8
Vol. 87, No, 52 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, Dec. 12, 1967 5c By Steve Carhart They came in groups of two and three, stepping quickly through the cool night into the center of the' Great Court. First there were only a few, but gradually their numbers swelled until the group numbered about three hundred The date was Thursday, December 7, and the occasion was not -a Communist takeover of the In- stitute, but the greatest hack of all time: the great tuition riot. Begins at EC The day -before it was to be announced, news of the Institute's decision to increase tuition- to $2150 per academic year leaked to the student body through the Burton House Reflector. An un- identified- East Campus resident originated the "riot" idea and set up a loudspeaker which told the entire floor about the increase and the planned "riot." Prominent in the gathering crowd was UMOC Ed Krugman and a few of his less easily iden- tified friends, who led the now- traditional 2150-TDM chant. Asked why he was present, Krugman fund isn't big enough, we have to raise tuition." "If you didn't raise tuition, you wouldn't -need a bail fund," in- terjected a voice from the crowd. Move across MIass. ave. Dean Wadleigh then asked the crowd to adjourn to the broad expanse of Briggs Field, where they would be on Institute prop- erty. A hiss arose, but the stu- dents moved single file across Mass. Ave., tying up traffic. After Dean Wadleigh threatened to take ID cards of those who didn't move, he succeeded in moving the crowd to West Campus. Rather than move to Briggs field, the demonstrators marched into the Student Center library in single file, carefully displaying their ID's. They all posed for pictures in front of the library desk. Wadleigh asked them to leave again, they hissed again, and they left again. Next stop was McCormick, . (Please turn to pacle 5) New Held Day fOraat aceeptea; IH aSCmaa discusses Vietaam 0pd By MARK BOLOTIN While many students demonstrated following rum- ors of a tuition increase Thursday night, members of Inscomm remained restrained and forsook rioting 'in order to hold their regularly-scheduled meeting. Unfor- tmnately, it seems that cool heads do not always result in progress; for little more was accomplished in an eve- ning's discussion than in an hour's rioting. After the committee had finished plodding through the myriad of subcommittee reports, discussion turned to Field Day and, in particular, the report of the ad hoc committee to study Field Day. Field day proposal As explained last Tuesday's paper, the ad hoc com- mittee criticized excessive time spent on construction for special events, the danger of injuries in the glove fight, the misdirection which Field Day gives to Fresh- man Council, and non-achievement of the goals of Field Day-fun, entertainment for spectators, and class spirit. Consequently, their suggestion for Field Day called for a slate of four mass participation games, separated by three coed events, intended for comic relief. Although there were few objections to the content of the report, considerable concern was voiced on the question of whether or not Field Day should even: be ex- amined by Institute Committee. Apparently oblivious of the fact that the ad hoc committee had been created at (Please turn to Page 3) To S lemen CEP ideas '5 replied, "It's a hell of a lot of fun." An unidentified student con- curred: "It's either this or I tool." Also present were the Campus Patrol, who said that they had no plans to intervene. "They're just a bunch of boys," said the officer. Deans Wadleigh and Gray were there also, watch- ing paternally. The crowd marched to the steps under the columns where they posed for photographers. Dean Wadleigh caught up with the mob and mounted the steps to address the throng. He began, "Have you heard the one that begins, 'Anybody who's here in five minutes .. .'" Crowd reac- tion forced him to begin again. "The Cambridge Police are be- ginning to get interested (in the demonstration), and the bail fund isn't big enough. Because the. bail During Christmas vacation eigh- teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings to which undergraduates are Gray to assist Provost By Carson- Agnew Dean Paul E. Gray, Associate' Dean of Student Affairs, has been appointed to the newly created Post of Assistant Provost. According to a letter sent to members of the Faculty yesterday, Dean Gray will "be responsible for the coordination and development of the undergraduate curriculum, and, in particular, for the treatment of the first year as a coherent program." Work with CEP Within the Provost's office, Gray will be respon- sible for supporting and implementing expeiments approved by the