Stone scores arms policy

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Fr t n.. EddlemanEhrman Dresse:Bovanck George'Solsh Others Blank TAULATED UAPUAP RESULTS?TABULATED UJAPUAVP RESULTTS By Ted Lchtensten Wells Eddleman and Steve Ehrmann were elected UAP and UAVP n a close race last Wednesday, recevng 907 votes on the thrd ballot to Dresser Bovamrnck's 848. George Solsh went out on the thrd ballot. The total vote of 1899, 49% of the student body, was the largest n four years. There were turnouts of 2181 n 1966 and 2069 n 1965, whle last year's was only 1617. John Kryzwck '72, who comanaged the electon wth Dave Mclwan '70, felt the relatvely large turnout was'4nfluenced by the nsttuton ths year of multple pollng places and the lftng of the requrement that the voter present an MT actvtes card. nstead of punchng actvtes cards, poll workers smply marked and x on the back of voters' MT dentfcaton card. The tabulated results of the referendum ballot wll be made publc wthln the next few days. results wll be used as npul t VOLUME XC, NO. 8 FRDAY, MARCH 6, 1970 FVE CENTS Stone scores arms polcy By Joe Kash About seven hundred people attended the fnal sesson of the twoday March 4th arms control actvtes to hear.f. Stone, Edtor of.. Stone's BWeekly, castgate present Amercan mltary polcy as the dabolcal product of a malevolent elte. Contnung, Stone sad that Amercans would have no fath n the upcomng Strategc Arms Lmtaton Talks (SALT) f they vewed dsarmament attempts n hstorcal perspectve. Of the many dsarmament conferences snce the frst n 1897, not one has produced any lastn desrable effects. Fro example, he sad, the Brtsh and French were on the verge of a cessaton of naval compettons untl the aged and dodderng Duke of Wellngton told the Brtsh that new French steamshps could secretly land 50,000 troops near London and overrun the captal. Agreements wth the French collapsed, and a new arms race began as the Brtsh became mesmerzed, by natonal paranoa. ndeed, throughout the conference, the mssed chances for general dsarmament was a central theme. Stone lsted three occasons durng the nuclear age when the U.S. mssed chances for dsarmament. The frst was n 1955 when the Russans accepted the Western proposals for c o nm pr e e n s ve dsarmament, however, the West backed down from ts prevous poston. The second opportunty was just before Kennedy's nauguraton when Sovet' offcals told Scence Advsor Jerome Wesner that they were ready to negotate f the U.S. would not contnuously talk of a dangerous mssle gap; but the U.S. dd and bult a thousand CBMs. Agan, n 1963, a thrd chance occured when the Sovet Unon was prepared to accept a total test ban treaty, but Kennedy became cautous n hs proposal to Congress n order to placate the hawks. The U.S. began another round of underground testng and the possblty for agreement was lost. New chance at SALT The fourth chance s now 1st 634 623 494 133 15,. 2nd 665 676 ' 507 3rd 907 848 CLASS ELECTON RESULTS Class of ;70.: Permanent Offcers Presdent... Steve Carhart VcePresdent...... Bob Denns SecretaryTreasurer..... Laura Maln Executve Commttee....... Greg Arenson, Joseph Baron Greg Gowdy, Robert Vegler Pamela Whtman Class of '71 Presdent... Executve Commttee Class of '72 Presdent.... Executve Commttee Class of '73 Presdent.. Executve Commttee........... Howard J. Segal..... Joseph Angland, Dane Feldman Gary Felser............. Peter Whte... Thomas Bergen, Dave debronkart Randall Frazer, Kenneth Kempson Paul Levy, Wllam Reenstra.............Curts Reeves. Mchael Chang, Rchard Goettke Steve Strauss ~5 ~~~"~t ',5 ' " ~...... 'The,mm.~~~~~ confrontng. us, sad Stone, n the form of the SALT talks. But, f the U.S. puts them n hstorcal prespectve, we wll not expect the llusory hope of general accord on lmtaton. Stone further charged that the ABEM, another central focus of the conference, was really an attempt by the Nxon admnstraton to buy a frst strke aganst manland Chna. "t's purpose s war, not peace." Three partcpants n the UCS program, Jerome Wesner, George Rathjens, Professor of Poltcal Scence, and GerogeKstakowsky of Harvard, are expected to testfy aganst the ABM before Congress when the fght aganst ts expanson s rejoned ths year. Jerome Wesner, Provost of MT, sad Tuesday nght at Harvard's Sanders Theater, that MRV and ABM were clearly "dsasters" and that further Amercan progress on the weapons' could hurt the SALTtalks. Amerca, he sad, has a way of overreactng to almost any concevable threat we can thnk of, thus fuelng the arms race. Because of the long leadtmes n weapon development, "You don't need an opponent, you only need a mrror." Amerca has tradtonally been favorable to defense allocatons of any type. Recently, however, the country has become ncreasngly skeptcal of mltary weapons sgystems and the need for them. The problem, Wesnersad, s how to accelerate ths process of skeptcsm. Clark then rose and asked "Are we crazy?" Yes, sad Clark, for we contnue to buld weapons and become. afrad of our own shadows, thus weakenng chances for dsarmament, SALT offers he mantaned, the U.S., a reasonable chance for dsarmament. He further agreed wth Wesner that prvateefforts outsde the government would ultmately prove more effectve. The U.S. can promote general dsarmament wthout drastcally hurtng ts natonal securty, clamed, by: reducng the land based mssles, cuttng the mltary budget to ffty bllon dollars, cuttng back the armed servces to two mllon men, pressng for agreementperhaps total nuclear dsarmament by 1973at the SALT talks, promotng an effectve nternatonal peacekeepng force, mplementng suggested strengthenng reforms of the UN, and ultmately formng a world federaton capable of outlawng war. "t [dsarmnament] all depends on you. Organze". Envronmental war Congressman Rchard McCarthy (D.,N.Y.), one of the orgnal fghters aganst ChemcalBologcal Warfare (CBW), decred natonalleaders for ther (Please turn to page 5) By Alex Makowsk and Lee Gguere SDSSMC members found themselves shorn of a target when they arrved at the Placement Offce Wednesday. Havng only three ntervews scheduled, Captan Mlner, the OCS recruter, vacated hs offce at 11:00 am. The vanguard of the march ht the Placement Offce about 40 mnutes later. The abrupt change splt the. an Edd reman s UAP materal n the decsonbmakng process of the Workng Group on Judcal Processes of the Task Group on Governance of the MT Commsson. The workng group s chared by Prof. Campbell Searle. Eddleman and Ehrmann felt that the electon turnout should have been better, but noted that t was relatvely good. Snce all the canddates stood for smlar ssues they felt the good turnout s an ndcaton that students want change, and, accordng to Ehrmann, that students wll be wllng to work for t. E and E's Plans, Tha offcerselect began talkng wth General Assembly representatves and the other canddates shortly after learnng of ther electon to begn the process of organzng the GA for ts desred role of ncreased effectveness. The'new UAP team s mmedately faced wth the task of judcal reform n conjuncton wth the Judcal Workng Group. They stressed the need for feedback from the MT communty on ths ssue. Student opnon on the MRV ssue s a pressng concern. GA representatves wll be charged wth the job of talkng to ther consttuents about ths. Another task marked for prompt acton s gettng people nvolved n ther departments. E and E plan to set up two new organzatons of the GA, a communcatons board and arn "operatons group". The com' muncatons board wll be charged wth mantanng contact between the GA and the nsttute's varous commttees and student groups. The operatons group wll be the central organzaton for tacklng the multtude of programs for change whch students feel should be worked on. ts membershp wll be open to all; t s ntended as the channel through whch students can get nvolved n the nsttute's affars. Students who wsh to work on t are urged to contact WVells or Steve. Lack of experence should not dscourage anyone. The group wll be selforganzed nto groups.of 3 to 5 students who wll ether tackle tasks of ther /hoce or wll be gven a problem whch needs to worked out. The task forces mght make recommendatons to Presdent Johnson. n the past some of these student task force recommendatons have been accepted n leu of those of faculty commttees. n the course of ther campagn, Eddleman and Ehrmann talked to about 1300 people. The most promnent concerns they encountered were dssatsfacton wth the judcal system (Please turn to page 5} Paul Snover, Greg Arenson, and Karen Wattel hand count class electon ballots at the Computer Center n Buldng 39. Radcal students protest