4
Jaok Pines . Box 452 - O, rS VWa :- -.- :..-.....CAMBRIDGE, MASS. | |TUESDAY,-NOV.29 1949 PRI CE -FIVE CENr S : VOL. LXIX NO. 49 THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE M1!.T. UNDERGRADUATES FIDO! DUE. To ESGAPE NEX.T FRI DAY. -Poppin Calling for a greater apprecia- tioa of "the motives and methods of science," Dr. Dealev W. Bronk, president of Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, told a Technology audience last Tuesday that the success, of industrial .democracy depends on developing "a closer unity between the sciences and between those called natural and those called social." Speaking in Morss Hall of Walker Memorial, Dr. Bronk was .the lnstl- tute's fourth in a distinguished series of annual Arthur Dehon Little lecturers. His address was titled "The Unity of the Sciences and the Humanities." Social Implications A dtlussiO Of the social Impli- cations inherent in the develop- ment of science, he said, is par- ticularly timely because of the recent rapid expansion of scientific activities Pxesent-day culture, Dr. Bronk pointed out, is increasingly dependent upon the products of science and technology, and scien- tists are thus becoming "essential to our social order." This greater relevance of science to medern society tends to make scientists focus their attention on quick answers to practical ques- tions . ; . a fact which, together with t;he increasing complexity and widened soope of scientific knowl- edge, br. Bronk said, leads to spe- dalizamtlon and the possibility that scientists will be trained for limited objectives in a small sphere of scientific activity. However, Dr, Bronk added, the goal of true science is more than quick answers to practical ques- tions. Quantities of data and many Individual solutions must be cor- related for the development of broad new concepts. . Specelzation Needed O"Science can seldom be developed by scientists who do not have spe- cialized competence," continued Dr. aBronk, "but more than this Is needed for the development of science." We need, he said, men Iable to "comprehend the broad rel- evance of detailed facts and klowl- edge and their human implica- tions." The unity of sciences and human- ities required for the achievement of future objectives is to be found, Dr. Bronk said, 'in the conmmon search for understanding, in the satisfaction of intellectual inquiry and expression, and in the enrich- ment of human life." Musical Clubs Offer Handael's 1"Messiah" For its annual Christmas Con- cert the Musical Clubs are offering Handel's Messiah to be performed at Jordan Hall, Saturday, fDecem.- ber 10, at 8:30 p.m. The program will feature soloists Willabelle Underwood, soprano; Helen McClosky, alto; Sumner Crockett, tenor; and Paul Matthen, bass, accompanied by the combined ti..l T. Glee Clubs and the Synm- phony Orhestra under the direc- tion of Klaus Liepmann. The solo- ists have been heard on the opera and concert stage throughout New England and in New York. Tickets will go on sale in the lobby of Building 10 Tuesday, November 29, at 10:00 a.m. All seats wia be reserved. - The ticket priors are $VD0, $1.20, and $1.80 per , few. aungarlan Quartet To Present Conceri Clarinetist To Appear In Joint Performance Fresh from a tour of Earope and tke United States, the Hungarian String Quartet will present a con- cert at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, Decem- ber 13. The concert which will be held in room 10-250 will be a joint appearance with Reginald Kell, a British clarinetist. This performance, which is under the auspices of the Humanities Series and .the .Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation, will include 'Clarinet Quintet", Mozart; "String Quartet No. 4", Bartok; and "Death and the Maiden", Schubert. Both the Quartet and Mr. Hell are widely known on the other side of the Atlantic. Mr. Kell's Colum- bia recording of Mozart's "Clarinet Quintet" with the London Philhar- monic Quartet was voted "the best chamber music record of the year" by-. New York's Music Critics' Circle. .Tickets for the concert will be available to students at 12:30 p.m., Tuesday, December 6, in the In- formation Office, Bruilding 7. lNSA Is Planning Industrial Work Student Exchange First information has been re- ceived here concerning the pos- sibility that students in American colleges may be invited to partici- pate in the present all-European program known as IAES'E, the International Association for the Exchange of Students for Technical Experience, reports Donald J. E berly, '50, NSA Chairman. It is a program whereby students who are interested may go abroad for the summer and make money at the same time. Although com- plete details of the project have not yet been received,,the main idea is that a Technology student may work in a factory or power plant in Norway, for example, while a Norwegian student is spending his summer working in an Amer- ican industry. All students prefer- ably juniors, are paid regular wages for the jobs and must work at least for a six-week period. Until this time, the principal difficulty has been the ruling of the State Department that foreign students are prohibited from working in this country when they are depriving an American from the job. Erskine Childers, inter- national vice-president of USNSA, recently obtained special permis- sion frnom the State Department to run this particular short-term program. The only expense to the student is that of oceanic transpor- tation. Basketball Hockey, Skits, Dane, To Highlight Third Annual Sports]Weekend Nine athletic contests, a dance, a two-hour skit show, and a beauty contest will 'enliven the coming weekend when the third annual Tech's-A-Poppin program is presented by the Athletic Association. Tickets for the Friday and Saturday events will continue on sale in Building 10 this week. Seventy- five per cent of all tickets had been sold as of last Friday. Tech's-A-Poppin is scheduled to get under way on Friday, December 2, atI 6:00 p.m., when the freshmen basketball squads of Technology and Boston University tap off. A varsity