Radiative corrections to electroweak parameters in technicolor theories may
be evaluated by one of two techniques: either one estimates spectral function
integrals using scaled QCD data, or one uses naive dimensional analysis with a
chiral Lagrangian. The former yields corrections to electroweak parameters
proportional to the number of flavors and the number of colors, while the
latter is proportional to the number of flavors squared and is independent of
the number of colors. We attempt to resolve this apparent contradiction by
showing that the spectrum of technicolor one obtains by scaling QCD data to
high energies is unlikely to resemble that of an actual technicolor theory. The
resonances are likely to be much lighter than naively supposed and the
radiative corrections to electroweak parameters may by much larger. We also
argue that much less is known about the spectrum and the radiative corrections
in technicolor than was previously believed.Comment: 17 pages (which incl 3 figures), BUHEP-92-25 HUTP-92/A033, text uses
harvmac, figures use picte