c~~oleet local-banks - The Techtech.mit.edu/V100/PDF/V100-N19.pdf · same race to capture the...

16
, r~4i n4il UTQD~r I -iLq a T`~P2i-ssl'l~ · Cjr.~-CT·~LLF~'::< rIS- L*7; q f- P - % 54X ci 5*;:;:L19!E~i~S""r~·~"~~iF59l~tStttS**4 - - --- --- -- ..- I - _F"~ W II _a- -L · _ sl l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _1 " - s -n I I I - - LI · L -~PL II I I -La ~ L_ _ I · - I- BIPr -- ---- -F C- I - I-. I 11,_ · 1·11 5- __ a Alth~ough the Cambridge City I Council unanimously endorsed W I the bill, LaRosa indicated that i because of the question of con- l i . _ I stitutionality the Committee on u o baning Banks and Banking might react - -N ' X t unfavorably to it. }|1| The Comnmittee will announce its decision on the bill sometime in the near future. Feature Soaring with head in c Ouds r L an r 6 ON I - '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·i.' il -l., !' '%- '1, ~ ' ,, - ! 1 - - , - " ,- ', -, - I - '_ V j M e~~~~~~~~i E~~~~~, Is. I,.-1 , , 1 , , 1. 1 1 -1 , - Continuous - Al News ServiceX Since 1881 Volume 100, Number 19 'Centennial Volumeo MIT- Cambridge Massachusetts Friday, April 25. 1980 By Lb- Storhe A bill presently before the Cornmnittee on Banks and Bank- ing in the State .. House of Representatives would require all colleges to do 75 percent of their banking within the community where they am- located or lose their tax exemptions. Representative . Michael J. Lombardi (D-Cambridge), originator of tiee bill, House Bill #445, said, "I support this bill because it will allow the Cambridge banking community to increase its mortgage portfolios for reinvestment in the com- munity of which we are all part. Aiding home owners seeking mortgages would keep this tax ex- ernpt money in the community-to be put back into projects that would benefit the people who are paying the freight in the form, of full taxes." Assistant to -the C hairman, of the 'M I T Corp'oiration_ 'Walter' Milnle said he doubts the bill will pass. He asserted; "'MIT uses big banks ou tside of the Camb~ridge area because they provide the, ser- vices M IT needs." In -addition, he fiels'it is-.uncorstittutio'nal~to tell the Corporation where it may bank. Glenn Strehle, the MIT Treasurer, prefered to study the hill' more closely before com- menting on it. He did say, however, "Anything that limits the institute has"Ao be looked at very carefully."' Harvard Assistant Treasurer Henry Arneral said he cannot' think of any, bank in the Cambridge area that could serve .;as a custodial bank for Harvard. He declared, "It is sort of like talking through.'your hat to propose that much banking in the comrnunity." Ameral 'does not know if the bill MiU pass. Harvard does use community banks for their receiv- ing and. disbursement accounts. He, commented, '"Those un- sophisticated as to what banking is for h major institution will think it's great+" He thinks the bill's demands are unrealistic. Al LaRosa, Rep. Lombardi's administrative assistant, thinks- -the local banks would be able to !neet the needs of the universities. By Hy Tran "Tighten the lower belts firsts then tighten the shoulder straps," instructed Ira Blieden of the MIT Soaring Association (MITSA). As I complied, he climbed into the second seat of the Schweizer 2-33, a two-seat training glider, and strapped himself in. I closed and locked the canopy while Blieden checked and set the con- trols of the glider. The two plane started down the runway, and within moments we were, air- borne. UI'TFSA is the largest of thefew (ollege soarinzg eluhbs in the United States. MITSA otwsi sfife gliders anid is hbilding a si.rth. In addition, sontue of its n11enhbers have their own gliderv. The soaring asQsociation's * Ming o peratioZs are hbsed at the X ar7.v~ield. Massachusetts airport near Fovx-horo. There are ahout seventvs neni1hers inl MI TSA roughiv thirt'v studentls, tlventY alumni, and the rest membthers e#Jthe MIT com- inunitit . A mZong MITSA ilneqhers are twoz, Federal Aviation Ad- I nisftlralionl (FAA cerified flight ,,;.·insrrJii orserz sevra piloCerti4Cd¢ | ur powered aircraft. andane FAA certified glider maintenance in- Ipec tor. The association1 reaches novice ilnleers /horlw to flr.' It takes tivntrl'live to thirtY lessons. or abooat siky }ponnthts, hyfire one if al- oIt 1ee to fli solo. and another I ivnltr solof ightr s hbobre the FAA It-ill liceZnse oine as a glider pilot. The rentire prscess ,generaill, takes ea v'ar a rank b eginner to earn an FAA pilot's license. Most MITSA mtembert s become FAA licenr.sedglider pilots. Each time the glider moved near the wake of the two plane, we experienced a great deal of tur- bulence. We reached 3,000 feet: I released the tow rope, we turned right and pulled up. The only sound now was the wind whistling past the glider. Ex- cept for a few seagulls, there was nothing near us. No motor, no power, just two people in a 600- pound contraption of fabric, wood, and sheet metal - 3,000 feet in the air. The airspeed in- dicklted showed fifty miles per hour, but to my relief it was not 50 rnph straight down. "')Do . left turn," suggested Blieden. I looked around, check- ing for traffic, then pulled the control stick left and back, while pressing the leff rudder pedal. The horizon rotated 45 degrees clockwisei and we were off on a new heading.... Blieden performed the landing approach. The glider suddenly tipped to the right and we went down the last hundred feet in three or four seconds. Then the glider straightened out, and we landed-hard. Altholgh it is expensive to be a #rneithr o'J MITSA -- dues are $ 100 a rmear phls towling charges it is still much less exrpensive than i, gl/eidipR, ivithucl_,X~T~tp_- .sp rt. The MI TS- nttnrs. owlvningvpowebred airc radii tonl rte gliders, while otlhers prefnlrr mtaintenance on thent. So1me emelbterqs are loaned a MIlTSA -gliRter to participate in region/al, atdl somrtetiiles national, .Silplaenr mraces. All menbthers trake niarn a.s "Dutvs fle*r~s ." inl carew of' the dl'.s /f7lihs. logikswite.s, and Iwteartter /ore>an.s. Operatiows -take plac e each'1 iSaturdgar1, and ont1vl .snow1, ratin or he9avit, ilnld.v Will c lose (Please turn to page 3) New Dean e r StudentvAIs -< flars Shirley McBay was at the annual laterFraternity Conference -(I FC) awards banquet last Friday. In'ad-: dition, th-ee following awards were presented: Killian Conimunity Service Award - Lambdfifa Chi Alpha for the outstanding -com - runity service. program. Fredrick J. Fasset Award - Greg Wilson, G. Theta Chi for the outstanding con- tribution to the Indepen- dent Living Group system. IFC 'Awards - Special recognition for outstanding projects, programs, or other action which has improved the quality of life S. in the Independent Living B. Giroups: Pat Houghton, Its Zeta Psvi: Charlie Wilson, ric T/thta C'0I; Bruce- Wrobel, ecu I i Contact by Matthew B. Alschuler AE: Zeta Beta Tau Fraterniyv; Vice President Constantine Sirnonides; Dean Bob Sherwood. so recognized for their work this past year were: Mr. Mer- -k Leler, Stephen Immerman, and the 1979-80 IFC Ex- utive Committee Members. By John Shirked Seven years ago, Emily Tsutsumi was a lonely and isolated woman. She had come to Boston -and each face was a new one. So with much enthusiasm and crossed fingers, she posted signs asking for mothers interested in forming a babysitting group. Result - Tsutsumi had found a new circle of friends. The story serves to bring forth two major points about Tsutsumi's' character: one, she likes being around people, and two,;-she enjoys bringing them 31 together. It is perhaps these two qualities, plus a sen- sitive and undeistanding manner, that recently got her the position of Coordinator of Women Student Interests. Tsutsumr coordinates information between the various , undergraduate and graduate- women's groups. She also sets up various women's interest programs, such as a lectureon the early history of the women's movement.The lecture will be delivered by Holy Cross professor Patricia Hanratty this Monday, April 28, in room 3-310.at 4pm. Tsutsumi is far from being an activist firebrand, and she has always stayed away from deep involve- ment. in politics. "My, real interest," she says, "is in working with the individual." This certainly does not mean that she does not have strong opinions about women and society. "Women have traditionally taken support roles, such as teachers and helpers. There's' been a real discouraging of women from math and -science - by the time they graduate high school many do not have the background to get into a school like MIT." In tlie future, Ts'utsumi hopes to start programs in the high schools designed to encourage women to do what they want and not be pressured into stereotyped roles they would rather not assume. Perhaps herdmost-important role isjust to be there ; helping MM and human: resource when a womrln student runs into trouble, needs encourage- rment, or seeks advice. Says the Coordinator. "MIT women have in the past had high rates of attrition without support services. The whole idea of this of- fice is to say, 'yes - there is help for you'." Boston's sports scene was busy last week, with the Bruins, the Celtics, the Red Sox, and the Marathon providing plenty to talk about. Page 14. The lightweight crew team defeated Harvard for the first time in sixteen years by three- hundredths of a second and topped Dartmouth in the same race to capture the Biiglin Cup. P"* la. The Cure: The band. Page 8. "ouchless" A cutback in next year's var- sity sports schedules is possi- ble due to the intramural par- ticipation planned fir Next House residents. This is ex- amined in a look at the fnding of MIT sports. Page I6. 1- J. - Alllw12-i _ _ ,I State-blwl resric c~~oleet local-banks Errata . 'F'h Tech wishes to ;lpologiiz.e for arn inaccuracy in ain article appearing on the front page of the April 19 issue. The article incor- rectiv stated that Mike G;erardi '8I was involved in -n incident involving the throwing of a pie in Undergraduate Association P resident C huck M;arkh;arin's face. Witnesses have verified that Gerardi was not pre- sent ;at the time. Pive Tch regrets the error. Tsutsumi coordinates interests

Transcript of c~~oleet local-banks - The Techtech.mit.edu/V100/PDF/V100-N19.pdf · same race to capture the...

