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- - __ VOL.9. 0NO. 39 MIT CAMBRIDGE, MASS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24. 1969 FIVE CENTS I. , I I I Is I b The Weather Sunny and warmer. Lows in the forties. "Continuous News Service Since 1881"' By Lee Giguer.e The Pound's l'ancl, in its final report rcleased this Wednesday, called for the formation of a standing committee to advise the administration in the running of the special labs. An additional recornmmnda- lion, added to the first report of last May states "that the entire matter of the relationship be- tween the Institute and its two special laboratories be reviewed on a regular basis" by a group distinct from the standing com- mnittee. The report is the result of intensive efforts by the panel as a group from April 26 to May 31 1969 and the individual ef- forts of its members since then. MIT, according to the panel, should conduct- diversified re- search and be flexible enough to mieet the changing needs of soci- ety. Furthermore, the role of faculty and students .in- deter- mining the direction of the lnIsti- tute's research commitments should not be neglected by the administration Panel recommendations Ihe specific recommenda- tions of the Panel are: 1. "The laboratories and MIT should cnergetically explore new projects to provide a more balanced research program." 2. "The educational interac- tion between the special labora- tories and the campus should be expanded" 3 "There shouldbe intensive efforts to reduce classification and clearance barriers in the special laboratories." 4. "A Standing Committee on the special laboratories should be established." As envisioned in the panel's report, the Standing Committee would consist of ten members:. four faculty, two students, two administrators, and one staff member from each of the labora- tories. The final responsibility for decisions concerning lab con- tracts would remain with the administration while the com- mittee would serve in an adviso- ry capacity to voice the attitudes of the MIT community. A national problem Professor Noam Chomsky of the Department of Modern Lan- guages and Linguistics, in a spe- cial addenda to the report, stressed that "the uses of tech- nology should be of concern to the scientists and engineers who develop it." in his report, Jonathan Ka- bat, states: "The major contribu- tion that a university can make to a free society is to preserve its independence to pursue such learning objectively and free from ideological constraints." The university, however, "has become wedded to the national myth" of the importance of defense work. "The problem is indeed a national one, not parti- cular to MIT." Text of "... As to November 4th, there have been many. specific examples of statements that have been made; a -number of you have written to me about these, about a recent article in the Sunday newspaper where a statement was' made by Mr. Michael Albert calling for city wide demonstrations at MIT in November "to put an end to the machinations of the second Pen- tagon." Most recently, -Mr. Michael Ansara, spokesman for the.November Action Commit- tee was quoted in last. Sunday's Herald as calling for militant, disciplined action against MIT on November 4th, probably in- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~·" . ;...?-ftsi -'sit- i;- . , t 'President Howard Johnson, at a post-faculty meeting press con- ference, stated that the Institute will not allow militant students to abridge personal rights on Nov. 4. major policy change in the direc- tion of the labs and that exten- sive efforts have been underway to obtain funds from non- military sources. He further stated that MIT was'aware of the interests of the labs' sponsors, of the labs and their personnel, and of those opposing the work done there. However, policies would not be set by sponsors, special Photo by, Robert Elkin interest groups or by Boston- area demonstrators who are to gather at the l-Labs on Nov. 4. Recalling the "strict account- ability" of the president, John- son asked for a wide range of views to aid him in formulating policy toward the special labs, and said that his door was open to all. · Professor Jerome Lettvin sug- gested from the floor that MIT turn the labs into specialized manufacturing concerns. He said that this would be possible be- cause MIT has unique skills and patents in such fields as weather sattelites and that this monopoly would make them the nucleus of an independent concern. "I have a tendency to overstate and oversimplify things, but this is an alternative to ideas I definite- ly oppose." (Please turn ta page 5) NO DISAGREEMENTS -JONSON, DRAPER President Howard Johnson and Professor Charles S. Draper, head of the Instrumentation Laboratories, issued a joint state- mnent Tuesday that expressed their mutual agreement on re- search policies of the labs. The statement read: "The Instrumentation Labor- atory continues to conduct de- fense related research and, at the same time, devote its compe- tence in high technology to fr- ban and other domestic prob- lems. There is basic agreement between us as to the policies of the laboratory " The statement was apparently an attempt-to bring to an end the controversy surrounding the resignation of'Draper. Originally intending to resign in June, Dra- per will be replaced January 1. However, in at least two national papers, blaper had said that he had been "fired," although Johnson has denied it. In an addendum, Draper stated that "reports of my resignation have beeri greatly exagerated." The statement was read at a meeting Tuesday between Dra- per, Johnson, and about 60 di- rectors- of the labs. Johnson told the group that the administra- tion will be reviewing the lab policies with the faculty. Draper pledged to stand behind the work of the labs after he leaves his post. He is being succeeded by Professor Charles Miller, head of the Department of Civil Engi- neering. eluding sit-ins and a militant picket line to prevent- Faculty and students "from entering buildings to do their work." It's quite understandable that state- ments of this nature have be- come the center of deep concern of many members of this com- munity, and many of you have asked me to respond explaining the Institute's position and my own views on matters like these. I feel it is appropriate to bring the matter up before the Faculty today as I believe it to be partic- ularly serious. The fact that such statements have been made in a most bitter way changes the context in which we operate. Whether the threats materialize or not, they have already affected the level of trust that we have in each other. They have begun to limit our ability to communicate, to deal with the real problems we've got, which I will continue to insist we will deal with. And, they make it increasingly diffi- cult to discern between protest and potential destruction. I have, on several occasions, stated what I believe to be the policy of this campus, what I believe to be your support for me in that policy of free expres- sion, including dissent and pro- (Please turn to page 9} General Assembly meeting, last Tuesday night, Storch '71, member of the MIT Commission 70's. advantages of the plan. The hap- Dean for hazard way action was decided another of I on in the past will be imnproved tages. Unde by a method clearly understood only the De by al. Important is the realiza- i n i t i a t e tion that "the panel is not meant action-hard to mete out'justice or injustice," the concept only to determine which inci- to represent dents require further considera- ests. tion. Assembl) tl~~~rp. B~~~ssemrbI] That the new panel lifts the draft was mantle of prosecutor from the /Plea, is addressed by Larry on Education in the Ptroto by Gary DeBardi Student Affairs is the proposal's advan- ar the present system, ean for Students may disciplinary Ily congruous with t of an administrator t the student's inter- y reaction to the generally favorable. e turn to page 7) Is scuc The~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pounds released: lab plan FacIultt By Joe Kashi President Howard Johnson re- ceived an ovcrwhelning vote of confidence from the faculty Wednesday for his plan to imple- ment the Pounds Commission's final report and to assess its feasibility next May, thus defer- ring any further action on the disposition of the special labora- tories until then. Only ten faculty members. voted against this delay in deter- mining whether the special labo- ratories shall remain part of MIT. Johnson said that it may be necessary to disassociate the labs from the Institute if this proves to be the course of action most beneficial to the Institute as a whole. Johnson added thaL if threats of physical destruction and vio- lence continue, he would feel constrained to ask civil authori- ties for aid before Nov. 4. This would be necessary,.Johnson said, to preserve the integrity of .the campus, guarantee the safety of personnel and property, and enable free expression through- out MIT. Declaring that the issue of the special labs was critical to the future of MIT Johnson said that the Institute was at a point of report passes permanent panel suggested Johnson's speech GA bl conservatives unaffected EDDLEMAN ELECTED TO EXECOMM SEAT Spectators hoping to see a conservative coalition do battle with the rest of the General Assembly were disappointed Tuesday night. Aside from a few skirmishes early in the evening, delegates were unmoved by attempts to push them into a condemnation of, for example, the RLSDS appropriation of the UAP office. The issue was all but decided with the election of an under- graduate to fill Owen Franden's Execomm seat. Dale Geiger, one of the organizer's of the Ad Hoc Committee to Discuss General Assembly Procedures, lost a 29-21 decision to Wells Eddle- man. Crucial to the election's out- come was the ad hoc commit- tee's report. Supporting Geiger, FEinboard chairman Bob Mac- Gregor argued that the Assembly needed a candidate willing to bring a little order to student government. (Please turn to page 7) DEAN'S DISCIPLINE PROCEDURES SET By Alex Makowski Responding to a "growing feeling that there is a gap in the processes by which we deal with 'current events'," Provost Je- rome Wiesner and Dean Benson R. Snyder have drafted a new procedure for dealing with cam- pus discipline. Replacing a method "created for dealing with beer and wo- men," Wiesner outlined at the Tuesday General Assembly meeting the concept of a 25-man panel to act along the lines of a grand jury. Composed of roughly ten stu- dents, a dozen faculty, and five staff, the panel would decide whether an incident warranted disciplinary action. Charges a- gainst students would be judged by faculty discipline committee, while faculty cases would be referred to the president. Specifying the correct disci- plinary procedures, explained Wiesner, is one of the main
Transcript
Page 1: report passes lab plan - The Tech

- -

__

VOL.9. 0NO. 39 MIT CAMBRIDGE, MASS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24. 1969 FIVE CENTSI. ,

I

II

IsIb

The WeatherSunny and warmer. Lows in

the forties.

"Continuous News Service

Since 1881"'

By Lee Giguer.e

The Pound's l'ancl, in its finalreport rcleased this Wednesday,called for the formation of astanding committee to advise theadministration in the running ofthe special labs.

An additional recornmmnda-lion, added to the first report oflast May states "that the entirematter of the relationship be-tween the Institute and its twospecial laboratories be reviewedon a regular basis" by a groupdistinct from the standing com-mnittee.

The report is the result ofintensive efforts by the panel asa group from April 26 to May31 1969 and the individual ef-forts of its members since then.

MIT, according to the panel,should conduct- diversified re-search and be flexible enough tomieet the changing needs of soci-ety. Furthermore, the role offaculty and students .in- deter-mining the direction of the lnIsti-tute's research commitmentsshould not be neglected by theadministration

Panel recommendations

Ihe specific recommenda-tions of the Panel are:

1. "The laboratories and MITshould cnergetically explore newprojects to provide a morebalanced research program."

2. "The educational interac-tion between the special labora-tories and the campus should beexpanded"

3 "There shouldbe intensiveefforts to reduce classificationand clearance barriers in thespecial laboratories."

4. "A Standing Committee onthe special laboratories shouldbe established."

As envisioned in the panel'sreport, the Standing Committeewould consist of ten members:.four faculty, two students, two

administrators, and one staffmember from each of the labora-tories. The final responsibilityfor decisions concerning lab con-tracts would remain with theadministration while the com-mittee would serve in an adviso-ry capacity to voice the attitudesof the MIT community.

A national problem

Professor Noam Chomsky ofthe Department of Modern Lan-guages and Linguistics, in a spe-cial addenda to the report,stressed that "the uses of tech-nology should be of concern tothe scientists and engineers whodevelop it."

in his report, Jonathan Ka-bat, states: "The major contribu-tion that a university can maketo a free society is to preserve itsindependence to pursue suchlearning objectively and freefrom ideological constraints."The university, however, "hasbecome wedded to the nationalmyth" of the importance ofdefense work. "The problem isindeed a national one, not parti-cular to MIT."

