nf rteamnte excesses GA faces gay mixer issue Impersonator cons frats Campus Panel invited to air unrest findings

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1 --- ~-e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cousn Bruce for "Contnuous News Servce Snce 1881." MacGregor Freshman Councl Presdent [ By ee Gguere The General Assembly's specal commttee on the gay mxer, whle stressng the hghly complcated nature of the ssue n ts report tonght, wll recommend that the mxer be allowed. The report wll gve a summaton of the many arguments for and aganst the mxer. t wll nclude the commttee's own conclusons that the admnstraton's objectons be overruled, accordng to Mke Salomon '71, a member of the commttee. Report to Nyhart The man thrust of the report wll be amed, not at the GA, whch was receptve to the SH proposal two weeks ago, but at the MT admnstraton, and n partcular at Dean for Student Affars J. Danel Nyhart who objected to sanctonng a gay mxer. When ntervewed on Sunday nght; Salomon was pessmstc about the commttee's chance to change Nyhart's mnd. He was NET sponsors study nf rteamnte excesses,fe ve %Aw a r %VWW, By Alex Makowsk Two graduate students at Harvard are explorng varous ways of sabotagng computer nformaton systems as part of a larger nvestgaton on technology and prvacy. Natonal Educatonal Televson wll sponsor ths fall a 90 mnute TV specal dscussng the crucal mpact of modern scence and engneerng on ndvdual rghts. The producers hope the MT acton group schedules forums on mperalsm The Unversty Acton Group (UAG) wll sponsor ths fall a seres of weekly lectures nvestgatng the Unted States role n atn Amerca. The frst semnar ths Wednesday wll be "mpressons from a Recent Trp to Cuba," by Bology professor Ethan Sgner. The talk wll begn at 4:00 n the Bush Room. 'Poltcal Educaton' UAG was organzed ths fall to provde for poltcal acton on college and unversty campuses throughout New England. Belevng that successful reform through the electoral process s mpossble, these faculty members, staff, and grad students wll concentrate ther efforts on nvestgatng varous local, natonal, and nternatonal ssues and conductng "poltcal educaton" for the publc. The mperalsm seres on atn Amerca wll focus on "the need and possblty of revolutonary change." Subsequent semnars wll examne events n Guatemala, Brazl, Bolva, and Hat. A central theme wll be "the hstory of the struggle of the people of - atn Amerca aganst ther oppressors." Urban renewal Other projects wll nclude an nvestgaton of MT's role as a landlord and, on a regonal scale, a look at what part unverstes have played n varous urban renewal. decsons MT, CAMBRDGE, MASSACHUSETTS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1970 FVE CENTS VOUVME 90 NUMBER 36 GA faces gay mxer ssue convnced, though, of the Dean's concern over the problem. The ssue, Salomon explaned, was much more than the smple queston of mnorty rghts the delegates dcusssed two weeks ago. The queston nvolves an ndvdual's rght to determne hs own lfe style and hs concurrent rght to examne opposng lfe styles before he makes hs decson. Fear of seducton Dean Nyhart, n- hs letter of two weeks ago, gave as one of hs objectons the fear that students who were undecded about ther own sexual dentty mght be "seduced" nto homosexualty and would be less happy than they mght have been as heterosexuals. Salomon, after dscussng the problem wth a number of socal psychologsts at Boston Unversty, felt that Nyhart's reasonng mght be false. He explaned that t was not necessarly true that homosexuals are less happy than show wll warn a presently gnorant publc of the danger's nvolved wth large nsttutonal data banks. Harvard students Jerry Popek and Mark Tuttle are responsble for amassng suggestons of varous methods open to those people seekng to strke back at computers. The entres wll be judged n four categores (see page eght of Frday's The Tech), wth cash awards and natonal exposure for the wnnng suggestons. Quant or exotc deas can be as quant as punchng extra holes nto -a bllng card or soakng an BMtype telephone bll n water. Alternatvely, Popek expects some of the real computer jocks to come up wth deas for reprogrammng or rewrng the large government machnes. When reached by The Tech, Popek explaned that hs job had both ts humorous and serous mplcatons. Though some proposals may seem rdculous or far-fetched, there s a real need to break down the myth of nfallablty the publc ascrbes to computers. Too many bllng companes, for example, use ths aura to extract money from nnocent people. ndvdual rghts And the study focuses on the larger ssue of ndvdual rghts. For example, borrowng a book on Karl Marx from the lbrary may, when vewed as an solated case, seem perfectly nnocuous. But f your name s ncluded on an FB computer fle of all Amercans readng communst lterature, the ncdent may not be deemed so nnocent. The dea for the specal developed fro a Newsweek artcle on computers and prvacy ths summer. That magazne's reporter sat down wth Tuttle and Popek to dscuss varous ways Amercans mght strkeback at these large data systems. When NET decded to make the ssue the topc for ts frst fall specal on natonal problems, Newsweek recommended the two Harvard grad students. -heterosexuals. He ponted out that he had spoken wth several -very happy homosexuals. Adjustment Salomon beleved that Nyhart's objectons about the possblty of seducton must be weghed aganst the possblty that a student who mght actually be more happy and (Please turn to page 7) A young woman, posng alternatvely as dfferent members of several wealthy famles, apparently has succeeded n trckng a number of MT students nto payng for her lvng expenses. The most recent ncdent occured ths summer, when two MT students were left holdng over $500 n hotel blls, for whch they had been led to beleve they would be rembursed. Ths woman was usng the same gambt n the Boston area two years ago, when she vctmzed two MT fraternty members, and a member of a BU chapter. Ths summer, she called one student, clamng to be a lawyer for Ann Hughes, supposedly a relatve of bllonare Howard Hughes, n Boston to "clear up" the. "scandal" caused by her earler actvtes. She struck up a conversaton wth the student, and on a later call appeared n town "n-need of money." The student sgned for a new hotel bll after havng been lead to beleve Campus Panel nvted to ar unrest fndngs By Duff McRoberts Members of the Presdent's Commsson on Campus Unrest have been nvted to MT for open dscussons of the Commsson's report and ts mplcatons. Apponted by Presdent Nxon n May, the panel recently released ts fndngs. UNTTED, 1966, by Vctor Vasarely. The Comrnmttee on vsual Arts s sponsorng an exhbton of Orgnal Graphc Art from the Catherne N. Stratton Collecton n the Student Center, 2nd floor, October 5-16, 10 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., Mon. through Fr. MT students may regster ther preferences of prnts durng the exhbton, and a lottery drawng wll be held on Frday, Oct. 16. Wnners wll have the prnts loaned to them free of charge for school year that he would be repad later. nstead, he was forced to pay the bll out of hs own pocket. A second student receved a call from a woman clamng she was a doctor tryng to get n touch wth a member of another fraternty, for she had an "urgent message." She called hm back four days later, to thank hm, and succeeded n becomng acquanted wth hm. He was lead to sgn for a room at the Fenway Commonwealth Motor odge for the caller's "lawyer," "Thomasna Mellon," for whch the bll came to $50. After talkng to an nsttute psychatrst who recognzed the story, the student was referred to the Dean's offce. Accordng to Dean of Students J. Danel Nyhart, the young woman s the same one who defrauded students last summer. She s also apparently the same person who appeared n the area n October of 1968, when she used.the same alases and a very smlar story. Whle the Boston Polce have t s hoped that one or two members of the Commsson wll attend a program n the form of a Compton Semnar sometme ths month, accordng to Jm Tsang (G,V) and Dr. Ben Snyder, Dean for nsttute Relatons. Plans for the forum have not yet been fnalzed, but the sponsors hope to know by the mddle of ths week what members of the Commsson, f any, wll be able to attend. Unversty response Dean for Student Affars Dan Nyhart related that nterest n such a program has arsen out of a feelng that the.unversty should "address tself to the questons [the report] poses." Nyhart sad that Presdent Johnson, Provost Jerome Wesner, Assocate Provost Walter Rosenblth, Prof. Eugene Skolnkoff (XV), and several others had expressed nterest n what the MT communty should do to follow up on the report. Tsang remarked about the report that there are "some nterestng questons rased about what t means n specfc terms." -He mentoned the "general pont of communty" and centrfugal forces that have tended to create a student subculture as possble topcs of specal nterest. Poltcal context Snyder saw the formaton of the Commsson as a possble poltcal act on the part of Presdent Nxon, whch resulted n "not puttng the fnger where Agnew would lke to put t." He noted that many pe'ople on campus agree wth Agnew that permssveness has gone too far. The aftermath of the Commsson's report s a good tme, he feels, to promote efforts by these people and ther adversares to understand each other. mpersonator cons frats been called n on the case, sad Dean Nyhart, "as far as anybody knows, there has been no acton." He- understands the polce are cautous about the possblty that they mght make a false arrest, and are watng for a formal complant whch can only come from someone to whom the woman owes a legally bndng debt. The Dean beleved that the woman mght owe money to at least one Boston hotel, but knew of no acton whch had been taken n that area. The October 1968 case had been handled largely by Dean Sorenson. At the tme of that case, there had -been some suggestons that the woman mght be commtted for psychatrc observaton but that had not been done because, then, as now, there were not suffcent grounds for legal acton by the polce. Durng the summer, there were unverfed rumors that "Ann" had apparently escaped from a prvate nsttuton n southern Massachusetts..

