t ro alr siri iaus - the techtech.mit.edu/v92/pdf/v92-n21.pdf · up and moved into the crowd...

12
'Aminp UNWIC f'T--XT'XICI - the building, a faculty member who had been standing on the, steps tried to leave and in the process stepped on several of the d emionstrators. Those sitting down apparently retaliated and wer-e kicked by the faculty mem- ber who proceded to the Sloan School followed by several irate demonstrators. Faculty chair- man Hartley Rogers moved to block the demonstrators and the faculty member, was able to escape into an elevator unin- jured. Later, several of the protes- tors identified a photographer who was at the scene in the employ of the MIT News Office. One of them moved to attack the photographer with a Berkley Physics book and was ordered off the plaza by Vice-president Kenneth Wadleigh. Very lfew people attempted to cross the sit-in. (Immediately after the first incident, the dem- onstrators had closed ranks.) At one point, Pounds, who had left hris position oni the steps, tried to work his way through the crowvd to the buifdins, but after being blocked several times, he with- drew. Around ten o'clock, Wynne announced that anyone who re- mained seated before the steps after five minutes would be con- sidered a trespasser. He also warned those in the immediate w.'cinity to leave the wra.aT, five minutes passed with-out any action being taken by either side; although an MIT adminis- trator expressed the feeling that MIT, determined to keep the building open, would have no alternative but to call the police. After a brief interval, Wynne again warned the protestors and asked those in the crowd sur- rounding the sit-in to move back. At the end of two mi~n- utes, a number of administrators pulled out note pads and began writing. At this point, the sit-in had been thinned out as people got up and moved into the crowd surrounding the demonslration. As their ranks began to thin, the demonstrators began to discuss tactics and decided to leave the steps. No Cambridge police had appeared in the area. Access to the building w~as l/mited after the crowd left, with several campus patrolm-nen checlk- ing ID's in the entryway. Immediately after the sit-in broke up, six of the demonstra- tors were admitted to speak with Sk-olnikoff. The meeting, re- portedlly fairly relaxed, revolved around the question of classified research at the CIS. Skoln/koff, who said that under no circum- staces would he consider any relations between himself (pet-- sonally) and the CIA, main- tained that the Center no longger has any ties with the CIA. Hie admitted, however, that in the fifties, the Center had done The following petition is being cirecuated in the lobby of Build- ing 10: We, the undersigncal members of the MIIT community, petition the MtIT faculty to suspend (or postpone) classes on the fourth of May and defer assignments and quizzes scheduled for the fifth of May so that members o~f the MIT community may partici- pate in the Washington Lobby o other demonstrations of th®[b opposition to United States policy in Southeast Asia. g- MIT, CAMBIUDGE, MASSAU.-I U Nr- I IN FItVE~ C.. I.NT1 VOLUM 92 NUA.BER 21 FRIDAY, APRIL 28.1972 ~.dministrators and faculty, in- cluding Chancellor Paul Gray, Vice-president Constantine Si- monrides, Skolnikoff, Dean Wil- liam Pou-nds of the Sloan School, and jim. Cullion, Assis- tant to Vice-pre./dentl Wynne, a-rrayed themselves Oh the last set of steps leading -to t-he doors of the Hermann Building. Whaen the demonstrators arniveal, they were blocked from enterflag the building by : those before the door. One demonstrator who tried to break past the line was thrown -back by Gray, assistead by campus patrolmten_ As the crowd sat down before the steps, several of them began to question the faculty and ad- ministrators on the steps above them about the work of the CIS. The protestom insishted that s/nee they were denied access to open Files, the CIS and director Skoi- nikoff had '"something to hide" as they contended -that the Center was doing war research. Skolnikoff told the, crowd on numerous occasions that the CIS is no longer sponsoring research done on the war or for the CIA, as many of the protestors had stated earnier. He did not deny, however, that individual faculty aright be doing /independent re- search for either the CIIA or DOD. Only a few "ihtc/dents" m ar k ed t he demon.stration. Shortly after the crowd had settled, blocking the entrance to By Lee G iguere Shortly after 8 Wednesday morning, approximately 80 dem- onstrators staged an obstructive sit-in before the doors of the Hermann Building which houses the Center for International Studies (CIS). After assembling in the lobby of Building 7 anoi marching across campus by way of Build- ing 20 (where ROTC is-housed), the demonstrators, many of them students, were met on the steps oil the building by a line of MIT administrators backed by campus patroinmen. Barred from entering the building, the group immedl/ately sat on the steps where they stayed for a little over two hours until threatened with arrest by the MIT adminis- tration in the person of Vice- president for Administration and Personnel John Wynne. Following the sit-in, six of the demonstrators discussed the CIS with Professor of Political Science Eugene Skolnikoff, Di- rector of the Center, in his of- fice. The only other significant ac- tivity of the day was an open- ended discussion, sponsored by -the Student Cernter -Committee in the Sala.- Between one and six in the afternoon, a reported three hundred students con- versed with over 30 MIT faculty and administrators_ %Wtile the demonstrators were assembiing in &,uididng 7, -MiT Yesterday, in Kresge Auditoriurm, Profesr Skolnikoff, Head of the Political Science Depamnt, and Director of the Center for Interatmional Studie.s, anwr~eA~ questions -of concerned students. Mos questions centered around Defense Department spionsored research done by the CIS. Photo by Dave Greetn. Mass. Senator Geoirge McGovern has swept the Massachusetts primary,3 showing strong support in blue-collar and black diseits %where Lhe was suppose. Oly weak. Despite the presence of eleven other candidates on the crowdod Democratic b.:ffiot, MecGoveda won 5 2% of. the total vote and -93 of the state's 102 delegates. far out-distanc/nq his arch-rival, Ed Mside, who received only 22% of the vote MceGovern's S-2 victory margin has reestabthshed the National dsifi/cance of the Massachusetts pr-imm,-y to the Democratfs quest for the White 1Hou- this Nov~ember. Several weeks ago, Ed Musk/e, notic/ing his drastic decline in Boston Globe !poplarity polls and still smarting from KM~veras victors in Visconsin, announced that he would not campaign actively in this state. t~owevez, the ~Muskie organizataon, -&awirm uPC= aim es i every w ell-known M~assachusetts Democrt. went all oV for the M~aine Se .m.tor. It vasut enouda; Muskie lost every bluectlar ward1 in -Paoston by mar&s of 2-I or higher. -McUovemn ran povnuy/in the Maec& war-fds, g~catty autpollhg Hlffert Hump.~ey, who was being, touted as 'tir cand~te of the bhacks. ffumiphnmy did win the Pennsylvania primary. though, garneng about 35% of the vote. Mus~de, MeG.ovam, and Wa!~he each received about 20%, of the [eYrstone state's vote. It w2S the 1968 nominee's first primary vkicory in twelve yem~ on the presi/dentivl ckcrf. He won 57 of the state's delegates. Close beblad w,. George M-cGovem, who won 37 pledged delegates. 'Wallace, desp:ite hi hg showing, won offiy 2 delegates. In this -race, Humphrey ran vwry ~,egl -m the large drfies, the mmn areas, and the black wards. while M1cGovern scored heavily in the subwbs around Ph/ldelphia and Pitftsburg_ Wallace and Ifuskie did best in the more mmrl areas. Tae races have estabg~shed George- McGovern and Hubert Humphrey as the two ftoat-maners for the D~emocrtic nomiaton. Muke's campaign, whicl depended heaviuly on reczuitin glittering endorsements, has been torp edoedl; most of the politicians, -,especially prmmary Pennsylvana governor Mrilton Shapp and Boston mayor Kevin Vibnite, are frantically trying to jump off the Maine' Sen~ator's sinking schooner. A reverse bandwagon effect seems to be occuuring. In all likelihood, Muskie w/ll soon abandon his presidential quest, leaving the Humphrey and McGovern forces free to slug each r*.Jaer L bitter -;." c~ ' . ~ {PJeas turn to pagfe 3.1 faculty.I Associate Professor of For- eign Literatures Rene K~iparsky presented The Tech with four motions that the caucus of facul- ty concerned about the war pre- pared for presentation to today's meeting. Associate Professor of Mietal- Iurgy Roy Kaplow, cludrman of the spec/al subcoemm/ttee set up by the CEP, said that the com- midttee was appointed in antici- pation of possible questions about the statement. While he was concerned that the commit- tee would be "flooded with questions`' he said that it had received only a few call so far. The meaning of the statement, he explatned, was that `~there be as much fiexibility as possible/in a given subject consisent with students finilqi-&g w/thin the term;'" and thhat st,,dents haNe~ a right to their classes. E.scntiaty, he said that an-angements should be Imade for people to do their coume work- at different times. IThe MIT faculty will meet at 3:15 today in room 10-250 for · Consideration of Issues Con- nected with the Current Student Strike." The meeting was called -at the request of twelve faculty mem- bers (only ten are require d) on Tuesday. Preceding the special meetig, thexe will be a maucus of faculty concerned about the war at noon in room 473 of the Student Center. Also on Tuesday, 'the CEP released a statement recom- mending, `I) that individual teachers be flexible with regard to ariangement under which in- dividual students may complete their academic work within the, pa-ewnt term, 2) that indi'vidual teachers make arrangements to ensure t-he continuity of their class ;' In addition, it sea up a special commuittee "to advise and assist indivdual students and faculty memabers in these mat- ters, and to resolve diffididties arising from unusual ciucum- .stanosj SD Contacted by Tke Tech, some of the individual ffaculty mem- bers who signed the re.quest for the meeting expressed differing reasons for their action. Assis- tant Professor of Hunmnities Nancy Dworsky emphasized that there had been no attempt to gather as many signatures as possible but onldy to collect the requ/red ten; signing the request, she added, was not an/indication o f supp~ort for the strie. Dworsky expained that origi- nally thre meeting had been asked for earlier in the week, to give an "immediate response to the strike."' Commenting on the CEP statement, she felt ilt was set up "to make the leasit pos- sible noiso;` while "leaving the student im a position wheae his professors can penalize Mm at Wfin' Assistant Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences John Ed- mond emphasized that he was "very impressed" with the stu- dents involved in the strike and was concerned that some of them mighdt be in "deep aca- demic trouble." the only thing the faculty can de, he said,/is to try to protect the students. He hoped that the faculty meeting might make the CEP's statement more specific. Professor of. Electrical En- gineering Joseph Weizenbaum, another of the petitioners, ar- gued that "important things are go/ing on" and that it would be "hkresponsble of the faculty to let these days and these events pass without taking officia notice of them and discussing the issuhes." He wanted, he con- tinued, "'to provide students and faculty with a chance to make any proposals they wish to make ," as well as with a mechan- ismn for students to talk with the was beginning..- Mov/e-goers waited outside the. buildring as the auditorium wuas searched, and returned to their seats when the Campus Patrolmen gave their okay one half-hour later. At 7:5 3 pm the IMIT operator, received a call in wh/ck a male voice said, '"You. did mot find what we left/in 26-100."1 At Olds point, a Cambridge fire marshall postponed the showing alto- gether. The Campus; Patzol called in the Cambridge Police and Bomb Squad, and a thorough search of the auditoriuma was made, with no positive result. By David Searls A series of bomb threats Wed- nesday night forced the evacua- tion of a capacity crowd from 26-100, resulting in the post- ponement of an LSC-sponsored showing of Wart and Peace until Monday. The initial threat was phoned into the MIT operator at 6:36 pro. According-to Campus Pa- trol, a "faint, female voice"" told the operator "There's a bomb in 26-1 00."1 The auditorium was ermptied just as t:he second /n- stallmeat of the two-part film A F m 4 C, . exi r r aj amill A aJysl :v l coven svweeps t ro alr siri sme Iaus sce2a 499

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'Aminp UNWIC f'T--XT'XICI

-

the building, a faculty memberwho had been standing on the,steps tried to leave and in theprocess stepped on several of thed emionstrators. Those sittingdown apparently retaliated andwer-e kicked by the faculty mem-ber who proceded to the SloanSchool followed by several iratedemonstrators. Faculty chair-man Hartley Rogers moved toblock the demonstrators and thefaculty member, was able toescape into an elevator unin-jured.

Later, several of the protes-tors identified a photographerwho was at the scene in theemploy of the MIT News Office.One of them moved to attackthe photographer with a BerkleyPhysics book and was orderedoff the plaza by Vice-presidentKenneth Wadleigh.

Very lfew people attemptedto cross the sit-in. (Immediatelyafter the first incident, the dem-onstrators had closed ranks.) Atone point, Pounds, who had lefthris position oni the steps, tried towork his way through the crowvdto the buifdins, but after beingblocked several times, he with-drew.