Text of"... As to November 4th,

there have been many. specificexamples of statements thathave been made; a -numberof you have written to me aboutthese, about a recent article inthe Sunday newspaper where astatement was' made by Mr.Michael Albert calling for citywide demonstrations at MIT inNovember "to put an end to themachinations of the second Pen-tagon." Most recently, -Mr.Michael Ansara, spokesman forthe.November Action Commit-tee was quoted in last. Sunday'sHerald as calling for militant,disciplined action against MITon November 4th, probably in-

~~~~~~~~~~~~~·". ;...?-ftsi -'sit- i;- ., t

'President Howard Johnson, at a post-faculty meeting press con-ference, stated that the Institute will not allow militant students toabridge personal rights on Nov. 4.major policy change in the direc-tion of the labs and that exten-sive efforts have been underwayto obtain funds from non-military sources. He furtherstated that MIT was'aware of theinterests of the labs' sponsors, ofthe labs and their personnel, andof those opposing the work donethere. However, policies wouldnot be set by sponsors, special

Photo by, Robert Elkininterest groups or by Boston-area demonstrators who are togather at the l-Labs on Nov. 4.

Recalling the "strict account-ability" of the president, John-son asked for a wide range ofviews to aid him in formulatingpolicy toward the special labs,and said that his door was opento all. ·

Professor Jerome Lettvin sug-gested from the floor that MITturn the labs into specializedmanufacturing concerns. He saidthat this would be possible be-cause MIT has unique skills andpatents in such fields as weathersattelites and that this monopolywould make them the nucleus ofan independent concern. "I havea tendency to overstate andoversimplify things, but this isan alternative to ideas I definite-ly oppose."

(Please turn ta page 5)

NO DISAGREEMENTS-JONSON, DRAPER

President Howard Johnsonand Professor Charles S. Draper,head of the InstrumentationLaboratories, issued a joint state-mnent Tuesday that expressedtheir mutual agreement on re-search policies of the labs. Thestatement read:

"The Instrumentation Labor-atory continues to conduct de-fense related research and, at thesame time, devote its compe-tence in high technology to fr-ban and other domestic prob-lems. There is basic agreementbetween us as to the policies ofthe laboratory "

The statement was apparentlyan attempt-to bring to an endthe controversy surrounding theresignation of'Draper. Originallyintending to resign in June, Dra-per will be replaced January 1.However, in at least two nationalpapers, blaper had said that hehad been "fired," althoughJohnson has denied it. In anaddendum, Draper stated that"reports of my resignation havebeeri greatly exagerated."

The statement was read at ameeting Tuesday between Dra-per, Johnson, and about 60 di-rectors- of the labs. Johnson toldthe group that the administra-tion will be reviewing the labpolicies with the faculty. Draperpledged to stand behind thework of the labs after he leaveshis post. He is being succeededby Professor Charles Miller, head

of the Department of Civil Engi-neering.

eluding sit-ins and a militantpicket line to prevent- Facultyand students "from enteringbuildings to do their work." It'squite understandable that state-ments of this nature have be-come the center of deep concernof many members of this com-munity, and many of you haveasked me to respond explainingthe Institute's position and myown views on matters like these.I feel it is appropriate to bringthe matter up before the Facultytoday as I believe it to be partic-ularly serious.

The fact that such statementshave been made in a most bitterway changes the context in

which we operate. Whether thethreats materialize or not, theyhave already affected the level oftrust that we have in each other.They have begun to limit ourability to communicate, to dealwith the real problems we'vegot, which I will continue toinsist we will deal with. And,they make it increasingly diffi-cult to discern between protestand potential destruction.

I have, on several occasions,stated what I believe to be thepolicy of this campus, what Ibelieve to be your support forme in that policy of free expres-sion, including dissent and pro-

(Please turn to page 9}

General Assembly meeting, last Tuesday night,Storch '71, member of the MIT Commission70's.advantages of the plan. The hap- Dean forhazard way action was decided another of Ion in the past will be imnproved tages. Undeby a method clearly understood only the Deby al. Important is the realiza- i n i t i a t etion that "the panel is not meant action-hardto mete out'justice or injustice," the conceptonly to determine which inci- to representdents require further considera- ests.tion. Assembl)tl~~~rp. B~~~ssemrbI]

That the new panel lifts the draft wasmantle of prosecutor from the /Plea,

is addressed by Larryon Education in thePtroto by Gary DeBardiStudent Affairs is

the proposal's advan-ar the present system,ean for Students may

disciplinaryIly congruous witht of an administratort the student's inter-

y reaction to thegenerally favorable.

e turn to page 7)Is scuc

The~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Pounds released: lab planFacIulttBy Joe Kashi

President Howard Johnson re-ceived an ovcrwhelning vote ofconfidence from the facultyWednesday for his plan to imple-ment the Pounds Commission'sfinal report and to assess itsfeasibility next May, thus defer-ring any further action on thedisposition of the special labora-tories until then.

Only ten faculty members.voted against this delay in deter-mining whether the special labo-ratories shall remain part ofMIT. Johnson said that it maybe necessary to disassociate thelabs from the Institute if thisproves to be the course of actionmost beneficial to the Instituteas a whole.

Johnson added thaL if threatsof physical destruction and vio-lence continue, he would feelconstrained to ask civil authori-ties for aid before Nov. 4. Thiswould be necessary,.Johnsonsaid, to preserve the integrity of.the campus, guarantee the safetyof personnel and property, andenable free expression through-out MIT.

Declaring that the issue of thespecial labs was critical to thefuture of MIT Johnson said thatthe Institute was at a point of

report passespermanent panel suggested

Johnson's speech

GA b�l conservativesunaffectedEDDLEMAN ELECTED

TO EXECOMM SEATSpectators hoping to see a

conservative coalition do battlewith the rest of the GeneralAssembly were disappointedTuesday night.

Aside from a few skirmishesearly in the evening, delegateswere unmoved by attempts topush them into a condemnationof, for example, the RLSDSappropriation of the UAP office.

The issue was all but decidedwith the election of an under-graduate to fill Owen Franden'sExecomm seat. Dale Geiger, oneof the organizer's of the Ad HocCommittee to Discuss GeneralAssembly Procedures, lost a29-21 decision to Wells Eddle-man.

Crucial to the election's out-come was the ad hoc commit-tee's report. Supporting Geiger,FEinboard chairman Bob Mac-Gregor argued that the Assemblyneeded a candidate willing tobring a little order to studentgovernment.

(Please turn to page 7)

DEAN'S DISCIPLINEPROCEDURES SETBy Alex Makowski

Responding to a "growingfeeling that there is a gap in theprocesses by which we deal with'current events'," Provost Je-rome Wiesner and Dean BensonR. Snyder have drafted a newprocedure for dealing with cam-pus discipline.

Replacing a method "createdfor dealing with beer and wo-men," Wiesner outlined at theTuesday General Assemblymeeting the concept of a 25-manpanel to act along the lines of agrand jury.

Composed of roughly ten stu-dents, a dozen faculty, and fivestaff, the panel would decidewhether an incident warranteddisciplinary action. Charges a-gainst students would be judgedby faculty discipline committee,while faculty cases would bereferred to the president.

Specifying the correct disci-plinary procedures, explainedWiesner, is one of the main

Page 2: report passes lab plan - The Tech

_ I -I �C II g· I--- -- I I-I ,-,

IPAGE 2 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 1969 TIII. TE.'61

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THE: TECI FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1969 PAGE 3

By Robert Elkin

Instrumentaion Laboratoryworkers demonstrated unity inthe face of a threat of "physicalviolence" from the NovemberAction Coalition at Tuesdaynight's meeting in Kresge Audi-toriu m.

Students composed onlyone-third of the near capacitycrowd that came to listen toRLSDS and I-Lab speakers pre-sent their positions on militaryresearch. The balance were l-Labpersonnel and MIT employees.

Military researchAll. three I-Lab speakers de-

fended the necessity of retainingthe l-Labs. William Denhard, anassociate director of the lab andorganizer of the meeting, dis-cussed the need for military re-search to maintain the securityof the US against the totalitari-anism of ('ommunism. He statedthat "defense research does notoppress the blacks, create poorpeople, or cause war." Denhardalso placed much emphasis onthe "duality" of military re-search; that defense work has-unlimited non-military applica-tions.

Ben Alexander, speaking asPresident of the Research, Devel-opment and Technical Employ-ees Union argued that an end todefense research at both LincolnLabs and the I-Labs would notonly "put people out on thestreets," but the loss of incomefrom the labs would "make MITa second-rate institution."

The final I-Lab speaker, F.D.Brown spoke of the selfishnessof-the human race. He statedthat "nuclear weapons have con-fronted man with his true na-ture." However, he concludedby saying that these specifictechnical manifestations ofman's inate selfishness were go-ing to buy peace in this world.

Philip Raup and Mike Albertrepresented RLSDS. Raup out-lined RLSDS' demands andplans for the November 4 cam-paign at the l-Labs. He de-manded an end to all war re-search and stated that no workershould be laid off when thel-Labs converted to civilianwork. Raup announced, "on No-

TRANSCENDENUTAL MEDITATIONas taught by

MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGIa lecture by Mr. Jerry Jarvis, Natn'l Director of S.I.M .S.

sponsored by Harvard University'sStudents' International Meditation Society

at Lowell Lecture Hall, 8 pnMonday October 27th

Admission Free

Informal discussion between I-Lab employees and members ofRLSDS, at the meeting the workers asked for, Tuesday in KresgeAuditorium. Photo by Gary DeBardi

j or proportions- over-popula-tion, pollution of every conceiv-able kind including mental." TheWeatherman group, which ad-mitted that none of its memberscame from the MIT community,called the November 4 denmon-stration a "battle."

A dispute developed earlierbefore the start of the meetingover whether these other groupsshould have speakers. In theprocess of the heated discussion,Michael O'Connor of RLSDSthreatened an MITSDS memberto "settle the issue outside."

SDS heckled

The audience heckled most ofthe speakers, especially thoserepresenting SDS groups. Onecould hear such comments as"speak for yourself," "you arepsychotic" and "we are going tofight for Doc Draper."

In an interview on the follow-ing day, William Denhard calledthe meeting successful. It didh'tserve its original purpose ofgetting the I-Lab and SDS viewsexposed before the MIT commu-nity since "MIT didn't showup." However, the meeting "uni-fied the laboratory pofitically."He felt that the large number ofl-Lab personnel at the meetingdemonstrated the "solidarity" ofthe lab.

vemrnber 4 we are going to begin acampaign.to disrupt the normalfunctioning of MIT." Picketingof the l-Labs and ('CIS, liberationof buildings, closing of officesand marching through the hallsare among the planned actions.RLSDS is going to "stop theInstitute in the process of stop-ping the projects." Raup calledfor a worker-student alliance andannounced that they are "notgoing to fight the workers. Thereal enemy is not the workers,but the' people who conceivedthe projects."

Mike Albert called the discon-tinuation of war research themost important RLSDS demandHe reiterated most of the pointsthat Raup discussed, emphasiz-ing the fact that the workers atthe I-Labs were not their ene-mies. He spoke of the "necessityto avoid fighting workers. andsplitting groups." However, heremarked that RLSDS would setup an obstructive picket line atthe l-Labs on November 4.