aganst a unted Frut recruter at the Placemnent Offce Wednesday afternoon. Photo by Tom Jahrts Photo by Gary Ezzell SDSS.MC protest fzzles shaky SDSSMC coalton. SMC leaders, refusng to jon the other radcals n ther attempt to confront the Unted Frut and General Electrc recruters, announced that ther organzaton was pullng out. The next hour was spent n random dscussons wth Robert Weatherall, Placement Offce drector, and two ar three hecklers. RLSDS role Fears that RLSDS partcpaton could spell mltancy proved groundless as less than ten members of that radcal group showed up. RL leaders explaned that the acton was vewed as a oneshot, once a year, affar best left to those ndvduals nterested. But RL member Jeff Mermelsten dd nsst that the demonstraton had an educatonal value. The demonstraton opened wth an 11:00 am rally n buldng seven. About 25 students gathered. as MTSDS speaker 'Llan Robnson and SMC leader Charle Scott denounced both the war and MT's contrbuton. Scott ntroduced Jerry Bell, and SMC member and V'etnam veteran wth a long lst of arguments aganst the US nvolvement n Southeast asa. Abqut ffty people joned for the trek from buldng seven to the Placement Offce. Sporadc, futle attempts were made to start unfed chantng. The marchers were met at E19 by Captan Olver, two campus patrolmen, and Weatherall. Recruter gone One of the marchers was nvted n to verfy Weatherall's clam that the Army recruter was gone. He reported back to (Please turn to page 5}

._ PAGE2 FR ';A, * v... 90 PAGE 2,FRDAY.MARCH 6, 197'0.... ;,S 18 ~ ~ ~ ~ _1... : [ m! F.:!.,, By Harvey Baker "The guy that dd that ought to be castrated wth a dull spoon." Wth these words, Herbert Woodson, Housemaster of Burton House, characterzed the.culprt, presumably a student, whose nnocent "'hack" caused a flood of the frst order on the frst floor. of Burton House Monday nght. Several huge wads of computer tape were found at the bottom of the man dran; they had effectvely stopped up the dran so that no water could pass through. As a result, the water backed up the dran, floodng the men's rooms, and ultmately the whole floor. A plumber who was called n to repar the damage stated that the cost.of fxng the backup would be very hgh, and that he was convnced that the blockup was delberate. Several people nvolved expressed the opnon that the hack was accomplshed by flushng long lengths of the tape down the toletrepeatedly untl a jam had been effected. The practcal jjoker had obvously spent the better part of several hours to accomplsh hs deed. The cleanup process began about mdnght. Because of the jam, a ppe had overflowed n the vcnty of the elevator, causng t to cease functonng. Consequently resdents had to use the stars for the most of the evenng to ascend to ther rooms. All the rugs on the frst floor had to be taken up, be: cause they were saturated wth water. Ths process tself took several hours, and at ths wrtng, they stll have not been relad. For about a week pror to the flood, some students, many WOMA N ELECTED *ETA KAPPA NU. PRESDENT The MT Chapter of Eta Kappa Nu, the Natonal Honorary Socety n Electrcal Engneerng has elected ts frst woman presdent n recent hstory. The 19701971 Presdent s Susanne M. Schulz '71, a woman student from Lttle Ferry, New Jersey. She replaces Mchael Dckens '70 of SPE, who now takes the post of Frst Member atlarge. The electon' was held n the Vannevar Bush room on the evenng of February 26, 1970. Other offcers elected wth Mss Schulz were: Vce Presdent, Thomas M. Gearng '71; Recordng Secretary, Davd V. James '71; Correspondng Secretary, Vncent E. Chan '71Treasurer, Marshall A. Schorn '71; Brdge Correspondent, Mchael P.' Portnoff '71; Frst Memberat Large, Mchael W. Dckens '70; Second Memberat Large, Smon Y Ho '71; and Thrd MemberatLarge, Carolyn A. Ross '71. Brdge s the natonal electrcal engneerng fraternty's magazne. The Brdge correspondent's job s. to keep the magazne nformed of the actvtes of the MT local. Relax and Dvert CAMPuS CUE 590 Commonwealh Ave. (Opposte B. U. Towers) Pcket Blards ''reat fo r a Date"' 'from :BtUon: House, had. been~ story s that whle: the repars seen walkng around the nst were proceedng, sgns were tute grounds, trang: long posted on the lavatores askng lengthsdo computer tapebehnd students'to abstan from usng them,..and strngng t'around them for the duraton of the trees, buldngs, etc. ' Many process. One student nonetheless people consder t lkely that gnored the sgn, used the tolet, these same students are respon and, accordng to reports, sble for the Burton flood, managed to depost fecal waste At the heght of the flood, drectly on the face of a plumber the entre frst floor of Burton workng at the bottom of the House was ankledeep n water, tolet dran. The comment of the and access was blocked off. unfortunate plumber s un An nterestng sdelght to the prntable.,, _,,,_l_r_. a9 f" Wome's Wonmeratn day a March here 8' Cl."beran teachn her nternatonal Women's Day s Sunday,. March 8, and the local women's lberaton chapters are plannng a conference for the day before' n room 1390 at MT. There wll be a publc. forum on the:_preceedng Frday nght at 8:00 pm to whch the publc s nvted. The. topc of the for um wll be "How Women Lost the Control Over Ther Destnes and How They Can Regan t." On Saturday, admsson s restrcted: to women only, as panels and semnars wll contnue n 1390 throughout the day coommencng at 10:45 am. Partcpatng n the day of dscusson wll be representatves. from the Mothers for Adequate Welfare, Boston Women Unted, Natonal Organzaton: of Women, and Bread and Roses, among others. ' The dea to set up an nternatonal Women's Day dates back to 1908, when the. suggeston was frst made at a Socalst Party, conventon n ths country. They proposed at the tme that a Sunday be set asde ~ ~a~~rp ~~9~~Ls~P M ", ra M 0. e ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ L _ ~~~~~~~~~~ :.JLC.,,..,.'.: MARCH 8 each year to rally women to the cause of ther equalty and emancpaton. The frst publc celebraton was n 1909. nx 1914, nternatonal Women's Day was celebrctd by German women demonstratnn 2 protest of the arrest of radcal Rosa Luxembourg. n 1917, women workers n Petrograd, Russa spontaneously chose ther day to go on, stke aganst the overgrown bread lnes and terrble lvng condtons. HOW TO GETA DOCTOR OF DVN TY DEGREE Doctor of Dvmty degrees are ssued by, Unversal Lfe Church. along wth a Oles,'n course n the procedure of settng up and operatng a nonproft organzaton. For a free wtl offerng of $20 we wll send you. mrmedately, all 10 lessons n one package along wth a D. D. certfcate. UNVERSALLFE CHURCH BOX 6575 HOLLYWOOD. FL.ORDA 33021 Natlona Go wth a company that's really gong places. Natonal Lead's 50 dvsons encompass over 200 eroduct lneseverythng from pants and plastcs to nuclear fuels and space age metals. Annual sates approach a bllon dollars. And our 20D plants, labs and offces are located throughout the country ard throughout the World. Lead wpants you. MARCH 18, 1970 Audtons l for the Tech Show '70 ucton of The Fantastcde wn beheld next Monday drougq Wednesday, March 911, at 7:30 pm on the second floor of te Student Center. Pnomances wllbe on Aprl, lmay 1, andmay 2. Ca1 4910813 after 5 pm for nformatkm.harp players ntested n playng for the show please call 4910813' * The monthly meetng of the MT Communty Psayenwll be on Mauch 19 n the Faculty. Cbb. there wl be a readng of n he.matter of J. Robert Oppenhemer. Cocktals are at 7:30, meetng at 8 pm n thepenthouse. There are stll techncal and backstage openngs for the sprng producton, Delcate Balance. C helsea Unversty n Bedford, Mass. s havng Davd Dellnger speak Frday at 8:30 n Cousens Gym. * Aman Eanonn Mc"ann, young rsh radcal socalst, wll speak on the revolutonary movement n reland n the MT Student Center, Sals de Puerto Rco, Sunday, March 8, t 8 pm; Sponsored by People's DemorCcy support group n Boston and SACC. Fot more nformaton call Paul McNulty, x6746. * The annual MT Red Cross Bno Drve wll beheld frommauch 11 through March 20. Ths yews goal s 2214.3 pnts [exactly 10o hgher than bsf year's,. To donate, see your solctor or obtan a form at the booth n Buldng 10. For nformaton on schedulng or elgblty, can x7911 or x3788. * Dr. hvng Londons Head of the MTHanrvad Jont Medcal Studes ProgAM,'wl speak on "Career Opportuntes n Health and Medcne" at an ASME meetng on Thursday, Mard 26, 1970 at 5 pm n the Bush ROom, Room: 10105. All'ate weloome. Coffee and doughnut wll be seved. * Dr. Harret L. Hardy, Head of the Occupatonal Medcne Srvce at MT, wnlt speak. on "MRanX0de Dsease" at an ASKE meetng on Tuesday, Aprl l4, 1970 at 5 pm, n Room 3133, ADlla welcome. Coffee and doughnuts wll be served. Want free computer tme? Tme sharng: CTSS; Multcs, ncludng a srpnletoleam BASC system. Batc: BM 360/6540. For: projects of your own despy lab calmatons, problemsets, MT Welslbey students. me to the SPB, 39594 1, Monday, thro Fray 35 pm, or cal x7.788 at those tmes. ~LC ~ J nteractve Lectures on Astronomy Freshmen wth curosty about astronomy but no great knowledge of the subject are nvted to use an expermental ' system contanng recorded lectures plus answers to queston that may arse whle lstenng. f yo u would lke to try the system, please wrte a short note to Stewart' Wlson, Polarod Corp., 730 Man Street, Cam brdge (near MT), statng your:prospectve MT course, the hours you are free, and how you' can be reached. Wth a BA/BS, MA/MS or PHD n just about any area of scence, engneerng or admnstraton, you'll go far wth Natonal Lead. Our ntervewer wll be on campus and happy to gve you more nformaton on the date below. Or wrte to our College Relatons Manager,, Natonal Lead Company, 111 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10006. Natonal Lead ' An equal opportunty employer..., a m s

