S0111erville to register TCU constitution proposals students at MacPhie to he debated next week BY DA YID ARCHIBALD T ufts Somerville properties are RY PETER GALUSZKA Caucus will deliberate on the ~tudenl organization. from each Voter registration of Tufts Rush. Haskell. Hodgon. Freefe{ proposals and place them before dormitory. and from commuting Somerville residents will be held Stratton. and Tilton dormitories; Rumping down a rocky-road the general student body for vote ~tu dents. on T hursday. March 16. The Capen Hall.Richardson. Swyer. 1oward T .C .U . Constitution in referendum. 1 a Co-ordinating Committee Somerville Election Commission and Start houses; and re idences reform. a group of revision ad­ A referendum vote is required with ~ix officers and three others wll · have a van in front of Mac­ on Fraternity Row. Sawyer \'OCa les decided Wednesday of the T ufts student body before elected from minority groups. l'hie Dining Hall from IO a.m. to 4 Avenue. and Whitfield Road. night to delay concrete Con­ any new Constitution can become "What this proposal does," p.m. Road. ~titution proposals for at least a legal. Mastellone. "is end the CQncept Now that the New Hampshire Those ~tudents li ving in ,\eek. Because of this provision. of small committees searching primary is over. activity is Medford will have to go to The thirty students at the Curtis \Uldent government elections. out issues. It gives the student mounting for the April 25 Medford City Hall in Medford Hall meeting debated general usually held in mid-March. were hody representation." Massachusetts presidential Square to register. According to yuestions of Tufts government postponed at a February 27 Mastellone continued that the preferencCe primary. The deadline Assistant Professor Chick and decided that interested Caucus meeting until some time Y.S.J.P. proposal includes for registering for that election is Y.eager. who is one of those parties should return to Curtis at '1efore April 30. provisions that any elected March 25. involved in getting registrars on l) :00 p.m .. March 15. to get down representative is subject to Students coming to register campus. Medford refused to send 10 the "'g.rit work" of formulating Two Sketches "immediate recall." dormitories need to hring their Tufts I.D. card anyone to the campus. Constitution proposals. have a voice since they are "basic and a driver's license or other Medford City Clerk Joseph All written proposals are due Presented before the 30 at- \ocietal units" on ·the campus, proof of age. Those who register McGonagle said that they could'! before the T.C.U. Student Caucus 1ending Wednewday night's and the Student Union can ac­ will he eligible to vote in the April on March 20. Caucus President ·meeting were two sketchy tively " confront" the ad­ --contin11ed o,a poge 10 25 Massachusetts primary. Debbie Linfield said that the outlines with different ideas for ministration in situations "where The residency requirement for Constitution reform. Other ideas 1he administration needs to be ,·oting is six months. Any student are expected as the revision confronted." ,, ho has lived in a Somerville deadline approaches. Students present at the meeting location since September is A group from the Young digihle. Tufts campus is split 0 Socialists for Jenness and Pulley. questioned the Y .S.J .P. proposal especially in areas concerning het\\·een the communities of headed by Junior George deliherations on student finances, Medford and Sometville. Mastellone. presented a the feasihility of the role of mimeographed three-page leaflet -b calling for : dormitories in student govern­ CSL to hear 1 a Tufts Student Union with ment . and the foreseeable ""final say'' in all matters involving bulkiness of the large number of s the ~tudent community. activities representatives on the a Steering Committee with "St eering Committee." radio case e elected representatives from each -continued on page 5J The Committee on Student Life ~·esterday accepted jurisdiction r hut postponed further action on Students dispute app't the case of former WMFO disc iockey . V n1ade by poli. sci. dept. Kaufman has appealed to the Committee seeking reinstatement BY SHARON NELSON after his December dismissal by e Donald Klein, a well-known expert on Asian studies, will join the the general manager and program faculty of the Tufts Political Science Department next year. Klein will director of the FM campus radio. r be a partial replacement for Professor Betty Burch who is retiring at the end of this year. In accepting jurisdiction. the Klein was offered a position at both Stanford and Princeton but dght members present at the time turned the-m down in favor of Tufts. Due to budgetary limitations, of the vote limited future Klein has been hired half-time. Beginning in the spring semester of deliberation to the specific case sci. restructures 1973, and during the course of his three year contract, Klein will teach in question. The decisiion one undergraduate course per semester. followed discussion of what was described as a broader question Klein's background. parts of He has been a research fellow of jursidiction in all grievance foundation, curriculum which have caused considerable at numerous Asian studies c.ases involving student controversy. is as follows: Klein, centers including the Harvard organizations. BY DAVID ROSEN Colcord further commented, ~3 . received his B.A. in history 1-: ast Asian Research Center Pl ans for a major restructuring "The present arrangement results and his M.A . in Political Science t 1%5-1%7) and the Columbia Prior to the- vote, Kaufman, of the curriculum within the in a very large number of students from the University of Florida. 1-:ast Asia n Institute -·1r%"' · ·~tation manager Harry Levy, and political science department were in 1' .S.1 and 2; it is inflexible. He is presently working on his present). program director Steve recently disclosed by Professor unrelated to the interests o( Ph.D. at Columhia. He worked in A student protest directed Thibedeau recounted details of Frnak C. Cqlcord. department majors. and is based on an ar­ the Far East for nine years. For against Klein was spearheaded Kaufman's dismissal as an "on· Chairman. · The proposed bitrary judgment that com­ three years (1952-1955) he was primarily hy the more radical the-air" staff member. overhaul. which was agreed to by parative politics is a superior employed hy Air Force In­ among Tufts Political Science memhers of the political science introductory program . We telligence in Korea and Japan. majors. They had three major Kaufman . said he was fired department . still awaits the believe that the new proposal is He spent four years (1955-1959) objections to Klein's ap­ because he 1) cued records badly, consideration of the University's more in line with our major's working as a civilian with the pointment : 2J switched records badly, 3) Curriculum Committee, Policy Army studying Chinese Com­ First. they were concerned played "Fool on the Hill" -continued on page 6 and Program Committee. and the munist political affairs. about his work in Air Force dedicated to President Burton C. faculty-at-large hefore it can be Intelligence ,nnd his job as a Hallowell. 4) didn't do any work initiated. civilian working with the army. around the station. and 5) was The changes will have the Secondly. these students were obnoxious. greatest effect on the depart­ 75 debate alternative media dis.turhed hy the fact that Klein. He noted that he does have a ment's majors. The existing while he was at Columbia. did not third class license granted and cqncentration requirements. RY MARSHA BERKOWITZ School student dominated the protest the lJ niversity's ac­ required hy the Federal Com­ outlined in the University Capitalism was suggested as an audience's part of the discussion ceptance of a government grant munications Commission. In Bulletin. call for the student to ohstacle to free media at an \\'ilh attacks on the media's in­ to study the Vietnam Pacification explaining his protest. Kaufman take Political Science 2 as a informal discussion sponsored by doctrination and objectivity. problem. Klein did not par­ ,aid he thought the radio station "foundation requirement," eight the Tufts Lecture Series Monday '-ihapiro pointed out that "ob­ ticipate in the study, but his should he part of the educational additional courses within the night. The panel entitled. "The jectivity is impossible" because failure to actively oppose it was experience at Tufts. He added department. and two courses of Boston Media : Its Public he media is selling out to its labeled "a morally hankrupt that "anybody who wants to be on advanced work in related fields. Responsihility ." featured Danny ;ommercial supporters. The first position" by Martin Blatt. a .the air should be." The new plan will significantly Schecter. the "'news dissector" of f'hol'nix failed. said the ex­ · member of the Undergraduate alter the foundation WRCN : Laura Shapiro. a senior \tudent. hecause it fully exercised Program Committee of the Levy and Thibedeau main­ requirements. Rather than taking editor of the Phoenix ; Michael 1ts right of-freedom of the press. Political Science Department. tained that he missed staff Political Science 2. the student Doho. /los t on Afte r Dark ·s He finds today's Phoenix Thirdly. students stressed the meetings. didn't fit into the style will now have the option of taking photography editor; and Bill predictahle hecause it labeled imhalance of the Department. or quality set hy the station any two courses from a diverse Slater. executive producer of itself alternative media. He also \\'hich is largely male and has only management. and failed to whow list of nine "introductory" community _service programming feels that it doesn't deal with the one radical faculty member. up for work other than during his courses. That list will tentatively at WCRB-TV. They spoke with a people 'that support it. · -continued on page 10 broadcast time. include course numbers 101 , 115, crowd of less than 75 people. Attempting to justify his place The discussion of jurisdiction 121 . 