FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and...

8
VOL. 89, NO. 211 MIT, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1969 FIVE CENTS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~FV CENT S __ ___ ,_, .=6 -NO- WP1 - 6'%_ AL.W..F L =_A A& Jkp Jr I W %_I L- & %_ A & I i r FM l s CONT!NUOUS NEWS SERVICE SINCE 1 R81 Weather Sunny and mild, high in the 60's. Chance of rain O.(ha-ha) Mass. Ave. Change of plans Following the procedure adopted last week, the demonstrators assembled at 77 Mass. Ave., from which point they were to leave for I-Lab Six at about 12:30. Before they could depart, however, "fate" interceded, causing Draper and Miller, who were together nearby, to learn of the assembly on the steps. As a result, the two professors invited some of the prospective By Larry Klein SACC planned a march on Instru- mentation Lab Six Monday afternoon to protest the helicopter research being carried on there. The protestors never made it to the lab, however. Instead, they faced Pro- fessor Rene H. Miller, Head of the Department of Aeronautics and origin- ator of the helicopter project and Professor C. Stark Draper, Director of the I-Labs, on the steps in front of 77 marchers to join them tor lunch, to discuss the grievances of the students. The students refused, though, request- ing instead that the two men appear in front of the Building 7 setps. Then, everybody could hear what they had to say. The professors agreed. Consequently, from about 12:30 to 1:30 Draper and Miller competed with the roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. as they addressed the crowd on the steps (which eventually grew to about one Poseidon project could be sufficiently declassified so that concerned students could view it and ask questions about is. Next. Miller addressed the group. (Please tun to page 3) tive Officer of the School of Abraham Siegel, Associate f the Sloan School, and Paul y, Associate Professor of Man- t. committee spent all day Wed- touring the Instrumentation La- y and planned to visit Lincoln ory yesterday. Pounds men- that he hoped to bring iln dy (hopefully by today) to he panel on the procedures that -l-Id follow in undertaking their ds asserted that the committee nimous in its decision to add epresentatives to the panel and hat the SACC members have mng with the consensus of the far. He said that the commit- seek to gain a wide range of and faculty inputs and vowed y will listen to all p!itical and ews on the subject. ds emphasized that he himself preconceptions on the role of ratories. He declared that his ee, which has been meeting y, will "push hard" in order to e its first report and recom- onsby May 31. CIS files; ~ IA funds '-A'A funds borat SACC drops militant action; o : tione some] Kabot discusses new panel advis they By Alex Makowski ginning early next week, the pamphlets study Tentatively avoiding militant act- would be a series of position papers to p ion, SACC has decided to concentrate inform the community of SACC's was was1 on education and organization for the goals. SAC( rest of the spring. Considered to be of primary impor- stat The decision was made at a Tues- tance is a leaflet directed at workers in day night meeting called for the con- the special labs. Besides details one sideration of future plans and the weapon research, the leaflet will em- pel tee v Pounds Commission. First on the agen- phasize the SACC stand that any tech- e stude da was discussion of the newly-created nicians displaced during a moratorium that that panel's progress. Discussion keyed on should receive compensation from the moral mnora! Jonathon Kabot's role. Should he act Institute. as a representative of SACC, or move Also being written are information P from a more personal stance? The pamphlets for students and faculty. A has n general consensus was that Kabot paper on the helicopter guidance sys- the 1: should not be considered a represent- tem will be circulated.-foliowed by a cOm" geneal cnsenus as tat Kbot tem will be circulated,-followed by a comm ative, but by acting as a member of final leaflet discussing academic free- every SACC he could present the groupab s dom. Picketing on the Mass. Avenue comp position papers. tegopssteps will be discontinued. mend Kabot also presented his evaluation M ill ; k a K op en s of the commission's progress. Desiring that the. panel take an independent o course, he expressed his frustration e i es u e o with decisions to refer matters back to By Joseph Kashi President Johnson or ask for legal Professor Max Millikan's dramatic TI advice. A key issue, he maintained, was offer to open files rewith offer to open all friles relating to the the actual name of the panel. The Center for International Studies to all prim rta~~~~~~~~~~eter ofo Ithernatiiona Stuld i e s t o all e status of the commission would sanc- interested parties highlighted an often- gi tion more exhaustive study. stormy meeting devoted to clearing yeat As for education, SACC opted for a public misconceptions regarding the meeti series of leaflets. With distribution be- Center meet tor5 )rate rd :boc e tl bun una C re d t] alo ! so will mnt thel 11 Vie I vk ouni no ] abe nitti da: dete atic I I I I II II I i I I E t s t s Photo by Hamiet Kang SACC protesters were met on the steps by Dr. Draper before they had a chance to march Monday. ROTC, war work discussed by multilevel Baker forum By Joe Kashi Representing almost the entire poli- tical spectrum of MIT', about 300 people gathered at Baker House Wed nesday night hoping to open new channels for the dissemination of in- formation and opinion throughout the MIT community. The forum's primary purpose was to establish a rapport between diver- gent factions on campus through small, informal discussions held throughout the House after a preliminary forum. During this meeting, speakers for the various parties put forth many of the issues that they thought should be considered by the discussion groups. A few also expressed what they believed to be the answers that the groups should arrive at in their conclusions. President. Dave Njus of Baker House, initiator of the forum, believes BULLETIN As The Tech was going to press, a group of MIT social scientists affiliated with SACC announced that MIT was negotiating with the Department of Defense to set up what the proposal calls "a data management system" to provide the military with "pertinent behavior science knowledge." The pro - posal, now in Washington for signing, is known as Project CAM and as the Cambridge Project, and grew out of the present Project MAC. A group of Insti- tute professors headed by J.C.R. Lick- lider and Ithiel Pool have asked the Penltagon for a $7 million program over the next five years. The kinds of topics to be investigated, according to the project, are communications data from the Soviet Union and China, compara- tive communism archives, Selective Service manpower data, information on youth movements, Chinese provin- cial statistics and Viet Cong defectors interviews. The issue will be brought to the next SACC meeting and the profes- sors and students opposing it hzve announced a mass rally to denounce Project CAM "'as soon as poodile." that by allowing people to come into contact with one another on a personal basis, greater understanding and freer, - more intensive, dialogue will occur. Among the more conspiciods members - of the 'MIT Establishment' participat- ing in the discussion were Dean of Student Affairs Kenneth Wadleigh, s Dean of the School of Science Robert - Alberty, Faculty Chairman Walter ,Rosenblith, Provost Jerome Wiesner, t and Professors Jerrold Zaccharias and David Frisch. All of MIT's Vice- Presidents were also in attendence. The discussion groups coalesced around many, varied topics such as. ROTC, war research, academic reform, (Please turn to page 5) Open Hog Apollo 9 astronaut Russel L. Schweickart and David R. Scott will participate in the opening ceremonies of Open House this weekend. The astronauts, both MIT alumni, will relate the adventures of their recent space voyage at noon, Saturday, on Kresge Plaza. Following the opening ceremonies, the astronauts and aud- ience will make tours of the demon- strations, exhibits, and displays featured in the Open House program Saturday afternoon. About 25,000 people are expected to attend the biennial event. Among the attractions are a mock-up of the Apollo space capsule and movies of both the Apollo 8 and 9 flights. Other demonstrations include a transport- ation improvement project from the Engineering Projects Laboratory, and the premiere of a new film entitled "MIT Progression," which is designed to show the involvement of students . outside the classroom. Open House is planned and carried out by students with faculty support. This year's chairman is Randy Haw- thorne '71, Course XVI, from Wash- ington, D.C. underL resean kan's result SACC Statin work work then c Mi work which inforrm studie only l ed fro not ev is the Mi have s biases its chc jects criteri want sus ar to the projec from The fi divider notabl he Center has often been linked the Central Intellligence Agency, arily because of the CIA support to the Center during it formative . Millikan, director of the Center, d that the primary object of the ing was to promote a greater rstanding of the Center and the rch currently in progress. Milli- ; offer to open the files came as a t of questioning by members of about the funding of the CIS. lg that the CIA does not fund any at the CIS an;' that no secret is done at the Center, Millikan offered to open the files. illikan emphasized that the only being done at CIS since 1966 required the use of classified nation dealt with disarmament vs. This information was used to verify material already gather- om public media, and often was ven used for verification, so great amount available to the public. illikan said that the Center does some value biases, and that these did indeed guide the Center in oice of research topics. The pro- are decided upon with these ia: 1) Availability of people who to do such research. 2) A consen- mong Senior Center members as need and value of the proposed :t. 3) The availability of funds private or governmental sources. unding of CIS is about equally d between private foundations, ly the Ford Foundation and var- (Please turn to page 3) 44 Draner fo-il. TLlnh nrateatora Dean Pounds outlines plans asr~a lai vrnSBF;.nnaa of special labs in By Bob Dennis The Review Panel on Special Labor- atories has spent its first full week dealing in procedural matters and other introductory aspects of its investiga- tion of MIT's special laboratories. In an interview, Dean of the Sloan School William Pounds, Chairman of the commission, related that the panel essentially "sparred" among themselves for the first few days. Besides discus- sing procedures and possible schedules, the committee drew up a list of their prospective information needs. They also began compiline a list of people, including nationally prominent figures, who might be asked to address the committee. Recruiting staff The panel has been recruiting addi- tional staff members - both students and faculty-for assistance in studying ministrat such aspects as personnel, fiscal mat- Since, ters, and educational effects of MIT's Den of relation to its laboratories. Some of the faculty members who MacAvoe are working with the committee are agement Robert Scott, Assistant Dean of the Te School of Engineering. Joel Orlen, Ad- nesday ;%~ ... v .hundred persons). Speaking first, \.^XXv - .; I~Drater informed the audience of his -. / /.~ Xendeavors of the past weekend with ': ;; 4 *e .. regard to a research moratorium. Talk- !:,- e '; //~ ~ ing with various Navy personnel in .--. ,,, . i Washington about the possibility of a m " i 4 -moratorium on the Poseidon project, V:-.S ;/he could not gain the acceptance of the ';:*v'.; Qu ' admirals for such a stoppage, but did receive tentative assurance that the J ise hosts astronauts

Transcript of FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and...

