stanlislaw on board, for the,journey back. Pausing at Wildcat, I wontlip. in the gondola while Stanislaw got- out

some textbooks to induce some much-needed sleep. Route 16 was packed withclenched-teeth drivers enduring the Co-lum-bus Day return to Boston, but 153,meandering like some ages-old Englishcountry lane, proved to be, a more pleas-ant, less crowded alternative. Oh for En-gland's Green and Pleasant Land!

Stanislaw kept up the conversation, onShakespeare and Chopin, politics, science,education, not quite aware that he was' en-gaged in a monologue with a sleeping driv-er whose finger responded just adequatelyto the curves in the hypnotic road. We fi-nally got the car backc to Avis in Boston,and Stanislaw declared an urgent need toreturn to his textbooks. "I'll only need toread for five minutes, and I'll be asleep,"he said.

.Now, Mis for, Massage as well as forMaltz. Maltz: get your checkbook ready,or meet me in Cambridge DistrictCourt,}. .

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_''-TUESDAUESDY, OCTOBERs 22, 1991 The T~eh PAGE 7 _I

| f :Srofna gn cotro lawfs, Stop senseless v o ence: Continued from page 4) , ;N ¢ <>wt h r-gun lobby on one point -that

- - - > . , s , ~~~~, . _ ,> 5 f ~~lukewarm attempt at gun control would be csent -the-, first thousand, or so to jail, maybe -the ;- p- g? pletely ineffectual and an absolute waste ofrst, would -get- the, idea. Cy PIL - . 0 and money and woulld onlly benefit the crim~

. ~~~1- .vIAr~ .. ou eeathnu Ivafnf t^ nrntprt ................... ?JThntic wzhv I'm tnl-i-na em-h a hnrch nnnrnn^.I Hat. 5 WnyX} M ai Sul uml a 1xars appludull.

Imagine 'this scenario. We're sitting togetheron the porch'ill straitjackets sipping lemonade.In fronot of us an eight-year-old child is gunneddown in a shootout. You gasp and say, "that'shorrible. 1, however, maintain my proper sense-about things and casually explain, "Well, yes,what-has just happened may be defined as tech-nically illegal, but in the larger scope of things,this--is a -mulch better alternative than to restrictyour right to bear arms.'

0-,,,1'i, -hltti 5,n,,ario: An armed robberholds up you and yufredad blows yourlfriend away when he or she doesn't complyquickly enough in handing over five bucks tofeed his crackc habit. You remark most poignant-ly, "Alas, but'at least our right to bear arms isstill'alive."

,t anycoln-.timeiinal.

- ow about inose wnoJany lny WantL 10 PltOEVL

'themselves? -Well , Idon't belie've'themi. You'remore likely to kill, someone you - cuow, than, anycriminal. And I bet the average person is-.an exam,Pert shot who takes -time to practice and. cleanhis gun- and is alsos good' at shooting in, the dark .too. Yeah right-, ~-Rambo. - a :.t, f :.-

1 u:wntthis le A elabiding citizens with- -out: guns;ad- Arimides with guns? Well, -if tthe,eco nomics of -this', hold ~out, guns will be -ex-o

criminal would be abe toafr0h.B-rcd"Aug-dealer would -find gn;cbn into -hisprofits.''.-

\ But what about the hassle? Yeah, Well, dyinig - -isnI't funl- either.---- I may have alienated many readers by now

--and that's too bad. But I'll be honest: I do -a'gree:

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Page 8: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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Page 9: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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Page 10: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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inspiredaydn's Symphony No. 90. Strings fellon the many difficult passages, andOrchestra as a whole sounded under.A performance of Handel's com-Water Music' to end the evening,

)roved to be a mistake. Despite somedid brass and captivatingly warbling; the orchestra lacked a sense of co-i, and the music too quickly becameIS and over-taxing on the concentra-It would have been better to havejust one suite of Handel's colorfuland done it properly.

OrpheunWaving arms obscured his legs as he,d around the front of the stage, andterous cheers filled the theater as theleft the stage and the final chords of;ed" disappeared.

JESUS -JONESWith Ned's Atomic Dfstbin.Orpheum Theaten Oct. 10, 7:36,pmn.