131, 132. 145, and 146, in :-;checter opened the discussion in alternative news media, CUR£ THli HEALTH SERVICE concluded the meeting. Kauf­ addition to I and 2. with comments on WBCN and Schecter announced " p.re­ man's contention that he was Colcord explained that the mt!dia in general. which he censor,\hip exists" since "99 Come to .9rlpe, advl•, aad primary aim of this innovation is rap about tN tyMC0)09lat, dismissed unfairly was set aside descrihed as "commercial and percent of the country's abortions, 9cqll.. wllll salt for a tentative meeting Monday at to offer as many options as capitali stic." He said that the newspapers are owned by 'an water, confldeetlallty or ny 2 p.m. The issue of jursidiction possiihle for students planning to hope for alternative media was dfete group of snobs.' " He feels othr topic that you tllbtll tlle centered on grievance major in political science. Citing limited hy capitalism and that that the same values appear in all Healtll Servlw aoutd be coa­ 1he present foundation course celNd with. Allo•ymoas ataN- procedures available to students WHCN's staff's values differed the papers although they might be 111Nts c• be 111ade If yeu so in campus organizations. offerings. Colcord stated that, " from that of their owners. presented in different manners. clesire. Doctors, nurses, sec:re­ In the absence of other ap­ given the variety of subfields in Schecter also recognized that Scht!cter sees the ··need for the taries. 111e111ben of studnt parent grie\"ance procedures, the our discipline and the diversity of "'1 hert! is space for subversion," people who are the ohje~ts of the Haith service co111mlttee wlll interests of our students, this llte there - Collen Audit. Mar. two hlculty. one administrator, and "1he ~ociety encourages media to hecome the subjects." 13, 7:JO IIIOHay, and fin: students present voted to ,eem\ hoth insufficient and dissent." consider the individual case. inappropriate." A former Harvard Business -continued on page 9 Spring: sunshine, bird songs The making of a and the yearbook (J utnbo) cup and saucer, 1972 /,y Judy Lloyd naturedly over who gets who. ·Rivi RY MINDY ROSENTHAL "Hey. Andy. I desperately need Zweig. al try-uuts for Mrnzek's Resides warm weather. sun­ ~omeone to do a walk -on in my "Out at Sea.' .,aid she picks shine and lazy afternoons on the , h iw . How about it'!" pa\sages for reading which lihrary hill. spring also inevitably "What's in volved?" particularly reve,1 1 character and hrings another institution to " Fi.ttin g tomorrow. dress their unique reactions. She gave a T ufts: the yearbook. This year's rehear\ai , he day after. and the ,ynopsis of the play and '.I short erro·rt promises such innovations play\ on Friday." .t:xplaoation of the chan,ctcrs to as ,.1 section on dance as well as "Well. OK." help the hopeful actor to un­ copy that is penned mostly by 'Thanks loads. Oh. by the way. der~ta nd what they were reading. Tufts students. vou 're a cook." Oo occa,;ion, actors must do Co-edit or Ken Bortner feels the Cup and Saucer directors aren't improvi,ations. Directors choose organization of the yearbook ah, ays \till \earching for actors at !heir cast that same da}. reflects the Tufts experience. It is 1he last minute. ·tthough that is a They then have two weeks of "hasically a sort of incoherent true story). hut with their in­ inten~i ·e rehearsal and technical coherency . .. an o rga nized credihly tight production prt·paration. culminating in a disorganization" which attempts -'Chedule. they are usually final tech rehearsal, (Mon. or to capture feelings and ideas of worrying about something. Those Wed.) a dress rehearsal (Tues. or Tufts students and groups rather free plays on Wednesday and Thur~.) a nd the show (Wed. or than ca tc•gorize th.em into titled Friday afternoons are the result Fri.). Due to the lack of space at ~ec ti o ns as has heen done in past of far more work. ~weal, thought 1he Theater. Cup and Saucer may editions. and dedication than most of the u\e the \ tage and costume and The transitions between dif­ audience ever realizes. The scene shops 011ly between 3:30 feren1 aspects of college life are directors are members of the Play and 7 _on weekdays. and whenever "spontaneous" though not Year~k co-edit.ors, Ken Bortner (left) and Gary Directing c lass. taught thi5 1hey can he sandwiched in on the "random:· In a time sequence of · Ca.hn. (Phot.o by Alan Okolotowicz) \emester hy the visiting artist-in­ 11 eekends hetween rehearsals for life. 1he yearbook opens with residence, Mr. Ric hard Hughes. maior productions. Putting pictures in brown sepia that Dallery. Simches. and G ittleman. describes the early phases of his 1Dr. Har_ry Ritchie is usually the 1ogelher a play in two weeks with capture the fl avor of the past · The editors like to think of their editorship as a responsibility that teacher.) Since they each must , uch limitations is a major \Orne are scenic. others are of publication as "a receptacle for .. required a great d~al of ti me \tage a play. a nd the Arena is so achieveme nt in itself, hut the people and places. One priceless .ideas.·· " mentally" though not li mited in ~pace and time, the class consistently ~tages excellent photo dates back to a 1916 Originall y. the yearbook staff "pragmaticall y." course can o nly be taken by productions. football game in which Tufts beat contracted for over 300 pages. With Gary Cahn handling the Drama majors who have taken Lolly Susi. whose show Harrnrd. The actual size of the book was photography and Ken Bortner the prerequisites and are "Sicilian Limes" hy Pirandello. In striking contrast. the book decreased to 9x 11 from last year's managing design and writing ,eriously in terested. "ill he put on Friday. March 10. proceeds with pictures of the 11 x 14. In order to compensate for interview,. a co-operative team During the first two weeks of at -4 : 15. \aid. "The director is in campus today and Boston in 1972. I his 30 percent shrinkage. the effort evolved. " It was not an ego classes. the plays are chosen and control of everything on the Co-editor Gary Cahn is completed hook was expected to 1rip for anyone," comments approved hy the professor. Last ,tage. The first thing you have to responsible for the photographic cover 304 pages. By December. Rortner. "1 here was a lot of give \emesler. any play of reasonable do is fi gure out what your show is aspects of the hook. however. Cahn and Bortner and take." Thi;ir goal throughout length tahout 45 minutes) which ahout. and then how to do it in Perhaps the greatest innovative realized this figure was unrealistic 11 as to he "tight." to be could feasibly he done in the 1he theater." Directors also must technique of co-editors Bortner and reduced the number of pages "c(;hesive." and not to be "self­ Arena was acceptable, but this find their own technical staffs. and Cahn is revealed in the 10 240. indulgent." A sense of relatedness ,emester the directors must consi~ting of a set designer, a portrayal of non-academic ac- Unfortunately. the yearbook pervades the hook that choose a style play (something lighting designer and a co<;tume 1i, ·ities. Such traditional formats 11 ·as \uhject to what appears to be culminates in the info rmal other than realistic. such as designer. and everyone works as the team picture have been a growing trend on the Tufts photographs of the · graduating expressionistic) o r a period play 1ogether ·10 realize the _director's replaced by more dynamic campus and had difficulty \eniors. I for example. Restoration or conception- of the play. photographs of activities in recruiting contributions. In early The 511 .000 needed to print mt:dieval) . In the fall. the The main problem in directing action. March of 1971. the editors began 1100 copies of the yearbook is department paid royalties and 1he actors, Lolly said. is "how to In at tempt to make the book to collect material. They provided by the student ac- allotted SIO for the technical get the most out of these people less formal and more personal, organized a contest with the hope 1i vities fee and advertisements. budget of each production. Now, in the time I have." Everyone 4 uota tions from renowned of obtaining creative work from The hook is distributed free to directors may spend S50 for all approaches that differently. She authors. poets. and artists have 1he student body. By early ,emors. expenses. uses vocal and physical exercises. gh·en way to the writing of Tufts December. they began their The Tufts university Annual, ·1 he work and worrying really a t the heginning of each rehearsal \tudents. The part of the book compilation. Their m ateri al more commo nly known