THIS WEEK IN UMASSD HISTORY
Championship fencing
in SMU’s backyard
Original Article By Bill Trippe
March 2, 1979
Fencing coach Eugene Williams will celebrate his 30th anniversary as a Corsair mentor in a unique manner this Saturday when the men’s team hosts the New England Intercollegiate Fencing Championships.
Thirteen schools will invade the gym Saturday morning for the competition. Each team, with the exception of Northeastern, will enter six fencers in the competition; two in each of the weapons: sabre, foil and epee. Northeastern is entering just two fencers, both in the foil competition.
Representing the Corsairs this weekend will be Captain Paul Tykodi, and Al Harrison in sabre, Victor Chiu and Lenny Travers in foil, and Rick Foster and Joe Schneider in epee. Tykodi, Chiu and Foster will compete in the A pool on account of their team leading individual records and Harrison, Travers and Schneider will fence in the B pool.
“I don’t think anyone is going to beat Victor,” commented teammate John Lima when asked of Chiu’s chances for the individual foil title in this, his fourth, tournament. Chiu enters the competition with a record of 25 wins and 3 losses in regular season play, and a wealth of experience in New Bedford competition. Chiu will receive a battle from M.I.T.’s Richeleau Hemphill, second place finisher in last year’s tournament. Travers, a junior competing in his first tournament, boasts a record of 19-11.
“Rick Foster has a good shot at the epee title,” commented Lima. “But he has very tough competition.” Foster will be going up against defending N.B. champion Kyle Christianson of Dartmouth among others. Joe Rodrigues of M.I.T. and Keith Chans of Brown should also give Foster trouble. Foster finished the season with a record of 22-5 and has been working hard in preparation for Saturday. Schneider should give a lot of people trouble: the talented junior compiled a record of 15-9 over the season.
Sophomores Tykodi (19-14) and Harrison (18-15) will give a battle in the sabre competition. Three talented fencers; defending champ Anthony Jones of Dartmouth, Kevin St. Armand of U. Maine, and George Gonsalas-Rivas of M.I.T. will give the Corsair duo a lot of trouble. Tykodi and Harrison have had exceptional years, though, that saw them earn spots in the U.S. Junior Olympics.
Defending co-champions M.I.T. and Dartmouth look to lead the charge fir team honors again this year, as both teams have most of their fencers returning. Brandeis and Trinity, two talented and experienced clubs, should also be strong. The SMU squad figures to have something to say about all this though. “We have a good shot,” said Chiu. “I think that some of these schools are going to be very surprised when we get out on that mat.”
Competition begins at 9:00 a.m. and will last throughout the day.
Satellite dish termed ‘illegal’ by FCC
Original Article By Dana Fullen
March 5, 1984
In the February 13 edition of the Torch an introductory story about cable at SMU stated there was a question of legality concerning the use of a satellite down-link dish. Last Tuesday, February 28, a spokesperson for the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) in Boston confirmed its illegality. He stated that for a state university to purchase a dish and hook it to an already existing cable system for distribution throughout the university is illegal. “If you are stripping a satellite for distribution, you better have permission from the senders; that’s all copyrighted material and you have to pay copyright,” said FCC spokesman. The rebroadcasting of a signal is where the problem lies.
“Cable wants to be paid for the cost to put it (signal) up on satellite. It costs them a fortune to put it up on satellite. They rent the space. The university didn’t pay anything for the satellite,” he said. The FCC contends that the Christian Network will give a university permission to use a dish.
Walter Frost, Director of the Audiovisual Department contends that it is only illegal to record with intent to sell for a profit. (SMU is only distributing the signal; we are not charging for cable). He states that he has spoken with lawyers and other professionals in the business and claims, “We are not in any way breaking any law. If we’re illegal, than everyone using a dish is illegal. We (SMU) are not concentrating on any one signal, but experimenting with different signals.” Frost said that the question of legality was looked into before the dish was purchased, but that was also when the cable programs were supposed to be limited to education. Now the cable is being used as a service of entertainment as well.
Last Monday night, February 27, the dish presented yet another problem. In an attempt to point the dish higher to reach other satellites, high winds of 75 MPH tipped the dish over, losing all signals. Apparently a pin which holds the control and prevents tipping was snapped. the dish was not in anyway damaged.
Bill Aguiar and Frank Fernandes of the A.V. Department said that the incident was expected because the dish installation was not completed yet. A “retaining block” is needed to prevent the dish from blowing beyond the axis. Frost expects the dish to be put back on top of the library at the end of this week. The weather is the only deterrent from fixing it at this time. The A.V. Department is working with the Anbrionics Company in Waltham on this project and Frost predicts that they will have the dish completely installed in April.