Committee on Educational Policy, and coordinating of the first year program of under- graduate curriculum. According to Dr. Jerohie B. Weisner, provost, Gray's job involves "ensuring that the first year Program remains coherent within the growing range of options provided by nearly every depart- rnent in the Institute and by such programs as AVT's mnajor in liberal arts." To resign as Dean Dean Gray has been Associate Dean of Student Affairs for-the past two and a half years, and clair- nlan of the Freshman Advisory Council since 1964. In an interview Friday Dr. Gray commented that he Would be resigning both these positions for his new Post, which he described as "nearly full-tirne." He didn't specify any definite date for this change, however, but added that he would remain in close Phqto.by George Flynn Dean Paul Gray has been appointed As- sistant Provost, with the job of coordinating the Freshman curriculum and implementing the decisions made by the CEP. contact with both the Dean's Office and the FAC. Gray describes his position as one of coordinat- or of the Freshman year. Because the first year lacks the coherence which the other years possess by virtue of the fact that the upperclass years'are (Please trorn to page 5) Photo by George Flynn The Great Tuition Riot,- held after the increase in tuition to $2 !50 was leaked, began- Thursday evening in the Great Court. After walking twice across campus, shepherded by Dean of Student Affairs Kenneth Wadleigh, the rioters dispersed at 12:05. To be Associate Dean Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notment Professor Abraham J. Siegel of the Departments of Economics and Management has been ap- pointed Associate Dean of the Sloan School of Management. Pro- fessor Siegel is a specialist in la- bor relations and has taught at the Institute since 1954. Professor Siegel succeeds John being extended special invitations. Aldst of the meetings will be regular sessions of the Alumni Clubs, but some clubs are plan- ning more elaborate programs in- cluding speakers. Still other groups are inviting high school seniors who are applying to MIT. These meetings have three pur- poses: * It is hoped that by having stu- dents presently at MIT talk to older alumni, the impact of the radical changes which have re- cently taken place will be clarified. * It is thought that Itudents may benefit from contact with alumni already in business and willing to share their experiences. 0 At those meetings which high school seniors will attend, their contact with MIT students may aid their decisions on where to go next fall. While Avatar, the hippie news- paper being attacked by Cam- bridge as pornographic and/or obscene, has been gaining atten- tion throughout much of Boston, until recently it had gained little attention around MIT. However, interest in the publica- tion has been increasing as newvs of prosecution has spread. Late. Friday afternoon, one man was arrested near the Student Center M. Wynne, who earlier wvas ap- pointed to the newly-created post of Vice-President for Organization Systems. Since August of this year, Dr. Siegel has directed the Sloan School's graduate studies pro- grams and he will continue to hold this responsibility as Associate Dean. Dr. Siegel has conducted exten- sive research on management-la- bor relations, industrial conflict, collective bargaining and human relations and has served widely as a consultant to labor unions, in- dustrial organizations and govern- ment in these areas. He received the BA degree in 1943 from City College of New York, the MA degree from Colum- bia University in 1947 and the PhD degree in 1961 from the Uni- versity of California at Berkeley. Following World War II military service, he was. an instructor in economics at CCNY and, from 1952 to 1954, was a research econ- omist at the Institute of Industrial Relations at Berkeley, where he collaborated with Dr. Clark Kerr in studies related to industrial conflict and settlement. From 1956 to 1960, Dr. Siegel was a visiting professor in the Department of Economics at Brandeis University and has been a specia lecturer in the Trade Union Program at Harvard Uni- versity. for selling the paper; Cambridge police refused to disclose the charge to The Tech. Other distributors of the paper exist on campus, but they remain- ed undercover while Cambridge police had the pressure on. One distributor, an MIT sophomore, has reportedly been advised by the Campus Patrol to take care, until the city discontinues in witch- hunt tactics. I LI I I I I i f 0 a ,Oro es ul long I'i' "o ers 0 -in a r 11-4 - can P on iva , ac Alumni' holiday meetefitnBE openeaed to undergra·duatesa~~ Avatara distributor ap~rrestd,& Others remain undercovser

Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

Vol. 87, No, 52 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, Dec. 12, 1967 5c

By Steve CarhartThey came in groups of two and

three, stepping quickly throughthe cool night into the center ofthe' Great Court. First there wereonly a few, but gradually theirnumbers swelled until the groupnumbered about three hundredThe date was Thursday, December7, and the occasion was not -aCommunist takeover of the In-stitute, but the greatest hack ofall time: the great tuition riot.

Begins at ECThe day -before it was to be

announced, news of the Institute'sdecision to increase tuition- to$2150 per academic year leakedto the student body through theBurton House Reflector. An un-identified- East Campus residentoriginated the "riot" idea and setup a loudspeaker which told theentire floor about the increaseand the planned "riot."

Prominent in the gatheringcrowd was UMOC Ed Krugmanand a few of his less easily iden-tified friends, who led the now-traditional 2150-TDM chant. Askedwhy he was present, Krugman

fund isn't big enough, we have toraise tuition."

"If you didn't raise tuition, youwouldn't -need a bail fund," in-terjected a voice from the crowd.

Move across MIass. ave.Dean Wadleigh then asked the

crowd to adjourn to the broadexpanse of Briggs Field, wherethey would be on Institute prop-erty. A hiss arose, but the stu-dents moved single file acrossMass. Ave., tying up traffic. AfterDean Wadleigh threatened to take

ID cards of those who didn'tmove, he succeeded in movingthe crowd to West Campus.

Rather than move to Briggsfield, the demonstrators marchedinto the Student Center library insingle file, carefully displayingtheir ID's. They all posed forpictures in front of the librarydesk. Wadleigh asked them toleave again, they hissed again,and they left again.

Next stop was McCormick,. (Please turn to pacle 5)

New Held Day fOraat aceeptea;IH aSCmaa discusses Vietaam 0pd

By MARK BOLOTINWhile many students demonstrated following rum-

ors of a tuition increase Thursday night, members ofInscomm remained restrained and forsook rioting 'inorder to hold their regularly-scheduled meeting. Unfor-tmnately, it seems that cool heads do not always resultin progress; for little more was accomplished in an eve-ning's discussion than in an hour's rioting.

After the committee had finished plodding throughthe myriad of subcommittee reports, discussion turnedto Field Day and, in particular, the report of the ad hoccommittee to study Field Day.

Field day proposalAs explained last Tuesday's paper, the ad hoc com-

mittee criticized excessive time spent on constructionfor special events, the danger of injuries in the glovefight, the misdirection which Field Day gives to Fresh-man Council, and non-achievement of the goals of FieldDay-fun, entertainment for spectators, and class spirit.Consequently, their suggestion for Field Day called fora slate of four mass participation games, separated bythree coed events, intended for comic relief.

Although there were few objections to the contentof the report, considerable concern was voiced on thequestion of whether or not Field Day should even: be ex-amined by Institute Committee. Apparently oblivious ofthe fact that the ad hoc committee had been created at

(Please turn to Page 3)

To S lemen CEP ideas'5

replied, "It's a hell of a lot offun." An unidentified student con-curred: "It's either this or Itool." Also present were theCampus Patrol, who said thatthey had no plans to intervene."They're just a bunch of boys,"said the officer. Deans Wadleighand Gray were there also, watch-ing paternally. The crowdmarched to the steps under thecolumns where they posed forphotographers.

Dean Wadleigh caught up withthe mob and mounted the stepsto address the throng. He began,"Have you heard the one thatbegins, 'Anybody who's here infive minutes . . .'" Crowd reac-tion forced him to begin again."The Cambridge Police are be-ginning to get interested (in thedemonstration), and the bail fundisn't big enough. Because the. bail

During Christmas vacation eigh-teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughoutthe country will be holding meet-ings to which undergraduates are

Gray to assist ProvostBy Carson- Agnew

Dean Paul E. Gray, Associate' Dean of StudentAffairs, has been appointed to the newly createdPost of Assistant Provost. According to a lettersent to members of the Faculty yesterday, DeanGray will "be responsible for the coordination anddevelopment of the undergraduate curriculum, and,in particular, for the treatment of the first yearas a coherent program."