Page 1: FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and Miller competed with the roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. as they addressed the crowd

VOL. 89, NO. 211 MIT, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1969 FIVE CENTS~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~FV CENT S __ ___

,_�,

.=6 -NO- WP1 - 6'%_ AL.W..F L =_A A& Jkp Jr I W %_I L- & %_ A &

I

i

r

FM

ls

CONT!NUOUS NEWSSERVICE SINCE 1 R81

WeatherSunny and mild, high in the60's. Chance of rain O.(ha-ha)

Mass. Ave.Change of plans

Following the procedure adoptedlast week, the demonstrators assembledat 77 Mass. Ave., from which pointthey were to leave for I-Lab Six atabout 12:30. Before they could depart,however, "fate" interceded, causingDraper and Miller, who were togethernearby, to learn of the assembly on thesteps. As a result, the two professorsinvited some of the prospective

By Larry KleinSACC planned a march on Instru-

mentation Lab Six Monday afternoonto protest the helicopter research beingcarried on there.

The protestors never made it to thelab, however. Instead, they faced Pro-fessor Rene H. Miller, Head of theDepartment of Aeronautics and origin-ator of the helicopter project andProfessor C. Stark Draper, Director ofthe I-Labs, on the steps in front of 77

marchers to join them tor lunch, todiscuss the grievances of the students.The students refused, though, request-ing instead that the two men appear infront of the Building 7 setps. Then,everybody could hear what they had tosay. The professors agreed.

Consequently, from about 12:30 to1:30 Draper and Miller competed withthe roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. asthey addressed the crowd on the steps(which eventually grew to about one

Poseidon project could be sufficientlydeclassified so that concerned studentscould view it and ask questions aboutis.

Next. Miller addressed the group.

(Please tun to page 3)

tive Officer of the School ofAbraham Siegel, Associate

f the Sloan School, and Pauly, Associate Professor of Man-t.committee spent all day Wed-touring the Instrumentation La-y and planned to visit Lincolnory yesterday. Pounds men-that he hoped to bring ilndy (hopefully by today) tohe panel on the procedures that-l-Id follow in undertaking their

ds asserted that the committeenimous in its decision to addepresentatives to the panel andhat the SACC members havemng with the consensus of thefar. He said that the commit-seek to gain a wide range of

and faculty inputs and vowedy will listen to all p!itical andews on the subject.ds emphasized that he himselfpreconceptions on the role ofratories. He declared that hisee, which has been meetingy, will "push hard" in order toe its first report and recom-onsby May 31.

CIS files;~ IA funds

'-A'A funds

borat

SACC drops militant action; o :tionesome]Kabot discusses new panel advisthey

By Alex Makowski ginning early next week, the pamphlets studyTentatively avoiding militant act- would be a series of position papers to p

ion, SACC has decided to concentrate inform the community of SACC's was was1on education and organization for the goals. SAC(rest of the spring. Considered to be of primary impor- stat

The decision was made at a Tues- tance is a leaflet directed at workers inday night meeting called for the con- the special labs. Besides details onesideration of future plans and the weapon research, the leaflet will em- peltee vPounds Commission. First on the agen- phasize the SACC stand that any tech- estudeda was discussion of the newly-created nicians displaced during a moratorium that that panel's progress. Discussion keyed on should receive compensation from the moralmnora!Jonathon Kabot's role. Should he act Institute.as a representative of SACC, or move Also being written are information Pfrom a more personal stance? The pamphlets for students and faculty. A has n

general consensus was that Kabot paper on the helicopter guidance sys- the 1:should not be considered a represent- tem will be circulated.-foliowed by a cOm"geneal cnsenus as tat Kbot tem will be circulated,-followed by a commative, but by acting as a member of final leaflet discussing academic free- everySACC he could present the groupab s dom. Picketing on the Mass. Avenue compposition papers. tegopssteps will be discontinued. mend

Kabot also presented his evaluation M ill ; k a K op en sof the commission's progress. Desiring that the. panel take an independent o course, he expressed his frustration e i es u e owith decisions to refer matters back to By Joseph KashiPresident Johnson or ask for legal Professor Max Millikan's dramatic TIadvice. A key issue, he maintained, was offer to open files rewithoffer to open all friles relating to thethe actual name of the panel. The Center for International Studies to all primrta~~~~~~~~~~eter ofo Ithernatiiona Stuld i e s t o all estatus of the commission would sanc- interested parties highlighted an often- gition more exhaustive study. stormy meeting devoted to clearing yeat

As for education, SACC opted for a public misconceptions regarding the meetiseries of leaflets. With distribution be- Center meet

tor5)raterd:boce tl

bun

una

C red t]alo

! so

willmnt

thel11 VieI vkounino ]abenittida:

deteatic

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s

Photo by Hamiet Kang

SACC protesters were met on the steps by Dr. Draper before theyhad a chance to march Monday.

ROTC, war work discussedby multilevel Baker forum

By Joe Kashi

Representing almost the entire poli-tical spectrum of MIT', about 300people gathered at Baker House Wednesday night hoping to open newchannels for the dissemination of in-formation and opinion throughout theMIT community.

The forum's primary purpose wasto establish a rapport between diver-gent factions on campus through small,informal discussions held throughoutthe House after a preliminary forum.During this meeting, speakers for thevarious parties put forth many of theissues that they thought should beconsidered by the discussion groups. Afew also expressed what they believedto be the answers that the groupsshould arrive at in their conclusions.

President. Dave Njus of BakerHouse, initiator of the forum, believes

BULLETINAs The Tech was going to press, a

group of MIT social scientists affiliatedwith SACC announced that MIT wasnegotiating with the Department ofDefense to set up what the proposalcalls "a data management system" toprovide the military with "pertinentbehavior science knowledge." The pro-posal, now in Washington for signing, isknown as Project CAM and as theCambridge Project, and grew out of thepresent Project MAC. A group of Insti-tute professors headed by J.C.R. Lick-lider and Ithiel Pool have asked thePenltagon for a $7 million program overthe next five years. The kinds of topicsto be investigated, according to theproject, are communications data fromthe Soviet Union and China, compara-tive communism archives, SelectiveService manpower data, informationon youth movements, Chinese provin-cial statistics and Viet Cong defectorsinterviews. The issue will be brought tothe next SACC meeting and the profes-sors and students opposing it hzveannounced a mass rally to denounceProject CAM "'as soon as poodile."

that by allowing people to come intocontact with one another on a personalbasis, greater understanding and freer,

- more intensive, dialogue will occur.Among the more conspiciods members

- of the 'MIT Establishment' participat-ing in the discussion were Dean ofStudent Affairs Kenneth Wadleigh,

s Dean of the School of Science Robert- Alberty, Faculty Chairman Walter,Rosenblith, Provost Jerome Wiesner,t and Professors Jerrold Zaccharias and

David Frisch. All of MIT's Vice-Presidents were also in attendence.

The discussion groups coalescedaround many, varied topics such as.ROTC, war research, academic reform,

(Please turn to page 5)

Open HogApollo 9 astronaut Russel L.

Schweickart and David R. Scott willparticipate in the opening ceremoniesof Open House this weekend.

The astronauts, both MIT alumni,will relate the adventures of theirrecent space voyage at noon, Saturday,on Kresge Plaza. Following the openingceremonies, the astronauts and aud-ience will make tours of the demon-strations, exhibits, and displaysfeatured in the Open House programSaturday afternoon.

About 25,000 people are expectedto attend the biennial event. Amongthe attractions are a mock-up of theApollo space capsule and movies ofboth the Apollo 8 and 9 flights. Otherdemonstrations include a transport-ation improvement project from theEngineering Projects Laboratory, andthe premiere of a new film entitled"MIT Progression," which is designedto show the involvement of students .outside the classroom.

Open House is planned and carried out by students with faculty support.This year's chairman is Randy Haw-thorne '71, Course XVI, from Wash-ington, D.C.

underLreseankan'sresultSACCStatinworkworkthen c

Miworkwhichinforrmstudieonly led fronot evis the

Mihave sbiasesits chcjectscriteriwant sus arto theprojecfrom The fidividernotabl

he Center has often been linkedthe Central Intellligence Agency,arily because of the CIA supportto the Center during it formative

. Millikan, director of the Center,d that the primary object of theing was to promote a greaterrstanding of the Center and therch currently in progress. Milli-; offer to open the files came as at of questioning by members of

about the funding of the CIS.lg that the CIA does not fund anyat the CIS an;' that no secretis done at the Center, Millikan

offered to open the files.illikan emphasized that the only

being done at CIS since 1966required the use of classified

nation dealt with disarmamentvs. This information was usedto verify material already gather-om public media, and often wasven used for verification, so greatamount available to the public.

illikan said that the Center doessome value biases, and that these

did indeed guide the Center inoice of research topics. The pro-are decided upon with these

ia: 1) Availability of people whoto do such research. 2) A consen-mong Senior Center members asneed and value of the proposed

:t. 3) The availability of fundsprivate or governmental sources.unding of CIS is about equallyd between private foundations,ly the Ford Foundation and var-

(Please turn to page 3)

44

Draner fo-il. TLlnh nrateatora Dean Pounds outlines plansasr~a lai vrnSBF;.nnaaof special labs in

By Bob DennisThe Review Panel on Special Labor-

atories has spent its first full weekdealing in procedural matters and otherintroductory aspects of its investiga-tion of MIT's special laboratories.