~~ ~~. THETECH FRDAY,MARCH 6, 1970 PAGE3 _/ t Fcnaal ut l rpend'ng Whte, Reeves elected.~~~~~~~ 1,... L v..l,... J _,,, 10 ldt A ByDck: Kng because MThad been dggng. An attempt s beng made to A letter h as been sent out nto the 'prncpalnot just equalze the amount students wth the Fnancal Ad Appl: nterestof the Technology owe when they leave here. Mert By Lee Gguere caton.materal ths year to the Loan Fund. Also, HEW allo that the nsttute's money catons to MT va the Defense ad package was dvded, between junor class presdent. used to be consdered when the presdent and Dave Slesnger for n the two contested class effect electons;' Curts Reeves was s becomng tght and that cut Educaton act are down. from scholarshp and loan, leavng, Curts Reeves, '73, who elected presdent of the Class of backs n fnancal ad loom n $650,000 to $400,000.' those wth poor grades and large termed the 400 vote turnout '73, 255 to 143, and Pete Whte the future. Studentsreceng ther fnan fnancal need possbly owng up "not too bad" sad he had no was elected Presdent of the the Three major changes n the calad package wll be "'stongly to $6000Q to MT when they defnte plans yet. He plans to Class of '72, 246 to 204. fnancal ad process wll take advsed to take an oncampus graduated. Ths amount can be talk to Steve Allen and complete the unfnshed. busness Elected the new presdent of place. part tme job. At present a stu reduced by equafzng dstrbutons of scholarshps and the Class of '71 was Howard J. of the freshman councl. Grateful to the members of 'the class Frst, loans tograduate stu dent doesn't have to declare Segal and Steve Carhart became dents are.beng cut. Ths change ncome from such a job on hs loans. The mert system wll the permanent presdent of the n sructure was announced n statement of fnancal resources,. reman n effect untl the next who voted for hm, he wll try to Class of '70. The Tech recently. Snce loan but n the future anythng up to ncomng class to allow those get rd of some of the apathy. Other class offcers elected mones have been the hardest ht about $600 of whathe earns wll who have been countng on a lot Reeves sad the class wll deft Wednesday are: Mchael Chang, by varous cutbacks,. MT:wouldbesubtracted needsas from/hs of money. because of a really.utely have a Junor Prom and Rchard 'Goettke, and Steve lke to make what. there s avals bresources. frr. h a good cumr to contnue to do so. plans to get started on class rngs Strauss, Classof '73 Executve ble contnue to.go_ to odund. A large percentage of those A change s also beng made as soon as possble. He also Commttee;' Thomas Bergan, graduates n, order to mantan on fancal ad hold such jobs, n nsttute polcy n gettng pad hopes to ntate communty Dave DeBronkhart, Randall Frazer, Kenneth Kempson, Paul ts polcy of.complete. ancal: typcally earnng.fromrn&450. to. back these lownterest loans to projects. ad tothose who need t, a term, Wth the lower try to allevate the shortage n Reeves stated that whle he Levy,.and Wllam Reenstra, was for student government, he Loan money s tght. ths year fgures more common, the future.' Class of '72' Executve Commttee; Joseph Angland, Dane Feldbers of the class to fnd out what would communcate wth mem _ r _' P ~ r,.....7........... :P:AET#1ENO#'S RESTAUR A N man and Gary Felser, Class of they thnk the role of student, ~ ~.,,A ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~ LANCER'S SVN ROSE '71 Executve Commttee; and government should be, admttng A 'ATHENT'CGREEK' CUSNE $2.95 ffth Bob Denns, permanent Vcepresdent of 'the Class of '70; ment as t stands should be that "perhaps student govern EXCELLENT EUROPEAN AND AMERCAN WPNES ALL KNDS OF LQUOR A Product of Portugal l Laura Maln permanent Secretarytreasurer of the class of '70; "'m gong to cry" changed." UNQUEHELLENC ATMOSPHERE FEATURNG THE ANCENT GREEK PARTHENON wneofthemonth specal OPEN EVERY DAY for February and 'Greg Areason, Joseph Pete Whte, '72, when he 11 a.m. to p.m. Baron, Greg Gowdy, Robert learned of hs vctory, reportedly 660 Package Store Extremely Moadrate Prces Vegeler, and Pamela Whtman sad, "'m gong to cry, they 660 Cambrdge St. For Reservatons Co 4910592 East Cambrdge Class of '70 Executve Cornmttee. further comment sayng only can't do ths to me." He refused 1 t924 Mas. Ave. At the RxR tracks (BETWEEN HARVARD AND The defeated canddates were that he would resgn as Nght * ~~! ~CENTRAL SOUARES} Steve Allen for sophomore class Edtor of The Tech because of _ 9, 1.. 1. _ hs new dutes. Hs campagn had been based on the premse that hs class should have a choce. Do you thnk Howe Segal, '71, emphaszed that class government can do almost anythng t wants to a brght young engneer do. Commentng on the lack of canddates, he sad that there s "more and more of an apathy towards everythng." Segal's man effort as presdent wll be to "collect the reflectons of class members on the changes of the last four years." Some of the changes that he noted were the death of student commttees, and recent antwar actvtes. should spend;> hs most magnatve years on the same assgnment? That's whywe have a twoyear Rotaton Program for graduatng engneers who would prefer to explore several techncal areas. And that's why manyof ourareas are organzed by functon rather than by project. At Hughes, you mght, work on spacecraft, communcatons satelltes. and/or tactcal mssles durng your frst two years. All you need s an EE, ME or Physcs degree andtalent. Nether do we. f you qualfy, we'll arrange for you to work on several dfferent assgnments... and.you can help pck.them. You :may select specalzed jobs, or broad systemstype jobs. Or you can choose notto change assgnments f you'd rather develop ndepth sklls n one area. Ether way, we thnk you'll lke the Hughes approach. t means you'll become moreversat le n a shorter tme. (And your salary wll show t.) um omy cornestea races m ' HUJGHES. HUGHES ARCRAFT COMPANY AROSPAC r DVSONS Segal felt ambvalent to the change at the nsttute, seeng t as both good and bad. Steve Carhart, '70, stated that he was "really nterested n workng on Commencement." He plans to try to make t meanngful n the present poltcal context. He also wants to set up some means for alumn to desgnate the money they donate to the alumn fund to be used for socally needed changes. No More "Leftover Spolage"! P.B r BYE B ~~bl 1'1 17~~ PLPP CAMPUS NTERVEWS: March 12 & 13, 1970 Representatves of several actvtes of Hughes Arcraft.Company (each wth hghly r specalzed personnel requrements and separate ntervew schedules) wll vst your campus. f your career nterests le n one or more of the followng felds of aerospace/electroncs, contact your Placement Offce TODAY to make sure your name gets onthe ntervewng schedule for HUGHES AEROSPACE DVSONS: Mcrowave & Antenna Engneerng ElectroOptcal Engneerng Gudance & Controls Engneerng M.crocrcut Engneerng f ~ Spacecraft Desgn Engneerng Space,Systems Engneerng Components & Materals Engneerng Mssle Systems Engneerng l Weapon Systems Engneerng Crcut DeasSgn Engneerng ~~ ~U.S. Ctzenshp requred/an equal opportunty employer. edp L aaaa _sa _, Wne n Cans s Here! That's rght. Now you can enjoy your favorte wne at every meal and not worry about "leftover spolage." Party Tyme's unque flavorgard* alumnum can holds 8 oz.just rght for two glasses. Our lttle cans chll quckly, open easly, and holds the fnest from Calforna's vneyards. Choose Rose, Burgundy or Chats. NOW AT YOUR LOCAL SUPERMARKET, PACKAGE OR WNE STORE.._.