Around ten o'clock, Wynneannounced that anyone who re-mained seated before the stepsafter five minutes would be con-sidered a trespasser. He alsowarned those in the immediatew.'cinity to leave the wra.aT,five minutes passed with-out anyaction being taken by eitherside; although an MIT adminis-trator expressed the feeling thatMIT, determined to keep thebuilding open, would have noalternative but to call the police.

After a brief interval, Wynneagain warned the protestors andasked those in the crowd sur-rounding the sit-in to moveback. At the end of two mi~n-utes, a number of administratorspulled out note pads and beganwriting.

At this point, the sit-in hadbeen thinned out as people gotup and moved into the crowdsurrounding the demonslration.As their ranks began to thin, thedemonstrators began to discusstactics and decided to leave thesteps. No Cambridge police hadappeared in the area.

Access to the building w~asl/mited after the crowd left, withseveral campus patrolm-nen checlk-ing ID's in the entryway.

Immediately after the sit-inbroke up, six of the demonstra-tors were admitted to speak withSk-olnikoff. The meeting, re-portedlly fairly relaxed, revolvedaround the question of classifiedresearch at the CIS. Skoln/koff,who said that under no circum-staces would he consider anyrelations between himself (pet--sonally) and the CIA, main-tained that the Center no longgerhas any ties with the CIA. Hieadmitted, however, that in thefifties, the Center had done

The following petition is beingcirecuated in the lobby of Build-ing 10:

We, the undersigncal membersof the MIIT community, petitionthe MtIT faculty to suspend (orpostpone) classes on the fourthof May and defer assignmentsand quizzes scheduled for thefifth of May so that members o~fthe MIT community may partici-pate in the Washington Lobby oother demonstrations of th®[bopposition to United Statespolicy in Southeast Asia.

g-

MIT, CAMBIUDGE, MASSAU.-I U Nr- I IN FItVE~ C.. I.NT1 VOLUM 92 NUA.BER 21 FRIDAY, APRIL 28.1972

~.dministrators and faculty, in-cluding Chancellor Paul Gray,Vice-president Constantine Si-monrides, Skolnikoff, Dean Wil-liam Pou-nds of the SloanSchool, and jim. Cullion, Assis-tant to Vice-pre./dentl Wynne,a-rrayed themselves Oh the lastset of steps leading -to t-he doorsof the Hermann Building. Whaenthe demonstrators arniveal, theywere blocked from enterflag thebuilding by : those before thedoor. One demonstrator whotried to break past the line wasthrown -back by Gray, assisteadby campus patrolmten_

As the crowd sat down beforethe steps, several of them beganto question the faculty and ad-ministrators on the steps abovethem about the work of the CIS.The protestom insishted that s/neethey were denied access to openFiles, the CIS and director Skoi-nikoff had '"something to hide"as they contended -that theCenter was doing war research.Skolnikoff told the, crowd onnumerous occasions that the CISis no longer sponsoring researchdone on the war or for the CIA,as many of the protestors hadstated earnier. He did not deny,however, that individual facultyaright be doing /independent re-search for either the CIIA orDOD.

Only a few "ihtc/dents"m ar k ed t he demon.stration.Shortly after the crowd hadsettled, blocking the entrance to

By Lee G iguereShortly after 8 Wednesday

morning, approximately 80 dem-onstrators staged an obstructivesit-in before the doors of theHermann Building which housesthe Center for InternationalStudies (CIS).

After assembling in the lobbyof Building 7 anoi marchingacross campus by way of Build-ing 20 (where ROTC is-housed),the demonstrators, many ofthem students, were met on thesteps oil the building by a line ofMIT administrators backed bycampus patroinmen. Barred fromentering the building, the groupimmedl/ately sat on the stepswhere they stayed for a littleover two hours until threatenedwith arrest by the MIT adminis-tration in the person of Vice-president for Administration andPersonnel John Wynne.

Following the sit-in, six ofthe demonstrators discussed theCIS with Professor of PoliticalScience Eugene Skolnikoff, Di-rector of the Center, in his of-fice.

The only other significant ac-tivity of the day was an open-ended discussion, sponsored by-the Student Cernter -Committeein the Sala.- Between one and sixin the afternoon, a reportedthree hundred students con-versed with over 30 MIT facultyand administrators_

%Wtile the demonstrators wereassembiing in &,uididng 7, -MiT

Yesterday, in Kresge Auditoriurm, Profesr Skolnikoff, Head of thePolitical Science Depamnt, and Director of the Center forInteratmional Studie.s, anwr~eA~ questions -of concerned students.Mos questions centered around Defense Department spionsoredresearch done by the CIS. Photo by Dave Greetn.

Mass.Senator Geoirge McGovern

has swept the Massachusettsprimary,3 showing strong supportin blue-collar and black diseits%where Lhe was suppose. Oly weak.

Despite the presence ofeleven other candidates on thecrowdod Democratic b.:ffiot,MecGoveda won 5 2% of. the total

vote and -93 of the state's 102delegates. far out-distanc/nq hisarch-rival, Ed Mside, whoreceived only 22% of the vote

MceGovern's S-2 victorymargin has reestabthshed theNational dsifi/cance of theMassachusetts pr-imm,-y to theDemocratfs quest for the White1Hou- this Nov~ember. Severalweeks ago, Ed Musk/e, notic/inghis drastic decline in BostonGlobe !poplarity polls and stillsmarting from KM~verasvictors in Visconsin, announcedthat he would not campaignactively in this state.

t~owevez, the ~Muskieorganizataon, -&awirm uPC=aim es i every w ell-knownM~assachusetts Democrt. wentall oV for the M~aine Se .m.tor. Itvasut enouda; Muskie lost everybluectlar ward1 in -Paoston bymar&s of 2-I or higher.-McUovemn ran povnuy/in theMaec& war-fds, g~catty autpollhgHlffert Hump.~ey, who wasbeing, touted as 'tir cand~te ofthe bhacks.

ffumiphnmy did win thePennsylvania primary. though,garneng about 35% of the vote.Mus~de, MeG.ovam, and Wa!~heeach received about 20%, of the[eYrstone state's vote. It w2S the1968 nominee's first primaryvkicory in twelve yem~ on thepresi/dentivl ckcrf. He won 57of the state's delegates. Closebeblad w,. George M-cGovem,who won 37 pledged delegates.'Wallace, desp:ite hi hgshowing, won offiy 2 delegates.In this -race, Humphrey ran vwry~,egl -m the large drfies, the mmnareas, and the black wards. whileM1cGovern scored heavily in thesubwbs around Ph/ldelphia andPitftsburg_ Wallace and Ifuskiedid best in the more mmrl areas.

Tae races have estabg~shedGeorge- McGovern and HubertHumphrey as the twoftoat-maners for the D~emocrticnomiaton. Muke's campaign,whicl depended heaviuly onreczuitin glitteringendorsements, has beentorp edoedl; most of thepoliticians, -,especially

prmmaryPennsylvana governor MriltonShapp and Boston mayor KevinVibnite, are frantically trying tojump off the Maine' Sen~ator'ssinking schooner. A reversebandwagon effect seems to beoccuuring.

In all likelihood, Muskie w/llsoon abandon his presidentialquest, leaving the Humphrey andMcGovern forces free to slugeach r*.Jaer L bitter -;." c~ '. ~

{PJeas turn to pagfe 3.1

faculty.IAssociate Professor of For-

eign Literatures Rene K~iparskypresented The Tech with fourmotions that the caucus of facul-ty concerned about the war pre-pared for presentation to today'smeeting.

Associate Professor of Mietal-Iurgy Roy Kaplow, cludrman ofthe spec/al subcoemm/ttee set upby the CEP, said that the com-midttee was appointed in antici-pation of possible questionsabout the statement. While hewas concerned that the commit-tee would be "flooded withquestions`' he said that it hadreceived only a few call so far.The meaning of the statement,he explatned, was that `~there beas much fiexibility as possible/ina given subject consisent withstudents finilqi-&g w/thin theterm;'" and thhat st,,dents haNe~ aright to their classes. E.scntiaty,he said that an-angements shouldbe Imade for people to do theircoume work- at different times.

IThe MIT faculty will meet at3:15 today in room 10-250 for· Consideration of Issues Con-nected with the Current StudentStrike."

The meeting was called -at therequest of twelve faculty mem-bers (only ten are require d) onTuesday. Preceding the specialmeetig, thexe will be a maucusof faculty concerned about thewar at noon in room 473 of theStudent Center.

Also on Tuesday, 'the CEPreleased a statement recom-mending, `I) that individualteachers be flexible with regardto ariangement under which in-dividual students may completetheir academic work within the,pa-ewnt term, 2) that indi'vidualteachers make arrangements toensure t-he continuity of theirclass ;' In addition, it sea up aspecial commuittee "to advise andassist indivdual students andfaculty memabers in these mat-ters, and to resolve diffididtiesarising from unusual ciucum-.stanosj SD

Contacted by Tke Tech, someof the individual ffaculty mem-bers who signed the re.quest forthe meeting expressed differingreasons for their action. Assis-tant Professor of HunmnitiesNancy Dworsky emphasized thatthere had been no attempt togather as many signatures aspossible but onldy to collect therequ/red ten; signing the request,she added, was not an/indicationo f supp~ort for the strie.Dworsky expained that origi-nally thre meeting had beenasked for earlier in the week, togive an "immediate response tothe strike."' Commenting on theCEP statement, she felt ilt wasset up "to make the leasit pos-sible noiso;` while "leaving thestudent im a position wheae hisprofessors can penalize Mm at

Wfin'

Assistant Professor of Earthand Planetary Sciences John Ed-mond emphasized that he was"very impressed" with the stu-dents involved in the strike andwas concerned that some ofthem mighdt be in "deep aca-demic trouble." the only thingthe faculty can de, he said,/is totry to protect the students. Hehoped that the faculty meetingmight make the CEP's statementmore specific.

Professor of. Electrical En-gineering Joseph Weizenbaum,another of the petitioners, ar-gued that "important things arego/ing on" and that it would be"hkresponsble of the faculty tolet these days and these eventspass without taking officianotice of them and discussingthe issuhes." He wanted, he con-tinued, "'to provide students andfaculty with a chance to makeany proposals they wish tomake ," as well as with a mechan-ismn for students to talk with the

was beginning..- Mov/e-goerswaited outside the. buildring asthe auditorium wuas searched,and returned to their seats whenthe Campus Patrolmen gave theirokay one half-hour later.

At 7:5 3 pm the IMIT operator,received a call in wh/ck a malevoice said, '"You. did mot findwhat we left/in 26-100."1 At Oldspoint, a Cambridge fire marshallpostponed the showing alto-gether. The Campus; Patzol calledin the Cambridge Police andBomb Squad, and a thoroughsearch of the auditoriuma wasmade, with no positive result.

By David SearlsA series of bomb threats Wed-

nesday night forced the evacua-tion of a capacity crowd from26-100, resulting in the post-ponement of an LSC-sponsoredshowing of Wart and Peace untilMonday.

The initial threat was phonedinto the MIT operator at 6:36pro. According-to Campus Pa-trol, a "faint, female voice"" toldthe operator "There's a bomb in26-1 00."1 The auditorium wasermptied just as t:he second /n-stallmeat of the two-part film

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MY meed to bodl, not weaken,(mas offerings and reeaErch

hm si m Mds-~ He noted thatrlro6 t see s to b1 wde

tende' to - opele for rnk andprestige in resarcb, thusemphzsg qam f fable kindsof evidence and niarrowunifoxmity of sp'eatizafin, anddiscouragPng divety andunorthodoxy; andl Second,Grave i th last S tronghold ofhis specaty - inde ei cOf specialty other tha &.d-t of theanalytic school - SO hisdeparture would leave the sesorPhilosophy faculty essayinvulnerable to chaLng in theirpat.icBrar cnception ad con-trol of the department for theforeseeable future.

agrm t on this ast principlpe,ty 'pied by pMs of PresdentWiesaner's inaugural addss,"one wondes whether to believethy have unch operationalsignmiicace.-"

The discussion reveaedagrement among the studentspreset tiht this was a clear-cuttest cas of the major issuesrelating to tenure. ThePhilosophy Departmentapparently claimed the right of

complete autonomous authorityto deny tenu:D, in spite ofGraves' excellence in al thre e ofthe criteria traditionallyinvoked: acknowledgedoutstanding teachbng (for whichhe received an award);acknowledged involvement andactivity in the MIT community(e-g., six years of reside~;ce inBurton 3Hose and chairmansaipof the Committee on StudentEnviron ment); andacknowledged praise of heq t of his research by othersi the spechty.'