In an interview, Dean of the SloanSchool William Pounds, Chairman ofthe commission, related that the panelessentially "sparred" among themselvesfor the first few days. Besides discus-sing procedures and possible schedules,the committee drew up a list of theirprospective information needs. Theyalso began compiline a list of people,including nationally prominent figures,who might be asked to address thecommittee.

Recruiting staffThe panel has been recruiting addi-

tional staff members - both studentsand faculty-for assistance in studying

ministratsuch aspects as personnel, fiscal mat- Since,ters, and educational effects of MIT's Den ofrelation to its laboratories.

Some of the faculty members who MacAvoeare working with the committee are agementRobert Scott, Assistant Dean of the TeSchool of Engineering. Joel Orlen, Ad- nesday

;%~ ... v .hundred persons). Speaking first,\.^XXv - . ; I~Drater informed the audience of his

-. / /.~ Xendeavors of the past weekend with': ;; 4 *e .. regard to a research moratorium. Talk-

!:,- e '; //~ ~ ing with various Navy personnel in.--.,,, . i Washington about the possibility of a

m " i 4 -moratorium on the Poseidon project,V:-.S ;/he could not gain the acceptance of the

';:*v'.; Qu ' admirals for such a stoppage, but didreceive tentative assurance that the

J

ise hosts astronauts

Page 2: FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and Miller competed with the roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. as they addressed the crowd

PAGE 2 FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1969 THE TECH

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Page 3: FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and Miller competed with the roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. as they addressed the crowd

THE TECH F R I DAY, MAY 2, 1969' PAGE 3

Miller denies copter charges Judge lets indictment stand;Zigmond to stand draft trial

Federal District Judge AnthonyJulian has refused to dismiss the caseof MIT research assistant Michael J.Zigmond, who is charged with refusinginduction into the armed forces.

Zigmond's lawyer predicted thatthe case will come to trial sometimethis fall. In denying the motionf fordismissal, Judge Julian wrote that hecould not rule on the legality of theVietnam war, whose morality Zigmondchallenges. He 'also stated that Zig-mond's other contentions must be de-cided upon at a trial.

Judge Julian agreed with anothercourt that the conduct of foreignpolicy is not a matter for the Judiciary.Zigmond had also argued that thedelinquency regulations under which

Discussion olPart of the crowd that heard Dr:afternoon. The protestors, however,

(continued from page 1)explaining that he had conceived of thehelicopter project as a civilian transpor'tation project rather than a militaryone. Moreover, he insisted that due tothe specific nature of the increasedstability which the I-Lab project wouldimpart to helicopters in 'flight (a stabi-lity making safer landings possible), theresearch would have only limited war-fare value. It would not, for example,significantly affect the accuray of gun-

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Draper, head of I-Labs, and Professor Miller, XVI head, Mondaymarched only as far as the Great Court instead of the I-Labs.

fire from a helicopter.The originators of the march re-

mained unconvinced by Miller's words,however, insisting repeatedly that heli-copters in Vietnam were used to killpeople and that the helicopter researchat MIT should consequently be stop-ped.

Questions and answersBy this time, the discussion along

Mass. Ave. had been going on for anhour and the "march" originators nowdecided it was time. to move to the,Great Court to reach a larger audience'and gather signatures on petitions call-ing for a moratorium on war researchat MIT.

Out in the Great Court, however,most people were too busy sunningthemselves to respond to the stridenttones of a bullhorn manned by astudent who kept demanding "Where'sHoward Johnson? Where's James Kil-lian? Where's Jack Ruina? Draper ishere. Come listen to Draper and learnabout his efforts for a research mora-torium." A few people did respond tothis urging, though, and they, togetherwith the people who had journeyedover from Mass. Ave. questioned Dr.Draper for another half hour.

Finally, at about 2:15, Draper re-ceived a message that Ruina would liketo see him as soon as 'possible.

The Review Panel on Special Laboratories announces the following

schedule of open hearings for May 2-4:Friday, May 2, 1969 Room 10-250 1-5 pm

Part I - Dr. Stark Draper, Director, Instrumentation LaboratoriesDr. Milton Clauser, Director, Lincoln Laboratory

Part II - Individuals who'have applied to appear before Panel.

Saturday, May 3, 1969 Room 9-i50 9-12 amFaculty and students who are currently engaged in thesis and otherresearch work in the special laboratories.

Sunday, May 4, 1969 Room 9-150 14 pmJack Ruina, Vice President for Special Laboratories

Paul Cusick, Comptroller, MIT

THE BOSTON COLLEGE INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGYSECOND ANNUAL EXPEDITION TO TELL MEGADIM

(Followed by an archaeological tour of Greece)June 15 - July 29, 1969

Excavating a Phoenician City of the 5th century B.C.Living in a kibbutz ( collective settlement)

Visits to the Dead Sea and the Cave of the ScrollsTours of Israel and the West bank of the Jordan

Lectures by leading American and Israeli ArchaelogistsTrips to Masada, Caesarea, Sebastia, and the Cities in the Desert

Living in the City of Jerusalem

Participants in this expedition can receive six credits towards a Bachelor'sor Master's or a Graduate degree.

For information and application forms, write or call:Dr. David Neiman, DirectorBoston College Institute of ArchaeologyCarney 408, Ext. 777 or 375

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he had been ordered to report wereillegal, and violated an instruction fromJustice Fortas of the United StatesSupreme Court. Judge Julian repliedthat the question he had to considerwas whether the indictment "adaquate-ly charges that the defendant com-mitted a criminal offense."

After turning in his draft card at aprotest rally last spring, Zigmond wasdeclared delinquent, reclassified, andsubsequently ordered to report foractive duty. After refusing to be in-ducied, he was indicted in September.

.Two other members of the MITcommunity will also stand trial soonon similar charges. They are Bob Kirk,a graduate student, and RichardGardner, a researcher at Tech Square.

r CIS projectsspearheads change of face

(continued from page 1)

ious departments of the Federal gov-ernment.

Discussion shifted to the role ofMIT faculty, especially in the PoliticalScience Department, as consultants toprivate industry and the federal govern-ment. Many objected to the extensivework that faculty members, such asProfessors William Kaufmann andIthiel Pool, had done for the govern-ment. A number of the faculty statedthat they felt that consulting did in-deed have an effect upon their teachingand the offerings of Course XVII andvolunteered their consulting commit-ments. However, Pool felt that thestudents had no right to demand thatall such consultation roles be detailed,and stated "If they would have let meanswer five minutes ago, I would havebeen happy to, but I don't think that Iwant to now." Others, notably Kauf-mann, detailed their extensive involve-ment with the defense establishment.The direct confrontations of the meet-ing ended shortly after, as some of theparticipants became enmeshed in argu-ments which had little bearing uponthe major purpose of the meeting: toallow students and senior staff of theCenter to interreact. It was hoped thatthis would remove some of the miscon-ceptions about the present status ofthe Center, and -also allow the seniorstaff to gain students input about theCenter's image. The image of the Cen-ter has been a problem in the past,with many believing it to be a reaction-ary CIA front.

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An analysis of Chilean developmentproblems being undertaken jointlywith the Chilean economic-planningoffice. This program, funded by theFord Foundation, will also train Chi-leans in the methodology of planning.

A study of the attitudes of the elitein Venezuela toward a wide range ofnational problems and an explorationof areas of consensus and conflictamong the various elements of Vene-zuelan society are under way in con-junction with the Central University -ofVenezuela.

Dr. Lucien Pye is conducting com-parative research designed to assess thedifferent attitudes and predispositions-which have influenced national deve-lopment in several Asian countries.

Indian voting patterns are beinginvestigated by Professor MyronWeiner. All relevant voting informationis being organized into computer stor-age for analysis of distribution ofvotes. The last three studies mentionedabove have been funded by Ford Foun-dation grants.

Projects being funded by variousagencies of the Federal Governmentinclude: Human factors in Moderniza-tion, under the supervision of ProfessorFrederick Frey; Studies in. Interna-tional Communism, including researchin the diffusion of information inCommunist countries by ProfessorIthiel Pool, and the development of asophisticated social-research filingsystem by Pool, Professor Stuart Mcln-tosh, and Professor David Griffin. Stu-dies in Arms Control are being madeby Professors Lincoln Bloomfield.Amelia Leiss, Max Millikan, Emile Be-noit and Robert Beattie.

Professor William Kaufmann. oftendescribed as MIT's one-man answer tothe Rand Corporation, is conductingstudies in the extension of the cost-effectiveness program within the De-fense Department under Ford Founda-tion funding. It will also evaluate therole of systematic analysis within thegovernment.