PAGE4 FRDAY, MARCH'6,1970 THE ' '. L L ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Tech would lke to congratulate the newly elected Undergraduate Assocaton Presdent, Wells Eddleman, and hs runnng mate Steve Ehrmann. They take over a student government whch has had lttle mpact on the student body whch t represents. For student government to become more than just shallow words wll requre much work and a great deal of nvolvement by ndvdual students. An encouragng note s the fact that almost 1900 students voted n the electon, the largest turnout n years. Perhaps ths ndcates the knd of nterest and support that Wells and Steve were descrbng n ther campagn. Here sy Exactly what courteses are due a foregn dgntary travellng n one's country? Ths s a queston most concerned Amercans have had to deal wth n the last few days, partcularly concernng the state vst of French premer Georges Pompdou. Pompdou has complaned vocally and angrly about the treatment he receved n ths country from prosrael demonstrators, and crtczed the Chcago Polce for not takng stronger acton aganst them. Just how justfed are Pompdou's clams; and does he have a rght to expect the knd of securty he clams he should have had n ths country? To answer ths queston requres a bref look at the hstory of French and Amercan dgntares travellng abroad and at the knd of receptons they have receved. Most pognantly, take a look at Nxon's ventures nto South Amerca. There he was treated very roughly, and whle dspleased wth.the ant Amercan crowds, he never crtczed or blamed the government of the naton nvolved. Rather, the Presdent accepted hs treatmernt as a way of lfe n the countres he vsted and dd not try to coerce the governments of those countres n any obvous way. Consder now the treatment that foregn dgntares get when travellng n France. n that country,: crowds are never allowed to dsrupt n any manner the vstof a foregn dgntary. f demonstrators become too potentally. raucus, the polce do not hestate to use rot clubs to 'break up a crowd, and certanly do not worry about any volaton of the cvl rghts of the ndvduals they club. Thus, n France, dgntares never receve the sort of recepton that Pompdou dd n Chcago. Now, the queston s, what oblgaton dd Amercan polce have towards the French premer? Pompdou no doubt thought that he would be treated n a foregn country n just the same as any foregn VP would be treated n hs. Here, though, he made a logcal error. Undenably, Pompdou had a rght to expect suffcent securty precautons such that hs lfe and property would not be endangered. Also, he had a rght to expect a certan amount of protocol from the offcals of the government he was vstng. Beyond that, however, the responsblty of the recevng government ends. Pompdou must remember that whle n France the demonstrators would have been treated more harshly, he was not n France.' le was toutng Amerca, and b y dong so, was agreeng tactly not to voate any of the rules of that Congratulatons country, and was also agreeng not to ask that the cvl rghts of someone else n ths country be volated, for the sole purpose of hs gong unscathed. Pompdou's feelngs were hurt prvately, and he had every rght to let ths fact slp to Nxon, so that Nxon mght try to assuage hm somewhat, or at the very least take offcal cog; nzance of Pompdou's dspleasure. What Pompdou chose to do, however, was fo publcly ask that the rghts of law be dened to some Amercan ctzens, for a certan perod of tme, so that" he could travel blthely through the country. Ths sort of request s ntolerable. What may ultmately be even more ntolerable, however, s the unfortunate consequences that Pompdou's spurofthemoment outburst mght have for FrancoAmercan,, srael Amercan, and Francosrael relatons. Nxon, n an attempt to To the losng canddates n the race, Bob Dresser and Kevn George, we extend our congratulatons also for campagns well fought. We hope that theycan see ther way clear to workng wth the new UAP and UAVP for the betterment of the whole student body. Wells and Steve wll want all the help they can get from nterested members of the student body, and we urge Bob and Kevn to make ther contrbutons. Fnally, we hope that Wells Eddleman and Steve. Ehrmann, workng as a team, can be successful n reestablshng respect for student government durng the course of ths year. Congratulatons and good luck. Dplomatc ndscreton placate Pomnpdou stll further,' mght start to make concessons to hm that could owly lead to an ultmate worsenng of relatons between our two countres. Furthermore to "get even," Nxon mght just sell the sraels down the rver, and not agree to promse them any more arcraft to balance France's new saleof 10 Mrage jets to the Arabs, thus puttng srael n a dangerous strategc, poston. Fnally, Ponpdou's outburst, coupled wth hs refusal to meetwth Amerca's Jewsh leaders, can only lead to a worsenng of the already deteroratng relatons between France and srael. Hence we see thatpompdou's behavor whle n ths country cannot bode well for the future of the "Free World," whch cannot long stay that way f Pomrnpdou delberately contnues on the course he seems to have charted froor hmself and for hs naton. Letters to T he Tech Judcal process (Ed. note: Ths was receved by The Tech as an open letter to the colmmunty). Dear Professor Smulln: f you remember, was speakng to you and some other members of the Task Force on the Judcal Process last Tuesday. You asked me to descrbe my verson of a good judcal system at MT. sad that poltcal cases should be handled n a way so tat the just nature of the cause would be taken nto account. For example, students who hold a dsruptve demonstraton n opposton to MRV would not be punshed. You wanted to know how one could apply that prncple to cases ten years hence, and so here s my answer. A dscplne commttee would have to nqure nto both the facts and the ssues. A just cause would be one that champoned the nterests of the dscrmnated aganst and the poor n opposton to the rch and powerful. Of course, a far evaluaton of the ssues would requre an ndependent judcary, who would not be afrad to rule n favor of a dsrupton. They would h.av to be free to say that the demonstrators.should not be punshed and that the admnstraton s wrong. The MT admnstraton's current acton of pressng cvl and dscplnary charge s aganst Pete Kramer, a former member of the Dscplnary Commttee, would not be allowed under such a system. Another requrement f an ndependent judcary s that ther mnds be open. One has to realze how much ths proposal dffers from the present system. Now poltcal consderatons are out of order; n ths scheme they wvould be the order of the day. Now only the admnstraton's vewpont s assured 'of representaton; n the future, ther deas would be nsa dstnct mnorty. t s easy to see that ths plan wll,never be adopted; s t as smple to justfy that fact? Peggy Hopper Specal Labs' (Ed. note: Although ths was not receved as a letter, we run 'ths as an open statement to the comrunty.} To the MT Faculty: n regard to the comng faculty vote on March 11, as members of the Research, Development and Techncal Employees' Unon, we feel retanng the Specal Labs s vtal to the entre MT communty. People are mportant, The frst mpact wll e the loss of many jobs faculty, staff, and support employees. Another mpact wll be the loss of mportant revenue to the nsttute. The separaton of the SpecalLabs wll mean that Campus Labs wll have to make up a loss of $8,000,000 that goes for the support of mantanng facltes used by faculty members, students, and the entre MT communty (such as medcal, lbrary, and plant operaton). MT's exstence as a frst rate unversty s n no small way due to the Specal Labs whch provde an addtonal source of knowledge and realstc tranng.11.. Producton Manager....... Erk Calonus Edtoral Consultants. Carson Agnew'70, GregArenson '70 Red Ashe 70, Steve Carhart '70 Bob Denns'70, Jeff Gale '70 Greg Bernhardt 71,Ray Kwasnck '71 Assocate News Edtor..... Lee Gguere '73 Typographer.......... ; Me Bromnberg '70 Treasurer..............Joe Kubt'70 Accounts Recevable............. Rch Gulk'73 Accounts Payable.... Scott Berg '73 Crculaton... FredZerhoot'73 Producton Staff.V... ck Halburton '72, Steve ROvnscy '72 Cndy 0 'Connell '73, Gary Raymond '73 CurtsReeves '73 News Staff.. Harold Federow '70, Ed Grossman '71 John Jurewcz '71, Dave debronkart '72 Rchard Kng '72, Ted Lchtensten '72 Duff McRoberts '72, Warren Leonard '73 Bruce Peetz 'T,, Werner Schlegal '73 Entertanment Staff........Jeff Gale '70, Mke Fertag '72 Jay Pollack '72, Emanuel Goldman G Davd Housman G, Davd Maurello Sports Staff... Jon Frcker '70, Dave Rapoport '70 Karl Lamson '71, Bll Mfammen '71 Bob Gbson '72, Steve Goldsten '72 John Kavazanfan '72, Buzz Moylan '73 Dean North '73 Photography Staff......Gary Ezzell '73, Dave Johnston '73 Washngton Bureau Chef........Pete Peckarsky '69 Staff Canddates......... Wendy Erb '72, Danel Dern '73 John Lu G Secondclass postage padat Boston' Massachusetts. The Tech s publshed every Tuesday and Frday durng the college year, except durng college vacatons, by The Tech, Room W20483, MT Student Center, 84 Massachusetts Avente, Cambrdge, Massachusetts 02139. Telephone: Area Code 617 8765855,o 8646900 extenson 2731. Unted States Mal subscrpton rates: $4.50 for one year, $8.00 for two years. Prnted by STPublshng The Tech announces the resgnaton of Peter Whte '72 from the Board of Drectors of Volume 90. Mr. Whte, who held the ttleof Nght Edtor, resgned as a consequence of hs recent electon to the offce of presdent,of the Class of 1972. The Board and staff'of Te Tech wsh Mr. Whteand theclass of 1972 the best of luck. TT[ q / re EAD BO GLE HAS DSAPPEA EP! the Boson Herald Traveler the Boston Herald Traveeer L ' Board of Drecors : Chamnan... ;....... Crag Davs '71 e Edtor4m. Chef.'.... Randy awthone '71 : e e,. SB~ggg~jg~jg~jg~ Busness Manager..,............Steve Baley'72 fmaag Edtors.....Bob Fourer '72, Bruce Wenberg '72 Edtors....... '.Harvey Baker '72 KJash 72 Alex Makowsk 72, Bruce Schwartz 72 Nght Edtors....... Bll Roberts'72, Sandy Cohen 73 Entertanment Edtor...... ob Eln '73 Sports Edtor............ DonArkn 72 Photography Edto)r. Tom ahns'73 Advertsng Manag er............ Ed Markowtz 70 that has and can contnue to beneft students, employees, and faculty. f t s mportant for MT and the faculty to ahve a say n the, gudance of the Specal Labs, then t s mportant for the Specal Labs toreman as part of MT. Your vote not only drectly affects your own welfare, but also the ten thousand members of the MT communty and ther famles. Research, Development and Techncal Employees ' Unon There wll be a jont meetng of the Corporaton Jont Advsory Commttee and the Corporaton today at 2:00 PM n the Schell Room. Dscusson wll center around the Smplex property. The publc s nvted to attend... /.