en- counter will follow. Complete de- tails of all sports events for the Howley Speaks on weekend can We found on page 'Fear For Breakfasf Brig. Gen. Frank L. Howley will speak today under the sponsorship of the Lecture Series Committee and the Faculty Series Committee on "Fear For Breakfast." Until his resignation in October, 1949, he had 'served four years as the director of the United States military government in Berlin. He will speak of his experiences with the Russians and of his policy to- wards them. Gen. Howley now has a aeries of articles appearing in Collier's mag- azine, also dealing with his Berlin experiences. This lecture will be given in room 10-250 at 4:00 p.m. Unique, Pleasart English-History Library Opens; Students Criticize Locked Door, Book Layout By tO;Tt S LEDBETI'TE . Featuring incandescent lighting, individual study cubicles and air- conditioned to a temperature cal- culated to increase mental agility, Walker Library opened last week ;n the north wing of the new Charles Hayden Memorial Library. Pleasant as well as functional, the first floor of the north wing,; fir: , which is now known as the English and History Library, is designed to provide a maximum number of - : - "' students with a quiet place to read . . and study. The 104 by 40-foot room has linoleum flooring of a deep terra-cotta' color. The scrape of - chairs, the click of heels on hard- surface floors, antd all the other-.* ,'G;.t, distracting noises that pervade __ many libraries will be largely, eliminated. One point of criticism from the many who have already had occa- sion to use the library is the ar- rangement of the books. 3000 volumes of literature, or what is judged to be the best of the entire collection, have been placed on a special shelf. This system divides the collection into two parts, the criticism being that anyone wish- ing to locate a book must usually look in two places. Locked Door Criticized way to and from the main building in inclement weather. three. Beauty Contest At the TP dance Friday night in Walker Memorial, the preliminaries to the beauty contest will be held. Appointed student judges for the contest are Robert W. Mann '50, John Jacoby '50, Norman B. Champ '50, George A. Lopez, General Man- ager of Tech's-A-Poppin; and Theodore R. Metzger '50. Nine finalists will be selected by this group from fifty preliminary contestants chosen by members of the TP Steering Committee during the early hours of the dance. Final judgment on Tech's - A - Poppin beauty has been entrusted to a com- mittee consisting of President James R. Killian, Jr., Executive Vice President Edward L. Moreland, Dean of Students Everett M. Baker, Dean of Freshmen Thomas P. Pitre, and Dean of Humanities John E. Burchard. The queen will be se- lected and crowned by Dr. Killian at 11:00 p.m. during the Hexapop- pin skit show Saturday night. TP Dance Brad Kent's Society Orchestra ·- ... '. .- ' ................. ' s will supply the music for the TP .. Dance to be held in both Morss ~t: [ '~ [i~" ~ Hall and the Walker Gym. Addi- ';~'~" , i,.~tional entertainment planned in- 7;T,-T A 4nludes Julio Gianotti, accordionist; Mv hgie and Lopez (George A. Lopez 'R50), South AmeriCan dancers; and '.'g ~ |/~~ f~ '~. ~ ' vocalists Jean Seaver and Arthur " _L~,A. Wasserman '51. The dance will last from 9:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. Places and times for the Satur- -ay afternoon sports events can be found in an adjoin'ng schedule. In {t111 1 k addition to five contests, a fencing demonstration has been scheduled. Saturday night the Engineer ice- (Continued on Page 4) 28 New Members . Elected To Pi Tau Sigma Eleven Seniors and seventeen Juniors were recently elected -to Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity. The new Photo by Honlgsberg pledges are all Course II men and were selected "on a basis of sound under lock and key. In the new engineering ability, scholarship, location, however, only the base- ',,d ,e,,alit," Students generally agree, how- Iment stacks will be closed to the ever, that the seventeen two-feet by three-feet individual study cubicles are a blessing to those who find utter silence the most t Cons;derable criticism has also conducive atmosphere for study- arisen over the locked door at the ing. Students from Building 22, east end of the library. In the from the dorms, and the corm- )riginal plan of the building the muters will find these rooms a loor was to be a convenient pleasant and convenient place to entrance to the library for the dorm study. residents and others coming from that end of the campus. After the Reference Stacks Opened- Noor had been constructed, how- Sometbing unique in the new ever, the idea hit home that the library wll1 be free use of the refer- English and History Library was ence stacks by the students. For- in danger of becoming a passage- merly reference material was kept ;eneral student body. This means that the majority of the 16,000 volumes of English .n the library will be and history readily avail- able to everyone. In another effort to cut down disturbing noise in the library, a window to be used for borrowing and returning reserve books was .uilt opening on the corridor. Other innovations are all wood, rock .naple furniture, steel shelving, and a mahogany librarian's counter with a bonded plastic, alcohol and cigarette-proof top. Seniors: Robert D. Bissell, Thomas c. Cerwonka, Jack E. Downhill, Malcolm Green, Lawson P. Harris, George M. Hatsopoulos, Richard H. Johnson, Louis A. Morton, George M. Robinmson, Edwin H. Spoehl, Jr., Louis H. Washauer. Juniors: William G. Austen, John J. Bradley, George A. Brown, Stephen J. Chamberlain, Jr., Donald K. Crockett, Albert C. Erickson, Louis Galan, Robert E. Kendall, .John H. Lindholm, Jr., Daniel EB. Magnus, Edwin B. Miller, Jr., Robert Nook, Jr., Carlos Nogueira, Charles D. Spencer, Robert R. Stephenson, Jalme Urrea, Roger D. Weatherbee. __ ___ __ _ _ C I _ _ I . I I I I t i I I I I I I I I I I ,1 I I I -i -- vl.----- I., ;Fc~~Ll~~ke~l ~~gh~I rP . Ven S A Bron~k Calls For U~ni~g B'etweena Sel-ena.-, Somei