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Page 4: FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and Miller competed with the roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. as they addressed the crowd

PAGE 4 FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1969 THE TECH

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ROTC:The other sideAtow".To the Editor:

I would like to comment, in part,oon the position paper presented byProfessor Watson, Jonathan Kabat, and -Gerry Stein in the April 25 issue of VOL. LXXXIX, NO. 21 MAY 2, 1969The Tech. My intent is that this letter B --will be in accord with the charge forsolid reasoning set -forth to the faculty Chairman ......................... . . Greg Arenson '70and administration by Professor Wat- Editor ........................... . Steve Carhat '70son, et. al.: "We have a responsibility Business Manager .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Julian James '70

Managing Editor . .. .. . .. . ........ Rid . Ashe '70to our students and to our country to M i I I I ..........I.. . . Reidsee the issue of ROTC in all of its Editorial Associates ........ . Carson Agnew '70, Robert Dennis '70contexts and i n a ll of its practical Production Manager ................... . . . Bruce Weinberg '71effects." Night Editors .......... . .... . Randy Hawthorne '71, Carliss Baldwin '72Aeffuaal recognition in t posit- News Editors . . .. ... .............. Greg Bernhardt '71, Jay Kunin '71A cucalrecgntin n te ost-Features Editor . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .Karen Wattel '70ion paper is that the rea l issue is not Sports Editor . .- . . . Ra y w a snic '7 1acaemc reit PiortoidntfiatonSports Editor *-................................... *Ray Kwasnick '71academic credit. Prior to identification Entertainment Editor ......... .......... . Steve Grant '70of the central issue, the writers listednine numbered objections to the form -Second-class postage p ald at Boston, Massachusetts. The Tech Ls published everyof ROTC at MIT; but I maintain these Tuesday and Friday during the college year, except during college vacations, byare not real issues. The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT Student Center, 84 Massachusetts Ave.,

1Thfisistaxot thearme forces. Cambridge, Masachusetts, 02139. 'Telephone: Area Code 617, 876-5855, or1864-6909, extension 2731. United States Mail subscription rates: $4.25 for one,appoint the faculty of military science year, $8.00 for two years.departments. In the law and in pra-t--:m ; ; R " ';:::: g::, 0 :tact, the appointment is totally subject ii~i i::i . ....:.............................. .......... ..............to the approval of the university. M IT ..................... ....... . ................... ....................to the approval of the university. MIT !'i'~i.icould require that any nominee hold a *,R:.!- : : :::'·::::::FootnotesPh.D. degree. From DA Form 918,. ........Applicatiion and agreement for Estab-. . . by Karen Wattel i: :!........lishment of Army Reserve Officer's 65. Students taking an 8.04 quiz Wed- issue of Thursday, a new MIT publi-Training Corps Unit (the Army-MIT nesday morning woke up with a 'bang' cation, dated April 17, 1969. We here-contract): '"That the Secretary of the when the procter (an ex-tTack runner?) by endow you with 'writer's cramp,'Army shall have the right at any time used a blank revolver to signal the start twisted fingers, and a sprained wrist, soto relieve from duty any officer, war- of the exam in 50-340. They were you will be unable to write anymorerant officer, or enlisted man of the' again startled when the gun was fired dirty stories in your school paper.Army assigned to the institution. That -at the end of the hour. Why should Your mother, she's a nice lady. You,no Army officer shall be assigned to procters have guns when students you're a rotten kid. How could youthe Department of Military Science don't? write a piece like that for all yourwithout prior approval of the authorit- 66. The Mattapan Tribune, Boston, mother's friends and neighbors to see?ies of this institution, and no Army Mass., circulation 1800, received an After all her hard work bringing youofficer will be continued on duty after issue of Thursday. One article especial- up and getting you into MIT. How,the authorities have requested his relief ly caught their interest. The following- could you do this to her? Better youfor cause." Not only can the Army short article was their response: should forget about this Julie Christieremove an Army ROTC staff member "This week's sour grapes award goes to and find some nice Jewish girl. That is,at any time, but so can MIT. Mr. Freddy Epstein, 20 year-old stu- if the mothers of the nice girls will let* 2) The present law does require the dent at MIT, for his story, "The Winter them out of the house when you'rerank of professor be granted to the of My Discontent,' printed in the first around."

· * - - 67. One of our favorite administratorsreports that he has finally determined

l tANq OF AY DANCE6 YO" { . m0 THE LAYM h te reason for the difference in appear-V APPEAR SIMILAR.e H HAT 15 ! Jance between Mtke Albert's hair and

Larry White's. He thinks that Albertdoes his own hair, while White has hisdone professionally.

nf z/t 68. Litton Industries, that well-knownpillar of the military-industrial com-plex, has just purchased Stouffer's,which runs Twenty Chimneys and theother food services on campus. Anyone

for a MIRVburger?

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Faculty meetingTo the Editor:

I wish to take exception to some ofthe attitudes expressed in the editorial"What is Education?" in The Tech ofApril 29th.

I believe that the editorial shouldhave focused first on a most unusualmeeting of faculty, students, admini-stration,. and staff-a meeting that wasat once tense and highly charged, butheld to good order by good humor andgood sense. The meeting devoted muchof its attention to the issues so well

ranking 'officer of each ROTC unit.The fact cannot be denied, but the realquestion is whether this fact has causedproblems for MIT. No such referenceswere made in the position statement.

3) The author's point concerningthe legal provision for military scienceprofessors appointing representatives

'to faculty committees is factually cor-rect. Again, however, the real questionis whether this fact has in any practicalway compromised the ability of theInstitute to meet its obligations to thestudents and society. The positionnainpr #rnpe menf *AA--cc i4calf fr% +'hic

0

the same level oi rigor and with thesWit of free inquiry as other universitycourses seems to depend t6o often onthe degree of his personal contact with.the "military." Popular prejudice has itthat the military is monolithically infavor of Vietnam in principle, to besure, it maybe not'in practice. If myexperience from contact with the "mil-itary" through Army ROTC can beextrapolated to the "military" as awhole, the prejudice is an inaccurateassessment of the reality.

The position paper described someMIT ROTC courses as having "a clearpropaganda slant that is repugnant tomost MIT students," while others weredescribed as stimulating and challeng-ing. My experience has been that thecourses have a pronounced sensitizingvalue. Political biases are generally i-dentified as such by students andinstructors alike.

Strategy in the Missile Age byBernard Brodie is a RAND Corporationstudy and required for sophomoreArmy ROTC students. While discussingthe 19th century military theorist Karlvon Clausewitz, Brodie praised his con-viction that war should always be an.arm of pational policy; pursuing vict-,ory for victory's sake is immoral, in-sane, policy. Consider the contempor-ary relevance of the philosophical basesupported by Brodie in these excerpts:"'It must be asked: what were these'-men [WWI military leaders] after thatthey were willing to pay so high a pricefor it?... The -high commands of bothsides-in World War I have often beencondemned for their methods, as wellas for their arrogance, insensibility, andwhat not, but almost never for theirlack of objective! Clearly, each sidewas trying to achieve 'victory'. Butwhat did that mean?... the term was amere symbol, almost devoid of con-

(Continued on page 5)

President Richard Nixon's latest blast against campus dissent isan ill omen for all institutions of higher learning.

Those who read his statement carefully will recall that it wasdirected specifically at students who practice violence as a means ofaccomplishing change. Virtually no one on ttis campus wants to seeor will condone shotguns in 10-250. However, the public at large,and particularly Nixon's constituency, will not be able todifferentiate among the different tactics of campus dissent. We fearthat there is a very real danger that too much of the general publicwill equate any attempts to gain necessary reassessment of policiessuch as we are now attempting at the Institute with the violenttactics employed elsewhere.

The way in which the press and public are likely to interpret thecurrent mood as a clarion call to repress dissent in general on campusis suggested by the headline in one Boston paper, "Nixon tellsuniversities to use some 'Backbone." This call from the WhiteHouse, which will undoubtedly be echoed and carried' to greaterextremes elsewhere, will require a new degree of sophistication inthe tactics of students seeeking change. ike it or not, a veryundesirable situation currently exists, in which even privateuniversities such as the Institute are at the fiscal mercy of the federalgovernment. If actions in behalf of change transcend a certain level(there is reason to hope that we haven't yet reached that level,though we may be fast approaching it), it is entirely possible that thevast "unenlightened" masses outside academia which(unfortunately) are paying our bills, may rear back and withdrawtheir financial support through Washington. .

Student activists must recognize that if they are serious aboutbringing .about change, their objective must be to maximiseeffectiveness, which does not always require disruptive action.Militancy for the sake of militancy is not the way to a betteruniversity.

Informal educationTuesday's conference on informal education at MIT may be the

beginning of a major effort to improve the breadth of educationavailable at MIT. The problem which lies before us now is how totransfer some of the constructive suggestions made at that meetinginto reality: It is in this area that the Institute has always fallendown in the past; we have seen many conferences, but- theimplementations of new ideas have been slow.

Two stopgaps to improve the advisory system were suggested atthe conference; these can be implemented almost immediately andstem from a realization that students want and need something more-than merely answers to specific questions. That something is somesort of ongoing contact with faculty members, not unlike thatgraduate students have with their thesis advisors. The currentsituation is one in which students (for the most part) view theiradvisors only in the narrow sense as someone to answer specific,non-personal questions. The result is that when something of a moremajor nature comes up, the student often does not have anestablished friendship with a facultymember whose help he can seek.

The two changes we would suggest are these: a) that any studentand faculty member may, by mutual consent, set up anadvisor-student relationship recognized as official for the purposes ofthe department; and b) that every effort be made to allow successfulstudent-advisory relationships to continue for longer than one year.

The first of these would ensure fthat the student had confidencein his advisor and that the advisor took a genuine interest in hisstudents. The second move comes under the heading of not throwingmoney away.

As strictly stopgap solutions to a larger problem, We hope thatdepartment chairmen will consider these suggestions. They will notcost extra money and they can be implemented virtually byexecutive decision.