0 Drector._allened on, recrutng polcy AL 4w (Contnued fbom pages 11 hs comrades that the OCS representatve had, ndeed,. departed but he,noted that men from Unted Frut 'and GE were:stf nsde. Ths annoncemnent prmcptated thesmc wthdrawl, and the 30, remanng students opted to contnue wth ther plans for a nonobstrusve run. Through Weatherall, they. tred to force a meetng wth the man from Unted Frut, but wthout success. The demonstraton degenerated nto dscusson groups, whle one heckler pestered the SDS by frng a cap gu n and complanng about radcal rhetorc and bullsht. Neutral? The leftsts entered nto one. sgnfcant, exchange wth Weatherall. Asked for hs opnon, the drector repled that "you cannot draw a lne between dfferent. recruters. Any 184 Massachusetts Avenue 4Cambrdge. Mass. 02139... ' ~~~~~~~Arthur Rosenbaum, Optcan c L * {Contaued from page 1) and would contrbute lttle to,mon:01lmana", carryng out prowthout ever thnkng the growth of the movement, a grams buldng seven rally was planned, about ther consequences to to be followed by an ndoor, omplh cated systems such as the nonobstructve stn. nvronament. For example, he Several of the radcals were sad, wvre develop nerve gases for concerned about the poor atten whch there s no real mltary dance at the meetng; at least need. VWhen we fmallydecde to one suggested that, n vew of rd o urselves of these gghly the lack of nterest, t mght not toxc aagents through the ratfca the Geneva Protocol out be a good dea to have any ton off demonstraton at all. Another lawng them, we nterpret t n student stated that he had found such a way as to make t all out that there were actually very meanngless. few.ntenrvews scheduled, and The U.S. specfcally exclud and harassgn gases most 6f those were ether rght ed deftolants wngers who wanted to confront that tt uses nnvetnam from demonstrators or radcals who ban. However, McCarthy sad, wanted to confront the re there Xs evdence that the defol use there have resulted cruter. ants wve Past actons n marny deformed brths, and The army OCR recruter has that thhe harassng gases we use been the target of leftst actons are fattal n large doses. At ths for the past few years. 1Last momennt, the U.S. and Canada sprng, the Resstance plans for a are usng the carcnogenc defoldemonstraton were shattered ant, 2 ',45,jT, to defolate a strp when the army recruter, along the AmercanCanadan clamng he had to reman on hs border. "t's envronmental warbase to supervse preparatons fare." for nspectons, bowed out. n s"f you were Nxon" 1968, about 50 students staged a Durng the Wednesday mornstn outsde the placement ng set.,son, Senator Clark asked offce. organzaton whch s!_ can recrut." SDS argued' that Weatherall's reply underlned the fallacousness of MT's clams to neutralty. Claearly, they argued, the government would not offer ts sancton to the Vetcong. By ts stand, then, the nsttute had gven support to the US effort UCS goals re narn aganst the NLF. Acton plans News Analyss by Joe Kash sent nnomenturn after poltcal The acton was planned at a Although rallyng support for presurre for polluton control meetng Monday. nght by less the new antabm fght n Con declnes. than 50 people. Sponsored by gress was the mmedate objec Armns control s a far less MTSDS and SMC, the meetng tve of UCS's March 4th actv certan feld %at the moment. consdered several possble tactcs, rangng from a mltant ac Scentsts', longrange goals and great corganzatonal and publc tes, the Unon of Concerned Scentsts wll have to exercse ton to a rally. The dea of a tactcs n the struggle to halt the relatorns efforts natonally f mltant acton receved lttle arms race are much less certan. they ajre to effectvely educate support: most of the hour and a Whle UCS has concerned t the pulblc on arms control and half was spent dscussng the self wth many aspects of scen mold publc opnon. Marcf 4th best place for a demonstraton/ tsts' socal responsblty, t s sbuta a start n ths drecton. At pcket lne. lkely that the group wll con the sanme tme, ntense lobbyng_ Confront vs. buld centrate on two fgelds: envron efforts can be mounted to pro The ssue addressed by most ment and the arms race. Envr vde po31cymakers, wth detaled of those present was whether t onment, though, s now a pop nformeaton about the arms race, was more mportant to confront, ular ssue. Scentsts wll probab and hoopefully change the pre feelngs toward ex the recruteror to buld support ly do less lobbyng for ecologcal sent beengn for the movement. Ths was reflected by dsagreement on the frequently to advse already con Ano ther feasble short term vglance but be called more cessve. mltary expendtures. best locaton for the demonstraton. Snce t was felt that any lowses ts glamor as an ssue, as t help aagreement at the SALT verted poltcans. Once ecology effort whch could concevably demonstraton n the area of eventually must, they wll be talks ss passage of the Brooke E19 would not be very vsble, charged wth mantanng pre antm[rv amendment. The SSudents p TechCoop Optcal NEXT TO SPECAL ORDER BOOKS N THE BOOK DEPARTMENT Sunglsses, talormade to your p&esrpton n the fnes of Bausch and Lomb and Amersan optklcamfe s Qualty and Servce s Our BywordPtronagc Refund Opthalmolgsts preserptons we flked.gpomptly accurately. Excellent selecton of frames for Men, /omen. Chldren. Offce Hours: MondayFrday, 8:50 to 5:00Lunch 2 3 (Cknsd) Saturday, 9:20 to 1:0rO Phone 491 42 30, Ext. 50 Or from MT dal.8950 T9CH WOOP, n the MT Student Center "Bravo! A mnd lanogn sparkler, shockngly brllaoato _a * ts. M. a tho tt stratsx( M SL Thes rs b ~ ~~~~ ~, ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ F. r to Begnnng Monday mornng, the lobbby of buldng seven wll be the locaton of a lven blled as a p)rotest aganst MT's war researcl:h and the secrecy sur new contract proposals roundrng at the Especal labs. Org; anzers of the "People's Lobby'"' emphaszed that ther acton s not the work of SACC, RLSDS S, MTSDS, Weathermen, SMC, c,r any other radcal group. No seecret tactcs meetngs are plannecdall decsons wll be the result of votes taken among those pe)artcpatng. Leafflets dstrbuted Wednes day esvenng urged students to "eat, slleep, tool, dance, sng, and WOULDP YO1U LKE TO BECOMaE A MNSTER? DtDNATON s wthout queston and for lfe. LEGAL n all 50 aes ad most'foregn countres. Perform legal marrages, ordnsthns and funerals. Receve dmcounts on. some fares. Over 265.000 ers have already been ordaned. Mnster's credentals and senosest an ordanment certfcate for framng and an D'card for our bllfolk We need your help to cover malng. handlng, and dmnstraton costs. Your generous contrbuton s apprecated. ENCLOSE A FREE WLL OFFERNG. Wrte to: THE TECH FRDAY, MARCH 6, 1970 PAGE 5 pantl CB9p~annng termed t ermted poor Door Panelsts General E.L. Burns of Canada, Prof. Matthew Meselson of Harvard, and Prof. Phlp Morrson spoke n Kresge, Wednesday. Photo by Harold Federow the panelsts what they would do to further dsarmament f they were Presdent Nxon. Leonard Rodberg of the nsttute for Polcy Studes sad that the U.S. should rd tself of landbased Mnuteman mssles, transfer 3 bllon dollars of defense research money to socal tnear amendment s now eght votes short of passage. Many New England senators have not supported t. Ths provdes fertle ground for organzatonal efforts n nearby states amed at fosterng a groundswell of support for the MRV amendment. t s lkely that some of these senators could be nduced to support Brooke f the publc responds favorably to educatonal efforts. Rhode sland senator John Pastore, a noted hawk, s up for reelecton ths 'year. f arms control were made an ssue, the publc would gradually become concerned wth t, as t dd wth polluton. Whether or not a dove beat Pastore, the wnner would have to be mndful of publc support of arms control when votng n Congress. an "1vea n t research lve" n the lobby for as long as they wsh. "t s an opportunty to explore new styles of lfe whle rejectng our programmed exstence." How long wll the protest last? One organzer of the rally, contacted yesterday by The Tech, emphaszed that the rally, duraton would hnge on the sprt and nterest of those nvolved, but "certanly t wll last through the trespass trals Tuesday and the faculty meetng Wednesday.' Sympathzers are urged to b r n g "gutars, kazoos, matresses, blankets, frends, your deas, and a voce." UNVERSAL LFE CHURCH BOX 8071 FT. LAUDERDALE, FLORDA 33314 scence research and depend upon the Polars submarnes to mantan our deterrent. George Rathjens, Professor of Poltcal Scence, sad that we should have hope but not confdence n the SALT talks. Further, he sad we should ntate more unlateral decsons to defuse that arms race and wat and see what longterm response we receve from other powers before begnnng new rounds of arms deployment. Marvn Goldberger, Professor of Physcs at Prnceton, sad that we must talk. We must talk to the Russans, to the Chnese. COMPUTER COUN T GOES POORLY XContnuecl from page 1) and tenure decsons, and a desre for coed housng and an ncreased range of lvng group alternatves, The Electon An nnovaton for ths year's electon was to tabulate the ballots by computor. The computer tabulaton for UAP showed E and E a head of Dresser Bovarnck by 55 votes on the thrd ballot, but 60 cards dd not regster n the computer tabulaton because they were ether ncorrectly punched or not punched at all. Ths stuaton prompted John Gunther, '72, who was workng on the tabulaton, to request a hand recount, whch was made. The results of ths hand count were announced at 1:00 am and are consdered the offcals results. The problems wth the computer tabulaton began when the prepunched ballot cards would not be accepted by the sorter. They were then duplcated on an BM 360 and started through the sorter. Next the tabulaton crew was forced to leave the sorter n the computaton center and had to take the cards to a machne n Buldng E19. Kryzwck felt that publcty efforts for ths year's electon mght have been mproved, and suggests that new publcty approaches be looked nto for next year's electon. Another practce nsttuted ths year was to have the canddates supply the poll worklefs. BLOW YOURSELF UP TO POSTER SZE ^ 2x3 Qgn S.S ^ $3 ~ 0 ~ ~~~' 1/2x2 Ft. S.SO50tP Send any black and whte or color photo, polorod prnt or magazne photo. A great Gft dea... A splendd Gag.o. deal room decoraton... perfect for partes. Poster maled n sturdy tube. Your orgnal returned undo*m90. Add s5 for hc r Kete ctd ladlng EACH ftm ordered. Send check, or M.0. (No C.O.D.) To: PHOTO POSTER NC. dept.x 210 a. 23 St., N.Y. 10010 4 L? L _,