Weatherman SDSThough originally unsched-

uled, spokesmen for SACC,MITSDS, and the WeathermanSDS presented their organiza-tions' views. John Kabat, speak-ing for SACC, stated that "weare approaching a critical uniquepoint in history. We are_ ap-proaching an ego disaster of ma-

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Page 4: report passes lab plan - The Tech

PAGE 4 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1969 THE TECH =

Commonsense"We have met the enemy, and they are us."

- -PogoOssification met idealism at Kresge last Tuesday, as the

Instrumentation Labs met RLSDS. The IL had great faith in thecountry, but little in human beings. SDS has little confidence in thecountry, but a belief that we must begin sometime to perfectmankind.

The IL people kept saying that getting fid of a few technicalgadgets won't enable us to come to grips with ourselves. True. SDSkept saying that if we could only come.to grips with ourselves,' wewould get rid of a few specific technical gadgets. Also true.

People are on the verge of physical conflict over how best to livein peace. it

Other things were floating around Kresge that night too. Therewere a lot of people there who seem to see all authority as'aconspiracy. They say that the l-Lab workers' true interest lies withthe students and against the bosses. Actually it lies with humanity,which is what they're really trying to say, but we have alwaysconsidered Doc Draper a part of humanity. Then there were thepeople who were convinced that if you're strongly against somethingthis country is doing you must be an agent of another country. Or ifyou think we have enough defense without MIRV, you thereforebelieve that we shouldn't have any defense at all. -

There was a naive faith on the part of some people that all MITneeds in order to do certain desirable things is the will to do them;we are certain that the administration wishes it were so omnipotent.

There was also a concern for employees of the institute and somany conceptions of what "their interests" were that, were weemployed by the Institute, we would be quite overwhelmed by thisoutpouring of concern. Apparently some quarters have not realizedthat at some point, middle aged people reconcile themselves to thefact that they cannot change the system in any major way and settledown to enjoy their second car rather than risk everything on apossibility that they might get a third one after the revolution. It'salmost enough to send you back to problem sets.

VOLUME LXXXiX No. 39 ' FRIDA Y, OCTOBER 24, 1969

Board of Directors

Chairman Greg Arenson '70Editor-in chief ............... Steve Carhart '70Business Managers . . . . . . Doug Coonley '72, Pete White '72Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reid Ashe '70Editorial Board ..... Carson Agnew '70; Robert Dennis '70

Greg Bernhardt '71Entertainment Editor . . . . . . .. . . . .Bob Fourer '72Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . Ray Kwasnick '71Photography Editor ........... .... Craig Davis '71Night Editor ' Randy Hawthorne '71Advertising Editor ............. Steve Bailey '72

Production Manager ................ Bob Reedifrod zttion .lssistant . . . . . . . . ... . Mona Stockman

Associate News -ditors .... Joe Kashi '72, Alex Makowski '72Associate Sports l ditor. Don Arkin '72Associate Photography !-ditor . Gary De Bardi'72Associate P1roduction MTanager . . Vicki 11aliburton '72-1' Vypographer ............ . Mike Bromberg '70Production Staff . . . . . . .. . fill Roberts '72. Sandy Wiener '72:Ni, eht Sta..!. .... Becky Donnellnn '72, Gail Thurmond '72NVews Stalf . . . . . . . . ... Betty Bennet '71, Harvey Baker '72

Du ff McRoberts '72, Bruce Schwartz '72Sports Sta.fl.' . . . . . . . . . . . ..- John igh t '70, Dave McComb '70

Jay Zager '70, Steve Goldstein '72!:) itertainhtent Staff . . . . . . . . . . Jeff GCole '70, Ed Markowitz '70

Gary Bjerke '72, Bruce Laird '72Robert Rozenberg '72, Emmanuel Goldman G

Washington Correspondent ............ Pete Peckarsky '69Staff Candidales . . . . . . . . . . Dick King '72, Ted Lichtenstein '72

Steve Rovinsky '72, Sandy Cohen '73Robert Elkin '73, Lee Giguere '73

Buzz Moylin '73, Fred Zerhoot '73John Liu

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts. The Tech' is publishedevery Tuesday and Friday during the college year, except during collegevacations, by The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT Student Center, 84 Massachu-setts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139. Telephone: Area Code 617864-6900, extension 2731 or 876-58S5. United States Mail subscription rates:$4.50 for one year, $8.00 for two years.

Jed.Stein, an individual of great sincerity and sensitivity, died bytaking his. own life last Tuesday. An extraordinarily creativeindividual, Jed, a junior, was editor of MIT's literary magazine,Tangent, and a superior poet. The Tech -wishes to extend. itscondolences to his family and friends.

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iWas he protesting his birth? Did mhe perceive the DDT already building up in his infant liver;the black coating his lungs? Didhe realize he stood a fair chanceof joining the other two-thirds

,of the' world the hungry thirds?Did he know- of the deathpointed at him, fifteen minutesaway; of the unseen microbes insome hidden lab that Couldmake him' vomit, twist and diebefore another sunrise? A babywept; wept for me who was toonumb to cry out.

But Ben Alexander did notsee this. No, to him his boys arethe world. He is a good unionman. Never mind their jobsmight vaporize with them; thisthey. were not prepared, to con-sider.. But he was applauded ,loud and long, as Denhard be-fore. Then F.D. Brock, a blackman (token Negro? One alwayswonders). How strange that 'inAmerica a black man can talkabout .freedom and liberty andtaxation WITH' representation!-(and yet another strange exam-ple of a swiss cheese world view.Let us recall that you pay taxeseven if under 21; taxes even tothe extent of your life)

Let us proceed Denhard introduces Doc Draper and thelegend gets a standing ovation. Itthen proceeds to remind u-s thatin the instrumentation businessone must work for whomeverhas the contract money. Asanother built rockets? He speaksof the balance of respect andtells jokes about his Russiancolleagues.

Let us not go into what theSDS's said: They said what theyhave been saying only moremilitantly, trying to out militanteach other. Weatherman came,though, to promise the revolu-tion. Served a guarantee of vio-lence.

And now that the hall was atwhite heat, Jon Kabat took theMike; Kabat of SACC, Kabatangry and worried and appalledby all he had seen; disgusted bythe spectacle of supposedly in-telligent men talking past eachother, men spoiling for a fight inthe best apeshit tradition; Kabat,who had seen it, seen the.vision Ishared, the vision of a worlddissolving into the faction pas-sion - men tearing at each other'sthroats, the ugly surreality ofrevolution or worse attempt atrevolution and repression crush-ing all that is left of any value.Who knew well also the alterna-tive unreality the alternative totiery doom wlich is always ice

e slow rot anrd decay gangren-ous as we perish in our owncorruptions, our own poisons,our own eco-disaster. He spokewith the passion of a man who.wes the noose hovering near; hespoke in desperation and couldoffer no real solution save we'vegot to stop acting like, animalsand get together. But perhaps itis not in man's nature to gettogether and technology in such

hands2 -is as_ a_ revolver_ n a ba by 's:neither is capable of its respon-sible use. Kabat: "It may be toolate already;"

In Kresge -as night fell -mynightmare enacted, taking formon a stage; fleshed out by actorswho did not perceive themselvesas such.', Take your unrealitywhich may come true: fire, orice?

Quote William Butler Yeats1913, a premonition:

"Things fall apart; the centrecannot hold;

Mere anarchy is loosed uponthe world,

The best lack all conviction,while the worst

Are full of passionate intensi-ty. v

By Bruce SchwartzSurrealism is becoming easier

to write all the time since it isnow with us in real life. LastTuesday it seemed as the earthbeneath Building 7 were aboutto turn to quicksand, and thepillars crumble into dust. Readon as we make the long dary'sjourney into '-

Night seemed to have at-tached itself permanently to theCaptain. A city' of 10,000 isnever an easy responsibility. Thetension showed in the Captain'sface. The lines there; the eyes,tired, spoke of too many meet-ings and phone calls, of thestrains of uncertainty and thefear of a man who cares abouthis world and sees-it preparing toexplode around him. It is twoweeks to November 4 but theCaptain, like many people herethese nights, is living with it nowand it shows. It shows in thelines, and he will not lose any inthe coming days and weeks.

Reconaissance mission. Tar-get: I-Lab 1-4. Cross AlbanyStreet to unobtrusive factory-like brick building and you arethere. Enter door. Sign: "DocDraper forever, SDS never."Guards with badges. Can I helpyou? Yes, I am from The Tech.

Fine right this way. I came totalk to ... Yes but he is inconference why don't you talkto...

He is smiling at me, beardedneat, jovial.. Ingratiatingly, Ismile back. Con him. Make himthink you're -on his side. Wemove to conference room, I startto ask question but still smiling,elfinlike, he offers me cigarette.I don't really want it but ingrati-atingly I take it. We talk. Iquestion. He evades but pointsout spirit of lab people. And it isso: the camaraderie is such thatwhen you get deep back amongthe labyrinthe corridors wherethe pipes hang from the ceilingthe effect is of being aboard aship at sea; a fighting ship at sea;a ship out of a war picture madein 1943. He tells me nothing but

shows me the bars on the doors:see, we have out barricades, ifthis thing goes to the ramparts.He gives no information butoffers me the grand tour. Andsoon, deep in the caverns ofTechnology (where, I suppose, 1should be experiencing a properawe at the creations of man, atthe banks of incomprehensibleelectronic instruments and thebulk of precision nlachinery)wepass among. the workers of In-strumentality..Mark these men:purposive, organized, efficient.ingenious too the rows uponrows of'awards in Doc Draper'soffice bear witness to that inge-nuity - busy men; men whosleep well at night. Who are notunproductive and do not de-stroy. Men who create and buildso that we may sleep secure inthe knowledge that there is abalance, of respect in the world.Besides, they only build the but-tons. Let us not condemn with-out consideration, however.

There is some merit in what DocDraper says; they may have theirmadmen, too. But let us reflectthat it is somewhat tragic thatmen can sleep well with Damo-cles' sword hanging above.

And to make the tour com-plete, there is Doc Draper him-

self, looking much more likeleprechaun than legend. This.one thinks, is not the face of agrandfather who dresses up andplays Santa Claus on ChristmasDay. No, things are not whatthey seem, now less that ever_

Smiled at. Smile back. Ledfrom the building, surrenderpass, bidden'goodbye - Tell them

all we are ready! - exit. Back in-the street where it almost lookslike

Reality is fading with the sunas Kresge fills. I-Labs wants totalk. SDS wants to talk. So beit!! Double exclamation the suresign of propaganda No one-hascome here to talk. They havecome to fight; to begin battlerhere. A verbal joust now, apreliminary bout. A proper ges-ture to what little-shadow image

,of MIT's universitality may belatt. Denhard: S$S is attemptingto push around the Administra-tion, the Labs, the workers. Weare witnessing, it all goes innatural sequence, the last mo-ments of MITs existence as afree university. Free? A contractis a bond; you are not free whencommitted. Didn't the wholeMIT community consider thisproject? Free? Is one free whencontracted for two-thirds ofone's value?