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I-iLq a T`~P2i-ssl'l~ ·Cjr.~-CT·~LLF~'::< rIS- L*7; q f- P -% 54X ci5*;:;:L19!E~i~S""r~·~"~~iF59l~tStttS**4

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Alth~ough the Cambridge City I Council unanimously endorsed W Ithe bill, LaRosa indicated that ibecause of the question of con- l i . _ Istitutionality the Committee on u o baningBanks and Banking might react - -N ' X tunfavorably to it. }|1|

The Comnmittee will announceits decision on the bill sometimein the near future.

Feature

Soaring with head in c Ouds

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Continuous - AlNews ServiceXSince 1881

Volume 100, Number 19'Centennial Volumeo

MIT-Cambridge

Massachusetts

Friday, April 25. 1980

By Lb- StorheA bill presently before the

Cornmnittee on Banks and Bank-ing in the State .. House ofRepresentatives would require allcolleges to do 75 percent of theirbanking within the communitywhere they am- located or losetheir tax exemptions.

Representative . Michael J.Lombardi (D-Cambridge),originator of tiee bill, House Bill#445, said, "I support this billbecause it will allow theCambridge banking communityto increase its mortgage portfoliosfor reinvestment in the com-munity of which we are all part.Aiding home owners seekingmortgages would keep this tax ex-ernpt money in the community-tobe put back into projects thatwould benefit the people who arepaying the freight in the form, offull taxes."

Assistant to -the C hairman, ofthe 'M I T Corp'oiration_ 'Walter'Milnle said he doubts the bill willpass. He asserted; "'MIT uses bigbanks ou tside of the Camb~ridgearea because they provide the, ser-vices M IT needs." In -addition, hefiels'it is-.uncorstittutio'nal~to tell

the Corporation where it maybank.

Glenn Strehle, the MITTreasurer, prefered to study thehill' more closely before com-menting on it. He did say,however, "Anything that limitsthe institute has"Ao be looked atvery carefully."'

Harvard Assistant TreasurerHenry Arneral said he cannot'think of any, bank in theCambridge area that could serve.;as a custodial bank for Harvard.He declared, "It is sort of liketalking through.'your hat topropose that much banking in thecomrnunity."

Ameral 'does not know if thebill MiU pass. Harvard does usecommunity banks for their receiv-ing and. disbursement accounts.He, commented, '"Those un-sophisticated as to what bankingis for h major institution willthink it's great+" He thinks thebill's demands are unrealistic.

Al LaRosa, Rep. Lombardi'sadministrative assistant, thinks--the local banks would be able to!neet the needs of the universities.

By Hy Tran"Tighten the lower belts firsts

then tighten the shoulder straps,"instructed Ira Blieden of the MITSoaring Association (MITSA).As I complied, he climbed intothe second seat of the Schweizer2-33, a two-seat training glider,and strapped himself in. I closedand locked the canopy whileBlieden checked and set the con-trols of the glider. The two planestarted down the runway, andwithin moments we were, air-borne.

UI'TFSA is the largest of thefew(ollege soarinzg eluhbs in the UnitedStates. MITSA otwsi sfife glidersanid is hbilding a si.rth. In addition,sontue of its n11enhbers have their owngliderv. The soaring asQsociation's* Ming o peratioZs are hbsed at theX ar7.v~ield. Massachusetts airportnear Fovx-horo.

There are ahout seventvsneni1hers inl MI TSA roughiv

thirt'v studentls, tlventY alumni, andthe rest membthers e#Jthe MIT com-inunitit . A mZong MITSA ilneqhersare twoz, Federal Aviation Ad-I nisftlralionl (FAA cerified flight

,,;.·insrrJii orserz sevra piloCerti4Cd¢| ur powered aircraft. andane FAAcertified glider maintenance in-Ipec tor.

The association1 reaches noviceilnleers /horlw to flr.' It takestivntrl'live to thirtY lessons. orabooat siky }ponnthts, hyfire one if al-oIt 1ee to fli solo. and another

I ivnltr solof ightr s hbobre the FAAIt-ill liceZnse oine as a glider pilot.The rentire prscess ,generaill, takes

ea v'ar a rank b eginner to earnan FAA pilot's license. MostMITSA mtembert s become FAAlicenr.sedglider pilots.

Each time the glider movednear the wake of the two plane,we experienced a great deal of tur-bulence. We reached 3,000 feet: Ireleased the tow rope, we turnedright and pulled up.

The only sound now was thewind whistling past the glider. Ex-cept for a few seagulls, there wasnothing near us. No motor, nopower, just two people in a 600-pound contraption of fabric,wood, and sheet metal - 3,000feet in the air. The airspeed in-dicklted showed fifty miles perhour, but to my relief it was not50 rnph straight down.

"')Do . left turn," suggestedBlieden. I looked around, check-ing for traffic, then pulled the

control stick left and back, whilepressing the leff rudder pedal. Thehorizon rotated 45 degreesclockwisei and we were off on anew heading....

Blieden performed the landingapproach. The glider suddenlytipped to the right and we wentdown the last hundred feet inthree or four seconds. Then theglider straightened out, and welanded-hard.

Altholgh it is expensive to be a#rneithr o'J MITSA --dues are$ 100 a rmear phls towling chargesit is still much less exrpensive than

i, gl/eidipR, ivithucl_,X~T~tp_- .sp rt. TheMI TS- nttnrs. owlvningvpowebredairc radii tonl rte gliders, whileotlhers prefnlrr mtaintenance onthent. So1me emelbterqs are loaned aMIlTSA -gliRter to participate inregion/al, atdl somrtetiiles national,.Silplaenr mraces.

All menbthers trake niarn a.s "Dutvsfle*r~s ." inl carew of' the dl'.s

/f7lihs. logikswite.s, and Iwteartter/ore>an.s. Operatiows -take plac eeach'1 iSaturdgar1, and ont1vl .snow1,ratin or he9avit, ilnld.v Will c lose

(Please turn to page 3)

New Dean e r StudentvAIs -<flars Shirley McBay was atthe annual laterFraternityConference -(I FC) awardsbanquet last Friday. In'ad-:dition, th-ee followingawards were presented:

Killian Conimunity ServiceAward - Lambdfifa Chi Alphafor the outstanding -com -runity service. program.Fredrick J. Fasset Award -Greg Wilson, G. Theta Chifor the outstanding con-tribution to the Indepen-dent Living Group system.IFC 'Awards - Specialrecognition for outstandingprojects, programs, orother action which hasimproved the quality of life S.in the Independent Living B.Giroups: Pat Houghton, ItsZeta Psvi: Charlie Wilson, ricT/thta C'0I; Bruce- Wrobel, ecu

I

i

Contact by Matthew B. Alschuler

AE: Zeta Beta Tau Fraterniyv; Vice President ConstantineSirnonides; Dean Bob Sherwood.

so recognized for their work this past year were: Mr. Mer--k Leler, Stephen Immerman, and the 1979-80 IFC Ex-utive Committee Members.

By John Shirked Seven years ago, Emily Tsutsumi was a lonely and

isolated woman. She had come to Boston -and eachface was a new one. So with much enthusiasm andcrossed fingers, she posted signs asking for mothersinterested in forming a babysitting group. Result -Tsutsumi had found a new circle of friends.

The story serves to bring forth two major pointsabout Tsutsumi's' character: one, she likes beingaround people, and two,;-she enjoys bringing them

31 together. It is perhaps these two qualities, plus a sen-sitive and undeistanding manner, that recently gother the position of Coordinator of Women StudentInterests.

Tsutsumr coordinates information between thevarious , undergraduate and graduate- women'sgroups. She also sets up various women's interestprograms, such as a lectureon the early history ofthe women's movement.The lecture will be deliveredby Holy Cross professor Patricia Hanratty thisMonday, April 28, in room 3-310.at 4pm.

Tsutsumi is far from being an activist firebrand,

and she has always stayed away from deep involve-ment. in politics. "My, real interest," she says, "is inworking with the individual." This certainly doesnot mean that she does not have strong opinionsabout women and society. "Women havetraditionally taken support roles, such as teachersand helpers. There's' been a real discouraging ofwomen from math and -science - by the time theygraduate high school many do not have thebackground to get into a school like MIT."

In tlie future, Ts'utsumi hopes to start programs inthe high schools designed to encourage women to dowhat they want and not be pressured intostereotyped roles they would rather not assume.

Perhaps herdmost-important role isjust to be there; helping MM and human: resource when a

womrln student runs into trouble, needs encourage-rment, or seeks advice. Says the Coordinator. "MITwomen have in the past had high rates of attritionwithout support services. The whole idea of this of-fice is to say, 'yes - there is help for you'."

Boston's sports scene wasbusy last week, with theBruins, the Celtics, the RedSox, and the Marathonproviding plenty to talk about.Page 14.

The lightweight crew teamdefeated Harvard for the firsttime in sixteen years by three-hundredths of a second andtopped Dartmouth in thesame race to capture theBiiglin Cup. P"* la.

The Cure: Theband. Page 8.

"ouchless"

A cutback in next year's var-sity sports schedules is possi-ble due to the intramural par-ticipation planned fir NextHouse residents. This is ex-amined in a look at thefnding of MIT sports. PageI6.

1-J. -

Alllw12-i _ _ ,IState-blwl resric

c~~oleet local-banks

Errata.'F'h Tech wishes to

;lpologiiz.e for arn inaccuracyin ain article appearing onthe front page of the April19 issue. The article incor-rectiv stated that MikeG;erardi '8I was involved in-n incident involving thethrowing of a pie inUndergraduate AssociationP resident C huckM;arkh;arin's face.

Witnesses have verifiedthat Gerardi was not pre-sent ;at the time. Pive Tchregrets the error.Tsutsumi coordinates interests

WorldCanada, Japan vow Iran sanctions - Canada and Japan joined theEuropean Conimon Market allies Wednesday by ordering a series ofdiplornatic and economic reprisals against Iran should "decisiveprogIress" tot he made in the hostage situation by May 17.

NationWhite House turkey feels at home - A wild bird. popularlyidentified as a turkey, has been camping on the White House lawn forthe past couple of days. Attendants have been trying to catch the bird,hut it did not fall for the trap. President Carter has ordered that thebird not be harmied. Press Secretary Jody Powell offered to help catchthe bird, but was told he "had not had much success with all thelurkeyVS around here."