Work with CEPWithin the Provost's office, Gray will be respon-

sible for supporting and implementing expeimentsapproved by the Committee on Educational Policy,and coordinating of the first year program of under-graduate curriculum.

According to Dr. Jerohie B. Weisner, provost,Gray's job involves "ensuring that the first yearProgram remains coherent within the growingrange of options provided by nearly every depart-rnent in the Institute and by such programs asAVT's mnajor in liberal arts."

To resign as DeanDean Gray has been Associate Dean of Student

Affairs for-the past two and a half years, and clair-nlan of the Freshman Advisory Council since 1964.In an interview Friday Dr. Gray commented thathe Would be resigning both these positions for hisnew Post, which he described as "nearly full-tirne."He didn't specify any definite date for this change,however, but added that he would remain in close

Phqto.by George Flynn

Dean Paul Gray has been appointed As-sistant Provost, with the job of coordinatingthe Freshman curriculum and implementing thedecisions made by the CEP.contact with both the Dean's Office and the FAC.

Gray describes his position as one of coordinat-or of the Freshman year. Because the first yearlacks the coherence which the other years possessby virtue of the fact that the upperclass years'are

(Please trorn to page 5)

Photo by George Flynn

The Great Tuition Riot,- held after the increase in tuitionto $2 !50 was leaked, began- Thursday evening in the GreatCourt. After walking twice across campus, shepherded by Deanof Student Affairs Kenneth Wadleigh, the rioters dispersed at12:05.

To be Associate Dean

Abraham b$egeI receivesoman Schoooi ap&-notment

Professor Abraham J. Siegel ofthe Departments of Economicsand Management has been ap-pointed Associate Dean of theSloan School of Management. Pro-fessor Siegel is a specialist in la-bor relations and has taught at theInstitute since 1954.

Professor Siegel succeeds John

being extended special invitations.Aldst of the meetings will be

regular sessions of the AlumniClubs, but some clubs are plan-ning more elaborate programs in-cluding speakers. Still othergroups are inviting high schoolseniors who are applying to MIT.

These meetings have three pur-poses:

* It is hoped that by having stu-dents presently at MIT talk toolder alumni, the impact of theradical changes which have re-cently taken place will be clarified.

* It is thought that Itudents maybenefit from contact with alumnialready in business and willing toshare their experiences.

0 At those meetings which highschool seniors will attend, theircontact with MIT students may aidtheir decisions on where to go nextfall.

While Avatar, the hippie news-paper being attacked by Cam-bridge as pornographic and/orobscene, has been gaining atten-tion throughout much of Boston,until recently it had gained littleattention around MIT.

However, interest in the publica-tion has been increasing as newvsof prosecution has spread. Late.Friday afternoon, one man wasarrested near the Student Center

M. Wynne, who earlier wvas ap-pointed to the newly-created postof Vice-President for OrganizationSystems.

Since August of this year, Dr.Siegel has directed the SloanSchool's graduate studies pro-grams and he will continue to holdthis responsibility as AssociateDean.

Dr. Siegel has conducted exten-sive research on management-la-bor relations, industrial conflict,collective bargaining and humanrelations and has served widely asa consultant to labor unions, in-dustrial organizations and govern-ment in these areas.

He received the BA degree in1943 from City College of NewYork, the MA degree from Colum-bia University in 1947 and thePhD degree in 1961 from the Uni-versity of California at Berkeley.Following World War II militaryservice, he was. an instructor ineconomics at CCNY and, from1952 to 1954, was a research econ-omist at the Institute of IndustrialRelations at Berkeley, where hecollaborated with Dr. Clark Kerrin studies related to industrialconflict and settlement.

From 1956 to 1960, Dr. Siegelwas a visiting professor in theDepartment of Economics atBrandeis University and has beena specia lecturer in the TradeUnion Program at Harvard Uni-versity.

for selling the paper; Cambridgepolice refused to disclose thecharge to The Tech.

