<<

.,- 11~- " , I... - : _-.isI ... I .I

W~~~~~~·' ;-'n's' -W#-Go SStjl

1 ;Sll-'^-i4>; i' ' ' 'I

Continuous MIT News Service Cambridge Massachusetts

Volume 100, Number 5 Friday, February 22. 1980 Centannial Volkne

,. . _. _ . iSimo-nid-es i-to-expand -as onhn-J yne steps down ser- By Steven Solnick and Vice-President for ]Financial structure of student financial Operations Stuart Cowenn. Cowen' vices. Associate Director of Vice-President for Administra- oversees many student financial Financial-Aid Leonard Gallagher tion and Personnel John Wynne offices, among them"Stuident Ac- said the review will probably ex- will leave MIT on March 1. His counts and Student Loains. amine the different perceptions duties are to be assumed by Vice- Wynne is taking "early students, faculty- and staff can President Constitntine B. retirement" after 22 yeaars at the have of the various offices in: Simonides, the Chancellor will Institute. He. explai [ned, " I volved. He explained, "percep- announce next week. decided I'd like a change re of pace tions of these offices can change Simonides will assume overall and place." When -aske:ed about depending on whom the offices- control of those offices currently the plans to reorganize Ipersonnel report to." under Wynne's jurisdiction: the services under Simonicdes' con- Gallagher , declared, however, -Admissions Office, PlaceinentOf- trol, he commented thaat he was "Whatever decision might be fice, Personnel Office, and Office "very pleased with the wway it will made on where Financial Aid sits of Child Care. He will also work out." on an organizational chart, the become the Institute's Equal Op- Simonides, retaining the title philosophy of financial aid will is nothing portunity Officer, a post currently "Vice-President of the I]Institute", remain the same. There Referr- i held by Wynne. said the aim of the reorgIanization to fear from this review." The Dean for Student Affairs is "to interrelate the ser,rvices the ing to changes in people's percep- (DSA) and the Department of Institute provides in diirect sup- ticns of the office, he said, "We Athletics will continue to report port of people": Adrmisssions, wish to continue to be perceived to Simonides, as they have since Financial Aid, Personneel and the as caring about students." ilast year'sreview of the Deans' DSA. He explained thatLhe hoped Wynne's long-time assistant, will become Office. Simorfides' other duties, there would be "more iintercom- James Culliton, controlling the MIT Press and In- munication among thesise offices Simonides' assistant and will con- formation Services and serving as - not that there hasLsn't been tinue as Director of Personnel. indicated he was looking rIAbbsbsa3Arci-tant toL· theLIv r,A,President. . , will re- enough already." Culliton main unaffected. He added that whiile he did forward .to working with The Student Financial Aid Of- not intend to take pers;onal con- Simonides. He also had high rice, also currentl-y under Wynne's trol of any of these ofMffces, the praise for-Wynne, noting, "He -control, will report to Simonides charge from the Chanccellor was has had an extraordinary impact for at least the next few months. to "devolop an e ffe ctive on MIT." The final disposition of that office organizafio'nEl struct ture" to Another of Wynne's assistants, r.-;will be determined by "a-review of manage them . Isaac Colbert, will contiriue to Vice President for Administration and Personnel John Wynne, shown Tech file /I all student financial services"t- The review of financi' ;,;-oversee t1I*Institutte's Equal-Op- -addresiiig -'a"wmen'-s-4farum.will retire, this June. (The the orgainizational I portunities Programs. photo) be conducted by both Simonides will investigate I I, v I II - II L 11 -''-II .I ... ~. · .. I 1tn- -athletic seating II-II - , of physical plant, says that the * those hours. .1 Laur.aby Farbi two criteria for the building iAich Combs does not feel- that N41Tr's new two-story athletic the designers worked with - parking-spaceswill be a problem and sppecial events center, being physical size and fire escapes - He stated, "The people who will built on the Institute's West were considered, and the capacity use the sports facilities at the Camptus, will have limited use was designed for the number of center routinely live at MIT. For becausse of problems with fire fire exits that would be installed. these people, the center will simp- regula tions and parking space. From 9am to, 5pm on week- ly be a replacement for the ex- The,second, floor of the center days; the athletic and special isting hockey rink and Rockwell will bee an indoor field house with events center can only be used for Cage. The special events where the caipacity for 4200 people. It athletics. This is because there are the spectators might have cars oc- can eonly hold 3800 people, few parking spaces open in the cur usually at hours after five and howevier, because that is the max- parking lot next to Kresge during on weekends." -anurn number the seven sets of stairs and fire exits can ac- \, +.1.~>-X*jtv .¢ >.i comod Acc-,ording to John Fresina, Xe-as4'cf Direcltor of the Safety Office, fi V£v¢.;.....-.;. more fire exits are not being in- ,> .5..sl. l....

''9ats -EzA' stalledd because the cost would be 8 8v/svv greater-Irand "the building would 5s -? v s brought his sm- defeated Clark 4-1 Saturday All Tech staffers are Hakatla '81 confirmed the report, be changed," the. UAP said. ooth new wave rock to the with Royce Barondes scoring reminded that a full staff t , saying that he had only recently This money will allow an ex- Saturday night. twice on backhand shots. Orpheum last meeting will be held this w discovered the money. He said he- pansion of funding for activities Page 19 February 24, at the internal Page 8. Sunday, $didn't know how long to student groups, Hakala in the Student Cen- Institute account number- 41330 speculated. "We do not need to I lamn estimated that 'ask the Administration or the ter, Room 491. All staff has existed, but he The track team ended its years" and Dean's Office for any' more Our intrepid music critic members are expected to it dates back "tens of with a 3that "it doesn't appear that money than what the activities reviews the Boston Rockwell Cage career attend, and interested over Bowdoin last anyone knows how old the ac- normally use," he explained, since Symnphony Orchestra's recent victory students are cordially in- assistant coach count is, or at least how much was the money in the accounts should all-Mozart concert. Page 11I Saturday, as vited. iin it.' be able to offset inflation and Chris Lane marked the occa- gHakala explained that he has provide for expansion- of the stu- sion by wearing a tuxedo. .dent activities for quite some " fqo-about 20p accounts - the Ii of I. known I -two years, but-he had no reason'- time. _~ .· _ Sl ~C C I·- g dL -- · ~ i'·" "7 :

_ _ PAGE 2 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980 , Tl ,i " Faculty accepts sex comm. report e~~~~~~~~~~~s -~~~~~~~:~ By Gordon Hunter would help to bring the Institute Chancellor Paul Gray '54 stresw The faculty endorsed the report up to, date. sed to those present that "the vic. and recommendations of the Ad- The Report of the Commit- tim is not always female and the WoV - Committee tee on Sexual Harassment was aggressor is not always a faculty Hoc Faculty-Student to boycott Olympics - With the arrival of President Carter's Rarassment at presented at the meeting. The member." He said that keeping US on Sexual February 20 deadline for the removal of all Soviet troops from Wednesday's faculty meeting. report noted that nearly all records of complaints was now Afghanistan, the White House reaffirmed their "final and irrevocable" t Professor of Computer Science serious cases of sexual harassment natural and appropriate to in- decision to boycott the Olympic Games in Moscow this summer. Even and Electrical Engineering Peter shared the following itiate, although Elias said that the uf if the Soviets withdraw all troops in the weeks or months ahead, Ad- Elias, chairman of the committee, characteristics (quoted from the nature of the records and who- ministration officials said the President will still expect the United spoke to the approximately 60 report): would keep them was still un- States Olympic Committee to abide by the decision not to send a team people present about the findings 1) They report behavior which determined. to Moscow in of his group. He said that current- the Committee believes the "MIT has been well served by July. policy majority of the informal procedures" because of Releear of hostages again in doubt - The release of the American ly there is "a well-defined overwhelming Nations informal of as grossly "a barrier characteristic" that has hostages in Iran was again thrown into doubtwhen the United and well-defined faculty would think for at with harass- protected the complainants, ac- inquiry commission delayed its trip from Geneva to Teheran procedures" to deal objectionable at MIT. the delay but that there cording to Gray. He said MIT-has least three days this Wednesday. According to diplomats, ment complaints, has caused the asked for ad- was "inadequate statement" of 2) That behavior been fortunate because a study came at the request of Iranian President Bani-Sadr, who illness, lost the embassy and procedures for complainant physical has been made without an at- ditional time to gain the assent of the militants occupying these policies evidence of preoc- by the latest mes- He stressed that sleep, or other mosphere of hysteria and law to release the captives. Bani-Sadr's task was not easdd the community. he called "lour "wide distribution" of the policy cupied misery. suits. sage from the Ayatollah Khomeini, who praised what of religion off the scene." to the community is very impor- 3) There is a conflict of interest, Undergraduate Association dear youth" for having "thrown the enemies tant for dealing more effectively in that the reported behavior is by Vice-President Chuck-Markham 'US hockey team triumphs - The United States hockey team, with the problem of sexual haras- a member of the teaching staff '81 said that the stress on "con- already assured of a spot on the'medal playoff round, defeated West sment. who is at that time supervising or sciousness raising" of the com- Germany 4-2. Because of their total goal differential, however, they are The faculty also approved a teaching and grading the complai- munity is a very important part of considered the group runner-up, and will play against the Russians this new degree program in the nant. the report. He explained that this afternoon. not was necessary if the community is Department of Nutrition and 4) The alleged harasser did Modal standings posted - As of Thursday afternoon, the Soviet to understand that there is certain Food Science. Called Metabolism deny unusual contact with the Union and East Germany were 'tied for first plac with seventeen behavior which is inappropriate and Human Nutrition (SM and complaining student or students medals each. The Soviets had eight gold; the East Germans had six. at MIT. President Jerome PhD), the program will replace (for graduate students harassed Tied for third were the US and Austria, each with six medals, three of in the thesis advisor). None Wiesner commented, "One man's various similar offerings by a them gold. -by Richard Selz department. claimed that the student had joke can be distressing to the only Provost Walter Rosenblith ad- made the first move. woman in the class." dressed the meeting about progress on improving the use of computers and computation in education at MIT as the last order of business. Discussion centered around the possibility of creating Institute-wide educational a job with a big company (last year we minimizing paperwork -technical or management. an Taking like to work in network run by a computer company can be ,sold -over $400 million and bureaucracy, and in if you'd computation everybody the ; a company where your czar." Rosenblith the first step toward obli- worth of word processing giving "computer and computersequipment). chance to see his or her success depends on your MIT was behind in vion. As a beginner, it's argued that or The point is, we think ideas turn into products. own energy, brains and and easy to get pigeon-holed be "integrating computation lost in the crowd. new blood and young in addition, we'll give you ingenuity, Wang could looking computers into the -education At Wang, however, ideas are as vital as ex- plenty of opportunities for just what you're process," and that the network you'll get a chance to be a perience. advancement in whichever for. I stand-out from the start. We also believe in career path you chose And vice-versa. Gray explains It's not that we're a small dining . s-- reasoning ,· by Ivan Fong 1 ' MIT Chancellor Paul,-Gray 4 i personally addressed a meeting of mmk the General Assembly (GA) Thursday evening, February 14, i: on the administration's actions on induœ campus cdining. Outlining four basic premises xb; of the proposal, Gray contended that "the status quo is unaccep- table," but stressed the impor- i! tance of student meetings with ad- ministration for feedback pur- poses. Gray first stated that MIT has a "responsibility to provide food services to its students in a viable manner at a reasonable cost." He also indicated that health, safety, and sanitary conditions must be considered, which includes "'not cooking in areas not intended for ·1` purpose." The dining 5 that 8 should also be one program I which complements the residence 5 program, and finally, though some flexibility is good, the din- j: ing system should be "physically :;r ex- constrained" in some way, L- plained Gray. I· Grail concluded that although there is a iiimitation of flex- F (Please turn to page 16) t abortion - birth control I pregnancy tests 1 tubal ligation iiF vasectomy r individual counseling c; uniquely combining a warmth and understanding with excellence in medical care r · r ? i F "· tels 01980 Wang Laboratories. Inc .Lowell. MA 01851. U.S.A. j r