,-,Two i of conjectureemerged at te studenb t meetingto account for the PhilosophyDepartment's decisona: first,most departents in top schools

/

IItS! .! WW~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~k/

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4 ejL~ET 7

'til~

May 2, 19725:15pmLUeS,2Hectff 9-150 '

Professor SahAf E. LariaInstitute Professor of Bio~_ol

Respondent:RobeA W. Nhansgiech~ical Eagmeering, MIT

Moderator:Je~seph Weizeb~, Electeaml Eng/neeng, IUT

TbC Uarmte ResearchOppartunity Program an-maam ta@y tati funda arawa'm~ for indiiual studentsmm ect prkN Ti iste 3hgscm= ¢e UOP has had fuds

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a, gmeml Insttute adloca-dwi aiiion, them has been

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(Continued from page 1)battles between now and theMiami convention. It is nowclear that no one will gainenough votes to assure a firstballot victory; McGovern leadsthe race, but has only 234pledged delegates. 1,509 areneeded for the nomination.

The large unknown in thisrace is the appeal of GeorgeWallace, who has shownsurprising strength in severalw Northern states. While no one

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Photo by Joe KXashDean for Student Affairs J. Daniel Nyhart and Vice-PresidentConstantine B. Simonides compare notes during Wednesday morn-ing's obstructive sit-in on the steps of the Hermann Building.Vice-President for Administration and Personnel John Wynne (farright) scrutinizes demonstrators after warning them to leave the area.

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THE - ECII F R I DY, AP I L 28,'l 92 PAGE 3

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PAGE 4 FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1972 TETItECH

Contin uous News Service

Since 1881

William Roberts '72, Carol McGuie '75Night Editors

David Searls '73, Ats EditorWalter Middlebrook'74, Paul Schindler '74

NewsEditorSBradley Billedeaux '72, Sports Editor

Sheldon Lowenthal '74, David Tenenbaurn '74Photography Editors

Michael Feirtag '72, Joseph Kashi '72,John Kavazanjian '72 , Bruce Schwartz '72

Con tribu ting EditorsAlex Makowvski'72, Adverfigng ManagerBruce Weirberg '72, Production ManagerStorm Kauffmni '75, Norm Saddler r75

Associate News EditorsSandy Yulke '74, Associate Sports Editor

Neal Vitale '75, Associate Arts EditorPeter Peckarsky '69,

Waskzington CorrespondentJerry Hudson '73, Accounts Receivable

Dave Lee '74, Accounts PayableDews Staff'

Ken Knyfd '72, Janet Stoltz '74,Roger White '74, Sandy Yulke '74,

Bezt Halstead '75, Masgo Levine '75,Jim Moody '75, Seth Stein '75,Liz Wise '75, Charlotte Cooper

Sports Staff:Rick Henning '72, Mike Charelte '74,

Randy Young '74, Dan Gantt '75Arts Staff.-

Jay Pollack '72, Mark Astolfi '73,Walter HllM'73, Daniel Reinharth '74,Brian Rehxig '75, Manny Goldman G,

Nancy BrighamPhotography Staff.'

Roger Goldstein '74, Dave Green '75Adverting Staff:David Gromola '74Ciculation Staff:

Alex Makowski'72, Scott Berg '73Fred Zexhoot '73

Second-class postage paid at' Boston,Massachusetts. The Tech is published twicea week during the college year, exceptduring college vacdtions, and once duringthe first week in August, b, The Teeh,Rooms W20-4853, MIT Student Center, 84Massachusetts Avenue, Cam.bridge, Mass-chausetts 02139. Telephone: (61.7) 864-6900ext. 273 1 or 1$4 1. _

tItI

fVi

!

-

I

PI

The Conmmunists have ~aied in. theirefforts to rin over the people of SouthVietnam politically. General Abrams be-lieves that they will fail in their efforts toconquer South Vietnam militarily. Theirone remaining hope is to win Ein'theCongress of the United States, and amongthe people of the United States, thevictory they cannot win among.the peo-ple of South Vietnam or on the battle-field in South Vietnam ..

Let us look at -what thes+tkes re -not just for South Vietnam but for theUnited States and for the cause of peacein the world. If one country, armed withthe most modemn weapons by other coun-

tries, can invade another nation andsucceed in conquering it, other countrieswill be encouraged to do exactly-the samething - in the Mideast, in Europe, and inother interatontional danger spots. If theCommunists win nmfitarly i Vietnam,the risk of war in other parts of the worldwould be enormously increased.

But if on the other hand, communistaggression fails in Vietnam, it will bediscouraged elsewhere and the chancesfo/ peace will be increased ..

But, we will not be defeated; and wewill never surrender our friends to Com-munist aggression...

That is why I say let us bring our menhome from Vietnam. Let us end the warin Vietnam. But let us end it in such away that the younger brothers and sonsof the brave men who have fought inVietnam wiHl not have to fight again insome other Vietnam at some time in thefuture ...

Let us then unite as a nation hn a firmand wise policy of peace - not the peaceof surrender, but peace with honor - notonly peace in our time, but peace forgenerations to come.

Thank'l1 yu, and good rd¢t.

What we are witnessing here- what isbeing brutally inflicted upon the Repub-lic of Vietnam - is a clear case of nakedand unprovoked aggression across an in-temational border. There is only oneword for it is invasion.

I have before me a report which Ireceived this morning from' GeneralAblams. He gives the following evaluationof the situation.

1. The South Vietnamese are fightingcourageously and well in their self-defense, and inflicting very heavy casual-ties on the invading forces, which has notgained the easy victory some predictedfor it three weeks ago.

2. Our air strikes have been essential inprotecting our own remaining forces andin assisting the South Vietnamese in theirefforts to protect their homes and theircountry from a Communist takesover.

3. General Abrams predicts that therewill be several more weeks of very hard.fighting in which some battles will be lostand others will be won by the SouthVietnamese. But he is convinced that, ifwe continue to provide air andsea sulap-port, the enemy will fail in its desperategamble to impose a Communist regime onSouth Vietnam, and that the South Viet-namese will then havse demonstrated theirability to defend themselves on theground against future enemy attacks.

Based on this realistic'assessment fromGeneral Abrams, and after consultationwith President ' Thieu, AmbassadorBunker, Ambassador Porter, and my se-nior advisers in Washington; I have threedecisions to announce tonight.

First, I have decided that Vietnamiza-tion has proved itself sufficiently that wecan continue our program of withdrawingAmerican forces without detriment toour overall goal of ensuring South Viet-nanra's survival as an independent country.Consequently, I am announcing tonightthat over the next two months 20,000more Americans w'il be brouught bone,

from Vietnam. This decision has the Utlapproval of President Thieu and of Gener-al Abrams. It will being our troop ceilingdown to 49,000 by July I - a reductionof half a million men since this Adminias-tration came into office.

Second, I have directed AmbassadorPorter to return to the negotiating tablein Paris tomorrow, but with one veryspecial purpose in mind. We are notresuming the Paris talks simply in orderto hear more empty propaganda andbombast from the North-Vietnamese andViet Cong delegates, but to-get on withthe constructive business of makingpeace. We are resuming the Pars talkswith the firm expectation that productivetalks leading to rapid progress will followthrough all available channels. As far aswe are concrned, the first order ofbusiness will be to get the enemy to halthis invasion of South Vietnam, and toreturn the American prisoners of war.

Finally, IE have ordered that our air andnaval attacks on military installations inNorth Vietnam be continued until theNorth Vietnamese stop their offensive iAfSouth Vietnam ....

As you will recall, I have warned on anumber of occasions over the past threeyears that if the enemy responded to ourefforts to bring peace by stepping up thewar I would act to meet that attack, forthree reasons: to protect our remainingAmerican forces, to permit continuationof our withdrawal program, and to pre-vent the imposition of a Communistregime on the people of South Vietnamagainst their will, with the inevitablebloodbath that would follow for hun-dreds of thousands who have dared tooppose Communist aggression.

The air and naval strikes of the recentweeks have been carried out to achievethese objectives. They have been directedonly against military targets supportingthe invasion of the South. They will notstop unfA that Lzasion stops.

(The following are excerpts from the-textof President Nixon's Wednesday nightspeech. -Editor)

Draft calls now average fewer than5,000 men a month, and we expect tobing them to zero next year ....

Our most recent proposal provided foran immediate ceasefire; the exchange ofall prisoners of war; the withdrawal of allour forces withia six -months; and newelections in Vietnam, which wvould beinternationally supervised, with all politi-cal elements including the Communistsparticipating in and helping to run theelections. One month before such elec-tions, President Thieu and Vice-PresidentHiuong would resign.

Now Hanoi's answer to this offer was arefusal to even discuss our proposals, and,at the same time, a massive escalation oftheir military activities on the battlefield.Last October, the same month when wemade this peace offer to Hanoi in secret,our intelligence reports began to indicatethat the enemy was building up for amajor attack.

Yet we deliberately refrained fromresponding militarily. Instead we patient-ly continued with the Paris talks, becausewe wanted to give the enemy evezrychance to reach a negotiated settlemenaltat the barganing table rather than to seeka military victory on the battlefield - avictory they cannot be allowed towin .,..

The facts are clear. More than 120,000North Vietnamese are now fightig in theSouth. There are no South Vietnamesetroops anywhere in North Vietnam.Twelve of North Vietnam's 13 regularcombat divisions have now left.their ownsoil in order to carry aggressive war ontothe territory of their neighbors. Whateverpretext there was of a civil war in SouthVietnam has now been stripped away.

when you say these things? Surely noteveryone in the MIT community supportsyour position. If you claim to speak foreveryone then you are plainly lying and ifyou are speaking for only those whosupport your view then you are forsakingmany of those whom you are supposed torepresent. If you are speaking only foryourself, then you have no right to useyour office as a political sounding board.I consider myself a .... zKe of this

community as an alumnus who helpssupport the school in my spiritual andlimited financial way, and yet I was neverasked my opinion on this matter and Idoubt if anyone else was. Certainaly therewere probably many people blockingyour office door and yelling obscenitieswho were offering their opinions, but youmust understand that not everyoneadheres to this method of communica-tion. In short, your jurisdiction as auniversity president and spokesman ishighly limited here. You were elected toadminister the university, not to broad-caist spurious foreign policy opinions.

If you will allow me an opinion, Ibelieve you and the others have formedan alliance to limit the expected studentdemonstrations, even if this means awholesale prostitution of your position asa university president. Apparently thecowardly college officials of the 60'sremain undaunted. The sad fact is youwill never realize that unreasonable con-cessions breed unreasonable demands.

In a related topic, I have followed thePrlease turn to page 6)

by, .3mme tBarka and Jothy h9t

The StrikeTo the editor:

The following is an open letter to theMIT community.Fellow students, faculty, and staff:

I have heard it broached about thatthe futility of the strike is matched onlyby that of the war itself. What have wecome to then, that we think so little ofourselves? There are at least three reasonsto strike:

1) We, as students, are not outsidesociety and therefore outside the warmachine. On the contrary, as MITstudents we have a special complicity init. The education industry is an integralpart of the machine. We engineers areindispensable to it. The warmakers canbetter afford to lose Vietnam than to loselS.

We are being educated to carry out thefunctions the machine needs. Part of thSteducation is the indoctrination of oursense of responsibility: we are taught toaccept responsibility for getting our workdone; not for the consequences of whatwe are doing. We are doing the work ofthe machine. If we want it to stop, wemust stop.

2) We are not impotent. The 1970student strike stopped the invasion ofCambodia. Admiral Moore cites thethreat of another strike now as his mainconstraint. He takes us seriously° We m Zesttake ourselves seriously. As a Vietnamtesevictory becomes increasingly a reality,Nixon becomes more desperate andtherefore more dangerous. Who wi l

E 69PIM OF ED

restrain him, if not us?3) Granted, it's comparatively easy for

students to strike. We don't face loss ofour means of livelihood. Well then, wehave to do it! It's our responsibilitybecause it's our possibility, and someonemust do it. We're losing our tuition, ourgrants, or degrees? The Vietnamese arelosing their land and their lives. We candemand that the faculty recognize ourstrike and join us; we can go toWashington and demand our tuitionmoney back forom Nixon; but we can't letthe war go on. We are the warmakers. Wemust stop.

William Ahlgren, '72

WiesnerTo the editor:

I am enclosing a letter which I recentlywrote to Jerome Wiesner, President ofMIT, concerning his statement deploringthe bombing of North Vietnam. You mRayfind this letter from a former The Techstaffer suitable for publication in youreditorial letters feature.

Michael J. McNutt '69

Dear Mr. Wiesner:I have just heard on a news progam

that the Ivy League schools and MIT haveissued a statement deploring the.bombingof North Vietnam. I assume that thisstatement came from your office. With-out attempting to argue the anti-bombingposition, I would like to pose, somequestions about this type of statement.

First of all, who are you speaking for

Robert Elkin '73, ChairmanLee Giguere '73, Editor-in-chief

John Yileer '74, Business ManagerSandra Cohen '73, Managing Editor

appears daily arnd $utav in the Beston Harald Traveler. 3

NSi!oP:3X1XOSX~~ peace gces neratf ions; to comep~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ He id

Letters so -e -e ec I

'I;;'EM FR;IDA&¥,,~IIL M.1972 PAGE5.