Kennedy. Bush win in Philly - The Bay State's own EdwardKennedy gained one more delegate than former peanut farmier Presi-dent Carter in Philadelphia's primary Wednesday, while trenchcoatmlalnl (George Bush received 10 percent more of the vote than formlerHollywood good-guy Ronald Reagan. In a related itemn, the man withthe Difllrence, Senator John Anderson, announced he will seek thepresidency As an independent third-party candidate.

Exxon proifits up - Exxon Corporation, the nation's largest oilcosnpany, reported first quarter profits of $1.92 billion - the highestqlualrtcrly corporate earnings in United States history.

CampusBig Screw tallies - At the close of voting last night, Plul Gray wasleading in Alpha Phi Omega's "Big Screw" frndraiser with $104.44.Constantine B. Simonides had $35.37, and Dean Wadleigh - the onlyeOflcialG candidulte to have previously won1 the contest -had $12.06.Voting closes Satlurdaly at 6pmi.

_ _ _ ~~~~~~~~~By Richard Saft

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_- PAGE 2 THE TECH FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1980

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i�l�L "rMUrsj2:rg�ylpjCrn�i:n rl.r3�C+Cq jr�.h..p�.7�;)��1� WTr�rlO-.;�CLjLi;�C�·-�j�.-� 1:*: L1:.�.'T R'--J �'��;�;?�; Y ;· -

I r| |o - | ·C~~I - 1 ' , | FRIDAY, APRIL 25. 1981- Iw 7 _ .