dlin"IC Wang's representatives will be on campus send her your resume as soon as possible at 10 Perthshire Rd. on February25, 1980. To arrange an inter- Wang Laboratories, Inc., One Industrial Boston, Ma. 02135 view register with the Placement Office. I-f Cavonuo, Lo~eI, FMA 018515 We are an affir- 617/782-7600 the schedule is full pleas call Elaine -Fltive action employer. collect at 469 5000, ext. 2788 or sponsored by the Rosenberg Crittenton Hastings House a nonprofit social servk%. Fagency serving women since 1836 Free Parking We accept Master Charge & Visa L -- -- " :·- ·· -··,·-·· '--- :':'"-E;··L"'i.·c: r -· ·- - :·s :-c ·:.pa;-·rr···l·r;:s,·--,· PU7.S.4 X. (L·)--··-l: -FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, IQ80 P `.:i:'5:;c";Pmr,: i .- *R·.. L· ·C*r.Z-l.(·-Ci THE TECH PAGE 3 ,;i·:··.- C-*iii----- jC -^'1C-;i- "' "".;LT:II: 't·l - · · IL · ,_sr - I I _ L __ _ -' "''-zu-· r·· YlliC·e1\ C\ I^ki.·X -iji ·_ .... .'- -:""*C:·"i· ·u-. .-- : rc , : .;r 5 r ;·R· ·C "re 5 ISIISeS"" ;ouer I ,e:sai· ..,. ---.·, ·n· · .;.71'·· !Ilais at: -- beirig sarcastic; she really did on his list. Rob Spines '83, also of by Jack Link think it was a nice day, and she Fiji, has a technique he claims and her husband, 'both alumni, produces great generosity. "I donated $15. tion hike and the'-MIT football promise them we won't bother David Lebow '83 of Fiji was them any more this year and will team ate' inspiring generous surprised to see his physics alumni donations forom (Please turn to page 14) I across the professor and his own first cousin US and Canada in thie second an- II , __,, _ - -- I Is -I nual MIT telethion, according to the students competing in the fundraiser. Last year the telethon, raised $70,000. This year's goal is $10- 0,000, and $60,000 had been raised as of Wednesday--mornin'g, said. Brenda Hambleton '79, Special 'Programs Coordinator for the Alumni Fund.. "We only call those who have, donated up to $500 in the past, and we ask -them to double the amount they gave last years," said Harnbleton. This tactic sometimes backfires, according to many of the students participating in the telethon, which begin Sunday. "'The first few times I tried that I *usually got an incredulous would you buy a T-shirt from this man? MIT President elect Pauil One o the many volunteers who worked on this year's telethon. Gray '54 joins in the celebration of the UROP program's tenth an- response after a long silence," niversary. (Photo by Matthew Alschuler) said Lee Moriwakee '81 of Alpha (Photo by Margo Woodruff) I ,~'-I-=11 | . I _L~, _q I .-_. r . _B .. , . I I _I .-._ . ,,,., , .. , . I _ Tau Omega -(ATO). "I dropped. II . aL- -_ -- -- L I -- - that tactic pretty quickly."1 The alumni may designate, their donation to any particular fund. Favorites this year are the general operating budget, scholarships, THE EAMFG HESMA4 ZM and the Independent Residence Development Fund (IRDF). AT 'LIIE U~~~~~~~~~yN~~~sT PRICE..ddwb Special emphasis is being given this year to the IRDF and its dorm equivalent, the Campus Residence Fund (CRF). CRF and IRDF money is used to help finance dormitory and Independent L~iving Groups (ILG) housing renovations. The IRDF has loaned one half million dollars -to thirty houses for sprinkler ,:syste~msv aglon'e-.Current--~- Iy, one frAt is-still-16okin'g-4ounew I housing and two others would like to move nearer, campus. "The IRDF is'doing much bet-. ter than CRF because- the frats are really plugging for it. They're much more -aware of the need than the dorm residents are," said Harnbletonl. Over half the ILGs and all of the dorms except Bexley are com- peting in the telethon for a $100 prize to the group raising the most money. Additionally, 1FC will be awarding $100 to the ILG receiving the most donations',:and Because you Dormcon will be awarding the' attend college coveted bronze telephone to the you are eligible three highest dormitories. "At this point it looks as if ZBT . . to receive TIME:, will run away with the IFC: I the world's lead- prize," said Harnbleton. ZBT ing newsweekly raised $12,20,8 in one night. at the lowest indi- There are also individual prizes I awarded nightlyl and free theater vidpal subscription passes to the individual receiving rate, just 35C an the most points in a system based : issue. That's BIG on the number of definite dona- tions and donation increases. SAVINGS off the ATO's Garry Neben '81 -has r regular subscription won the individual prize twice. C rate of 59C an issue He's also been hung up on several times, and Tuesday was told "It's , .iand even BIGGER such a niice day, why don't you-go SAVINGS off the $1.25 fly a kite?" But the callee wasn't newsstand price., And it's so simple to r IF·i:. subscribe-just look for I the cards with TIME and TRANSLATORS its sister publications, il _.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sports Illustrated, Fortune, Life, Money and People. I GERMAN - ITALIAN - ARABIC' They are available at the I gl~slr3~slCi r' -T rmrl9 college bookstore or from (And other languages) native your local TIME representative: fluency - experience in computer, engineering, other technicai, l00i, and commercial terminology- Alan and Debrah Anacki (Language teaching positions 42 Pearl St. also open.) Bridgewateri MA 02324 11 Mt. Auburn St. Cambridge 02138 354-6112 i

I IL !~~~~~~~~~~ 11I--I |I--"-I--" 1- - I ; - _ _

I- -471...,;, - 1 .

_ ~PAGE 4 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980 1.-1-- I I . , , " 1, I I ., " , , , ; t,- ,,: - , I 11, ----;- -- I " -, 0 0. , I I ,b,,o,,1~~~~N I I Steve Solnick I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ m Activists: A esire in search of a cause The Link. A communications link. "The nervous system for Ma developing child." "A link for creative thinkers -to give creative thinkers a place to write." Yes, there is, in fact, to be another newspaper on the MIT campus soon. Or, at least, that is what all the indications seem to point to. A nother newspaper, and one willing to do investigative projects as well, according to its organizer, David Kuller '81. Kuller, whose descriptions of the new paper's goals are quoted above, is planning to distribute the first issue of The Link on Wednesday. Wonderful. This paper has sorely.needed an alternative newspaper on this campus ever since thursday sold its soul for the sake of a sex sur- vey. Investigative reporting and creative writing -a noble and vitally necessary goal. Newspapers are expensive though, and here the story becomles somewhat interesting. Kuller's estimates for the first issue run to about $500, of which $I150 has been raised already. That $150 has come from donations. Donations from one student ($5) and four faculty members, according to Kuller. That's $145 from four faculty members. One contributor to the birth of The Linak is Professor of Psychology Stephan Choroyver. Said Kuller, "He has been instrumental in getting a lot of the others to help." Why? Chorover is one of the organizers of the planned March 4 "teach in" which is being arranged to discuss There are no years of serious, probing thought tion was proposed. A paroxysm of energy searching everything from draft registratiuon to campus structure. According to leading up to March 4, 1980. There are, instead, for a channel to allow it to discharge itself, Thie Link Kuller, "He was looking for March 4 coverage," coverage- which Kul- memories of the same date years ago. Perhaps that is will be its voice. All power to it. But a word of ler confirms he will receive in the first issue of the paper. why the most vocal organizers of March 4, 1980, caution... . Chorover, on the other hand, asserted that there were "no solicita- have been faculty, although students have certainly tions among the faculty" for donations to help the paper. He con- been involved. Last week's Maly was largely student Arm in arm with the Desire in Search of a Cause firmned, however, that at a March 4 Coordinating Committee fleeting organized, and yet the Beatles7music and the Tom clique, there seems to be an End in Search of a held Wednesday, there was considerable interest among those present Lehrer and the faces from the sixties left little Means clique. That is to say, a group so enamored of in advancing some money to "'help the first issue get born." doubt what eras were frying to be relived. The un- the glamour of the sixties that'it seeks to effect the Both Kuiler and Chorover claim that the March 4 Coalition and iversities were, indeed, the place to be during the six- same climate, without theltortuouis moral buildup. 7hte Lintk are fully independent entities, however. Kuller: "'The faculty ties and those who lived through it seem to miss be- The Desiring ones are an idealistic group, believing (who aire donating money) are not putting any restriction on what goes ing in the spotlight of the nation's attention. that by the very application of their fresh energy- into the paper." He added that he was working on the paper since last Those who didn't live, through the sixties, (that's partly why they've come out of the blue) they term, long before plans -for March 4 came into their own. Chorover, a though, seem to be another case altogether. Anti- can do some good to a society which, admittedly, former professor of Kuller's, stated that the March 4 Coalition ""has nuke chants erupted at the draft rally. Stop the Draft needs some help. only the most peripheral involvement with Dave." buttons circulate to oppose registration, not out of a For the press to achieve this goal, especially their deep moral outrage, but rather out of. . . what? goal, it must always maintain a certain healthy dis- A Desire in Search Of a Cause. That seems to be tance from those it may someday choose to discuss. Whalt we have, evidently, is the birth of a newspaper in a climlate of the phrase to describe the anti-draft/anti-nuke circle The, Link can, hopefulily, be a link among creative uneasiness about world and national affairs. Whether that's a cause of students which has burst on the picture literally minds. It cannot, and should not, serve as a link and efflect I'm not sure. A relevant fact, though, and one cited by both out of the blue on this campus -since draft,registra- between the Desire and the End. Chorover aind Kuller, is that many people involved with The Link are also involved with March 4, although both claim that is the only tie betw~ee. the two organizations. Oh, and there's the 'funding, too (although Kuller reports that the Writing Program and the Council- from the Arts are also contributing funds.) Kuller, by the way, was also an inprta~vl~nt figure in organizing last week's draft rally. At which )tnt= raf| Chorover spoke. To the Editor moves cowvardly Let's be a bit less coy, -though, and a bit more ana!)ticall. A new- The attitude of appeasemnent, their own selfishness, and will peopje risked their lives for God, s;paper is born (assuminilg it happens according to plan, and I hope. for detente, and cowardice is no have to suffer in the self-imposed for righteousness, and for others the sake of campus media, it does) and plans to run niost of what is answer to communist aggression. hell of their own pricking con- that we have an abundant life; in- contribsuted with minimal editing. It itc hes to do the sort of in- Such an attitude does nothing to sciences. There is at least a third deed, even that we have the vestigative reportingt that put thur'sda, on the map. Many of the people prevent war; it only incites the ag- category of "ino - drafters": the freedom to protest in such a way orgalnizing the paper (it will operate with a committee structure) are gressor to provoke the very war communists. They -are different, is attributable to the sacrifice of also coordinating a teach-in to examine a broader range of issues than we try to avoid. for they purposefully use their countless brave souls who have were covered on March 4, 1969 -a day which served as a culmination Most of those chanting "'no power as administrators, profes- gone before us.- Dare we stain ol'year s olfserious, probing thought in an atmosphere of moral outrage draft" or "'give peace a chance" sors and the like, to lend an air of their blood with our cowardice -it a1 evar we should never have touched. seem to be either ignorant or credibility to this foolishness and and timidity in the face of the cowardly. The tragedy of the ig- cowardice. They are, also in- communist aggressor? Stephanie L. Pollack'82 -Chairman norant is typified by Neville sidious, for they seek to hide their Remember, while we glibly- l | l [ [ Steven L Soinick '81 -Editor-in-Chief Chamberlain, who sold out the identity. and purpose, which is to protest here, thousands of others _~ ~ ~ ~DavidG. Shaw'81 Managing Editor Sudatenland to "keep the peace;" destroy the peace and freedom wade through the stench of rot- Michael L. Taviss '81- Business Manager the disgrace of the ignorant is that the history of self-sacrifice ting flesh on the battlefields of I rosa +Gordon B. Hunter '80 -Executive Editor their refusal to listen to dissidents' has fought and died for. Afghanistan so that they can bury W ~~~~~~~~Volume 100, Number 5 warnings or their refusal to Maybe it is time -to consider their loved ones. Can we stand Friday, February 22. 1980 believe that the 'communists ac- just where the Christian world idly by? I for one will not! We tually did slaughter Camabodians, would be if Jesus said "Hell no, I must stop the Soviets now, before PRODUCTION STAFF FOR did enslave Vietnamese, and did won't go" to the cross, or where it is too late! THIS ISSUE push thousands of Chinese out to America would be if 'the Pilgrims If called, I will go! And Night Editors: Hy Tran '79, Matt Alschuler '83 Staff: David G. Shaw sea. The cowardly, on the other said "Hell no, we won't go" to the proudly! '81, Robert W. Leishman '82. Judy Passman '83. Stephanie Pollack hands are simply dominated by New-World. It is only, because J. Andrew Combs G '82, Drew Blakimanl '80 ' .. tIanavibius '82, Kevin Osbomn '82, V. MA Michael Bowf 8?v Jon von Zeiowitz'82 PHOTOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT Photo Editor: Kevin Osborn '82 Darkroom Manager: Timothy Hilby '82 Staff: John Borland '80. Jim Oker '81. Maryann Helferty '82. Linda Custer '83. Jim Mihori '83, John Moses '83. David Radin '83. Eric Shrader '83 Photograph~ic Consultant: David Tenenbaum '75. SPORTS DEPARTMENT Sports Editors: Bob Host '8 1. Rich Auchus '82 Staff : Dennis Smith '81. Eric R. Fleming 8,13,Robert Labarre '83. Steve Kim '83, Arlene Santos '83 ARTS DEPARTMENT Arts Editors: Linda Schaffir '82, Jon von Zelowitz '82 Staff: Shawn Wilson '81. Jonathan Cohen '82. Kevin Cuoningharn '82, Joseph Kristl '82. Jonathan Richmond G. I SENIOR EDITORS Steven F. Frann'80. Kathryn E. Gropp '80, Marlon K. Weiss'80