Commentry:

zzzay toZ2(this was said/in 196;9}. In 1970, a ]pl~fuacoirporafing Doppler radars (a L/cnlmh

I.lsspecialt)and stabilization for 9rEfia (ine rtially controged, tlhm; owigaleast its basic technology to D=pcr Labs),becamoe opmation.aL But by that time theAmwfican ground war was Winding down_

In the meantime, the air war ha =go/ing on since 1965. L/ncoln Labs ha=contributed to gO.fdanoe (~mchdm M1andl nigh c~ombat capabiliy), ca=&rl(guided bombs, computer program fortaret soe. orion and identifcation), 2ni

electronic count~mmeasures (radar h~e-ferrite, fae images, etc.). AsAedmgroundtroeops were -Mtdrve. tlhe a7.war became more vital to the US wareffort.

On thle ground, Vietmi~fop waunderay, presumably w~ the fiden&advice of CIS experts on weaponry, pont-ical development, propaada, and othertools of Political eng~mcring.

And now, M-T is continuing to im-prove on ~these hol'rors of war, and isdevelop/in new gadgetr like la~ forgutidace and.- weapomT. (is bftim_[gpeople en ~msse a wax crime?)

Last fall the National Magmet Labor-to3ry (foxnerly funded almost entrdrly bythe US Air, Force) received a contract ~todevelop hfigh .powered .laser called TEAC..Tht's Transverse-Excited Atmasplhem-proesse Carbon dioxide laser- It has ahig~h power output, such as woul b~eneeded for weapons applications. tl~_Benjamin Lax, head of the 12b, wasquoted last year (Aviation Weak amdSpace Technology) as proposing an a'.-biting fus/on reactor powering ultrva, etlasers, to s~hoot' dow-n objects in spam.A~h, the -wonders of advanced technokegy.

"'3IITs already done what theyve.dome for the war-" But, in each pba..e ofthe war-, MIlT's contributions ffmve go--come progressively moare 'n~rtAmn, uatHnow MIT-based technoiogy dominates tikeair -war, and in some cases makes Edpossible. Failure to put a stop to I"11$work in thae past has made possible tlhe 2war and social redesigning (Le. genocide)in Indochina today. PA1T is s1 caIkimup nasty dev/ces and even better sys/mmsfor the futuae. They won't stop '~st forthe asking.

It is very important to realiz te dtechnology can rmr~ce pox=ibg a mr=without major US casualties, then smwfwars al over the vwprld wff becomepohL/fEdy acceptable to'the majorit'y offthe people in the US (Le., they vn notbe able to stop a President firome cmatmffglittle wans at wil). The technology, to dojust that comes from Mfr. If R11 can rUeturned away from war resarch, that m-mean more to the Nixons, Lairds, a~m/t

:Kiss/ngers of America than any meaewave of demonstrations.

In ime w/th t~hat, there is a. bscquestion of how MIT should be cam-txolied.

Basicalty, it is the Adwiniswafionwhich runs M/IT, especially/in its corpr-ate aspects. The Corporation On-fesserve mainly to rTaise funds. Pfunom.-gyt,they represent moneyed interests whicllbenefit from advanced technoloft.

TherTe ame few checki on the Amntratioaa's autbority; indeed, they do noteven have to perform well_ (V*-e t .heHousing and Dinin'g Service). Th~ey dedefi.what the directions of the institution w-.,~be, and if you -don't Eake it, they dem'treally care.

There/s- a- g1re-at elo1t- b u"zacademic/freedomTM to do research, butnobodly seems to discuss just where adg-ministrators get the right to admn/nstrate.Since they nm~ MIT's corporate o/de,(which has, a budget almost four times asLarge as the "educat/onal" part of theLInstitute), they would prefer to b-ethought of as servants of the faculty 2misivadents.

But there is no academic freedom tadminh-ter the Institute. Instead, the ant!-min/stration rules by secrecy (as does tikeUS government). As long as people don'tknow what's going on here, they cam'¢tstop it_

The first ztadel 4of secrecy is cano-tracts. You never hear anything about aproposed MPIT !contract utmfi it is signedl(and usuaily, .not even then). OnceVisher's signature is on the contract, "&ehonor of the Institute" woul be des-.·troyed by. lbreaking/it, say the ad.m/n'r~m=·/ore.- So people who0 titght have opposed~

tbt- Chmm ft Mac .mef MH Commits

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a II was 'mamxtf 'm getting more- ~ ~ r&2z_ ou/ alui atdinih-

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Nw~ U, w-am- a-'"~ A...1 Research,-say t semthe SDzyo ffits !heaings itto wi ab ,CaMBgE.e of the ?M~ple who

dem~ semmm tareli 71mfts a bettere~l~~ titam th, -e ~reve -committee

gpwc to ACDC_ 1e cmxmfft said thattthme mi~ C=.b~-,,;mm flor comtmcts, so

vwa maimctsa are pmase ,by the peoplewl m= W g-r± Ahz oe ~a:ct, mand not let

c~,,,~e CMItq" AM.ami wt as the-~"m~ee .-awm wvha woA -went on,

ibe/g 1pa-upa~t~di 1by MMIIF Tha'as academic

M~aw~ is sz~arz a~mot MI zactviies so

p=& m= mad ,wr of il (another·,mlgv off ~~}. t else- can be

the& emV~~h-xm fr>z .Oe ./a, .s bland

zlhaf-Bfl a rwazaV wolt ,n Draper and.:/2ul Labes 1X nmmm, -ghis MLminis-tnimaffr r , m -- lo [ko Lincoln and

W a ~-11 d:, a~ :~ffo, .nm1o; that's=b~ffa~e by .... 7 J e obf'sation.

~ae= -is ZF0 Ca -adMIc a~ffernenbe ae 3 ~'TMd rfese'Ch amml/roe speech.

App:EVO neaseaz _~s h~ev-d to accom-p,.Tur a s~rer-ac meE_ Dam.&rg somet~hhin,Gn' -W.7mme, :2s nzl ~ae free explession. If

a .~team f-on fcm hs. iate t~o ,mean that'mrfiff~s ca~ ,/!a ammyf.m at all, this

Mee]MM, rCT M=Mse~ ,/oes m~t zest on thegam~e Vf :ye& e.~ mm ,,Mobabbr it

1IIemortf Of ,[i-'' wwff-le.-' activ--'m m~.~y may. -ur .zriem d~o::g /it on

pwprp~:" Mb.t is a :3e. To get a DefenseDa eimmal wm:racd, &te -con~tractdng par-

,y -m- ~me a ~. -mT appl/a-9-w w wbih- the.. ,o~m~ct-is ,.m:rcted.

IMs slt ,omarr ,:ffg pa~v.e ,i§Tr acm-ted y,

'ms $!I/B . n~ =,m.~T~ of spzfc militiaryap~almti-, lo ',A.he :a~mn ,of r-ese-archdam b3~[),37 peo]:e i_.xvm ,ZeAl 't'o the govern-'mDOutt tto g~ m'l Me3Lzy u'hns sILmI a lot of,,-mf5.tx2 And~~~s ] i s doing it0M. puxrpamge_

· X~mltcan~w ~-a~~t,~s shh-quation?Men-2e stay, ,~n,~ mt>-rzs wz2S_ ore accur-

&x Amamn-~ :ruST. my :.ro-m IoLaty des-fifoip :3rvg pt~,ffbm.-~-f ~ ehberationffGT= a ,Zwcg:'ISg Lclzz_ Volim~g hassh.rea u~p It2 ,xmen Hmg _T. fies in the US.-

Ad=5n ,x z:ml tae def-e,:iv-.. Warwz:& as 'D lmr,,zga as ~.ptapi hbere as itGM=e Wm&s 3Mt Wsf a1 !h0g mazy to any

.. ~L'~=~:-~x~ges Tle war cren ors havea ,~tu~ rrn,~enestI n MFI, mad a lot of

F,- ay 2zu .b-ssn:1-ralifitcalin freakesh ~ brbTg .mr~k tm d~gs. And you

w t=YL tI m wzy~ ism't sf here bygastamr yonI d~d to '10~ MtT from

CT 9ttie tM:h-Mmleg Of ,m~murder,

tgrMg GM_ $M 'PMaetPI knoW how

Reading ==nt Tee. bs, it would smmthat the sbtre at MIT is pointle= anduwk. Gidmn 77 Tech's normal leve ofin/omainron about wimt goe= an at MIIT0.e- what the tas mnsm/o ¢~ you.otalnaiy b/t), that's e-ectd~. '.

Bttheme is a rean to sltrie MIT:whft protest sage and -normal func-tio~a of the Islust/rte conmue, MIThas be provding the techneote vitato continumg the- Andoch.a War withoutAmeda ground tmops.

MIrs L/ncohm Labs have taken thele-ad in developing systems of senwsor todetect mayb~hng on the ground, computentsystems to direct bombs, and sheths tofte= /m-gets, and[ radareleectro/iei coun-terme~sre and utamsoph/st/catedl bombgui&Mce -to make amm the bombs get tothe tag.s (Th US -ha a IV-guidedbomb that reputedly can strike within sixfiet of a specified targ.t)

lM1onday, Jerome Wiesner said that,in ]965-66, he w~s 'investitig ways tohasen troop withdrawals from Vietnamn,without endageig the safeaty of re-Wanig brops.'" (Yes, that's a directquote, afthugh The Tech d/dn't put it inquotes. Wiesner inteuded his wortk tosuppor Gavin's entclav polcy-) Doesthat sound Mke NiLxons Vietamnizationpolicy? It/xs exactly thee same firing. UStroops ame replaced with machines andelectronic devices, worth biffions of dot-lasin h war contracts to MIT and com-purees represented on Ars Corporationtrustees). AR to protect General Thieu'$

Soe-th Vietnamiese reghne. With respect tothe zir war yes~terday, Jerry Wlenerstated that he was a director of Adams-Rumsel!, Ywhch have in the lias yearmodified Bg-52's and other Us bombersw/th specia electronic countermeaue(ECM}.- Very probably these counter-measures am the ones that have pesm/tnedrecent B-52 raids on _Nlorh V/et~aM. T'heECM diverts Vietmamese anfiaircraft mis-siles and blanks out their radars, so theycen't hit the B-527s as each of them dropsup to 60,0/}0 pounds of bombs on them.

(H~easa note, mas destruction of ciwRl-ian ~pOPatons is a war crime, under theNurembuvg treaty. Artice= 7 of the usConstitution gves treties the statek of"supreme law of the land." So assg/inthis bombing/is Weg even! See City ofSeatfle v. US, US Supreme Court, 1924.)

rdire~r sMys he didn't knows Adains-Russell was roinhg this work. He did notsay -whether he thought such work- shouldbe dome. I bet/eye gerary. What he hasdone, by b-eco~/ng dmvector of Adam-

Rmeis to lend them the pmsfige of hisnme. I can junsi see Adams-RusseR szyingto the DoD "We can fix your bombers.'We know electronics. Just ask Jerry Wiles-ner, -he's on our board of diurectors--" AndDoD> says, "Well, if Wriewer/is a director,that means he has confidence in yourprofemsom~a ab~iiies and ltmaCs enoughfor Ml:y'

If Wiesner is tefR/ng the truth, he isiemd/ng his z'g~ad name to ar warcontractors. Cf counre at the spme time,he w-dtes letters denou.ncing the bomb/ing.Thatmfs pretty heav hypocrisy. And ffWiemer is lying, bat's too badl. ThePresident of MI-T shouidn't have to H/e inpeison_ He has_ lots of assistants who cando that for .h/e.

Dr.- Wiesner says The doem't know ex-actly what w r-related contracts the Insti-WMteis puro-m/iag. Agi, I beffeve him. It'sinteresting to note that Jerry has beenProvost (1966-71), chief officer -of thelusftufte reposile for research, andPresident (1971 -- ), who has to sign allMM!Ts contra.s So if he doesn't knowwhat w~r rosetorch M.fT is doing, either hehasn't thourght it important to know, orhe daesnt want to know. 1In any cae,?iemee's statement is very clear evidencethat war rewmdz at MIT is a routie thug,1not w-orthy of the Piesdent's attention.

Maul Gray .ays, (Th~e Tech, Apdl 21)there/is a "morderately improved climate"for research, and Draper and LincphiLabs are exprecing a %noderategrowah_" Just whtmtis ax~~onsible for thi-"moderate grw/hi"-More war work?When is the Insftu's depenenc on t.hegovemnment (and, ergo, war) going toend?

about SS millon each year from DrapfLabs and Lincoln Labs, yearly, and thatthis income makes MIT research overheadkzs 'for "on campus" projects, Presum-ably it also makes education cheaper thanit might be_--

Loss of this huge income would cer-ukily hurt MET. ",Naturally", (in ourcap~.alistic system), most MIT people donot want to lose thifsrincome. But MT'rsendowment must earn moze than $10m~lon a year. So MIT should be able todrop war researc:h without killing educa-tion.