HopeWe are happy'-to see President Richard Nixon's mea culpa

regarding his decision to deny Dr. Franklin Long the appointment asthe head of the National Science Foundation on the. basis of hisopposition to the ABM, mentioned in our editorial of April 22.Now, if he would only reconsider the ABM...

stated in your editorial. It was too paper aoes noT acar It1e TO tiseffective a meeting and too important point, but merely point. to a circum-

a meeting f or the phrase "lukewarm stance whose consequences need- to besupport" to appe ar anywhere in char- honestly appraised in any responsible

support"ito appear anywhere in char considerations of the issue. If detri-Youerizig ask, " l a e t omental consequences are found, thenYou ask, "Will MIT address itself to w aeas on elpolmthenor-aadeicisses t nd urwe have also found a real problem-the non-academic issues it and our

nation face?". The answer to this is-a otherwie not.resounding "yes" as evidenced by the 4) The writers indicated that MIT'soverwhelming faculty vote for "Dean cntractual agreement concerning of

Wadleigh's proposal to establish a ficer output and level of ROTC basicgroup to facilitate community partici- course enrollment is in practice notpation in a reassessment of the role of binding. The university taps no tang-the Institute as. required by many ible or intangible university resourcescurrent issues." By their vote, the in an attempt 'to meet these quotas.

faculty did not slough its responsibility The quota clause of the law has nonor its interest to a small committee, impact on MIT; the university takes nofor the group's purpose is to set mecha- pains whatsoever to insure enrollmentnisms which · answer the question at the quota level or above, and this is

"how"' and not the question done with the approval of the Depart-"whether." ment of Defense."whether."

I nonetheless want to commend 5) The question of who controlsyou for your espousal of the causes, ROTC course content, is important.even though you did notquite see that The position paper asserted, "Theevenythough wee gtidng t youi e tvant ROTC will remain, regardless of ouryou were getting. what you want. Re-acinnexralyotoldag-member that a positive first derivative actions, an externally controlled agen-with a positive second derivative is cy of the armed forces conducted

often more important than the value of according to its own standards andthe function. I have this faith in our policies for its own special objectives,"

and "nor can this faculty change thefaculty, our students, our administra-......character of ROTC."tion, and our staff. ·

Jerrold R. Zacharias Whether a person believes the "mili-Institute Professor tary".is capable of offering courses at

Letters TheBacklash

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issue. In this respect, questions con-cerning the positive potential role ofMIT with regard to ROTC should notbe neglected. Examples are: In whatways, if any, are the ROTC programsat MIT unique? What changes andadditions are planned for next year?Beyond ROTC's short- range relationto Vietnam, does the ROTC programrelate meaningfully to long-range secur-ity problems? If so, should MIT electto meaningfully relate to ROTC? Canthe problem be discussed comprehen-sively in terms of defining MIT's re-sponsibility for public service? Arepresent natronal policy problemscaused by the sheer existence of thearmed forces, or rather by widespread'public indifference to the use of theirmilitary? If the problem lies with thepublic, but ROTC were found to be inthe long-range public interest, wouldremoving ROTC from MIT be a fair,effective, and desirable. means forarousing public opinion? Or, are bettermethods lying unused which wouldserve the same end without makifigMIT's ROTC program a sacrificiallamb? Hopefully, these and other posi-

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(Continued from page 4)

tent, -3ave that it determined who askedwhom for an armistice," and "Thepoliticians did show themselves muchmore sensitive than their military bret-hren to the price being exacted for theundefined 'victory.' They sensed that

- the common soldier was not merely ameans for fighting, but also one forwhom the fight was being raged."These points were well developed inthe text, and can easily be used aspremises from which to argue againstVietnam.

Additional information concerningthe control issue may be obtained fromthe memorandum "Academic Status ofROTC at MIT" in which Professor.Austin and Professor Roshenow des-

cribe the MIT faculty's record of suc-cess in developing ROTC programs as"compatible with the educational goalsof the Institute and the interests of itsstudents," quoting from the conclud-ing lines of the account:.

Points 6 through 9 pertain to thecontractual obligations incurred by stu-dents who do elect to sign with abranch of the armed forces. Professor

Watson's motion really does not relateto the problem of a student whodesires to be released from his ROTCcontract. The motion urges that theInstitute do its best to see' that stu-dents who wish to continue be some-how accommodated outside MIT. Be-cause of this, and because of the

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authors' expressed belief that the Insti-tute cannot prohibit students fromsigning ROTC contracts, it seems likelythat channels opened for students whoWish to continue will also be capable ofaccommodating those who wish tobegia. Thifs is not a direct answer to thecontract question.

My interpretation of the position ofwriters is that their nine points disclosefeatures of ROTC incompatible withthe concept of the freedom of MIT.However, practical consequences toMIT of all but one of the points seemnonexistant. The exception concernsrelease of a student from his contract,but Professor Watson's motion doesnot deal directly with this question. If,indeed, the MIT community is con-cerned over this point, it might besignificant to learn precisely what theprovisions for release are, and howsuccessful students generally are whoseek a release.

The nine points are, at best, sideissues. I share the authors' convictionthat the basic issue is the moral andpolitical problem. The writers are con-cerned with how the people outsideMIT will react upon MIT's treatmentof its ROTC issue. By now, the nationis well aware that there is an ROTCissue astir. However, we choose to treatthe issue here will undoubtedly havesome nationwide effect. Concern overhow our thinking is read throughoutthe country belongs to every memberof this community. Whether we arejudged, by ourselves as well as others,as opinion leaders, not opinion follow-ers depends on many things. First, theMIT community should exhibit thepatience needed to insure that everyindividual who wishes to speak is heardand heard as, first and foremost, anindividual, rather than a member of aparticular group or groups. A format ofpatient, painstaking inquiry could onlyserve to enhance the leadership role ofMIT. MIT can set a significant exampleby sake of doing justice to its ROTC

tive questions will be explored asseriously as the negative questions inthe weeks to come.

Joe Martin '71[Ed. note: In accordance with ouroffer in the last issue of equal space forpro-ROTC articles, we offered to printthis letter as an article. Mr. Martinchose instead to have it appear in itsoriginal form. ]

Issues on campusdebated at Baker

(continued from page 1)crisis in Cambridge, and urban prob-lems. However, the emphasis was clear-ly upon the controversial issue ofwar-related work being done at theInstrumentation and Lincoln labs. Themajority of the speakers urged a moremoderate position on war- related re-search than the abolition advocated bySDS and other student groups present.

Letters to The Tech Annouttremern 0** The Nominations Committee will hold a meeting Tuesday night at 7:30

in Room W20400.

* The Nominations Committee of the new Student Government iscurrently engaged in filling appointments to administration and facultycommittees. There are currently positions open on the following commit-tees: Academic Performance, Student Environment, Athletic Board, Com-munity Service Committee, Community Service Fund, Evaluation ofFreshman Performance, Placement Services, Registrar's Office, ActivitiesDevelopment Board, Task Force on Equal Employment Opportunities, andPrivacy of Information. Anyone who would be interested in serving on anyof these groups for the next year should contact Wells Eddleman, X3161,.assoon as possible.

*A reference collection on MIT and its activities has been created in theStudent Center Library. The current President's and Treasurer's Reports,Policies and Procedures, compilations of research projects and publications,and information on the Corporation are among the publications pertinent tothe debate on the future of MIT. The Library acted promptly after such acollection was recommended by the Committee to study MIT's ExternalCommitments. Some documents in the collection were not easily accessibleto students before, including the Report of the Visiting Committee onSponsored Research and the Rules and Regulations of the Faculty. Theinformation on research activities at MIT should also be useful to studentsseeking thesis topics and advisors. The collection is located to the left as youenter the Library.

*Summer Employment: Work in education, recreation, and rehabilitationis available for men, preferably Spanish-speaking, in the South Endcommunity. Good wages, room and board provided; interesting andchallenging jobs. For further information, contact Ellen Fleischnick,492-7705 or Mary Ann Rivet X7765.

*The Department of Physics will be holding an informal Open House forfreshmen interested in physics as a m~ajor on Monday, May 5, from 7-9 pm.Staff and students will be present-to answer questions. Refreshments will beserved.

* The Pot Luck Coffeehouse will be open tonight at 8:00. Featured will beHal Moorman and David Gluss in the West Lounge (note the change from theMezzanine Lounge). All are welcome!

* Summer Session Registration Material must be returned to the Registrar'sOffice, Room E19-335, or the Information Office, Room 7-111, before 5:00pm, Wednesday, May 21.

*Nominations are still open for fire Everett Moore Baker Award. foroutstanding undergraduate teaching. Any student may nominate a juniormember of the faculty whom he feels has demonstrated outstanding concernfor his students, both within and outside the classroom. Nominating aninstructor'for this award is virtually the only means presently available tostudents to promote public recognition and professional advancement of.those instructors who have given generously of themselves and their time.

Nominations may be directed to the Baker Award Committee, c/o TheTech or Mickey Warren at AEPi.

l Continental-style breakfasts will be served in the Sala De Puerto RicoMonday through Friday for the rest of the term on an experimental basis.The breakfasts will be a la carte.

*Canoeing, rock climbing, bicycling, caving, and hiking trips, including amidnight hike up Mt. Monadnock, are planned for the Outing Club's "springcircus," Saturday, May 3. Most trips will return to a picnic at Larz AndersonPark in Brookline. Beginners are particularity welcome. See the Outing Clubbulletin board in Bldg. 7 (opposite the Medical Dept.) for further details.