TheTech (ISSN 0 148-9607) is published twice a week during the academic year(except during MIT vacations). weekly during January, and once during the last week in July for $7.00 per year Thirc; Class by The Tech, 84 'Massachusetts Ave. Room W20-483, Cambridge,MCA 02139. Third Class postage paid at Boston, MA. Non-Profit Org. Permit No. 59720. POSTMASTER: Please send all address changes to our mailing address: The e~~_wemeP~wIM^^ NW INTi pij tEcs oIl Tech, PO Box 29. MIT Branch, Cambridge, MA 02139. Telephonle: (617) 25-3- 1541. Advertising, subscription, and typesettingrates available. 0 1980 The D*6lZQ:,'%-W Atpuu9l Tech, Printed by Charles River Publishing, Inc. I 16mmli i :· :··. r ·· ·--·: -` 2'-` c 5 1 C 'I 'I I I I IIII ill I r I I I_ ·, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1980 THE TECH PPAGE

Ken Hamilton Are there values implicit in science 7 science. But it appears that truth From this fundamental premise, Editor's note: This is the second of some 'of their faith; what they by those who value the truth. might regard as their sense of When the practitioners of the dis- has often been defined very it is possible to examine the 111 a series analyzing the nature of strangely so that truth, in fact, has nature of scientific truth as well as values in science and. the social value. cipline pursue science, they look Is the activity of science. actively for new facts, find an not been valued in dogmatic what is implied by saying that a implications of value-oriented societies. The acceptance by any scientific description corresponds science. motivated-by a sense of values in- order among the facts by group- herent in'the discipline? Science is 'ing them under concepts, and society- of the material fact as an with the facts. Since such a A National Assessment of an activity ,of arranging the judge those concepts by testing arbiter of truth makes it a scien- description cannot be perfect, the Educational Progress' - Study, known facts-and interpreting whether their implications and tific society. A dogmatic society, description can match the facts reported in the January 7,,1980, them to form general concepts, predictions turn out to be true in one that believes that it has dis- only to a certain degree of ap- edition of The Chronicle of Higher that often have predictive the'light of new facts. covered some absolute immutable proximation - what some Education, has concluded -that qualities. These -concepts are- When critics assert that truth, may attempt to regulate the engineers may call a degree of "the older children get and the judged by their factual outcome. science is neutral, they say that behavior of others in accordance tolerance. A scientist must more they are exposed -to science, , In all practical matters, our the findings of science are neither with that truth. To the contrary, therefore decide what imperfec- the less likely they are to have society judges belief by results. A good nor bad in and of scientific truth appears to. be a tions s/he accepts, if s/he is ever 'favorable' attitudes toward it, belief is held to be valid if the act themselves, They may go on to changing, evolving concept. to~come to any conclusions. Cer- either in terms of their own career tions that it' motivates are pru- say that the use to which those The activity of science presup- tainly this is an act of judgement. choices' or their expectations of dent. We believe we live in a findings are put - the ad- poses that truth is an end in itself. ( Please turn to page 6 ) how it might change the world world with friction because our visability of technological ap- around -them."' Many- of the concept of friction is consistent .plications - must be determined respondents in the survey blamed with'the facts and it consequently - by values brought in from outside science for. so'me or most of affects our behavior. scientific activity. But this is BALLOT COUNTERS society's ills. where their argument may begin The findings were based on a But the findings of science must to break down. The critics may I NEEDED study conducted in 1977 of ap- not be confused with the activity believe that these values must proximately 80,000 students aged of science that discovers them. come from outside science, which 9, 13, and 17 and of 1,300 adults The activity of science is not is certainly not implied by the for Presidential. Primary Election on Tuesday between ages 26 and 35. neutral. In practicing science, one argument that the findings of larch 4. MMust be a registered voter in Cambridge. These rather negative attitudes key value directs research. The ac- science are neutral. From 8pmn till count is done. Flat fee $14.00. Also toward the scientist may be tivity of science is directed to seek at polls needed. Call Sandy 498-9087 related to the abuses and misuses -the truth, and it is judged by the *It could be conjectured that day workers of technology', one of the criteria of being true to the facts. men believed in truth as a value during business hours. Science can only be practiced long before they began to practice a _- products of science, in the past. It _ _~~ '" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ is easy to think of examples of k- I _" __ such abuse: the threatened melt- down at Three-Mile Island in Pennsylyania, Skylab's violent descent to Earth from orbit, or the possibility of cancer caused by nitrites in bacon. Given the abuses that have arisen from ap- If you missed 1957 you missed the Russians launching Sput- plications of science in the past, singer -could research be directed so that nik I-into earth orbit. You missed seeing a young more prudent applications will continue his rise to the top-of the record industry with a evolve? Are some -questions, in Rock. You missed the ballyhooed introduc- theory -mo're.,ortthy of called Jailhouse -scientific an being addressed than oORreques- z- tionwof a .cg called Edsel. And you missed the birth of .i . .1 *; .0L--. t tio ns, since the products of -even group of talented young engineers and "basic" research can often be ap- industry when a plied? scientists formed the nucleus of Fairchild's This article-deals with the ex- semiconductor operations. istence of values in science. Are values inherent in the character of the discipline or, is science value- ~ · Though you missed the beginning, free or value-neutral? you haven't missed the future. Tal- To begin, are values an in- ent, enthusiasm and -hard work herent part of the' practice -of science? Some have criticized can take you as far today as it did science by claiming fhat scientists _in1957. Maybe even farther. Today, have no humane interests and lit- tie conscience because the only' with the vast resources of our parent company, success that -science accepts G Schlumberger Limited, Fairchild is committed to derives from the material facts of the world. But do scientists lend technological leadership and innovation. And while I judgement to -their analysis of we're pioneering new technologies, we are also creat;ng scientific data and might values I find their way -into such in- new career enrichment and em- I terpretations? hkt ployee benefit programs. There is nothing absolute about the concepts of natural science;- 1 they are organized in a flexible Fairchild has exciting career openings on framework which is always 1 rebuilt. 'At 0,-. both the West and East Coasts. 1 building and being However, the foremost considera- We'll be on campus in the next tion in the evolution of this week or so and would like to talk I framework is the facts; theory must fit the empirical data con- to you about the future. Yours sistently. It is this'obstinate neces- sity that might distress critics of Visit your placement center for the time and science who fear that the spread , an opportunity you won't want to miss. of science is robbing them of some freedom of judgement and EVE JOBbiSI SAVE THE DAYSI Enjoy convient -2nd shift hrs....working on a nice F=AIRCIHILD Tempsory assign .... in dwntwn. Boston! Use your head for figures. . .. to earn A Schlumberger Company I good hourly rates..;. No gexp. nec., training is- j I providedtl Adding Machi ne I exp. helpful. Some weekend day wor' is avail..too! CallI Ms. rCiat 357-8374 or Oficoe into: Of f- C"Q_ -;YOU WONIT WANT Specialists.> 120 Tremont St..Bos. 357-8300 9-6.-Mon.-Sat. 18 Brattle St.Xamb. .5'-7215 12-6, Mtn.-4E1_ I ------T0 MISS" -- EXT WEEK. .., . .-· 1 _I PAGE 6 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980 I Ox~On

Draft is necessary or natS To the Editor: perceived as a stronger army. in Angola, South Yemen, peak in 1968, the US defense the idea, of "mirror-imaging," As two American of draft age Then there is a problem that Ethiopia, South Vietnam, Laos, budget has gone down in constant that they are simply reacting to with a personal interest in the doesn't get a whole lot of press: Cambodia, Mozambique, and dollar terms. The Soviets have in- American initiatives. Their mas- matter, we think it is time to bring the dangers of having a profes- Afghanistan. There are 50,000 creased their defense budget 5% sive arms build-up has gone far to light some facts relating to the sional army.' We don't want to Cuban troops in Africa. There are every year for the past fifteen beyond trying to just have parity draft which seem to have been imply that the army is on the also Cuban troops in Iraq, which years; they spend, 14% of their of "equivalence" with American overlooked. verge of a coup or anything like shares a long border with Iran. GNP- on defense while the US defense capabilities. We would like to begin by that, but we do believe it is In Europe, the Russians have spends less than five. Their The analogies between Nazi pointing out that a truly informed foolhardy and irresponsible .for a two to one manpower advan- spending cannot be explained by (Plea-se turn to page ?J decision on the issue of the draft the American public to assign the tage, a three to one tank advan- -- ~- -I would require detailed knowledge task of national defense to a tage, and a two to one aircraft ad- Translations into your native language are of the fields of history, highly specialized sector of vantage. This is not a defensive needed for industrial literaure. You "ill be economics, military science, society. A civilian army has force posture. Classical military Your well paid to prepare these translations on c` political science, psychology, always been the keystone of our thinking calls for a three to one an occasional basis. Assignments are - ethics, and specialties like arms democracy. If we employ a advantage in numbers when at- foreig[n made according to your area of technical control and engineering. We are mercenary army, we are courting tacking, and the Russians have ) knowledge. not experts in all these fields, but the same dangers that have that capability. The recent NATO languags We are currentlyseelkng trbnslatorsfor:. we know a little about some of troubled nations throughout decision to install Pershing II mis- • Abraic*' Chinese Danish D uOtc them and we would like to share history that have lost control of siles in Europe is a direct reaction * Farsi * French s German · Greel our views with you, to let you their armed forces. to Soviet deployment of the SS-20 XItalian * Japanese - Koran c know what we think are the real Unfortunately, good intentions and the Backfire bomber, both of • Norwegian * Polish a Portuguese issues in the debate over the draft. in the world are not enough. The which are capable of hitting all of * Romanian * Spaaish e Swedith Most of the anti-draft people with existence of offensive military Western Europe. However, there I and others. whom we have spoken seem to ig- forces in other countries in the is another more basic reason valuable! Into-English translations fom Russian, nore the realities of the world in world, especially the Soviet which critics of the draft should ··. . I.~: East European languages and many which we live and the history of Union, seems something that realize. Theater nuclear weapons others also available. - - the past thirty-five years. common sense would say we must are a substitute for manpower, l, .· ... | _ Foreign language typists also needed. r The world is a dangerous place. protect against. The fact that the and an inability to stop an attack e All this work can be done in your homnel We have enemies and we have Soviet Union has no qualms with conventional forces increases e I responsibilities to our friends. about using its military force, as the probability that theater LUnguistic Systems, Inc. is-New England's r shown by their aggressive in- nuclear weapons will be resorted largest iranslation agency, located a block c The capability of our volunteer north of the Central Sq. subway station. army to protect us is terference in or invasion of over - to, with the terrifying possibility a e questionable. It has morale and twenty countries since World War of escalation into thermonuclear For appli¢ation and test - r discipline problelms. This is 11, should show the obvious need war. translation cad Ms. Tabarii r Linguistic Systemns, Inc. a directly attributable to lax stan- for American watchfulness and In the past decade, the Soviet 116 Bishop Allen Drive dards for volunteers. The army military capability. In tee last Union has spent over a hundred Cambridgje, MlA 02139 has been made soft and appealing decade alone, the Soviets have billion dollars more on the 864-3909 in order to spur enlistment and sponsored communist takeovers military than the-US. Since its -1 --V---j ------meet manpower requirements. I Some non-commissioned officers doubt it will fight if called upon. People join for pay, benefits, or technical training, not to become soldiers. They are a less effective fighting force because of it. Soldieri; g is hard. People ought to respect it more. Voluntary enlistment is not an equitable way to distribute the responsibility of national defense. It draws mainly from the poor, the uneducated, the unemployed, and the unskilled. Not only is its actual capability inadequate, but the perception abroad is that our army is weak. Perceptions are very important. Perceptions of power, of capability, of resolve, of intent, affect the decisions of other nations. Perceptions of weakness invite aggression.- Perceptions of strength deter ag- gression. We think a drafted army will be tougher and leaner than the volunteer army, and will be Is science value-free? (C toll.inudll Jriom page 5 ) Within the scientific come munity, the valuation of truth has other consequences as well, such E -s. the necessity of independence for the scientist, the valuation of' origina;it , and the necessity for I the safeguard of dissent. Mme But the aim of this article is to w defend science from what appears m to be an error in the thinking of cr ilicS ot science, the thinking that maintains that science is value- free or value-neutral. Rather, the scientific community must hold truth as the highest value within I the scientific tradition. -- .. .". . . ~ -