THE TECH PAGE 3 _

Imm W11"m V%,3- - 4XISVILMIlikwp

~~~"`""LI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a-~~~~~~o~~~~-~~~~~ir~~~~~~-~~~~~~~-- _.MY - Y C -- -Vr--d

MIT DRAMASHOPpresents

Man and SupermanIncluding the Don Juan in Hell scene

by George Bernard Shawdirected by Robert N.Scanlan

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Lectures

mics madebers. Forfrom, I to

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(Confinuedfrompage'1)Sod'ring~_ il the .US is still very

?nult as .port fivr the elite. There isnolshinjq practical about it; one goestip. and one mlust cmge down-in the.. .a4l place -for else have a largegrounlds .pport¢*rt crevct. And uet, the -i experienle q ' fi/g is vewrv intenseanel dlirec't. There is nothing but.theglider hetiveen 'the pilot and thegrousnd. Thtoses laivs of pkvsic.F,aerodvlasmnics, lily and drag - theyreallh troark!!

The only damage suffered inthat First glider flight was psy-chological. I am now in a Blanik,

EASY EXTRA INCOME:-$500/1000 Stuffing enve-lopes - Guaranteed. Sendself-addressed, stampedenvelope to: OEXTERENTERPRISES 3039 ShrinePi. LA, CA. 90007

. high performance two-seatglider. Although we are flyingfaster than ·we were in theSchweizer-2-33, the wind seemsquieter. Roy Bourgeois, one ofthe FAA certified instructors,tells re, '*Take your hands off thecontrols."

I obey. "Turn around," he con-tinued-his hands, are raised- inthe air. "You're not flying theglider, and I'm not flying it, sowho isn'?

A ,glider i~s lctlatuafif, stable. Tltepilo}t'sjob is to) Jttice the ehviron1-mwent. .search fOr therinlals,. and

iaigate ths e (-rqli. He Inust alu'vwshb an-are ofi hl/at is happenling inlatoll aroma tle gfidier - unlike thepac~ssike exrperien(e ofh }eing carriedft08in Wacshlinrgtonf to Bodstont on aBoeing 777. It is anl absorbing ex-periences(; ohsenriin thel .sceerl,fhinedk a tat ennll air culrrernt, tircl-hklt, to .sta ill that thernitaL One'sinind is totallil concentrated tonAli-ing.

-Bourgeois makes the landingalpproach, then he brings theBlainik in. I find it hard to believe.that we are on the ground, thelanding is so smooth.

I sets byWilliam Fregosi

lighting byEdward Darna

costumes byLinda MartinThe MIT Student Art Associa-

tion is having a pottery sale inLobby 10 on May 7 from 1am to, an 'or -| Is__ __

Womanspace is organizing apost-abortion support groupstarting Monday, June 9. Formore info, call Beth at 267-7992.

Announcements

- - ~~4:30prn of ~original CeramAll students should pick, up a . - .final examination schedue as soon by the association -ine. . - ~~~more info, call x3-7019fas possible from the Informati on Center, 7-121. All conflicts must Spm-be reported to the Schedule Of-fice, E19-338, by today. Activities

May 2 & 3 at 8pmMay 8, 9 & i

Tickets: $3.50 or $3.00For reservations

May 4 at 2pm10 at 8pm ,w/MIT or student IDcall 253-4720.

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LEVIWRANGLERH-BAR CDEE CEE

_~~~~f c'a 1 'iIl: tOt v ""TI:ALL giuys to,.1.

Starting

1 92 Boylston St., Boston,

170t�4�

HASTY PUDDING THEATER12 Holyoke St., Harvard Square

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WrA$ ff 9wr OF am OORO 7 rWrY Of, H1s-ccomnfortable Design, and the Students come to theHall and fall asleep. The Professor then holds a Lec-ture for an Hour, and the Material is directly ab-sorbed by the Minds of the Nerds.

Many of the Rooms in the Institute are filled withMachines of a most wonderous Kind. TheseMachines are called Computers, and serve as Solversof Problems and Planners of the Future. When theMachines are bored or displeased with their Tasksthey refuse to talk with their Operators, which is cal-led a Crash. Many of the Nerds are permittedSpeech only with or about these Computers. TheMachines' Language is called Programming, aTongue much like that of the Nerds.

Other Roomns are filled with Devices of manyTypes, and are called Laboratories. These Roomsare crowded with Nerds who volunteer to work forProfessors to gain their Favor. Many of the Nerdslive in these l~aboratories, as there is a Shortage of

GolumnlMich~ael Tavi

First,, I guess I've got to beat a tired draft horse.The House did it; registration will be a reality. Here-ire a few conclusive arguments that the Ho-use Ap-propriationls Committee apparently ignored.

Records show that any registration lists preparednow woul d be out of date by -the end of the yearbecause half of the 19- and 20-year-olds listed willhalve moved and "forgotten" to report their changeof' address. It seems that a registration now wouldsalve alil of five days in sending draftees to trainingcanips later. And who can forget the Selective Ser-vices' own report.naming registration as the leastcost-elfective and most intrusive option available.

The rnost disgusting aspect of the registration is-sue is the apathy withl which the general public istreating it. The Boston Globe considered it importantenough for the front page -buried in the bottomleft, hand corner. The lead spot was shared by thePennsylvania primary results and a picture -of

_ ~~~Stephanie L. Pollack'82 - Chairmant| | a r " Steven L Solnick '81- Editor-in-Chief

< *^ W ~David G. Shaw '81- Managing Editor@ q1 ~~Michael L. Taviss '81 -Business Manager4 Em ~~Gordon B. Hunter '80 -Execuative Editor

V/olumle lQ00 Number 19Friday, April 25, 1980

PRODUCTI/ON STAFF FOR THIS ISSUENight Editors: David Shaw '81, Judy Passman '83 ProductionManager: Bruce Sohn '83 Staff: Jim-Sutton '80, Stephanie Pollack'82, Robert Leishman '82, Rich Salz '82, Matthew B.Alschuler '83.:

NEWS DEPARTMENTNews Editors: Jay Gilass '82, Richard Salz '82 Cartoonists: KentMassey '81, Glenn Ackerman '82, V. Michael Bove '83, Geoff Baskir.George Plotkin, Larry Appleman, Brian Bradley Meteorologist:James Franklin '80 Staff: Art Hsu '80. John Molitoris '80. James-Moore '80, Kent Pitman '80, Elias Towe '80. Jim Wingo '80.Richmond Cohen '81, Alan Lichtenstein '81, Ann Hering '82. Aaron

.Rapoport '82. Elizabeth Storch '82. Sarah B~ingmnan '83. BruceCampbell '83, Stuart Canton '83. Rose-Marie Damiano '83, KimElcess '83. Laura Farhie'83, Ivan Fong '83, Agnes Huang '83. ShiouHuang '83. Glen Langston '83, Rick Larkin '83. Andrew Lee '83.David Lingelbach '83. John Shiroma '83. Jack E. Link '83, DougMcDonald '83, Ron Ramus '83. Jerri-Lynn Scofield '83. SteveSilberberg '83, Jim Xanthos '83

PHOTOGRAPHY DEPARTMENTPhoto Editor: Kevin Osborn '82 Associate Editor: James Mihori '83Darkroom Manager: Timothy Hiiby '82 Staff: Jim Oker '81. RichardBlumenfeld '82, Linda Custer '833, Jim Mihori '83. John Moses '83.David Radin '83. Eric Shrader '83 Photographic Consultant: DavidTenenbaum '75.

SPORTS DEPARTMENTSports Editors: Bob Host '81. Rich Auchus, '82 Associate Editor:Eric R. Fleming '83 Staff: Dennis Smith '81, Robert Labarre '83.Steve Kim '83, Arlene Santos '83

ARTS DEPARTMENTArts ]Editors: Linda Schaffir '82, Jon von Zeldwitz '82 Staff: GaryEngleson '80, Shawn Wilson '81, Jonathan Cohen '82. KevinCunningham '82. Joseph Kristl '82, Jonathan Richmond G.

BUSINESS DEPARTMENTAdvertising Manager: Rich Epstein '83 Advertising AccountsManager: Robert W. Leishman '82 Circullation Manager: DonaldGottfried '82

The Tech (ISSN 0 148-9607) is published twice a week during the academicyear (except during MIT vacations), weekly during January, and once duringthe last week in July for $7.00 per year Third Class by The Tech, 84Massachusetts Ave. Room W20-483. Cambridge. MA 02139. Third Clas&postage paid at Boston, MA. Non-Profit Org. Permit No. 59720.,POSTMASTER: Please send all address changes to our mailing address: TheTech. P~O Box 29, MIT Branch, Cambridge.-MA 02139. Telephone: (61 7) 253^1541. A4dvertising, subscription, and typesetting rates anmailable. 198UwTech. Printed by Charles River Publishing, Inc.- :

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Rooms in the Dormitories. Each Student is requiredto take Residence in a Laboratory for a Period of ~Time before being permitted to. leave the Institute.

The School of Huranities is the Part of the In-stitute for the Nerds who cannot learn to speakProgramming. The Students in this School aretreated with much Contempt for speaking Englishrather than Programming. These Nerds are fewer inNumber than even the Females, and are consideredParasites as they raise few Funds for their Research.Isolated like Lepers from the Majority of the In-stitute is the School of Political Science. PoliticalNerds are the Objects of much Sympathy as they aredestined for Careers in the Mire of the Government.

At this Time the Sun began to rise and my Hostended the Tour so he could return to his Laboratoryto sleep. I saw nothing or no one in this Place thatcould invite me to a longer,Stay, and so undertookrny Departure without partaking of Breakfast.

t

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(Please turn to page 5)

To the Editor:In recent weeks many reports

have surfaced in the media detail-ing Vietnam veterans' concernsabout the health effects related toexposure to Agent Orange. Mas-sive amounts ot this chemhicalwere used in Vietnam to destroydense underbrush used by Viet-cong soldiers as cover. Veteransstationed in areas where AgentOrange was sprayed have allegedthat many of their present healthproblems are directly related to.their exposure to the defoliant.Among the detrimental effectsfrequently cited are skin dis-orders, various types of cancer,and birth defects.

Between 1962 and 1972,, 12 mil-lion gallons of Agent Orange weresprayed by Air Forve:olanes on 5 -million acres Of.$Vietnamesecountryside. Ai-4'result of this, as'many as 80,000.American soldiers

the veterans' allegations havebeen denied them. The New YorkTimes reports (3-17-80) that V.A.hospital, physicians are'"specifically prohibited from corn-ducting - chromiosome analyses,sperm counts or biopsies on fattissue."

In short, we have seen a consis-tent and deliberate attempt toobstruct a full exploration of theconsequences of Agent Orangeexposure. At present the specificsource of these efforts at suppres-sion is not known. It is clear to us

-that the United. States govern-ment has a responsibilitylto thoseexposed: the AmericanYveterans,the Vietnamese citizens, and thefuture generations of both, toremove all obStructidns to a fullinvestigation",d- this serious mat-ter.

- <-1farry-Atwater'81'Tom Misa '81

and innumerable Vietnamesecivilians were subjected to thistoxic chemical. Studies conductedby a prominent Vietnamese sur-geon on civilians in Vietnam ex-posed to Agent Orange suggest adistinct correlation between thisexposure and birth defects andliver cancer. In particular, the rateof birth defects among the offspr-ing of those exposed was double,that - considered normal. TheseSignificant and alarming findingsled United States medical in-vestigators to state that while the,correlation was not conclusive,additional research in this area isdefinitely needed.

Howeve'r, investigation in theUnited 'States has not-.movedrapidly, at all. Althoubl morethan 5,Q00 veterans ,exposd toAgent Orange have filed claimswith the Veterans Administra-tion, tests that would substantiate

_ PAGE 4 THE TECH FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1980'

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It was with my last Breath that I struggled to the Shore of the foulRiver Charles. The Stench, the Nausea of the Stomach and the greatDiscomlfort of the Skin from the filthy Brine overcame nle and I col-Ilapsed. When I awaked, I found myself in a dark, brick Building withsnaking Hallways. Although it was late Evening, the People in thebuilding were very busy with various Tasks.

The Tongue my Rescuers spoke was not my own, but I found theirWords understandable. The Language seemed based on Mathenmatik, aSubject I had studied in my Youth. The Adjectives were based onQuantity, and oftimes a Variable is substituted for a Word.Nevertheless, I came to understand that I was in the Land of MIT,where the People call themselves Nerds. I made it known that nlyNarnle was Captain Lemuel Gullible, I had been nlost recentlyshipwrecked off the Coast of America, and that I wished a Return tomy Country.