2 - PAGE2 TUESDAY,OCTOBER 6,1970 TMTEC Betblebem- oecer laeds eorwrate, unversty tes (Ed. Note:... the fllowng artcle was maled to our offce from Bethlehem Steel recently and deemed of suffcent comnunty nterest to warrant ts publcaton. ) A plea for greater recognton of the close and nseparable bonds of nterest between the college campus and the corporaton was made n Detrot rer ently by Steward S. Cort, presdent and charman-elect of Bethlehem Steel Corporaton. Addressng a noon meetng of he Economc Club of Detrot,,he Bethlehem executve aszerted that the flow of assstance from socety to the college ampus must be ntensfed. 'We depend on our colleges and unverstes and they, n surn, depend on us. We need ther help... and today - rght now - they most urgently need ours. t s the latter part of the equaton that appears to be n jeopardy today." Ctng the busness communty's need for well-educated young men and women, he ponted out that t could not survve wthout such talent because of a relance on ever more sophstcated technology and advanced technques of busness management. le 1,, OCTOBER 'Young ook' "But, n a larger sense, college students are equaly mportant to us because they are nfluental representatves of that fastgrowng porton of the total populaton known as- the younger generaton'. Our populaton has acqured a new look, and t s a young look. As recently as ten years ago all ndvduals over thty years of age slghtly' out-numbered those under thrty... but today.- the under-thrtes are forty percent more numerous than those who are over thrty... and, wthn only fve years, young people under thrty wll overwhelm us old-tmers by ffty-sevren percent. "TTs s somethng to thnk about, hard and long, especally n vew' of the forthcomng 18-year-old votng age." Revolutonares Touchng on "the hghly publczed revolutonares who rase oxur hackles by takng full advantage of the lbertes and materal benefts of our socety to preach ts overthrow," the B e thlehemz - offcal descrbed the total college populaton." He sad the natonal major pollsters show that college students have some comprehenson about the fundamental role of busness and ndustry. He regards ths as a reason to be hopeful but not complacent. " am mndful of the fndng that some 94 percent of college students subscrbe to the vew that busness s overly concerned wth makng a proft, and too lttle concerned wth socal responsbltes. Ths does not dscourage me unduly, because am confdent that t results from a combnaton of dealsm and a lack of knowledge of the facts. Speakng from my own experence, young crtcs are nvarably astounded when my assocates and descrbe my company's aggressve nvolvement n, such programs as recrutng of mnorty group employees, educatng and tranng the dsadvantaged, and mprovng and preservng the qualty of ou.- rronment. Most lkely your own observatons have been smlar to mne." R"Aq*f TO AllKft.. career opportuntes that match your nterests and educaton.. our long-establshed management tranng program * our dverse and growng corporaton.. our natonwde facltes.. our corporate phlosophy of carnag about people Now's the tme to sgn up at your placement offce for an ntervew wth the Bethlehem Steel oop Course recruter. Ths'could be the start of somethng bg! And just what S the Bethlehem Steel oop Course? t's our management development program for graduates yth-bachelors' or advanced degrees. Bethlehem loopers spend four weeks at our home offces n Bethlehem, Pa. Then they report to the approprate plants or departments for ther frst assgnments. From there, anythng s possble. Where would YOU ft nto the oop Course? Check your degree or the one most smlar to t: MECHANCA ENGNEERNG-Engneerng or mechancal mantenance departments of steel plants, fabrcatng works, mnng operatons, and shpyards. Fuel and combuston departments. Supervson of producton operatons. Marne engneerng assgnments n Shpbuldng Department. Also: Sales or Research. METAURGCA ENGNEERNG-Metallurgcal departments of steel plants and manufacturng operatons.- Engneerng and servce dvsons. Techncal and supervsory postons n steelmakng departments and rollng mlls. Also: Research or Sales. CHEMC:A ENGNEERS-Techncal and_ supervsory postons n coke works, ncludng producton of byproduct chemcals: Fuel and combuston departments, ncludng responsblty for operaton and mantenance of ar and water polluton control equpment. Engneerng and metallurgcal departments. Steelmakng operatons. Also: Research or"sales. NDUSTRA. ENGNEERNG-Postons n steel plants, fabrcatng works, shpyards, and mnes. Engneerng and mantenance departments. Supervson of steelmakng, rollng, manufacturng, and fabrcatng operatons. Also: Sales. CV ENGNEERNG-Fabrcated Steel Constructon assgnments n engneerng, feld erecton, or works managemnent. Steel plant, mne, or shpyard assgnments n engneerng, constructon, and mantenance. Supervson of producton operatons. Sales Department assgnments as lne salesman or sales engneer (techncal servce to archtects-and engneers). WHEN YOUJ SGN UP be sure to pck up a copy We thnk you wll lke what we have to say. Ta oob XAk a BETHEHEM STEE An Equal Opportunty Employer EECTRCA ENGNEERNG-Steel plant, fabrcatng works, mnng operatons, and shpyard electrcal engneerng, constructon, and mantenance departments. Techncal and supervsory postons n large producton operatons nvolvng sophstcated electrcal and electronc equpment. Also: Research or Sales. MNG ENGNEERNG-Our Mnng Department op- -erates coal and ron ore mnng operatons and lmestone quarres, many of whch.are among the most modern and effcent n the ndustry. Ths 10,000-man actvty offers unlmted opportuntes to mnng engneers. Also: Research. NAVA ARCHTECTS AND MARNE ENGNEERS- Graduates are urged to nqure about opportuntes n our Shpbuldng Department, ncludng the Central Techncal Dvson, our desgn and engneerng organzaton. Also: Traffc. OTHER TECHNCA DEGREES-Every year we recrut loopers wth techncal degrees other than those lsted above. Senors enrolled n such, currcula are encouraged to sgn up for an ntervew. ACCOUNTANTS-Graduates n accountng or busness admnstraton (24 hours of accountng are preferred) are recruted for tranrgn for supervsory assgnments n our 3,000-man Accountng Department. OTHER NON-TECHNCA DEGREES-Graduates wth degrees n lberal arts, busness, and the humantes are nvted to dscuss opportuntes n the Sales Department. Some non-techncal graduates may be chosen to fll openngs n steel plantoperatonsandotherdepartments. Of our booklet, "Bethlehem Steel's oop Course." C- - C C ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Z -1--l- -. -=- Y - -

3 -~~ _ t [, _,_.,. Headquarters for- SKNG-TENNS-rQgUASH One of the argest Selectons of Sk- Equpment &,Squash Rackets n New England - Restrngng A Specalty - Tenns & Squash Shop- 67A Mt. Auburm St. Harvard Square Complete Prescrpton Servce All Cosmetc Brands ff FURNTURE EASG 6. :Cloosest Pharmacy to MW..:T. Manport Rexall -Pharm-acy 781 Man St. corner Wndsor St RENT FURNTURE By Week - Month or Year Wth Your Choce of Do you thnk a b~rght -young engneer spendnls most xnagatve years on the saxne assgnmetlt?. ~should RENTA PAYMENTS on 12-mo. lease may be appled toward PURCHASE FREE DEVERY Complete Apartments - ndvdual MODERN or SPANSH Peces - Rollaway Beds STUDENTS & DOCTORS. BANKAMERCARD, MASTER OUR SPECATY CHARGE ACCEPTED B.BAMo0MMes lng: "Boston's oldest & most relable furnture leasng store" 1096 BOYSTON ST., BOSTON " 2. 