The Managing Board of Technique 1969 is pleased to announce theselection of the Managing Board for Technique 1970 Managing Editor,X2955 or 247-8355.

*Today, May 2, is the deadline for applications for the Wellesley-MITExchange. Leave your completed applications at the Office of the Dean ofStudent Affairs, Room 5-104.

Senior photographs for Technique 1970 will be taken beginning Mayfifth in the Technique office. Sign up now in the lobby of Bldg. 10 for anappointment.

* Interested in guiding visitors for Open House, May 3, noon to 5:00? If so,contact Val Livada X3265, John Drobak X3617, or the head of your livinggroup.

*All students should obtain an examination schedule atthe InformationOffice, Room 7-111. Examinations not listed, or a conflict in examinations,such as two exams scheduled at the same time, ,'nust be reported to theSchedules Office by Friday, May 9, 1969.

THE URBAN CALENDAR

An Institute-wide Spring Urban Conference has been scheduled for Friday and Saturday,May 9' and 10. The Conference will begin with a general overview statement by ProfessorCharles Miller of the Department of Civil Engineering, followed by panels dealing with specificurban activities now underway at MIT. The Conference will attempt to chart what MIT hasdone through its commitment to urban affairs, where it now stands, and what actions remain tobe taken. Invitations to the conference are being extended to local, state, and Federal officials,representatives of foundations- and industry, and members of other organizations concernedwith urban affairs. Details of the conference will be released next week.

The Urban Systems Laboratory Computer Group seminars will include the following:

Ron Nilsson will speak on "CMS/ICES: Tis Use and Subsystem Development" onMonday, May 5.

'Ronald Walter will speak on "Assisting Health Planning with CMS/67" on Monday,May 12.

All lectures will be held in the fifth floor conference room in Building 9 from 3-5 pm.

Sponsored- by the Urban Systems Laboraetory.

Antonio's

In the Year of the Pig

May 526-100

Two showings - 7 and 9 pmGeneral Admission- 75 cents

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by Joseph Heller

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May 1, 2, 3;9 & 10 at 8:30 PM

Little Theatre, Kresge Auditorium

All tickets $2.00

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..PAGE 6 FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1969 THE TECH

of powergroups including Freshman AdvisoryCouncil and Committee on Curricula(any committee not proceeded by theword student is a faculty committee).SCEP is the place to go if one isdissatisfied with almost anything aca-demic and wants to do more than'gripe. The dirty work of the operationof MIT is the responsibility of theCommittee on Academic Performnace.The CAP is the 'axe board": the group'responsible for determining the fate ofthose who get into academic trouble.Composed of seven faculty membersand the Dean of Student Affairs, Regis-trar, Medical Director, Director of Stu-dent Aid and the Chairman 'of the'Freshman Advisory Council, this groupdecides if a student should be disquali- fied, put on probation or readmitted. The CAP also has the responsibility forIthe advisory program -and readingIperiod-exams. There are now two stu- dents associated -with the committee s;on an experimental basis at the request 1of the chairman, Professor Nyhart. aThis group, as well as all the others, is Ialways eager to hear new ideas on how

In recent weeks the cry has risenfor student participation in policymaking, allocation of power, and in althe decisions that determine the courseof a urfiversity's growth. The problenis that in a large number of cases thlapparatus for student participation already exists and is functioning but goesunseen and unheard.

Nearly a dozen student facult)groups are now operating and involvedin. educational reform and the day today process of making MIT run. Sincea number of these groups are open tofurther participation by interested stu-dents and faculty, the following com-pilation of the apparatus for adminis-tration and evaluation of the educa-tional system has been made. Theprimary source of information is PeterHarris, former chairman of the SCEPand, a participant in a broad range ofeducational reforms. In fact, it is nosmall coincidence that large-scale stu-dent involvement and Peter Harris hap-pened at the same time.Faculty Committee on Educational Po-licy (CEP)Most decisions made about generaleducation are the province of theCommittee on Educational POlicy. TheCEP has power to conduct experiments(for example,pass-fail);it considerschanges in requirements; it studies po-licy questions including ROTC andinitiates or submits on the behalf ofothers, proposals for educational re-form. The CEP is chaired by theChairman of the Faculty who can be,as in the case of Prof. Rosenblith, theguiding force of the committee. Whena faculty member wishes to innovatehe first approaches CEP. The groupconsiders proposals that are submittedand presents them with a recommenda-tion to the faculty. The CEP has asmembers the Provost and Undergra-duate Planning Professor (Jerome Wies-ner and Edgar Schein respectively) andten members of the faculty who servetexms of two years. Questions concern-ing course content ias well as moreambitious ideas for new modes ofteaching may be addressed to theStudent Committee on Educational Po-licy, which is a counterpart to the CEP.SCEP's communication with the faculaty committee is regular and thorough.The Chairman of SCEP often meetswith the CEP and a number of jointtask forces are considering the pro-blems of requirements, freshman pass-fail and senior pass-fail. At one timeSCEP had a formal structure withrather rigorous qualifications for mem-bership, but the group is now eager torecruit anyone who will make a seriouseffort on some project. Members parti-cipate in a number of other faculty

Open ROTE talks

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also featuring theMIT CONCERT JAZZ BANDdirected by EVERETT LONGSTRETH

SUNDAY - MAY 4 - 8 pmKRESGE AUDITORIUM, MIT

Tickets $1 at door or callUN 44900 ext. 2901

O"f�by Jeff Gale

The Blues Project was one of themore creative, if not successful,attempts at meaningful music withinthe last few years. They did, however,for some reason split up about a yearand a half ago. Several wayward mem-bers have surfaced in various placessince that split. Al Kooper and SteveKatz formed Blood, Sweat and Tearswith Keoper moving on to the SuperSession albums with Mike Bloomfield.Now, Roy Blumenfeld, the drummer,and Andy: Kulberg, the.bassist andflutist extraordinaire of Steve's Songand Flute Thing, have assembled SeaTrain with an album due on A and M.

Perhaps the most unique thingabout Sea Train is their instrumenta-tion. As rentioned, Blumenfeld is thedrummer with Kulberg on bass andflute. Richard Greene (who has a newrelease on Columbia) is the violinist.(It's an electric violin, I think. TheUnited States of America used to useone.) John Gregory is the guitarist anda vocalist of reasonable quality. DonaldKretmar completes the unit doublingas a saxophonist and bassist.

The album itself is a disappoint-ment. Perhaps it is because so much isexpected. James Roberts' lyrics are, atbest, a rude intrustion into a mqod setby the instrumentation. John Gregory

does an adequate job with these towork with. The let-down is, primarily,in the instrumental exhibitions. No-where does Kulberg's flute appear as indays of old.' The work varies from dullto brilliant. Many musical forms makeappearances but the country flavor, asused in Let the Duchess No and As ILay Losing is by far the most effective.Greene's violin seems more like a Nash-ville vintage fiddle and the othersnicely complement this impressionwith good judgement.

The most successful cut on thealbum is Kulberg's Sweet Creek's Suite.As the title indicates, the county air ispresent in abundance and it is the onlypiece with sufficient life (due partly tothe absence of lyrics). The suite iscomplex with several tempo changes.Everyone gets his chance to shine.Gregory opens with a Ventures-likesolo and later -takes another which isreminiscent of Steve Stills. The smoothsax work by Kretmar is the out-standing component of this one ex-cellent cut.' Sea Train displays both substantialtalent and overwhelming unfilledpromise in its first outing. Progress willbe viewed with both interest and con-cern by those who expect so much.

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set for next weekROTC will be the subject of two.

open forums to be held next week bythe ROTC Subcommittee of the Com-mittee on Educational Policy.

The meetings will take place Mon-day at 7:30 pm in the Sala de PuertoRico and Wednesday at 4:00 pm inroom 9-150.

Charged with examining the aca-demic status of ROTC at the Institute,the Subcommittee, chaired by Profes-sor Richard M. Held, is expected tohave a report ready for a facultymeeting on May 14.

In a memo to the faculty this week,the Subcommittee solicited expressionsof opinion on the ROTC issue. Contro-versy has centered on two proposals onthe student military programs at MIT:one for the denial of academic credit inthe program-the other for the totalabolition of ROTC on campus.

M. I. T. DRAMASHOP

MIT Gilbert and Sullivan Society ·

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Alloca on exp Pl 'nEexisting procedures could be improvedor new ones init iat e d. The CA P is noin the process of writing a paper whichwill spell out in detail the duties anresponsibilities of the committee.

The responsibility for watchinyver the freshman is the province othe Committee on the Evaluation o.Freshman Performance (CEFP). ThCEFP was set up with the freshman_

'pass-fail program: its function is tocheck the class's progress. Thlie mem-bers of the CEFP are each talking withseveral freshmen and have run severalfeedback programs to date. Since it isstill rather early to tell much about theeffects of pass-fail the'CEFP'has pub"-lished little. They have made someregulations, including the units ceilingand they designed the written evalua-tion forms that all freshman fill out.Freshmen who have questions aboutpass-fail or problems- with the gradingsystem should talk to Peter Buttner,the Executive Officer. Two students,appointees of Presidenf Johnson, sit onthe CEFP.

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Page 7: FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and Miller competed with the roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. as they addressed the crowd

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By Karen WattelIs your advisor really too busy to

see you, even though he has his threeoffice hours a week posted 'in hisdoor? Does your advisor run awayfrom you, even after repeated in-vitations to come and see you, andafter you've had him home for dinnerwith, you and the family? Maybe some-thing's wrong with the system.