_ I I . . i

I~~~~~~~~~~- .( !.I . L . . . . 4 1-'_ o ._'' i ,ll , 1. ' ' 1.3 .. _, _ I * |-1 _ 'FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1980 THE TECH PAGE 7 M I I- - O- l -.--- I , I-- Ad- - - lr I-. -_" I - " II_. * *

- -- -I-- -- ALpnl r- _ Editorials, which are those marked only by the marked as such and printed in author's name are by regular a distinctive format, represent columists, those bearing the the official opinion of The notation "column" are written Tech. They are written by the by other staff members. Guest brat registration Editorial Board, which con- columns are written by in- (Continuedfrompage6) Gulf oil, albeit with a lot of to realize how bad it really is. Our sists of the chairman, editor- dividuals at the invitation of ur allies freedoms are something worth Germany in the 1930's and Soviet sacrifice by all of us, but ou in-chief, managing editor, ex- the Editorial Board. All to protecting, and it does not seem a expansionism are striking. The could not. Were the SolViets ecutive editor, and news columns represent the opinion Idbe in lot to ask young Americans to Soviet's Gestapo-like tactics in seize the Gulf, they wouk editors. of the author only, not neces- Afghanistan' are just coming to the position to blackmail MWestern help ensure the security of the Columns are written by sarily that of the rest of the light, where they are reported to Europe and Japan into ssevering society in which they live and members of The Tech staff; staff. have lined up over one thousand their security ties with Axmerica, whose many benefits they enjoy. 16 Afghans last year and executed since Europe 'and Japan are so If there is one thing that recent them. They have also reportedly dependent on Mideast oilI that a history shows us, it is that'ap- been using chemical warfare cut-off would cause econormic col- peasement is not a practical agents. When and where do we lapse and political upheav;al. This policy, that isolationism is not a "draw the line," so to speak? As would seriously disrulpt the practical policy, and that aggres- Henry Kissinger said recently, if delicate balance of poweer.. that sion unopposed invites further ag- Europe had stopped Germany in keeps the world at peace. gression. War is a terrible thing, 1936 instead of in 1942 20 million The supfposed but we cannot retreat to a world lives would have been saved. If we "humanitarians" who are against of ideas. We live in a physical had waited until our territorial ins the draft seem very willing to con- world where force and violence tegrity was breached, Hitler demn millions of other people have always been used by some to would be ruling Europe today. around the world to- lifeI under coerce others. Force has never I We are not advocating going totalitarian dictatorships. Grow- been successfully opposed by out and starting a war. Quite the ing up in affluent middlle class good intention alone. Societies contrary, we feel that war can be America, they seem. unawaare that that forget the necessity of averted only if we convince the freedom is not cheap, thEat it is defending themselves soon suc- Soviets that it would be too cost- something that must be fou ght for cumb. We cannot afford to iy. Going back to a drafted army to be preserved. The self-s serving, retreat -from the world or from Rapifd unlimited advancement based on is a step toward strengthening our anti-draft movement is a tnatural our responsibilities. We must be performance, not on bureaucratic systems. deterrent. outgrowth of the tiarcissis;fic cult strong, learn from the past, and A common misconception is of the 1960's and '70's. Petrhaps it look to the future. If thats what you wont you want us. that the draft automatically leads takes personal expenence of the WYere seffing the pace for the '80s in the system Bernard Beard G to militarism and war. Europe has horrors of the communisi Hans A. von Spakovsky'81 semiconductor industry. had conscription since the end of I - -. , - . . . s World War -II; national service is a fact of life in West Germany FOR- THE BUSY EXECUTIVE We'll be on campus and Switzerland, yet they have, been at peace for thirty-five years. WE prepare tu x-returms for the bwuy executive. Thursday, March 13 At this point we would liket 11 Of our taxt-oetturns are verfled.'by computer. elucidate the real significance of For more Information, please visit your the Persian Gulf to US security Your ratw i u tomarieOalil tested for -the lowed Placement Office, or wrfto to Signetics, interests. An oil cutoff would not ta resuts by taking adirantage of income Professional Staffing, Opportunity CP, 811 just affect Americas Sunday driv- averaging and mataasmxx (if -ppl able). East Arques Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94086. ing habits. An oil cutoff would 'All that-is requurird- is that you fill out our tax Per'manent residency visa required. \We are cause brownouts, food shortages, queticnoire. fn ant equal opportunity employer m/f. increased infl-ation, and av ril. t va V :addition, you may fintd it widespread unemployment. advisible-to visitt our offce for a reviewof your- However, we believe-that the US. 1979g tIXaxithrmail tion. Adlto disuss#bxaplanning.: : ~oped Peopl Company could survive a cdutoff of Persian ta ,, John Chen pl-oneria r-eall for a free copyof our tax -rm&Za]]aii" t .-- MU.r -services are charged at an renmembe-red mlhinimum fee is $300 which aiwoLLtinC influxd~~ 'the, prooperatbon of state and federal- a ustciary of UgS BPIfiprwgoPo s To the Editor: income tax retiurr ------I must give praise. to Steve -Shirmn, Ow1IPrin, tchnedw", QL, s wrman, Solnick for the sensitivity in his ~~g~;~p~:~p~:~p~s~p`W. g2.WIWVMI8 V.10 I editorial onthe death of John C. . Accurnt Chen. On' Woil -,AvenRue I first met JohnP on a scenic NoIon Conti% , asahuew.0219 Tel. 964-MOs cruise of Boston Harbor during,_ usrka~ fto Mr. W9imint Wihbor,-,CPA Rush Week activities this year. We are the-, law at cmuntin t, k Noon. 7 \CRp\ON5 ond R Over the ensuing days and a long. walk at the beach we became friends, discussing the traumas of a freshman at MIT. He pledged Phi Delta Theta,-nly fraternity, to 151 C\l me that afternoon. -2 Over the past four months all 413a of us here became familiar with tN John's effervescent -personality, I2 his interest and ability in ab- As I solutely everything,- and his un- 01f1~- bounded energy. Slowly, quietly, co we also became aware of John's illness. When he took a turn for IO the worse inl November and was 'O admitted to Mass. General, we visited him en masse, bringing I news, and once, singing carols. It was with great sadness that LLJ II we learried of the death of this member of our family last month. ;U Lr, May this sorrow serve to re- 3 mind us of the tenuous thread pa with whcih we hold onto life.,We, live as if we will live forever; John P.,- lived as if it was-forever. L/) He will be remembered, SAI A -& P IE PT( Charles Freemnan '80 haw_,l \ _ _ % 1&I Na % i _ , ,·_-- RICO FEBRUARY 29 GIl 8 P.M. INFO: 3KATE | 3- G97g9 LAURlE x58630 AM\Y )H- 861 ,.. Advaived Scientfic. ,, Programmable FRAPlNK .- 5 720[ ar a e WESTERNo~eaeettrr~e SHATS : -

- M.I.-T. STUDENT CENTER' I:gp: 0 = ___ -- · '- II · I sr rpPaR -;---I ------i ,1L - ,I- I -,, Iz-, I II.. .- " I.- '.-- - . I-,. . - - . I ,-- 11-1 I-- -- ,- - e-~ - - .,l -- 22, 1980 _ PAGE 8 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY .. ·- · ,, ;· r7 I: . '' S -a -

r m m Jackson' concert short but Sweet The Joe- Jackson Band at the Orpheum Jackson, who by rights should still be slug- songs from his upcoming , due out porating reggae into his music from the Saturday, February 16. ging it out and building a following club sometime during the summer. Neither *"I beginning, as evidenced on "Fools In Has success spoiled Joe Jackson before gig by club gig. More importantly, though, Don't Stare" nor "Pretty Boys" were par- Love" from Look Sharp. A full plunge into he's truly achieved it? Don't misunderstand the album received the crucial radio airplay Radio," a venomous attack on all his "ex- reggae might be suicidal from the stand-' - Jackson is the consummate new wave which established his legitimacy as a new friends, ex-lovers and enemies" who once point- of fan alienation, but Jackson could performer, and he and his band were in fine wave artist. abused him but who now should feel for- well be the one to popularize that form of form on Saturday night. The sellout crowd The follow-up album, I'm the Man, has tunate that they can listen to him on the music in this country as it has been done -in at the Orpheum was looking sharp and spawned two singles with a third on the radio. The band swung right into England. looking forward to the concert. They were way. The new LP, released just before the 'Friday", a song about working-class peo- The band then launched into two songs i so psyched up for the show that they sur- end of last year, appeals even to those who pie and how they spend their paychecks, from the debut. Jackson did an- incomplete B prised the opening act, The Inmates, with find punk and new wave music an. and followed that with "Geraldine and version of ""," singinig only the enthusiastic response that they anathema. Joe Jackson could well be the John," about a "happy. loving couple... the chorus while substituting a purported deserved. There was even a live radio man who is able to bring new wave per- married of course' but not to each other." story in some Enquirer-type tabloid for the broadcast, so you can be sure everything manently into the mainstreamm.of popular The next tune, from the I'm The Man LP, verse. Although the "93 year old woman, in was done to make it a showcase perform music if he can continue to win over the as were the other three, is the forthcoming her tights... . all of it true" must be a i mance. The only failure of the concert was folkies and Springsteenites. He is certainly fascinating character, the omitted lyrics are its brevity - a mere hour, including breaks the most significant new artist of the past more humorous and make the song a more

- which left the overly anxious audience year - more consistent than labelmates entertaining number as a, whole. -"One e more than a little disappointed. The Police and more lyrically meaningful -More Time," which followed, brought the j Maybe it's just a complaint, speaking as the B-52s. entire crowd to its feet for the first time. r a consumer, that the performance should Jackson's first show in Boston, at the Some who tried to stand up and dance have been longer. Even though Jackson has Paradise last April, barely drew anybody. earlier in the show were forced back to - 5r released only two (Look Sharp, I'm Then the single came out, and suddenly he their seats by Don Law's notorious the Man) and two additional songs (on the wasn't an unknown anymore. A show was Redshirts, prompting Jackson to threaten Propaganda sampler), he has no paucity of hastily scheduled at the Berklee Perfor- to bash the next bouncer in the head with ~a, excellent material. In fact, three tunes mance Center for the very next month and his mikestand who attempted to restrain which unquestionably should have been it drew three times as many people as the anyone from dancing. The first extended done ("Look Sharp," "The Band Wore Paradise appearance. Then the first album ovation of the evening followed-this song, Blue Shirts," and current single "It's Dif- hit big, the second is hitting even bigger, but the band immediately calmed the

ferent for Girls") were left off the evening's and the size of the audience was tripled crowd down with "Amateur Hour," 'the i program entirely, while "Sunday Papers" again for last week's Orpheum concert. slowest cut from the new album.: was shortened and bastardized. The show sold out weeks in advance; there The next number started with a totally I Joe Jackson was a virtual unknown was ample demand for an added perfor- new and unfamiliar introduction, but the less than a year ago. His first single, "Is She mance. Jackson has had a history of voice crowd erupted into cheers when Jackson Really Going Out With Him,"' was problems, though, and probably wouldn't crooned the first words of "Is She Really I released in England in late 1978. Concur- have been able to take the strain of a se- Going Out With, 'imi" And croon it he i rently, two other songs which would even- cond show. He was able to do the Berklee did,-Jackson seems to-%want to carve out tually appear on his debut album were in- concert last, year (important for press -his niche as-the Frank Sinatra of the new cluded on A&M's No Wave sampler on this coverage at the time) only by cancelling the wave era. This vers-ion of "Is She Really . . - side of the Atlantic. (That album was two preceding nights and downing large ."highlighted his musical versatility. He designed as a vehicle for the Police's single quantities of liquid novacaine..His voice Joe Jackson plays tne melodica. t received classical training at anl early age "XRoxanne"; while it gave the bleached- .seemed to have been giving him difficulty Phil Kauffman) and worked at a Playboy club in England blond trio the radio exposure needed to on Saturday, which may have been a factor ticularly memorable, although that is often as-the lounge pianist in order to finance his turn that song into a hit, all the other cuts in cutting the concert short. the case with his material when presented first demo tapes. This formal musical train- on the album, including Jackson's, were ig- What Jackson and his band did perform ,With it for the first time. It takes as.ew ing is what sets Jacks-on ahead of the'rest, nored.) '*Is She Really. . .," which did not was superb. They opened with "On Your listenings to fully appreciate the lyrical and since he is rnord'-capdble-'Ofi`talizing his sell well o)n Jackson's homne turf, was single. "Kinda Cute" is a lyrical departure musical complexity of his work, and hear- ideas to their fullest potential. His facility released in the States in spring 1979, even- for Jackson - he already has the girl of his ing something for the first time in concert is for melody and hooks is uncanny, and as a tually peaking on the charts at about dreams instead of merely coveting someone not usually conducive to full comprehen- -resu~lt every song he writes is -noteworthy. number twenty by the end of the summer. else's. True to form, though, he won't sion. Rumors that the new record will be Jackson closed the set with two numbers Lookc Sharp was issued on the heels of the dance with her for fear of "making a fool more reggae-oriented were at least partially ,fromn IM the: Man;'is Don't Want-To Be single, and it too reached up into the of myself again." borne out by the extendedjam at the end of Like That,"'-which deals with his repudia- charts. This sudden success surprised even Jackson then performed two new "Pretty Boys." Jackson has been incor- ( Pleaseturn to page 9 ' I

-I-- MIT

-I Chamber Kw Players

0

February 23, 1980 8pm Room 10-250 free Ienter at 77 Mass. Ave.