But Denhard does not see itthis way (let us not be uncharit-able by singling him out; twothirds of the people in Kresgeagreed with him); his reality is ofquite a different order. He .be-lieves that the Russians mayattack us; he believes the NLFare thugs; he believes in Americaand its abilities to get rightdemocratically. RL SDS doesnot believe this. MIT SDSdoesn't. Weatherman doesn't.And so no one came to talk fortalking is impossible; there is nopossible compromise between aman who sees a thing as green-and one who sees it blue. No,they had come to take a stand,to shout challenges and maketlueats, to beat their breasts and'roar as apes are wont to dobefore- battle. Mr. Denhardquoted Konrad Lorenz to re~-

mind us of our bestiality; theneveryone proceeded to defendhis little clod of psycho-philosophical territory. Menhave been know to do terribledeeds in defense of lesser faithsthat these. Here then Act I ofwhat may yet be called thebattle of Mass. Ave.

Denhard at least addressedthe issue. "I do one hundredpercent classified work." He'sproud of it. lte conjures up thedemons Russia, Red China -proclaims his love for America,since where else do you have'free speech? ("But that's not theissue" from an onlooker) iisworldview proclaimed, he issatisfied in the rightness of whathe -does. He has forgotten Viet-nam, Laos Thailand SouthAmerica Harlem and lots more(or maybe not; maybe they'rejust lhidden in the back of hishead) Go his world is incomplete;but then SDS forgets a lot too asapes are wont to do.

In the crowd, a baby wept.Did he know somehow what wasgoing on? Did he sense thatthese men, all these sane mad-men, had made'and would con-tinue to make his world a-hell?

A- visit to te zoo

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. CAMPUS CUE

.590 Commonwealth Ave.(Opposite B. U. Towers}

Pocket Billiards.'"Great for a

Date"§

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.Tilff T]Cf FRI DAY, OCTOBER 24, 1969 PAGE 5

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individuals and the structure oftheir political, social, and eco-

People from the MITcommu-nity are encouraged to partici-pate in the conference. Otherparticipants will range fromworkers to well known academi-cians and legislators.

Proceedings to be PublishedThe proceedings will be pub-

lished, and SACC is looking totrade journals to report portionsof the proceedings. The Bulletinof the Atomic Scientists hasalready agreed to oblige them.

The conf erence is co-sponsored by the Fund for Na-tional Priorities - in America,-which has sponsored conferencesin Washington on the MilitaryBudget and on National Priori-ties.

Discussion will be held in anopen panel format. An impres-sive array of speakers is expect-ed.

I- ads tohead of the i-Lab, told the facul-ty that he and the labs "felt likea corpse being talked about bythe neighbors over whether tobury then or tear them apartover how to live in peace."He fur-ther stated that while many feltthat they could change the waysof thinking of I-Lab personnel,this was not the case. He claimedthat despite the intensive effortsaimed at converting I-Lab per-sonnel hardly anyone changedtheir mind about work beingdone at the labs. This is due topsychological climate inside thelabs. No one works on a project

he doesn't like. Draper later en-dorsed Johnson's plan for a trialof the Pound Comnmission's re-commendations at the labs priorto a final disposition on thelabbs.

Call police in advanceAt 'a press conference later.

Johnson said that if it appearedthat a militant picket line, whichwould prevent students and fa-culty from entering buildings,seemed likely to develop, hewould call the police before thedemonstration started. I-le saidthat once trouble starts, it is toolate to call in the police. Thetime to have the police on handis before any violence occurs.

Johnson said that non-MITdemonstrators involved in anyviolence or criminal disruptionwould be prosecuted under civillaw. He alluded very stronglythat MIT students would be subject to expulsion, saying thatstudents "took on the responsi-bility to respect everyone else'srights when they came here,-andif they don't, the communitycould put them out." RLSDS,which originally called for out-side support for their actionagainst the I-Labs, will be heldresponsible by the Adm inistra-tion for any violence or damnagethat might occur.I

Johnson also stated that theInstitute would take steps toprevent any battling betweenstudent vigilanties fiom "jock"fraternities and student radicals.Students will be expected todisassociate themselves from anytype of violence which mightoccur.

(C'ontinued from page I)

Professor Noam Chomskysuggested to Johnson that MITlook into ways of terminatingthe MIRV contracts more rapid-ly than now planned, but wastold that "MIT must continueour commitments." Johnson re-plied: "We're talking to the Na-vy. I can't say more. I don'tthink that you should press me.Yet. clearly, we should talk withthem. I am convinced that itwould be wrong to.unilaterallybreak out commitments."

Professor C. Stark Draper,

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Opthalmologists prescriptions are filled promptly-accurately.Excellent selection of frames for Men, Women, Children.

Office Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:50 to 5:00 -Lunch 2-3 (Closed)Saturday, 9:20 to 1:00

Phone 49 l 4230, Ext. 50 or from MIT dial 8950

1W£ TECH CW i -In the MIT Student Center

84 Massachusetts Avenue JCambridgc, Mass. 021 s -Arthur Rosenbaum, Optician

SATURDAY NIGHTYOU'RE GOING TO

SKUFFLE

If you were always near a socketwhen you needed a shave, that

_ would be one thing.But you aren't.You're all over the place.So you need a shaver that goes where

it's happening.A shaver like the brand-new battery-

operated Norelco Cordless 203.With floating heads that fit the curves

of a man's face.And self-sharpening blades inside those

f oating heads thatshaveclose and smooth

every day. The Nlorelco unique rotary ac-tion keeps the blades sharp while itstrokes off whiskers. Every timeyou shave.

The Norelco Cordless gives you closeshaves anywhere. up to 30 days of shaveson only 4 penlight batteries.

Handsomely styled in jet black andchrome, there's even a mirror inside thecap. So you can see what you're shaving.

And it's small enough to fit your pocket.Very self-sufficient.

All ready to sock it to your beard.

By Ted Lichtenstein

The MIT Science Action Co-ordinating Committee plans tosponsor a National C'onferenceon Social and Economic Conver-sion at MIT on December 3, 4,and 5.

SACC will also circulate apetition calling for "an end toMIRV word at MIT and theconversion of the manpower andfacilities thus freed to non war-related work." The organizationhas not yet made any decision

fe,cGhnfererelone participation in NovemberAction.

ConversionThe concept of conversion

goes beyond simply converting-to dis-armament. As stated by aSACC( bulletin: "Much of present political, social, andeconomic activity is misdirected,Wasteful or destructive, and doesnot respond to the needs of largesegments of society. Conversionto a society that constructivelya nd effectively satisfies theneeds of all its memibers entailschanging both the awareness of

set .Xtea attttti A* The next General Assembly Meeting will be held in thie LobdellDining Koom of the Studenrt Center at 8 pm on Tucsday. October 28.November Actions will be the main topic of the meeting wlich is opento all.

* The Commission for the 70 s may be reached at x197 1

• The Agenda Committee meets tonight, Friday, at l0 pm in roomW20401.

* Five spaces are available for Washington Summer Intcrnships.Deadline for applications is November 20, Details available fromProfessor Rogers, ES3402, xS 143u

Freshmen basketball will start Wecdnesday, October 29, at 5 pm inthe Armory.*

* A graduate student who is registered as a full-time student when lieis mailed an Order to Report for Induction may request that hi:induction be postponed until the end of the academic year. He shouldmake the request in writing to his local board and ask the GraduateSchool Office (3-1403 to send certification of his registration.

* "Re-surrection or In-surrection; Onc View of the Politics of God"will be the sermon at the I I am worship service Sunday. October 26.The Rev. Johrn Crocker, the IEpiscopal chaplian, will conduct theservices.

46 t o 0 0 gIclvl lanlzei

AT PHI KIr"PA oioxlA

IT'S FREE!

Even on a beard like yours

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before, all bets are ofl and the stockholders' nomi-nlations automatically take office. Even -if nobodvcares enough to run for an office this year, the struc- -ture will at least be there for the future.

The amen,!mcnts offered lby the Coop shift vir-tually all decision-making power from'the stock-holders, who are self-appointed, to the ;directors,who would more than-ever represent the member-ship. The directors instead of the "trustee" stock-holders would set the rebate rate, for example.While continuing to hold the 500 shares of Coopstock in trust, the stockhaolders Will become no morethan a nominating board for the directors.

If the Coop is ever going to change, now is itschance. To approve any amendment affecting therelationship between management and membershipat least 25 per cent of the members must vote' Last

11fall about a thousand membersexpressed interest inchanging the Coop; this fall at least fifteen thou-sand have to react. The management plans to pub-Iicize, the change:s wvi.dely and to alUtw voting bymail., Only about 30 per cent-of Harvard's alumniever bother to vote for the Board of.Overseers.

N O MATTER what happens to the by-law pro-posals, the-goop is working to push the rebate backup. The rates this year have slipped again to 5.-5 percent for charge and 7.5 per cent for cash. Becauseof a new charge arrangement with Harvard Trust,the Coop-Avill now be able to cut billing expenses.

No one has to use the new Coop-CAP cards.Cash business will continue as usual, but anyonewishing to charge will now receive a monthly billfrom the bank, listing Coop expenditures and anycharges at stores honoring CAP. Since the bank isnow handling all billing and immediately reim-bursing the Coop for all charges, the Coop will givea rebate on all purchascs, even ones not paid withina month..

Harvard Trust will have a toughe?* credit poliCethan did the Coop, but no tougher than the Coopplanned for itself this fall. Because of the high costof money the Coop was planning to tighten creditand tack a 1.5 per cent interest charge on overduebills.

The new system,' therefore, offers it chance forstudents to establish credit and for the Coop to cutexpenses. The Coop's increased profits will flowback to members, which, after all, is what a coop-er;ative society is all about. - ALAN S. GEISxEX- JR.

The University Daily, Founded 1873IIIII

, III

Second-class postage paid in Boston, Massachusetts.IlPubJlished daily, except Sunday, holidays, and duringvacations (Christmas, Spring), from September toMay inclusive, five times weekly during readingperiods (January 5-15.and April 30 to May 19), andthrice weekly during examination periods (January1G-28 and May 20 to June 2) by the Harvard Crim-son, Inc., 14 Plympton Street, Cambridge, Massachu-setts 02138. Telephones: 547-2811, 876-6700 (ext.2196t; 2154). Subscriptions $14 per year delivered,$1G per year mailed.

James M. Fallows '70, PresidentNight Editor for this Issue: Richard E. Hyland '69-4Photo Ed. for this Issue: Christopher H. Ripman '70Ed. Night Ed. for this Issue: Thomas H. Geoghan '71

SATURDAY; SEPTEMBER 27, 1969 .

Brass Tacks .

Coop Reform.-

LAST YEAR'S nearly successful coup at theCoop is beginning to yield results. Next month

i Coop members will have the chance to approvesome long-overdue revisions in the Coop's by-laws.If at least 25 per cent of the members bother to re-turn their ballots, the structure of the Coop -canbecome more representative of the membership andopen to future improvements.

The main changes proposed by a committee ofthe board of directors and already approved by theten stockholders encompass:

[ Denmocratiing the stockholders and board ofdirectors to) givc students half the seats on each.

| ° Replacing the annual meeting with an electionby mail.

I * Allowing any member to run for the board if! he can'get a petition with 100 member signatures.