1 BOCK FROMVl PRUDENTA CENTER That's why we have a twoyear Rotaton Program for graduat ng engneers who would prefer to explore several techncal areas. And that's why many of our areas 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 and talent. By Davd Searl Sx years ago, before phrases lke "concerned students" and "Underprvleged chldren" had become clches, a group of concemned students created the MT Socal Servces Commttee, wth the ntent of tutorng underprvleged chldren. The orgnal premse of the founders was smple and very personal: each of them, n consderng hs own educaton, had decded that hs lfe had at some pont been hghly nfluenced by a "sgnfcant personalty," n most cases a teacher. Wth ths n md, they collectvely decded to become sgnfcant to the lves of needy chldren, wth the hope of gudng them to achevemnent. That group, after a crcutous but successful genealogy, s now MT-Wellesly UrbanActon. ast Thursday, an UrbaqnActon Open House was held n the Student Center West ounge, prmarly for the purpose of recrutng new volunteers. Desspte methodcal advertsng wth posters and leaflets, attendance was relatvely sparce. Youth apathy "Somethng s n the ar ths fall wth these kds... don't know." The woman sayng ths was pleasant and matronly, a Nether do web f you qualfy, we'll a rra nge for you to work on several dfferent assgnments...and you can help pck them. lhe TECH TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1970 PAGE 3 Ur~banActon neees people resdent of Cambrdge. Her concern was not revoluton or drugson campus; she had worked closely wth students for several years as a parent-admnstrator of Tutorng Plus, the progran that s -one of the man concerns of UrbanActon. What she referred to was common apathy -. nothng as exotc as beaurocratc or corporate apathy, but somethng more dstressng - youth apathy. She consdered t to be a crss. Personal nvolvement "We've recruted at all the local colleges - MT, Wellesly, Harvard and Radclffe, Smmons, and more... The kds just aren't nterested ths year." Normally, some 150 chldren are pared off wth tutors at the begnnng of the school year. Th$ s done on a one-to-one bass, wth a matchng of needs and specal sklls f possble. Volunteers spend from three to fve hours a week n the homes of ther students, and the tme s not restrcted - feld trps, to museums and even moves, are encouraged. All of ths works toward a goal of personal n-- volvement from each sde. Funds and volunteers Tutorng Plus s drectly descended from the orgnal Urban- You may select specalzed jobs, or broad systemstype jobs. Or you can choose not to change assgnments f you'd rather develop n-depth sklls n one area. Ether way, we thnk you'll lke the Hughesvapproach. t means you'll become more versat le n a shorter tme. (And your salary wll show t.) r HUGHES,: J HUGHES ARCRAFT COMPANY ACROSCPAC DVSlONS Acton, but has snce become essentally ndependent wth the nflux of parental nvolvement n admnstraton. The prmary functon of the UrbanActon group now s to provde funds and volunteers - the problem at present s wth the latter. The whole scope of Urban- Acton, n fact, has experenced several trends n recent years. One s a shft toward admnstraton and coordnaton, rather than control, as more and more programs are ntated or ncorporated. Another s an ncreasng poltcal nvolvement, not n a partsan sense, but n terms of practcal experence n such prorams as Welfare Rghts and the Greater Boston Commttee on the Transportaton Zcrs. Fellowshp Program As far as ntense personal nvolvements are concerned, the real core of the organzaton s now the Fellowshp Program. Utlzng funds from the Presdent's offce, some 21 students are granted fellowshps for summer work n health, educaton, housng, etc. n the fall, part of ther work contnues n the form of a semnar whch surveys urban problems from the vantage of experence. Programs whch fll under the admnstratonal auspces of UrbanActon nclude: Tutornm7 Plus and Dorchester House, for chldren; Educaton Warehouse and Communty Hgh School, for hgh schoolers and older; G.B.C., the transportaton crss;. Columba Pont, the EB-Well Project, and The Organzaton, housng and communty problems; Welfare Rghts; and the Bancroft Teachng Assstant Project, a new program to ad blngual classes on the South End. Almost any knd of work n urban affars can be found wthn the framework of Urban- Acton - when the nterest s there. They urge anyone wth such an nterest to contact them at extenson 2894, or n room 437 of the Student Center. Students Can Rent Chevrolets or other fne cars MNCOST tl R EN M > nnncora The Mncost Way Cambrdge Boston (Central Sq.) (Park Sq.) No ower Rates n Mass ~ 2x3 ft. Poster (black &whte) Send any black & whte or color photo up to 8x1O (no negatves please) to: RONAD JAYE Poster Servce P.O. Box 43 Planvew, N.Y Enclose cash, check or money order (no C.O.D.'s) n the amount of $3.50 for each blow-up. Orgnal materal returned undamaged. Satsfacton guaranteed. Allow 30 days for delvery. Add 450 for postage & handlng. Mcrowave & Antenna Engneerng Electro-Optcal Engneerng Gudance & Controls Engneerng Mcrocrcut Engneerng Spacecraft Desgn Engneerng Space Systems Engneerng NAME Components & Materals Engneerng Mssle Systems Engneerng ADDRESS '!Weapon, _ Systems Engneerng, Crcut Desgn Engneerng CTY STATE-ZP- U.S. CtzenshprequredlAn equal opportunty employer.., l11 A ~P ---,, CAMPUS NTERVEWS: October 19 & 20, 1970 Representatves of several actvtes of Hughes Arcraft Company (each wth hghlyspecalzed personnel requrements and separate ntervew schedules) wll1 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 on the ntervewng schedule for HUGHES AEROSPACE DVSONS: j

4 PAGE 4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6,1970 THE TECH Tonght the General Assemblyv wll rereu a_ report from ts own study group recommendng that the Student Homophle eague be granted permsson to hold a mxer at MT. The Tech frst reported on ths ssue two weeks ago;we feel that the delegates have had ample tme to poll ther lvng groups and prepare for a vote. There are two closely related aspects of the problem. Frst, the communty must decde who should make the decson. Second, the crteron for the -decson must be establshed, and the decson made. We beleve that ultmate authorty for ths ssue should rest wth the undergraduate government. Clearly, the faculty and staff need not concern themselves wth such a problem nvolvng students. The only debate seems tocenter on what role the admnstraton should play. Dean for Student Affars Dan Nyhart has argued that, because of the moral and legal ssues nvolved, hs offce should have a veto over the mxer. But hs comments, both to The Tech and the Assembly, ndcate that hs over-rdng concern s protectng the welfare of MT students, both homosexuals and heterosexuals. Apparently, communty relatons and legal problems are not nearly so serous as the perceved threat to the student body. Over the summer Th7ae Tech 's edtoral- board changed ts membershp, and the new board felt that now, at the start of the term, was an approprate tme for a statement of polcy. Our prmary goal s to provde-accurate and unbased news coverage of events at MT and n the surroundng communty. The edtors devote a large fracton of ther tme to arrangng news stores, feature artcles, sports coverage, and entertannment. We prde ourselves for contnually emphaszng the value to the communty of an objectve news presentaton. By Steve Ehrmann (Ed. Note:... Steve Ehrmann s vce presdent of the MT undergraduate government.) The predomnant emoton pervadng student government these days s frustraton. A recalctrant admnstraton? A faculty that won't lsten to reason? et me lst you a lst that may go a dstance n explanng thngs. 1. Student Commttee on Envronment (SCE) - has a charge coverng all aspects of the MT envronment and student lfe plus a budget. Has two actve members. 