By SANDE- CHEN,and -ALBERT-D -- --LAU

OR THOSE OF_-YOU WHO COULDN'T'bear to tear yourselves away fromyour late-night tooling sessions,you, missed a great double bill

with Jesus Jones and Nqed's Atomic Dust-bin at the Orpheuni. From the start, theatmosphere was charged, the audience waspsyched, and it sure beat doing a problemset.

I

The sold-out show began promptly at-7:30 pm .with the opening act, Ned's-Atomic Dustbin. -The wildly appreciativeand jubilant crowd were already on theirfeet. An hour-long run through God Fod-der,, Ned's 'debut album, was more thanenough-to get them going.--

-Ned's breezed through "Less Than Use-ful," "Uiitil You Find Out," ."Skill Your,Television" and'"Cut Up" or as leadsinger John called it, "the Stomp-Your-.Fet-Until-They-Hurt Dance"- with head

humning intensity and little inxtertialon-.:Their first single; "'Happy,"_ generatedmuch adoration and applause. After

e;'1-111t~-¢. .S~at,'-andi. -"Grev__pells.Gre il's Ned' annoujiced a "short- e-

_- _- -_- _ _ _ --- - -

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FREE TICKETS FOR - -5TUDENT S ~ v-· -'j~icjd~,

jW- 0 ATINOCULTURAL. -EVENINGS ; PLANN ED

*The Office- of the Arts is sponsoring t#Q>-_excursions to performances of the IBA--Art-y Cultura Cafe Teatro Series at }helJ6rgeSHernandez Cuttukal Center in the 'SouthEnd.'

On Friday Oct. 25 cat 9pm:9Astrid Hadad: "Heavy Nopal.'kAreinterpretation of Mexican history thro'ughsongs anc-d'per ormance.

~n, Fridv No~v` -8 'af_8:30p'm:C~i!Dv'Onni Hildog>, congo drum virtuosos

oReserv~ations mft b mod EN RtlSON;ONLY a the OG:dfk th rs E -0OCne -icket' per MIT studen ID A $5,0tdeposits is re'qui~red ,4wilb returnedafter he" trip),. ORV60id/T'student IDs must bepresenwte&'-.~ :

Plaickets' Will ,b'e- ,i'stribut6"digit Bu~ildi~ng,,1 E 15one hou'r ,before-c'urtain'time on'the-datei of

eahevent.Ron¢~ri trans~portiprovded j~r -n~fomatton-co1:"253-4OW03

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,ever, was dfinitely Jesus Jones. Thie banmdwas as wildly out of control on stage as T te TechPerformting 2rts Serms _naoureesNed's Atomice Dustbin. They didn't play asfast as expected;--but still were-very ener- EVGENYXKSSIN >.getic and intense. - ·.. Only- 9 -years old, Evgeny Kiskin has already played at Carnegie Hall and with the New

Jesus Jones~o pened with the -frenetic, . - e; e York -Philharmoic, and seems destined to become a piano superstar of the' nextdisehordant- soun~tds of tiheir debut ali~m ... generation. Pjram: Liszt, Song Transcrnptions of Schubert; Hfungan Rhapsody, .iquzd6~izer .and- garnered.- great response . *-- no.. 12; . Scih'brt; Wanderer Fantasie, Op. 15; Brahms, Capriccios & Inltermezzos,

Op.,116, nos. 1-7. A Bank of Boston Celebrity Series event.Mciuntaitls, avrow, Eh~~i'- an-~8~d I~ PeI~Ye.-I;: · Sjypzhony Hall, October 24, 8 pm.Moduntains," "Nerver,-Enouppgh"',$ad "The' -~T yc= 7Real World" from the-samne album. -.

It was evidently howeve-r, -thzat.Jesu's JOHN-7W1ILLIAMS, -Jonles' second , albums a 'Doubi,, ,was Ihe - - Classing guiftarist. lohn Wifllamg is the heir to the traditions established by Andresmore well-kniown df th wo Their-thre - SegoTv-ia'.- Tiff informal style is inviting, his technique brilliant and rigorous. ProgramTop 40 hits, "Internationa l W~gtYung . . . ............. w i l nld.works by Villa-Lobos, V,-jgi 'Uicue,"ivaldi, Granados, Albeniz and Cordoba. A-Bank

ThirE, Z~i~ Herekiht Nw"~ ad the ~ -, of Boston Celebrity Seres devaent.

current "Real Real Real-,7 produced an au-,,,0da al Nvme l mdible audience -chorus,: -- Other -,son~gs, on .ie q~,,$..