The amendments also implement a proportionalvoting system in which students will vote for stu-

! dent candidates and non-students (alumni, officers,I employees) vote foK non-students. Voting by mail

Nwith proportional representation will safeguard theCoop from a sudden' takeover by a small numberof members, wvhile offering a way for minoritiesto have representatives on the board.

If no one pctitions to be a candidate or if at leastfive tpcr cent of the memirbers don't vote, then, as

If you do not receive a ballot in the mail,counter and pick up a ballot.

Ballots

please stop at any Coop store cashier's

must be~~~~~

by Nov.10

HARVARD SQUAREDM.I.T. STUDENT CENTER

HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOLCHILDREN'S HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER

The CoopAsks You toVote

On about Octobir 10 1 am sending every Coop member a copy of the propdsedrevisions to the by-laws, a supplement explaining: the revisions, and a ballot. Theeditorial in the September 27 edition of the Harvard Crimson, reprinted below,sums up the situation exactly. I urge every Coop member to east a ballot.

MILTON P. BROWNPresident, Harvard Cooperative SocietyProfessor of RetailingHarvard Business School

The Harvard Crimson

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JOHNSON, WIESNEROUTLINE DISCIPLINEPROCEDURES TO GA

(Continued from page 1]Some students feared that a re-commendation for DisciplineCommittee hearings would carrythe taint of guilt, but Wiesnercountered that the same couldbe said of our grand jury system.Others voiced the fear of doublejeopardy, the chance of trial byboth MIT and civil courts.

The validity of a "brushfiresolution" was questioned by onedelegate, lie suggested the devel-opment of a code to define therights and obligations of cachmember of the MIT commlunity.Wiesner agreed that such a state-ment of principle was necessary,but pointed to the urgency ofdrawing up an adequate judicialsystem to deal with such eventsas the march on the CIS.

Finally, a representativeasked what plans were beingmade for handling disruptionwhile it occurred. Snyder arguedthat that was a slightly differentproblem, but Wiesner did remark ,that MIT "preferred to act aftera demonstration, rather than riskescalation by using provacativeforce." Having students fromother universities on campuscomplicates the matter, the pro-vost added, but there were noreal problems with the outsidestudents at the CIS demonstra-tion.

NOVEMBER ASSAULTTHREATENS I-LIABS;DISRUPTION LIKELY

By Bruce SchwartzRLSDS and members of the

November Action Coalition arekeeping their tactics close to thechest as plans unfold as to justwhat will happen on November4.

Rurgors of a building take-over are flying around the cam-pus; Weatherman the violentSDS faction, had made it knownthat it will be there. But notmuch is known exactly.

Baseball bats and chainsThe Institute is being equally

secretive about its response tothe planned disturbances. Itseems, however, that MIT wantsto keep its options open. Butthere can be no doubt that theInstitute is prepared for any-thing that may happen.

Interviews with Capt. Olivieriof the Campus Patrol and withBernard Feldman, Associate Di-rector of the instrumentationLaboratory, yielded little solidinformation but many indicative

no comlnment"s. When askedwhethler reports that l-Lab work-ers \\ere carrying baseball batsand ch.a'inls inll their cars. were illfact true. Olivieri taffirmed thatthis was so but that l-Labs offi-cials were seeking to disco urageit.

Cambridge policeWhen asked whether Cam-

bridge police might be called inas they were at Harvard, he saidthat the Canmpus police maintaina constant, normal communica-tion with the Cambridge policebut would not elaborate. He didnote, however, that the Novem-ber Action would be taking-place in Cambridge streets and

(Please turn to page 11)

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on motion t(Continued fromn page 1}

Eddlefflan argued, apparentlysuccessfully, that the Assemblywas doing a fine- job. Whileagreeing with the substance ofthe ad hoc report, he suggestedthat such projects as working forcloser relations with the facultywere more pressing. Citing hispast work ong the NominationsCommittee and with theExecom, he promised continuedwork to improve the Assembly.

In another significant vote,the Assembly made an all butunanimous decision to postponeaction on a motion requestingMIT to release pertinent data onits DoD projects. The delegate's

1r 0oD datathat the Assembly could notafford to take a firm stand be-fore getting all the facts straight.One representative insisted thatthis was the way to get informa-tion, but he was outvoted.

The next General Assemblymeeting is scheduled for Tues-day night. Discussion of the No-vember Actions will be the mainitem on the agenda, but commit-tee reports and new business alsodemand attention. The ad hoccommittee has vowed to presenttheir suggestions to the dele-gates. The same group will un-doubtedly insist that the As-sembly condemn any violent dis-ruption of work at the the

A cinema V He'ease

Square 5.4 Beacon 5t. 262 3790 ,, .. ... ICinema- Kenmore

I read somewhere they're solvingrapid,transpit problemsand helping explore the seas andouter spaceand working with packagingand automotive applicationsSo when I go inI'll tell it like it is-for meand they'll tell it like it,is-for them

Straight questions-straight answersand they won't care if thebus is'a Little late

Get together with Alcoa:

November 6, 1969

An Equal Opportunity EmployerA Plans for Progress Company

E5 A LC-OA

I've got my interview set Ibetween computer lab and econhurry up busI'll be late for classwonder if Alcoa's doing anythingabout traffic jams.

Change for the betterwith Alcoa

Assembly defes actionm a Ars Iw~lh IF&

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.M:

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Page 8: report passes lab plan - The Tech

PAGE 8 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1969 THE TECH

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In the past three days, bothlocally and nationally, the NewMobilization Committee and theVietnam Moratorium Committeehave reaffirmed support for eacho t her's activities. Nationally,Sam Brown has said that there is"only a difference in emphasis",and thptt he would be marchingin Washington on November 15.

On Tuesday, October 2-1, thelocal Moratorium people re-leased a statement stating thatthey "fully support" the Novem-ber 15 march. On WednesdayStudent Mobilization reciprocat-ed by giving their support to thelocal activities planned on. No-vember 13 and 14.

When questioned about thepossible effects of Nixon's No-vember 3 speech on the actions,Jeff Rosen from the MASSPAXoffice stated, "Unless there isimmediate withdrawal of troops,the activities will go on asplanned."

In particular there are sixactivities planned in the area. OnNovember 13th the main empha-sis will be on canvassing in thecommunity. On the 14th therewill be cleanup projects through-out the city which are designedto emphasize where peoples' at-tention and money should be.

Also planned are a series offorums in each Congressionaldistrict where the Congressmancan go and listen to his constitu-ency's views on the War.

There will also be an attemptmade to close businesses earlyon the 14th; many church vigilsare scheduled. Additionally,everyone participating will wearblack armbands each day.

At MIT there will be a meet-ing on Monday at 8 pm in Room491 of the Student Center toplan for the November activitieshere. There also will be a head-

Name

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orward... otbac]qvardTime never stands still - andneither does a Paulist.Issues are raised, conflicts ap-pear and the world changes, butthe Paulist is always part of thenew . . . blending the best ofthe old with the hope and prom-ise of the future.Because one of the major char-acteristics of the Paulist is hisability to cope with. and wel-come, clhange, he's better ableto meet the needs of modernman: he uses his own talentsto work for Christ and is giventhe freedom to do so.If you've given thought to thepriesthood, find out more aboutthe order that never stands still.Write today for an illustratedbrochure and a summary ofour recent Renewal, Chapter-Guidelines.Write to:

Vocation Director

C-Pa uistathe

Room 100415 West 59th Street

New York, N.Y. 10019

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portedly from Burton House andalso summoned by the residents,also showed up. They were car-rying large sticks and umberellaswhich some floor residentsfeared may have concealedknives: More Campus Patrolmenarrived.

No violence was precipitated;attempts were made by thewhites involved to reconcile thesituation. Nevertheless, the at-mosphere remained one of tenseapprehension,

freshmen on each dorm floor byshowering theni. However, whenattempts were made to enter the.room of two black students in :

East Campus, the residents re-fused to participate. The usualphysical methods of room-entering (door-rolling, Coop-carding) were tried but failed,

Soon after, 2 or 3 CampusPatrolmen arrived, apparantlysummoned by the residents.Then unexpectedly, a largenumber of black students, re-

quarters located in the EastLounge of the Student Center.All activities, including transpor-tation to Washington on Novem-ber 15 will be coordinatedthrough that office.

Across the country, there isonly a little non-co-operation.The New York Times reportedthat the New Haven MoratoriumCommittee would not partici-pate in the Washington activitiesdue to a fear of alienating theirmiddle-class supporters.

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now get a digitasl readout of bacteriaconcentration in a matterof minutes.

Other potentially lifesaving usesfor the biometer are being sug-gested every day-such as diagnos-ing metabolic rates, enzyme de-ficiencies and nerve damage.

Innovation-applying the knownto discover the unknown, inventingnew materials and putting them towork, using research and engineer-ing to create the ideas and productsof the future--this is the ventureDu Pont people are engaged in.

You can. become one of them,and advance professionally in yourchosen field, See your Du PontRecruiter. Or send us the coupon.

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The lampyridae beetle family.Delight of small boys. Biologicallight bulb. And prime-source ofraw material for another Du Pontinnovation..

Luciferase, an enzymatic proteinwith intriguing properties, obtain-able only from fireflies. Luciferin,an organic molecule also found'infireflies, but synthesizable. Adeno-sine triphosphate (ATP), a commonenergy-yielding substance found inall living cells.

ThoSe are the three main ingre-dients in lampyridae's love light.And because ATP is common to allliving cells, university researchersdiscovered they could produce an-

artificial glow by mixing luciferinand luciferase wherever life ispresent.

Noting that phenomenon, Du Pontscientists and engireers went onto develop it into a practical ana-lytical system. Correlating the in-tensity of the artificial "glow" withthe amount of ATP present inbacteria, they designed a means ofmeasuring the reaction.

The result is the luminescencebiomneter-the first really basic im-provement in bacteria-countingmethods since the time of LouisPasteur. Rather than waiting daysfor a culture to demonstrate growthdensity, a doctor or technician can

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Du Pont CompanyRoom 7890, Wilmington, DE 19898

I'd like your latest information on opportunitiesDu Pont for graduates with degrees in

at IIIIIIII

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I An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F) I~~L__________________~~~~~-~~~_______~___ ~tL - - - - - - - - - - - j -u- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - ---

II

Peace movemnent makesits peace -for November Shower:

(The following story was phonedto The Tech Wednesday night by anunidentified resident of East Campus.'The story was written by a staffmember. All statements have beenverified as factual or understated. -editor's iole}

Freshman shower night pro-voked a tense racial situation inEast Campus Wednesday night,involving at least fifteen blackstudents.