as hegin with auditions. Usually, two to get the actor\' thoughts off the once referred to as the dance included 200 pages of poetry and Jumho. ,yi ll be off the presses by plays audition at the same time. outside world and into the world \ection. for instance. is now a 7 or 8 short stories. Bortner early May. and the directors squabble good- of the play. Then they can conglomerate of photos and practice with more concentration fee.lings \>'~; tten by a st udent and involvement. Other directors about the a~t of dancing. prefer to start immediately with As Bortner explains. "We're the script. Some tell the actors getting completely away from exactly where to move and what formality to more organized arts and ·etcetera • • • gestures to make. others allow the informality." It is an escape from ac tors to do what comes "high schoolish" traditions · what naturally. then tell them what INTO THE EXETER: mosphere ideal for movie houses. emerges is a "readable literary ma ior flaw -- the love story "orks and what doesn't. Io any Sometimes where you go to see a Quite a contrast from some of the magazine." between the two gets a bit case. the director has to know movie can be as important to newer. sterile shoe-box theaters The '72 yearbook will inc(ude frustra ting. T he student spends what's going on in the play itself tha t are about as imaginative as two shorts stories. poetry, stream your enjoyment as what you see too much time mooning around and on the stage, and let the of consciousness. drawings, IS. Houston and Miller Halls. over his frus,tra ted love. But actors know how everything fits cartoons. and interviews with A case in point is Boston's T he film currently at the Exeter that's not important. Pay more together. Professors Ritchie, Rosenme.ier, Exeter Street Theater. currently is worth noting. "Finzi-Continis," attention to the nuances of in­ showing DeSica's beautiful new DeSica's first effort in quite some tolerance in a society rapidly At the same time, diJferent film . Th e Garden of the . Finzi­ time. tells the stories of two going insane. parts of the. director's mind are C,·1111inis. But even when their ftnancially solv ent Jewish families Perha ps. the most com­ "orrying about lighting. costumes Grace Paley films are not up to par, the facing the rismg tide of mendable aspect of the film is and set. and whether everything theater is worth a visit for its own discrimination in pre-World War how DeSica manages to win our will ever really fit together. a gift outright artistic merits. Unique in Boston, 11 fascist Italy. It is built around sympa thies for a class of people "That's why Cup and Saucers the theater dates back to 1885 the unrequited love a middle class that today's anti-bourgeois cause cancer," said Lolly. puffing By Carter Wilson when it was opened as a church. college student has for the feelings would condemn. De­ on her cigarette. There's a lot of During World War 1 (i n 1917, to daughter of the aristocratic Finzi­ Dica 's characters emerge as pressure. hut she also pointed out fed . note. Grace Paley will read he precise). though, it became a Continis. As the· tide of human beings above any symbols 1he good feeling among the her slories al Tufts Thursday. movie house ·· one of Boston's discrimination grows, life m· -- lit a nd does not reall y originalit y is helter security issues is presenting a slide show p.m. MacPhie Snack Bar. Maybe you learn o nce a nd for all in \'olve much effort. This process against the ft than putting a on the automated air war. in­ For further info., contact Marty 1hat a great sto ry runs in part on a 11 sua ll y brings ple nty of hitc hing 1.ia nuscript in a hank vault could cluding Hon~ywell 's role. The Blatt (39 5-0 IO I) or Gordy beauty it generates for itself. (In from the a udie nce and a ha ndful l ver he. program h as been prepared by Schiff (666-8739). this way the humble fiction­ of people who refuse lO leave in S< vou can't steal Grace Paley's creator is more like the Lord hopes of avoiding the heavy mira~ulous ways. But it is still Krishna than like Krishna's loyal 1w e nty five cent admission rwssible to learn something from \ervant Hanuman. It is said that exhibition charge. If vou do it this time. her. Exactly what will differ from " ·he n Hanuman needed to get to 1hough. re n,-e mher that half of person to person. 1 have lent he r Cevlo n. he walked across the " ·hat vou're ripping off is being \ lories. '/he little Disturbances of and sale :>c~an reciting Krishna's na me. ripped off from Pat Reilly. /lll/11 . 10 many friends. No one hut when the Lord Krishna Saturday night. the film series has ever not thanked me for the needed to get to the island, he original \Creens one of the newest films on loan . and several people have had to b uild a bridge. I can't its \C hedule . l t's.Bertolucci's Th e actually decided that. although I recall what big action it was ( '0 11 /i1rmis1 starring Jean Louis didn't say it in so many words, I graphics purchases maybe charg ed which necessitated all t his ·1 rin1 ignant I from Z and Claire '.,· meant to give them Grace Paley traveling to Ceylon.) TUFTS UNIVERSITY !, 1:1·!' ) and Stefania Sandrelli. "A as a gift outright. They must have \ tunning evocation of the thirties felt they could make more in­ -continued on page '6 COHEN HALL - GALLERY D and the rise of fascism in Italy," tell igent use of her book than I Wed., Mar. 15 - 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. 1he fi lm made the 1971 Ten Best could. Well. with only a half­ COIHCTION: CIIDITS Lists of , heart I say. 'To each accord ing to t.astweeli'1dcace...... ,.. Nell'sda1·. 'fi'm e. C/JC-TV a nd the his need.' ,•, I• tlle CHAGALL, BASKIN, ROUAULT, DAUMIER AND MANY OTH ERS due by Paulca.....,... S.lcler, cad ••6e . Nation;! Society of Film Critics. For a while. s_ince The little drawlllfl ., Lita o, ...... ARRANG ED BY FERDINAND ROTEN GALLER IES If you wa nt . you can pay $2.00 f)ist11rho11 cl'S of Man was sailing ,...... a1 flshye view .. BALTI MORE , MARYLAND . 10 ee it at the Orson Well es this in and out of print faster than a lallH Hall w• tali• by Ala Sa turday nig ht. Or at C'ohen for a rum-runner in a revenoor-infested Ollolotowla. quar ter. Take your pick. ,iarhor. (I've seen four separate Friday, March 10, 19'72 Observer letter ,. commentary . On Banfield • Dear Friends: 1hat ll'as "very favorable.'' It is The air war comes to Tufts You had .an accurate headline my fervenl wish that the on page one of last week's issue. nell',paper s1aff somehow see that the Defense Department. victions and have sought various A number of students have an ar1icle saying a meeting oc­ Wr: helieve it is entirely ways to avoid it (e.g., staying in indeed attacked a racist book. curred is \imply not an intelligent hy Gordy Schiff appropriate and correct to school when they preferred to be on hehalf of They have a11acked it not only at response 10 a problem which has do \O as a mdtter of good elsewhere. seeking medical Collective Effort 1h e meeting 10 which your article heen raised on campus. If the c itizl' 11 ship . . We stand. deferments, applying for C.O.'s, referred but also at several class ,,arr ~ees 1he problem of suf­ ready 10 huild weapons that etc.). As encouraging as it is to meelings of Political Science 114. ficien1 inportance to give it first work. to huild them fast and \ee such a widespread sentiment 1n fact at one class session last page ,talus 1hen it seems 10 me "War is no longer the to huild them in quantity." of opposition, it is becoming clear week the professor halled an 1ha1 ii would also do some in- desperate annihilating --Statement of Honeywell. 1hat 1he war is changing. Our open class discussion of 1he book 1·es1iga1ion and perhaps even struggle that it was ... It is a Incorporated government neither requires nor i ust as I he class was nearing the make a statement. i.e .. take a 11 arfare of limited aims depends on having American racisl heart of The Unheavenly ,land like in the old days. . .. This is not to say that the Next Friday. March 17. the ,oldiers 10 wage its war against ( 'ity. hy Edward Banfield. With lhe passing of passion conduct of war has become Honeywell Instit ute. a division of 1he people of Indochina. As I was lucky enough (I guess) to comes a veil of passivity. The less hlood1hirsty. or more I he Honeywell Corporation, will George Orwell predicted, have attended Tufts Universi ty Oh1·£·n·cr of days past which chivalrous. On lhe con­ he at Brown House to recruit conventional land warfare would 1hree years ago when people like called us lo action or reported on I rary But in a physical l'ufts s1ude11t\. The Institute, run inevitably lead to automated war l'hil Primack saw to it that the ac1ion now reports on meetings, sense ll'ar involves very small hy Honeywell. is a twelve week as military technology developed. I 11/).1· Oh.l'erver was something 1ells us how Dean Gullion is numbers of people. mostly graduale program which provides The war in Indochina today more 1han a slightly stale junior ac1uall y a secret fighter for peace. highly !rained specialists. appears to he undergoing such a New York Times. II lruly and writes editorials about Term The fighting lakes place on lransformation. disappoinls me lo see the Oh- Paper Companies. "The Present the vague frontiers whose '/'he Automated Air War 11· rw·r conlinue 10 produce these i\ge" lame nted Kierkegaard. 11·hereahouts the average ".,hiective·· articles about issues and nothing really happens." man can only guess at . A report issued by a group of ,o important as Banfield's book. I challenge the Newspaper staff to c;eorge Orwell. l