... C _s ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~ r., _ 31~~R~~ l : _z qe PAGE 6,FR.DF)Y, MARFCCH 6, 1970 TV TtE C.H,. Y.~~~~ ;,P., W,..... * The Eastern Regonal Conference on Scence and Technology for Publc Programs wll meet at MT On Aprl 2;3, 1970. Tlhe'conference wll be addresed by many famos scentsts and publc fa'qures ndudng Senator Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. The cnference wff take up thetopcs of Ar and Wt erputon, Plannng and Management, Transportaton, Housng, Crme Control, Health Servces,. Educaton, and Fre Preventon, among others.. There wll be a semnar on March 10; 970 at 3:00 pm n room 10250 on the topsof Publc Polcy and Electrc Power. Phlp Sporn, former Presdent of Amercan Electrc Powe Servce Corp., wll sak' on "Optons on the Way nto the Future." ' Nomnatons for the Goodwn Medalst ae now beng acepted by the Deman of the Graduate School. Please submt the names of any canddates to Dean rwn' W. Sze. Room 3143, :before March 30; : 1970. These nomnatons may be made by any student or faculty member. Faculty:nomnatonss should be submtted through the head of the nomnee's department of appontment; studentnomnatons should : be submtted through the Underduarsate Assocaton (for undergraduates) or the Graduate Student Councl (for graduate studaents).: The Goodwn Medal s awaded n.tecosnton of.conspcauously effectve teachng by a graduate student who s ether :a Teachng Assstnt or an nstructor. '....,. s................~~~~~, U. S. College Sponsored Progranms :Abroad Summer 1970. A, lst. of over 200 summer study programs throughout the world, publshed. by the nsttute of nternatonal Educaton, s. now avalable for consultaton at the offce of the Foregn Study Advsor, Dean Harold L. Hazen, Room 12Q7. Most announced applcaton deadlnes ae mmnent, so prompt acton s essentnl foranyone nterested. * Secretares or typsts sympathetc to the cause and wllng to nvest twot hree hours wthn the next two weeks: eght to ten volunteers are needed to transcrbe (for mmedate publcaton) the tapes from the March 3 and 4 Unon of Concerned Scentsts program on the Arms Race. Contact Prof. T. Sherdan, Room 11 O, MT x2228..~l~ MT ponders L By Bob Denns' ts effect on natornal tranporta noon. Eddleman. reported that A group of students has ton polcy, and thtegeneral man Dr. Kllan expressed a generally begun a drve amed at persuadng the MT Corporaton to sup.mdable economc power, UAP beleves that the Executve ner, nwhch t uttlzes ts for open,.mnd on the ssue..theportauto safety crusader Ralph The drve to wn MT's.sup Commttee of the Corporaton Nader's proxy fght aganst the port wll begn t hs afternoon has the power to make a dec hope to ad: son on the subject for the entre' management of General Motors. when the studentss Nader's' major resolutons dress the subject tbo the. meetng Corporaton, beng presented to the GM of the Corporatonl, and the Cor :Harvard Movenment stockholders nclude addng poraton Jont A4 dvsory Corn A smlar movement has three publc representatves to rmttee. The stude:nt advocates, begun up the rver n an effort to. GM's Board, of Drectors (cur ncludng F;nboarrd 'Charman sway Harvard Unversty's.rently numberng 24);,and 'Jeff Gale, hope that many stu 287,000 shares. Thle. Harvard changng the GM charter to pretent the corporaton fromengag ng at 2pm n the Schell Room TreasurerGeorge F. Bennett s dents wll attend thhs open meet Crmson reports that Harvrardng n operatons that are~ :"detrmental to the health, safetyor!.t, o ne of: G 's 1.4 mllon "My offhand vews that GM (E241 2)... ntally skeptcal of the dea. welfare of the ctzens of' the shareholders, s beleved to :own has done a good job for the UntedStates.". about 300,000QO G :. shares. Ths publc, the stockholders, and the,".the *Campagn" to 'Make fgure represents, about one employees," ". Bennett asserted. General Motors Responsble" (as :.tenth':of, one p.er cent of' the "Fd 'have Xto see some pretty Nader and hsgroup of Washngton lawyers have :named ther :Nader's supporters beleve:. that vote aganst the :management." total.gm M con rmon :stock,.persuasve evdence to :make me cause) a ls o propose settng up a an affrmatve act; onby the n The Harvard Treasurer added, ','shareholders.commttee".. to,... ;sttute: would. create..a trend of "W'hat: we're. ntereste d snn GM study GM's mpact on the country. Ths commttee would assess Newlyelected UAP Wells practcal value s a manage natonal sgnfcance.. for. nvestment, ncome and the efforts of the naton's largest Eddleman '71 spokke to Corpora ment that.s excellent. Just as we corporaton at producng pollutonfree engnes and safe cars, on the.gm ssue yeesterday after want excellent rnvestments." ton Charman Jannes R. Kllan want excellence n educaton, we,,_ ',. A.. 1 "" C.Sly 8 :L Lt;lll =lll ; who support dfferng actons for smlar reasons to reach agreement. For example, some are callng for dvestment so that MT wll no longer be assocated wth mltary research, whle others are askng for retenton so that the labs mght be converted Speakers at the meetng wll nclude' Professor Bernard Feld, V, Professor Phlp Morrson, V, Professor Ascher Shapro,, Professor Thomas Sherdan,, and Professor Wallace Vander Velde, XV. 1 * Homosexuals ntransgent! of the Cty Unversty of New York wll hold a gay mxer on Saturday, March 14, from 9 pm to am n the Grand Ballroom of the Fnley Student Center of The Cty College; at 133rd Street and Convent Avenue n Manhattan. H! hopes to fll ths 480capacty hall wth gay students of both sexes from colleges throughout the northeast. Tckets wll cost $1 n advance or $1.50 at the door, and can be ordered through Hl!'s presdent, Crag Schoonmaker, 127 Rversde Drve, New York, N. Y. 10024. a B UCS PLANS FORUM ON DsLAB'S FUTURE UCS wll hold an open meetng Monda'y March 9th to begn dscusson of the varous proposals about thedsposton of the Draper Labs. Next Wednesday's faculty. meetng wll dscuss these resolutons more formally and probably vote on whether to retan the labs, convert them to nonmltary research, OrFask MT to.dvest tself completely of the controversal laboratores. Several UCS members have sad that one of the reasons for the meetng s to allow people.. hnrrlbm ~ aun 44SM 0 TODA Y THRU TUES/ MDNGHT COWBOY 2:306:059:40 TWELVE ANGRY MEN 4:258:00 ml _! '~ THRUSA T FeUn's JULET OF THE SPRTS 7:009:30 Sat. Mat. 4:30 SUNTUE! NEVER ON SUNDAY 6:309:50 Sun Mbat. 3:05 THE BRDE WORE BLACK 8:00Sun Mat. 4:35 TR Y THRU TUES! Kurosawa's THRONE OF BLOOD 6:1510:00 X LVE N FEAR 8:05 Sat/Sun 4:20 ls omomwmnmomomommumomaovon V?oDA? THRU rues: MASK OF DMTROS 710:20 Peter Lowe S/S 3:45 BEAST WTH 5 FNGERS 5:308::5 lo'lkahmuscaransounaser" TR 64e6c ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ fr [. ' assfed advertsng 'WANTED: HealthyMT marred couples plannng to conceve a chld. For Harvard School of Publc Health study of ablty to predct sex of chldren before concepton. Call Dr. Nelson, 7310835, evenngs, 710 pm. YOUNG CAMBRDGE WOMEN wth teachng experence nterested n startng an after school project wth sx to eght year old chldren. Please call Mrs. Dolgn Pet 8681829. Swng a Lttle! Open ACan Of Wne Tonght! That's rght. We canned the grape. Ros6, Burgundy and Chabls n Party Tyme's unque flavorgard* alumnum Cans. Just pop top and pour. All alumnum can chlls quckly and holds 8. ozs.justrght for two glasses. But most of all, we used the most luscous Calforna wne gapes grown because n arty Tyme Wne, taste s where t's at. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. NOW 'AT YOUR LOCAL SUPERMARKET, PACKAGME OR WNE STOE......... ll ',~~~~N 7~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ''d` 'Wuz*'',\ WV X A '' L"o Mn 'p'.m.e'::/... Lesson. L 41L LL 1 _ L_ JC ' 1 MN..~~ 'LESSON'SCHEDUL.. : ' *~~~t more ~~~c ~ efn w9.'.,a:, to anhu 2', P ', Wedftm'a..,,,,> :M NU MEVELY HAT? * WHAT? Chafter Now"..'. 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.. /Mn Lesson. A key hole peek nto a new dmen\ son n readng. f you've been lookng for the key to more effcent T s readng. spend, $ o an P 7..M hour,. wth us. Get the facts fromus at a Mn'.sson. MNLESSO N *SCHEDULE. Arla,.h ~o *:co,.~. Tuoe tuy; B:LO lo OsCO P..,,u904Prrs(Bpl m,hl doy.!n.,.';are ' ' l 11t'. '~ dy dlu0am St',. F sstn Woaqosdmy, tre, P say1 8s O P.M#. :', md ay,.hanl Aat O res Pe.M.,' C.' '' ~ N aw. N nmm. r. : t~h.ar:at,ok tp.m.. l. two. m, 1ga Lextm~toB Mote r:esrs WsBro e {larm soameo st.) ' E VXELYN WOOD /. ~ READNG'DYNAM 8 H 17 Ardngon St.. ' ' S oston' \ phs.q : s36~380 '.