Traditionally, the night be-fore the first freshman quiz hasbeen the time for "initiating" all

ritual irks Blacks

ru r.tron

Ventures for better living;

Page 9: report passes lab plan - The Tech

THE TE4CH FR I DAY, OCTOBER 24, 1969 PAGE 9

M.Il.T. HUMANITIES SERIES 1969-70presents

Beethoven Bi-CentennialMasuko Ushioda, violin; Pascal Sigrist, piano-October 26

Makanowitsky-Hillyer-Parnas String Trio-Novtmber 23Lenox String Quartet-January 11

Balsam-Kroll-Heifetz Piano Trio-February 15

Philadelphia String Quartet-March 1

All concerts on Sundays at 3:00 p.m. in Kresge Auditorium, M.I.T. SeriesTickets: $10; Single tickets (after October 1 only): $3. Make checkpayable-to M.I.T. Humanities Series. Send with self-addressed, stamped en-velope to Kresge Auditorium Box Office, M.I.T., Cambridge, Mass. 02139.

MIT STUDENTS WITH ID $1.(0 (at the door onll)......... ·- I (a toe door ont.3,

.,,a -lUN 4.458030o 0

Today thruTea THE I.OVE'ES OF o ra LADORA 1:30-5:35-9:35 THE BOFORS {O GUN (Ist run) 3:45 & 7:50. IC Ct0 ~~~~~o

TR 6-4226oecz

OGODARD) FESTIVAL CONTINUES! Today aothru Sat. BREATHI,ESS. Sun. thru Tues-oMY LIFE TO LIVE. All show times.e5:30-7:30-9:30 Wknd Mat 3:30. 3C "

r 3CUN 1042- 260m19 'I~~~HE CRAZY -'ORID-n ,.Today thR- Tues. l.Z C.AZY V ORtI.DI

o !~OF LAUREL AND HARDY 6:15 & 9:10 nrwknd Mat, 3:., THE T.EST OF W. C.

d FIELDS 8:0 & 11:00 cn oI k gUrn np!ilml inm .qlmemtJ mm3. )mm;lLl· W. C. FIELDS FESTIVAL CoC).INUES,m m Today thru Sat. THE BANK DICK,6 & oa 8:30Sat. Mat. 3:25 IF I }tAD A MILLION:07:15 & 9:45 Sun. !hruTues. POPPY a0 a*6:00 & 8:40 Sun Mat 3:15 MRS. WGCGS 37:10 & 9:55 Ccmum mmou;momomnamnrmnenmuummnm u

-TV A~iIOA quality company of L g- T>co- u c. CR qua/ityt company of Ling-Temco-vought. /nc ..L'~K '_ , , , , * . .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~m

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any other time. I consider thatto be the explicit policy of theInstitute and I ask the :Facultyto give nle the support of ourpolicy.

ThLere is. of course. the qetes-tion of tactics always. but I'mtalking about the philosophy.TI here is tile question oftactics the tactics of those whlofreely say thLey want disruption

--and of the actions tlhat nmay benecessa3ry to prevent it. I saysimply that any act by indivi-duals or groups that coerce otherinilividuals or groups fromspeaking or acting freely I con-sider to be fascist tactics. Wewould be acting irresponsibly asan Institute if in the face of suchexplicit statements.- I must saylargely by outsiders, we did not

individuals on this canmpus. Thepluralisnl that is the heart of theuniversity cannot survive forvery long ill such a climate.

No matter what lmotivations.thoughts. or feelings I knowsonme of those mlen and theirthoughts and feelings are veryhigh indeed - some are not.some are.. .No matter what mio-tivations. thoughts. or feelings ofthose who are giving us suchthreats and such potential actioncannot be condoned- and in nlyjudgement lmust not be allowedto happen on this campus.

I've said this as plainly as Icould in my letter to the com-mnunity at the beginning of theterm and I'd like to repeat itagain here: we cannot allow theforce of obstruction against free

expression. free access: we can-not allow any part of the Insti-tute to he damaged. Physicaldamage can be repairzd. but thepsychic destruction. that goes onin free minds has its Illmost pro-found effect on the comninuni-ty's ability to come together atprecisely tile tinme when we needto stay together to deal with thevery large problemls that thisinstitution, 1 think. has the cour-age to look squarely in the face.

1 ask for the serious. in-formed help of every memlber ofthis commnlunity faculty andstudents alike in discharging nlmy

responsibility to all of you tomake sure that such coerciveacts are not allowed to occur onthe fourth of November or at

prepare ourselves. I am going totry, to my best. to emphasizealways the prevention of thesekinds of things, the opportunityfor people to discuss and consid-er. to change: but if such threats

·continue. and if it appears thatsuch action will nmaterialize, Iwouldt feel it necessary to callupon tile civil authorities forhelp in advance ot such exyplicitthreats.

To break, push. or stop, ininstitutions that, unlike the uLni-versities, are heirarchllically or-ganized. that have tfences andgates, such policies as I've justexplained and such protectionsof basic' principles and freedonlto move can be enforced byphysical nicans. The university isnot that kind of an institutionand it's a sad day when thecampus m1ust become an armeldcanmp; it may be that one of thepurposes of sonic people is toturn it into armed cam'ps. Ibelieve that here at MIT thereshould be no one in the ranks ofour faculty, staff. and studentbody whose objective is to de-stroy the basic character of theuniversity. I therefore appeal tothe reason and the feelings ofevery membeLr of our conimuni-ty so that kind of force that'sbeen found necessary elsewhere,on other campuses, will never beused here.

But if such action against uscontinues to be imminent, thenas free men in a free universitywe miust be prepared to resist.As President I bear the responsi-hility for what we do in responseto these threats. I ask, of course,for your responsible help, know-ing always that there is a pointbeyond which I cannot sharethose responsibilities. But I wishtoday to say again that I'm goingto stay in close contact with thisFaculty. 1 would hope that therewould always be time to do so,and except in the face of anorganized mob, there should betime to do so. I would hope thatthe office of the Provost, theDean, and mine will be open toall individuals and groups be-tween now and then. Probablywe'll have another meeting be-fore then to discuss this matter,and we will give all the supportwe can to groups that Wish toconvene and discuss our con-cerns and issues, before and afterNovember. It hurts to bring sucha serious matter before this Fa-culty, but the issue is there forall to read and hear, and if wemiss it we shall have lacked thewill to be concerned with ourwhole fabric, and we'll not beable to solve all the problemsthat we've got in front of us.

So once again I say I hopeyou will give me your supportand understanding through ourdifficulty ahead."

(/'residlent Johnlson received ast1tanding ovlation r rorm ficulty)anrdt spectators at the conclusionofj thivs statlement.)

/Conticanued lrlom page j

test. I think that our recordshows that I look to every nmem-her in this community about thismatter: i'll repeat here again thatI believe it is cevery person'sresponsibility, certainly mine. tolakec sure that free expression is

guaranteced.fror all individuals onthis canmpus. The threats we arenow hearing constitute. in myjudg cment, a Imost dangerous at-taick on suclh basic fredoims of

i'art-time posiionlS avail;ble as a;mllanager for on-camllpus ladvertis-ing. market researchl. and salespromllotion programs. i.iberalfees will provide a steady incomeall year. If intcrestedl.call colle.t414 272-285(0 (Milwaulkee).

We're a diversified company. Abig one. Our sales will run morethan half a billion dollars thisyear.

They'll come from computerseryice, -education systems, heli-copters, farm equipment, spacesystems, all kinds of technicalservices.

And airplanes.Airplanes turn us on. We've

built them for going on sixtyyears; . -

Our planes scored the nation's' top kill ratios against Zeros and

again against MiGs.We've won the Thompson Tro-

phy, the Collier Trophy, and theDoolittle Award.

Our chief exec is a recon-structed test pilot. We've gotmore fighter jockeys in manage-ment than any other company inthe country.

Besides our attack airplanes,we're involved in the 747, S-3and the DC-10 and the SST pro-

,- grams-to thebltuhe of hundreds ofmilions of dollars.

COur simulators are the finest in

industry. So is our schedule per-formance. And our titanium capa-bility. And our record of comingup with growth designs.

, This is where you ought to beif you're an AE, EE, ME, or IEwith a thing about airplanes.

Sit down and write ourcampusrep tonight. He's the guy with thelong white scarf. Address: Col-lege Relations Office, LTV Aero-space Corporation, P.O. Box5907, Dallas; Texas 75222.'We'rean equal opportunity employer.

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ntal spoilrngThe organization also plans to

name an "Air Polluter of theMonth" sometime next week.The offender -will be presented,with appropriate fanfare. an AirPollution prize. Th'e "Ecology.Thcatre" will invade the AutoShow opening this Sunday atWar Meinoria! Auditorium inBoston. Pollution protestors willcirculate wearing gas nlasks todramatize their point. l cologyAction is asking for people tojoin them in tlhecir campnaign. andnotes that gas mnasks can bepurchased for about three dol-lars at Army-Navy stores.

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PAGE 10 FRIDAY. OCTOBER 24. 1969 THE TFCH

Qb� p�� I 18b�.

By Bruce Schwartz

Sandwiched between theweek of October 15 and [hebeginning of November. andthus likely. to be ignored bymost people, is Cleaner AirWeek. October 19 - 25. N otignoring it will be the business ofBoston Area Ecology Action.which opened its headquarters.Ecology ('enter, at 925 - Mass.Ave. in Cambridge last Monday.

Ecology Action was formedthis fall by a group of people,largely students, to "proniotepublic awareness" and to takeactions against environmrentalpollution and other abuses ofthe biosphere. T'he group takesits name from the science ofecology, which deals with thecomplex relationships of organ-isims in the physical and biologi-cal environnment, or ''biosphere".

Its formation reflects thegrowing concern that nlan's con-tinued disturbance of the bal-ance of nature may lead todisasters - widespread diseaseand wholesale death. The Brain-child of one Allan BeruLbe, byday a worker for tile AmcricanFriends Service ('mmniittec in('antbridge, LA clailmed fortymelmbers by the tinie it under-took its first sponsored activity,the screening of a film at MIT onOctob~er 16.

The film, entitleZd "Multiplyand Subdue the Earth," featur-ing ecologist ian MclHarg, drewabout 80 viewers in roonm 1-1 90.A donation of $1 was 'askedbecause, as an I.A representativeput it, "we need bread". Initiallythe group needs nioney just tokeep t 'heir storefront open; itrents for $200 per month. Ac-cording, to a volunteer this re--porter talked to at the !-cology('enter, nany of the people whoattended the filim filled outforms to do volunteer work, and1:A now claims over 75 activemembers and is still growing.

The 1i-cology ('enter. basicallya storefront covered withi posters

sayilln" suLIch things as "Ban1) 1T". contains the nucleus of a

"p(olliti(n library" and is wellstoekeri with leaflets dleailingtlhe evils of )i)lT. artificial sweet-'on'rs. exhaust funmes. etc'. Aparticularly horrifying piece oflitertaure entitled "-Fco-('atastro-p he " describes the all-too-possible death of the ocean dueto pesticide pollution;-

!FA also has information a-bout how to report offenders tostate pollution control agenciesand intends to act as a clearing-house for such complaints, aswell as being a pressure group onthe agencies them nselves.

Long-range activities and tac-tics are yet to be determined;IFA is still in its infancy. Suchthings as mass petitions to thestate legislature to enact stricterlaws and enforcement are underconsideration. For the present,EA plans a campaign'"to buildpublic awareness of the problem.It will feature dramatic activitiessuch as picketing and guerillatheatre.

SPECIAL FALLSTUDENT

DISCOUNTS!Brinag this ad to

Students' Wives

.3ored? Need Extra Cash?Why not try

temporary officeassignments?

Be a gal-friday.type, file.

Excellent houriy rates.call Nancy Cole 357-8383

ate engineers. His day might in-clude anything from solving aproblem in thermo-dynamics tohelping hire a new engineer. "Idon't know of another job thatwould have allowed me to moveahead as fast as this one."

"They're completely flexible,"says Jeff. "Whether it comes totrying something new or chang-ing job assignments. You get toplay a part in your own destiny. !see people getting ahead fast. ..I wouldn't be here unless I weresure I could, too."