Dob were-.is o e tuitically received. Tickets are on sale at the Technology Community Association, W20-450with extra _emp'hasiis on1 "el eoe&`Back in the Student C~enter. Once ,~hours posted on the door. Call x3-4885 fo~rVictoriar and,d.,Are You Satisfied?' De- .fw --- 'gther information.

"evief-ie:riiitlke an auiomm'ta' t ent i. up The'Tech- Perfprming Arts Series, a service for the entir MIT

U~~~esus ~ ~ ~ 0 foee h~rw o ny.sod.. omnty, fiom'-Ti Tec, MIT's. student newspaper, in eqn/unctioniip&-.<but thoroug'hly enjoy~ed theselves, -'4ith -the Technology Community Association, AfT's student community

., ..es .s.

I

.·",l-:TESDAY,'OCTOBER 22-, 1991' The'Tech' PAGE 11 _N "

H e~~~~r' Orcipta '0%'occasionaO~oMlY CHQ"BER ORCHESTRA - .the, Saturday eveningI Waily Weekend slot . for~a'nce_ of the evening. Oboe soloist off

Conducted bdy S'6~ eve: cDondaldP - in Kresge. Auiditorium. To start with, ',.Alain:Tissier G produced many felicitous apartWoirks by, Bach,·jande·anc-Haydn Kresg~.:. s ,e sth wrong ~pliace:- -they sound- . touches along with a strikingly plaintive the or

.l:,awrence~c~;;ronv~~e';~-.Vd ' --;3'.· >.' " - small Pd.,of~ p lace there,'ad should 'tone, while violinist Lawrence Jones strain.AlinZ-irf''-l i' s _-_;~,_: ·i:: '- :"_,.~,~,,~~i7~'~t-s- ' i~'hii~^i rtt'Tt hi r s; . .m plasing. phrasing. The' plete

Kres?~gedtoria , -Oct.' l . - ut, mostI. imp~ort~ ay, 'aespite`the eerts .interplay. between soloists ,was 'inadequate also p- co iictor -Steveri M cD nild ·which did . for -Some ofd the performance, but pro- splend

-s; By-'ONATN ·la-giCHMO , . ,, result in amnumber of M'spifed moments,. -duced telling efects at times. The orches- winds,2 -the ensemble' stll sounds unsteady 'and not tra provided an adequate accompaniment, hesion

'HE MITCHAM]BERAORCHESTRha-/quite ready for' the pcerludes of interesting, ex- tedioue. tai.nly., i mprovqd:since _USiitearl- s- The:tconzet bigan--*ithBidMbocertt pPression,-jf marked- by rather too much tion. idays," but -it'sstaill q tuestiona I f D rviol~n· arnd-0boe;, S. 1 -and' it. untidines. -done jwheither they 'were, up AofESTPP~ -,taking' y ilatsuds-brinaretig·ea~ tdiu

, whether they wvere .up .to ~t~aking tured outitso be the most, successful. per- The orchestra did not successfuly bing work,

Jesu-s--Jone~v-;s ezlsectric charge to 0and with even' more energy. After a short .reminiscence on their earlier performance .at the Orpheum, they launched into"Blissed:' Midway through the song, Ed-wards stepped off the stage into the.audi-

- core" which went on for some time. Final-ly, they played, the, well-received -"Selfish"and-departed onel-by-orie to the fine '"Get

'off of that stage," from the song "What.Gives.My Son?"-' '

The muain ttraction-for the night, how-I1.I

L

-- -1-:- · :

Oliver, Wyman & Company-·':.;':New.-York London- Paris Toronto

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. ..OER,, WYMAN' & COOMPANY

Strateg y-Consultantsto the

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-MIT students are invited to attendour presentation

Wednesday, October 30 1991Room 4-149at 7:00 p.m.

:Partner John Drziiktt will discuss our firm, our philosophy,

and- the unique international career opportunitiesand challenges

offered by

Frankfurt

Page 12: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

-*~~~~~~~. ~~~~~..; .-~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ·.

PAGE 12 The Tech TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1991 _ -.