The Nerds are a People curious in both Appearance and Action.Their Travel is always in great Haste, and their Talk of Machines andN urnbers rather than People or Places. They are most Disheveled andFatigued, except for two Days of seven when they hold Celebrationsand walk about with much Laughter. All Nerds are marked by Circlesof' Black beneath the Eyes. The Males are distinguished by snlall blackPackets hanging from their Belts. These Males are far greater inN~umlber than the Females.

My Host had advised that I take Rest~before continuing my Journeyto Civilization, which in their Tongue is called Newyork. Less than aWeek after my Arrival I begged my Host to allow the Resumption ofmy Travel. I had tired of the Acconiodations, the Bed being hard andnarrow find the Flood inedible. My Host was synmpathetic but suggestedI paly a Visit to the Great Ins'titute before my Departure. This Instituteis the Center of Life for the MIT Community. I gladly accepted the Of-l'er olfa Tour in the- hope that some of my Boredom might be relieved.

This Institute is a Series of Buildings connected by a Maze of un-derground Tunnels, raised Hallways and numerous Passages. TheDesign is such that the Nerds need not go Outdoors often. I conjec-tured that the Sun must harm their Vision, as they Walk about withHeuld always bowed low. The Institute is divided into various Parts orSchools. The Schools of speculative and applied Science are lookedupoll with Ilost Favor, as they can spend the most Monies for theirResearches. It seemis that the Object of the various Projects at the In-stitute is the Acquisition of the greatest Amount of Funds, rather thanmnerely snaking Discoveries or solving Problems.

In return for being permitted to seek Funds, the Professors are re-quired to spend some Time in the training of theNerds. I was shown aiarge Roornl in which such a Class was held. The Seats are of a nlost

time !aBoston Marathon woman winner (?) Rosie Ruiz.

Meanwhile, as to the primary story: Kennedynosed out Carter while Bush beat Reagan, althoughthe latter got more delegates. Despite a revitalizedcampaign and weakening of Carter's support,Senator Kennedy doesn't have the proverbialsnowflake's chance of getting the nomination. Andwe've all known for months who the Republicancandidate will be. So what sort of choice does thatleave the country in the approaching election?You've got it - the darling of the intellectual com-lnunity, John Anderson. He is so close to declaringh1imself an independent candidate that by the timeyou read this, he might have already done so. Ac- -cording to so-called inside sources, it has gotten tothe point that friends are, making last-ditch attemptsto talk Anderson out of it. He's even begun consider-'ing vice-presidential possibilities, apparently.

Agent Orange study needed

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WHEN IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VISIT UNIVERSALi" STUDIOS TOURWI - -- -- -

TEXAS INSTRUMIENT T.s.,59: Program-mable Calculator w/Prdgram ROM.Magnetic tape 'w/motor drive, allmanuals, charger, case. mint condition.$200/best offer; maist sell. Call Johnafter 6pm at. 566-4526.

Lasat.dayy todrop classmle

VP

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To the Edittr:The problem of finding a place

large enough to house,,MIlT's arn-nual comnmencemnent e'xerci ,ses isbeoigicesigyaue usurely, we do not have to settle for-a nondescript "commencement"of merely picking up our degreesin the CageA · would like to pre-sent an alternative which will he$i~future graduation ceremonies.

I suggest that we have two corn.,mnencement exercises each year -

graduating students, perhaps 5W0-.700 will graduate in Februaryeach year.

Having a F~ebruary graduationcerem 'ony -will, cutdown thenumnber of students and guests inJune. Moreover, many of thoseon the February degree list rareunable- to return in June for theirgraduation even though theyMight want to. Hence a F~ebruaryrgraduation- would be perfect forthem. The weather in February isusually quite awful - true, butwith the smaller number of stu-dents and guests, we should be

able to have a formal commence-ment indoors without too muchtrouble.

Hence with decreased numbersin June, finding a large enoughfacility for commencement in caseof rain will hopefully become amanageable problem. I hope that this-suggestion will be taken intoserious consideration for the stu-dents graduating in future years.For this year's graduating class, Iindeed hope that we will havegood weather on your graduationday.

Nellie P. Yeoh '81

M.I.T. STUOENT CENTER

COMPUTER HARDWARE FOR SALE:ADM13 terminal with lower case, IDS

plain paper line printer, and 9 channeltape drive, super easy interface. Maikeme some offers. 661-3718.

SUMMER SUBLET WANTED. Vlisitingprofessor seeks furnished apt. or house,7/1-9/30. Will, consider -monthly ar-rangemenrt. Prefer Cambridge. Contact,Ms. Belz at 868-3900.

TENNIS INSTRUCTORS WANTED: Ex-cellent high paying summer jobs (clulbs,resorts, camps) available throughWlashington Tennlis Services for studentswith tennis playing or teaching ex-perience. Call Mr. Covryeau at (301) 654-3770.

CHARMING 3 BEDROOM HOME inNewton Centre. Walk to T and shopping.Fenced in yard. Bowen School. $87,000.969-8775.

."WHERE, THE BUFFALO ROAM" co-starring BRUNO KIRB~Y andRENE AUTBERJONOIS * Screenplay by JO]HN KAYIE-

Music by- NEIL YOUNG * Produced and Directed by ART LINSONR·IHER .1 S hioRCK ptb ACCOMPANYING IT~ET A UNIVTERSAL PICTUREER PANY O AOLT GARDIN jMCA RECORIDS & TIAPES MXESOOnSU1Lr-AOW lbW

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HP-33E -~83w98Progr~ammable Scientffic features 49 lines of fully mergedk~eycodes and 8 lev~els of memory.

HP-31 E 46.498

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Tansla-iton .DF1Needed to translatetechnical documentsjinto French,. Germnan,Italian, Portuguese,Spanish, etc. Please call,944-8488s'or write P.O.IBox I-450, Reading, MA IB

BILL MURRAY as Dr. Hunter S. Thompsono PETER BOYLE

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_ PAGE 6 THE TECH FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1980

; Sheis looking for a manager

to begin in the fall of 1980.

Applications are available

in the Coffeehouse 266-9519.

Office W202347.and SCC

Iloilmf eadline for applying is May 2na.-

FROM 7AM. TO MIT, ADAY THRU SNDlAY, Us -IICl HOT TO A...AT WR Sw MASSP AerAVl.

W~EVERYI FROM BARBE ED CHITO At n E 7'TYou say you want something tasty to eat for a snack or a meal and

you'd like it right away. Purity Supreme, 600 Mass. Ave.., Cambridgehas the answer. At our new Hot Foods Department, you can get every-thing from barbequed kielbasa to shrimp rolls to daily hot entrees suchas stuffed cabbage. We'll pack it up so you can take it with you.

Also, for you late night snackers, we don't close until midnightMonday thru Saturday.IE OI, NA __ W59ffRVE MSW OF IOW REM FROM OUR NOT'FOO DWI

BarbequedSpareribs

Corn onthe Cob

*3 PiecestoWI NGI-BREAST HAI. I-THIGH

*6 Potato Logs92 Rolls

BarbecuedKielbasaON ASTICK I -.Oj

I

Tne :>crew an(Continuedfrom page 4) wrote a

Does the silver-haired Republican from Illinois reputabhave a1 chance' I'm afraid not. Much as I'd love to award tsee hirn in the White House, Anderson just has too fortunat1nu1ch going against him. He's too liberal for the to allowRepublicans, and too consevative for the by losinD)emiocrats. Even if he starts immediately he charity.probably can't get onto the ballot in more than 20 given thstates. right do

More traditional obstacles include the lack of money rl'unds (an independent party is not eligible for the FinallS29 million-plus in government money that the two to a claother parlies get). An independent hasn't had a hope sandwic(hi winning since the 1920's. On top of it all, the thirty, a(C.lrter machine is already gearing up to make a case bus, fills.lgainst the legality of an Anderson bid. these oc

It is certainly Carter who stands to lose the most inhabitaI'roln an Anderson campaign. If enough disaffected The uDernocrats vote Anderson, this will effectively split horriblythe Demiovcratic vote and put Reagan in the White all the fHlouse. Anderson counters that his own polls show realize tthat he would get equal support from both parties. to someWhatever the real answer, I hope he runs. If nothing look atelse it will make this a damned interesting race. tural "rn

Closer to home: this week, the annual Institute and TraScrew contest is being held. Last year at this time, I and con

Class of '82 NewsClass of '82 is looking for a manager for thelobby 7 donut stand for the coming year. Allinterested Parties should contact Charlie

24 " lour Coffeehouse 4

Frankel at

There will be a class newsletter and question-naire in the mail early next week. Please fill it outand returns

SouthernFried Chicken_LB.

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Rentals will be ready May 27All caps and gowns must be returned immediately

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To the Editor:-In response to John Molitoris's evidence for even that I percent?

article "The Investigation of the The-fact is ihat-not 99 percent,Pafanhorial" in last week's Tech, not 99.9 percent,'but every validI would' like to say thINt I am in' scientific- experim'ent that hasfull-.agreement with' Professor ,; sought to prove thi existence ofWheele-r that. the ,arap-T such phenomena has failed'to dosycho!'gieal Assoddiation' should so;(See ESP-' XScientifc Evalua-be ousted from the AA-AS ~ tion, by C.E.M. Hansel.)(American Association for the. The two examples of suchAdvancement .of. Science. Mr. phenomena that Mr. MolitorisMolitoris opposes this move on cites'are- easily disposed of. Tetwo grounds: first, he states that case of the San Franciscothere is at least some evidence for policeman is one of a number ofthe validity of "paranormal" such cases reported over theclaims, and second, he believes years. These are not scientific ex-that keeping the Association in- periments because they do not ae-side the AAAS will maintain cer- count for and control some ob-tain restraints on the organization vious possible causal variables.- by allowing members of the For example, little weight is given

AAAS to judge the scientific toWthe fact that a trained police oftvalue of its claims - which would ficer can tell many things about aotherwise not be possible. person by meeti ng him, and using

The first argument iso the more that knowledge can predict what,fundamental, so I will deal with it the person will do. ( Hisfirst. Mr. Molitdris very clearly knowledge of the city will tell himportrayed the legerdemain in- what the person is likely to seevolved in someof the so-called while doing it.)4'paranormal";events' Yet he still The case of Uri Geller and theleaves the door open for the ex- SRI tests has been fully exposedistence of such events:, '". . .Even in James Randi's book The Magicif 99 percent of all paranormal of Uri Geller. Those tests were aclaims are bunk, what we, cane ludicrous sham, with the scientistslearn from the real I percent is repeatedly ,relaxing ,constraintsworth the effort." My question is, because - in Mr. Molitoris'swhere is the slightest scientific words - "they just wanted to see

something." Actually, the constraints in these tests were norelaxed'only after hours of seeingnothing. They were relaxed fromthe beginning. The SRI scientistsallowed an associate of Geller's tohave free run of the premises, andthis associate could easily havetelephoned to Geller the 9 digitnumber that Geller allegedlypredicted unaided from the dis-tance of his hotel room.

Given the pseudo-scientificstatus of past "paranormal"claims, one cannot accept Mr.Molitoris's argument-that keep-ing the Parapsychological As-sociation in the AAAS will allowthe AAAS to keep the Associa-tion in check. Since the veryphenomena which the Associa-tion claims to study have not beenproven to exist, there is nojustification for continuing togrant it the unearned sanction ofallowing it to remain in anorganization devoted to the ad-vancement of science. That wouldbe logically, equivalent to theAMA allowing "faith healers" inas a means of insuring that futureexperiments with such techniqueswere in accord with establishedmedical practice.