There- are opportunities to"move ahead" in every field ofengineering at Ford Motor Com-pany. If you want to put your en-

gineering degree to good use, seeour recruiter when he visits yourcampus..Or contact Mr. RichardRosensteel, College RecruitingDepartment, Ford Motor Com-pany, American RoaO, Dearborn,Michigan 48121. An equal oppor-tunity employer.

"The real world is out here," saysJeffrey Quick, Product DesignEngineer in our High Perform-ance Engine Department. "Thesearen't academic problems ... notwhen you've got someone waitingfor a solution!':

"My job is to make Jeff's de-signs work," says Jim Bregi,Manufacturing Engineer at theDearborn Specialty Foundry."Between us, we have a lot ofresponsibility, but that's whatmakes this job so challenging."After only three years with FordMotor Company, Jim is Super-visor of Foundry Facilities with asection of eight people workingfor him ... including three gradu-

Ford Interviewer Will Be On Campus OCTOBER 30 & 31, t1969

wvCar.wagesNew groupon envtronm

417.,VAN H-41E US EM

You've emancipated your id and you're doingyour own thing! Now you can wear the shirtthat isn't up tight in drab conventionality.Van Heusen "417." The shirt with turned- on stripes and mind-bending solid hues..The one with handsome new Brooke collar. And with permanently pressed dVanopress to liberate you from theirohing grind. Unbind your, mind,man! Don a "417" shirt from VanHeusen!

What keeps dynamic youngengineers like Jim Bregi and Jeff Quick

at Ford Motor Company?"' *9:~:~:~ i'- - ; ' X % % o'Z,< a; , fA .¢ *Si..2 o z : v........:·....-r.·: ,-: ,2:..:.....· . ..:: ..:...:.. :..:..:..?.·.....-,..::::::::·:'::::::::: . ...... .. .................*-· - ' *-.: . ,...........~, . . . , :i:.i: '' .' ' ~ Y lli. ..... '..;;..- ..:.·..·:.·i:. ' ' ' ';

"They tell us-to do it... not how to do it!"

... has a better idea

Page 11: report passes lab plan - The Tech

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THE TECH F R I DAY. OCTO BE R 24, 1969 PAGE 1 1

(<'ontinued fromn page 7]that the Cambridge police havejurisdiction there. This meansthat the police can come even ifMIT does not want them. Askedwhether MIT would post bail forstudents in the event of arrest,Olivieri noted that the normalprocedure a student should fol-low if arrested is to call CampusPatrol - but he would commentno further. -He added that thePatrol's biggest worry was thatthe November Action will in-clude "outsiders who do nothave the interests of the Insti-tute at heart."

Security at the l-Labs is ajoint responsibility of the Cam-pus Patrol and the Division ofSponsored Research. DSR main-tains a staff of internal securityguards within the labs. Accord-ing to Mr. Feldman, they arearmed "sometimes". "Will theybe armed on November 4?" "Icouldn't say." He couldn't saymuch, but he did dispel misno-tions that the I-Labs stand onU.S. Government property andare guarded by Federal Officers.Only a converted hangar in Bed-ford, used as a testing facility, isgovernment owned, and theguards are all' working for MIT.Neither Feldman nor Olivieriwould comment on a reportfrom a usually reliable sourcethat the administration has beenin touch with Washington inconnection with the situation.Neither would they speculate onwhether Federal marshals,troops or the National Guardhad been put on alert or mightbe called. That possibility muststill be relegated to the realm ofspeculation.

As for the I-Labs, bars wereplaced on the doors last year topreclude any possibility of aforced entry. The people at thelabs seem to be united in opposi-tion to the Action; signs saying"Doc Draper forever, SDSnever" bespoke the spirit atIL 1-4. "Do you expect to oper-ate normally on November 4?""We see no reason why weshouldn't," Feldman replied,

(Continuedfromn page 12)refs, but it seems that those arethe teams that are most vehe-ment on their demands. In theend the problem is dumped intothe waiting arins of the IMmanager.

In the end the season is com-pleted and the playoffs mustbegin.. Playoffs are most impor-tant for they determine whichteams will move up in leaguestandings. Winning teams in low-er leagues wind up playing losing.teams in higher leagues, andteams vie to play easier oppo-nents. When SAE 'B gets to playTheta Chi in football rather thanDelta Tau Delta, other teamswant to know why, and they runto argue with the manager.

When only four guys run forfive IM positions, there must bea fault in the system. In theupcoming weeks, The Bench-warmer hopes to examine- this

Phi Bete Gene Thorner '71 unleashes a powerful backhand in theintramural 'tennis tournament finals against Burton. Thorner wonboth his matches by scores of 104 and 10-7 respectively. BillJaklitsch '71 also scored a win in the PBE triumph. The only pointfor Burton came with a 6-4, 6-2 victory in the doubles match. PBEhad qualified for the finals the day before by stopping Pi LambdaPhi 4-1.

Ph"Mn h., fr"; n".".;aS

therhither and thit

.

Adlt HMO

hither and thither. In or toward one place and another. Also hob-ble"hither and yon." -itrt

hitheor-most (hith'ar-m6st') add. Nearest this place or direction. limp. 2hith-er-to (hith'ar-tdo') adv. 1. Until this time: up to now. hobble2. Archaic, To this place: thus far. acti-hith.or-ward (hlth'zr-ward) ad.. Also hith-er wards (-wordz). t.,H ither. sul

Hit.lr (hitlor). Adolf. 1889-1945. Austrian-born Nazi leader: ' .assumed title of "Fdhrer" (1934) as dictator of German Reich. -"

hit-or-miss (h1l'2r-mls') adJ. Lacking accuracy: random: har.;.hazard: careless. ::

hit-ter (hit'0) n. 1. One who hits or strikes something. 2. P.--' ball, A battcr. .·

Hit-iite (hit'it') n. 1. A member of an ancient people iv.;:Asia Minor and northern Syria about 2000-1200 .c,,. - _

extinct Indo-European language spoken by these people :Of or pertaining to.4he Hittites. their culture. or their la -(Hebrew Hitti. from Hittite Haiti ]

Hi-vn O-a (hE'vo 6%'). Also ii-ve-o-,, -An island. 15, .:2miles in area. of the southeastern Marquesas group. -':.- Polynesia.

hive (hiv) n. 1. A natural or artificial structure for housing becz-'.especially honeybees. 2. A colony of bees living in a hive. 3. A '

place swarming with active people. -v. hived, hiving, hriem.-rr. 1. To collect (bets) into a hive. 2. To store (honcy) in ahive. 3. To store up; accumulate. -intr. 1. To enter a hive.

2. To live with many others in close association. [Middle Eng- .":lish hive, Old English hUf See keu-1 in Appendix.')

hives (hivz) n. Pathology Unicaria fsee). [Origin uncertain.Hjill-ma-rin (yel'ma-rcrn'). A lake occupying 190 square mile ':-

in southern Sweden'. .'HKG Airport code for Hong Kong.hi hectoliter.H.L. House of Lords.HLN Airport codc for Helena. Montana.hm hectometer.

H.M. His (or Her) Majesty.H.M.S. His (or Her) Majesty's Ship. -:

HNL Airport code for Honolulu, Hawaii,ho (h&) interj. Used to express surprise or joy or to att s'

attention to something sighted or to urge onward: amn'.-'Westwardho! [Middle English. partly from Old Norsc h/,2'opartly from Old Frcnch ho!. halt!)

No The symbol for the element holmium. ; shoho. house.

hoe-gie (h'ge) n. Slang. A sandwich, the hero Iseel. .- Ho Chi unknown. ] a C i lhoar (h6r. h6r) add. Hoary. -n. 1. Hoarines. 2. illustrationssurface or Coating. 3. Hoafrost Isee). (Middle EnglOld English har. Sce ei 2 in Appendix.") tion you

hoard (h6rd, h6rd) n, A hidden or stored lunc.-'.guarded for future use; cache: treasure. -v. hoasrdr. new A ¥nehhoards -intr. To gather or accumulate a hoard. '

accumulate or gather by saving or hiding. [Midd. ::hard. Old English hard. Sce sku. in Appendix.'] -h.

hoard-inol (h6r'dIng, hoer-) n. 1. The act of gathe,'.. And, yoSaving a hoard. 2. A hoard. ::

hoard.inir (h6r'ding, h6r'-) n. British. 1. A temporary :widest mafence around a building or structure under construe.·

repair. 2. A billboard. [From earlier hoard. a fence' O.earlier hourd. from Norman French hurdis, from Old * 5.

hourd. scaffold, from Germanic. Sce kerr- in Appendix.* -. AHD i:-hoar-frost (hor'frOst'. -fr6st'. hrf-) n. Frozen dew that for, ' ,

white coating on a surface. Also called "hoar," "white fro: It's Clehoar-hound. Variant of horehound. .vhoarse (h6rs. h6rs) adj. 1. Low and grating in sound: ;- Auth

croaking. 2. Having a husky, grating voice. [Middlehors. from Old Norse hors (unattested), variant of h.Germanic haiirhsa- (unattested).}

.oar.-on (h6r~szn, hor'-) v .-cnid,-*ening.-e. - -nr.-- regular priceto be hoarse. -intr. To become hoarse.

hor-y (h6r'E. h6r'e) ad0. -set. -iut."l. Groy or whit,"'if with age. 2. Covcred with grayish hair or pubeastleaves. 3. Very old: ancient. -boarti-ness r.'ho-atzin (h6At'sin. wait'-) n. Also ho-act.zin ("w ak'.). A brownish. crested bird. Opisthocomus Heritagtropical South America, having claws on the first at an I

digits of the wings in the young. [American Spa,Nahuatl uatzin. pheasant.]hoax (h6ks) n. An act intended to deceive or trickpractical joke or as a serious fraud. -Ir.v. hoe)

hooxs. To deceive or cheat by using a hoax. [P .'ened variant of HOCUS.} -homexr n. ;

hob' (h6b) n. A shelf or projection at the back o ' Lo(inside of a fireplace , for keeping things warm.known.)

hob: (hbb) n. A hobgoblin. sprite, or elf. -play (c :To make mischief or trouble. Often used with wi '

English hob , from Hobbe. pet form of ROBERT O* ,:tTHo-bar (h6'bart, -bart). The capital of Tasmania,"

port located in the southeast. Population, 119.00".OHo-bart (h6'bart, -bart), Garret Augustus. 1844-President of the United States under William McKi *

99): died in office. ..Hobbes (hobz), Thomas. 1588-1679. English p'.::

Hobb-ism (h6b'iz'2m) n. A theory promulgat.'Hobbes. advocating powerful. especially mon.;

ment as the only means of adequately controll . : HA Fcreated by competing individual interests. :M..T. S

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TRUE ENGINEERS.. engineers who get their kicks from putting electronic things together tomake them work, engineers who are intrigued with the problem of findingthe best combination of available components to achieve the ultimate in'reliability arid performance.

A craftsman's love goes into even the most sophisticated circuit design atTeradyne. For Teradyne engineers build their own breadboards, grab ascope and test their own manufacturing prototypes, modify them with asoldering iron, not often with a pencil. But they are not craftsmen alone.They intuitively know when they have to resort to a Laplace transform,and they can appreciate the unity between Maxwell's equations and ahigh-speed switching circuit.

Some are born tinkerers: most work with no supervision, only withguidance from somebody who works with them to prevent overlap and toseek serendipities.

Teradyne designs and manufactures both computer-operated and manualsystems for production-line test and incoming inspection of resistors,capacitors, and semiconductors - from zener diodes to L.C. 48-bit shiftregisters, and bigger. In just nine years, the company has grown to 600people at the rate of no less than 50% every year. The engineers of whomwe speak have made many innovations: the ten-year guarantee, theelimination of adjustments and calibration, the creation of our ownsoftware. We have thereby established international- technological leader-ship thus assuring Teradyne's rapid expansion into world wide markets.

If our description of a "true engineer" sounds like you please talk to uswhen we visit your campus on October 30.

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Page 12: report passes lab plan - The Tech

PAGE 12 FRID)AY, OCTOBER 24, 1969 THE TECH _,

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X ~~~~~~By Jay Zager...'!i.i!!! The Intramural Council met for the first time last-*ii Tuesday in the Varsity Club Lounge. Voting members.of...iii:

X the Council include the intramural managers and the:"'athletic chairmen of Baker House, Burton House, East >:..>Campus, Senior House, and McCormick. Athletic chairmeni. ..::

-of fraternities are members of the council' but they vote as .i.""a block with two votes. Other members of the council are' !:.. -