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Page 1: A rP -Poppintech.mit.edu/V69/PDF/V69-N49.pdf · 2007. 12. 22. · that end of the campus. After the Reference Stacks Opened-Noor had been constructed, how- Sometbing unique in the

Jaok Pines.Box 452

- O, rS

VWa:- -.- :..-.....CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

| |TUESDAY,-NOV.29 1949PRI CE -FIVE CENr S

: VOL. LXIX NO. 49

THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPEROF THE M1!.T. UNDERGRADUATES

FIDO! DUE. To ESGAPENEX.T FRI DAY.

-Poppin

Calling for a greater apprecia-tioa of "the motives and methodsof science," Dr. Dealev W. Bronk,president of Johns Hopkins Univer-sity, told a Technology audiencelast Tuesday that the success, ofindustrial .democracy depends ondeveloping "a closer unity betweenthe sciences and between thosecalled natural and those calledsocial."

Speaking in Morss Hall of WalkerMemorial, Dr. Bronk was .the lnstl-tute's fourth in a distinguishedseries of annual Arthur DehonLittle lecturers. His address wastitled "The Unity of the Sciencesand the Humanities."

Social ImplicationsA dtlussiO Of the social Impli-

cations inherent in the develop-ment of science, he said, is par-ticularly timely because of therecent rapid expansion of scientificactivities Pxesent-day culture, Dr.Bronk pointed out, is increasinglydependent upon the products ofscience and technology, and scien-tists are thus becoming "essentialto our social order."

This greater relevance of scienceto medern society tends to makescientists focus their attention onquick answers to practical ques-tions . ; . a fact which, togetherwith t;he increasing complexity andwidened soope of scientific knowl-edge, br. Bronk said, leads to spe-dalizamtlon and the possibility thatscientists will be trained for limitedobjectives in a small sphere ofscientific activity.

However, Dr, Bronk added, thegoal of true science is more thanquick answers to practical ques-tions. Quantities of data and manyIndividual solutions must be cor-related for the development ofbroad new concepts.

.Specelzation NeededO"Science can seldom be developed

by scientists who do not have spe-cialized competence," continuedDr. aBronk, "but more than this Isneeded for the development ofscience." We need, he said, menIable to "comprehend the broad rel-evance of detailed facts and klowl-edge and their human implica-tions."

The unity of sciences and human-ities required for the achievementof future objectives is to be found,Dr. Bronk said, 'in the conmmonsearch for understanding, in thesatisfaction of intellectual inquiryand expression, and in the enrich-ment of human life."

Musical Clubs OfferHandael's 1"Messiah"

For its annual Christmas Con-cert the Musical Clubs are offeringHandel's Messiah to be performedat Jordan Hall, Saturday, fDecem.-ber 10, at 8:30 p.m.

The program will feature soloistsWillabelle Underwood, soprano;Helen McClosky, alto; SumnerCrockett, tenor; and Paul Matthen,bass, accompanied by the combinedti..l T. Glee Clubs and the Synm-phony Orhestra under the direc-tion of Klaus Liepmann. The solo-ists have been heard on the operaand concert stage throughout NewEngland and in New York.

Tickets will go on sale in thelobby of Building 10 Tuesday,November 29, at 10:00 a.m. Allseats wia be reserved. - The ticketpriors are $VD0, $1.20, and $1.80 per, few.

aungarlan QuartetTo Present Conceri

Clarinetist To AppearIn Joint Performance

Fresh from a tour of Earope andtke United States, the HungarianString Quartet will present a con-

cert at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, Decem-ber 13. The concert which will beheld in room 10-250 will be a jointappearance with Reginald Kell, aBritish clarinetist.

This performance, which is underthe auspices of the HumanitiesSeries and .the .Elizabeth SpragueCoolidge Foundation, will include'Clarinet Quintet", Mozart; "String Quartet No. 4", Bartok; and "Deathand the Maiden", Schubert.

Both the Quartet and Mr. Hellare widely known on the other sideof the Atlantic. Mr. Kell's Colum-bia recording of Mozart's "ClarinetQuintet" with the London Philhar-monic Quartet was voted "the bestchamber music record of the year"by-. New York's Music Critics' Circle.

.Tickets for the concert will beavailable to students at 12:30 p.m.,Tuesday, December 6, in the In-formation Office, Bruilding 7.

lNSA Is PlanningIndustrial WorkStudent Exchange

First information has been re-ceived here concerning the pos-sibility that students in Americancolleges may be invited to partici-pate in the present all-Europeanprogram known as IAES'E, theInternational Association for theExchange of Students for TechnicalExperience, reports Donald J.E berly, '50, NSA Chairman.

It is a program whereby studentswho are interested may go abroadfor the summer and make moneyat the same time. Although com-plete details of the project havenot yet been received,,the mainidea is that a Technology studentmay work in a factory or powerplant in Norway, for example, whilea Norwegian student is spendinghis summer working in an Amer-ican industry. All students prefer-ably juniors, are paid regularwages for the jobs and must workat least for a six-week period.

Until this time, the principaldifficulty has been the ruling ofthe State Department that foreignstudents are prohibited fromworking in this country when theyare depriving an American fromthe job. Erskine Childers, inter-national vice-president of USNSA,recently obtained special permis-sion frnom the State Department torun this particular short-termprogram. The only expense to thestudent is that of oceanic transpor-tation.

Basketball Hockey, Skits,Dane, To Highlight ThirdAnnual Sports]Weekend

Nine athletic contests, a dance, a two-hour skit show, and abeauty contest will 'enliven the coming weekend when thethird annual Tech's-A-Poppin program is presented by theAthletic Association. Tickets for the Friday and Saturdayevents will continue on sale in Building 10 this week. Seventy-five per cent of all tickets had been sold as of last Friday.