2. Open House - every two years, students run a well- -budgeted program of openng doors to the outsde communty. Free polcy ren. One.volunteer thus far. 3. ncorporaton - a draft charter for a student corporaton now exsts but there s no one to -carry t forward. Homosexual Mxer THE WZARD OF D Whle genunely thankff! for Nyhart's advce, we feel that the students themselves are responsble enough to make ths decson. The Assembly study group has done a thorough job of nvestgatng all facets of the problem; enough facts are avalable for a reasoned decson. The Assembnly should decde for tself the merts of the varous arguments. As for the decson tself, The Tech suggests that SH be allowed to run a mxer. Just as wth other mxers, of course, precautons should be taken to see that MT does not suffer any physcal damage. The mxer must be carefully marked, so all students dll understand what s happenng. We urge the SH to establsh a screenng procedure to ensure that, only students are admtted. Fnally, the Assembly must leave the Student Center Commttee the flexblty to schedule the mxer wth an eye to what space s avalable and what other (possbly more numerous) student groups desre use of the facltes. We would close by reconsderng a, crucal pont. Ths ssue concerns the students far more than any other group n the co/nmunty. f Boston Unversty can hold a gay mxer wthout brngng down the wrath of the cty fathers and the local meda, MT runs no rsks. The student government must be allowed to decde ths ssue. Polcy Statement Secondarly, The Tech provdes a form for student opnon. Edtoral polcy through the comng year wll be the consensus of vews among the news edtors and the edtor-n-chef. When'too large a dvson exsts to permt a consensus, ndvdual board members wll wrte sgned columns dscussng ther vews. The Tech welcomes wrtten contrbutons from all members of the communty. Works from students wll be run as ether letters or columns, whle ah other artcles wll be run as letters to the edtor. On student government 4. Commttee on MHT Responsblty - comes up at tonght's GA meetng. f confrmed as task force, wll examne ssues of MT's corporate responsblty to socety. Three members. 5. Communcatons Board - heart of the government. Charged to be n touch wth dongs of all student, faculty, presdental commttees. deal vantage to learn how MT functons. Three members. 6. Chrstmas Convocaton - the only event of the year that brngs the entre communty together. No volunteers. The tale of woe goes qute a bt further. Almost wthout excepton, our workng groups are undermanned. There s freedom and money to start new projects. No takers. The worst gap s n the "executve" area. t's the most dffcult to fll because the type of person we're lookng for lkes an overvew, can mostly defne hs own work,- and s able to get thngs done wth a mnmum of fuss. Hstory tells~us that ths has happened before. t stll s tough to take. An amazng phenomena has swept the campus. For the moment at least, there has been a great dsengagement from the ssues, any ssues. What makes ths a matter of exquste pan for me s that the quotent of student wllngness to work for change dvded by nsttute changeablty has never been lower. The place s wde open. Perhaps t was the strke. Perhaps many people have found no :answers at all for the problems they, see. Whatever the reason, the heroc loads beng lfted ths term by an army of rejuvenated tools would put the old MT to shame. Whch brngs me to my pont. Heavy loads do not knock. (Please turn to page 6) -A ~~~aage-;as~~ ll., VOUME XC, No. 36 _ tltuesday, OCTOBER 6, 1970 Board of Drectors Charman....Crag. Davs'71 Edtor n Chef..... Alex Makowsk '72 Busness Manager Bruce Wenberg '72 Edtoral Board Harvey Baker '72, Joe Kash '72 Bruce Schwartz '72, ee Gguere '73 Nght Edtors... Vc Hahburton '72, Bll Roberts '72 Sandy Cohen '73 Sports Edtor.... John Kavazanjan '72 Photo Edtor Red VanDerson '71 Advertsng Manager... Bob Elkn '73 -Producton Manager Erk Calonus Assocate News Edtor Duff McRoberts '72 Assocate Producton Manager Stephen Rovnsky Second class postage pad at Boston, Massachusetts. 77re Tech s publshed twce a week durng the college year, except durng college vacatons, and once durng the frst week n August, by The Tech, Room W20483, MT Student Center, 84 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambrdge, Massachusetts Telephone: Area Code , extenson 2731 or Unted States Mal Subscrptons: $4.50 for oneyear, $8.00 for two years. Prnted by ST Publshng STATEMENT OF OWNERSHP,.,. j;t... o ttrh d MANAUEMEN AND CRCUATON o,"r. t Coap:.. t~,. n,.0 t, */ot df ~ Otdt 2. f962.~tl,l. 6 7tl ;w 't~tml ~Mttt (UA Mtwt;, l ea plor t..! t.r Q~,rlt~l Orl n t( lrrr twlts( dl P UANCDn ( dr pmlcat~ Dmn Ra Nas m( of - Sept. 30, tc.,l, Twce weekly durnr oolleze yr, except vacatons; 'c once frst wk of,aug * OCATON f b O 'P*lUCATHO 01'Ft tsrs. n. _,tt,ta./.t a ) MT, 3lJ Massachusetts Avenue, Car..br.:re, MA $1 toa.o.' P tt at Of a $' -, 11 llsn t " w. r- J MT, 84 Massachusetts avenue, Cambrd-e,.YA AMS At At St.S OF PJSMtt. EWO., AND ZMAtN, Of... nap tt _,%,,,^t dft,e Crst R. Davs, to0 "emoflal Drve, :ambrdge, ;A AllMelX_.omws 1116!;eacor Street, Boston,?..A /.~l~... *, ' Addr~r. /-tl GAS =d"rr ~ tfr fa..rt ottrtttto by -p-- l -1SA=ue*..dtS d, f 1/ e,, "... P---., f,.,t Ad em~*~ As f~t ~ ran tt t~fnfl Maqts t,,.) TutC~~~lSS ~.'T. S t Y.sasachusette Av e, Cambrdre , NOmN OONDOtElS. MORGCt&E$., No TO *sr t CUP/tY"Of( OWH OW. ('O oqg PRC1; 0. MO Of TOTM Al. f Of ONDS, MAOtVGAGCS OR OTHft SfEst-UM... n r A(ft ) PE ]... ADMSS NONE. ~~~~~~~~~- -- r-. 9 FOR CCOWMtEl At BYT tmon m l!~ CN C tut/. A r AUTNUO O - AM' M A, )TES (SJ, t. rml.n au CA.<* -). nth......ro, oc of oovr odrzplf lou l Hoot out Co oh d d [o( not S fr (f bdjed. P blfthr t ggdo and e er.p~ a0 o r Feea o l a ke [ dv,t 9d'2... ppe ed,g 12 -m.%. : l 4 11 J,oe Sl - &tb ^ t1lt, ppkl jfuojj l J l10~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~A, n CO.S.0,o,..o Nfsue,,.,. r.,c~o~. ~a.,cr *O- A-SS -M.,.R(s F CO 1 *rud awards CCMnUT touat WUl' OF SC A1 -SNGU S.",rez*SVC C5 DAt7 s *C t nsoel D CUod X... r s u C TONG, t ccarlon , 1., t,..tr.,,...tone,,. * u,. C C.oO A, rw, ';50 750,o., DfsO S..-,/(, 1), l176 v. O.. USE. a.d.,m Kr EDM 8A ev C *ot~~~~~~~~~~ltn y WnrS*/, ma ~n -l o,o,~.../r,f~ 6 F-.U.-... r, ,., 50 ' 5000 re or ra n _*Fsoso Cefel "" h' h- by e bor.rr made orr, B (Sl[,fnyl u.. wn, Mq,,r, _ -.Pj... d. -O A, -C6@ COMPANTS DEPT. wthout seeng sex frst and everythng else second, ncludng To the Edtor of The Tech: the A rtcular characterstc n hs artcle about Karen whch s mpso ant at the moment. Men notce what women Bursten's speech, Harvey Baker found t necessary to menton wear (women do too, and t.hs of that Mss Bursten wore "a course compounds the problem), brown pantsut and peace and rarely lsten to what they symbol necklace." wonder have to say. must admt that why. Ths s rarely found n the wrter seems to have l.:tened artcles about speeches by male at least superfcally to the Congressonal canddates. speaker, whch s a step n the Ths s just one more conformaton-of the fact that'men small descrptve phrase was se, rght drecton. But that one are unable to look at women obvously out of place n the context of the artcle, that t could not fal to escape the notce of... W -. T:~-~~~~ ~ -a ~~ non-radcal- by Brant parker and 3ohnn hart technque to descrbe Mss Bursten's Clothng. Obvously, whether the canddate was wear- ~ggkk ~ ng Alue jeans and a T-shrt or a ~ THE~~~~~CH- -jeers, 0 7,e - Yec but-becomng- more-so Woman (Ed. Note:.. ' ths s not the frst complant we have receved regardng stores we publsh about female poltcal fgures. The phrase referred to was ncluded solely as 'a journalstc A ,.,q; _*wn to at<; Y t. _ -.%-%-, [~:-. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;_j.xtl;. ~-/~, - -' rl.?' - ' - ~ --~- ~d ':...- '7....-~-~,*'~" ': ',~.T )2' -' %.--~, ' --' ' ' -:sc';-c T " ' mn' -, ; '?rtant. A r~l ' *tl;tm-,~ u4 ers ~ Ad _&a.;-w t l g -X! n2. a.tat).- ~ ~. a...--f -P---~~---.~-~-~Y--- ~ --..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