Friday, March 10, 1972 Pagell'lve Square dances April 22 peace action plans will continue protest for total withdrawa

Due to the success of the first The ca ll er went !hrough each BY LAURIE GRAYSON mohilization of the American demonstration in 197 I. T he co­ "Buck wheat" square dance on dance ,Jow ly . "a dry run," and people who oppose the war is its chairmen explain that the fact March 2. square dancing will 1hen repeated it at the regular Massive, peaceful antiwar prime motive. the NPAC as an that this is an election year will become a regular event at Tufts. ,peed. i'enple responded with a demonstrations, sponsored by the orga nization does not endorse probably reduce the number of The next square dance is Jot ,if enthusiasm. if somewhat National Peace Action Coalition, any ,pecific political candidates. participants. They point out that ~ched uled for March 16 at 8:30 le,\ fin.:sse . will take place in New York City T he Tufts SMC co-chairmen in addition to the many p.m. in the Eaton Memorial /\ilhough most people wore and on April 22. maintain that such peaceful, Americans deceived by Nixon's Room . According to sophomore ieans and s neak ers. some Immediate and unconditional national demonstration.s. in­ propaganda. some former ac· Boh Resnick. one of its responded to the event by coming "ithdrawal of all U.S. military volving a ll sectors of the tivists in the antiwar movement organi ze rs. "Buckwheat" will try dressed in a "folksy" manner. fo rces and material from population . are the antiwar may redirect all their energies 10 sponsor two square dances a Resnick thinks "each time there Southeast Asia is the central movement's most. effective means toward electoral activities. month. "·ill he more diversity of dress." dem and of these national of achieving peace in Southeast Others. convinced that Nixon has 0\'er 200 people came to the Two riddlers and a mandoli n demonstrations. Asia. They insist that such mass to end the war if he wishes to be first sq4.are dance. "At first." player will continue to provide T he NPAC is also launching a antiwar actions have already re-elected. may also refrain from Resnick said. "there was a lot of 1he music for the square dances "·idespread ed uca tiona 1 cam­ unmistakably changed the course active antiwar activity. con[usio)! hut as the evening went and adrn'ission will remain 50 paign to convince the American of the war. Dorman contends on they got hetter." cent s. people that the war in Vietnam is tha t such united antiwar action Contending that such massive not winding down. Student has accomplished "significant action will "force Nixon to Mobilization Committees at victories:·· the wi thdrawal of consider the war as a major college campuses throughout the troops [rom Cambodia in May, issue ," Dorman stresses the Poli. Sci. revanips. • • nati on are also using educational 1970; the prevention of a U .S . importance of the April 22 rallies. campaigns to encourage students troop in vasion into Laos in Floth chairmen agree that these _ three courses will be limited to to partake in the April 22 February. I 971; and the overall -continued from page 1 cl e m.o n s t r a I i o n s . a I t h o u g h the most closely related demonstrations. diminishment of the number of po\sibly sm a ller tha n some interests. more consistent with departments: history. economics. Tufts' SMC. co-chaired by troops now present in Indochina. organized in the past. can be current thinking in the field, and \ociology. and philosophy. George Mastellone and Tom · Dorman also maintains that the crucial in determining the course should result in the elimination of The total numher of political Dorman. plans to conduct an pas t successive mass demon­ of the war in 1972. , ery large classes." science courses required will not antiwar teach-in. including fi lms, \trat ions have played a cr4cial The proposal also calls for a change--it will remain at nine speakers. and literature, before role in raising the consciousness realignment of the courses within courses lone [oundation course 1he April 22 rallies. The chair­ or the American people. 1he .\ub-categories of the .i'nd eight electives). men agree that there is much Alt hough the size of the April Hit-run department. The present system Changes will also affect potential activism at Tufts. since 22 demonstration cannot ac· diYides political science courses victim graduate students. Colc ord antiwar sentiment is high. curately he predicted, Mastellone into fiYe categories: American • pointed o ut that the graduate Dorman admits. however, that and Dorman concede that the (,oYernmt:nt I Group · I) . Com­ recoverang st udent hody has steadily in­ "1 he primary problem at Tufts is rally" will probably not be as large parati,·e Go\'ernment and Politics creased in size. while the small the lack or knowledge of what is as the massive April 24 Care11 Halbentadt, victim of 1 Group II). International numher of graduate seminars going on in Southeast Asia." He a hlt-and•run accident on Peb• ruary 16, has come out of a . Rdationsl Group !Ill. Political availahle to graduates has not further explains that because of COLLEGE WITHIN EVENTS T hought !Group IV). and coma and Is In satisfactory , imilarly inc·reased. Graduate the prevalent illusion that the wa r WEEK OF MARCH condition at a New Bedfo,.., Methodology !Group VJ . , tudents ha\'e thus in the past i, ending . Tufts' antiwar activism Mon., March 13, 9:00, Arthur hospital. Despite a broken '*f, S1ude nts currently must complete heen forced to take a substantial ha s "lost some of its urgen­ Gladstone w ill offer the second broken wrist, broken slloaldet, and facial cuts, she sllould be at least one course in Group JV number l,r courses which are cy. ''Dorman expects the teach-in session of a Jab course in inter­ and at least one course in each of able to go home 111 several de\ignat ed as undergraduate at Tu[ts to stress the importance personal awareness. The Com­ weeks. Tufts police are still two of the [ollowing . three courses. or "applying pressure" and to munity is invited. seeking infonnation on the drl• ca tegroies: Groups I. III. and V . In the new plan. the number of combat the press' propaganda. ver of the ve)l'cle. The new plan calls [or a merger graduate cotirses wi ll be enlarged Convinced that "campus apathy is of Groups JV and V. This sub­ hy ahsorbing present advanced largely a myth.'' Mastellone hopes category will also encompass undergraduate courses. Senior the SMC's educational campaign interdiciplinary courses now political science majors who have "ill "draw as many people as Hiliside Liquor Mart heing offered: political sociology met certain prerequisites. will be possible into the an tiwar political an thropology. and encouraged to take several of the movement. S23 BOSTON A VE. psychology and politics. Fuc- graduate courses. "Non-exclusion.'' emphasizes (Medford Hillside) 1 he rm ore. students will be Ir the plan is approved. it wi ll the co-chairmen. is a basic required to take at least one tak e dfect this coming [all. principle or the NPAC. Ac­ course in each of the four existing Colcord is hopeful that the cordingly. the organization seeks large .stock low rates categories. ,·arious faculty committees will the participation or all Americans Colcord commented on this take action in time [or the plan to \\' ho oppose the war, regardless or serving Tufts for years phase of the new program: "Sub­ he included in the forthcoming their views on other issues and [ield offerings in political science Bulletin. irrespective of other affiliations. open Mon.-Sat. 9-11 pm. ,·ary greatly among U.S. colleges Ass uming that it is im­ in the April 22 demonstrations. and universities; our proposed plemented . current freshmen The NPAC wishes to involve large four rields are well within the ma_iors will be obligated to fulfill numhers or people from various hounds of convention." Also. "the 1he requirements of the new plan. and \undry constituencies in the proposed change is simple and Sophomore and junior majors anti-war movement: oppressed assures that our majors have "ill have the option of fulrilling nationa lities. working people , adequate coverage." the requirements or either the old G Is. returning veterans. women. The third stage in the proposal or new plan. ~tudents. etc. Since massive Trinity College requires that Political Science majors take three advanced Rome Campus courses in related fields . rather than the current policy requiiring June 10 to July 31-$760. <>niy two related courses. These STIMULATING CURRICULUM • OUTSTANDING FACULTY ~OUBLE KNIT SLACKS ETRUSCAN ARCHAEOLOGY PROGRAM Send for new brochure Grace Paley all models 30-40 waist Trinity College/Rome Campus, Hartford, Conn. 06106 -continued from page 3 Farah, Haggar, Champion, Seven Seas, Damon You may get from G race Paley the sense that English is still alive 5 5 BASKIN-ROBBINS and up-for-grabs and still being 14 to 35 created and made metaphor by Medford Square Since 1886 ~uch lofty poetic types as the lady ()pen Thurs., Fri. eves. until 9 p.m. We make people happy1~\ [olding her sheets beside you in the laundromat next to the fish ~ store.