MCMeawtfil, at the Cenkter for7 Interna-tional Studies (CIS), things have gotten abit too hot to do war research directly,an contracts. So the CIS has gone under-ground. Thke most sensitive Fries, (secrtes?)lave been removed from the CIS's claissi-flied private (no student allowed) library.(What's this staff about academic firee-dom?) The dit work goes on as con-suiting.

Rec.ently, there was a meeting at 'theCIS where professors were asked abouttheir consltng. The most honest profes-sor, K aumnn, said that for the past tenyears, each year he had had to getgoverunment approval to consult morethan 30 days per year fo£ the govern-ment. Four of those same years, he hadhad to get special approval to consulttw er 130 days per year. Consulting morethan 30 days in any year for the govern-ment. technically moakes you a govern-menit employee. Not only that, but MITregulations limit professors to one day.per week (or, 52 days per year) ofconsulting. So MIT/is bending its rules along way to perrmit this professor to assistthe government. (But we must preserve"out" rules against disruption of such`'normal f unctions of the Institute.")

Other professors at t~his CIS meetingwould not say how much time they spentconsulting, but they did say they consultfdr teCAoState - Deparimeat, etc.(The agencies are hardly innocent parties-in Vietnam~ and I doubt very much ifmany of the cons~ultants are telling themto get out.) Professor ithiel Pool wouldmot discuss hi s consulting; but in the pasthe has not denied working for the CIA.

Prof~ess~or Hayward Alker (XVH) ob-jected to the Cambridge Project, in partom the grounds that introducing sophisti-cated and very expensive compueter tech-niques to the forefront of political sci_-ence re~search, the goveriament would"price out of the market" political sci-ence researchers waho could not or wouldnot get government funding. This is anexceffent argument, and a clear exampleoff how "academic freedom" works in acapitalistic society. If people with com-puters can do more or better research,and the main source of money is con-tracts (and not any source that wouldg/we just anyone money to do research),then the university, by giving -academicsaaction to the contracts, is saying,"We're for sale to the highest bidder."Goverment, with its power to tax, cantheoretically out bid anyone, and/in factdams control a lot of the contract workMIT does in political affairs (and virtuallyaE the consulting).

Michael Feirtzg writes in Thne Tech(April 25) "At M~IT, it seems probablethat the academic contribution to the warwas completted long ago; it seems doubtfulfilat anything new or vital, either politicalor military, is being developed (thoughaimittediysoehgcoltrnp..nobody has looked closely at dhe -labs orthe els in two years ).""

Let's see just what that "completed'academic contribution to the war hasbeen. In the earlly stages of the war(A-mericans proppimg up the French andDiem regimes), probably all' that MITcontributed was consultants (CIS). Withthe American /nvasion in 1965, MITtuned up to produce hardware for theAmerican war on the ground. This in-cluded the infamous Mov'mg Target Indi-cator (note the euphemistic title) whichseeks out and iden'~fes anything movingon the ground, so she, he or it can bedestroyed. Lincoln Labs people went toVletnam to help field test this device; butthat was before protest made them shy.

Another MIT project for the groundwar was the helico~pter stabilization pro-ject. Protestera were told that the MITprojec was not. fox a gun plaffor fia andwould not be oplrational for some years

PAGE6 FRIDAY,APRIL28, 1972 THETE, C9i'

Freshman!

Chemical Engnee-digFree feod, drink, and info

at an informal meetingwit~h studens and professor

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Xonitinued from page 4]trend of the "socialization" of scientistsclosely for the past few years and havetried unsuccessfully to point out thefal/ibility of the logic espoused by itsadvocates. Scientists must remain alooffro m the political aspects of their work inorder to give objective and factualappraisals of the results of their work andbe guided by the wishes of the demno-cratic majority. The breakdown of thissystem might allow a handful of qualifiedscientists to veto a scientific projectdesired by the vast majority of the 1/eopleand their elected representatives either bya biased presentation of the facts im orderto distort opinion or by an outrightstrike.

An indication of this trend was vividyseen in the: Congressional heazings an theSST and -the AMB. Experts in the so-called precise sciences who- had enteredtheir work with extreme preconceivedbiases ended up giving testimony on thesaient/~ic possibilities of these syrstemsexactly opp~osite to each other. Thae netresmta being that most Congressmen ad-mittedly ignored the testimony in favorof gut feelings.

En an k--stitutional sense, these sameprimc/ples. apply. For years, the Americanpeop~le and their representative govern-ment looked to MIT and its associatedlaboratories to perform much of thescientific research and developmentwhtich they desired. Now the trend is totell the American people in the form ofnom-scientific value judgements that theyam -wrong and that MIT will decide whatworkc is to be done. A good example Of

Us as th~e hysteria concerning defensework performed at the lhstrumetataionLab-oratory and the resulting changeswhich took place against the wishes ofthe personnel involved. This is an tlitistattitude and amounts to governmemt bythe. minority, especially if the few other-qua~ified laboratories £ollow MIT's lead inblack~iitng certain projects. MIT's role isto m.ake- sc[lntaa czeoamnd,Tw '1cold objectivity and leave value judge-mezts to the ballot box.

Thus yo-u do a great disservice to thescientific profession and MIT when you

take thew publ political stands, and youcan't help but alienate part of the MITcommunity, And fimalydo,do* your jobinstead of bucklfng under. every studentpressure groap that comes along. Yourr esponses to these situations are so pre-dictable as to be laughable .

itchael J. McNutt '69

To the editor:I feel that I must take issue with Mr.

R eid Ashe in his pro-smodidg letter toThe Tech of AprRi 21. in this letter, Mr.Ashe c~iires that the main reasons for theanti-smoking drive are neo-puritanism andoverseR of environmentalism. This claimis patently false. No non-smoker is goingto claim tha~t Wie are ruining o urenvironment by harvesting largequantities of tobacco or that the smogproblem in' our cities is caused bypollution of cigarette smoke. It is alsotrue that most non-smokers do not give adamn whether or not an individualchooses to irot his own lungs.

What is at issue is the right ofasthm atics, allergic individuals, andnon-smokers to breathe clean air versuasthe 'gt"of the smoker to rot the lungsof those arourte him. Smoking, whether itbe in the classr~oom, in the halls, or at anexamination, is a discomfort whichsmokers blithely expect others to endure.

Whd~e Mr. Ashe agrees with threbanning of smoking in classroomns, hesuggests that. banning smoking iexaminati~ons is an unfair burden on

smokers. His suggestion that a section ofthe examination rooni be set aside forsmokers will not be a viable one until theInstitute makes an effort to drasticallyincrease the ventiatlion in the rooms inWhich -exams are currently being held.The bonfire of tobacco in one corner ofthe room will spread throughout theroom during the coerse of theexamination, with effects on people as afunction of the ventilatio n of the room,

their distance: from the source of thenoxious fumes, and their individual-sensitivity to smoke irritation (which, insome instances, is quite high).; Theresulting irritation can be as bothersomeas having someone next -tO' you in theexamination loudly popping bubble gumor talking a soda straw and kandomlyshooting peas at people around .him. Theonly difference is the sensory organ beingimpinged upom. The ashes afkd cigarettebutts which are almost invariably leftupjon the floor are a Final reminder. of thecallous disregard most smokers have forothers.

I would suggest to smokers who feelburdeined at the thought of not being ableto relieve their tensions at an examinationby smoking bring a few pencils or pens tothe examination to chew, or alternately,some chewing gum. Non-smokers; havefound these to suffice for many years.

As for smoking in the halls betweenclasses, I suggest that it be done outsdie,instead. This method avoids botheringinnocent passers-by. I do not believe that

the additional smoke wM advefi rly affectthe air over Cambridge. Duzingin'clemeatweather, certain rooms could be set asidefor smokers so that they need -not standoutside.

An alternative to all of rthe abovemeasures would be to reqluni a dlear

plastic globe over the faces. oE anokerswho attend classes at MIT, so -that thekismoke does not escape beyon d their. ownlocal atmosphere, or to requfire smokersto supply gas masks to those' aro;td the m-who desire such protection. Tis way,smokers could be allowed the choice ofrotting their own lungs without [~otheringothems.

Alan Cassel :74

To the editor:I rmled your editoriaI comment on th~e

publication of M~r. Rothchild's letter as adesire to publish all. views on topic-alcontroversil subjects. I beieve that you~xvfil find that within the dictionarydefinition of libel -- and I checked severaldictionaries - that letter confaiis lbelousmaterial- In addition. it mirepresents theexpressed views of Phrofessor Pinson onthe issue of Professor Bronfenbrenn¢r'sappearance here, and it coes with athreatening statement. It strikes mae tihatthe publication of such a letter canl hamrdybe considexed responsible ed~iorial goficy.

Eieen Kibrick(On Ike basis of ecent &4;reme Court dezisions, uv do not bebere th.at M. RothchildITletter was. Hhlfbeso. -E.dftvr}

The Wmrdo id appears daily and SunlaVy in The gS 'ort Hem'Id Travelar.

MIT STUDrNTS,, STAFF AN. ID FACULTY[ PR$AY PURCHASE

ARJOle BRA N -c

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On Wednfy, May 10, an officer of litlenindustries will be a1 the Pacement Office,El 9-455, to interviet- cndidates for positionsof permanent employme nt.

The opportunit ammtiebe are as assistants todivisional group vfe peidents, w ith fastadvancement into top line factory mana§e-merit rsponsibilites.

The candidates should have u'tasndingrecords of achievement

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a e 10 TELEPNHE 86I-75F5 o e aHOUGR - 7:30 A-U. to 5:34 P.M.

Monday and Wednesay: 7:30 A.A[ to 7.-- P.MLSaturday: 7:30 A-M. to 3.t3 P.M.

Ovw A Hal Cenbm o e/ware $~a~ 3915U m vm Qmrm seem Mo C 9DRUM cmamm OF cemomm

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THET1EC FRIDAY¥,APRIL28,'1972 PAGE 7

tiiiatons prese td or c ty commnittees

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made, the faculty voted to closenominations.

Discussing the nominationprocedure , PMartin said --thatevery other year the faculty issolicited by questionnaire fortheir interest in the committees.These results are tabulated bycomputer, and along with infor-mation about who has been in-volved in what, are used by thecommittee to choose its nomi-nees. He also noted that depart-ment heads are asked for theirsuggestions.

The Nomination Committeeitself, Martin stated, is appointedby the President.

This year's nominations are:Pofessor of Mathematics Hartley

Rogers, Chairman of the Faculty;Associate Professor of MetalurgyRoy Kaplow, Associate Chainan;Associate Professor of HumanitiesDavid Ralston, Secretary of theFaculty;

Associate Professor of ChemistryJames Kinsey, and Associate Pro-fessor of Aeronautics and Astro-

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By Lee GiguerelThe Nominations Committee

of the faculty has proposed 51faceulty members to fill posts aselected officers of the facultyand openings on commnittees.

According to Professor ofMathematics W. Ted Martin,chaixrman of the NominationsCommittee, the candidates,whose names were circulated tothe faculty earlier tFhis monthand were formally presented atthe April faculty meeting, willcome up for approval at the Maymeeting.