About 200 people involved withthe official advisory/counseling/tutor-ial system gathered at the StudentCenter Tuesday to discuss how thisinformal part of college education re-lated to the formal, more professionalpart-and what measures would makeit work.

Following an explanation of theconference structure, the advisors, stu-dents, housemasters, tutors, house of-ficers, medical and Dean's staff as-sembled for workshop sessions. Inthese mixeA groups of ten, many firstrealised the other resources, ,personal-

ities, and responsibilities of the system.Questions-and answers

It took some time to realise whatquestions had to be asked. What, forexample, do students need and want?How can it be made available? Howcan people-be made to take advantageof the resources already available tothem?

Some students would like nothingmore than to talk with a professorabout what's going on around them inthe college community, and where it isall taking them. The professor seems anatural person to turn to in a univer-sity; but the professor who has notcome to know the student in a'casual,every-day outside-the-classroom sit-uation is not in a good position to beof help and guidance when problemswith that student arise.

How many students do you thinkgo in to see their advisors just to talk?Not many, unless they've had them fora class, or have spent time with them in

some other comforable. informal way.Most students are afraid to go in just totalk; they feel they would be wastingthe professor's time, or be thought ofas obnoxious, an unneccesary distract-ion. The advisor, on the other hand,seems to be tearful and shy of 'i-mposing' himself upon the student.Often he doesn't realise that the desireto just sit and talk even exists. In thisage of student independence, our advis-ors are not going to chase the studentuntil he comes in.

More recognition neededMuch of the trouble with the advis-

ory' system seems to stem from thelack of recognition of its importanceand for its real service in this area. Can

the faculty in the system which placesso much value upon professional statusafford to spend their time listening andspeaking with students? Student inputcould be used as one measure of thisskill, if it were included in a ratingsystem for promotion and tenure, as'-s been done at other universities.

The problem of closer relationsbetween faculty and students is a largerone than can be chalked up to theinadaquacies of the advisory system.Since warm relationships do not oftendevelop in the classroom, the problemexists. It is necessary, then, to startpatching up a system with mechanismssuch as assigning each student a facultymember for a registration process.It wassuggested that allowing the student tochoose his own advisor would make forbetter communication between thetwo.

r-iI WANTED: Photographer/Sailor.

In 1967 Don McNamara's White Sails, Black Clouds was published with criticalaccolades: ".. one of the finest sailing books ever published." This summerMcNamara will campaign his 53 Coot Tara over the full northern racing circuitincluding Halifax and Annapolis-Newport, racing almost every weekend. Hispublisher, Burdette & Co., Inc., is seeking a tough, thick-skinned photographerwith broad available-light b&w experience to provide pictures for what itexpects to be the best sailing book of its kind this generation. Meals andlaundry. provided, but no pay. Small advance against royalties to cover photoexpenses. Publication plans, hard cover, late '69 or 1970. Send resume andreferences of experience to:

Ted Thomte, Burdette & Co,, Inc., 437 D Street, Boston, Mass. 02210.

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ease yurmother on er day, look .. - I Please your. mother on her day, look over these Coop

suggestions. Better yet, drop into the Coop and choosefrom a wide, wide selection of gifts. -It's a nice way to mother her.

Electricalappliances

Radios andtelevisions

New.tButtoneer

SaltonHotrays

Stainlesssteel

Corning- ware

Decorativelinens

Hair curlers by Clairol. Hair dryersby G.E. Hair dryers by Sunbeam.Manicure sets by G.E. Also,Waring blenders, irons, fans,toasters, tooth brushes, knives.mixers.

Large selection in quality brands:RCA, Zenith, G.E., Sony. Table,clock and personal radios, $9.95and up. Portable b/w televisionsets, $74,88 and up. Color TVsets start at $199.88.

The mechanical marvel that at-taches buttons. Click and it's on.$5.95 a set.

The modern way to keep and servefood warm. Smartly-styled trays.several sizes. $6.95-$34.95

Finest quality stainless by Fraser.Functional accessories for delight-ful entertaining. Now at specialsavings: $5 group, reg. $8;$7 group, reg. $9-$14; $10 group,reg. $15

Royal Family Set. Includes 1, 11/2,13/4 quart covered saucepans,1 handle and 1 cradle, 1 ten-inchcovered skillet and cradle. Specialuntil May i1 $19.88, reg. $24.95.May be used as casseroles, too.Many other popular cooking andserving pieces in famousCorning Ware.

Linen place mats with napkins,8 pc. sets, $5.98, $6.98, $9.98.Hemp place mats with napkins,8 pc. sets, $7,98. Scenic placemat sets by Hedwin. AmericanCup Sailing, New England CoastLine and American Cities.Beautiful colors, 4 pc. sets,$4.50-$9.95.

FragrancesFaberge is nature-in-the-wild: Aphrodisia,Flambeau, Tigress' and Woodhue. SprayCologne, 2 oz.; $2.50Mary Chess gives a treat: free Oil Mist

' with Toile t Water, 8 oz. $7..50

Her shirtsFeminine romanticism by Alice Stuart.$11016

HandbagsImported straw, beautifully designedSpring accessory $6-15

Record bouquetTHE JOY OF MUSIC Bernstein conductsfavorites from symphonies, ballet andshows. Columbia M2x Special: 2 recordsfor $6.20THEMES LIKE OLD TIMES 90 of the mostfamous original radio themes Viva 36018$3.30GALVESTON -Glen Campbell sings hiscurrent hit tune plus ten more.Capital ST. 210 $3.30FUNNY GIRL - Barbra Streisand, Oscarwinner for best actress, on the originaltrack. Columbia BOS 3220 $5.20

*.

Books to cook byRitz Carlton -Lippincott (Ridley) $17.95Ladies Home Journal'- Prentice Hall$11.95Time-Life Series: France, Italy, Vienna,America $6.95Fannie Farmer -Little Brown $6.95Art of French Cooking -Knopf (JuliaChild, Beck and Bertholle) $10.00Better Homes and Gardens New CookBook -Meredith $5.95

�m

HAPPY SELECTION OF GREETING CARDS CACANDY AND STATIONERY NOTES

M.I.T. STUDENT CENTERLongwood and Brookline Aves., Boston

MEDICAL CENTER

HARVARD SQUARE Open Thurs. 'til 9.

HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL

The Collegiate Department Store

[Conference criticizes advisory system, offers improvementsPARTHENON RESTAURANTA UTHENTIC GREEK CUISINE

EXCELLENT EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN WINESALL KINDS OF LIQUOR

IUNIQUE HELLENIC ATMOSPHERE FEATURINGTHE ANCIENT GREEK PARTHENON

OPEN EVERY DAY11 a.m. to p.m.

Extremely Moderate PricesFor Reservations Call 491-9592

924 Mass. Ave.(BE'I3'EEN HARVARD AND

CENTRAL SOUARES)

00 b

I_

Di

Page 8: FV Draner fo-il. TLlnh Deantech.mit.edu/V89/PDF/V89-N21.pdf · 2007-12-22 · 1:30 Draper and Miller competed with the roar of the traffic on Mass. Ave. as they addressed the crowd

PAGE 8 FRIDAY, MAY 2,1969 THETECH

BU extends Tech nine losing - .1* AO DN dPneo 'In "n. T horli*ow

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with 6-0 winchances cleanly, while phlaying his firstgamne in almost two years at the hotspot. Mike Neschleba, taking over forCompton at second base, also contrib-uted an excellent effort.

BU's victory virtually insures thema fist place finish in the GreaterBoston League, while MIT is now 0and 5 in the league with two games toplay. This Saturday, the Techmentravel to New London, Connecticut, toface the Coast Guard in a double-header.

While the varsity may be havingtroubles, MIT's freshman nine con-tinued on their way to a winningseason. Wednesday, they handed theBU frosh an 8-6 pasting. Catcher BruceAlborn hit a three run homerun toaccount for three of the four runs theteam scored in the first. Alan Dopfel,in relief of Chuck Holcumrn, grabbed thewin for the frosh, who now stand at 4and 3.

skein to sevenBoston University has one of tile

best teams in New England this year.MIT does not. So when the two teamsmet last Wednesday in Auburndale,Mass., BU's 6-0 victory was not sur-prising. Junior Bruce Villeneuve wasthe winner on a three hitter, and hehelped himself at the plate with tworibbies.

Perhaps MIT was doomed to defeatfrom the start. After Bruce Taylor ledoff BU's first inning with a single, MITpitcher Dave Dewitte picked him off.But Bob Gerber's peg to second basewound up in centerfield, and Taylor,who advanced to third on the play, wasable to score on Reggie Rucker's sacfly. Villeneuve was able to make therun stand up for six innings, wheninsurance came in the form of twomore runs, both coming on a single byTim Cotton. In the seventh, the BUpitcher hit a three two pitch to rightcenter to increase the margin to 5-0. Inthe next frame, Mike Leverone singledoff reliever Steve Rock to end thescoring. ·

MIT's hitting attack was nearlynon-existent. Held hitless for the firstthree innings, the Tech ballplayersfinally showed some life in the fourth,as Jeff Weissman followed BobDresser's lead off walk with a bloophit. With one man gone, both runnersmoved up on a wild pitch, but at thispoint, Villeneuve struck out Rich Frey-berg and Dave Dewitte to end thisthreat. Two innings later, Dresser rip-ped a hit to right, only to be strandedas the next three hitters were retired.