f _ Th:e q u e ; t~~~~~~~~~~.. ot n Co~rre Correctons t ponsa "Publsh "Proposal" and Hexter's Before Wood became, char or Persh," both n Publc nterunversty man of the newly created Pol est. tcal Scence Department n The "tradtonal" 1965 a junor faculty, ncludng could most graphcalyy be detower n Fen, Saloma; and Johnson, had scrbed as an vory been added to the Poltcal whch wzened, otheerworldly Scence dvson of the Depart professors tred by word of ment of Economcs and Socal mouth (e. prmarl y verbal Scence.. means) to nstll the lbody and There s no "polcy" aganst sprt of the classcs n the often appontng MT PhD's n polt' uncomprehendng mnd s of stud dscus cal scence drectly to the facul dents. Ther studes an ty on graduaton. However, be sons were charact' ertcally cause of the natonal compet academc,".e. unmp ortant, to ton for all'postons, t occurs the concrete concerns s of the nfrequently and rarely 'exceeds surroundng socety. T. hs s not a sngle contract. to lessen the value of tlhe unverst to say By Edward Grossman sty tosocety; t s ju: Thlls s the thrd n a seres of that there was a mutu al separaand soc artclesconlcernng tenlure n the ton of the unversty Poltcal Scence Department. t ety, of the academc and the represents only the. author's per economc (so to speaak). The spectves on tenure and not unversty of ths tmle was a necessarly those of The Tech. communty unto tself. ll. Tenure n Poltcal Scence Because the unvers ty repre of lfe A PersonalPerspectve sented a dstnct wayt beleve tenure to be merely nvolvng ntense ntelleectual n a pecular economc characters volvement, prospectve profes long and tc of the unversty; by no soral canddates had a means s t a defntve or unque narrow road of tranng (specal before characterstc. ndeed, as one zaton) ahead of therm cannot properly vew the take they could enter the hallowed over of the Presdent's Offce n hafls. Ths path sacrfcced alter fame, solaton from the natonal ntve careers wth money, Movement, one cannot dscuss and power. Tenure Mras nstacademc the development and changes n tuted to make the tenure wthout dscussng the pursut economcally secure. hstory of the unversty system. Tenure was also an acxceptance However, wth brevty and d'rec by a communty of men of tedness n mnd, lmt myself another man; t was an eextenson to showng how two develop of ctzenshp" for th te welfare ments have radcally changed the Of thecormunfty as wfell as the bass of tenure. These two de securtyofthe professor r. velopments are the change of So, tenure decsonss at ths academc emphass from an oral tme were based upon a profes ntegra to a wrtten medum and the sor'scontrbuton to andd merger of the unversty and ton nto hs academc commun the' nter socety. Some of the deas con ty; ths reflected both taned n ths artcle have been est he took n hs teac;hng and borrowed from Nsbet's "The hs personal relatonshp'to the Permanent Professors: A Modest other professors n thhat com RWLD YOU LKE TO START YOUROWN CHURCH? We wr futh you wth a Church Charter and you can start your own church H udquurtas o UNVERSAL LFE CHURCH wll keep records of your nchrh au the wth the fedem gsoemnenst and famsh you a tax exempt latu a you ha* to do s report yowur actvt to hequat four trme a g. Enedoe a fee w ofrelnf UNVERSAL LFE CHURCH BOX 6575 HO.LYWOOD, FLORDA 33021 Allegheny Arlnes helps you beat the watng game... And saves you up to 331/3 %. Allegheny's Young Adult Card lets you fly whenever you want to (even holdays) and stll get advance reservatons. f you're between 12 and 22, what are you watng for? Stop by any Allegheny tcket counter and purchase your Young Adult Card. Only $5.00 for all of 1970. "~~~:~_l~~... '.::::_:_:~.::~..... _ of tenure munty. Snce such communtes were small and tghtlyknt, ntegraton of new members occured ether soon after arrval or not at all; so, the tenure decson was probably more consensual, more, a matter' of compatblty than a "rejecton" of one professor n favor of another. However, the academc commu ncatonnetwork expanded beyond the ndvdual college when the wrtng of a professor at one end of a contnent could reach and nspre students at the other end durng hs lfetme. The frequency and ease of ths communcaton ncreased radcally 'through breakthroughs n communcatons (and transportaton) technology; partcularly notable were the developments of academc (and professonal) journals and paperbacks. A pro fessor's name became assocated. less wth hs "lqud" assets (Le. lecturng and teachng oral prowess) at a partcular unversty and more wth hs "sold" assets (.e. books and wrtngs) n hs specalty. A natonal publcatons market removed the barrers separatng unverstes; wth ths ncreased nteracton among professors on a regonal and natonal level, ndvdual unverstes became homes wthn a natonal "academc communty." Ths development mght be vewed as an ncrease n horzontal moblty or the establshment ofa natonal (vs. local) marketplace for academc deas and talents. Meanwhle, Amercan unver_ stes had receved the ad and encouragement of both busness. and government; MT for nstance, was establshed under the LandGrant Act of 1862. n tme of natonal emergency, these same unverstes. wllngly removed ther academc garb'and contrbuted sgnfcantly to the soluton of these crses. ndeed, the help of a collegate "brantrust" n extrcatng the naton from a Depresson s evdence of ths; the development of the atonmc bomb by unversty professors was conclusve proof of ther worth. By the end of World War 11, both government and busness recognzed the value of tradtonal, "academc" professors outsde ther classrooms and were wllng to pay well for ther 'sklls n' nonacademc matters.!, _ Allegheny Ar System We have a lot more gongfor you TE TE v1. FFdAY McH.. 6; 7 THE TECH F R DAY, MA RCH 6, 91 PAGE 7 Ths development meant greater vertcal moblty for professors than ever before and freed them from ther tradtonal dependence on academa. These two developments shattered the relatve solatonsm of the unverstes that had characterzed ther exstence for cen 'tures. A professor now competes on an open market across the naton for jobs n corporate bodes, ncludng unverstes. Because of ths, hs "success" sgnfcantly relates to hs achevements and competence n hs specfc professonal area rather than hs performance as a teacher. The ethos of these men s no longer Scholastcsm and teachng, but professonalsm and careersm. n short, as the professoral outlook has changed, the hstorcal justfcaton for tenure has dsappeared. Professors have acqured the economc moblty and flexblty, the absence of whch tenure was ntended as a compensaton; a professor's afflaton wth a partcular unversty has become more transent than communal. However, tenure has taken on new meanngs. As a professor s awarded tenure by peers n hs feld (.e. by the department wthn hs unversty) on the bass of the worth to the professon of hs research (as usually revealed n hs publcatons) tenure s a sgn of status as a professonal. The possblty of ultmately recevng tenure at a major unversty can nduce junor faculty members to stay on; the status of appontment to such a prestgous post s an nducement to reman. However, because professors often are offerred tenure at several unverstes concurrently, the professor may feel lttle afflaton wth the partcular school he chooses. For example, n 196g two tenured poltcal scence professors were asked by ther department ether to return from leave to teach or to resgn; both chose to leave. F Furthermore, unverstes use tenure as a qualty control devce to nsure that ther staff s of the hghest calber. n ths sense, tenure represents a "local lcensng" procedure n hgher educaton, whch has been not' able n ts (e.g. AAUP's) refusal to even consder the problem of lcensng n the professons. Tenure mght best be seen as a pass/fal gradng system for the cream of academa. However, as wth grades, once tenure has been awarded, the unversty loses most of ts leverage on a professor's performance. As tenure s a dscrmnatoryrewards system, people can atgue proandcon the need for such a system, the valdty of choosng partcular dfferentatng standards and the relablty of these crtera. Alternatvely, some state that tenure s necessary for the pres ervaton of "academc freedom." However, academc freedom s an attrbute of the whole unversty of students and junor faculty as well as tenured faculty. Others mght even consder tenure as a threat to academc freedom as t often has been used (n the same manner as grades) to reward conformty and specalzaton and punsh creatvty and dversty; Nsbet wrtes, "ts [tenure's] crme, s not ts cost n dollars but n creatvty." However, tenure could be used to reward ths creatvty. f tenure were elmnated, the staff would have more freedom, but ths does not mean that they would be more creatve than at present. Scholarly creatvty s a characterstc of the ndvdual, ndependent of hs contractual crcumstances.. What thnk dsturbs students most about te.ure s the gnorng of "teachng ablty" as a crteron n tenure decsons. One of the reasons (ratonalzatons?) why "teachng ablty" has been seemngly gnored by the departments s the dffculty and ambguty of defnng and. applyng ths standard (ths seems a partcularly dffcult task for behavoralsts). Hexter rases the queston: on the bass of "teachng ablty" alone, ceters parbus, should a unversty gve tenure to (or value more hghly) the excellent lecturer who s a poor semnar leader or to the poor lecturer who s an excellent semnar leader? t s far smpler, and more n ther area of expertse, for the faculty to ratonalze that research publcatons have ntrnsc, educatonal value for students n the feld, and, consderng that most learnng today s done (or should be done).by readng, that the publcaton of a major work represents great "teachng ablty" to a large, natonal student audence. The Poltcal Scence Department nvestgated the teachng prowess of Fen, Johnson, and Saloma; ts ambguous and undfferentable results only confrm those observatons. f students wsh to modfy the present crtera of tenure, they face the procedural dffculty of ascoverng far and standard measures of dfferentatng good teachers from bad 'teachers. Of course, the near mpossblty of reachng any consensus as to "what s a good teacher?" wll lmt ther success; however, the faculty at ths tme seems amenable to new approaches. Yet, the frutlessness of ths strategy at present should not be underestmated. Because tenure s not an academc (.e. unmportant) ssue for students today as evdenced by refusals of tenure precptatng campus unrest across the naton have decded to add to ths seres a fourth artcle descrbng possble strateges and tactcs of changng the present system. THE MT GLBERT & SULLVAN SOCETY PRESENTS o OR BUNTHORNE'S BRDE MARCH 19, 20,& 21 8:30 PM KRESGE AUDTORUM Tckets on sale n buldng 10 startng Monday, March 9 or call ext. 4720 tbr reservatons PRCES: $2.00 Thursday & Frday $2.50 Saturday ALL SEATS RESERVED ~~~~..