Tech's-A-Poppin is scheduled to get under way on Friday,December 2, atI 6:00 p.m., when the freshmen basketball squadsof Technology and Boston University tap off. A varsity en-

counter will follow. Complete de-tails of all sports events for theHowley Speaks on weekend can We found on page

'Fear For BreakfasfBrig. Gen. Frank L. Howley will

speak today under the sponsorshipof the Lecture Series Committeeand the Faculty Series Committeeon "Fear For Breakfast."

Until his resignation in October,1949, he had 'served four years asthe director of the United Statesmilitary government in Berlin. Hewill speak of his experiences withthe Russians and of his policy to-wards them.

Gen. Howley now has a aeries ofarticles appearing in Collier's mag-azine, also dealing with his Berlinexperiences. This lecture will begiven in room 10-250 at 4:00 p.m.

Unique, Pleasart English-History Library Opens;Students Criticize Locked Door, Book Layout

By tO;Tt S LEDBETI'TE .

Featuring incandescent lighting,individual study cubicles and air-conditioned to a temperature cal-culated to increase mental agility,Walker Library opened last week ;n the north wing of the newCharles Hayden Memorial Library.

Pleasant as well as functional, the first floor of the north wing,; fir: ,which is now known as the Englishand History Library, is designedto provide a maximum number of - : - "'

students with a quiet place to read . .and study. The 104 by 40-foot roomhas linoleum flooring of a deepterra-cotta' color. The scrape of -chairs, the click of heels on hard- surface floors, antd all the other-.* ,'G;.t,distracting noises that pervade __

many libraries will be largely,eliminated.

One point of criticism from themany who have already had occa-sion to use the library is the ar-rangement of the books. 3000volumes of literature, or what isjudged to be the best of the entirecollection, have been placed on aspecial shelf. This system dividesthe collection into two parts, thecriticism being that anyone wish-ing to locate a book must usuallylook in two places.

Locked Door Criticized

way to and from the main buildingin inclement weather.

three.

Beauty ContestAt the TP dance Friday night in

Walker Memorial, the preliminariesto the beauty contest will be held.Appointed student judges for thecontest are Robert W. Mann '50,John Jacoby '50, Norman B. Champ'50, George A. Lopez, General Man-ager of Tech's-A-Poppin; andTheodore R. Metzger '50.

Nine finalists will be selected bythis group from fifty preliminarycontestants chosen by members ofthe TP Steering Committee duringthe early hours of the dance. Finaljudgment on Tech's - A - Poppinbeauty has been entrusted to a com-mittee consisting of PresidentJames R. Killian, Jr., ExecutiveVice President Edward L. Moreland,Dean of Students Everett M. Baker,Dean of Freshmen Thomas P. Pitre,and Dean of Humanities John E.Burchard. The queen will be se-lected and crowned by Dr. Killianat 11:00 p.m. during the Hexapop-pin skit show Saturday night.

TP DanceBrad Kent's Society Orchestra

·- ... '. .- ' .................' s will supply the music for the TP.. Dance to be held in both Morss

~t: [ '~ [i~" ~ Hall and the Walker Gym. Addi-';~'~" , i,.~tional entertainment planned in-

7;T,-T A 4nludes Julio Gianotti, accordionist;Mv hgie and Lopez (George A. Lopez

'R50), South AmeriCan dancers; and'.'g ~ |/~~ f~ '~. ~ ' vocalists Jean Seaver and Arthur

" _L~,A. Wasserman '51. The dance willlast from 9:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.

Places and times for the Satur--ay afternoon sports events can befound in an adjoin'ng schedule. In

{t111 1 k addition to five contests, a fencingdemonstration has been scheduled.Saturday night the Engineer ice-

(Continued on Page 4)

28 New Members. Elected To Pi Tau Sigma

Eleven Seniors and seventeenJuniors were recently elected -toPi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanicalengineering fraternity. The new

Photo by Honlgsberg pledges are all Course II men andwere selected "on a basis of sound

under lock and key. In the new engineering ability, scholarship,location, however, only the base- ',,d ,e,,alit,"

Students generally agree, how- Iment stacks will be closed to theever, that the seventeen two-feetby three-feet individual studycubicles are a blessing to thosewho find utter silence the most t

Cons;derable criticism has also conducive atmosphere for study-arisen over the locked door at the ing. Students from Building 22,east end of the library. In the from the dorms, and the corm-)riginal plan of the building the muters will find these rooms aloor was to be a convenient pleasant and convenient place to

entrance to the library for the dorm study.residents and others coming fromthat end of the campus. After the Reference Stacks Opened-Noor had been constructed, how- Sometbing unique in the newever, the idea hit home that the library wll1 be free use of the refer-English and History Library was ence stacks by the students. For-in danger of becoming a passage- merly reference material was kept

;eneral student body. This meansthat the majority of the 16,000volumes of English.n the library will be

and historyreadily avail-

able to everyone.

In another effort to cut downdisturbing noise in the library, awindow to be used for borrowingand returning reserve books was.uilt opening on the corridor. Other

innovations are all wood, rock.naple furniture, steel shelving, anda mahogany librarian's counterwith a bonded plastic, alcohol andcigarette-proof top.

Seniors: Robert D. Bissell,Thomas c. Cerwonka, Jack E.Downhill, Malcolm Green, LawsonP. Harris, George M. Hatsopoulos,Richard H. Johnson, Louis A.Morton, George M. Robinmson, EdwinH. Spoehl, Jr., Louis H. Washauer.

Juniors: William G. Austen, JohnJ. Bradley, George A. Brown,Stephen J. Chamberlain, Jr., DonaldK. Crockett, Albert C. Erickson,Louis Galan, Robert E. Kendall,.John H. Lindholm, Jr., Daniel EB.Magnus, Edwin B. Miller, Jr., RobertNook, Jr., Carlos Nogueira, CharlesD. Spencer, Robert R. Stephenson,Jalme Urrea, Roger D. Weatherbee.