Beethoven Trio in B-flat Major Strauss Emperor Waltz Weill "Frauentanz" ;1 (Boston premiere) Faure Piano Quartet No. It

+*#**+.+.*+****+**+***.+*:*~(~)~·!

L _ . _ __ _ _ it6 I ,

-- .- " -,-I - ., , ". r, >·it ·tr : :.,· "''": ; · ··- ···· I: · ? "·,' : : "' '' , c· ... - ow' ,,FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1980 TH9 TECH PAGE 9 '` '"P·:;r'-;F;:::;;u;-n i'-"XPi;:T;;lljr,*I ; :L::_;-: ;-;-i _r:);?yl-;:ir I;-:.UR:;i;i;-----?l;i·7;-----

ARTS Joe Jackson -is king of the new wave hill (Continuedfrom page 8.j monica, and melodica on some numbers, tion of the stardom syndrome, brought the but his support is what makes the tunes I entire house-to its feet to stay. IHe has jump both live and on vinyl. The arrange- stated time and again that he wants,to re- ments and production of the albums utilize main true to the principles he held when he the same basic sound as that which comes started his career, although he admits that across d uring the performance - it is 6ecoming more difficult as his pop- minimalistic and no-nonsense. The band is ularity continues to grow. The last song tight, as should be expected of an ensemble befoi the band left the stage was the title which has been playing together for two track of the LP. "'sIm The Manse describes years, but each individual has attained a the "ultimate spiv," the man who can sell high level of proficiency on his instrument. anything to-anybody at anytime; it's also Joe Jackson's show, the first major con' the fastest cut on . the record. Jackson cert of the Eighties to hit Boston, was ab- acknowledged his reggae influences by solutely stunning but inexcusably short. cove-ring Jimmy Cliff's "The Harder They Perhaps Jackson's voice was bothering Come" as an encore, and finished for the him, forcing him toe cut the performance evening with a breakneck-paced "Got The short so as to avoid permanent damage and Time" from Look Sharp. The audience was a terminal case of Ste~ve Tyleritis. If this hoping for another song or two, but the was the caise, he should have, mentioned band didn't return. The crowd refused to that he would be unable to perform to his leave, screaming in vain for Jackson to utmost capability. come back for one last number, and even.. Hopefully, Jackson will return to town tually had to be asked to disperse by the soon and make up. for the brevity of the bouncers. show this time out. The Union Jack In concert they are billed as The Joe suspended behind the band during theiri Jackson Band, and it would be unfair not performance turned out to be only a black to mention one of rock music's best group and white -replica when the lights were of supporting players. The band is a power turned on, ironically symbolizing how trio with Gary Sanford on lead guitar, many in the audience must have felt as they Graham Maby on bass and occasional se- filed out of the theater and into the snowy cond lead, and percussionist Dave streets. Houghton. Jackson adds keyboards, -hare, Drew BzeX - · -- II -- - Canpu Iwrviews TI Gentral Reosearch I I Laborto 0es o)"Bt l - ~~~What Y~ou Need I 1%I You should have an IMS or Chemistry Materials Science I 0 PhD degree in one of the Computer Science Chemical Engineerng $am* following: Electrical Engineering Physics UNDERWEAR What We Do . Tl'n-lve Cenrnal Research Laboratorie ensure the timely availability of techno~les requiredby present and future business opportunities. . This involves (1 ) diwoveing,, identifying.and evaluating new scientific phenomena likely to generate inventions and new products, and (2) deermnining and-developing the technolo- gies-required for new business opportunities. The five faclif s inchde: The Materials Sciece Laboratory The Computer Scince Laoratory The Systers Components Laboratory The VLSI LaWo a-oiy The Interface Technology Laboratory

Areas of Activity

Materials Preparation/ Semiconductor Logic X-ray Lithography Crystal Growth and Memory Devices Plasma Processing, I Materals Characterization liquid Crystal and including: Component Development, Electrochromic ' Chemical Vapor including: Displays Deposition Charge Coupled Microwave Devices lon-implantation Devices Process Development, Systems Development Magnetic Bubbles including: Computer Systems Surfac Acoustic VWave Electron Beam Speech Systems - Devices Patterning Memory Systems IInfrared-Sensors

BV/D underwear you can. depend on for - -~-Live in Dallas quality, long lasting fit and comfort. Shirts and briefs in soft combed cotton knit, Enjoy the facilities afforded by the country's 8th largest city, including 20 colleges and an boxer shorts in permanent press blnd of abundance of entertainment. At the same time, take advantage of Dallas' low cost of living 50% cotton 50% polyestsr that requires and no state income ta.- little or no ironing Tee Shirts pkg. of 3 7.50 C:AMIIPUS INTERVIEWS Crew or V/-neck. Sizes SAL, XL. March 6 Briefs Pkg. of 3 6.00 If unable to interview at this time, send your resume in confidence to: Heleln Meltzer/P. C). Box 225474, M.S. 217/Dallas, TX 75265. Sizes 28 - 44. Athletic Shirts pkg. of 3-S"25 0 Sizes SML, XL. Boxer Shorts pkg. of 3 9.00 Sizes 28 - 44A TEXAS INSTRUIMENTS I NCORPORATED M.I.TO STUDENT CENTER I An equal opportunity employer II/F -. I · II -- I _, ·- II C L -~~·.llb~ iMd I -. - -- - .- - --. - - -- .- - - - I r.- :-· ··· LntUI ffp anl 489af '" fi ' ·, "

_I r PAGE 10 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980

1 _-I I -- L -11·IL LIJISI --- I - II · II- - -II I I I I IIl-L Illb-se- LC

Harbison's FullMoon in MarchI: intimateeop-era If- will be free and obtainable in ad- M Overheard, back neck right opera than from the regular ritual on April 19 at Jordon Hall, both tion, -with the original music of vance from the M-IT Music Sec- m while awaiting the start of a of problem sets, his first words at 8:30pm, the Boston Camerata Jean-Baptistg Lully. Tickets are buses 0 were: "I love opera." He con- tion, room 14N-434. Free $2. chamber production of The will leave McCormick Hall at will present The Pleasuresof Ver- $7, $5 and (at the door only) Barber of Seville: "Well dear, we tinued, "This opera is only being sailles. The second half of the Call 735-5009 for information. 8pm and return after the concert. booked for Tosca at the Garden given once this year, and they can program will include Moliere's And don't ever say opera's only Be sure to go. simply months in advance. And, do a problem set every night. And farce L'Amour Medecin (Doctor for the rich again! On February 21, 22, 23, and 28 sitting in best Orchestra Stalls besides, it's sex and violence and Cupid) in a new English transla- Jonathan Richmond and March I at 8pm, and on Feb. seats half-way through the first there seems to be a market for 24 at 3pm, North House Music Act, I noticed that Henry had fal- these things nowadays." Society will perform Mozart's len asleep. Well my dear, ye!u Sex and violence indeed it is, Cosi fan Tutte with a cast of know what the prices are like at expressed through lyricism professional singers. Mozart's I ,. 1t-M 1.1Is Garden nowadays. So I though it may be. There are two Covent human opera, Cosi can be he woke up in main characters: Queen and most ing, Luna Mon'. Mardi 17 at The nudged Henry, but for some an education in life, for a grumpy mood,-saying: "I have Swineheard. The former is 'IAUSIC ' Orpheum. others an evening of absorption in Mission of Burma and Ground of a hotel room for tempted by the latter, but finding Madness Sun. at The Paradise. paid the price the most heavenly music'ever Zero Fri. and Sat. at Cantone's. this seat, and I intend to use it as the paysan in him too crude, has Root Boy Slim Mon. Feb. 25 at written, and for still others an Andy Mendelson Band, if it was one." him beheaded, and does a wild The Hits, The Paradise. entertaining comic spree; at its and Shade Fri.'at The Rat. This possibly apocryphal story dance with the separated best it is all three, but much de- Maps and Peter Dayton Fri. at illustrates a central problem of cranium, the head meanwhile pends on the nature of the The Underground. Id MOV)IES-"~ opera: it is perceived as being ex- singing a morbid nursery rhyme. audience as well as of the per- Unnatural Axe, Lap-este, and- This week's LSC lineup: special and elitist D'Anna Fortunato is to sing The pensive, a rather formers and Director. It is to be Shrapnel Sat. and Sun. at The Taxi Driver Fri. at 7 & 10 in 26- activity; nectar that ordinary in- Queen, David Arnold The performed at the Agassiz Theatre, Rat. 100. dividuals can not enjoy. But Swineheard, Richard Pittman and tickets-priced $2 to students, Peter Dayton and Scientific Arsenic and Old Lace (classic) Fri. top prices at the major conducting the Boston Musica although $4 otherwise, are available from Americans - Sat. at The at 7:30 & 10 in 54-100. inflated, Viva. Also to be performed- houses are inevitable the Harvard Holyoke Ticket Underground, Young Frankenstein Sat. at 7 & 10 usually a good range, with and staged - will be Stravinsy's there is Unit. Iggy Pop and Nervous Eaters Fri. in 26-100. room at the bottom for the smal- Soldier's Tale. Now, you can't get As if this were not enough, on i March 7 at The Orp'heurn. Citizen Kane Sun. at 6:,30 & 9:30 ler pocket. cheaper than this because tickets April 16 at Sanders Theatre and I Boomtownl Rats, Private Lightll- in 26-100. there are also considerable And _ ------"--- .-1 chamber performances around that are not only invariable low- priced, but often afford a per- I sonal touch and ability for more direct communication with the audience than is possible in the grand arena. There may not be elaborate sets, amazing effects or the greatest singers beating their hearts out, but the close, intimate environment can often make up for this and create an evening ranging from the highly charged and emotional to the charming Hil and amusing. m And what better example of the m former type than John Harbison's 2 u Full Moon in March to be per- Er formed ' s part of the annual m Abramowitz Memorial Concert, February 28, at 8:30pm in John Hancock Hall. Harbison had a passion for opera at a tender age, experiencing early on in his life the delights of a night at Grand Central Station as a sacrifice for having remained for the hypnotic conclusion of Tristan at the Met. Full moon in March is Har- bison's second opera, completed in 1977 and premiered last year by There's a big difference. The MITR>E Cor- information systems; information manage- the Boston Musica Viva. Andrew poration has two major locations, with 11 ment and communications systems; ground Porter, though finding it hard to technical divisions and 63 departments. Our transportation and more. Much more. draw parallels, compared Har- 1573 members of the technical staff provide At either location, opportunities constantly bison's music to that of systems solutions to Federal, state, regional arise to challenge -your intelligence, your Stravinsky, Szymanovski and and local governmental agencies. There's plen- knowledge, -your motivation. In search of Britten, though rather than ty of opportunity to grow in responsibility. solutions, MIITRE people use the tools of finding it eclectic, he felt "it does Many companies offer you a job which can systems engineering and analysis. If this type sound personal," saying of the broaden your career. But when the challenge of atmosphere intrigues you and if you have composer's works that they is, gone, most professionals seek a new com- a degree (or are about to receive one) in elec- "enshrine poetic vision in precise, pany with a new job and a new challenge. At trical engineering, computer science, math, lyrical, and beautifully wrought MITRE we recognize this need for new chal- physics, or economics, we'd like to know music." lenges and new opportunities. With dozens more about you. See your Placement Office Inquiring of Professor IHar- of sponsors and scores of projects in a wide to set up an on-campus interview, or send bison why MIT students would variety of technologies we offer the oppor- your resume directly to: gain more from a night at his tunity toQ CHANGE JOBS WITHOUT CHANGING COMPANIES. The direction Jerome P. McKinnon p· of your career at MITRE is up to you. We'll P T'he MnTW Corporation WESTERN help you stay on track through our staff Bedford, MA 01730 BOOTS I' development programs. We offer 100% tuition FRYE il,, Ronald S. Hill ACME 1 Idt" %L prepayment and company paid professional DINGO TONY LAMA growth seminars. Washington Center TEXAS JUTN At our facility in Bedford, Massachusetts The MlnlWE-Corporation DAN POST (just outside Boston), we're looking at all 1820 Dolley Madison Blvd. DURANGO kinds of command, control and communica- McLean, VA 22102 I' tions prohlems as technical advisor to the Air stal fin Force's Electronic Svstems Division. at i(.9,5 4 h .'a MITRE will be at 292 Boylston St., Boston At our McLean, Virginia facility (Just out- side Washington, D.C.), we're not only work- MAIT P -I --- -L ing on defense and ynilitarv svstems but also L-- __ --- I on significent problems in air traffic control; on February 25, 1980 energ! resources and the environment; civil , _ , , '' nY - U.S. BOOK IM PRINT ORDERED BY TELEPHONE DELIVERED DIRECTLY TO YOUR THE HOME OR OFFICE ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED OUR OTH YEAR WORLD WIDE h/l ITRE "-8060/7ADV-24HO wUR

