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The Tech (MIT) Institvte Holiday on Monday, Tuesday; Drop Date Thursday MIT’s The Weather Oldest and Largest Today: Mostly sunny, 70°F (21°C) Tonight: Clear, 48°F (9°C) Newspaper Tomorrow: Sunny and breezy, 64°F (18°C) Details, Page 2 http://tech.mit.edu/ Volume 128, Number 20 Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 Friday, April 18, 2008 UA Election Records High Turnout So Far, Continues in Lobby 10 By Nick Semenkovich controversial field this year. “The EDITOR IN CHIEF controversies … certainly drove a Turnout in the Undergraduate bigger turnout,” said Holmes, spe- Association elections rose this year, cifically mentioning dorm e-mail list with at least 1,930 votes tallied as of discussions. Most of the dorm mail- last evening, according to Ainsley K. ing list debates focused on an e-mail Braun ’10, the UA Election Com- from Akash A. Chandawarkar ’09 missioner. Paper ballots are avail- in which he suggested randomized able today in Lobby 10 for those who freshman housing as part of a UA haven’t voted online. Senate request for brainstorming. This year’s UA President can- Holmes added that the large OMARI STEPHENS—THE TECH didate pool was enlarged at the last number of candidates also led to a A construction worker fills in a hole where a tree was removed just outside of the Stata Center’s minute with help from Braun, who competitive election: “There were Forbes Cafe yesterday afternoon. The trees from the construction area are being relocated the helped one slate gather signatures on four tickets … meaning an extended NW35 graduate residence and to various other locations around campus, according to the MIT their elections petition as the filing network of friends and people telling Department of Facilities’ construction updates page, available at http://web.mit.edu/facilities/ deadline loomed. people to vote,” said Holmes. construction/updates.shtml. Last year, 1,847 students voted But the election pool wasn’t in the UA election for president and always quite so competitive. On vice president. According to Braun, Wednesday, March 19 — two days there were still votes coming in late before the petition deadline — the last evening. “In the past five min- field of UA presidential and vice Faculty Hear Discipline Report, utes, we’ve had about ten more peo- presidential candidates was alarm- ple vote,” she said. Braun estimated ingly uncertain. that upwards of 100 more students As of that Wednesday, Vote on Degree, Curriculum Changes might vote online. Chandawarkar had lost his running Martin F. Holmes ’08, the cur- mate, Noah S. Jessop ’09, who had By Michael McGraw-Herdeg Comparative Media Studies perma- to the report. rent UA President, said he had been decided to run on his own, said EXECUTIVE EDITOR nent, and heard a proposal for a new Charges brought against students hoping for at least 2,000 voters this Braun. “Akash picked up [running Seventy people were accused of Master of Finance degree from the were split almost equally between year — about 50 percent of eligible mate] Amanda [J. Maguire ’09] at misconduct and had cases brought Sloan School of Management. academic misconduct and personal students — and that it looked like the the end of Wednesday night,” Braun before the Committee on Discipline George E. Apostolakis, who last misconduct, with 33 and 37 cases UA would reach that goal. said. in 2006–07, according to a presen- year chaired the Committee on Dis- Holmes attributed the increase tation at Wednesday’s faculty meet- cipline, reported that the COD had Faculty, Page 12 in turnout to the highly competitive, UA Elections, Page 12 ing. concerned itself with 70 incidents During the meeting, the faculty in the last school year. Of those 70 also voted in support of issuing a incidents, 49 involved males; the single “double major” diploma in- people against whom charges were stead of two separate degrees to stu- brought included 19 freshmen, 21 Edward N. Lorenz ScD ’48 dents with two majors, voted to make sophomores, 15 juniors, 10 seniors, Edward N. Lorenz ScD ’48, an MIT meteorolo- The practical effect of this theory was delivered the Bachelor of Science program in and five graduate students, according gist whose meticulous attempt to predict the weather most starkly in an academic paper he offered in 1972: through an early computer unraveled into what be- “Predictability: Does the flap of a Butterfly’s Wings in came known as the chaos theory, died of cancer at his Brazil set off a Tornado in Texas?” Duke University Student home in Cambridge Wednesday. He was 90. The phrase “butterfly effect” would become part His development of chaos theory is considered a of the lexicon of both pop science and pop culture. seminal moment in 20th century science. Also called Dr. Lorenz