FricJay, March 10, 1972 Slowdown You move to fast! Got to make the morning last. Just kicking down the cobblestones, Looking for fun and feeling groovy .•• -P. Simon

Photography by David Margaretos

Friday, March 10, 1972 •• 'The air war conies here ... Lobby for education planned -continued from page 1 resources to care for the Raytheon Co. · 454.5; RCA Corp. The National Student Lobby is funding for the federal work· wounded. This type of weapon Asian lives are more expendable · 250.7; ITT - 232.9; Bendix Corp.' holding a Lobby . Conference on ..tudy program. was declared ille gal by in· tha n American lives. With the - 162.3; Magnavox Co. · 96.2; the Higher Education . Act in The NSL Lobby Conference · e rna tional laws governing F.astman Kodak Co. · 63.4; and Washington. D.C. on March 22, will also provide speakers on the latter solution. however, the war 'inhumane warfare." Use of such 1 is moving into a new phase ·· the G eneral Foods Corp. · 44.4. 23. and 24. concept and practice oL student "·eapons appears to constitute a Students participating in the lobbying. Columnist Jack An­ automated battlefield . This is a "·ar crim e as defined by Article 6 total war ,ystem which links l/011 e 1·11 ·,•// -- Liberal Corpora lion Conference will be registered derson and John Lagomarcino, of the Charter of the In­ lobbyists speaking with Director of Legislative Activities together a huge quantity of ternational Military· T ribunal, at complex equipment. The changes in the war have ~·ongressmen and Senators about of Common Cause will be among "hich Nazis were tried for the heen very p rofitable for the provisions and funding o[ the speakers. The , ystem starts with sensor· "ar c rime ~ they committed detectors that broadcast sounds. Honeywell. About 40 per cent of. \ .659. the Higher Education Act. Students interested in at· .luring World War II. iis profits in 1970 came from its ,it issue are Federal scholarship tending the confe rence may ,,nells. vibrations. the heat of :IONEYWELL IS BY FAR THE people's hodies. etc. A computer \lar contr::icts. And. as i clear by money. funding fo r NDEA loan~. conta t the Ohserver office or LARGEST PRODUCER OF the types of equipme111 they are fe d erall y insured loans, and 776-7205 for fu rther information. command-and-control center ANTIPERSONNEL WEAPONS receiv es th e mechanical spies· producing. there are a few moral /\ND COMPONENT . WITH 4ue~tions which take precedence J ata, e valuates it. decides what to CONTRACTS TOT ALLING do. and broadcasts automatic over those of profit. T hese OVER 5250 MILLION. (Council changes in the war and Turn toward law • • • orders to bomb a certain place or on Economic Priorities). to fire automatic weapons. This Honeywell's role are prefect is the "battlefield of the future" examples or the inadequacy of --continued from page f universitie~ are able to borrow that General Westmoreland liheral reforms which fail to raise lega l studies had a lower priority professor~ from their law schools ~poke about in 1969, where fund amental questions about the in T uft s' p o li tica l science 10 teach on the undergraduate "enemy forces be located, "ar or our economic structure. department 1han in other level. Tuft\ has no access to these tracked, and targeted almost Liheral solu tions to the war universities. professors. ,tres~eJ "' rdorming" one of its instantaneously through the use Chayes revealed that she had M.I.T .. Chayes stated . because mmt brutal aspects -· that of data links, computer assisted recently \ought several Ford o f ,tudent impetus. the Institute American hoys were dying by the intelligence evaluation, a nd Foundation grants for the ha\ developed a legal clinic I hou\ands. Those who run and automated fire control. " development of a curriculum of progr:1m. Similar to the in· profi I from American cor­ That "battlefi eld of the future" 11ndergraduate legal courses. She 1e rnships in law firms and with porations s tress t he ir "good is here today. Corporations like , ta ted I ha I for ,ome time she had puhlic interest groups. which are citizenship" in providing Honeywell have played a large heen exploring the possibility of arranged for various students at equipmt: nt for our "defense" and part in its development. Over $3 o ri ginating a five-yea r com ­ ·1 ufts during the Winter Study iohs for their workers. Together. hillion has been spent on research bina tion H.A .. .1.0 . law and liberal l'eriod , the program goes a step these reforms have brought you and development leading to -a rts program. However. she had further hy providing academic the new war in Indochina ·· the perfection of the automated mel opposition from the , upport. discussion. and seminars electronic. auto ma ted battlefield. battlefield. Honelwell has been Massachuset ts Bar Association. for participating students. receivi ng about 39 million a year, Vittrtami~tion We wish to thank New England "hich had in5isted tha t the Da vis teac hes a political since 1969. for its part in this. ,\ ct ion and Research on the program could no t adequately ,cie ncc course in urban law. T he list of antinersonnel Military Industrial Complex . I On October 18. 1971, the Wall fulfill he needs of potential < )11tside the l lniversity. Davis is Street Journal announced that weapons and systems produced Nf-:A RM IC. 48 Inman St., lawvers and th at the schooling l"mployed as the Director of Honeywell had just received a hy Honeywell is seemingly en­ Ca mhridge. Mass .. and The period could no t he limited to less Ci rcle /\,~ociates. a firm which is 55 1.3 million contract for "a new dless: XM54 white phosphorus 'foneywell Project. 529 Cedar 1 ha n ~ix years. concerned with the funding of family of standardized off-the· anti-personnel mines, Rockeye II \ve. South. Minneapolis. Minn. Meanwhile. C' hayes organized , mall black husinesses in . the ,helf computer systems for use in cluster bombs, BLU / 26 B '15404. for much of the research her curre nt class within the Ex . l'Clllrni <.:ity. used in this article. Collecti ve ( 'oll ege framework because she th e world-wide military command "guava bombs," CBU-55 / B. etc. ·1e nohky. a new member of the and control systems." Honeywell For example. Honeywell has Fffort is involved in raising the felt it wa\ highl y experimental. political ,cience department: computers thus serve a{ the designed a nd produced the issues of \tuden1s' roles as future hut , he ,ays it has shown a suf­ teacht:s a \eminar o n legislative "nerve center" of the automated fragmentation Wide Area Anti­ "orker~. and is actively involved ficient amount of promise to functiom. His doctoral disser- Personnel Mine (W AAPM or in exploring many of the ideas \\arrant it s in clusion within the battlefi eld . 1at ion concerns the role of O ne example of Honeywell's BLl J ; 42) . raised in the article. For more political science department. The pressure gro ups. with respect to The fr agmentation mines are info rmatio n . contact Dave co11r\e examines the sequential products used in the automated 1 he courts. as a means of in· battlefield ·· the sensor detector the round objects packed into the Carson of the Dept. of Political ,tep~ of a legal dispute. the fluencing poli cy. Tenofsky stated delive ry cases as shown in the Science. development of common law nicknamed the "people sniffer" 1hat he helieved there was a t X M-3 chemical detector) is picture. Several va rieties have doctrines. the right to privacy. -.lefiniti: interest in teaching law made a t Honeywell's plant in heen designed with electronic 1 4 + Also. check the notice and o ther procedural questions. courses among· the members of cont rols or sensors so that even , ectio n of today's Ohsarver for Chayes pointed o ut that the Lexington. Mass. The ''people 1h e political science department ,niffers" do not merely scent physical contact is not essential the announcement of a major factor which prevents and that he himself hoped to people on the ground. They are for detonation. The most deadly presentation of a slide show on T11ft \ from more fully developing dt:Ye lop courses concerning the very sensitive -- a Honewell ad example of these weapons is the the automated air war. including a n undergraduate law cirriculum Warren and Marsha ll Supreme says they can detect as little as 2 ~pider-like, spring-tnggered white Honeywell's role ). i, 1ha1 Tufh has no law school. ( ·ourts. parts per million of "human phosphorus mine with severe Consequently. while o ther Courses on Civil Liberties. traces" in the air. These sensitive burning capacity. ------. Constitutional Law. a nd Ad- An impo rta·nt point to mechanica l bl oodho unds can STRINGS ATTA TCHED ROOMMA TE WANTED ministrative Law are also offered remember is that Honeywell is 1hu s he us.e el in the air. Scents of a Tufts Symphony Orchestra des- Need 3rd rmmate - apt w / 3 in the political science depart· not an exception nor are our man. woman. child. or animal can perately needs string players and bdrms, lving rm, kitch, bath, · men!. and have heen for some policies in Vietnam a n he broadcast to computers at brass musicians. Please come to aberration. It is not exceptional near campus. $50 mo plus util. tim~. They a re all taught by control centers which evaluate rehearsals Wed. nights. Cohen 623-1430. I ecturer F.s ther Sweet. member for a corporation to build the the data and decide what to do. of hoth the political science and products that wi ll reap them the _Audit., 7-9 p.m. economic departments. A111i-Per.wnnal and FraR· greatest profit ·· it is the rule ... It is GUYS & DOLLS not an a berration that weapons 111c•11/a/ion Bomhs SHABBAT SERVICES Tickets for GUYS & DOLLS are being built and used to kill rrhis Friday night - 7 p.m. in are on sale now! Call ext. 381 civilians. It is perfectly consistent With these computers making the Hillel House. 