Warren Ross G Sponsor: MIT Hillel, for information call 253-2982

Translations into your native language areneeded for industrial literature. You will bewell paid to prepare these translations onan occasional basis. Assignment aremade according to your area of technicalknow-ledge.

We* are currently seeking translatosor:* Arabic e Chinese * Danish i Dutchi Fani *, French * G merma * Greek9 Italia e Japanese 0 Korean0 Norwejan * Poush Pep* Romanian Spanish | Swedishn- andotheris.-

Into-English translations from Russian,East European languages and manyothers also available.

Foreign language typists also needed.

Althi worman be done i your mellinguistic Systems, Inc. is New England'slargest tranrlatisn aifnCY, locate~d a aib~cknorth of the Central Sq~. subway station.For appla Ad testtranrxs a ea Ms. Tabart

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Bachelor's Cap and GownMaster's Cap and GownDoctor's Cap and GownHeight, weight and cap size required, when ordering

Following exercises and 1980.

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FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1980 THE TECH PAGE 7' _

THI� SPARRPOW cience MEMORIAL

LECTUREI

Rabbi David Feldmanauthor of

"'Birth Control and Jewish Law"

ISEXUAL ETHICS:

IPASTI PRESENT

& FUTURE"

Monday, April 28 8pm

Marlar Lounge

MIT Bldg. 37, Rm. 252

(Enter at 70 Vassar St.)

I IYour

foreignlanguage

ISvaluable!

Orders for cap and gown rentalsfor graduation exercises June 19-80

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SATU RDAY MAY 3, 1 980for orders from the

traditional Tech resource

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RENTAL RATESTraditional10.00

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no later than June 4,

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it was in a redneck bar. The place inPhiladelphia wasn't too good. It was calledThe Hot Club. When we played there,sorneone was dancing and jumping up anddown and he went right through the floorinto the, basement.

Mission of Burma, the band who opened foryou here, is one of the more pgopulr Bostonbands. Did you bhve local bands opening foryou all through the tour?Yes, but they were booked by the people

'who booked the clubs,, not by ourpror!loter. Mission of Burma played one ofthe nights at Hurrah's in New York, too.They were really the only good supportband we've had. One of the bands wasplaying Lynyrd Skynyrd and things likethat - we nearly died.

How are sales of the new English album?Have you heard yet?Well, it's only been out one day. But thesingle is in the top 40 now in England.Adding keyboards is an important change tothe sound of the band for the second album.Yes. We used keyboards on every track.But on the album, it's not so much used askeyboards, but as an additional instru-ment. On the first album, there are over-dubs with a guitar doing little melody linesand things like that. On 'Someone Else'sTrain" and "Accuracy," there are little fillswhich I couldn't do on stage, and playchords as well. It got to the point where wewere sacrificing songs for the sake of stay-ing three-piece, because we thought ""Oh,the Cure are three-piece." But there was lit-tle point in carrying on as a three-piece tothLe detriment of the songs. The keyboardson the new album aren't like RickWakeman keyboards - they're stuck in'the background. They just add texture tothe sound.

Yourfalbum is on PVC Fiction records. Willyou try to sign with a major American label?We're signed with Fiction Records foreverywhere. It's not like being signed to abig record company. Chris, there, runs therecord company, and manages us, and doeseverything. We're as much running FictionRecords from our point of view as fromhis. All we need in America -is somebody todistribute the record. JEhM only imports tocertain shops, and that leaves whole areasolA America where we'll never get heard. It'sjust that Fiction is still a pretty small com-pany.

I see ywochanged bass playersYes. We had been playing together for a.ong time, but only seriously for aboutA-10months. When things started to get bigger,and we were spending more and more timetogether and touring for months on end,the personal differences between us gotquite exaggerated. Also, it was the music.All the new songs were written around thetime we toured-.with So'uxie and theBalnshees, and he really didn'tClike the new

The Cure antd Mission of Burma at TheUnde1 rgroundlt/. /11() Colntnonwealth Ave.,boston, Sulndla) April 20.

Thl Cure are api up-and-comling Britishnew1 wlalv haled. Thel, recentiv released theirfirst Anterican1 LP. "Bov.>s Dont't Cry," andc(onilpleted a brief East Coast tour in Boston/r.as wee1·kendl. I spoke with the band's leadsirvicesr and glitari.st Robert Sinith ajier the

Is this a really big US tour?No, it's just the East Coast. It's a really sm-all tour - only ten days. We did two daysin New Jersey and three days in New York,then Washington and Philadelphia. ByAlmerican standards, it's pretty small. ByEnglish standards, it's a whole Englishtour.What sort of clubs are you playing in?Similar to the Underground?Well, it sort of varies. The first night weplIayed alt a place called Emerald City inNew Jersey which takes 1500 or 2000 peo-ple. It looked like a disco. There were sevenor eight -hundred people there that night,and that was really good. The next night wewere tit Ashury Park NJ, which was awful-Bruce Springsteen territory and all that.

Matthieu Hartley. the Cure's newkeyboard player. (Photo by BarbaraPickles)

Lol Tolhurst of The Cure. (Photo by Bar-bara Pickles)

songs. It was stupid, because it was gettinglike a job - there was no excitement in itany more. Me and Lol really liked the newsongs, and he was saying, "Okay, I'll play,but I don't like it.'" We thought it shouldnever be like that, with someone in thegroup who doesn't-like playing the songs.Have you noticed differences between Br-'-itish and American audiences?There is a difference, but it's sort of hard topin down. Tonight was quite like anEnglish audience. At Hurrah, you couldtell it was a New Yark audience. I don'tknow how, but you can tell. Audiences

-don't worry us that much. If we think weplayed well on stage, it doesn't matter if theaudience hated it. A lot of bands,regardless of how they played, if they gotthe audience moving about, they're happy.it doesn't work that way for me.

-Jon von ZelowitzRobert-Smith (guitar) and Simon Gallup (bass) at Hurrah in New York last week. (Photoby Barbara Pickles)

I

The MIT Drnmashop presents GeorgeBernard Shaw's comedy Man andSuperman - including the Don Juan inHell scene. The play will be performedMay 2, 3, 8, 9, and 10 at 8pm and May 4 at2pm at the Hasty Pudding Theater, 12Holyoke St., Harvard Square. Tickets are$3.50 or $3 with student or MIT ID andcan be purchased at the door or by calling2534720.

-- - --- A ' lIsThis week's LSC lineup:

Annie Hall: Friday at 6, 8:30 & I I in 26-100 and at 9:30 in 10-250.

39 Steps (clas.sic): Friday at 7:30 in 10-250.

Hair: Saturday at 6, 9, & 12 in 26-100.Support Your Local Sheriff: Sunday at

6:30 & 9 in 26-100.

Off the wall is pleased to announcescreenings of newly released animated filmsfrom the People's Republic of China onApril 28-30. The filmmakers will be presentat a special screening at 8.30pm on April28.. Other screenings will be at 6:15pmMonday and 6,.8, & 1Opm Tuesday andWednesday. For more information, call354-5678.

-ing Thurs., Fri., and Sat. nights at 8pmthrough May 15 at the Reality Theater, 26Overland St. Pontifex is a zany comedywith music about the turmoil and confu-sion of revolutionary politics and the tragicyearning for transcendene. Tickets are$3.50 and $4.50 and can be reserved by cal-liag 2624780.

M""l~(USCeSICe~Lazers, Marhals, P.S. Wild at the Rat,528 Comm. Ave., Fri.

Neighborhoods, Lou Miami and theKozmetix at Jasper's, 379 Somerville Ave.,Somerville, Fri.

Peter Dayton,,, TV ^ To,, W B at TheUnderground, 1 l10 Comm. Ave., Fri.

Pastihe, Slow - Ahitd, ITrademarks atCantone's Fri. and Sat.

Maw, TV To at the Vanderground Sat.

Ribp,. Mimrs Debutantes at the Rat Sat.and -Sun.

Saoeaoa and the Sobodi, WhiteWoe at The Undergound Sun.

The MIT Shakespeare Ensemble presentsits spring production, The Comedy of Er-rors. It will be staged in the Sala de PuertoRico April 24-29 at 8pm. Reservations,which will be held at the door until 7:40each evening, may be made by calling 253-2903. Tickets are $4.50/3.50 with ID onlFriday and Saturday nights, $2.50 on allother nights.

The MIT Dacee Workshop presents twoperformances of student works directed byBeth Soll; on Sat., April 26 and Sun., April27 at 8pm in Walker Gymnasium. Theprogram includes pieces derived fromchoreographic assignments given in Ms.Soll's composition/improvisation class.Admission is free. Call 253-2908 for moreinformation.

Chapel Concert: MIT' Early MusicSociety, Tim Aarset, director. Baroque in-strumental ensembles play Vivaldi,Corbett, Chedeville, Loche and others.May 1, MIT Chapel, noon, free.

* ,Lev'Mias andet Kotzkat-Cantonea s-a +`$Mon-

Potifex, an original adaptation of -TII Nedesis fiitirwiig Ch&'speddingThoodore Roszak's dramati enovd, is-play-- at. 1c Un-dcrground Tues.' ; K

CN lMt I IIIAd or-" -- TER·H[41ER --

Wellesley College Theater will present ALittle Night Mutic May 2, 3, & 4 at 8pm atAlumni Hall. The music and lyrics of thismusical comedy were written by StephenSondheim and the book by Hugh Wheeler.Tickets are $3 and will be sold at the door.

In celebration of Emerson College'sCentennial, the College's Musical TheatreSociety will present My Fair Lady on MayI A 2 at 8pm and on May. 3 at 7pm. Theperformance will take place at John Han-cock Hall. Tickets, priced from $3.50 to $5,are available at 262-2010, ext.. 248.

Scrambled Feet a "biting" musical com-edy revue spoofing that '*fabulous invalid",(the theater) is playing at the CharlesPlayhouse, 76 Warrenton St., Boston. Per-formances are Tue.-Fri. at 8pm; sat. at 6 &9:30prn; and Sun. at 3 & 7:30pm. For reser-vations, call 426-6912.

2*1ft lav-14. --, - 11 I- - 11 I- I � - , ", -- , , , , --- , , 1.1�1 ";!, - ,'. 1�1. , -- -.�; -1 --, , , - � -.- r., -"I,-.,-- l,'-'.. - .. , , -- " �-, -:� ;- -, '. , " - -- , " _ : I ." '' '. , 11, - 11

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|.%-FRLDAY. APRIL 25. 1980 THE TECH PAGE 9 , --

run tours ^ t t

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Sd heremembers of the NRA (NationalRifWe Association)" Buchwald'ssolution? Register typewriterowners.-The perfect television show: all

about' a crazy family fromiGeprgia that takes over the White .House.

Why we can't find a decentpresidential candidate: ". .. buthalf of them [the country's pop-ulation) are women!. .. We'll be-ready for a woman president insix months. .. "

About Carter's notoriousPlayboy interview, and hisheartfelt lusts: "I could not makethat up."

The overall impression was thatwe were listening to a night-club

.comedian doing a Washingtonact. But this comedian knows thepolitical beat intimately, as he-should after 32 years on the job.

After the set speech, Buchwaldanswered questions and con-ducted his own presidential strawpoll. The overwhelming favoriteamong the audience was JohnAnderson (of course), with "Idon't know" coming a close se-cond. IBuehwald declared himselfto be an Andersonl supporter.

Buchwald fans also learniedthat their idol wouldn't run forPresident because he didn't -wantto be made fun of by editorialcolumnists. In addition, after thenews, he watches M*A *S*H,Barney Miller, and Taxi. Hedoesn't watch too much televi-sion, however, because after -anevening in front of the tube, "Ifeel so stupid."

Michael Taviss

please call-x3-2475

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boothswith Greenspeak

ahe | Thuchsi stop;:Art- Buchwaldi the' foiostr "I have beenfo~ld-to tel yo'u'..