Martin explained that .al-though the Nominations Com-mittee prepares only a singleslate, any faculty memnber cannominate another member withhis approval. He noted, however,that after the committee's list ofnominees was circulated -noother nominations were re-ceived. He called for additionalnominations at the April facultymeeting and when none were

nautics Albert Solves, Committee onAcademic Perfonrmance; Professor ofElectrical Engineering Leonard Gouldand Associate Professor- of Eco-nomics, John Harris, Committee onCurricula;

Associate Professor of EconomicsMichael Piore and Associate Professorof Chemical Engineering AdelSarofun, Committee on Discipline;Associate Professor of MathematicsSteven Orszag, Professor of Mechani-cal Engineering Thomas Sheridan,Associate Professor of Earth andPlanetary Sciences Carl Wunsch andAssociate Professor of ElectricalEngineering Michael Dertuozoss, Com-mittee on Educational Policy;

Professor of Mechanical Engi-neering Richard Lyona and AssociateProfessor of Management JiaroldWilcox, Committee on IndustrialLiaison; Professor of Poitical ScienceWilliam Kaufman and Professor ofEcononics and Management CharlesKindleberger, Committee on OutsideProfessional Activities;

Associate Prossosr of Nutrition-Maria Lindner, Committee on Staff-Administration; Associate Professor

of Earthf and Planeta SciencesFrederick A. Frey and Associate Pro-

fessor of Mathematics DavidSchaeffer, Committee on StudentEnkronment; Associate Professor of.Ecoanomics Duncan Foley and Asso-ciate Professor of Physics JamesLitster, Connittee on UndexaduteAdmissions and Financial Aid;

Professor of Cheaistry John Rossand Professor of Aeronautics andAstronautics Leon Tnrling, Corpora-tion Joint Advisory Comnmittee oninstitute-wiede Affairs (members ofCJAC are actualy elicted by theCosorration, they are listed here forinformation);

Professor of Meterlogy .aTmesAustin, Professor of AerohauticsJudson Baron, Visiting PffeS.ar ofArchitecture Julian Beinart, Professorof Phulosophy Syh-/n Bromberger,Professor of Humanities DavidEpstein, Professor of Ocean Engi-neern J. Harvey Evans, Professor ofUrban Planning Aaron Fleisher, Pro-fessor of Political Science FederickW. Fxey;

Professo of Foreign LiteraturesMorris Halle, Professor of Physics

Georg Koster, Professor of CiiEngineering Charles Ladd, Professorof Clhemistry Richard Lord, Professorof Earth and Planetary ScienceTheodore Madden, Professor ofManagement Donald Marquis, Pro-fessor of Nuclear EngineeringNorman Rasmussen, Associate Pro-fessos of Psychology WlhitmanaRichards, Professor of BiologyPhillips Robbins, Professor ofMechanical Engineering WarrenRohsenhow, Associate Professor ofMetalurgy Kenneth Russel, Pro-fessor of Mathematics RichardSchafer, Professox of EconomicsPeter Temin, Professor of ChemicalEngineering Glenn Wlamrns, and Pro-Ifessor of Naiibon Gerald Wogan,Commnittee on Graduata SchoolPolicy;

Assistant Professor of AeronauticsRenwick Curry, Professor of Econo-mics Evsey Dornamr, Professor ofPhysics Bernard Feld, Assistant Pro-fessox of PMetallurgy Keith Johnson,Pofemsor of, Architectule HenrjyMion, Professor of Chemistry C.Gardiner Swain, Committee on theLilbrary System.

Calif~ornia grape win d natural fruit flavors-. Gallo Vineyar. odesto. Calinia.California grape wint d natural fruit flavors. Gallo Vineyards. Modesto. Califor~nia.

. ito p aa- - om b m a

PAGE8 FRiDAYAPRIL28,1972 _ TE__

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The second The Tech' -ite-flying contest will be held aspart of Kaleidoscope '72 on Fri-day, May 12, on Kresge Paza.Kaleidoscope '72 will also fea-ture belly dancers, folk dancrs,three rock bands, unicyctists,ping pong experts, Prof. Rosen-how's Band, fencers, nggers,Road Runner cartoons, and apie-eating contest.

The kite-flying contest willbegin at 4:30 pm. It wi in claldeprizes ilrn the following catego-ries:

Hlighest-flying kite: A three-column by sx-inch advertise-ment.in The Tech; we'll do thetypesetting. The ad must be non-comamercial, not obscene orlibelous, and, signed with thewinner9s name; other than that,just about anything goes.

Largest kHite, based on weightas flown: We'll photo-enlarge sixpages of agy black and whitematerial to 12"x 18".

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Ahntiwa3 dratift f~tia imofims an~ ft I= &R of/t 9b Nff~ ~ hold that.

lwqat up; mtintgoeftm 1} A ~ IM oea-fifzfamaf for Faiaay 1bai- fc in AMa fo manym:CB ~ s ~iie e ~~~ggtspac

M '~tima I tiv o tt~ p ml lnd ofibis Meafg iof the BUT at gt im i

f~ma cams for an 3 Ok/az cogs to ltir Uzaidto us in ino i $ y a&, this

:wt,,adlto ~ pMimt &= tohav made the Em t.. ml s to bring

.b~e PEc i! ROas RO a im w ubs that Rfurter

. ftwy zsa (bota in =a- dcziqe mma isa tmcwate, andeai IT~ amd fin anI-eat w al tae muto

alamtmn), Md sr~~l~ ree Mze M ~ to gt out of SinP. t of M evi r as z as sle. 2)

(as-at th1 Cemc for Iftemago- T pn of i tembleal Stu&Ies). We ugv techw wa ammmft-the can-~ ofsitm,=% stat ff em tol tO d h lke& o ~e r stmnts, whojn,- in . apge.. CMr4 . now femt c f again It theyagains 'the Inlm:. bim W2 W -M~_ CaMtO bW-ieM as

mid olsr im3a m fe. 7 to rt M fl tow a:VI/C. ~ ~ ~ TiD mr flma3.of ca- MI31I c .f ami the cur-

A m~aja~ity of us at Ibis Mwt- OEM= &M go Pme- t

M IB= M M/A

Most original kite design:Well typeset the w-nnees termpaper (20 typewritten pas/5000Q w ords orless), includingjustfied copy, subhead, itals,charts, your choie of our seolec-tion of typestyles, table of con-tents, and a cover complete withline drawings or -photosgraphs.(Good either Spring or FallTerm 1972.)

Most original kite designmade from Te Dfy Reamer:an 8x0O glossy photograph ofour Chairman,, Bob Elin.

Most absurd, Charlie Brown-esque failure: A Wednesdaynight date with Paul and Sherryin the office of Te Tech. Freepizza and Coke.

All winners receive a freeone-year subscrupton toTech.

All entries must be can-structed from old copies of TeTech or The Daily ReamerWooden, meal, or plastic from-

ing material may W ~i ; ta-smay be made of cloti Am 'tnaof decoratoan is welaace; hzw-ever, the words ie Te or TheDail Rewam from the top ofour Efront page mm ap ztleast once in a prminn hon the kIite

Judging w be byof the B3oard of Dipidtmn of 7F Tech. Decsions of the ~-~_wiH be fmia[ AD eatd= nmmstayao f alof t lor at 1$ast ma -interrupted nintes to qaffor prizes. Members of te staFof The Tech sare ine fr

prizes.A picnic dimact for Commons

people -will be gen. Thiose noon commolnes can buy ticets inadvance in .BLding IO; the p-i~:is $2.75 ($S.75 &F ,R~ }.)There will b a s dmteactsoftball game, and tbh yearsWinner of the Big Sme w beannoulced.

There are 16 ;£them, covegng 19 ofhe Idse smost popular ies.

Whey not oxy desecibe the reglargatractons, but the of-eat plas a well

And have d-, :smunt cupons good for hvtl'5restaurants, s , shops, atoum, etc

For only $ia book you can save up t$100 a eit.

ey're available at a TWA tcket ofes or

A~nd tkhen, :dyoun wanni you~H a~i ; ake up imfim your TWeV travel age tMINCNS. O E TAVA C A -02Lwo y e W as you mmcar

~'A offers ~ver 150 A :mbsotdohrffifgStudpayto Eu~rope ndL oer 40 flgt ea aly acm ~heUrn'ted SBte d

TWA ga mutees th~atvhefantures cary rselowest far hage by ay ~h~~ ~on-the - theUited

States ayr avet agentorye aW And t'p,_ ay.nege mor Mthan YjN C lowV N EM 7DEPAR NE,fare to 'Emrpe- ~.vr0aystU X ni\teStes

:?:_~~~::i:ii:::__ ~_~~::~:':i;" '""~" } A coupon booklet that."-gets you a room and

Continental breakfast ineithr a- guesthouse orstudent hotel in any of

52 European cities ~%r only $4.80 a night.No advance reservations needed.And, as a bonus, we throw in free coupoTns good

for bullfights, concerts, the use of a Bicycle,theater tickets, sightseeing and more.

in any of 52 European cities.They range in price from

$6 to $18 a day, and includea room md Continentalbreakfast in either aguesthouse or economy - U --:.3:::

hotel, taxes and all serice chages. f ~_6r_ _

As a free bonus, we also throw in sightseeingtours, parties, theater tickets, localtransportation and TWA guide books.

WXSt GETAWA GUIDESa*

. zw w g y ts P Xs g XAM

Z d 4@~~Lgropn 99 WC C. 1@CI

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TWbs STUTELPASS ..- - - -

TW~l BED AND @BREAiKFASTAD, NURES. A higher grade of

rpqfR-rvpd qr S-mmoei:.-.in-, : ._r~q~xr~] ~~t~m ~ fi n_~ }:: .....m= .. _:...!

...........- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .THE TECH . FRI DAY, APR I L 28,- 1972 PAGE 9

Se lective .ai . pp . I . _.

:e] io epea ooc ss I~~~-~~ C~l~crive ce .1,~Ze;~

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Relax and Divert

---- � E�a�aa�sl�···�aamnnmars��·rr�slm_ --

Administration of all research atMIT whose main application isin wars of colonial type. Thefollowing motion was suggestedafter the Wednesday meeting:

Motion IVMotion: That the faculty

committee to investigate the useof high-accuracy MIRV submitits report, which was promisedearly in the fall term of 1970, atthe next regular faculty meeting,and that the report include anexplanation of the year-and-a-half delay in the submission ofthis report.

- -- ------- - - -- --

Red Pin SpelealWednesday - Friday 1:30 - 5:09

Strike when 'the head-pin is redand get a free-game certificate

(redeemable durig "Special". houn)

to

~Eie Ma

g)ew in 7OaU nqur(Effective May I st)To: BritRail Travel International

P.O. Box 267. Staten Island. New York 10314 . -

Please send me I Bri tRail Youth Pass Leaflet . Detaiis of $4 "Opento IView" Ticket L_- BritRail Pass Folder for those over 22 years of age. -

NAME .m=

ADDRESS 14B

CITY STATE ZIP ,

= .- ~ S .t ' 2 ' 3 1

C-·�-n�·�·9�n -·-m --?11-·lll--P-· I�·1I1I1II���·�·-·�-·D�·CIWIIZII�UD··-··L .

of ~IVIIT w(Continued jrfom page 8)

rent crisis, and not to penalizestudents academically for acts ofconscience.

Motion IIIW3e hold that the US war in

Vietnam, the Amnerican-aidedPortuguese wars in the Africancolonies, and other similar oper-ations seek to prevent self-deter-mination of several nations.Such wars and operations buildhatred against the United States,waste lives and resources, and sodetract from the defense of theUS and its true interests.

Work in support of such warshere at MIT should be re-exam-ined, with greatest urgency inthose cases where the actualdefense of the United States isleast involved and colonial-typerepression is most involved. Wesee no justification for secrecy insuch cases, and feel that theclaim of academic freedom isnot compatible with secrecy. Weask for full disclosure by the

iI

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Following the appeal, theregistrant will be sent yetanother classification form. Ifthe state decision was notunanimous, there is again a 15day period during which aPresidential appeal may berequested. The personalappearance is an option of theregistrant.

All of the 15 day limits maybe extended by the local board,through which all appealrequests must pass, if it issatisfied that the registrant'sfailure to act within theprescribed period was due tosome cause beyond his control.

A personal appearance cannow be requested before thelocal board decides on a COclassification or a hardshipdeferment. The same proceduralrights pertain to suchpre-decision meeting.

Guidelines have been clarifiedfor those who fail to report for apersonal ap pearance. Thexegistrant is given five days inwhich to submit acceptablereasons for his failure to appear.

The boards must now mailthe reasons for an adverseclassification decision . at thetime the classification notice issent. Such informationpertaining to a ruling by thePresidential board must berequested.

By Stom KabiffmanLast month, the Seiective

Service System issued its lastmajor - group of regulationchanges, thus hopefully endingmore than two years of almostconstant reform and confusionabout draft policies andregistrant rights.

T he regulations concernprocedures' for .. personalappearances and appeals, amongother subjects. The issuance ofthe new rules removes thearbitrary administrative rightsover personal appearances andappeals which had been in effectsince late 1971.

Following is a summary ofthe changes, similar to that

published in the FederalRegisterof March 10, 1972 .-....

Formerly, a request forreclassification after the receiptof an induction order was notconsidered unless there had beena change in the registrant's statusresulting from circumstancesover which he had no control.Now, someone receiving apostponement authorized by thenational or state director, or oneissued in o rd e r for him tocomplete a school term oracademic year, will receivec o n s i d e r a tion of areclassification-request until 30to 40 days prior to his actualinduction date. Post-inductionorder reclassification requests

:cepted Upon written request of theformer registrant, a personal appearancecontrol before a state-level appeal board

is now allowed. Again, he will becitizen ' entitled to sufficient time for aperiod fair representation, but he will

18th not have the right to bringegister. witnesses.5 with A personal appearance beforept for a quorum of the Presidentialill be appeal board is now allowedi, an upon written request, if the votealding of the state-level board was not

unanimous. The registrant isant had permitted 15 minutes although,s to his this time may be extended at theore the discretion of the board, and;trant is witnesses are not permitted.o three A registrant now has only 15earance days, rather than the former 30,is local from the date of his latest noticeto such of classification, in. which toe as is request a local board

fair appearance. If he wishes toclaim: by-pass the personal appearance,

will be he may request, during the sameinterval, an appeal to the stateboard.