108 Bromfield (2: 00-10: 00 p .m .) for reserva­ " ·ith our intent of uprooting an the decisions on "scientific" data, Rd., informal services and oneg tions. Curtain rises 8: 00 p.m. in ''idea" shared by tens of millions men are freed from the hatred. shabbat. Cohen, March 23-25. All seats of Asians: that they should be Come and bring a doubts. and greed or friend or find one there. reserved. Box Office in basement rationali1.ations that killing able to run their own countries without United States control. In of Jackson Gym (2 p .m . · usually entails. The issue o[ guilt 10 p.m.) loses its meaning. Conscience fact. the United States Air Force· HEBREW Manual states: "A military target and morality are irrelevant. Hebrew Table Talk over lunch is any person. thing. entity or Thus. the decisions to dispatch every Mon. at 11: 30 at Hillel PIRG loca tion . selected for destruction, some of the most brutal and House, 108 Bromfield Rd. All inactiva tion or rendering There will be a short mcetin& inhumane weapons ever invented levels. of Hebrew welcome. Jugt nonusable wit h weapons which of Tufts PIRG this Sunday at are made completely "ob­ have to want to talk a little. will reduce or destroy the will of 8:0 p.m. in Carmichael Lounge. iectively." One of Honeywell's Petitioners please bring your main products is the fragmen­ the enemy to resist." Honeywell is not an isolated completed petitions for a pre­ tation homh. which hurls hun­ liminary determination of the dreds of steel pellets in all evil institution profiting from the SUMMER JOBS production of machines of death amount of suport received to directions with great force. As Guys & Gals needed for summer date. Questions will be answer­ the Defe nse Dpeartment and destruction. The Economic Priorities Report published by the employment 1t num•ous loca­ ed from all interested parties. repeatedly admits these bombs tions throughout the nation in­ are completely useless against Council on Economic Priorities 1Jan .- Feb. 1972) lists dozens of duding National Parks, Rasort mil itary installations. weapons Areas, and Private Camps. For corporations profiting from the emplacements or vehicles, they frn information send self-1d­ war and from production of can o nl y wound or kill un­ dressed, STAMPED envelope to mili1ary hardware. The 1971 protected people in open fields or 0 pportunity Research, Dept. B&L LAUNDRAMAT military a..,,,ards tin millio11s) for flim~y huts. T he pellets tear into SJO, Century Bldg., Polson, MT lloneywell totall ed 236.6. A 1he flesh in an erratic pattern 598 60. APPLICANTS MUST 285 Boston Ave., Mrdford Hillside ,mashing hones and thus making ,ample of o ther totals included APPLY EARLY .. . '. ,eneral F. lec tric 1.040.9; Open Daily 8 a.m.-9 p.m.; ,SUNDAY 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. 1hem dirricult to remove. Lesions ~ -.:· .. - - "'..:1 - .• ':O~'.•~::.::.J.:..:..•-.~•=-:Y~·'£•"'.•"'.•-•~"'.•"...,:4.-.:~... ~"...,~~..-· caused by one fragment or pellet ~ ~. . -~~u... ~OPEN ».in,y"j ·u~ ·.-...: ...... -- ··~ are numerous. difficult to detect. 8 lbs. Dry Cleaning only $2.50 and require delicate operations. -IROWN .. auE RESTAURANT ~ In fact. one of the stated purposes ~ Complete Laundry Facilities of such weapons is to tie up m-BcatoaTve. - Jllllslde. Medford -1 "enemy'' medical personnel and DROPOFF LAUNDRY SERVICE faci lities requiring a lot of :t:. =~~t;~l~:=:~:·:~:~ Pa_ge Eight Olleerver Friday, March 10, 1972 TCU constitution .. Alternative 111edia • • • --continued lrom page 1 general pot shots at student and respond to student needs. --continued Iron, page 1 a j'l'hotographic essay. since "the Questions were also raised government itself. 1 a generator for student power pictures are only fillers between Problems raised for future in ,ituations where it is needed. - Schecter went on to say that he copy and ads." B.A .D. is "visually co ncerning the proposal's lack of l establishing a system of doesn't put down the people who guidelines for student par· reference include: boring," said Dobo, with "no : difficulties wit h duplicity in go\'ernment here that is flexible have hopes of changing in· creativeness." He feels tha t there ticipation on faculty committees. enough meet the day by day stitutions from the inside. Decrying the "unfair situation" 1he present government. 10 is potential for fr ee thinking in , trains in functioning and can Management hassles at WBCN of the presently-active five-man Students elected to committees the Phoenix and B.A .D.. but allow elected representatives to led to consolidation thtough the F.xecutive Board deciding ex· are required to serve on the doesn't see it happening until the perform adequately without over· form a ti on of a union. The elusively upon student finances, Caucus. editorials hoards unite. hearing lime demands. demands to maximize leverage Junior Barry Scheur introduced a 1 communication and liason An audience member noted wit h fac ult y and administrators. and to control commercial policy that alternative media reaches the proposal including a student were met, and "a free-form Senate. in visibility of the present I halancing a political form and people who are already con· government. Lack of a central ,cope of government wit h needs progressive format" was verted. Schecter pointed out. The Senate is designed for developed . In a ddition to unifyi ng factor that can be used for co-ordination in the arts and however, that WBCN's audience 1hr ee senators elected from each alternative music and news, class and three representatives as pivot to direct student interest other activities. did include. for example, high WRC'N is allowed to produce the school students fro m South appointed from each of the four commercials making them more presently-operating committees. • Boston. while Shapiro said that a appealing to their listening poll showed the typical Ph oenix ·1 he hody would represent the Mass. primary ... audience. students at large and deli berate rt!ader to be "a 28 year old Slater: formerly of WBZ-TV \alesman with S980 worth of upon major financial decisions. --continued from page 5 Muskie. McGovern-Shisholm , felt that "mass media owes it to Other committees, including \ tt!reo equipment." Schecter among the 12 districts, ap· Mayor John Lindsay, a nd an 1heir audience to make an honest rt!marked that alternative media the 25 student-faculty com· po rtioned on the basis of uncommitted s late whic h is attempt to he fair." He talk ed a mittecs. would continue to exist. has grown. hut that its influence is population. reportt!d to he for Senator lot ahout WCVB's documentary minimal compared to· the Of these. 7 delegates wi ll come lluhert Humphrey. and project units which led to a 01herS1uff estahlish t!d media. He stated, "I from the Kth district which in­ discussion on teamwork. Shapiro \t!t! myse lf as part of a movement cludes Somerville. Cambridge, Senator Henry Jackson has a11rihuted the f'h oe11ix's first trying to change the country," but Discussion at the Wednesday a nd parts o f Boston a nd e nt e red delega tes in three failure partially to the teamwork meeting fluctuated between 11greed with someone who said Brookline. districts and McGovern and approach. while Doho saw a rhat the dominant class sees "our" specific questions and criticisms Four slates are entered in that ( 'hisholm have t! nt ered separate "lesser possihility of a one-sided of the two rough proposals and id eas as da ngerous. district : those com mitted to , latt!~ in several · other districts. , torv "ith the teamwork idea due In discussing commercialism, to a system of checks and the Harvard student saw ads as an !'he final datt! for registration ha lances." aid in lt!gitimizing the control of for I ht! primary is March 25. D<1 ho \\as displeased with the 1he capitalistic ruling class. KNOX PHOTO Stude nts over I 8 years old who \\ay /1 . ·\ .n . handles the news l1<1wever. Slater disagreed, have rt!sided in Massachusetts for ,i, ually. He finds that he takes pointing out tha t eliminating ads 94 Salem St. Opp. Medford City Hall <, months are eligihle to register.