... the five Executive Committee Members. the secretary,.... currently Pete Saunders, and the president, 'Bob Dresser......:..... Dave Michaels of the Athletic Department serves as the t:::::!.... faculty advisor. .. ... ::...::*....::: The main function of the council is to supervise the........ running of IM sports' on campus. Each IM sport is run by a....... manager, who usually seeks the aid of one or two assistant:"....... managers. In addition, the athletic department has provided i................. the council with its own office and a part-time secretary.......:i At the last meeting, the first order of business was....... electing a member of the executive committee. Five'.............*.... candidates, each of whom had served as an IM manager, ran .......- for the job and the winner was Gerry Lowe. last year's:....:..ii..::.- softball manager. Most of the executive committee mem-....::.:.

bers have been IM managers, though being a manager is-not .....--.: a prerequisite....... Elections were then held for five IM managers. Four:..-.......*... candidates ran uncontested. The fifth position volleyball,........ found nary a person interested in the job, and as a result ......:: the election was postponed until a candidate could be........-.... found. ::......::i... The most interesting aspect of the meeting was the

...... discussion that followed on the values of bei ng an IM m..... manager. It was decided initially that there were t wo types

..... of IM managers those who ran one-shot affairs, like IM..:.::

.: track, IM cross-country, IM wrestling, and those managers A..:... who ran never-ending seasons with never-ending playoffs. It ..>-:..... was decided to consider only those managers who ran........ season long sports....i*~~~ The work of a manager is not very glamorous. He begins ........... his job by deciding upon a season to play his sport. Having

found a time period, he must make arrangements to reserve ._..!.B.!........ adequate playing fields for the sport. This can create many

. problems, especially in a sport like ice hockey where one* rink is shared by both varsity and IM hockey. Assuming :

playing areas can be-found, the manager then seeks to knowhow many teams will engage in his sport. Preliminary ' ..questionaires are sent out to the athletic chairman throughinstitute mail. This means that most athletic chairman :

* receive the necessary information the day after it's due.This isn't too bad in small fraternities which usually field

* one team; but in the larger dormitories, this createsproblems. Usually the athletic chairman will be the first to .play the popular game "dump on the IM manager"'.

Once the manager knows how many teams he has, he... begins to form IM "leagues". Once again, it's the duty and '

obligation of Athletic chairmen to get specific teams in :specific leagues. When this isn't satisfactorily accomplished .:',.-!

it's time once again to dump on the IM manager. ..Finally, the leagues and teams are established and -the *.

real problems begin. In many sports, referees must be .....

.... provided, and it seems that every team must have a ref who :..... knows the rules inside out. Few teams are willing to supply -

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Wo-men's sailing teamn winsfour of first six regattas

24d 79 gave him two victories. Smo-lek increased a two hole front

.nine lead over Brandeis to five atthe end of 13. He coasted in fora 3-- 2 win. Against Clark, how-ever, he needed a birdie on 17and a par-on the tough 18th fora narrow 1-up victory.-Don Anderson '70 at the

number two spot had troublehitting the ball straight in 'thestrong winds. He took the worstdefeat in his career from hisBrandeis opponent, dropping a7-6 decision. Against Clark,Anderson hung on long enoughto- send the match into extraholes. He dropped a 15 foot-birdie putt on the first extra

tiole to take the-match .John Light '270 was another

double winner, but he did it thehard way-He threw away several

k loss skeinBrandeis 24

Rich.Eskin,'72, -who scored thezopening goal in:th e Brandeis.game,controls ball in a losing effort against Amherst. ThejTechkickersbested Brandeis 2-1 for their second triumph. Pheoto by Craig Da is

By Ray Kwasnick left the Judges charged to withinAfter following up a season- one on a long shot that took -a

opening win over Holy Cross tricky hop on the slick grass. Butwith five straight defeats, the the Tech kickers held them offvarsity soccer team finally got to register their second win ofback on the winning trail with a the season.2-1 victory at Brandeis. The game was fairly even, but

The two squads played to a the engineers held a slight edgescoreless first half before soph- in play. They outshot the Judgesomore halfback Rick Eskin 30-20, had several good oppor-kicked--the engineers into the tunities thwarted by good goal-lead. Eskin dribbled through the tending, and had a number ofJudges' defense and let a hard good shots hit the crossbar.screen shot fly from about 30 Tech goalie Tom Aiden '72yards out. The ball beat fhe played well as he' just missed hisgoalie to the far-corner, and it first shutout of the season. Ilewas 1- MIT. made one spectacular save which

The score stayed that way could well have been the turninguntil ten minutes were left in the point of the game. With MIT stillgame. Then Steve Young '70 nursing a }-0 lead early in thesplit the Brandeis defenders with fourth quarter, a Brandeis winga beautiful pass to Jimmy Korff lifted a wicked shot toward the'70 Korff just had to beat the upper far corner of the net.goalie in the breakaway situa- However, Aiden made the save,tion, and when the Brandeis and the engineers went on to win.netminder came out to -meet The Techmen face theirhim, the Tech forward passed it toughest test of the season whenby him for what turned out to they take on defending Newbe the winning score. England and Atlantic Coast Re-

The game was not over, how- gional NCAA champion Spring-ever. With about three minutes field on Saturday.

rs outclass foes

By Kathy JonesThe women's sailing team has

scored four victories in the sixevents in which they have parti-cipated this year. The girls willcompete-again this weekend forMIT's Lab Trophy.

A new sailing event, the annu-al Women's Single-handed Cham-pionship. opened the fall season.Kathy Jones '71 won the event,which was held on home water,for the Tech girls while CaroleBertozzi '70 and Janet Mertz '71tied for fourth.

The regular dinghy season o-pened with a regatta on Septem-ber 27 on the Upper Mystic

F reshmBy Dave McComb

Unfortunately, there has beenlittle publicity about this yearsFreshman Sailing Team. Unfor-tunately for sailing afi'cionados,also, there are no home eventsfor the frosh until the spring.But from the first day of prac-tice, certain members of theclass of '73 have shown them-selves to be better sailors thanvirtually anyone on the presentvarsity was in their own fresh-man year. And regatta scoresbear out this story.

On September 28, twelve'schools met on the Charles for.the second event of theyear. .. the first which MIT enratered Though the scoring was

I

Lake, a location always charac-terized aby light, fluky winds.The poor conditions -were nohelp to MIT's 'ladies as theymanaged only third behind Rad-cliffe and Newton. One weeklater, a crew traveled to URI.There they tied a group fromConnecticut College for Women.

During the next three weeks,however, the female skippersshowed their skill on theCharles, winning every' eventthey entered. First they grabbedthe honors in an MIT-sponsoredregatta. They followed this witha victory in Boston University'sFall Invitational.

'n sailo dominated by Peter Warren ofBU,- Techmen Bruce Fabens,Frank Kiel, Al Spoon, and DaveM a r k f i n i s h e d6-2-2-3-3-1-2-1-5-1-24 to win bytwo with 32 points. On October5, Coach Ed Shaw drove theteam to the Coast Guard Acade-my, where I0 other teams hadgathered. Al Spoon held down Adivision with Larry. Baiow andMike Goldsmith as his crews. Hefinished 3-1-2-1-5-2. John Aval-Ion and Balow, with Don Kol-lisch as their crew, combined inB division for finishes of2-5-2-3-6-DNF. That was goodenough to allow the Engineers tosqueak by Holy Cross 44 45.Harvard held down third with57.

On October 12, Fabens,Spoon, Avallon, and Mark skip-pered Tech to a devastating vic-tory at Yale. The frosh regis-tered record. Their nine pointseasily topped the URI's 26 and

,Coast Guard's 32. The nextweekend, however, they had abit more difficulty and wereonly (!) able to win by 7 overthe host team, totalling 51points through 14 races. AlSpoon finished 1 2-1-DNF whileFabens rounded out A divisionwith 2-2-3.

In B division, Frank Kielsailed to.a 2-2-4-1 posting whileDave Mark had 24-9. Craig Mar-tin and Dennis Tully had achance to crew in that one.

This coming Sunday, the

frosh will be sailing at Harvard(also on the Charles at the Sail-ing Pavilion), starting at 9':30. Aweek later they will round outtheir normal fall season at Tufts.The final event. in which M ITwill be represented will be thePriddy Trophy at Coast Guard,where each' participating schoolis represented by one skipper.Three years ago, the cup went toSteve Milligan, while Tom Ber-gen brought it home last year.From the level of competitionthat this year's frosh have exhi-bited, there are many who coulddefend it successfully. TheFreshman sailing team has to beone-of the very strongest teamsat the Institute this year.

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matchesearly chances before pulling outhis wins late in the match. Lightheld a I up lead on both oppo-nents going into 15, but afluffed wedge shot there and apoor chip on 16 left him even.Hp sank a six footer on 17 for abirdie which regained his l-uple'ads and an uphill. into-the-wind three iron on 18 whichstopped 20- feet from the holesalted away a pair of 2-up- :ins.

Andy Smith '72 scored wellwith a 79, but he could onlymanage a split. At the 14thrteeSmith was even with Clark and 2down to Brandeis. Three straightpars ended the Clark match,3--2. However, they were onlygood enough to pick up one holeon Brandeis. When he bogeyed17, Smith gave up a 2-1 win toBrandeis.

Mark Davies '72 won both hismatches in routine. fashion. I-letook front nine leads and heldon for wins. Against Clark headded a few holes to his lead andfinished with a 7-- 5 triumph. HisBrandeis opponent was harder todispose of, but he tooeventuallywent down by a 3 1 score. BobCreecy '70 fought off severalcharges from Brandeis to registera l-up victory. Only three holeswere halved in the see-saw battlein which Creecy never trailed.

Someone who did trail forawhile was Gregg Erickson '70.After six holes he was threedown to -each opponent.Cormier of Brandeis still held atwo hole lead after 10 holes.Then Erickson caught fire. He

-won the next six holes to end upon the long end of a 4- -2 countSaafz of Clark held on longerand led by three after 12. Fourholes later he trailed by one, andthat proved to be the final mar-gin.

The golfers now enter theirlast match against Bently andStonehill assured of at least a.50d fall record. They shouldpick up two more victories asboth opponents have been solid-ly beaten by teams over whichTech owns victories.

. C~~~~~n ................

TodaySoccer (F) BU, away 7:30 pm

TomorrowSoccer (V)--Springfield, away,I 1:00 amCross Country (V&F)-Williams,Tufts', home 12:00 pmSailing (V)-Invitational at Har-vard, away, 12:30 pm

Tomorrow and SundaySailing (V)-White Trophy atCoast Guard away, 12:30 pm

a,, SundaySailing (v)-Hoyt Trophy atBrown, 9:30 amS ailing (F)-Duodecagonal atHarvard, 9:30-amCrew (V&F)--'Head of theCharles" Regatta, 12:00 pm

take-GolfersBy Jdhn Light

Strong winds and a poorly-conditioned course usually mean

a high scoring golf match, andthat is the way it was Monday at

the Wachusett C.C. in West Boyl-ston. The varsity golfers provedthey could handle conditions,however, as they pulled o~ut vic-tories over Brandeis and Clark.This raised their seasonrecord to

4 2.'Clark failed to show for the

past two years, and this yearTech found out why as the

Engineers won a laugher, 6- 0.Brandeis, fielding a stronger thanusual team, still went down todefeat by a 5-2 count.

Maintaining his undefeatedrecord at the number one posi-tion was Ken Smolek '70, whose

Booters brealby defeating


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