5 THE TECH TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1970 PAGE 5 -- OCTOBER 6, ~ ~~~~certerocold -- Makg aoma By Hlarvey Baker How to Make a Woman at the Caravan Theater s one of those plays n whch specfc ncdents of dramatc qualty stand out n your mnd for weeks after you've seen the play. The theme of Woman s probably well-known to most Cambrdge students by now, for though ths s a new season, the same work played at the Caravan regularly last year. Bascally, the play explores the oppresson of women throughout ther lves, emphaszng the contnually. lmted number of optons open to them. Women are gven the choce of ether beng warm, sweet sex objects or of beng rejected -by men (and other women too) and lvng unfulfllng lves. Women who choose to move forward to forge new careers of ther own fnd that socety has stacked the deck aganst them. The dramatc ncdents that are so remarkable are effected wthout use of elaborate props. For example, the home of a typcal woman s nothng other than a pure whte cage wth lace curtans surroundng t, mprsonng ts female vctm nsde. At frst, the newlywed s thrlled wth her new home, and polshes t up ncely, -mutterng the words her mother mprnted n her, mlww "Keep t clean. Keep t clean. Keep t clean." The crss, of course, comes after the house s all cleaned up, when the prsoner s forced to ask herself, "Now what do domnated socety n a Caravan Theater's long-unnng, mpro-. vsatonal satre,"'how to Make a Woman," runnng every Frday and Saturday nght; do?" Her husband, a hunter, ("t's my thng," he explans), comes home, wth tales of how hard he has worked, and shows no concern for hs wfe's own feelngs. He s the provder, and she exsts only to satsfy hm. Symbolc rony abounds throughout the play, as a lttle grl's suppressed feelngs come to lght much later n lfe. ttle grls are supposed to be femnne ("ttle angel," mother says) and- cannot enjoy gettng themselves drty. At another pont, a prop, a basket of papers,, earler very mportant to a man movng to a new job wthout consultng hs wfe, becomes used as "the -garbage," and the queston of who s gong to take t out provokes a major battle between a leechng man and hs wfe. Most sgnfcantly, the ssues rased by the play are never resolved satsfactorly, for, as n real lfe, the oppresson of women (and men too) nto stereotyped roles contnues, and for the authors to have provded a happy soluton would have been hypocrtcal. The play ends wth the actors gong slowly Thngs of fe By Emanuel Goldman There s -a school of psych- Wr atsts who argue that n order to fully apprecate lfe, one must be aware of death. The Thngs of fe s a hlm dedcated to that proposton. The openng scene depcts the aftermath of an ac- 'cdent: a car wrapped around a tree, onlookers mllng about, and the drver lyng unconscous n a feld nearby. The camera then goes nto reverse. Vola, t s twenty-four hours before the crash; we follow the vctm's dealngs wth hs lover (Romy Schneder), hs ex-wfe, hs son, and hs best frend, up to the accdent and afterwards. -Hs mstakes, the tme he wastes, and hs falures n communcaton, are so much more panful to- us, for we are watchng a condemned nan n acton. f he knew.t -coutdkbb e ]&hkst day, would he behave the same? Prortes shft and dfferent values emerge, under a death sentence, Detractng from the phlosophy s a some.what melodramatc and mddle-class storylne. As n A Man and a Wo-man, memores and muzak accompany the hero as he drves along: salng wth hs famly, outbddng everyone for an antque chest at an- aucton, vacatonng at hs Medterranean sland summer home - not exactly a hard lfe. Hs ex-wfe-s far too young and glamorous to be the mother of a twenty year old boy. And though the romantcsm s pretty well-dscplned, at tmes t gets embarrassng, as when hs lover declares: " love hm - notg else matters; even f only see hm -fom tme to tme, -'l do whatever he wants." t reflects a.-nave love-s-slvery' -no-matter-what mentalty that rarely~has any sustaned applca.- crazy. Along the same lne les perhaps the play's major weakness, the stereotyped characters of ts men as wolves, hunters, and leeches. No man s ever gven a non-oppressng role. Perhaps the cruelest (and most deserved) swpe the play takes at men s at dress desgners, who by mplcatona also see ther role as to desgn women generally. The actng tself s genunely fme, for the cast of fve plays contnuously n strenuous, even exhaustng roles for nearly an hour and a half. Ther versatlty s demonstrated by convncng smulatons they gve of a cryng baby, of lttle grls, of stereotyped housewves- and mothers, of sexual ntercourse ("Wow," says the hunter), and of chldbrth. Of partcular note s the way the stereotyped, "normal" (unlberated) men and women play act ther roles. The lnes are so real that the mages evoked n one's mnd are frghtenng, for even whle the play went on nsde the Caravan, the same lnes were beng acted out, only for real, two blocks away n Harvard Square. Woman power, to the women people. By Carolyn Mook After ffteen years n professonal musc, ke Turner s fnally approachng th6 top of hs feld. He and hs wfe/co-star Tna, produce one of the most dynamte R&B shows currently avalable. Both have worked for years as performers playng behnd the Stones and other top -name groups, but only n the last year has ther notorety spread to the Amercan publc. Ther Frday nght performance at the Boston Arena dd not do them justce. Havng caught ther performances lve n.a. and San Francsco several tmes, t was evdent to one that the entre Boston producton was sufferng from a lack of coordnaton on the part of the management. The sound man had no feelng for balance or volume, and the resultng echo ton n actual human nteracton. Furthermore, the fleetng, thoughts that go through the hero's mnd after the accdent, are questonable. Accdent vctms who suffer concussons seem to have no ratonal thought processes; f they recover, they sometmes fal to remember anythng at all about the accdent. Despte the unsatsfyng settng, the flm does, however, make a serous effort to present communcaton among people as the most mportant value, especally n the. context of death. Also, the accdent s one of the most 'exqustely photographed sequences have ever seen, both n slow and fast moton, and from dfferent perspectves. The' Thngs of lfe wll be rememberedl for ths sequence alone, f not f or anythng else. The Thngs-'of fe n French, wth Englsh subttles at the Kenmore Sq. Cnema. Al Snger screams out aganst her role' as "Bg Mama," n the Caravan Theater's Producton of "How to Make a Woman." ke and Tna Turner and boom made t hard to pck out the- senstvty that ther show requres; stll, the performance was well worth the rather expensve tckets. Hopefully, the "ke and Tna Turner Revue" wll return to the Boston Arena soon. n a press conference followng the concert, both made t evdent that they hadn't enjoyed ther Boston show, and were dsapponted n the set-up at the Arena. There are ndefnte plans overs and Other Strangers By Emanuel Goldman Although t s not exactly Desmond Morrs (The Naked Ape), overs and Other Strangers does attempt to survey the matng habts of Homo Sapens. Several pars of people at varous stages are exhbted: a young couple enterng courtshp, another young couple gettng marred, slghtly older couples fghtng, or on the verge of dvorce, mddle-aged adultery, and old-aged habtuaton. By spreadng tself so thn, the flm, as mght be expected, fals to penetrate human behavor wth any depth. One constantly senses the possblty of deeper thrusts nto -human actvty. A young man, tryng to explan to hs father why he wants to get dvorced, complans that he and hs wfe are strangers. "We're all strangers, but you become deeper strangers," father reples. "There must be more to t than that," the boy asks. "There s no more," father answers. At another pont, the fellow says "We're not happy together." Hs parents reply "Who's supposed to be happy? Don't look for for a TV specal, and several "underground" moves wth segments contanng parts of the Revue. WBCN s already playng tracks from ther next album, whch wll be released n a couple of weeks. ke and Tna wll be back n ths area soon. They're nto a thng that s extremely hard to do well, and n a tough feld they're at the top. f you're not nto them yet, look t over; t's worth the effort. happness -- mserable." you'll only be Workng aganst the flm's potental are several frankly banal and repettous routnes; they're funny at frst, but they soon become a bore. n partcular, the lecherous man tryng to make t wth the nhbted, ntellectual grl, s overdone, as are several other sequences. The flm s tryng too hard to be funny, n a stagey knd of way, nstead of allowng the natural events and actvtes to stand by themselves. There s ample humor and pathos smply n the characters, wthout havng to manpulate and contrve the stuatons around them. The overall mplcaton of the flm s that although our matng system seems to be a falure, there's really not much. we can do about t, except to hope that the next par wll do better. The fllm does no more than tell us what we already know, wthout explorng the why of t all - somethng we mght have hoped for from those few genune moments n the flm. At the P AZEe They're.