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Friday, March :LO, 1972 Observer Sotnerville to register • • • Sox-hose • • • -continued from page 4 --continued from page 12 team publicly announced that he the Somerville School Committee as mea ning voters must have "no wouldn't play in the outfield with have someone register voters on and is presently seeking a position definite plans to leave." Cam· of progressive change in baseball. one o f the other outfielders. campus because of a shortage of as a McGovern delegate to the bridge election officials state that He "'as I he first owner to give But Reggie is best known for voter registration personnel. He Democratic Convention. \tudents do intend to leave. Jackie Robinson a tryout, and the his magnificent throwing arm, ,aid there are only two people for According to Yeager. Puglia is According to Bob Perkins. an first to reject him because of ll'ith which he annually hurls lhfi t job.· interested in the student impact e_mployee of the Student Vote race. He took an old and out­ .three or four balls into the third Yeager and several other in elections and has personal organization. most of the hearings moded stadium and turned it into (ine of the palaces of baseball. Of hase grandstand while attempting in political aspirations and agreed to are II on by students. people interested voter to cut down a runner at the plate. use his own influence in securing Student Vote. sponsored by cmir,e. that was in 1934. registration sought help from But perhaps the Red Sox are the registrar. political parties and interested Stale Representative George best known for their farm system Sacco of Medford. Yeager ex­ Boston groups, is situated in a 8111 hack 10 the a lleged team "hich year after year turns out plained that Sacco had come to cramped and somewhat chaotic itself. The leader of the Red Sox REGISTRATION RESULTS the best young pitchers East of the Tufts campus in January lo two-room office in Harvard for I he last t \\'clve years has been Somerville E lection Com­ Worcester. People like Dave ,eek students to work for him. He Square. Carl "Big Yn" Yastrezemski, a missioner Maureen Amaraul Morehead, Jerry Stephenson, Hal ,ought Sacco's influence in aiding Their main objective is "not to ,elf-proclaimed \uperslar. But let estimated that 200 new voters Kolstad. Galen Cisco. Bill on-campus registration. ,et up drives directly ourselves. it not he \aid that Yaz is as un­ have been signed up since the last · \ panswick. Bullet Bob Sadowski, Sacco refused however and hut 10 encourage the local civic nHllivated as the lesser lights of electio n in November. In a single and Fireball Fred Wenz, who in explain ed that such a task was not groups. like the League of I he learn. Through shrewd in - l\\'O·hnur evening session, 115 of his only big-league appearance within his jurisdiction as a state Women Voters or the Chamber 1 est ment he has earned a fortune I hose 200 were enlisted. Amaraul I\ ,liked three and struck out representative. Yeager disagreed of Commerce. to initiate their for him\elf in such enterprises as e~ timated that about 60 percent three. ,everly damaging his arn and said . "If Sacco wanted. it own drives." ·' Big Yn Bread." "Big Yaz Ford." of the new voters were students. ,111d putting a quick and merciful could have been done." l'erkins added. "It's different in a nd having his wife ,tale on TV In Medford. recent voter 1 end lo his unpromising career. He added. "The only way the each town: in one you just leave hat "Carl and all the little enrollm ent figures have not been I his year's outstanding candidate ,ituation is going lo be reversed is them alone and they do it. but in Ya\lrezem,kis use Guildon's compiled. Since the 18-year-old lor the Cal Koo nce seventeenth if someone can get political gain o th ers no one wants to take the Mustard." \'oter was enfranchised. over 1600 player award is Rogelio (now from registering Tufts students." responsibility." He estimated that i1ew voters under 2 1 have been I hrough his en thusiasm for called Hoger because The Fox Tufts students wishing to half 1he ,tudent s li ving in dorms added lo the lists. grou,e·hunling. Ya1, has been couldn' t pronounce Rogelio) register can go to Room 11 5 in have registered: 90 percent pf ( >\'er l he year, the fav orite of Moret. ll'ho in an attempt 10 Medford Ci ty Hall by March 25. those have registered in their owner Yall'key and has used this ma~ter I he art of big league, or at Registration will also take place PROBLEMS IN CA MBRIDG E home towns. Perkins explained. po,ition 10 become the most over­ lea,1 Heel Sox. pitching. burned 1here on March 15 and 22 from 7 Ot her cities. notably Cam­ 'They undergrads ,iust a ren't paid 11nderachie\ler in all of 0111 his arm in the Peuto Rican 10 lJ p.m. and o n March 25. the bridge. have not been so easy on registering al college. profe, ,ional or hig-time college Winter League. regist rati on deadline, from noon the question of the six month An Oh l'C' l"l'Cr survey in October ,ports. 10 10 p.m . Because Medford residency requirement. Anyone re,ealed that 289 students o ut of Ye,. !he Red Sox are a delicate police took a census last month ,aying he is a student is a ,ample of 293 had registered in ha lance of unexperienced But there are many other on campus. students do not need automatically required Lo have a their home towns. \'oungster~ and aged veterans. iunior executives on the ballclub. ·10 bring any proof of residency. hearing to prove his six month Student Vote has recently been Little Luis Apari~io finds playing people who could just as quickly residency. Rent receipts are instrumental in getting registrars ,horlstop for the Red Sox a 1ell vou the Dow Jones Average LEVERAGE IN SOMERVlLLE at 1he little city halls in Boston relaxing ll'ay of supplementing his ,uggested as acceptable proof: a, their own hatting average. Tufts graduate student Andy phone hills and driver's licenses and mobile registrars al some of monthly socia.1 security check. ·1 here is Heggie Smith. who in an Puglia aided in getting the have not been held as proof. Boston's unive rsities. A few attempt to restore harmony to And ,o if you're going to be Somerville registrar on campus The Massachusetts Attorney 11 eeks ago. 300-400 students were last vear's dissension ravaged around Boston this summer. take for a day. Puglia is chairman of General has interpreted the law registered at Northeastern. a ride over to friendly Fenway l'.trk to watch the Red Sox stand around and collect their money. l\ut be tter leave extra early, the lack of adequate parking facilities Students dispute • • • near the.park is Owner Yawkey's PIRG ... ,ure lire "ay to keep attendance he low l he miniscule seating China policy. One of them -continued from page 4 lawyers. scientists. and other -continued from page 1 capacity of Fenway. technical experts wi ll accept a Accordingly. Bl~tt . along wi th rehu!led Laird's intimation that I lniversity is the proper channel 1\111 remember. the Red Sox ,ignificant cut in salary in order ol her ,t udents who opposed the Chinese government was for the funding mechanism. need all the \upport they can get. lo 11ork for PIRG. Ap­ Klein\ candidacy. offered the irrational and dangerous to lJ.S. Through the Un iversity students If vou·ve ever played first base. or proximately 15-20 professionals department an alternative ,ecurit y. Klein's letter suggested 11 ill make efficient use of their el'er desired to play first base, 11 ill be employed by MASS PIRG candidate. Jean Doyle. Doyle. I hat L;1ird was either "i ll -informed resources and wi ll establish an con1act Carl Yastrezemski at any FAST. " ho has a clearly radical per­ or purpmely misleading and elfective PlRG . needlessly frightening the of 1he manv golf courses around · Q . Will PlRG set a precedent ,pect ive. will receive her Ph. D. The Stale Board will have the Americ:1n public." 1he Winter Haven training camp. for other group5 who may wish to from Ro,ton lJniversily by responsibility of hiring and firing Also in 1969, Klein chided If Ya,. approves of your per· e~tahlish a funding mechanism September. any professional staff member. Nixon for his hard line policy on ,onali1y and ability. he will give ,imilar to that of PlRG? Both ca ndidates were in­ The~ prof essional's activities will China. He emp hasized the < ;cneral Manager O'Connell his I\. ff an organization receives terviewed hy the faculty and he ,upervised and directed by the nece,sity of admitting China to pern) i,sion to hire you. overwhelming nationwide S1ate Board. according to l I l'C. In ~upport of Doyle's candidacy. Blatt read portions of 1he 1/nited Nations and S" remember. in the immo rtal ,upport from st udents. faculty. guidelines established by the unequivocally slated that a and local comm unities. then it 1h e Affirmative Action Program "Prd, of Edward Andleman. participating colleges. completely inflexible position can deserves seri ous consideration of Any further questions con· is , ued hy !'resident Hallowell on 11 hen vou think Red Sox. think January 25. 