7 _ H By Don Arkn The sprng verson of the MT Rugby Club s already out and practcng on Brggs Feld but there are stll plenty of openngs for anyone nterested n playng. The club has agan scheduled games for three squads each weekend. Practces are Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5:30.. When the weather s nce, the team frolcs n the snow under the lghts on Brggs Feld. Otherwse, the practces are n Rockwell Cage. f you have any questons, call Charle Fnn at x3312 or come to the rear equpment desk n DuPont around 5:30 on practce days. Montreal heads schedule The schedule'begns March 28 when the Montreal RugbyClub vsts' MT for several days of play. After that, the club wll play every Saturday untl May 23 aganst all the top tearms,n The regular hockey season s now over wth the playoffs set to begn tonght. There are a few playoff games scheduled for Thursday whch are to deter L L Montra,,"..,.,,.... Montreal ruggers wal vst Tech March 23 TC,~~1 G L L '. m gs~~~~ New England. The hghlghts of the season wll be the annual sevenasde tournament held by the Harvard BusnessSchool on May 2. Teams come to ths tournament from all over the east coast and Canada. Last year Tech's frst team placed ffth. A week later, May 9 and 1O, the Unversty of Massachusetts wll host the frst annual New England Champonshp Tournament. Over 20 top teams from New England are entered n ths.sngle elmnaton tournament. Tech s seeded fourth on the bass of ts fne fall season. Seeded ahead of MT are the Boston Rugby Club, Yale; and Brown. The season wll end wth a match aganst the Mystc Rugby Club, the only team whch defeated Tech durng the' fall season. The ruggers wll be about to avenge that 98 debacle. So,f you are nterested n fun, glory, and partes, come out for rugby. skaters mne the bottom spots for the playoffs. The top twelve seeds have been determned, however. TC.'A' s seeded frst on the bass of ther frst place fnsh n t a shot on goal n M hockey acton. ne playofts wth TC frst seeded. 971 Allmday.. t Saturday, March 7 Moves: noon to 5 pm Bbst: 8 pm to mdnght Whole day just $5/couple Moves only $l 50/couple Blast only $4/couple OPEN TO ALL OF MT COMMUNTY Detals and tckets avalable n Lobby of Buldng 10 Optons for wblast on sale n Buldng 10 lobby... Save $2.00 by orderng your yearbook now. r L L ec y g By Gr g Oppenhemer $hturday, February 28,n the last dual meet of the season, and n' front of a record crowd, the MT gymnastc team tackled the Yale team and came out on top wth a score of 114.70 to Yale's 105.25. Tech won fve out. of the sx events, wth frst place honors gong to DaveBeck n Floor: Exercse (7.6), Tom Hafer on Rngs (8.7), Dck Hood n Long Horse Vaultng (8.65), and Ken Gerber on Parallel Bars (7.55).. Frst place n allaround competton went to MT cocaptan Dck Hood, wth 35;7 ponts. Ccaptan Ken Gerber took fourth n allaround wth a score of 19.3 on three events. MT's Long Horse Vaulters,had a spectacular day, capturng frst through fourth places n ther event. (Hood, 8.65; Bocek; 8.5; Daub, 8.35; Wahl, (8.05). Other outstandng performances favored A league's Dvson 1. Second slot goes to CP, the wnners of Dvson 2. Next comes the LCA squad whch was second to TC. Fourth through sxth postons are held by TDC; KS, and Burton House 'A'. Seventh through twelfth are East.Campus 'A', SPE, and Bexley House. The next several places are beng determned by playoff matches. : TC clnched ther frst place bybeatng LCA n an overtme thrller n the last game of the season. TC had had an edge n play through most of the game but the fantastc goalsndng of LCA's Rod Red prevented.a score. TC fnally grabbed a 10 lead early n the thrd perod on a goal by Stu lohnosn. Ths held :untl the fnalbuzzer when Mke Olver scored for LCA teng the score. TC protested that the score had. come :too late, but the game went nto sudden death overtme. After a mnute and a start todaly half of play, Joe Runkle scored TC's second goal and the game was oever. Volleyball starts,the volleyball season began on Monday and fve A league games have already been played. Defendng champons Persans had lttle trouble defeatng TDC 'A' 153 and 154. Runnerup Economcs won by forfet. PBE 'A' ralled to beat Burton '3A' 1416, 1511 and 1512. The Baker Yacht Club also came fromn behnd to down Burton 'SA' 1115, 151, and 157. PSK easly defeated LCA 150 and 157 '" The outdoor track season wll begn for both varsty: and freshmen on Monday, March 16.at 5 pm, n Rockwell Cage. All canddates for the teams should see CoachesArt Farnham or Gordon Kelly rght away and :draw e qupment for the prelmnary workouts. n nasts _ :.: :, or come to 468A Commonwealth n Kenmpore Square between 10:30 and 6:30 *~~ _ ~ ~~~~~~~~ Cocaptan Ken Gerber '70 perfforms a dffcult front lever on the rngs wth perfect form n a meet aganstyale on Saturday won the meet 114104. were gven by.paul Bayer (5.3) for second place on Sde Horse and Danny Bocek (6.6) comng n second behnd Beck n Floor Exercse. ~. Tech : The Tech squad now pre;pares: for ts fnal competton o)f the season, the New England C ponshps, whch wll be held at 'Lowell Tech on March 14.. ~..... F2 A... sa?!!l!'.. Captan Bob McKnley '70 returns abackhand shot n early acton aganst hs Trnty opponent. Both McKnley and the team won. Photo by Gary Ezzel. The varsty. squash team ended ther season wth a rousng vctory over Trnty to cap off a generally dsappontng season wth a two game wnnng streak. The wn was especally welcome as t avenged an earler 63 defeat at the hands of Trnty only a week and a half ago. Tech swept throughthe frst sx matches wthout a loss. Captan Bob McKnley '70 hrd lttle trouble dsposng of Trnty's number one man by a 31 score. Manny Wess '70, 'at number two, had evenless trouble as he was vctorous n three straght games. Colbery Resz also had an easy tme as he heat Trnty's number three man 31. Trnty attempted a counterattack at poston s fve and sx as both Trnty racquetmen led ther Tech opponents 21. However both Bob Rodgers '?2. and Phl Hammond '72 played some beautful squash n stagng comeback ralles. Each won hs Most nexpensve NonStop RoundTrp Jet to London Avalable to the. MT Communty June 26Sept.. 16 $209 June l1july27 $179 Open only to MT students, faculty, staff, andmmedate famly.call Students nternatonal of Ann Arbor, Mch. ' at 5367863... 5367864 leye Raequetmnen end year by toppng Trnty, Come fly wth S. Europe 8179.: :"' match, 32. Jon Frcker '70 contnued Tech's wnanng ways as he beat hs opponent 32. Tech's only losses came at postons seven and eght where rd Asher '70 and Rod Walker '70 were defeated. Skp Perkns '70 pcked up the fnal wn for Tech at the number nne poston by blankng hs opponent 30. Ths gves Tech a fnal season's record of 5 wns aganst 10,losses, wth the only event left on the schedule beng the Natonals ths weekend at Prnceton. P,~. to "a ~:~, 4 ~.le O~t ' W b5a., 9b fz U eo Ao~ >,_ 4 2 CO 0 = Ca X > le Q.:. 09:2 T aow C* a ~.~~ *coo ~ vv E'ZE W to e Y 0 0, &. CA _ R CK Z ke