6 * PAGE 6' TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1970 On studenne n t (Contnued from page 4) just happen to thnk that dong a lttle honest tol for one's communty ought to be part of that load. A note on deology: personally am not a revolutonary, nor do happen to thnk that the methods of revoluton wll accomplsh anythng partcularly desreable ether n our socety or at ths nsttuton. do happen to thnk that a lttle ntellgence and a lot of sweat can accomplsh somethng. For evdence, call on anyone who graduated from ths place four or more years ago. The changes are not nearly complete. They wll not happen by themselves however. We are gong to have to get out and push. f we're good and we're lucky, we mght just see a new judcal system ths year and the begnnngs of a communty-wde power base n governance. A lttle student nvolvement n the budgetng process may possbly occur and hopefully a revamped system of fundng for the actvtes. thnk the student government may become a lttle more useful to students ths year f we get a few more people to care. For the record, do not expect that we wll be able to end all defense-related research (although we may be able to keep track of the D-abs dvestment f we can fnd some nterested sleuths) nor do expect an end to racal volence. - We're not askng for much, just a few more people who thnk t mght be fun and part of THETECH ther educaton to try to change ths -place around. f you happen to be nterested n that sort of thng, or f you just want to regster a complant or need help n copng wth a hostle envronment, gve us a call at x2696. One more thng: the ssue of the Student Homophle eague's proposed mxer wll come up agan tonght at the General Assembly's meetng n the Sala. 've talked to a few people about t and found myself n dsagreement wth just about everyone n one respect.'no matter how people felt, pro or con, they seemed -to thnk t was a smple ssue. Ether t was out of the queston that the eague be allowed to hold a mxer or t was completely obvous that they should get the space. personally don't beleve ~~ the ssue to be. ll J ll ll _. smple and hope that nobody forgets that real people, fellow students f you Wll, both homosexual and hetero, are at the center of the ssue. The General Assembly dd the rght thng two weeks ago to table, the ssue for study and f we are lucky, we may yet set thngs to rghts. Dana's Barber Shop for fmen* 332 MASSACHUSETTS AVE., CAMBRDGE ocated next to Seymour Chevrolet DANA and MARYN AT YOUR SERVCE A TYPES OF HARCUTS HERE Also razor cuttng and beard trmmng FOR APPONTMENT, PHONE OPEN SATURDAYS _ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _~,..,,, -.,..4 - C- --- Tech Coop Optcal MT Student Center ower evel - Next to the Post Offce Qualty servce s our byword Glasses-for men, women and chldren *._- r Patronage Retund 84 Massachusetts Avenue Cambrdge, Massachusetts MT ext ext 50 Mon-Fr 8:50 am - 5 pm unch 2-3 (closed) Sat, 9: noon - -- ''''''~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,, ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -- KENDA SQUARE BRANCH Servng M..T. n The New' CAMBRDGE GATEWAY MA NORTH AVENUE SAVNGS BANK. PORTER & KENDA SQUARES - CAMBRDGE Telephone JUST THNK OF T: ' 5 Year Renewable Term Savngs Bank fe nsuransce ' Based on current dvdend rates, these are the annual net pay-.ments for 5 years f purchased at age 25. f purchase made at earler age, payments are less. SAVNGS BANK, FE 1SURANCE p -- ~- CAMBRDGEPORT SAVNGS BANK 689 Massachusetts Avenue Rght n Central Square Cambrdge, Mass. Savngs Bank fe nsurance S Amerca's lowestcost lfe nsurance for all Ordnary fe, Endowment, and Renewable Term polces ra,, ---- u - R -1 - Cambrdgeport SavngsBank Mass. Ave., Cambrdge, Mass. Please send me ow Cost Term nsurance booklet Name: $25,000 for less than $65 a year $20,000 for less than $50 a year $15,oo. for less than $40 a year -$10,000 for less than $25 a year J u. $5,000 for less than $15 a year The Stockholders of the Harvard Cooperatve Socety have nomnated the followng Drectors and Offcers: Joseph Angland George E. Chrstodouldo HarveyC. Dzodn Francesta E. Farmer Rchard R. Mannng Donald W. Mtchell James A. Monk, Jr. on E. Roberts, Jr. Paul S. Snover Donald E. Steele James M. Zegenmeyer Wllam D. Andrews Mlton P. Brown Bruce Chalmers Robert J. Holden Malcolm G. Kspert Rchard G. eahy ous oss Donald P. Severance PhlpA. Stoddard Robert B. Watson Charles M. Wllams Mlton P. Brown ous oss Malcolm G. Kspert Charles M. Wllams PhlpA. Stoddard COOP NOMNATONS DRECTORS STUDENT DRECTORS M..T. 71' Harvard College '71 Harvard Busness School Radclffe'71 Harvard College'73 Harvard aw School '71 M..T. GradSchool Harvard College'72 M..T. '71 Harvard G.S.A.S. M..T. Grad School NON-STUDENT DRECTORS Professor of aw -Harvard ncoln Flene Professor of Retalng- Harvard Busness School Gordon McKay Professor of Metallurgy- Harvard Assocate Dean of Student Affars -M..T. Vce Presdent for Academc Admnstraton - M..T. Assstant Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Scences for Resources and Plannng.-- Harvard Wllam Nelson Cromwell Professorof aw -Harvard Executve Vce Presdent and Treasurer of the Alumn Assocaton - M..T. Vce Presdent for Operatons M..T. Athletc Drector-Harvard George Gund Professor of Commercal Bankng- Harvard Busness School OFFCERS Presdent Vce Presdent & General Counsel Vce Presdent Treasurer Clerk PROCEDURE FOR MAKNG ADDTONA NOMNATONS Pursuant to Artcle V, 2, of the Socety's By aws, as revsed October, 1969, addtonal nomnatons for student drectors may be made by petton sgned by aleast one hundred student members and fled wth the clerk (by leavng the petton wth the manager of any of the four stores) not later than 5 p.m., October 14, A sgnature wll be nvald unless the student. desgnates hs membershp number and school and he s currently enrolled n that school. F A STUDENT SGNS MORE THAN ONE PETTON, HS SGNA- TURE ON EACH PFETTON W BE DSRE. GARDED. Pursuant to Artcle V, 4, addtonal nomnatons for offcer-alumn drectors may be smlarly made by petton sgned by at least one hundred non-student members. t At ther September 23, 1970, annual meetng the Stockholders elected Alexander Zavelle, the General Manager, a Drector. As a result of the fllngof vacances at the Stockholders' meetng, the ten stockholders (of whom fve are students) are: John B. Butler John P. Elder - Dana. Farnsworth Carl F. Floe RobertJ. nadom Cornelus W. May John A. Newkrk J. Danel Nyhart Ronald H. Rennck Danel H. Smth -c- -_-t Drector of Personnel - Dean of the Graduate School of Arts & Scences - Drector of Unversty Health Servces - Harvard Professor of Metallurgy - Graduate School - M..T. Harvard Harvard M..T. Kennedy School of Government -Harvard M..T. '7 Dean for Student Affars - M..T. Harvard College '71 Harvard Medcal School '72 Street: Cty: Zp: HARVARD SQUARE M..T. STUDENT CENTER HARVARD 8USNESS SCHOO CHDREN'S HOSPTA MEDCA CENTER Telephone Nurnmber: Date of Brth: - c- -- f J..ṃ,

7 _ -, - By Dave debronkaft pof. Raymond Bsplnghoff pro Dean of the School of, erng, sad Tuesday thatell begn a 'two or three leave of absence early ths th He has been apponted sve n Washngton n the 0 Da eputy Drector- of Natonal Scence Foundaton vbge NSF undergoes a perod of organzaton and adjustment changng oblgatons. n an nltervew wth The V8oVO AUTHORZED DEAER -SERVCEtAES - PARtS EUROPEAN DEVERY SPECASTS WE MAJOR N PERFECT-ERVCE OAZE MOTOB SAES c NEXT.TO RAYNOWS MXE BOCK FRO.M RTE PROVDEKCE HGWY n " Bsplnhoff gets NSF-job Y RTE., DEDHAM Tech, Bsplnghoff sad that the stpulates that all Defense Department-sponsored adjustment wll manly nvolve research ncorporaton of ncreased support for unversty research nto NSF's structure. Hs assocaton wth such research, he feels, was nstrumental n hs appontment (the Senate confrmed Presdent Nxon's appontment last week). DOD contracts cut The NSF wll be. takng over must be drectly defense-orented, leavng many ongong projects wthout funds. Much of the work nvolved s done by unver-_ stes, Bsplnghoff sad; he cted MT's Natonal Magnet aboratory as an-example. The NM has for years been supported by the Ar Force. many research contracts whch NSF lends support had been sponsored by the Department of Defense, buf much of the support for ths Congress had decded that had been ended by the Mansfeld' research wll be shfted to NSF. Amendment. ast wnter Congress passed the measure, whch enng of NSF's nvolvement wth Ths wll-nvove extensve wd- unversty research; Bsplnghoff feels ths was a major factor n C. W BEANE hs -ganmg and acceptng the COPY CENTER want better qualty copes appontment. He mentoned that '"t was for ths reason that felt t mportant that spend two or three years of my lfe n Washngton." at lower prces? Bsplnghoff wll be returnng to MT upon complton of hs 1075 Massachusetts Avenue work wth NSF. near Harvard Square. Studentsamnpler FREE From the Coop and College Marketng Fena le SANTARY NAPKNS CANDY COFFEE SHAMPOO OCTOBER 7,8, & 9 The Coop Man Buldng st floor You must present your M.l.T..D. Card.