Rebounding from last week's farceat Bowdoin, the Engineers played asound defensive ballgame, commitingonly the throwing error in the firstinning. An outstanding performancewas turned in at third base by JohnCompton '70, who fielded all six

By Ray KwasnickSince losing a tough 12-11 decision

to Harvard three weeks ago, the varsitylacrosse team has reeled off six straighttriumphs. In the process a multitude ofvarsity records have already fallen orare being threatened, and the squad ismaking a strong run at the New Eng-land small college crown. The latest ofthe stickmen's vicims was defendingchampion Amherst on Wednesday. Theengineers defeated the Jeffs by a 6-5count.

Jack Anderson '69 scored the gamewinner with 9:46 left in the contest.Anderson got the ball and beat hisdefender in a one-on-one situation. Thegoal broke a 5-5 deadlock. Andersonhad scored on a break-away in thethird quarter. He knocked down a passfrom Walt Maling '69, picked up theball and whipped it by the enemy

goalie. Carl Brainard'69 scored twice,and Maling and Dave Peterson '70 putin one apiece to lead the engineerattack.

Anderson and Maling are the mainculprits in the attack'on the recordbooks. In the Tufts game which theengineers won 18-2, both Andersonand Maling- scored six goals and twoassists. This performance tied the re-cord for the most goals in a single gameset by Pete Kirkwood in 1966 ahddemolished the record for the mostpoints in a game which was also heldby Kirkwood.

With five games remaining Kirk-

wood's mairk of 44 points during aseason and Joe Skendarian's record of35 goals in a campaign seem doomed.Anderson with 31 goals and 11 assistsfor 42' points and Maling with 29markers and 11 assists for 40 points areboth within shooting distance.

At this point in the season theengineers are knotted in a first place tiewith the University of Massachusetts inthe NE circuit. Both teams are unun-defeated in league competition; and ifthey stay that way, the stage will be setfor the last and most important.gameof the year when the teams meet onBriggs Field.

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Rich Goldhor '72 stayed with thepack all the way in the freshman threemile run. Goldhor's mile times were4:45, 5:00 and 5:12 for an impressive14:57. The two mile time Goldhorturned in was a personal record andbodes well for the continued success ofTech's distance crew.

The absence of Larry Kelly '70 andCaptain Bill McLeod '69 hindered theengineers performance in the varsitytourney.

Ben Wilson '70 waged two classicbattles with Harvard runners in thegrueling 3000 meter steeplechase andin the three mile. In the steeplechase,Wilson led Dave Potetti '71 for fourlaps but lost contact on the fifth lap.Wilson's time was 9:08.

In the three mile, Wilson paced TimMcLoone '69 for 9 of the 11 and afraction laps. Potetti outkicked Wilsonin the last 220. Wilson finished in atime of14:08. Meanwhile, Larry Petro'70 and Pete Peckarsky '69 were fight-ing for the remaining three places (onlyfive finishers figured in the scoring)along with two Harvard runners andone from Northeastern. Petro pinneddown fourth in 14:47 while Peckarskyfinished out of the scoring in sixth.

The varsity mile relay team blazedto a 3:24 for their best effort of theseason while copping a fourth place.

By Pete PeckarsckyHarvard swept to an easy victory in

the Greater Boston Collegiate Cham-pionships at Boston College on Tues-day and Wednesday. MIT's squadsfinished in fifth place in both thevarsity and freshman divisions.

The highlights of the meet for theengineers was a first place in the 220yeard dash for Mike Rybak '72. Rybakcame off the turn slightly ahead of theHarvard runner in the inside lane andwaged a fierce battle over the last 100yards to win by one inch. Albert Lau'72 garnered two fourth place ribbonsin the triple jump and long jump.

Photo by Bill Swedish

Ken Lord '71 circles behind the Wesleyan goal in Monday's game.Walt Maling '69 (No. 14) waits for a pass at the top of the crease.

Harvard edges golfers 4-3when late rally falls short

By John Light- Harvard edged the'golf-team Tues-

day by a score of 4-3. Tech golfersattempted to rally in the final holes,but fell short in a well played match atthe Concord Country Club.

Playing at number one, Ken Smolek ·'70 lost 2-up to Harvard's Bruce Lo-pucki. The match was even through 15holes until Lopucki holed out hissecond shot at the par 5 sixteenth for adouble eagle. Smolek was unable toovertake his opponent on 17 or 18,although he finished with a 76.

Once again it was Greg Kast '69 andMike McMahan '69 who led Tech.Kast, playing at'number four, cardedthe low score of the day with a one

in sofballThe ping pong regular season has

also ended with the playoffs scheduledfor Tuesday. All the A league teamswill be in the ployoffs along with thetop'two teams in each B league and thetop team in each C league. The winnersof the three A leagues, all with 4-~records, were Burton A, Chinese Stu-dents A, and Chinese Students B. TheB league winners were Baker D, BakerE, TEP B, Random Hall, and ChineseStudents C. The C league winners wereKS A, TDC C, and PLP B. SPE andEast Campus Weaseels will play off forfirst in the other C league. Also overthe weekend, PBE Alwill playoff withStudent House for second place inleague B2 and a playoff birth.

O n D ec k: ..iii ..i ..iiiiiiiii.iiiiiii ...Today

Golf(V)-Bowdoin,Lowell,away, lpmTolmorrow

BaseballO(V)oast Guard,away, lpmBaseball(F)-Stevens Business College,home, 2pmHeavyweight Crew-Cochrane Cup atDartmouthLightweight Crew-Callow Cup at NavyLacrosse(V)0-Trinity away, 2pmrSailing(V)-Friis Trophy'at TuftsTennis(V&F)-Trinity,home, 2pmOutdoor Track(V&F)-Tufts,BU away,lpm

over par 72, while McMahan was closebehind with a 74; Both won theirmatches.

The other Tech winner was captai-Tom Thomas '69. Playing in the sev-enth position, his 75 was good enoughfor a 5-4 victory, the biggest winningLmargin of the day.

The final three Tech golfers lost inclose matches, despite respectablescores. Carl Everett '69 with 78, DonAnderson '70 with 80, and John Light'70 with 79 were unable to pull even inthe final holes after spotting theiropponents to generous leads throughthe first eleven holes. Their inability tomount a charge told-the story for theengineers as the golfers suffered a 4-3.loss to Harvard for the third straightyear.

The next match on the schedulesends the golfers to the Vesper CouLn-

try Club to face Bowdoin and LowellTech. The Techmen will be favored tomove over '500 for the first time thisyear with a double victory.

his rare losses to an intercollegiate foeas Dartmouth's Jock McKernan tookhim in straight sets 6-3, 6-2. MannyWeiss '70 came away empty handedfrom Hanover as he lost to DaveBurwell 6-0, 6-3.

At five Tom Stewart '69 blankedJohn Mueller 6-0 in the first set, butStewart couldn't hold his game andlost the last two 6-4, 6-04. Steve Gott-lieb '71 played excellent tennis at six,but he couldn't overcome the exper-ience of Ed Cranch and lost 9-7, 6-2.

McKinley and Weiss played the bestmatch of the meet and won 6-4, 9-7 inthe number one doubles slot.

The tennis squad was derailed atDartmouth after seven straight vic-tories. The Green defeated the en-gineers 6-3 in a close match on Wednes-day. The Techmen attempt to get backon the winning track tomorrow whenthey host Trinity.

At number one seed Skip Brook-field '69 was dropped by Geoff Dyer3-6, 6-1, 6-1. Brookfield couldn't con-trol his passing shot and that wasenough to give Dyer the win. BobMcKinley '69 was the only Tech singlesentry to win. He easily downed TomGreist of Dartmouth 6-2. 6-2.

Bob Metcalfe '69 suffered one of

By Don ArkinSoftball completed its third round

of games with the same teams remain-ing undefeated. SAM made their record3-0 with a 13-0 trouncing of SeniorHouse. Pitcher Steve Sitkus '70 struckout ten men in the four inning gamewhile allowing only two singles. RichHaberman got the only home run inthe game with no one on base. Bexleytrounced TC 15-6 to keep them unde-feated and in a tie with SAM.- LCAremained in first place in the other Aleague with a forfeit win over DU. Inthe other games, SAE beat PDT 13-8.Conner 5 beat East Campus 9-6, andBurton beat SPE 12-9.

Persians and Club Latino are theonly undefeated teams left in thedouble elimination volleyball tourna-ment. There are only two other teamsthat have one loss, Economics and PhiSigma Kappa.

In the loser's bracket quarter finals,PSK eliminated TEP in three games11-15, 15-8, and 15-12. Burton 2A andTEP will now play off for fifth andsixth places.

On Sunday PSK eliminated Ash-down in three games. Ashdown andBurton 5A will play off for seventhand eighth. Also on Sunday, Persianshanded Economics its first loss. Econo-mics will now meet PSK in the finals ofthe loser's bracket for the privilege ofone more chance at the Persians or

Club Latino who will be playing in thefinals of the winner's bracket. The lasttwo places in the top ten were grabbed

-by PBE and Conner 5 who played offfor ninth place. PBE won in threegames 15-10, 11-15, and 15-6.

The water polo playoffs are due to

start with a full round of games thisSaturday. The standings after the endof the regular season were Burton infirst, LCA second, DU third, SCfourth, TC and PDT tied for fifth,Baker sixth, SAE seventh, and ATOeighth.

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'- -. . 'Phzoto by Dave SimanskyTEP forward goes up for a spike in IM volleyball play-off gameagainst Phi Sigma Kappa. PSK won 11-15, 15-8, 15-13, to move intoserni-finals.

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Track team finishes fifth inGreater Boston tournament

Dartmouth defeat snaps netwinning streak at 7 mnatches

LCA Bexley unbeatenSAM,