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Page 13: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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The meeting closed 'with an-nounlcements of events of generalstudent interest.' The first coni-cemned the $11200 fellowships of-"fered by-the Public Service Cen-ter for studeids interested in-i?6lic servce-proj s..- I~ r-

The IJA Safil* Coitiittee node >edthat '' Late Night- at'LobfdellI __"

which sponsred- a- talk entitled

gasm,' isi!~oki Mrand entertoeini acts.-

The last announcement con-cerned the class councils, whichture spoqnsqor,,_ga-- Battle of theClassk*s :«on- 1` r.6. TeMasses'Are Schfeduld o ,,

out at Killan Court trom lispmto 5 pm, in. events, such as leapfrog, wheel barrow and "di-bat" races'. Tlie cls offcr '-co-irag'eid as' maniy-people from'-their' respective'-dcasses- to show:their class spirit- by-4fining indi-vidual four-person teams. --

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5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~TEDY OCOE 22191Te'rech PAGE 13

and is directyu rePonsbe o' th eommen ations.o aren de~i- -space a ' xd'rntet'r'-a y ' i si' proe: ,'to en. a AS ' 'uexiost.fi ' -

dispu~tes.inc ,nManaThnuete Msc.e l;~ ; ,L-t

difasu tlY,-se respy;onsimebler - SA m,, - ;-;n- ',e -bea t is.g frmteG- n ''-Iircm eda'tio~q,.,rq: d ew n,,, i seprsna aI idtiieacf omity5;,C ---Set .4i0,& safid A-evec-exitar Kndis thes UA.-co T y he o ficr- o"te''b idhe, -JPero'92 lthfied | -G S-C *es-

c mtati ee of cl sudds th, groups odnt._, 30hn§n th k~ta alodo f-gtreaeure erentar e Ae mbtre co -: fc.AS akt ailtron'B n~et-FilO tbr2

mitge ofrteAS'omshv the c anps 'We-a:e, vey ite ,Ieeon-Dinr Pber ant boyIereetto -rpc ommendations dhleSown s, rersenatid Teac. Jhno, fporamf~- spaetosuetatftew' rnrd Mrol.KdllSue

cor UAt ofthe o'f ps.Aermsto:th M1 als e lieta svryanthvte: ope.ati'psil difiul t ero n"2 "Iaoc te spailed o e:FEASAare telS~eted ettie have the, geeaxibya stin grupsntanymu consen us 1asembly,,ct tonsitingde ofn meliete- hie,"addesad.'taings of l sthedASA , group hene JohnAsoniate teat alof catient Af-thatps teritrssaentbig frstdt Jactiit ace T whysita,|-- Ge ck snL by11

"Te ecuted nt texdecutive o istkn- difil tas k to, adilistening-',to-vari-'e' ,' iody Friday, October 025)bythe ASA, the aSA doesd.v-, -.caous. "Wte-. Mvegarn v'ter as 6;--

AStuen Presdent tot e a- po salloatdde. nothile a ny -'uhoney '92 proposdht the GSC's Areopnn in thuiasti togalloat nw-, C m rd &M ri ,Kn alSu r

said Td & Jhsompogam sac tostuent $afy CtivitER AR-sA, " CTOER6coodn or. of te CrnuS ushut' lsele -that ; it :0

thattheiSC epdrespentties hae theexisting sdscse gr' |Gue)HS~IS Tts: I C NE

of vacations, the length andplacement of' Residence/Orienta-tion Weekc, and the length ofreading periods and final exami-natcion periods.

Colleen M. Schwvinget '92, the.student representativ'e for theFaculty Policy Committee', spo'keabout the FPC~s current agendaduring the meeting. Sc'-win'el:talked about -a new faculty com.-mftbee wbi~c- Isiloniiiig "to study:indirect costs of research, a pro-ject inspired by the -current gov-ernment audit of MIT.