COOPERATIVE BOOK SERVICE OF AMERICA, INTERNATIONAL ITtllRE is an,c.,.llo>/>oztffffzit! culndelo!ers .lstillv scki> .Ipt~li;tiotrs lrtitr its .Affirmalti'zV Action P'rogram. Reading. Massachusetts 01867 U S A i I I I - I - . I IFRIDAY- FEBRUARY 22. 1980 THE TECH PAGE 11

·-:·- :.. "",=1:'7,L·F,'9' '1:···' -;.6.L-':Y=rr.:-:'·L.j·· Iii: ·"· .L

ARTS

I. Jupiter out oI th s world When[ playing the music of Mozart, And so the 39th Symphony gave tbegan, it seemed to sound thin. But by the sroads, included performances by Jeffrey technical proficiency is naAt enough. pleasure - but not rapture. The 40th was aallegro assai, the truth and honesty of the Gall, counter-tenor, marked by its pure, admirably accurate, but did not give rise to ssound had banished such ideas from the clean unstrained fluidity, and by Susan Mozart is one of the few coimposers for deep inner thoughts, did not transmit sor- fmind. And all the more did this come Larson in sweet and lyrical vein, Daniel whom the wholejust had to be,-greater that row 'or uplift- the- soul. What -was wrong? aacross in-the Orchestral Suite number 3. Stepner weaving in and out with his the sum of the parts. M-ozart-ga Ive ha~s mupsic enchanted violin (a baroque violin - all have made a magic completeness; he aimeid notijust at Maybe it was that this-was the fifth perfor- So many-past performances the instruments were originals). Ray deVoll syrupy and rich, refining all the the ear, but also at the'soul. H-is is not mancemhe of this program iri-a week; maybe it tthis work sounded a note of urgency, accompanied nutrients out of it; modem instruments in unshielded sensuality of Straluss, not the was the hard acoustics of Symphony Hall. X by the delightful baroque oboe d'amore manner ganging up to produce impossible strutggle.of Beethovten. fHis;is the - -But then something happened. For after inordinate playing of Kenneth Roth, and Dennis an unthinking bowdlerization. But Boyer (who is also responsible for produc- invisible cord, the valve that interval, Mozart's 41st Symphory, the lets flow em- ~ the Banchetto's ensemble was in perfect ing the most intelligent classical music fortless joy, effortless grief. "Jupiter", was given, and it was glorious. b balance; the famous misnomer of an "Air program in New England, for WBUR) Real body at last; both the outer man and ,nn a A. Rtrina" roams nver with effortlesCC as- #US_ f- - A - #h. +|>vss But where was this vital umbilical for the stidgIIVyrn OH d U aL1111r, Lrfind VVVa WPLIIII cleanly crew tne piece to a close: wltn tnet first, half of'.,the Boston Symphony the Iuinner;dfresh bunst rened string playinga serenity, Daniel Stepner excelling on the chorus in good form, if a trifle muffled at Orchestra's all-Mozart concert under Kurt ofresist and giv joye violin with a virtuosity that avoided preten- times. Martin Perlman, director, played the - tiousness. The Gavottes leaped into life, harpsichord for the whole concert with Masur? Nota note was 1Wasur?playedoutplayedNot outtha note ofplace, was Giue as acarfre frlic an th timing was sure enough, there was elegance t * * * the Gigue was a carefree frolic and the adeptness and control. Banchetto's next whole appeared in a fresh light: Bach concert is on March 28, and will consist of in the violins, beauty in theflute; but a~s a Wa ots og nx d e rebosrn. the Boston premiere of Telemaann's St. whole, the impression -was of a-perfectly What a contrast to-go next and hear calibrated machine, an artificial pump of Banchetto Muscale's- all-Bach concert at Luke Passion of 1744. sonorities rather than the mysterious cur- Jordan Hall. At first, when the Concerto in * * * $ rents of the mortal human-.heart. F for harpsichord and vtwo recorders The last piece, Hercules at the Cros- Jonathan Richmond

I

i 60iE4C _ owtm. laaoa*rur kridrr I , l '~~c-,GY~-·i ac b',c^C.h8 '`*'r'· -II - 1-- V 4t-, - a --': _ - ~ " ; f"· :· ..t'.··:'· '" t-, :s . I Y. - _ PAGE 12 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980 r - c -. ,> - :|_ .- ·, i · . -I ' - - . ,, . Y - I - " ; F. . I

I - - I I . _ I , _ s _ _ _ I some phase of federal activity Students are needed to help in after graduation. Students must The Black Rose Lectures will pre- The campaign for safe-energy will related to their individual career tabulating Course Evaluation submit a written proposal outlin- sent Elizabeth Henderson, speak- host a benefit concert-on Sat., fields. About two-thirds.of these Guide results. Pay is $3.10/hr. ing plans for a summer project, ing on 'Art and Revolution," at Feb. 23rd, at 7pm. Featured will summer intern positions will be Extremely flexible hours. Evening including an indication of how MIT in 9-150 tonight at 8pm. Ad- beJohn Halnd the Pousette-Dart located in the Washington, DC -7 hours available. Call 253-2696 the project will contribute to mission is free. band with a special solo perfor- metropolitan area, and the and leave your name and number. his/her educational objectives, The talk will explore the mance by Arlo Guthrie. The con- remaieder distributed throughout- Also, freshmen who have called how the project will be carried relationship of art and revolution cert will be teld in Concord, NH, the country. weekly salaries range previously should call again to out, the support available, and a by examining the role of the arts at the Alosa Civic Center. Tickets from $193.20 to $3.96.40 reaffirm their available status. budget. Letters of recommenda- -- in the Russian Revolution. For are $7.5Qin advance and $8.50 the depending upon the-grade level of ii.L· tion should be included. * * * * further info, call 492-6259. day of the concert. For-informa- the position offered. Proposals for the summer of 1980 tion about the concert, call 617- The MIT Office. of Career Plann- The office of the Provost is spon- should be submitted before 423-1901. ing and Placement elcourages in- soring applicants for the New March 24, 1980, to Ms. Norma terested students'-wMo will have York City Urban Fellows McGavern, UROP Office. completed their~ sophomore year - Program. Qualified seniors and A limited number of summer -by June 1980 and' who are US graduate students may apply for research fellowships for MIT un- -citizens to take advantage of this an internship for a full academic dergraduates will be awarded this Noam Chomsky will lecture on has been invited to nominate opportunity. For further informa- year which carries with it a $4,800 spring under the Eloranta Fel- "The US and the Third World in M IT for summer intern posi- tion and applications, see Tricia stipend with an additional $500 lowship Program, intended to sup- the Post-Vietnam Era" Wed., students in the Federal Summer ,Murphy at 12-170 between the awarded by MIT. Any academic port summer research or study Feb. 27, at 8pm. Tickets are tions Program. hours of 9am and 3pm. Applica- credit must be arranged separate- projects and associated travel. available for $3 from Ticketron Intern Summer Intern be submitted to the ly. Application forms in 4-246. Any MIT undergraduate may ap- and Brandeis University Student The Federal tions must was developed to give Placement Office by . Feb. 29, For more info, call D~r. Louis Me- ply, including seniors whose sum- Service Bureau. For more info, Program in projects would actually occur call 647-2169 students practical experience 1980. , nand, x3'7752. mer _ - L -LI - I -- -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _ .~~~~~~~ . M IT Drive a National car ba hie slopes and CONCERT BAND youll~llpte*e sloe Tour Finale for&%40 **te pried-. a- Z Sunday February 24, 1980 2pm A\ First, National helps you get to he-.slopes. Just rent one ofour ski -specials,and you get a Walker Memorial Chevrolet Chevette'or similar sized car for only 14.95 a day with free mileage.You just pay or gas. Arthur Htu & Sammy Song £31 Then, National helps you get up the sloes. just ask our counter agent and youwllget 1/2 Violins priced ski lift tickets that aregood at Waterville VAlley, Mt. Cranmnore, Sugarloqf, Loon Mt.-or John Corley C-onductor J4 Blue Hills. And they're good _until the end of the season. * Admission Free Aw Youlcan get u r-i 6 fur half ~~i~' I . _. -- 'L "- priced ski lift tickets with each rentda Offer isavailablelhursday throughi Mondayand only q_ ij at these ~otations: 1651 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge_ i · i (at Holidy l-nrw)661-747, 1;8Iartuth'St.;Arwaat Me l ., Vhlitho(Ix k Uavt Copley Plaza) 426-630. - - ii Ie Rates are non-discountable. Car' must be returmed to renting location. We offer S&H Green Stamp Certificates ona rentals in al 50 US. states. $14.95 a day no milfie chub I requirements apply. we' Computerized Certain minimum daily San Francisco Bay Area Computer and ·s - C--LC· I U I _IILIII J _; - Telephone Equipment Manufacturer. seeks talented __II - rrl =- Is_;= individuals interested in: e Telephony • Microprocessor AppOications * Digital and Analog Design, A COMPcANYt * CPU and Memory Design T Ml • Real'Time Systems Softwar CALLED • Data Communications Software WILL #11 a System Programming Languages • Hardware/Software Interfacing ON CAMPUS c Test Engineering 29 * Production Engineering FEB* 25 96, 28. @Field Engineering TONTEINIEW

ROLM Corporation, located in Santa Clara, GRADUATS' N California, has grown 50 - 100% each year and currently has 2600 employees. ROLM's Teie- SCIENTIFIC AND communications Division is the leading indepen- T001INI L dent supplier of computerized PBX's (CBX) and microprocessor controlled telephones. ROLM's 'DISCIPLINES Mil Spec Computer Division offers a complete line of rugged general purpose minicomputers. Included in ROLM's outstanding benefits -CONTACT THE package is a three month paid sabbatical after six years (and every seven years thereafter). PLAEMENT Comnpany paid tuition and time of f for G:raduate Study at Stanford, and flexible working hours. OFFICE TO SCHEDULE YOUIR APPOINTMENT* r n Campus Interviews, Monday, March 3, 1980 IF UNABLE i ) Most with Working Hlardware and Software Engineers TO MEEXT from ROLM in the Placement Center. Soo ourCompany t~~~ the Placement Center. rL~erain WITH US, f I SEND YOUR It unable to attend an interview, Gibs'on Anderson send resume to: Engineering Group Manager RNSUMK 'TO* ROLM Corporation 4900 Old Ironsld~s Drive Santa Clara, CAb 95050 DEFENSE AND SPACE SYSTEM GROUP We are an equal oppor tunitylaffirmati-v action employer. College Reations AEducational PraograrAS Dept. IIIT2/80,RS/819tS COPOATO One Space Park Redondo Beach, California 90278

------j L ------I I LI I- - ·_ __ _ ·

I ,,, ll L->lL` Gus '. ,1 I , ,; agi~~ziR'7^, J*bauron ·r; .r·· .··.- r.· ,· -.