~~~~~,-. -- _,... RON DESENER PRESENTS nnale GETTE HAR SPRAY WRVA MR SOUARE M l.t..stud NT CEMER CWWDREN'S HOSP 4TA MEDC& CENTER Sun.Oc.t at 8:30 pa #- ~~ a W1e U6p CANDY ~~~SOAP ~ Q COFFEE By Steve Goldsten Ths weekend the varsty basebau team took ts annual fall trp to New York to play two games aganst CCNY. The sophomore and freshman-laden Tech squad dropped Satuday's game by a 14-0, score and Sunday's by Saturday's debacle was a defnte show of power from a strong CCNY team. The prevous week, CCNY had competed n the prestgous St. John's tour-> nament and defeated two of the best teams around. They took the natonal-rank and prevously undefeated St. John's team, and then beat an undefeated U team to fnsh second n the tournament. The Tech htters only managed 2 hts. Gary Wllams '73 managed to hold CCNY to a 1-0 margn untl the M Football Key scores SAE 'A' 37 PDT O Sr. House CA'A' 18 Chem E. 6 'A' 26 BSU 15 SAE 'B' Forfeted SAM 9 TC 6 DTD 18 DU 6 CA'B' 15 PGD 2 n ' ' THE TECH TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1970 PAGE 7 Gar lf vestgatad by BEU sp**t (Contnued from page 1) well-adjusted as a homosexual would be dscouraged from pursung hs nclnatons and repress them. Ths, he felt, could lead to just as many psychologcal dffcultes. - Need for mxer Salomon questoned the assumpton that a person would be happer as a heterosexual, per se. f, n fact, ths were not true, then bannng the mxer would mght prevent some students' from formng a sexual dentty whch would better sut them. The mxer, he sad, "would help people fnd out whether they would be happer as a homosexual or a heterosexual." n hs dscussons wth psychologsts at BU, Salomon heard arguments both for and aganst the mxer. Some of those for asserted that no one would go to such a mxer unless he had Baseball team l ses ~14-0, 10-4 to ()CNY ffth nnng. After that, the roof lterally fell n. The CCNY team pounded n 6 runs n one nnng and then 7 runs n the next to completely demolsh the Engneers. Saturday saw the Tech htters, outht CCNY by a 9-8 margn but the nexperence of the young team showed through. Chuck Holcom '72, comng off of hs '2 htter aganst BU, gave up 6 runs, only two of them earned, over the frst seven nnngs. The CCNY cause was helped by a total of 5 MT errors. Brght spots ncluded Steve Reber and Bob Tran, both freshmen, each of whom went 3 for 4. The team wll play BU agan on Wednesday and Brandes on Thursday, both at home on Brggs feld at 4:00 pm. 1 Nolew and Ussed Hlgh Performance Cars GTO's -Transams-Formula Frebrds Come and get one at or below our Cost. Our low prces wll help offs'et your nsurance cost. already made a commtment to that way of lfe, whle others argued, n agreement wth Nyhart, that ther'e was a poessblty of someone beng seduced nto a role n whch he would be-truly unhappy. No 'pat' answers Salomon characterzed the decson as a choce between probabltes, further assertng that hs research had lead hm to beleve there was no smple answer at ths pont. Salomon sad that the study had made hm aware of a complexty whch he had not seen n the ssue before, and clearly stated that there could be no "pat" answers when so many of the "'experts" dsagreed. The Commttee was formed to look nto the ssues along the lnes of Dean Nyhart's objectons, n the hopes that he mght be convnced to reverse hs decson, 'Why not?' Gay mxers have already been held at Harvard and Boston Unversty, wth the BU mx er havng the unversty admnstraton's approval. Salomon characterzed the BU admnstratons atttude as "Why not?" The homosexual mxer ssue surfaced last sprng when the MT Student Homophle eague requested permsson to hold an open mxer n the Student- Center. When ther request was turned down by the Dean's offce, SH members sought help from the undergraduate government. vng group delegates were reluctant to -vote on the ssue two weeks ago, decdng nstead to refer t to a commttee for study. c assf ed a vertsng Part tme,, on campus work wth college computer datng servce. Set your own hours. Pay may ex.ceed $5/Hr. For nformaton wrte now: PARTY MATE, PO Box 38, Dayton Oho WANTED, on-campus representatve for frst-class Boston hotel. Work on own tme -commsson sellng. Call Betty Berke, , exct. 246 between 9 am - 10 am and 4 pm - 5 pm. Rugs, new 9x1l2, $ X15. S39 12x15, $55, pads $10, orentals. $35, drapes, spreads, $ Austn-Healey Mark.3 excellent"' condton. Call Get 10 nterestng, on campls, computor dates. Deadlne Oct. 30. Wrte now: Party Mate, PO Box 38, Dayton, Oho, PONTAON * BE, BOTTOMS o EVE'S 10 EEYS o WRANGER'S SYMPHONY S TCKETS: $4.50, $5,00, $5,50 avalable at the Box Offce or send tamped, self-addressed envelope to Symphony Hall, 256 Huntng- A ton Ave.,-Boston, Mass. PHONE: (617) CO tl HA.,.-, 1180 Commonwealth Ave. (near Harvard St.) Boston, Massachusetts ',, lcentral War Surplus 433 MASS. AVE. 'Ventral Sq, Cambrdge

8 PACF -:' ;:ESDAY,OCTOBER 6, 1970 THETECH S %~~~ Beware the Body Shrt Snatche r! r * + You're far game when you wear..:. a Van &eusen H Bodyg Shrt. Man, you'll just have to defend your prop- ^ :;te lax-erty rghts! 'Cause the new Van Heusen < r ~. ~~~ max Shrt UBody s the best fttng "property" s W. ; XqfS ~. ~~~ your ;n wardrobe! Enjoy t all for yourself,!: H:.; "~ h, J' ~.-" ":~ n bolder strpes and solds, wth the new- t \ t ~~~est long pont collar and 2-button cuffs. a;.-k~~ s@..w~ s ;!E /.! flghts s ~ > sb At.t '...)wx f ~to P~ > PRZES! Two bg ones! Two round-trp va SAS SCANDNAVAN ARNES Copenhagen and Majorca for a swng- *a ; OX t s*; t t;* ^$ng, expense-pad CUB 33 vacaton! Plus a box of Van Heusen Body Shrts for each ' - ~ a. so of 25 runner- up entres. Easy to enter: just '\~WJ~,' jj~' ~ '~.~ t ~ -- '. ad. " Send entres to College Contest, VAN [" ' \;t,.' ' ~ [, HEUSEN, 417 Ffth Avenue, New York, New t * A l \ [ f 2 \ t ~~~~~~~York Contest vod where prohbted F-'&;" S l ; E~~~z t ''f' Xby aaw AN 1H EU SEN 417 ' ~ ~~~~~~ back odcl~y Shrt VAN HEUSEN SHRTS FEATUREDAT -. nman Square Haberdasher- 130b CA MMDGE, T. CC 8., C7"2 Ca, MwaerC lhge, 91 Ted booters top Trnty 2-1 By Nakr Al "We just do. ze how good we really,.. was the post-game comment from coach. Bll Morrson, after hs Tech soccer team had trumphed over Trnty 2-1 n fartford on Saturday. As close as t seemed, the Engneers appeared to be much, the superor team. n ths, the frst hard test of what s one of. the fnest teams n years. The Techmen started rght from the begnnng, domnatng play wth the help of a farly strong wnd factor. The offense, supported by some good clearng, passed from the fullback lne, worked tme and tme agan nto the Trnty end for shots. At about the 7 mnute mark of the frst perod, a Trnty handball gave MT a penalty shot, but all-new-england Jerry Maskewcs '71 faled to convert t. Maskewcs made up for t, though, when at the 16 mnute mark, he took a pass from left nsde an Glendnnng '72 and beat a defenseman to the outsde on the rght wng. From about 20 yards out from the rght edge of the penalty area, he put a fne shot to the lower far corner, whch ht the post and bounced n. Wth the changng of sdes after 'the frst perod, the wnd advantage also changed. Whle Trnty only managed one shot on goal n the frst perod to MT's fve, the margn was 7 to 2 for Trnty n the second. Most of the 7 shots were from well outsde the penalty area due to some fne defense but n the frst mnute of the perod, a lapse causng an nablty to clear the ball left Snyder, the Trnty left outsde, open wth a loose ball, whch he converted to te the score. Wth the score at 1-1, one Trnty drve broke open ther left outsde, who sent a cross to the head of one of the nsdes. Wth the ball headed for the upper left comer, freshman goale Rch Straff '74 made a great dvng one-hander deflecton to hold the game to 1-1 at halftme. Wth the begnnng of the thrd quarter, MT agan had-the wnd advantage. The turnng pont of the game, however, came at the 8 mnute mark when Ken Stone '72 took a pass on the wng from G lendnnng and',t a pass n the drecton of ';ewcs, all alone n the, area. To stop the pass, F_, Trnty fullback had to commt a hand-ball foul, causng a ;~ -; SOCCER COACH B MOR- RSON. "We beat a good team on Saturday. We just don't realze how good we really are. MT was defntely the better team out there." The booters topped Trnty for the frst tme snce 1961 by a score of 2-1. penalty shot. Center-halfbackd Rch- Eskn '72 took the shot and placed an mpossble-to-stop shot whch grazed the left goalpost. The fourth quarter saw Trnty playng a game of desperate catch-up soccer. They kept only one fullback back and crowded the mddle of the feld wth players tryng.