197 1.11 reads in part: only please Moscow and Taipei." panty hose. its proposals. cerning PlRG may be directed to Colcord rer.1arked that this kind Q. What is PJRG's method of Bob Mazzarella in 416 Miller "In ,eeking to fill openings the university will make every effort of ,tatement would certainly representation'? ls one .Hall. place Klein on William Buckley's representative on the State board 10 recruit in such a way that "omen and individuals from roll call of wild eyed radicals. cq uitahle'? During !'resident Nixon's China A. A local board of seven Tufts minority groups will have an equal npportunity to be con­ 1rip. Klein appeared frequently ,1 11 dents will aid the Tufts Flhn1 by ...... Tracksters , idered and appointed to ,taff on the NBC "Today" show as f ~ community in the formulation their A,ian expert. Prior 10 · the Trvffaut. RNolr, po,ition\. It is the policy of the K11l'OICIWa, Hltclacocli and direction of research. One 1rip. Klein briefed Walter ,1uden1 from the local Board will fail ... university that no appointments Programs challge every Cronki1e and Eric Severeid o n two dcrys. Call theatre , erve on the State Board. Each -continued from page 12 "ill he made 10 faculty or J Jim Connolly had an off day professional positions until <" hinese ~ociety and politics. • for fflllll aN tlrnN, 864-45111.. . t participating college is entitled 10 Klein i, al,o the a uthor of a one State representative for each running the mile in 4:26 not minority-group candidates have nearly fast enough to make the heen ,ought out and. if qualified "idelv acclaimed hook, Thcher students should request ested students to discuss oppor­ analysis TEACH SCHOOL BOOKS, ETC. WANTED special loan applications after tunities in the world of business You'RE KIDDING, You'vE NEVER April 15. Decisions are an­ Souza & True Inc. - Civil Old books, records, furniture and to respond to questions and TAUGHT HIGH SCHOOL? nounced in July after June Engineering majors for struc-' would be greatly appreciated for concerns about relationship be­ Teach min-courses at the Somer­ Boston State Hospital's planned grades are availab_le. tural design tween the ·affairs of business and ville High School. Almost any patient library in May Unit - THURSDAY, MARCH 16 human issues. topic that will turn the kids on. See or call Larry Gosline, 224 LOANS General Dynamics / Electric This is an opportunity to enter All times possible. Only one,or Houston, 776-5373. Students holding second semes­ Boat Div. - Electrical, two hours a week. We need into discussion with men who ter loans should sign for them, Mechanical, and Civil Engin­ you. Get out into the world. PARTNER WANTED administ~r various kinds of as directed, if they have not eers See the Experimental College, Needed: Squash Partners, please · business enterprises. Chairman already done so. Loans not Dames & Moore - applied Miner 02. call Dwight at 625-0692. for the evening will be Mr. completed as requested will be Earth and Environmental Sydney Miller from the Harry cancelled in March. Sciences Miller Company of Boston. SHABBAT DINNER FRIDAY, MARCH 17 Dinner, services, and people. Honeywell Institute - Science USSR Informal shabbat gatherings and Engineering Soviet Union. Camping and every other Friday night. Next Morse Shoe, Inc. - any major, driving. 5 or 10 wks. July & one: Fri., March 17, 5:30 p.m. Retailing _ August. Small groups. Un­ at Hillel House, 108 ,Bromfield International Business Machines restrictive style. Call: Brenda Rd. Reserve by Tues., Mar. 14! Corp. all Engineering 776-5744. Shelly x597. majors. 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1::!Y DOUG PARKHURST fini sh first in 2:03.5. Peter and leaves of absence. He was RY DOUG PARKHU RST I hem as leaders," says Penders. Tufts finished sixteenth in a Shapland was 20th, timed at unable to field a J.V . squad due to Head Basketball Coach Tom "Both were very unselfish in their field of eighteen teams at the New 2: 17.5. In this event. 29 swimmers the small number of people who Pender, is iustifiably "happy with "·nrk for the team." England Intercollegiate Swim­ competed in 6 heats. c;a me out for the team overall. 1he progress \\'e made turning last ming Association Championships The last event on Friday was He stresses the individual ,·ear's 1-1 7 \eason record into a Penders praised the def~nsive held at Springfield on March 2-4. 1he -WO va rd medley relays. The impro\'ement of various swim­ ·, 2-8 111 ,1rk this year." Tufts has capabilities of the Jumbo squad. Springfield College finished first Tufts squad made of of Tom mers as the season progressed. the most improved basketball ·'Shooting-w ise Tufts was a below with a total of 388 points. Second Little. John Fagerlund. John Hut he sees the future as in the 1eam in New England for this past average team. We made 39 per ,, as Southern Connecticut Stale Salva tore. and Varney Hintlian hands of freshmen especially. ,eason. Records are now being cent whereas o ur opponents \\'ith 227. and Amherst was third placed 13th ·among 18 . Tufts' time s\\'im mers \\'illing to come out for ,tudied 10 determine if it m'a'y averaged around 4j per cent. ~coring 180 points. Williams was 3:58.3. The wining squad was 1he squad and work hard to build possibly he the most improved in Although we scored 91 points per placed fourth with 172, and Springfield's which was clocked a team over three or four years. the nation. game. it was our defense which l lConn finished fifth with 169. at .1:39.6 in the final. gave us the opportunity to score. The meet covered three days On Saturday night 7 events That ,,·e could compensate this and nights including trials and 11·ere held. Tufts competed in 5. "ay is a tribute to our hustle and finals. Tufts did not enter every Varney Hintlian was 13th, Bob ,l\"erall effort." event. Of three events Thursday Dorfman 19th. and Joe Poges night Tufts competed in one, the 25 th in the 100 yard freestyle. .XOO yard freestyle relay. Tufts They were timed at 51.2, 52. 1 and When asked about some in­ pl.iced 10th out of the 16 teams ::;2 _9 respectively. Barry McCoy dividual members of the team. ·'enders responded this way. "l competing in that event. The 11011 the event in 49..(). 49 relay team of Don Bettencourt, swimmers competed in the 10 am pleased with the development c;ary Bettencourt. Joe Poges, and heah. of Willie Young and Reggie (; raha m . \\'ho were the leading Peter Shapland was clocked at Jack Salva tore won 5th place in X:00.9. The winning time was 1he 100 vard butterfly. His time in ,corer a nd rebounder for the learn respectively. Both are 7: 23. 1 posted by the Williams 1he finai was 55. 1 Ray Godbout of ,4uad. l lNH finished first in 52.9. maturing as hall players. Willie In Friday's finals Tufts par- In the 100 yard backstroke ,ho11ld he a strong candidate for 1icipated in all events but diving. Tom Litt le finished 24th out of 34 All-American honors next year. Ht'ggie's statistics are p retty ·1he I ,t event was the 50 yard ""immers in a time of I :03.0. impressi ve for a \Ophomore. and lreestyle. Bob Dorfman and Joe Gc,rdon Gardiner took first place he ,ho11ld he a great p layer at our l'oges finished 20th and 22nd in 57.0. le\'el." respectively for Tufts. Their times John Fagerlund represented were 23.4 and 23.5. The winner Tufts in the 100 yarp breast· 11 as Barry McCoy or Springfield ,troke. Swimming in the second "John While \\'as probably our 11 ith a time of 22.2. In all . 49 heat.he was limed at I :09.3. Peter higgest wrprise of the season. It ,wimmers competed. \ansone of Springfield won in " ·as 1he fir,t time he had played at In the next event Jack I :02.4. in the final. ' Tufts. l'er minute he had an \alvatore placed 12th in a 28 man ·r ufh placed ninth in the last impre\sive number of assists. He field in the 200 yard butterfly. His event. the 400 yard freestyle a\'eraged \even c,r eight assists 1ime in the final heat was 2: 10.8. relay. T he team of Varney per game. John handled the ball The winning time of I :57.9 was I lintlian. Don Bettencourt. Peter 7() per cent of the time and under posted by Gary Haag of Amherst. Shapland. and Bob Dorfman was mv style a guy John's size can play In the 200 yard backstroke docked at 3:25.5 and came in 9th. like that. We run the controlled ·1om Little finished 26th out of Springfield won the event in 1ype fast break. getting the ball to 1he :n swimmers competi!)g. The .1 : 1.1.2 17 relay teams took part. John where he can see where the 11 inner was Gordon Gardiner of Despite its 6-7 season record players are and if he has an Springfield in 2:06.3. Little's time and poor showing at Springfield, opening someplace." was 2:21.1. the team deserves credit for The 2"0 yard breaststroke was overcoming the loss since last "A\ to an unsung player who won h) Edwin Suddleson of vear of a head coach and a doesn't get too much publicity. Brown. Histimewas2:17.9. Tufts' ;wmher of swimmers. But im­ l'aul Daniels. although he is not .John Fagerlund placed 17th out portant was its consistent im­ outstanding in any o ne area, is of .15 .,wimmers with a time of provement as this season alwavs consistently good in his 2:3 1.0. progressed. play ·and is an asset to the team." Don Bettencourt and Gary ·1 he first half of the winter was In referring to the Jumbo's Bettencourt finished 19th and dark for Tufts. as they dropped Penders. in his first year as ~uccess Penders. points o ut that .1 1\I repsectively in the 200 yard ,ix of eight dual meets. After Feb . II cad Coach at Tufts. said that the ·1 ufts \\'as favored in only three freestyle. T heir times were I :57.8 ;, however. their record for dual Tracksters player\ performed well as a team. ga mes. those against Coast and 2: 03.4. Peter Robinson of meet~ was 4-1 . ·· ·1 he players at the t::nd of the (;uard. Norwich. and Suffolk. He Bowdoin was on top of the 43 Don Megerle, as he started his ,·ear "ere \\'Ork ing more on their al\o emphasi7.es the advantage m;~n fi eld with a finish of I :49.6. first vear of head coaching. was fail-IC4A o\\'n abilit y. Everyone was doing The 200 yard individual medley 1hat many of the competing tea!flS faced \\'ith the loss of a number of BY STEPHEN G. TARRY hi, own ,ioh. Sometimes tha t is ,aw James Harper of Williams \Wimmers through graduation have in being allowed to play Coach John Pistone and five 1he toug hest thing for a coll ege fre,hmen. Fourteen of the twenty members of the track team player lo do. to work at his own teams Tuft\ played were a ll owed travelled to Princeton last ability. and hy doing so become a 10 field freshmen on the varsity. "eek end for the IC4A indoor functioning member of a team." Next year I here will be even r'nor~ RedSox-PantyHose championship. Individuals and "l tried to develop a winning , ar\ity opponents with freshmen teams from throughout the attitude and gain some respect for ".Jl'ad.memhers. As it looks now, Northeast and the middle a basketball team playing at o ur onlv Amherst and Wesleyan will Atlantic region participate in this 1101 · play freshmen on the varsity. HY MARC CUTLER c;eneral Manager Dick level. Mine is a completely meet. l Jnfortunately. it was a long different \tyle of basketball than The coaches in the conference