suggested the answer to the question he “deterministic chaos,” the theory brought about “one raised was a possible “yes,” and for decades he con- Threatened After Protest of the most dramatic changes in mankind’s view of tended such variables limited the accuracy of long- Freshman Who Tried Reconcile Protestors Is Targeted nature since Sir Isaac Newton,” said the committee term weather forecasts, even with the most sophisti- that awarded Dr. Lorenz the 1991 Kyoto Prize for ba- By Shaila Dewan talk, participants said. She began tra- sic sciences. Lorenz, Page 15 THE NEW YORK TIMES versing what she called “the middle DURHAM, N.C. ground,” asking the groups’ leaders On the day the Olympic torch was to meet and making bargains. She carried through San Francisco last said she agreed to write “Free Tibet, week, Grace Wang, a Chinese fresh- Save Tibet” on one student’s back man at Duke University, came out only if he would speak with pro- of her dining hall to find a handful Chinese demonstrators. She pleaded of students gathered for a pro-Tibet and lectured. In one photo, she is vigil facing off with a much larger walking toward a phalanx of Chinese pro-China counterdemonstration. flags and banners, her arms overhead Wang, who had friends on both sides, tried to get the two groups to Duke, Page 16 In Short ¶ Thursday is your last chance to ¶ John Edwards and Amy Smith drop subjects, to add half-semester ’84 will speak today during the subjects offered in the second half, weekend’s Millennium Campus and to switch from credit to listener. Conference, hosted by MIT’s Global It’s Drop Date. Poverty Initiative. For more infor- mation, see http://gpi.mit.edu/. OMARI STEPHENS—THE TECH ¶ The 2008 Boston Marathon takes Professor Edward N. Lorenz ScD ’48, widely acknowledged as the creator of chaos theory, passed places this Monday, April 21, with ¶ Send news information and tips to away this past Wednesday, April 16 at the age of 90. the first wave starting at 10 a.m. [email protected]. Comics The Tech will not publish next SPORT S World & Nation . 2 Tuesday, April 22 because of First ever Athletics Weekend! Opinion ����������������������������������������4 the Patriots’ Day holiday. The Page 20 Arts ����������������������������������������������6 Tech will resume publication on Sport Taekwondo brings home It’s Friday ������������������������������������7 Friday, April 25. second at U. Penn tournament Comics / Fun Pages ��������������������8 Page 8 Page 20 Sports . 20 Page 2 THE TECH April 18, 2008 WORLD & NATIO N Past Deals by North Korea May Shrinkage of Work Hours Face Less Scrutiny By Helene Cooper THE NEW YORK TIMES WASHINGTON Contributes to Market Slump The Bush administration appears to be preparing to back away from a demand that North Korea fully disclose all of its past nuclear weap- By Peter S. Goodman But the less-noticeable shrinking of to 33.8 hours, from 33.9 hours, while ons activities, in an attempt to preserve a nuclear agreement requiring THE NEW YORK TIMES hours and pay for millions of work- overtime for manufacturing workers it to disclose and dismantle the bulk of its nuclear weapons program. Not long ago, overtime was a reg- ers around the country appears to be fell by a larger margin. As described by administration officials on Thursday, the step ular feature at the Ludowici Roof Tile a bigger contributor to the decline, At the end of last month, more would relax a demand for North Korea to admit fully that it supplied factory in eastern Ohio. Not anymore. which has already spread from hous- than 4.9 million people were working Syria with nuclear technology. The United States would also agree to With orders scarce and crates of un- ing and finance to other important part time either because they could postpone its demand that North Korea provide an immediate and full sold tiles piling up across the yard, areas of the economy. not find full-time jobs or because accounting of its fledgling uranium program. the company has slowed production While official unemployment has their companies had cut hours in the The new stance is intended to help complete a denuclearization and cut working hours, sowing worry risen only modestly, to 5.1 percent, face of slack business, according to a deal that would focus instead on North Korea’s more extensive plu- and thrift among its workers. the winnowing of wages and work- Labor Department survey. That rep- tonium program, which has been at the heart of its nuclear weapons “We don’t just hop in the car and ing hours for those still employed has resented an increase of 400,000 since development and was the source of raw material for the device it tested go shopping or get something to eat,” become a primary cause of distress, November. in October 2006.
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