huminor columnist in'the.tounyt; ,that aftei,thii-lecture all the resi-does not hav'e to, w rrabout a` dentsiof East Campus-and Seniorlackf.< material. As>* he" s A'ys' - ois will move into- Ashdown;",,Facts get inmyw a y.";ist lea sihuciwadld -ran -thrugh thesethat's 'what h told' an avid haltiJo esiannner betray,audience of over- 700, in Dupont . ing his 0infamiliaiity- -with- thegyfmnirashim Ttiesday.night. material. The -rest" of the lecture

Buchwald's.; only troubles,- in was, delivered in a slow, -'steadyfact, stemnfrom how the iews out- foghorn voice. The speech wasstrips him in idioz cy,:(killer -rabbits-, ---obviuousy -prepped'well in adattacking .presiidents', et: al) and v vance; minuch of the..material- was.how some of his':columns have gleaned' from previous 'articles.started to come true. He told -e This did:not detract -from thestory of hows he invented .and audienct's' enjoyment', though,wrote about the"Air Forbe's new - since the jokes were delivered in asecret weapon: a plane that flies .new format.so slowly 'that it can't be shot Some examples of his solutionsdown. Apparently, a few -days to today's problems:later (so, he said) he got a call Gun control: "'I get hundreds.from-the Pentagon... Well, you of neatly typewritten letters fromcan take it from there.

With this and 'other similar' hilarous tales of -bubureacrtcrcticnonsense, the popular writerkepr t _students, faculty, and others' slaughing throughout the-speech.- The Lecture, _Series -Comi'ittee- sponsored event was a complete'success, being both entertainingand topical. In fact, its-only flawwas its short duration. Includingquestions and answers, the speech' _only ran fr a-little-over an hour- a disappointment to some of. -the spectators.

In the course of that hourhowever, Buchhwald mahagedto .lash out at Watergate;'the _Presidential elections,' -gun -con-; _trol, family -life with-the Carters,and a dozen other cuffent evrents.,

eHe even- sprinkled half, a dozen _MIT gags at the beginning of thelecture to warm up his audience:

Career opportunities for new and recerit.ComputerScience/Engineering graduates in speech recognitionsystem product development, research, data base,language and simulation facilities.

(Summer and part time positions also available.)

For the above positions, please call Paula Welshcollect at (617) 489-2830. Dialog Systems Inc.,32 Locust St., Belmont, MA 02178.

An-Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

Il'F76-XPT BUY A BLBLCK BOXILooking at used cars? Beforebuying one, bring it to us for acomplete evaluation. $20 for 4or 6 cylinder cars - $5 extraV-8 or A/C (with this ad).

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Class of 1-982The official MIT class rings will bedelivered on Thursday April 24, FridayApril 25, and Monday April 28. Pleasehave check made out to Dieges and Clust(in advance). The hours will be-10am-3pm. Additional orders for all classes willbe taken on Monday April 28. This will bethe last calf for this year.-

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Club CasablancaLouis of Boston & Chestnut HillHarvest RestaurantThe CoopU-Haul Truck RentalCamnbridge Savings

Stockpot of Cambridge- --Brian's Sporting GoodsGoods Department StoreLandmark InnShawmut BankAugust A. Busch & Co.- of Masi;'

SkewersHarvard Bay Bank33 Dunster St.Sweet StuffCambridge Trust"Elsie's Lunch,-.

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voftt>Xs9 Forseats &in'for ation, call -254885, zeThis event made, -alm-0ble-by grants from:

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FRIDAY, APRIL 25. 1980 THE TECH PAGE 11 _

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first-serve basis. Indicate below if you would liketo take advantage of this opportunity'the date(s) and timre(s) preferabledeparture. Please be flexible!

and specifyto you for

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circle oneor mnore

check one,or more

Narm e

Jocelyn Jacknis, Lisa Hakala, Nancy Douglas.Send immediately to 552B -Burton House or call Jocelyn at di .8478.

SUMMER INTERNSWVANTED

One 'of the top Wall Street Investment BankingFirms is undertaking a major review of alloperations with the goal of:

1. Indicating revenueexpansionand/orcostreduction opportunities that can be ac-complished in the near future.

2. Developing detailed requirements for anintegrated securities trading and pro-cessing system designed for expensereduction, revenue expansion and riskcontrol.

Ideal candidates will have outstanding aca-demic credentials in Industrial Engineering,Finance, or Management Information Systems,will have completed one year of graduate study,and have two to three years of businessexperience.Compensation is extremely high, but so are thehours.If you have an interest, please forward yourresume, along with a cover letter indicatingwhy you should be selected for this project to:

80ox c/o Jeanette Weifel, Doremus & Company, 120Broadway, N.Y.,D N.Y. 10006

WASHINGTON D.C.P;HLA-DELPHIA

mNCEW YORK CITY- - C~~OIYPARE WITHQ:

Wash. D.C.Philadelphia

-New York City

53mOO38mOO26mOO

The- Underg raduate Buying Service is spon-soring an MIT bus charter service for May whenstudents go home. Each luxury coach holds 49people, and tickets will be sold on a first-come,

n 10am [ 2pm [1 6pm (NYC only)

i·-·r.i 1!.'·

I _ - - -

Messenger vs, So~ores vs. Meetings

41 4 11 lv

, iso otnorrotv-- Variet~y Showw

11:00 outside the Student Center-- Carnival BootQohs

-- 0 Have your eneumiesthrown in jail

-- Fo~od%

Sunda~~~~

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tickets

. TRICYCLE IRELAYY -prelimincary round begins at IODO

-finals at 4:00

CHARIOT RACE-preiminarry roundls begin at 10:00-finals at 4:30

TUG OF WAR (sponsored by the Cask'~n'Flagon)-wleigh-inas begin at 8.DO-semi?-finals-begin at 3:30-first round begins at 11:0OBSTACLE COURSE I

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ICE CREAM EATING CONTaEST(sponsolred by Grumpy's Ice Cream)

-1:00 at-. resgeKEG TOSS

(sponsored by Ken's Pub)-preliminarys round starits at -1.1-0

naIu:~--i7 1 3:60a

a~nnounced-tim~be to ~be

-- noon to 4:00, Kiesgve'-free food-- livoe bandd-- presentation. of all trophies

The Undergraduate Association, the Student Center -Committee, the InterfraternityEConference, and the Dormitory Council, as well as a number of dormitories and

fraternities all deserve special'-thanks for their support of the weekend.

1114 1 (I T 44 VI 1R IIEEK ND VILI EN ]FIT I W MLiiJ aR IYV 1 14 1 ? s, I iaA T O

Sig a Chiy an ontestCICI-5.30, outside KresgeDU teak FryI Li, m - erst A Iley also appean'ng - . CASS

tic ets -$4I C) free beer with',proof of age&00, On nngg's Field

- dti 0TEAM C~~~ON1~~ESTS:~

All-ec Sng8:00 n t ae Stucent-I enter

Featuring 3 Bands, WBalloon-- Trapp~er

~ZaichariahDupont Gymna''S'lm "at'8:30

Tickets- $3.,00free beer & soda

SCC PICNIC:Ovall

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STAGE EQUIPMENT' BLY C.A.PeEe CO.LIGHTS ANUD SOUND EQOUIPMENT BY CAPRON:' LIGHTING AND SOU3ND

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Bright IdeasfromI

Harvard University Press

BUNKERRAMO

_ , _ ,, ___ �M.l.T. Student Center I P - I- -l~lsi 'C B- --,s- 0s

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Boston hasThis past weekend saw a great

deal of sports action in the Bostonarea, complete with playoffdrama, early season jitters, andcontroversy.

Boston's professional winterteams, the Celtics and Bruins,made the playoffs in the NationalBasketball Association (NBA)and National Hockey League(NHL) respectively. The Celticsare in the midst of a semifinalseries with the Philadelphia 76ers.The two teams fought down tothe wire in the regular season for

home runs at this early stage ofthe season, including a blast inMonday's 9-8 San Jacinto Daywin over the Chicago White Sox.Tony Perez, a recent addition tothe team, has also demonstratedfine play, scoring the winning runon a daring home plate'slide inthe same Detroit game, and is fit-ting in well at first base when 20-year veteran Carl Yastrzemskiserves as designated hitter or sitsout the game.

The Bruins, on the other hand,are out of the playoff picture.After defeating the PittsburghPenguins in an earlier round, thelocals couldn't match the NewYork Islanders, who won theirseries against Boston four gamesto one. This series was closer thanthe 4-1 margin would indicate,with three games going into over-time, including a fight-filled gamein the Boston Garden in whicheight players were thrown out ofthe game.

David Hoose, Guest Conductor

BACH: Cantbb 76WQU.S08hs Gdbfice Ulder

S > SCHUTZ: MetsSCH6NBERG: Sam- d vwksWednesday,'Aprfl 30, 1980, at 8:30 p.m.Sanders Theatre, CambridgeTickets: $7. s5.50, $4.at Bostix Ticket Booth in Boston, orThe Cantata Singers. Box 375Cambridge,MlA02138 (617)625-7410

11 ._

.FS _II

I(mm-nible

Arts Vouchers welcomed.Concert funded in part by the Massachusetts

-.Council on the Arts & Humanities.S§tdent discounts at the door. I* * *

Another local spring fixture isthe Boston Marathon. As ex-pected, Bill Rodgers won his thirdstraight title, following the retinueof motorcycles and vans that car-ried police and press along the 26-mile, 385-yard course. The con-troversy this year centers aroundthe alleged women's winner,Rosie Ruiz of New York, was thefirst woman to cross the finishline, but might not have run theentire course. Tech staffer JackLink, stationed a mile from thefinish, near where this reporterviewed the race, says, "JacquelineGareau of Montreal was definite-ly the first woman wearing anumber to pass me. I don't seehow a million people could have

missed anyone further up."

the Atlantic Division title, andthis playoff series promises to beevery bit as close. The winningteam will advance to the NBAchampionship round against thewinner of the Los Angeles-Seattleseries. Perhaps the most strikingfeature of this year's playoffsystem is that even if the remain-ing series go to the seven gamelimit, the season will end in themonth of May. Compared toprevious years, this is a welcomerelief to those who believe profes-sional basketball in June doesn'tsound right.

It's spring again, and the RedSox are back in Fenway Park.The big question mark for the Soxbefore the season started was thecondition of catcher CarltonFisk's arm. From early indica-tions, Fisk seems to be in primecondition. Last week, one of histhrows cut down a runner at se-cond base to save a 10-9 win overDetroit, and in pre-game war-mups a few days later his throw-ing arm seemed alright to thisreporter. Fisk has also not lost hishitting power, leading the team in

suggestions may be directed toPaul Mahoney at 267-9419.

Intramural Rifle entries are dueat 4pm today in the 1M RifleManager's mailbox in W32-131.Individual and team entries willbe accepted. Walk-on entries theday of the match will be accepteduntil the range is full. First roundcompetition will be held Sunday,April 27, and final competitionwill be held Saturday, May 3, atthe rifle range in duPont. If thereare questions, Steve Golson, theIM Rifle Manager, can be

reached at x5-9315.

Intramural Outdoor Trackrosters must be submitted byWednesday, April 30 at 4pm inthe IM Manager's Mailbox inW32-131. Individual entries andevent changes will be acceptedbefore meet time. The meet willbe held on Sunday, May 4 atIOam with Sunday, May lI as therain-out date. Comments and

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We're a Fortune 500, multi-national corporation, with locationsthroughout the UnitedStates and abroad, and sales nearing $50Qmillion per year. We are not so large that we don't know our people,well, but large enough to provide excellent opportunities for thosewilling to invest their talents in us.

If you'd like to find out more about ho-w we can fit into your plans,please send us your resume:

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_ PAGE 14 THE TECH FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1980

now thrusoortsI SaturdayBIGI

SCREW .obby 10; busy sports weekff -

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,,aid*'rlL

Vote foryourMITCorporationMember.

This is your opportunityfor representation onthe MIT corporationsSigned ballots mustbe returned by Mcly 9.

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ESystems continues-theutradition of