-Schwigel- said the FPC alsodiscussed ffilling the, vacancy cre-,ated by the recent death of Dean~-;.-for Undergraduate Education:Margaret L. A. MacVicar: 1 '65a_The committee is unsure 'whetherthey should. reshape, the wholedepartment or simply Ap~poi anewt dean to fill her'spot,-,by -the heissue will be -discussed- furtherand ultimately resolved, Schwin-gel said.-.:--

I

I

l >;>- -Xi' ''"4fi*^call e' . ;-2 - C .t-2w'm..p informafion

� � �, , . :.,. .. a - I . .. .t . �

First Boston, apcial bracket investment banking firm,e uree.in New York,..will be recruiting for itsffnanlcialanalyst program.. Positions: are available-in, the -Insbestmen~tBaikiing-, Sales-,and Trading, :Fixed Income Anaflyt ci's and--Mortgage Markets Departments. All sensors are cordially invitedto attend a presentation.Presentation:

Thursday, October 24, 1991-Room 4153

6:00 p.'m.Interviewing schedules:

Mortgage Markets: February 55 1992Investinent Banking: February 6, 1992

Sales,& Trading: Rebruary 6,41992Fixed Incom'e Analytics: :February 6, 1992

For further informnation and inquiries, please feel free to contact:

I . :7 . !, .

_~; . , , I < .. ... ....

Ii

i

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Rodney Miller-inVestrfen Bankiilg--:(212) 909-3953

Fix

Ray Wod;~~~ ,L&Ptst*-mte-t.Banlkie

(212) 909-2845Gai Kamhi ','"

Sales and Trading .bed Income AnalyticsWortgage. Markets(212)90Q9-2208

. - I

- 2ND FLOOR

O.P.EN TO, ENTIREMIT COMM UNITY!!!!

J

For

4 -� -: : Bax Ding- ; , ' ', . - ! ' 3 O p por t l l l | ides at ;:: - :- -0-- : -: S ; - --; : : : Fint Boston : v I ; -

STDYFOR ONE3 YEAR ORFYOR ONE OR TW#:)ERIMS RV

and lie -with Bitish Stuenats -

HOW WISC M DIFFERENT FROM-MOST OVERSEAS PROGRAMS:

*Accepted students reeve admissions lettkrs (and later transcripts)-dlreetly fi-m an Oiord (or Camnbridge) college.,

*Students are dlimsft xaole as fuUl students of the Oxford college.

Q (ualifled eariy applicants may share a co-ed Student Residenc-associated with St. Catherinies College, Oxford (fully integrated with

13rltlah students).

* Students acceptedi btefore Novrember I (for the Winter Term). or beforeUhy I (for nex ye ar) a ggaantdhusigwt Biihst udents.

* Students wlll NOTbe taught in, (anid receive- trasespts frm anAvmedca ll~egeppferat~ng in £oxrd. INSC ts one of thefew c=Le* h

- - fE2~~r t ; o ft~housh;)oesa pkt' ramS tn tl*:E;

oPrevious stuidents in your fi3eld wil speak to you on the phone.

For Wonna4 =l or wrf t -

TNI WAHIMGTON INTEMNAMINAL STJDIES COUNCEL214 Wkschuets Avenuet NSuite 450, Washington, DO 2009?, (800) 32.3-WISC

.S ~et : l -,.. t. d .....-egi t . and .on on.. ..

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Page 14: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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THE EMILE BUSTANIMIDDLE EAST SEMINAR

PresentsDr. Gary Sick

Columbia University

Member of the National Security Councilduring the Carter Presidency

"THE REAGAN ELECTION CAMPAIGN,THE AMERICAN HOSTAGE-CRISIS IN IRAN

AND THE DEFEAT OF JIMMY CARTER IN 1980"

Tuesday, October 22, 19914:30-6:30 pm

E51-00470 Memorial Drive

OPEN TO THE PUBLICSponsored by the Center for International Studies

Page 19: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

7:: ii!1:!:': : : i!; :L : :4 :,TUESDAY, -OCTOBER 22, 1 991 The Tech, PAGE 1 9

-A* ' -: 'Pelter/]Rono° ',/ :'-Q t :i'he'race'!e'e: a "' '"t'thec A11-:'`This past saurd'y)~'~.lnS~i Coieifc~::e:;ee Rdnc(6 'cross couintry- team' d0n:"thued,.:, :?9'a--Jse aly:5 e-rnd ' -: ': "--!'" :' b ''.'.:i ~ 'season,,.of excellence'--by, beS, ' t d, -eih h:'iinthL place. lhonors'to""/-,: ..- five'°other ",teams t°'-b'e ~:tl:take individua!'rec0'gnitionalong"" ' ..1991 Co'ns'titution 21~hett-"Cdn--:' -~ ~' ~ with'-.MO',6le,~"cr'ai'n"and'Prati:. a 'o 'e a5 entra uarference Chiampn.Te51 d -With 'MITs-,top'-five finisher's. :'" 'race, ,held'at the- US'Cat among the 'first,::10,'!,runniers to i~ 'Mm !TGuard Academy in New L0,don,, .crossthfns:Ue MI asiladHradSurConin. ,'-'marked the begmi~n gI0f' crushed the'opppos'ition 'with a ,the chamipi~fnship season, for the, mere 28 points.in' second place.,,:.,,,",MIT runnr: ~~~ was ,Coast" Guard With 53 i fol-'Te rcTstarted - lofwt~h'"1we& -by -Babson with' 64; N or- ::=: 'Coast Guard jumping 'tO: aiquick Wich with'-107, WPI.:'with ',,38. '