"i' I f

·' ; :· RC · ·, ·-- ··· *.C1· ·- ,rC'.;Zfi'f'. .14.i' :i---IQ IFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1980 THE TECH PAGE 13 _

Anti-draft -,rally Photos by Kevin Osborn PI.

at as PAGE 14 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 19801 -. -,, . II

ZBT raises over $12K in telethon I _ _I L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-rJ·IL~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

(C(onfinuedfiom page 3) un-American." Callers say older resident, are also participating in ~T TheCanfttcsShtnbr%- alumni tend to be much more the telethon. Graduate alumni why they |JohnFn Music Director &Cm(ebin take their name off the list. pleasant to talk to, whether they sometimes wonder MIT and not he:iJesu-melne Freude They're very eager to get off the give or not. Many say they also should donate to the Song of Sollomonl list." attended other colleges, as many just their undergraduate alma |Pa~letinw.Settingsof mater. "We try to impress upon Not everyone called donates, of as four, and that MIT is low on TOlrM: Spem In:Allum them the importance MIT may Wed. Feb. 2?, 1980, at 8O P..M. course. Many cite hard times, their list. Others say they've lost have had on their lives" said St. Paul Church, Cw hddge their own kids in college, or say touch with MIT, and callers say Hambleton. tkk*OtIwvln.m". . they're between jobs. Very few it's interesting to compare MIT There will be a special shift next atd ox Tcket Boothin bel~ad lnbaI ptby Ohe mention inflation as a reason for today with the memories of r~li~k-""OWIlH40r the Tuesday for graduate students,- not giving, however. alumni. TbCmntdWShqwl6x3% and there are still time shifts .wnbfd~a. mom am SWOWrdismots#1 at #w door One young alumnus asked if Some of the alumni were "- . (GII)M?410 -1J available for anyone wishing to MIT had forgotten the $20,000 he graduate students at MIT, and ----'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-l--r r ---- PI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~-l-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ participate. had paid in tuition. Another graduate students such as Tom

Hall graduate - - ^ P refused because, he said, "MIT is Smith, Random I '- I- ~-- F 9 Full'time or PimEt- M IT sgri ers explore MIBTA a pair of of a pre-nuclear age. Posititon Available By Jonathan Richmond lating mooment of it. Past worries stems ap- Just suppose you were to have a metal Igates, light dimmed Maverick station Research -Technician The dust- named; streams of night off. What more romantic es- veritably into Hades. propriately a particular pi- water trickle down the platform, a Creative, Research technician with engineering, background for capade to undertake than to polluted air added seeks relief, and MIT spend the evening in the unused quancy tto the atmosphere. drunkard challenging research and development program using X-ray- r're reinstituting service to avoid the tunnels of the ghost Green Line? "They students quick-step signs; sources and detectors for. advanced 'medical instrumentation. This subterranean expedition, now. yiyelled a voice, but the torrents. Disused platform out of the of geriatric the brainchild of veteran voice eclhaed its way nearby, a graveyard Laboratory equipment includes'high voltage generators, X-ray .4gricers" Erik Mueller '8l and envelope: of dark without reply condemned subway seats. Back "T", ideas detectors and electronics and vacuum systems. Machine shop and Joe Pingree '81, was also the fan- from an LRV of the imagination. on board the friendly world tasv realized by the other 13 MUIT A smallI underground clearing of trips to subways of the electrical assembly skills required. fell be the setting for a are discussed. A knowing face students in the group. Com- could wc Our laboratory is a five minute walk from Kendall Square. menting on their expectations for Hitchco ck movie, hanging sets of corrects the inexperienced that Location: Eliekl, l the trip, one bold venturer deter- lonely ligght bulbs sucking the cur- youngsters upon hearing minedly stated, "We're going to rent frorm overhead wire like in- Paris is a favorite: "'You don't ter- 143 Sinney Street take over the world." "Don't verted ainti-bats; neglected, sad, need Paris; believe me, it's go back Cambridge, MA 02142 forget the treasures and and wailiting for prey. Discarded rible." '*I'm just going to in- Contact: Dr. Rober Sohval or Dar. David Heam cadavers," added another survival I crackers lie scattered and get some sleep," declared Seagull. authority on the art of gricing. around,ssymptoms perhaps of the itiate Ken "Gricer" is a term of abuse used by British Rail employees to describe the hordes of spotty- nosed **enthusiasts" who litter station platforms taking engine numbers and countless photos of shining (or not so shiny) equip- ment. Grice is an Old English term for pigs. Down a dark tunnel the crew tramped, soaking up every scintil-

i

For rent. 8rookline. gorgeous townhouse, available 3/1/80. 4 Bedroom, wall-to-wall, central air, 7 Fireplaces, Skylight. Beautiful furniture, All amenities, Parking. $1000 per month. Dr. Gorshein: 738-6724 (Eve.), 732-4855 (Days)

Overseas jobs - Summer/year round. Europe. S.America. Australia. Asia. etc. All fields. $500-$1,200 monthly. Ex- penses paid. Sightseeing. Free info - Write IFC. Box 52-63. Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.

Co-ownergs). Professional couple seeks co-ownerfs) for lovely 16-room 1855 home in Newton Centre. Near lake, IVTA, school. park. Box 62. Newton Highlands, MA 02161

1955 PORSCHE SPEEDSTER Exc. road condition, 66.000 km Yel body/bIk int/chome wheels/ski rack 160ON engine 31 mpg Peter Seterian, 7 Emily St..lCamb. 02139, 876-3892 dur- ing work hours.

For sale: Dining room set from 1920's. Excellent condition. Includes table and chairs. china cabinet. buffet, server. Ask- ing $1500. Call Susan 732-1171 (days); 254-4939 (eves.)

PROFESSIONAL TECH TYPIST: 24 yrs. exp. on IBM Selectric 11 correcting typewriter, pica or elite - theses, manuscripts, tech, reports, proposals, equations, tables, math. symbols, Greek .4 Iletters. Fast service. Call 489-1586 after 4:00 pm.

Home typing service. IBM Correcting Selectric. Fast and accurate. Crhoice of type styles. Just off Mass. Ave., 20 min. walk. Few stops on audrey bus. Kathy, 16 Clearway St., Boston. 287-5976 weekdays after 1 pm. Also evenings and Saturdays. a. 4

I: Translaton Needed to translate technical documents into French, German, Italian, portuguese, Spanish/ etc. Please call 944-8488 or write- P.O. Box 450, Reading, MA 01867.

.i... . .... ..-. r· ·--· ··- ··· i-- --- ··--- --·--- '- _ L3S3Dtd H331 3H1 086L FZZ Auvnim3J 'AkVaI3b1 '' ' '` -r '-= -· .e: ·.- r*-`·: :-'·I·'- ^1:-.-· '-.*··'--.. · ·il:·'"L`·l`----;;x ';--'-'-;

· -· -

-·· IR UUnWCO )I· '-I --· Sz Si* A ** ,.eLt' -oJ - I",,: J "I,e 1 -,_,>I "_z . upt 1 - _..e ,,_ a__'o . M m1 '.

I _~ -PAGE 16 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980" - Po -r · r rr · I I I e. I - _ I · I.

Put your Blood into Circulation TCA-RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE MARCH 5-14 i Evening and weekend hours available. For info, call x3-7911:

-This space. donated by The Tech.

- -_ -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ INTERNSHIPS IN LON-DON Summer and Fall Semester,1980-

POLITICS-House of Commons, Lords & Pressure Groups FINE ARTS-Major London Museums SCIENCE-Research Labs. of Teaching Hospitals LAW-C:rimnnal Law Firms EDUCATBION-Admian. & Teaching BUSINESS-Advertising, Travel, accounting, Retail TOWN PLANNIN;G-Depts. in London Boroughs Full academic credit available May 19th 1980 for 10 weeks: $1,300 (Board, I lodging, tuition). Sept 10th 1980 for14 weeks: from $2,300 {board, lodging,--tuition).- Contact- EPA, Marymount 6College, Tasrrytown, Paul Gray '54 talks with students at Thursday's GA meeting. (Photo by Jim Oker '81) N.Y. 1591

II - __,__ ee_ I I _ eL - _ I L, s I: - Phone: (914) 631-3200-- _ ___ I -- I I ·- ·I f, _ __ I- __ _s ---- -s -- I-L·--- Commons GA topic I(ContinuedJront page 2) ibility" in the new program, ef- forts were made to understand student perspectives and these NOW THAT j considered and incorporated in E e the proposed plan. YOUV -GOT i ( Gray also disagreed with a re- cent Tech editorial, noting "forced Commons is not what is WHAT IT intended... it is just not r physically possible." TAKES ! 9 O Later, fielding questions from E the audience, Gray could not es- a cost of the E timiate the increase in Creative solutions to complex technological problems c new system, though there would have earned our company a solid reputation for overall B be an added cost for enforcing the excellence. We believe-that new and recent graduates B ' no-cooking" rules. In response can provide valuable insight and technical vitality in an s to a query concerning the quality environment which encourages professional growth e of food, Gray remarked that "it and respects individual contributions. e should get better." We welcome candidates with BS or MS degrees in Aflter Dr. Gray's presenta- Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, Physics, tion, a -resolution that the GA Math, or Mechanical Engineering to investigate oppor- continue to oppose mandatory tunities at Sanders in the following areas: Commons was passed. In addi- tion, ; motion to keep a GA SOFTWARE DEVELOPIMENT: Graphic displays; infor- represent-ative on the Campus mation processing; signal analysis; minicomputer Dining advisory board was pas- applications; data base; simulations; real-time sed, though a motion that the GA applications. use all legal nmeans to obstruct the CIRCUIT &, SYSTEMS DESIGN ENGINEERS: Auto- passage of the dining plan failed matic test equipment; receiver and R.F. systems to pass. Sanders Associates, Inc., is an international leader in technology; electronic countermeasures; signal pro- the design and development of Advanced Technology ,cessing,systems for real-time control; microprocessors electronic and electromechanical systems and prm and bit slice computers; graphic displays systems; ducts. Our success in providing innovative systems to antenna design; radar systems. meet widely varying defense and commercial needs Cornve oin us on the forefront of technology and make has been proven over a quarter of a century. the most of what you've got. MASS Today, annual sales exceed $168 million with REQUIEM -employment of 4,000 in Nashua, Merdmack, and' Manchester, New-Hampshire. Our souther New John Oliver Hampshire location-with no sales or income tax- . CONDUCTOR provides us with the best of two worlds., The Campus Interviews- mountains and the ocean are close at hand, yet we Monday-February'25 -1NO are only 45 minutes from EBoston, Massachusetts. MIT Choral Societ Please contact the Placement Ma-rch 2, 1980 I Office for informationl. 3 PM,

Sacred Heart - Church _ ·61 c-Lc- 6th Stret SANDERS East INC. Cambridge ASSOC1ATES, An. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer M/F Ticketss: I

I 58 $4 52 II II I a -j · I - _ ' - '-- I s, -- --sga I P Llul-' · .1 II __ --- · -- - - - I - ---- L*-L -- ' - -- Is · · , rll - Iii _IIILL I _- I CII

, Ie I

_ · I_·-U - · 5----·

m X Ir I I . II I ae'_,~4',,,-_t.'wI< l't!_%. - ,1,; " ~,_ I":;'.- Gu...z...\- ~~n~~~",I ,,.¢,

~e~M~ 1)4 ake, Wm meA AN.-I

·mte 46e M. 0 0 i PCL C00e4·

I I I

,,., 1 Come play with~~

our toys~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

~PetC-I RT~-2 -yls IL _I C IpIL The Editor 1one of the more important and more amus- ing toys in The Tech's production shop is the The Pacesetter editor. The editor, not surprisingly, is used for The pacesetter-is basically a big editing copy. It is also used to set up ads, a. box with a bunch of neat wires labor for which prod staffers may be paidOr and 0You can do all sorts of neat stuff with the a disk that spins around, nd-a editor. One button changes lower case letters to flashing light. When you put paper upper case, another wipes out entire words, a tape in one end, "S-Paper" ready few more and you can transfer whole blocks of copy all over the place. Come by and play with it to develop into typeset copy 0 sometimes - instead of just noticing errors in comes out the other end. Magic, 'S VNIN'.124. `DM ai The Tech, you can correct themkg right? Come in and watch (and I ai i RLL ?100 11100 t1 p09 is v018 TAB 00 MEM 0 ear) it work.

I

f;

The Processor

. _ I.,

Ir, IIiiI .. O.. j .,tt I *.Ii::. A. **bee· 1:'} **0-0 lP I

s-I· *w8 'Bea

The processor processes Vwm photographic paper and turns it into hard copy. You'd never guess it from the namer-right? ~~II------iiI I'------I s --- -- ~~~~V I Also covering the light ta ble are The light table is the knives, rulers and place where th non-repro pens, the whole issue come 'tools of the trade. There's more to work- together. It's usuall Despite the chaos, covered with photo there is a method to ing on our prod staff to be cropped, as- the madness. Into sorted headlines sharp objects? Come than just toys' though (usually- too long) in some night, pick 0 Prod workers get paid for doing some and typeset articles up an exacto knife, Tech work, and are eligible to work on and help out · r-rly ~ ,r I- ar r paying non-Tech production jobs. I O Prod workers get free munchies and > The Light Table free soda as reward I - L'L- - -- r b all- al I II a for their loyalty I I and devotion. PProd workers can take advantage of what we call G&C - graft and corrup- tion. For example; vvouldn't it be nice to typeset your resume? 0 And, of course. you get to experience Stop by and see the pride that comes with looking at an issue of The Tech and knowing that you us in WI-4 83 helped to make it. happen. L ftsleiq$t uvs v Production 4 . I I -:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.-.0 I.,

-i .

L~: ~~, "Zi _

. . . I.- * - .; so, · . , .