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FF ;"'AY, APRIL 25, 1980 THE TECH PAGE 15 0

dLbu wVurlliatizu up Dat i} > BAJwomen'sgl intercollegiate athletics,coordinated by Betts. -

Each of the division heads con-sults with the people in theirrespective programs in order todetermine that program's needs.This list of necessities is thehpresented to a committee madeup of Smith, Barry, Betts, andArthur. They then decide how thefinances will be divided amongthe: different programs and teams.

Barry and Betts work personal-ly with the coaches to arrange ateam's road trips and schedules.Depending on the, amount ofmoney available for that par-ticular year, 'the 'schools on ateam's regular season schedulewill be limited to-those within acertain radius. If the team wishesto venture outside that radius, itmust pay for the trip on its own.Thus, the fencing team was notfunded for the long southern roadtrip it took this season since thesclhools it fenced were all locatedoutside- its radius.

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the contrary, if training is essen-tial and cannot be done here dueto winter weather, the departmenthas supported trips to warmerclimates for this purpose. For ex-ample, the crew team goes downto Florida every January in orderto work out on an unfrozen river.

Should a squad be skilledenough to go to a post-season col-legiate tournament or meet, MIThas always been happy to foot thebill. Returning to the crew team,if a boat is fast enough to get in-vited to the Henley Regatta inEngland, the Institute will pay forthe journey.

The key word in the previousexamples is "collegiate." Theathletic department will not payfor post-season trips to. non-collegiate tournaments. For thisreason, the women's crew teamwas denied funding a few yearsback when they wanted to go tothe National Women's RowingAssociation Championshipsbecause the NWRA is not a col-

atnlmius, 1i is eviuetL mIIi tat iLne ;oIn

troversial Title IX has not hadmuch effect here,since the laws ofTitle IX were already in effect atMIT long before Congress passedit. The Institute comes closer tototal compliance than almost anyother school in the nation. "Thebudget for the women's program

,is much larger than most otherschools our size," says Betts.

Much of this is in large part dueto a task force on women'sathletics that was formed here in1975. This was one of the mainturning points for women'ssports. As a result, the women'sbudget was increased and morecoaches were hired for, that partof the program. Unlike manyother schools, the women's teamstravel the same way, get the sameaccomodations, and receive thesame quality equipment as themen.

Last year, the entire athleticbudget at M IT came to the sum of1.3 million dollars. Roughly fif-teen percent of this is revenue

sLItutu UUaget aIIU uonlUIons.

"One of the nice things aboutMIT is' that the administrationbudgets the Department ofAthletics much like it would theDepartment of Chemistry orsuch," said Smith. "Our goal is tostay out of the gate-receiptdependency that other schools aredeeply into."

Donations from alumni helpgreatly -in the realization of thisgoal. The Development Officehandles most of these. Othersdonate to a specific sport, such asthe donation of crew shells.

Smith says there may be a cut-back on some of the intercol-legiate schedules next year due tothe influx into the intramuralprogram from Next House. Acutback like this would be-con-sidered grounds for crucifixion ata place like Ohio State, and it is agood example of how fairlyeveryone is treated. As Betts says,"The needs of the program aredetermined and then funded tothe best of our abilities."

cards.the In-.no

By Steve Kim.Every information brochure

that MIT releases includes the fol-lowing words: MIT offers thelargest number-of intercollegiatesports of any college or universityin the nation. The Institute hasalways taken pride in this fact.Year' after year, the Departmentof Athletics has been successful inbringing the students, here a wideand expansive, program of sports-It has helped to producenationally-ranked -fencing, crew,pistol, and sailihg'teams in recentseasons. The", structure of thedepartment and its method offinancial 'distribution ·.guaranteesthat every aspeqt of MIT athleticswill be given--fair-and equal treat-ment.

Ross Smith,. the head oft thedepartment, has been at MIT fornineteen-years.' He' directs thedepartment Iwith the aid of two,advisory councils, the MITAthletic -.Association ExecutiveCom mittee and- the AthleticBoard. Studen'ts have represefta-tion on both councils.

Two assistant directors,-Jack"Barry and Jane Betts, head upthe,administrative staff. It is com-prised of business manager', Rod'Arthur, equipment manager John("Murph") Mu rphy, -facilitiesmanager Al Bianco, sports infor-.mation director Ken 'Cerino, andsports medicine director JamesLester. -The department thenbreaks down into five programdiv~isions: intramural athletics,coordinated by David Michael;physical education, coordinatedby Ed Crocker; club sports and

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Developing the ana-lytical theory known by hisname, oseph Fourier gave'' '"-ie _. -'-1. t:oo·c~~$l for, --.te woidiare for engineering analysis andsystem design.

Today, E-Systemsengineers are carrying onhis tradition. They're usingFourier's mathematicalaccomplishments to solvesome of the world's tough-est electronics problems

via computer-designed

circuitry.E-Systems designs

-,and produces cormmunica-tions systems, data systems,antenna systems, intelli-gence and reconnaissancesystems that are often thefirst-of-a-kind in the world.

For a reprint of theFourier illustration andinformation on career op-

portunities with E-Systemsin Texas, Florida, Indiana,Utah or Virginia, write:Lloyd K. Lauderdale, VPResearch and Engineering,E-Systems, CorporateHeadquarters, P.O. Box226030, Dallas, TX 75266.

~IA^ E-SYSTEMS

FridayMen's tennis, New EnjQualifyingBaseball vs. Boston StateLacrosse vs. Springfield ..

gland-

3pm3pm

SaturdayLightweight crew with Columbiaand Cornell, Geiger CupMen's sailing, SinglehandedEliminations ........ at URIWomen's tennis, Seven SistersTournamentWomen's sailing, Jerry ReedTrophy ...... at Coast GuardHeavyweight crew at Princetonwith.Harvard, Compton CupSoftball vs. Nichols Ipm

Sundav

Women's sailing,, Jerry ReedTrophy ..... at Coast Guard

Track, GBC at Boston College

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sandng: . Where does 81.3 million"gorecreation, coordinated by Barry; This is not to say that the legiate organization. from the sale of athleticmen's intercollegiate, athletics, athletic department will never With regard to women's The rest is made up from 1Aen >rnnreinatd hv Rarrv- -and filnd Ino trin ehv -MIT trme On nthl tirsc it;ev ;ePntthntthor~nn et;tlatit hisfiewf C l Ar rn:t;a

tIII

The problemsolvers.

AINV

ORDERED BY TELEPHONEDELIVERED DIRECTLY TO YOUR

HOME OR OFFlCEALL MAJOR CREDlt CARDS ACCEPTED

OUR ATH YEAR WORLD WIDE

$ COOERA-TIVE B(*SERXC9h OF AMIERICA. INTrERNATOALReadingo Massachuns 01 U.S A

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By Jack Link"I knew we were in troublt

after the first four strokes," saidHarvard lightweight crew coachPete Raymond after MIT roaredacross the finish just .03 secondsahead of Harvard at last Satur-day's Biglin Bowl on the Charles.

The victory was the first againstHarvard in sixteen years, asMIT's varsity lightweight eightposted a time of 6:41.00 over Har-vard's 6:41.03, with Dartmouthover a length behind at 6:46.0.

"We did our damnedest," saidRaymond, "but MIT is verystrong, very racy this year."That's impressive praise comingfrom a Harvard coach. Harvardhas won the Jope Cup for overallexcellence in crew for the past

Sports Update

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Sailing - Last Saturday, themen's varsity team captured theOberg Trophy by winning thegreater Boston Championships.Skipper Steve Dalton '81 andRoberto Lopez '80 placed first in"C" Division, and in "B" Divi-sion, Skipper Bill Dalton '80 andCahn Le'82 tied for low-point ofthe regatta. In the Three CrewTeam Race at Harvard this Sun-day, MIT and Dartmouth weretied for first after each team wonfive of six matches. Dartmouthwon the tie-breaker, however, andthe Engineers placed secondamong seven schools. Sailing forMIT were skippers Eddie Marcus'81, Tom Dobroth '82, and PeterBernhardt '82; John Piotti '83,Inal Uygur '81, and Steve Yao'82

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cellar for the-first time in the 1500meter-Eisenberg Cup.

The first: boat was 5 seatsbehind Yale's 5:13 with5.'16, fourseconds ahead of Princeton. Thesecond boat idd in' the first 300meters of its race, but fell four'se-conds behind Yale at the finish, aseat ahead of Princeton with atime of 5:10. The freshiwomenwere outclassed in their division.The women compete in the SmithCup here tomorrow.

streamlined cedar shell, while thefirst uses fibreglass.-

The J~s lost their, races but theFrosh #3 had a good race in theirfirst one this season, defeatingHarvard Frosh #4, behind Har-vard Frosh #3 and Varsity ,#4. Theentire lightweight squad competesin the Geiger Cup here tomorrowmorning.

Meanwhile, at Princeton'sLake Carnegie, both MIT varsity,women crews finished out of the

twelve years and was defeatedonly once (by Yale last year) inthe past four years of lightweightdual meets.

That record was broken by theMIT lightweight eight crew ofChristopher Hawkins '80, PaulRothman '80, Christopher Moran'82, Dan Chernoff '81, GaryNeben '81, Russ Murphy '82, PhilKaufman '81, Matt Thompson'81 and coxswain Lee Moriwaki'81. Their record stands at 1-1,having missed last year's EARCSprints champ Yale by only .2 se-conds at their first race of theseason under coach Tom Howes.They're the clear favorites athome tomorrow against Cornelland Columbia.

Thle second freshmen

lightweights fell to Harvard's6:57.8 but beat Dartmouth's 7:12with their time of 7:05 in a closefight for their division. The firstfrosh lightweights didn't fare aswell, finishing last with a 7:09behind Dartmouth's 7:05 andHarvard's 6:54, falling behindDartmouth at the HarvardBridge.

"The first and second boats arevery competitive," - said froshlightweight coach CraigChristensen, explaining the se-cond boat's better time. The dif-ferent divisions race at differenttimes under sometimes changingconditions. Further complicatingany attempt to compare the twoboats is the fact that the secondcrew uses a heavier but more

were the crews.The frosh team finished third

among seven schools in itsGreater Boston Championshipsthis Saturday at Tufts. Thewomen's team placed seventhamong nine schools in the EmilyWick trophy at MIT thisweekend.

Lacrosse - The Engineers are 6-2 after playing three games duringthe past week. On Saturday, MITstarted strong against Trinity,leading 2-1 in the first period.Trinity came back, and Techcould not cash in on scoring op-portunities. Trinity dominatedthe rest of the game and won I 1-5.On Monday, MIT's leadingscorer, Phil-Macneil '80, got the

Engineers off to a 3-1 lead withthree goals in the first period.Macneil left the game with anankle injury, but Earl Bartley '83and Hank Tremaine '80 rose tothe occasion and provided the of-.fense in an 8-6 victory over NewEngland College.

This Wednesday, Bartleyprovided three goals, andTremaine registered two goalsand one assist. Bobby Clarke '81accounted for the final score in a6-1 MIT victory over Nichols.The defense tightened and refusedto give, up any goals; GoalieAdam Sapirstein '81 chalked up19 saves and allowed only oneshot to slip by. The Engineers faceSpringfield this Saturday at 3pmat Steinbrenner Stadium.

This shot was stopped by Ml l1 rlacrosse -goalie Adcam Saperstein.'81, but Trinity scored eleven goals to--win last Saturday's game.(Photo by Rich Parker) - -

219

_ - BPAGE 16 THE TECH FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1980

Lightweights nip Harvard; Dartmouth finishes id

Sailors win GBC, take Oberg trophy

et 0

Call x3--2980 or drop byWV0-451 to make arrange-ments for your portrait sit-ting for Technique 1981.

Sittingsrun from April 28-May9am to 2 -noon, 1pm to 5pm.