-1'-2 lead -in the firs't-half-mile;,It- and,, Western New England lC 0 1 - " *looked.like it':was- going~to'i,b. a, l ege with.-- 178.:"':-*.. ". ''''':*'rfough:-day .for -the: MI-'t.e'', )-'..:!~!.-M,T'"S j~um-ir-ivaisity...team .con-_ .with:f'"three ', B aso "olgfad in'tled' its Winning, streak- against.--three 'Coast Guard ruliners'ahead -Divsion, HIll-schf01s -:with', an al-:of'MTs,fis ,;mn: But'at-,fiiis " 'ms!perfccrstoiic hi the meet.point, MIT went to 'w~ork.:: David' ' The perfect score Was miissed .1W. y . . . .Moyle '94 began,tooe o n.the only one-p'oint;. but MIT's 16 '""'; '.' '" , , '/~',~ ..

followed."-0;v~er.'the,.next -two"... 48,. Babson's 78 'and,-WPI's .i 18, - '9 Sweater'99 0· Workshirtsmile, th i lad hanged .-froin - hwd that, NMT'&suPeriority,, LS~~~~~~~~~~~~·Raincoatscoast Guard blue ~anid Babson ran throughout the'entire team; A FfghancSocks · Vests' · ~~Rubber bootsthe race,0ny':af-iise, the - mance,"'M!T-'-is looking _f0 ~vard ,I eoutcome Was -already deterii'iied:- to-squarinig off against:Brandeis' ': .. SnlseTheonly~~~~quest'on~eL'h w~ Un 'iy"which is.'r~senitlythe - l~. ~ -Winter and

badl MI~Was 8on oba~he ':tP:ranked, New !England Divi - .ed emC~oto ,T-pat y.shorts 9 ~jeanaketsopponents,.'':' ' ;.. ; : 'sion HI .team,' Throughoutthe · · C t o p at·yms h t s · Arctic boots'Moyle ,-battled, for' first --place . next month, the -team, will .be ' - e n - · Suspendersthe. rest- of 'the race, --but, .,fell ,competing in three'. other. ch amp/- · ' , , , , , . ' ',,,jtust ~Short to -Babsion's 'first man.' ohiShip meets;- includifig-the New:

However,. Moyle -e -an all-time England'Division !II National''MIT best time -. for' the 'Coast ' Qualifying Meet in Gorham,Guard course with,,a blazin-g Maine, -on No,., 16.' Brandeis will.26:15 for seconid place. Following b15e present at -wof these-comiln

closebehin- Were Ethan Crain ra~ffs-n.so'd¢e MIT some '~-'';.."-'95- and Jerry Pratf ,94, who.fin -st:~pto:?? -= -...-':'--'' ', W A E OS-iQ~DTiO /shed tlhird and'-sixth overall, reWA' etrREnoUS'2-i eme: "

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Page 20: vs 0ZS 04 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V111/PDF/V111-N44.pdfated the discussion and intro-duced the journalists.'to the audi-ence. Deborah'Amos of National Public Radio, Rick Davis of NBC

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Morgan Conn/Tte'-Tech Mgrgan Conn/The Tech-,:during last- Saturday's AnneWtI: M. Lee,'92 moves the al past Clark defenders : durs ng.r ast

The MIT men clinched Saturday's woijen's soccer match at, Steinbrenher Stadium. Thewomen lost 3-2 despite -aggressivdeplay.'.-

Sammy J. Farah '94 checks a Clark attackermen's soccer game at Steinbrenner Stadium.the hotly contested match, 4-3.

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