__ ___ __ _ _ � C I

_ _

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.

I

I

II

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i

I

I

I

II

I

I

I

I

I ,1I

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-i

-- vl.----- I.,

;Fc~~Ll~~ke~l ~~gh~IrP . Ven SA

Bron~k Calls For U~ni~gB'etweena Sel-ena.-, Somei

Page 2: A rP -Poppintech.mit.edu/V69/PDF/V69-N49.pdf · 2007. 12. 22. · that end of the campus. After the Reference Stacks Opened-Noor had been constructed, how- Sometbing unique in the

Page -Two THE TECHusy Novemb' e r -

I i

'Tuesday, Novem'ber 299-page *^0wo E

VOL. LXIX TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1949 NO. 4OFFICES OF THE TECH

News and Editorial-Room 307, Walker Memorial, Cambridge, Mass.Telephones KI rkland 7-1881. 7-1882

Business-Room 335, Walker Memorial. Telephone KI rklaad 7-1881.Mail Subscription $3.00 per year, S5.00 for two years.Published every Tuesday and Friday during college year, except during college vacationEntered as second class matter December 9, 1944, at the Post Oflice at Boston, Mass

inder the Act of March 31, 1879.Represented for national advertising by Natlonal Advertising Service, Inc., College Put

Mlfers Representative, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.Night Editor: Dale Cooper, '51

Assistant Night Editor: Carroll Miller, '53

CALENDAR OF EVENTSI . i. . , .r

, A .. H .... , ._I l --- 7i

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30Electrical Engineering Department. Staff Colloquium: "Acoustics Labo-

ratory." Dr. Leo L. Beranek. Room 10-275, 4:00 p.m.Metallurgy Department. Colloquium: "Solid Phase Transformations.'

Dr. Benjamin L. Averbach. Room 2-390, 4:00 p.m.Catholic Club. Father Hubbard Mission Film on China. Room 6-120

5:00 p.m.Mathematics Society. "Continuous Functions Without Derivatives." Dr

Warren Ambrose. Room 4-370, 5:00 p.m.

:9

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1Spectroscopy Laboratory. Seminar: "Spectroscopy of the Sun fron

V-2 Rockets." Dr. Richard Tousey, Naval Research Laboratory. Room6-120, 3:00 p.m.

Civil and Sanitary Engineering Department. Seminar: "General Surveyof French Hydro-Plants and of the Rhone River Development." Filmof Construction of Genissiat Dam and Power Station. Raymond Giguet,Director of Procurement of the French National Electric Pc5wer Service.Room 1-390, 4:00 p.m.

Economics and Social Science Department. "An Anthropologist Looksat Yankee City." Professor W. Lloyd Warner, University of Chicago.Room 1-190, 4:00 to 5:00 pmn.

Physics Department. Colloquium: "The Extensive Air Showers of CosmicRays." Professor Kenneth Greisen, Cornell University. Room 6-120,4:30 p.m.

Tan Beta Pi. Initiation of new members and banquet. Initiation: MooreRoom, 6-231, 5:00 p.m.; banquet, Campus Room, Graduate House, 6:30p.m. Faculty, staff, and graduate students are invited to attend.

American institute of Chemical Engineers. "Possibilities for ChemicalEngineers in the Field of Ceramics." Dr. Francis E. Tinal, Room 2-190,7:30 p.m.

Economics and Social Science Department. Graduate Economics Sem-inar: "Certain Aspects of American Symbolic Behavior." Professor W.Lloyd Warner. Litchfield Lounge, Walker Memorial, 8:00 p.m.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2Acoustics Laboratory, Modern Languages Department, and Research

Laboratory of Electronics. Conference on Speech Analysis. MooreRoom, 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Biology Department. Colloquiumnn: "The -evelopment of Methods for theHistochemical Demonstration of Intracellular Enzymes and OtherSubstances." Dr. Arnold M. Seligman, Beth Israel Hospital Room10-275, 4:00 pm.

Mechanical Engineering Department. Seminar: '"The Use of StrainGages in Force Component Measurement." Erwin G. Loewen. Room3-470, 4:00 p.m. Coffee will be served at Headquarters from 3:30 to4:00 pm.

Tech's-A-Poppin 1949. Basketball. M.IT. vs. B.U. Armory, 8:00 p.m. to9:30 p.m. Freshman game at 6:30 pam. Dance. Wa4lker Memorial,9:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.

~, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3New England Mechanical Drawing Teachers Association. Meeting. Room

2-390, 10:00 a.m.Tech's-A-Poppin 1949. Pistol: M.I.T. vs. Coast Guard Academy, Rifle

Range, 12:00 a.m. Rifle: M.I.T. vs. Harvard, Rifle Range, 1:00 pan.Trck: M.I.T. vs. Boston College, Briggs Field, 1:30 p.m. Squash: M.I.T.vs. Dartmouth, Squash Courts, 2:00 p.m. Wrestling: M.I.T. vs. Tufts,Rockwell Cage; Freshman, 2:00 p.m.; Varsity, 3:30 p.m. Swhnming:M..LT. vs. Brown, Alumni Pool; Freshman, 2:00 p.m.; Varsity, 3:30 p.m.Fencing demonstration, Walker Gymnasium, 2:30 p.m.

Tech's-A-Poppin 1949. Hockey: M.I.T. vs. Harvard. Arena, 7:30 pm. to9:30 p.m. Hexapoppin Show: Rockwell Cage, 10:00 pm. to 12:00 p.m.Queen Contest Finals, 11:00 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.