Shut Down! Power failure forces unexpected
four-day closing
Original Article By: Kenneth J. Souza
February 28, 1990
The SMU community realized how they take the simple luxury of electricity for granted last week when a power failure crippled the university, forcing the complete shut down of campus facilities.
As a result, students, faculty and staff were treated to an unexpected four-day weekend. At approximately 10:30 A.M. last Wednesday, the electrical supply to all buildings ceased, causing a momentary disruption of classes and student services. Emergency back-up generators kicked in shortly after the power failure, but were only able to sustain power for about three hours before breaking down.
According to William Traubel, the Director of Facilities and the Physical Plant, the problem was located in a 100-foot section of “underground feeder cable...that’s on campus [which] exceeded by five years its natural life and died.” The cable apparently developed a short—something that is not unusual for a 25-year-old underground wire of this type. The life expectancy of this type of cable is generally 20 years.
“This was the original cable that was put in when SMU was first built...and has never been replaced,” according to Robert Caron, a spokesman for Commonwealth Electric. “[Commonwealth Electric] did not install the system, it was all done by private contractors when the University was first built.”
The problem cable “was located 150 feet from the boiler plant, near the bridge where students walk to the old dorms,” according to Traubel. “We found it there through some testing and then we had to replace it. We were very fortunate that Commonwealth Electric did the work for us, which saved a lot of time...because otherwise we would have had to go out and contract [someone], which would have taken another day or two.”
“Working with the [SMU] electrical maintenance department, we found the problem in a...primary [feeder] cable, which is on the high voltage system side. At [SMU’s] request, we replaced an approximated 100-foot section of electrical cable,” said Caron.
Additional problems occured when some of the campus emergency back-up generators unexpectedly broke down during the initial blackout. Traubel explained that during the period that we were running on generators, two emergency generators went out. When we first went without power—10:30 on Wednesday—when that ‘phase’ went...the evidence on campus resulted in a ‘brown out’ condition, [meaning] the motors were all straining. In order to avoid further strain on the campus electrical motors, campus electricians quickly responded by shutting power off at the main power plant. “We actually shut it down,” Traubel said, explaining that they immediately knew that the main incoming power to the campus had been cut.
When university officials realized that the problem would take anywhere from 24 to 72 hours to locate and repair, the decision was made to shut the campus down until the following Monday. “The University made a very wise decision after analyzing the problem,” according to Campus Center Director, Dick Waring, “in that the Residence Halls had no electricity, which meant no heat as well as no lights and no hot water, because everything down in the Residence Halls is run by electricity.”
“The additional problems that the Campus Center faces are in the coolers...and refrigeration. We have a lot of perishables, and we were caught off-guard when our back-up generators did not [continue to] work...it only worked from 10:30 to 1:30 and then it died,” Waring said. Having main back-up generators breakdown during a power failure essentially renders the University helpless.
“When we first went down, we went into what is called ‘single-phasing.’ Many of the motors on campus run on what they call three ‘phases,’ and when you lose a phase of electric power, it makes the motors strain, because they’re trying to get by with less power and they tend to burn up. So we had some motors burn up,” according to Traubel.
According to university spokesman Greg Stone, the recent state financial cutbacks have greatly increased the chances of break-downs—both in the main wiring and the emergency systems. Because of budgetary constraints, Stone claims that the University’s Physical Plant is lacking the needed manpower due to the institution of a hiring freeze. But, Stone also emphasized that “even if we had the workers to alert us to [problems], we wouldn’t have had the money to fix it.”
Traubel attributes the generator breakdowns to limited use. “I wasn’t aware of any particular problems when the generators went down,” he said, “but they’re going to happen. It’s a diesel engine, and just like car engines...if you don’t run a car that often and you run it for a road trip, that’s more than likely when it’s going to breakdown.”
With immediate assistance from Commonwealth Electric, campus electrical service was restored within 23 hours of the power failure. According to Traubel, the university now must deal with the aftermath of restoring motors that were ruined by both the power failure and the initial restoring of power. “These motors will take about a week or two to get in, and then we’ll have to replace them,” Traubel explained. “The main expense will be the air conditioning unit for the computer center,” which was jolted by the loss of power.
Even though the worse is essentially over, SMU still stands to lose money, in addition to the already-lost class time, as a result of the outage. “The bottom line is we came back up at 9:44 on Thursday [morning], and we’re still making repairs,” said Traubel. “It looks like the cost of repairs will be about $50,000.”