-to keep the ball n the MT defensve end. Wth pass after pass they tred to ht Koro, ther tall strong-footed center forward sophomore from By Frank Spahn The MT rugby steamroller showed an occasonal lack of compettve fre last Saturday - resultng n a 15-8 Mystc RFC vctory. The loss evened the Rugger's season record at 1-1. Mystc scored frst after usng a good kck to penetrate deep nto Tech terrtory. The Mystc hooker won the ball n a set scrum and ther serum half caught Tech's defense flat - Gamba, but were foled. Though out-shot 7-0 the Tech defense held tght wth excellent play from fullbacks Al evm '71, Tony Resh '72, and ew Jester '72. Jester drew the job of guardng Koro n the mddle allowng hm only 3 shots, all of them forced. Agan though, t was goale Straff who made the dfference. Wth the ball on the rght corner, one of the Trnt attackers sent a bullet shot for the upper far comet that seemed to be destned to score but for the dvng deflecton from Straff and drawng awed applause from the partsan Trnty crowd of well over three hundred... The only unfortunate spot n the game was an njury to startng rght halfback Danlny Bocek '72, who suffered a bruse of a calf muscle and had to leave n the thrd perod. uckly he should only be-out for a few days. Hs poston was amply flled by John Fetrow '73 and Marty Bregman '72. Ths vctory was a long tme n comng snce MT hadn't beaten Trnty snce n wnnng though, as coach Morrson sad, the team ddn't realze how good t was. Though domnatng play for the frst 3.quarters, and playng a tough defense n the fourth, there seemed to be a defnte "runnng scared" atttude towards the end. footed wth a lghtnng-lke dash around the blnd sde to score. After the unsuccessful converson, Mystc held ts 3-0 lead for 10 mnutes whle the ball traveled up and down the feld several tmes wth nether team able to cross the try lne. Fnally Tech came chargng back after bluntng a mld Mystc drve on Tech's sde of md-feld. The ball was carred nsde Mystc's 10 manly on two kbameafh accepted,., _.a m,, _...,m S~alo rs 2nd wt slo By Randy Young - Ths year's Tech salng teams began ther season on September!9, and already. have noted a- number of successes. The Men's Varsty, Freshman, and Women's teams, under the coachng of Hatch Brown, Ed Shaw, and Stu Nelson' respectvely,' haft all saled- several regattas, and' appear to have the potental for a wnnng season. On September 19, the Varsty salors won a regatta over an eght boat feld at Tufts. Alanr Spoon and arry Bacow, both sophomores, and Tom Bergen, '72,- dd the salng and beat second place Tufts on ther home water. John.acy, Dwght Davs, Steve Shantzs, and Bob Hart traveled to the Unversty of Rhode sland on September 26, and fnshed second n a seven boat fleet, only one pont behnd the leader and host school U.R.. Almost all ntercollegate salng s done n fleets of fve or more schools, and a second or thrd place fnsh can usually be consdered qute successful. On September 27, MT fnshed second by fve ponts to Tufts n an eght boat fleet, salng n the Hap Moore Trophy 'Regatta at the Coast ~Guard Academy n New. ondon, Connectcut. Peter Nesbeda '71, back from France where he fnshed ffth n Ths week the team looks to) the World Champonshps of the avenge two of last years losses to Tempest Class, skppered the WP and Mddlebury. The WP MT crew to vctory n the- Sloop game s away on Wednesday and1- elmnatons at Coast Guard on the Mddlebury game s Saturday Saturday, October 3. Pete and at home at 2:00 pm. hs crew of Tom Bergen '72, Ruggers fall to M [yste RC excellent runs by fullback Wayne Book. Both these runs were set up by crsp executon and coordnaton n Tech's back lne. The second run resulted n a lne-out. Tech's forwards won the lne-out and then pushed ther way across the try lne dsplayng mpressve strength and ferocty. Ed Walker was on the botton of the ple of Tech forwards who grounded the ball. Walker's successful converson gave Tech a short-lved 5-3 lead. Mystc reganed the lead for good on the followng kckoff wth the help of a Tech off-sde penalty. Ths gave the Mystc kcker a shot at a 25 yard feld goal makng the score 6-5. Thngs went from bad to worse n the second h9w. A strong Mystc lne movement brought the ball nto a ruck on the left sde of the feld near Tech's try-lne. Quck work by the Mystc forwards started the ball back down ther lne n the opposte drecton. Unfortunately, Tech's lne had been slow reformng, allowng Mystc to create an overlap, and a swftwng carred the ball nto the corner to make the score 9-5. Mystc's next score was a gft. The ball had been kcked along the ground towards Tech's goal out of a vgorous tuck. Wth most of the feld chargng down at.them, several Tech players attempted to kck the ball back off the ground nstead of pckng t up. The kck was weak and an obvously off-sde Tech player reached for the ball reflexvely. Mystc was awarded a penalty kck from only 10 yards away from the posts, and the score was Tech kept tself n the game by drvng downfeld aand scorng a penalty kck- of ther own booted bywalker, but Mystc ended the- -gme- by korng another cheap- try as the game ended. r n Wood a DO * ' e e :-me,f etlmgna, on! John Avalon '72, and-dwght Davs '71, fnshed frst, thrd, and frst n the three races held n wnds-of mles per hour,. They were ted wth U.R... on ponts, but were awarded the vctory on the bass of havng beaten U.R.. n two o f the three races. Both MT and U.R.. advance to the fnals and wll be competng for the Whte Trophy. Also compet/ on Sat- A urday were Coast Guard, t Bowdon, Holy Cross, and l Stonehll. Also at Coast Guard, Kathy Jones '71, and Mara Bozutto ' 73, -represented the Tech Women's Team n the Sloop regatta, and beat second place Boston Unversty by approxmately forty ponts. Sandy Warrck, John acy, Alan Spoon, and Don Kollsh saled at Tufts on October 3, and won over a nne boat feld, twelve ponts ahead of second place Boston State. The Freshman squad placed frst n a fve boat fleet at Tufts a on September 20, wth Steve Cuccharo, Wayne Matson, Paul Shapro, and Randy Young dong the skpperng. On Sep.! tember 27, the fresh fnshed ffth out of nne schools at the! Harvard Freshman Regatta, and they 'placed second n the MT Regatta on October 4, wth Paul Shapro, Arseno Nunez, Wayne Matson, and Ronald Todd sal- ng. Also on Sunday, October 4, the combned Varsty, Junor Varsty, and Freshman squads placed second out of fve schools n the Jack. Wood Trophy g Regatta, beaten only by Harvard. Co-skppers arry Bacow and John Avalon won the Junor Varsty dvson, whle Steve Cuccharo and Randy Young took top honors n the Freshman dvson. Salng for the Varsty were Tom Bergen, Pete Nesbeda, Sandy Warrck, and Al Spoon. Other schools partcpatng n the Wood Regatta were Coast Guard, Dartmouth, and Brown. The Women's Team beat Radclffe and Boston Unversty n a 'the Cape Cod Tech regatta held on te Charles on Sunday. Skpperng for the women was Kathy Jones.,, ~:~:. :. ~: 1.xx.n..e:.~-.-; 2..~:.-.:.:.: , Today Soccer(F)-Brown, away, 3 pm Tomorrow Soccer(V)-WP, away,- 3:30 pm! Baseball(V.)-Boston U., home, 4 pm Thursday Golf(V,)-New Haven, home, 12:30 pm Baseball(V)-Brandes, home, 4 pm~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- C cd c t~~- e ge co " C ~ ~ ~,o. CA CDO~ r. ~C 3(Pr V Z a~' Z., 0 a l E

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