MONDAY, DECEMBER 5 Convocation. Academic staff and students invited. Al classes excused.

Dr. James R. Killian, Jr., will speak on recent developments in the Institute, Nathaniel McL. Sage will discuss the placement outlook, and Dr. Vannevar Bush will talk on human enterprise. The student bandwill play before and after the exercises. Rockwell Cage, 11:00 to12:00 a.m.

Outing Club. Lauletaan-Folk Songs. Tyler Lounge, Walker Memorial,8:00 p.m. Everyone welcome.

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6Faculty Club. Luncheon. "Who Should Study Education?" Dean Francis

Keppel, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University. CampusRoom, Graduate House, 12:00 noon.

Acoustics Laboratory. Seminar: "The Electrical Response of the Cochlea."Dr. Waiter Rosenblith, Harvard Psycho-Acoustics Laboratory. Room20E-121, 4:00 p.m.

M.I.T. Development Fund. Moving picture of the Institute. Room 10-250,4:00 p.m.

Model Railroad Club. Business meeting. Room 20E-216, 5:15 p.m.Musical Clubs. Messiah rehearsal. Room 10-250, 7:30 to 9:30 pnm.

IMPORTANT NOTICEThe M.I.T. Development Fund moving picture will be shown on Tues-

day, December 6, at 4:00 .p.m. and on Thursday, December 8, at 3:00p.m. in Room 10-250. Members of the staff as well as students are invited.

EXHIBITIONSAn exhibition including twenty paintings by contemporary Boston

artists, as well as two examples of the work ot Boston sculptor, is ondisplay in Lobby of Building 7 until December 14.

Salon prints by Mrs. Gisela A. Ellis o[ Waban, Mass., will be exhibitedby the Photographic Service in Basement of Building 11 through De-cember 11.

CALENDAR OF EVENTSThe Calendar of Events is published weekly on Tuesday in THE TECH,

and contamins announcements ior the following week. It is sent witnoutcharge to all members of the staff, heads of D.I.C. projects, as well as tothe leaders of various organizations. A separate listing of the Calendarof Events will be mailed to othhers for one dollar a year, payable in' ad-vance at Room 7-204.

Announcements, typewritten and signed, must be in the Office of theEditor, Room 7-204, not later than noon on Thursday, prior to publica-jtion date. Material for the Calenaar, December -7-13, is due December 1.

IWith men who prefer intellectual

; women it's Radcliffe two to one.. Extremists dominate the campus

at this liberal education school. Thesame characteristic may be attrib-uted to the girls' appearance.Beasts or beauties is the fare.

Although there are very notableexceptions, the normal Radcliffegirl neglects glamour. She believesthat it is much more noble to groomher mind than her body.

Cooperating with Harvard schol-astically as well as socially, thegirls are impressed by the "astutefaculty and educators" of theirneighbor institution. Harvard men,however, look down upon theirfeminine classmates.

Far from being affronted or dis-couraged by this attitude, mostRadcliffe girls desire and manageto have most of their dates wit/,:HarvardL men. This situation seemsto be fairly well entrenched as in-dicated by the fact that about 80%of the Radcliffe girls who marrywed Harvard graduates. Also, mar-ried undergraduates are commonphenomena, and many of thespouses are at Harvard.

The classic-mindedness of thestudents is exhibited in their past-times. Music and choral groups arefavorites for participation, whilethe lectures of visiting dignitariesare well attended. Sports, on theother hand, although compulsoryfor two years, do not attract gen-eral interest.

The girls practically make theirown, schedules and free time. Home-work is largely up to the aspira-tions of the individual. Off campuspermission is exceedingly liberal-15 1 a.m.'s per term for frosh,and unlimited 1 a.m.'s thereafter.Later hours can be arranged inalmost any case where somethingspecial is due.

On dates, the, Radcliffe girlprefers her escort to have a stimu-lating diversity of interests and toappreciate her intelligence aboveher appearance. According to TheTech's sources, blind dates are avery poor gamble at Radcliffebecause many of the girls will notaccept this method of introduction,and because the more desirablefemales are usually taken anyway.

The professions such as writing,social relations and physics arepopular as career hopes of the Rad-cliffe students. Intense individ-uality in their pursuits distinguishthem as extremists in degrees ofsophistication, but each hopes toobtain a broad background in theliberal arts.

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I

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!DANCES

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8Morss Hall - Walker Memorial - in-formal Dance Committee--1 a couple-same time.

SPORTSWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3S

Pro basketball-Boston Celtics vs. Syra-cuse at the Boston Garden.

FRIEDAY, DECMER 2Hockey-Boston Olympics vs. AtlanticCity at the Garden.

SATUEDAY, DECEMBER aHockey-Boston Bruins vs. Chicago atthe Garden.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4Hoekey-Boston Bruins vs. the Cana-dieno also at the Boston Garden.

ON STAGEThe Nat Race-starring Betty Field. Going

to Broadway at the end of this weekso see it now. Tickets in demand.Colonial Theatre.

The Man Who Came To Dinner-The an-cient comedy starring the man whocreated the role, Monty Woolley. At thePlymouth. Evenings at $1.20, $1.80,$2.40, $3.00.

A Night rn Spain-At the Shubert"Warmnly received by New Y¥Ics," and described as "a fastfestival of song and dance."

Macbeth-Boston Tributary Theatr-England Mutual Hall presentsscript version of this Shake:play. Friday and Saturday, D

2and 3,,

ON SCREENDevil in the Flesh-Boaeon Hill =

Boston Blue noses have left enthis picture intact to makeplenty worth seeing. French fikhad its Northeastern premiere £Thursday.

Fallen Idol-At the Esqvtre and METheatres. A wonderful mysterfrom England in which', thedidn't do it.