If he requests the appearancebefore the local board, he willreceive 15, not 30, daysxnoticeof the meeting. Following, hewill receive a new classificationnotification and will have 15

~A A days in which to request aWayB~ statelevel appeal and state

whether it will involve a personal~[~ ~ happearance.

from others will not be acunless they flfilll thecircumstances beyondclause.

Also, every n--le USnow has a two monthcentered around hisbirthday in wkich to rnRegistrants age 26 to 3extended liability, excemedical specialists, wiplaced in Class I -Fadministrative heclassification.

Formerly the registrano right to bring witnessepersonal appearance beftlocal board. Now, a regisentitled to bring up tcwitnesses to his appibefore a quorum of hiboard. He is also entitledtime for his appearancenecessary. for arepresentation of hisnormally 15 minutes adequate.

Buy a BritRail Youth Pass if you'regoing to Britain this year. It's good for-unlimited travel on trains in England,Scotland and Wales.You can't lose

If you're between 14 and 22 you can-get a 15-day Youth Pass for $40'or aOne Month version for $70. Each isgood for unlimited travel during thetimre period. Just hop on and off thetrains wherever you like. It's a steal. The1 5-day Pass, for example,gives you thefreedom of Britain literally for under$2.67 a day.Meet people, see places

With only a few super-highways,hitch hikcing is difficult and travel byroad can take a long time in Britain. Sopeople travel by train a lot. You'l! meetthemrn. And see more. British trains arefast- London to Edinburgh, 400 miles,in 5 hours 45 minutes. They're conven-ient, too - over 1600 train services dailycovering nearly 2,000 cities, towns, andvillages. And comfortable-most longdistance trains have dining or buffet

cars with full meals or snacks.Buy it now

If you get to Britain and your fiendsare off and running with BritRail YouthPasses you'll be disappointed. Becauseyou must buy one here in the Statesbefore you leave. Return the couponand we'll send you, free, a leaflet show-ing how to get your BritRail Youth Pass,plus details of a $4 "Open to View"season ticket giving you free admis-sion to over 400 places in Britainincluding the Towerof London, Hamp-ton Court and dozens of castles, parks,mnuseums and mansions.

Or you can get both from anyTravel Agent. All you need to proveyour age is your Passport. That's all.After that, Britain belongs to you.

And if you're post graduate or aprofessor over 22, there's a whole groupof similar value BritRail Passes for youtoo. Return the coupon. We'll send youthe brochure.

~a-Bita

,-. St F.. .

Wed. thru Sat. 11:00am- 11:30pmSunday 4 -10 Opm

Tuesday 4 - 11:30 pmClosed Monday

MIT Student CenterGames Area

Interviews for these Institute committees:Committee on C:urriculumCommittee on the Harvard-MIT

Joint Health ProgramCommittee on the Use of Humans

as Experimental SubjectsInterdisciplinary Environmental CournilSelective Service Advisory Comamittee

For more information contact:Evelyn Reiser, W20-401 x2696

The Undergraduate Nominations Committee

gl %ADate 9

CAMPUS Xfil Commonwalth(Oposite0 U. ato

I n 'Geatfr aA l Bono calls o endacti'vit

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PAG E _{ ¢',, : R' DAiY AiYARR ;L 28, i972-' -THE- i-, I

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America has found it easyenough to develop an upper classfor whom social concerns areamusements: radical chic. It isonly recently, though, thatgenial self-hatred ("God, am Icorrupt; God, is my life emptyand meaningless") has perme-ated the musical theater. Broad-way, which used to feed'America unclouded visions oflove as the meaning of life, hasof late gained the effortlesscynicism that passes forsophistication. Thus, religiousthought has made its appearanceon the musical stage, with thetheology of J.C. Superstar, and,more obviously, with theself-loathing of LennieBernstein's Mass, whose singersmusically shout theirshortcomings and despair topacked houses of thewell-groomed, deodorizedmiddle class.

An d fin ally thehowempty-my-life-is confessionthat has become the newsophistication has affected themusical comedy. Company,which ran on Broadway fornearly two years, and won aTony award for best musical,lives on self-doubt and earnestquestioning of the middle-classvalues it ultimately more-or-lessaffirms. Consisting of a series oftableaus revolving around a setof married couples and theirunmarried friend, the playbegins by expressing, with theappropriate room left for doubt,irony, and such, the sanctity ofmarriage (or at least one-toonemale female relationships)as thefoundation of fulfillked existence.At the conclusion, Robert (theprotagonist) has apparentlywoken up, and in an' extensionof the play's philosophy to life

THIE DaYS OF FIREAND BRIMSTONEARE '.

Rem en berfo ntan Ipakthe old-time.-

preachers whourged us torepent in tonesthat shook therafters? Thosedays are gon.forever.

The Paulist,bfor instance, speaksthe language of : atoday because ::

he is part of to- hday. He is not 'isolated in a pulpit but part of thescene.

Maybe he became a Paulist be-cause he felt uneasy about the stateof the world. Or because he wantedochange things. But whatever he

doing--whether he is a parishpriest, a missionary, a press, radioor television personality, an edu-cator or involved in the UniversityApostolate, the Paulist is con-cerned and involved.

Paulists meet the challengesthat change presents.

For more Information aboutthe Paulist priesthood, write to:Rev. DoenalaB.d C. Campbell, C.S.P.,Vocation Director, Room 608

415 West 59th StreetINewTR yerkG, N.V. te st'19

Flying...what a great wvay to spend your U:pon heing comlmlissioned a 2nd lieutenant inspare time. Undergraduate Pilot :Traini .............:...-ir. Force Reserve, VoLu ,o directly to an

: i t eF r ev.i o.......... .. A(UPT) is the Air Force Reserve : Force Plyin,,' school for classroom

gram that trainls those who.qual- to becomie Air Force pilots:., a minii imum of interrup':-:-:":iSi?'from ijot), homIe -life, !Detqa~uallf:ica~tiols ncius~ .Deilnl ,ctw eoen zol2 an. d ':

26./, years of age; in top .....physical condition; hold-::i...:a bachelor's degree (or::il your last senlester";".

and satisfactory scores ~:~¢¢~ :~on the Air Force ()ff- :X :;- Xcer-'s (4uaficatio'n^ ........est' ...

.......

.. 11 ..

~. -. .... oi:d flying ilnstruction. Aifter onea::er oI trainin-, you will

sp lo 1C al A'':..~n e rltlO U r o ! I1 1 eo, ; 00.,,3 !!wn. folalo ths civilian

?:s, c "-eer you ve' chserr, and:'- . .:ywith your l ocal Air

? ' ~ ~ ~ ~ :: he -!uf .:~v't;.:.;Fore Reserce unit, dur-

"?K ,0ur spao a re tie a eti,~{;o v¥'ee dsron. t or all

AkDVERTISING (RSAV) 44R FORCE BASE: E· : - ~'?>'":'::'{: he ~facts about th-e

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int) Dtservte of irnerthrad- .:?-a'e Pilot TIrairiingr

· 4 ,'~~"/ .'":1: ' i8r o gr a m n mail in thle'/'; ;~J~ :'';.:-tosl owing coupo o.~/~~~~?':~;!'.:-.:';:.h:en you filv w~ith

' "~ ~~~~~~ * c I 1e ' ~et"::~ ~ : ~~~~i:;'.!i¢:~·:a :~yfroml it all.

3-SC-42 lE RESERVE AD4VERTISING (RSAV) IIR% FORCE BASE I,S 78148 [

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in general,'declares that the realthing involves being open andwilling to be hurt. The play endsarmbiguously, though, as Robert,seemingly Broadway's attemptat an existenial hero, looks onfrom a distance as his friendswait for him at his apartment;, itis, as it is afl many timesthroughout the play, hisbirthday.

Along the way, the play findstime to be coy about obscenity,and sexist as well. Robert's threegirlfriends are displayed, andrequired to bitch in shrewishharmony, in Act One. In thesecond act, Robert's story of aMiami conquest who requeststhat he leave the motel toprocure champagne and baby oilgets a new conquest all hot andb o thered. Robert's ensuingcopulation is not seen (the beddemurely rolls off the stage), buta dancer in leotards is; sheshimmies about the set while theorchestra plays torrid music and,on tape, Robert and his lovelyexpress their innermostthoughts: "Oh, this issensational"; "Oh, I think hereally likes mne"; "Oh, she hassuch a smooth body"; It'spoetry"; "I think I could lovehim"; "If only I could rememberher name." This, then, for those

who wonder, is what theupwardly mobile,-guilt riddenthink as they fuck.

Yet there is some pleasure inwatching the p r oductioncurrently being mounied inKresge Auditorium by the MITMusical Theatre Guild. Two ofthe tableaus _work withmarvelous effect: Sarah (ValerieNorwood) and Harry (Peter J.FitzGerald) perform very welltogether to bring off a picture ofan ironically successful couple,the one a food freak,,the other alatent alcoholic, and theaudience responded warmly' totheir karate demonstration. AndAmy (Sherry H. Arell) performswinningly as a nervous bridewho has lived with her betrothedfor yeaIrs but can't go throughwith the pointless- ceremony.Robert (Charles Kiefer) singsreasonably, but his acting style isu n f o r t unately somewhatwooden. Yet perhaps hischaracterization of a vaguelydespondant bachelor entering alonely middle age worksanyway; his lines are not thebrilliant witticisms one mightwish they would be, and thedelivery- manages to convey agentle irony. Jossle de Guzman(as April) does a fine job with a

role that requires her to portraya personable piece of beef.

The performance I saw leftmuch to-be desired technically.A good part of the intrinsicpleasure of such a play (whoseone set consists of amulti-leveled platform, each

level of which represents a roomin one couple's apartment)derives from the cldockworkefficiency with which the sceneschange and characters moveabout the set. Unfortunately,the pacing of this perfonrmanceseemed slowed by difficulty theactors had in moving about.Further, many of the actorsmovements to their positionscould be seen by the audience.The--result was that much of theaction seemed contrived. On a

few occasions the problenseemed to lie with the directio-rather than the set or Kresg-Auditorium's shortcomingspersons pointlessly climl

· staircases to burst into song, o:prowl about the stage befor-beginning a number.

The lighting was sloppyLiterally dozens of cues weremissed during the evening.

The brass in the orchestrawere subdued, producing abetter balance with the stringsthan usual, but a weak overallsound, which, however, allowedthe singers to be generallyaudible. The sound of the stringswas better than usual, forstudent productions here, but as usual could use help.

-Michael Feirtag

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AIR FORCI3DIRECTORATE OF A

RANDOLPH AITEXA.

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.DiN'rS PIZZA ANDm r~P l IbET s5

FAST DELIVERYREASONABLE PRICES

CALL 266-63816 PM-l1 Midnight

MASS. AVE. IN BOSTON NEAR BEACON ST.

By A KedouTie IMT Rugby Club's young

wftmirg streak came to aMi-g halt, in last Satulrday's

ewmE y weather, at the hands ofEamrd Bsiness School. It ,&as

mat a FMtq match to watch.Ref.ee F. Sykes kept very closetrue of offsides, late tackling

and cnk-omsi, and the resultantpealffhes made the pace of thegame jeiff and sputtering. Longseq ces off. play without thesotrd of tae wistie wwere rareirtc~eed

Le tEe game itself, Tech'sefforts never seemed to getrofllng throvghout the long,&arey aftemroon. As individuals,te cEub members turned inperhalP thek best performancesGf the season. Loose-forwardT_. Cerne G and prop WO SmithG stood out, wtle wingers S.H.Arr Mand H.A_ Flanagan Gshone fi the back-line. Goodly as a teaa was not apparent,

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IM~TEM FRIDAY,-APRtIL28.1972 PAGE 11

M~~ i -r'hmimations for I l -N'f(g l an d Dinghy and

glehanded Ch

weekend, and' both tihSiy tem nd C=vidwaais g for~ t e: two

2^gat Tetc 6Sk $ray,,men's a rit mtmt. PB1mdopd in the Dam kBwl

d Hmvard, amd as am' oeff

the New Erdlbma iL, to be s-ae at CotXam

'Yacht Club ai Miar 6 md

SpM `73. smungn Kross '73 as GD ffmide-Ifor second pam in *b

;~h La2uncY 110ma W4vfiftg) and L-MiV Bamw -X3,ttmd at lggts CBab Lcmg5k

an in B Diddon-

16, NUT6, 22y, Boae 30, B c.m- 35,D

mouth 59.