- ":, " -,- - 1-i I I_ ·I _*'_rr., _1. 1 , rL_-*-·. .-II I·1 - C.I ( I· - · I · i: -11I 1 -- .1 1 _ - -· - : .-_ -":.- :. - -,:. I- - L"" ,- ,· ···- -j ··:·:· ·- :· ' r·. · L -- .., .II.·-.; i· ;,r . iti:-.- ; ·.. *;L d-· :,,= i;i ,. J...': .:~.. .;-.r*, c'' :,, -:-. -I' :.,', .: , :r..,.;:-,· .-·'`'j')L. I i .: '\· " '- '' 1. ·- ' ' I FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1980 THE TECH PAGE 19'

| _nots If you live or work in Cambridge March I is the deadline for pick. Graduate Students: Applications Anyone interested in entering the and -need recertification of your ing up refunds for the Sea Grant- for advanced degrees in June 1980 show will receive an entry dorm Bar-O'ndes' CPR training, come join in "Save sponsored IAP Seafood Fest, must be returned to the by writing Photo Show, Brockton a Heart Day," hosted by the originally scheduled for January 'Registrar's Office, E19-335, no Cornmunity Schoole, 43 Crescent Shoals-- I 'd- Hyatt Regency Cambridge on 17. The event was cancelled after later than today. Street, Brockton, MA 02401, or March Ist. Instructors will be on call Legal Sea Food in Cambridge * .* a * 580·7597. Deadline is March hand to give training for recer- was badly damaged-by fire. 3. M-IT -h-ockey- tification. Anyone holding a cur- Many of the 110 people who had The Brockton Community rent Basic Life Support Cer- signed up for the luncheon have School's 6th Annual Juried By Lee -Odette: Photography Show will take place Gene Youngblood will speak on Royce Barondes '81 emerged as tificate is eligible. Registration is not claimed their refunds. They between 9:30 and 2:00, with, a in the Massasoit Community Col- "The Video Revolution and the the scoring threat for MIT Satur- shoald do so as soon as possible Arts." 7pm, Film/Video Section, $1.00 charge to cover costs. For by bringing their receipts to Sea lege Fine Arts building March 14, day afternoon as the hockey team 15, and 16. E21 first floor. All welcome. defeated,-Clark 4~1_ Sarondes put more info, call Heather Ratcliff, Grant's offices in Building E38- a newly-found backhand shot, Carnbridge Red Cross, 354-7800 308. one that goes into the goal, to or Marie Mosca, American Heart good use. Association, 7384920. The MIT Lecture Series Commit- Intercity Ces The teams played to a scoreless * * tee and The Republican of I Club I I: tie in the first period as freshman MIT will sponsor a lecture by for Randy Grace, starting his first Applications for the Environmen- Republican Presidential can- . : game in goal Efcj MIT, came up tal Intern Program are available didate Benjamin Fernandez on Elderly, Children,Disabled with the big saves. The MIT of- at the Career Planning and Place- Mon.,, Feb. 25, at 8pmn in 66-1 10. ment Office', .12-1$0. fensive machine-was stuck in idle, This Mr. Fernandez, the only minority In their own homes in your commauni~ty. as has so often been -the case this program gives students an oppor- candidate on the Massachusetts season, waiting for the opposition tunity to, work- in paid internships primary ballot, is a consulting 4 to score the 'first goal. Clark with governnental agencies, non- economist and entrepreneur. The YOUJ earn extra cash. obliged at 5:31 of the second profit organizations, and cor- ,lecture is free and open to the ~poratiqns throughout the period, and then7,the line centered public. Mr. Fernandez will be YOU are part of a TEAM that gives the by Barondes took charge. country. Contact Tricia Murphy, available for questioning by the Baronodes and Harvey~ Stenger Placement Office, for more info. press following the lecture. BEST CARE. Because we are bigger and G broke on a -two-on-one at The deadlipe is March 3, 1980. better than any other Homemaker Agency center ice and Stenger wasted no in Mlassachusetts, we give YOU and the time, uncorking a slapshot at the The Shakespeare'Ensemnble has "Matheinatics save money," a people you care for the best agency support 0 ,blule line that sailed into the upper cancelled tomorrow's perfor- lecture being given by Professor corner of the net on the far side. mnance of A View from the Bridge Gian-Carlo Rota,, designe d to Intercity -because two events were a H iker QbSenke Inow On their next shift Barondes, give freshmen broader perspec- An qu8I WPegtunity emskW Stenger and Franlk Scarabino G -scheduled for 10-250 at that time. tive on tnath and its applications, forechecked relentlessly; there. All other performances will occur. on Tues., Feb. 26, at 3:30prn in Call 321408 5MS210 was a scramble in front of the net, as scheduled. 26-100. ·-- -a -1 II II Jo-sl _s _ _ c. -- ,,~-- I- --Il---r -7, I--·r and Barondes found himself out front all alone, his back to the net and the puck on' his stick. Barondes claimed his shot was a reflex action: "I saw the pileup to my right and just flipped it in un- 'der the crossbar." The goal proved to be the win- ner, but Barondes added another forbinsurance in the third period, again scoring on a backhand from the goalmouth. Al Strong '80 completed the -scoring for MIT at 18:24. The win ended a three game losing streak for MIT- rais- ing their record to 7-6 as the team moves into the final week of the season.

Friday Wrestling, New England Cham- pionships ...... at WPI Saturday Wrestling,-New England Cham- pionships ...... at W PI Indoor Track, New' England Division Ill. Meet .. at Colby Rifle, New England College League Finals ...... 8am, Men's and women's fencing at Trinity ...... Ipm Men's gymnastics vs. Boston University ... 2pm Women's gymnastics vs. Connec- ticut College...... 2pm Squash vs. Dartmouth .... 2pm Men's swimming vs. Bowdoin 2pm Women's swimming vs. Bowdoin 2pin Men's basketball vs. Connecticut College ... 3pm Wdrnen's basketball at Babson 7:30pm Sunday Rifles Nsational Association Sec- tionals ...... 8am

Women's basketball at H oly Cross ...... 6pm - " The Standard Missile-2. The most effective To learn more about the Standard Missile-2 and Naval surface-to-air missiles ever designed our other advanced high-technology programs, and only one of many on-going high- contact your Placement Office and schedule an technology programs at General Dynamics. interview appointment. Or, send your resume to: At our 15 operating divisions across the Bill Coleman country, you can apply your educational Corporate College Reastions Administrator background and.experience in Tactical GENERAL DYNAMICS COBRPO2RATION Weaponry, Shipbuilding, Aerospace, Data Pierre Laclede Center, CN 50 Products, Electron cs,Teledommunications St. Louis, MO 63105 and many other fields. An Equal poportunity Employer M/F.

I ` ' ' '

_I~- PAGE 20 THE TECH FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 19801 II I i, - 1: :r ------'' --

,,,

- - Track in Rockwell finale By Arlene A. Santos Three members of the MIT streamers and several banners for It was the final meet of the track team established new meet the last meet in the place where iii regular season, the final meet in records. Mark Taylor '82 leaped t-he Engineers have lost only five !· i Rockwell Cage, the final indoor 44' 23/4" in the triple jump. times in the last four years. Next a·B 2 meet for the senior members of Franklin Moore '82 ran the 50- year, the team will compete in the ?:"·· the team, and MIT's varsity track yard dash in 5.78 seconds, and nearby special events and indoor team emerged victorious against Paul Neves '83 clocked 2:01.8 in sports center currently under con- I

visiting Bowdoin College, 70-66, the 880-yard run. struction. "614' '' last Saturday. Head coach Gordon Kelly, in The varsity track team closed -· 9'. "' In one of the most exciting his eighth year as the varsity track its season with a 6-2 record. This meets of the year, the Engineers mentor, called the victory a "fit- Saturday, February 23rd, MIT I clinched the victory by winning ting climax." The meet meant a will compete in the New England the final event of the day. Trailing great deal to the Engineers. Not Division III Meet at Colby. 8 Bowdoin 66-65 going into the only was Bowdoin a formidable a

two-mile relay, a team of MIT opponent, but it had also defeated I runners won the decisive race Bates earlier this season, the team s oinc B that beat MIT on February 9th. a with a time of 8 minutes, 32.8 se- I conds (8:32.8), 29.6 seconds faster This made the triumph overfBow- than their opponents. doin even sweeter. "The team was Team entry cards and rosters for The excitement was there really up for this one," com- intramural volleyball are due in throughout the entire meet. In the mented Kelly. W32- 121 by 3pmn today. Late I a first field event, the 35-lb. weight This was also the final indoor entries have no guarantee of being- throw, the 1-2- finishers Joe track meet to be held at Rockwell admitted into the league. Games This Saturday marked the final track meet held in Rockwell Cage. I Carangelo '81 and Dave Kieda Cage, the home of the MIT start Sunday, March 2. Schedules a '82 recorded their personal bests tracksters since the mid-1950's. Next year's indoor track team will compete in the new events center, I will be available Tuesday morn- c· with throws of 50' 11" and 50' The bleachers were decorated ing, Feb. 26, and will be mailed currently under construction. (Photo by Shawn Wilson.) C 73/4", respectively. with royal and light blue out to team captains at that time. -KENNEDY No IM indoor track this year a a By Bob Host that he wanted to help IM been cancelled because of dit- BE A PART PART OF HISTORY Chairman Steve Aschkenase with ficulty with the floor in Rockwell Three members-at-large were intramural football policy, Cage. HELP TED KENNEDY elected to positions at a meeting specifically in reducing the Also discussed was the instal- of the Intramural Council number of injuries. He men- lation of mailboxes for athletic WIN IN NEIW HAMPSHIRE Wednesday night. The three, tioned, in response to a question chairmen in the IM Managers9 of- Mike Colucci '82, John Alam '82, from former IM Secretary Steve fice, which will allow postage Come and Paul Mahoney '81, join Guy Pettinato, that live fumbles could costs to be reduced by-$1000 a to New Hampshire Davidson '82 and Mark Krebs be investigated in order to see if year, ehough to cover the cost of Primary '83, who were elected to manage they contribute to injuries. Octathon. Such a move, which Party swimming and ultimate frisbee, would presumably make athletic Friday February 22, 1980 at 6pm respectively. The election for In other matters, IM hockey chairmen come into the IM office chess manager was tabled, while manager Ricardo Sitchin an- approximately once a week, was Kennedy for President Headquarters the election of a weightlifting nounced that because of fines seen as a way to open up com- 53 State St. Suite 845 ix s j manager was referred to the in- from roster discrepancies, which munication. IM advisor Dave Boston, MA e tramural executive committee. have been looked into more close- Michael noted that,this would put Bus will leave directly E Colucci, who served as assis- the onus of responsibility from Kennedy Head- iji ly this year than ever before, on the a r tant softball manager last year hockey will receive a substantial athletic chairmen and not on the quarters for`Weekend in Ne'tHaeffipShire- Ct i: and currently is the assistant amount of money. However, managers when entry forms and Bring warm clothes and sleeping bag. For basketball manager, stressed Oc- basketball has been scheduled roster deadlines are made public, tathon as an important issue. A "too tight" according to since the chairmen would have to further informatiomn call 617-973-4200.- possible entry fee and a new sport Aschkenase, who is also basket- get the information rather than in the competition were men- ball manager, and the squash rely on the manager mailing out (Paid for and authorized by Kennedy for President Committee.) i tioned by Colucci as important season will run into the softball such-- information._ --- ,; - -- ______developments that he was in- season. The greatest loss, terested in. Mahoney, last year's however, will be in the indoor ENCINEiSn cu ROEARCH ENGINE£= outdoor track manager, noted track competition, which has -- -I -- I -- - -- Take The Nest AWHLHUR Logical-Career Step.. mILLIJ 'I k)I

j 9 1\ I -We'll be conducting

\1jl l

[bi - N1I)6I CAIPUS l i FEBRUARY 21, 229 289 29 8:00pm Friday, February22, 1980 MARCH 1 2:30pm Bringing answers to all your questions. MIT Room 10-250 ADR ultrasound is a rapidly growing industry leader offering all the challenges, advancement opportunities and stability, ALL SEATS 3,50 necessary to sustain a rewarding career. Your future is-your most important concern. Don't take chances with it. ADR i, Students 2.50 i.- ultrasound wants to show you how a career investment in i Group rates available us will reap a rewarding future for you. For details, contact j. No February 23 performance your campus career placement office. For Reservations: ADRIFTjj~C1 Call 253-2903 2t224 S. Priest Drive. Presented by MIT Shakespeare Tempe, Arizona 85282 Ensemble Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H - L 'I- i

···--··· ·-· ·--- · · ·-· -- ·· ·-----,.·e..,. ·.. -.V·--l··rr··rr·,·-·r.r r·.· _. , .,,,,.,. ., . . , .,..... ,,, ,_._,....,......,,. , 1 ... _.. .....,,...,...... , ,.,.,. ,.r.,. ....._,,..__. ,.... .,,.-; ,.,.,,.,nr·-