Hamlet-At the Kenmore for a retgagement. If you haven't seenit; if you have seen It, see it ag

Easy Money-Another J. Arthur Raduction starring Greta Gynt andPrice. At the Exeter.

E

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RESULTS-WEEK OF NOV. 20-21League I-Delta Psi 16, New Dorms D 15;

Phl Kappa Sigma 29, Sigma Alpha Up-silon 24.

Eeague .i--Theta Chi 42, New Dorms A 8.League III- Sigma Alpha Mu 27, Phi

Gamma Delta 21; Barracks A 24, LambdaChi Alpha 17.

League IV-Delta Kappa Epsilon 23, Bemis19; Barracks B 11, New Dorms C 68.

League V-Senior House 21, Sigma Nu 88.league VI--Chinese Club 20, 5:15 Club 25.

STAINDXNGSLeague I

Delta Psi .............. -0Phi Kappa Sigma ...................... 2-0-New Dorms D .......................... 2-1Sigma Alpha Dpsilon ................... i-1Beta Theta Pi .......................... 0-2Theta Delta Chi ........................ 0-23Iunroe-EHayden ......................... 0-2

League IITheta Chi ........... ' ................... 3-0Senior House B ........................ 2-0Pegis Club ............................. 1-0Phi Kappa .......................... 1-2New Dqrms A ......................... 1-2Delta Tau Delta ....................... 0-1New Dorms E ......................... 0-1W alker ................................. 0-2

Leagu1e IIIPi Lambda Phi ......................... 2-0Sigma Alpha Mdu ........... ........... 2-1

Phi Gamma Delta ...................... 2-1Phi Delta Theta .......... ............. 1-1New Dorms B .............. ....... ... 1-1Barracks A ............................. 1-1Goodall .............0-1.............. .0-1Lambda Chi Alpha .......... ........ 0-3

League IYDelta Kappa Bpsilon ................. .2-0Grad Bouse .................... 2-........0Bemis-Waleott ........................ 2-1Agenda ...................... ............. I-1Phi Mu Delta ......................... 1-1New Dorms C .................1........1- 1Delta Upsilon .................. 0-2Barracks B ............................. 0-3

]League V

Sigma Nu .............................. 3- 0Chi Phi ................................ 1-1Senior House A ........................ 1-1Sigma Chi ..............................0-1Kappa Sigina .......................... 0-1-Theta Chi .............................. 0-1

.League VlChinese Club ........................... 2-0Phi Sigma Kappa ...................... 2-0Alpha Club ............................ 1-15:15 Club .............................. 1-2Student House .......................... 0-1Alpha Tau .Omega ...................... 0-2

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m

TH E TEC H

9Pisto leers 'WinFirst Mateches; Tech's '49-'50 pistol season, Is offtO. a successful start. After severalweeks of practice the engineers havewon their first two matches. ThetBeavers have seven of last year'svarsity back this year along withseveral newcomers who have dis-played great natural abilitY. Onerecord has already been broken inpractice; Wiston Markey fired 97slow fire, which is four points abovethe old record held by George Dick-son and Captain Francis VonMuller. The freshman team Is oneof the best M.I.To has ever had andexpects to win at least as manymatches as the varsity.

For the first time M.I.T. has en-tered the Greater Boston PistolLeague, which has some of the bestshooters in the Metropolitan area.Ila the first match held in this

(Continued on Page ,

T.P. Weekend Spars Event $To Usher In inter Season

BASKETBALL RESULTS

1H06psters To VieWith BR.U. Terriers

With the opening tip-off of Fridaynlght's contest against Boston Urni-versity, Coach Ted Heuchling andhis basketball squad will officiallyopen the 1949-50 season. Last yearB.U. won the T.P. contest by 2points; however, the Engineerscame back to down the Terrierslater in the season. Since the seriesbegan in 1903, B.U. has won 14games; against 12 wins for Tech.

The Engineer squad has lookedboth hot and cold in pre-seasonpractice, but is now begtinming tojell. Under Heuchling's '"platoon"system, the "senior" team will alter-nate with a "sophomore" five whichwill attempt to outrun the opposi-tion.

B.U. has a new coach this year inVin Cronin, former-coach of TonyLaVelli and of Somerville High'sNew England championship squads.The Terriers have suffered consider-able losses through graduation.

tiiemen To FireAgainst Crmson I

For the third consecutive season1V.I.T. will play host to the Har-vard varsity and freshman rifebteams on the Tech's-a-Poppinweekend. The Tech teams, whichhave made a clean sweep of theseries so far, are given a slightedge on Saturday.

The varsity match, which beginsat 1:30 P.M., will be Harvard's firstof the season. The Beavers will beiaiming for their second victory,having defeated Boston University1394 to 1279 in their first match.Both freshman teams will be tast-ing their first intercollegiate com-petition. The Crimson ' have re-ported a talented turnout this year,and are predicting a good year forthe freshmen. The freshman matchwill begin at 9 A-M.

'Beavers To FaceHarvard Pucksters

Saturday night will see the Techpucksters matching their sticksagainst the upriver sextet fromHarvard in the initial meet of theseason. This event will take placeat the Boston Arena as one of theevents in connection with the T Pweekend.

The Engineers should show togood advantage in this game de-spite the pre-season scrimmages inwhich they have been defeated byBrown arid B.C. These games, how-ever, were not played at fullstrength and cannot be consideredas previews of what is to come.

Veterans ReturnA number of last year's squad

are returning, including CaptainDon Lea who was fourth high NewEngland scorer last year, plus newplayers from Middlebury and W11-liams who have been obtainedunder the combined study plan.The seventeen men who made thesquad should equal the record oflast year's team and have one ofthe scrappiest teams in the league.