'Four Of MIrs si emdams'Ite ' t iars EI. ~

-Ch~am 'k" en SUM&Tsqualed for the ffa cerenLslated for M~ay 13 and, 14. alb2zt COMA GUn~ird, Sgream and~Fanmk Keff '73 bohita thfheats, whlne at Tufts, Bt(a¢ am~C'aeehiaro plaed fi amd tLfed

~m ~~i~st I~'~~fect r icdi GEoff-fitplace finishes imfta ~eraces_Sophmo.os Water Frank

and Ranedy Young bztth p ,Imp1thd ha theff respcve bmt atCoast Guard[ ant~ . mfied;M.a-md Bozzao. '73, ,'a, wtt15

She~ey Bemsti '74 an& GarBae ,7 as crwt&C MIT womeys teamE. to a~ffs ecn pae ofiihmtm pr

Cod Techr (keel !5bam},Invitafictal Regatta iemc an tie

Rant ffe wg ran e p-sct oh[

,of the Mf womenChlck Tuker and Ra,

Pme both f1inished second intehr division and skippered theT.I Emha squad to victoryn an eitschoolE regatta atHrar. d on Sunday. DaveAhtirh wfled with Tucker,whme ekrt HalEstead crewed forP'5;:er.

RIesus for the event'were:6T 16, Bowdoin 18, Harvard

1, Bton Unaiversity 25, Brown27, Dea outh 33, Coast Guard35, and Merimack 46.

34Tomorrow and Sunday, the,feshmen wi be comnpeting inthe Npew England Foh

iChampionships at Yale.

-.'

. / %

,

however, and the MIT sidefound itself in troublefrequently from mis-cues onkicks, bothl defending andattacking.

Of the million or so penraltykicks tried, HBS managed to getone over the goal for 3 points.They also garnered three triesfrom the loose to make their

stotal 15 Tech's two tallies came

on one of Arkin's classic rompsand on M. Best's driving try atthe feet of a bewildered BSchool scrum, who obviouslyexpected him to pass off apenalty given close to the HBSgoal. That left the score at 15-8at mnatch's end, and once againTech had come up on the shortend in a match they might wellhave won.

Pesents

~~sacrune s uevaraBy John Sipurfoing

Directed by Joesph EvoerinhamSets by W.D. Rober Costumes by Linda Mlartin

8:30 pro, Little Theatre, Kresge Auditorium, M ITThurs & Fri, May 4, 5; Wed, Thurs, Fri, Sat, May 10, 11, 12, 13

Resered Tickets: $2.25Telephone: UN 4q6900, Ext 4720

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The Nn outdoor track avA sh fot- The we tweepss'i 1tarted stmng wM th= the pole vault by Dave VFU-s

ecutiise victadm, v - '73 UV6' Pau Wuisberg-de a zecarss d-fteaking Fr- (12'9") and Kim BXferwert

dn>e 7by Yaw Akato '74 in h (I .16"), and i t ht umfpIA La '72 Ba l b Tn

&c stfc>Iawnior '73 (5'9") and Peck C59'TI ned t mEeet was xvth 1

appointing Main to Tuffs, Ui oS NeOf a sI-73. iae mee wasm &ed m wi was stifkl Rmfle: FezyX hbe a bya of 94 . It wasL ;

tco firm t G=WheEM~~Hd r- mBeet thaB t ALoto br.ke 'r thincdad by from CR & A onv ty t1:p. jupAc

; t pl= ~' T ~ , ,-,-... '-!,-P.!e f'= ! ~7 TME,4-2 with a tr 4eaa) of 495Y". T retestatl4d an /~~qltjr tmD akestaleed ay pmmb~ilyEar a ra took firsts in the/rntiemdtntes and high hurdles, w~hl~ocie ttramphed in tlke sh

The mnst exci Le Peaifr- and dim.ra e of te a by7 OP m..................t73, ah o m.s de - - -CLG

n m~te~b .4 seal m e rmqe..t 4 se he ] Cycling has a b ee a a-n ran a reshdsulged for Sundfy M'a

de and rS ed Eeto b: ~e S40 ;t s 7 at II am. People aEe sE'o. of NewS 'tml~ ~ s o nede to help im, a va~¢dt ars, Dan oMo h a. H ] a le- if iL estg -c~s If tEmste~i~~a Amer, to wti inj a time fCF helping o~IPIf~ comp~effrzg ca

.0530.5.ess,~~ D3Eav e gichaeL, x2925.Another u pmb mmmfmg ef-

r was aBccompr1re& by fte hee errwas, agaml pmenome-n on G.53my "S-B -" owdin, which saO ET heitratrlkes. ¥FffiEres vr, ,*Id b' weH-coodianated 'd/smembIpwte yaxsn tI~ 1t~ &z.D ~ [£t Mee yads inteI dah met by the scare of 13 _ 4o s -a came back to w/m fn the M-oo w-,s a triple winner-( hai0. His time VMS 11~. im the ker tt Sf, &SeY Tr0, but the cai n .asm aml 96 ~qea~ took the hi/gih and inLems. long. S$a, it wes h3s best dfa c

e to date- .Q~idlk hurdles, and ¥VIne o d t e .whi~zed by the opposition !m. tJ

Brian Moore '73 took first 9i ~ and 220 yd. dashes.ce in the hamme ffaarw, dfra,- The 100 yd. daes was, swe

;, and shot put, cm= thm& by ~lkes (!0.4), Geore Ch~was phagued- h.! ear am&i. '714 (10.6} and Gary R. uf '

ections. '(ID 0g. Temr was also- a sw eepIn a brief reiewer f the pne- t~ao- jave im by Mike Charette'us meets, te scom begam cm (1196'4"), Alex Tschyrkow '5

riI 5 veith a samdl mrafe/tn '73. '74 (172'5") and BierweBates, 93%2--35%Y in a m Lay {170'4").

et on gndggs bj-e~. Sw'at Peck tn a late result, Terry Blr:won the langjump and t~frpt met '73 lost to the MIT tra

1p. whlte Moore waz a dombEe bum~, from Tufts to :T[Tiner by takg the hamm =ar mfles), by two biocks.

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. nmmunty that the bestseason for madb Ims be.mn.Appl/cat/ons for memberdiipare invited.

Annml dues are $75.00for students (undegraduateand graduate) and $150.G0for other 'nembes of thecommunity. For informaton,.aH Alex Nedzel on extesidon811_0_.

GuardMonday

Tennis (V) - Brandeis, home, 3PmGolf (V) - Massachusetts, WPI,home course, 12:30 pm

Tha Old Vilna Synagogue

Invites you to ourTraffitoal Orthodox Serules.

Friday -SundownSabbath - 9 am

s PhiSllips St.,Beacon Hill. Btn

all of the Jewish faith welcome

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PAGE 12 FRIDAY,APR;L28, 1972 THETE

Alth-pugh winless in tworegattas, the MIT women's crewhas shown marked improvementover the season and is lookingforward to the first home regattatormorrow on the Charles.

: ~~~~~On Saturday, April I15, the[[1 ~ ~9 ~~ ~. . ,~. . er _N~icoeds made a fine showing in athree-event meet with thewomen's varsity team fromPrnceton on Lake Carnegie. Inthe eights, PrincetOn pulled to

3~~~~ an early lead after a strong start,i'-"~ *~~and held a commanding lead

throughout the race. The TechiI ~"'~ ~~~'~-~~~.¢~/~ girlsI in their first race of theseason, seemed to lack the

~ .... ~~necessary pulling power to closethe gap, and finished the 1000

x~'~~~ ' ~-~~meters two lengths of open~~ ~~L ~ .. ~~.~~~~water behind their hostesses.

~ -Ligstone '72, S. A hworth'75, Janice Benson 74, Barb

i 0 0 Small (Wellesley) '72, and bow3 1 0 Judy-Fairchild '75.4 2 3 MIT dominated the

R H E four-oared events, taking both000 O00D 0> O 4 races by significant margins. In000 0x 6 12 0 the first race, cox Derrick

Matthews '74, stroke Claie Kant- '73, Diane McKright '75, Anne

5 0 1 'McKennon '75, and bow Laura5 1 Z Smith '75 left Princeton far5 2 3 behind from the start and4 1 paddled to an 18-second victory.4 1 0 In the second race, MIT's stern

. 2 3 four (of the eight) defeated2 0 0 Princeton's first four by a full

0 0 0 The - followin- week,5 2 2 Saturday, April 22, a rearranged

MIT eight consisting of coxICosta, stroke Ward, Benson,Kant, McKnight, Ashworth,iLeafy Feld '74, McKennon, andSmith finished well ahead of-Worcester Polytechnical!Institfite, Williams College, andCon necticut College. Theytrailed archrival Radcliffe byonly a half length of open water,and the Cliffe in turnsurrendered a four-seat lead toVesper Boat Club ofPhiladelphia, last year's nationalchampions.

Tomorrow MIT will host aregatta at 1 pm oa the CharlesRiver. In addition to two MITboats, guests Radcliffe, Wiiams,ftnceton, Penn, and WPI willrace for 1000 meters on eightsand fours.

o.n Deck MNFriday

Baseball (JV&F) - Bryant &Stratton, home, 3 pmGold (V) - Bowdoin, Lowell atVesper CC, Lowell, I pm

SaturdayHvy. Crew (V,JV&F) -Harvard,Princeton, Kansas State, home,10:30-11 :30 amLt. Crew (V,JV&F)- Columbia,Cornef at IthacaWomen's Crew - Radcliffe,Princeton, WPI, home, i pmBaseball (V) - Coast, Guard,doubleheader, home, Ij pmLacrosse (V) - Trinity, home, 2pmTrack (V) - Amherst, WPI atWP1I, 2 pmTennis (V&F) Trinity, away,1:30 pm --.-.-Sailing (V)- Yawl Invitationalat Coast GuardSailing (V) - Fr/ss at TuftsWomen's Sa'ifing (V)Invitational at Jackson

SundayWomen's Sailing (V) - Conn.College Invitational at Coast

Earlier in the week, onMonday, NUT soundly trouncedBoston University by a score of12-2- Freshman Dave Yauch andsenior Chuck Holcor combinedto pitch a fine ballgame and gotexcellent hitting support fromDopfel and Herb Krmmer '75with three hits each and Tirrell,Kevin Rowland '74, Charpie,and Reber with two apiece.

Kummer's single in the fstknocked in Dopfel, who haddoubled, and Rich Roy, whohad walked, pating Tech's firsttwo nrns. Starer Yanuc h reachedon an eror in the second androde home on Dapfets RBIsingle. Rowland and Kummerled off the third wit'h singles andcame across on BU's seconderror, increasing the Engineer'slead to 5-0 and sending the BUstarter to the showers.

Singles by Charpie. Tirrell,and Dopfel and Rich Roy'sdouble to center, after a fourthinning solo homer by- BU, phatedtwo more runs and upped thescore to 7-1 after five. Techclosed out the scoring with a fiverun eighth, hghlighted byKmnme's bases-loaded triple.

The two wins moved MIT to2-1-1 in the Grter BostonLeague with two contests

remaining and above the .500mark on the season with a 6-502record. MiT meets the Coast

Lehseh,lfCbmic,c

Reber,cf

TeamBra2des 000MIT 131

By S. VoorheesMIT's ase r/ghthander, senior

A1 Dopfel, pitched his way the record book Wednesday -ashe hurled a sparkling no-hitterand set an MIT single gamestrikeout record with 18 inhurling the Tech batsmen to a6-0 win over Brandeis. Dopfel(pictured above beingcongratulated), throwing thefirst no-h/tter of his career, wastruly overpowering, facing theminimum of 27 batters, notallowing a ball to'be hit out ofthe ined, and reing the s/deon strikeouts in the first, fifth,and -seventh innings. TheBrandeis batters really never hada chance. His blazing fastbal andwicked curve were just a blur asDopfei threw the fn'st no-hitterby a Tech pitcher in at least thelast ten" years.

Meanwhile, MIT's bigsw.ngers were providing plentyof support, chasing the Brandeisst*ter in the second. Thirdbaseman Dave Ttroll '74 startedthings in the opening frame withthe fust of his four baseknoocks.He moved to second on an error,and scored on a single byDopfel. Tech upped the tally to4-0 in the second on consecutivesingles by Steve Reber '74, KenWeisshaar '72, and Tirre/l, twowild pitches, and a double laceddown the ine in right by RichRoy 7 2.

MlIT added another scoe inthe thud. After 'catcher RickCharpie walked and stolesecond, Reber lined the secondes hMs three hfits to center,plating Charpie. After being heldto two !hits over the next four,. _ g, Reber, Weisshaar, andT/rel~ al singled in the eighth,loang the bases for a sacrificefly by Dopfel mak/ng the finatotal 6-0 in this most satisfyinzvictory.

MITWeisshaar, 2bTinefl, 3bDopfel, rfRoy, ssRowland, cf, IfLeise, IfKummex, lbIDAngelo, rfRebet, ph, clfProper, cfCharpie, cTrin, cYauch, pBraun, phHolcom, p

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