Praised by WritersTo show the reputation of the

Tech squad in the newswriters cir-cles here Ls an excerpt from LennieFowle's column in the Boston Globe,"no hockey team-not even BostonCollege's national champions -looked really good against the Ed-gineers."

Following is the schedule for the1949-50 season:Dec. -Harvard .................... ArenaDec. 12-Boston University ......... ArenaDec. 13-Northeastern ............... ArenaDec. 19-American Ins'ti College .... ArenaDec. 20-Tufts ...................... ArenaJan. 13-Bowdoin .................... AwayJan. 14- -Coby ....................... AwayJan. 16-Tufts ....................... ArenaJan, 17--Northeastern ...............ArenaFeb. 11--Middlebury ................. AwaYFeb. 13-Bowdoin .......... Skating ClubFeb. 15-Boston University .......... ArenaFeb. 18-University of N. H ......... AwayFeb. 23-Saint Nick's ................ AwayFeb. 27-Boston College ............. Arena

The- following is the probablestarting lineup for Saturday's en-counter:Left WVing . ............... Don Lea, No. 15Right WVing ............ Paul Grady, No. 29Center ................ 3. Chisholm, No. 25Defense .............. James Fuller, No. 23Defense ................. Jack Bent, No. 32Goalie .......... Burton Woodward, No. 26

I 4

NOWOn Sale

TECH'$S.A-POPPINTickets

t yeour T. P. date on the IBoston side of the river, she'll l

UNTILT P 13 DAYS

-STUDIO 52-- CO 6-0520

) 11

qrbt A1wkvm We& k"Wq 0 Odf:&

P3liS I Q 0ilidResiYes, Comets are So MILD ihat in a coast-to-coast test ofhundreds of men and women who smoked Cameis--and onlyCamels-for 30 consecutive days, noted throat specialists,maing weekly examinations, reported

Hi i!·E·eaefL~a

Page 4: A rP -Poppintech.mit.edu/V69/PDF/V69-N49.pdf · 2007. 12. 22. · that end of the campus. After the Reference Stacks Opened-Noor had been constructed, how- Sometbing unique in the

Page Four-, , - - ,, I

Joseph W. Saylor, JT.,- gen-eral manager O£ the 1950Technique, announces that allbiography blanks of thoseSeniors whose pictures are tobe in the 1950 book, must bereturned to he Technique of-fice ,before December 1. .. Anyadditioms or corrections tothese blanks by the Seniorsmust be made before December10.

e

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7- *- I--Y . -I-, -- I

ljistol Team(continued fron Page 3)

dlesgue Tech defeated the -MIT.Faculty Pistol Club with a score of1290 while the faculty ws postinga score of only 1233. Entering.thisleague .should provide the M.I.T.teams with plenty of needed ex-perienace in shoulder-to-shouldermatches. The score by MLT. in'this first match is the hignest firedby a Tech team in a shoulder-to-

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Tuesday, November 29,.:1949: i

as part: of the sports eventsselhfed- uled for the Tech's-A-PoppIn week ?-en.d. ..

December S, 1949 Coast Guard Academy li............... Eone

Deeemfeer 10, 1949 -U.S. Milltary Academy .............. Away _

Februn 18, 190-Unlversity of Mass. ................. ;Ealto

;NMareh &, 1950U. S. Military iAcdemy .............Ho me ;

,uroh 11, 1950B. Coast Guard Academy ............... wway t

MIarch 18, 10NUalverslty of Mass .............. Away

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shoulder-match -and is a preview ofgood things-to come. '

In_ the.first pistol match of theseason, fired Qn Novrember.9, Techeasily defeated' New. York''StatetM!arlnmne -Academy.' -The Beaversfired 1283 to N.Y:;S.IA.'s 1254. TheIntercollegiate; matches are sched-uled to start bn December 3, whenM.I.T. meets Coast Guard Academy

Tech's-a-Poppin(Continued from .Page 1)

men will meet the Crimson of Har-vard at the Boston Arena at 7:30p.m., and the Hexapoppin skit showwill follow in Rockwell Cage.

Professor William C. Greene ofthe English Department has beenengaged as master of ceremoniesfor the program which will includeten seven-minute skits presentedby 'various living groups.

:Friday, Decemlber 2.:0D p.m. Basketball vs. B.U.-Armory

Fresh game at 6:30 p.m.9:00 T. R. Dance-Walker Memorlal

Brad Kent. Orch. (3Iorss Hall andGym)

11:00 p.m. Queen Contest Prellminaries--Walker 'Memorial

11:30 p.m. Intermission Floor Sihow -Walker Mlemorial

Z:00 a.m. Finale Dance--Walker Memo-rial

Saturday, Decemboer $rAfternoon

I:GD p.m. Track vs. B.U.--Brigga FieldRifle vs. Harvard-Rifle Range

2:00 p.m. Wrestling vs. B.U.-ArmorySquash vs. Dartmouth--Squash Courts

.g:00 p.m. Fencing Demonstration-Walker Gym

:;:45 p.m. Swimming vs. Brown-AlumniPool

F'rosh Meet at 2:00 p.m.Evening I .

7'30 -.m. Hockey vs. Harvard.-BostonArena I

10:00 p.m. HexapoppiD Show - RockwellCage

11U.0 p.m. CaQueen Contest Finals-Rock-weil Cage

.12:00 m. Presentation of HexapoDDin-Rockwell Cage

Cup by Queen

II t

NOTICE TO SENIORS |

FY HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYSSAVE MONEY TOO

hL addition,be returned tofore Decemberpublication innique.

all proofs raustWaid Studio be-3 to insure theirthe 1950 Teach-

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