Other distributors of the paperexist on campus, but they remain-ed undercover while Cambridgepolice had the pressure on. Onedistributor, an MIT sophomore,has reportedly been advised bythe Campus Patrol to take care,until the city discontinues in witch-hunt tactics.

I

LII

I

IIif

0 a

,Oro es ul longI'i' "o ers0

-in a r 11-4 - can Pon iva , ac

Alumni' holiday meetefitnBEopeneaed to undergra·duatesa~~

Avatara distributor ap~rrestd,&Others remain undercovser

Page 2: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

Twenty-one of MIT9s seventy-four U.S. and Canadian AlumniClubs listed helow are mailing invitations to home town under-graduates at their campus addresses to be their guests on the dateshown, to meet fellow alumni and, in some cases, to meet prospec-tive freshmen.

Alumni welcome a chance to hear about the Institute first-

hand, and are a good source for undergraduates who seek careerinformation.

If, by chance, you do not receie- an invitation fraonM yourhome town alumni listed below, phone the Alumni Association-extension 3878-so we can correct the oversight, and let themknow you will attend; they do have to guarantee the number aattending.

ATLANTA, GeorgiaMIT CLUB OF ATLANTA

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon at- 12:30Grecian Room, Regency Hyatt Hotel, Atlanta.

at thed

BALTIMORE, MarylandMIT CLUB OF BALTIMORE

Thursday, December 28: Luncheon at 12:00 noon at theEngineering Society of Baltimore, I Mt. Vernon Place,Baltimore.

BETHLEHEM, PennsylvaniaMIT CLUB of the LEHIGH VALLEY

Thursday, December 28: Luncheon at 12:45 at theHomer Research Laboratories, Bethlehem. Optionaltour of Research Laboratories following lunch.

CLEVELAND, OhioMIT ASSOCIATION OF CLEVELANDk

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon at 12:00 noon atthe University Club, Cleveland.

COLUMBUS, OhioMIT CLUB OF CENTRAL OHIO

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon at 12:00 noon atthe Battelle Memorial Institute, 505 King Avenue,Columbus.

DALLAS, Texas-MIT CLUB OF DALLAS

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon a+ 12:00 noon,North Park Inn, No. Central Expressway at Park Lane,Dallas.

DENVER, ColoradoROCKY MOUNTAIN MIT CLUB

Thursday, December 28: Luncheon at noonDenver Athletic Club.

at the

LOS ANGELES, CaliforniaMIT CLUB OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

Thursday, December 28: Evening program starting at7.30 p.m. at the Biltmore Hotel, 5th and Olive, LosAngeles. Movie and speaker and refreshments.

MILWAUMKEE,MIT CLUIB

QWsconsiwOF MILWAUKEE

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon at 12:00 noon atthe University Club, 924 E. Wells, Milwaukee.

N EW PKaRT NEWS, VirginiaEDUCATIONAL COUNCIL Serving WILLIAMSBURG,HAMPTON, YORKTOWN end NEWPORT NEWS, Va.

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon at 12:00 noon atthe James River Country Club, Newport News.

PIITT$SBURGH, PennsylvaniaMIT CLUB OF WESTERN- PENNSYLVANIA

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon at 12:30 at theEdge Restaurant, Grandview Avenue, Pittsburgh.

PITTSFIELD, Massachuset'sBERKSHIRE MIT CLUB

Thursday, December 21: Luncheon and Egg Nog Socialat noon 0t the Stanhlby Club, Pittsfield.

PROV1DENCE, Rhode IslandMIT CLUB-OF RHODE ISLAND

Thursday, December 28: Luncheon at 11:45 at Hum-mocks Restaurant, 245 Allen Avenue, Providence.

ROCHESTER, New YorkMIT -CLUB OF ROCHESTER

Tuesday, December 26: Luncheon at 12:00 noon at-theSmall Hall, Chamber of Commerce Building; RochesterProfessor Avery Ashdown, guest of honor.

SEATTLE, WashingtonMIT CLUB OF PUGET SOUND

Thursday, December 28: Luncheon at NoonHarbor Club, Norton Building, Seattle.

at the

ST. LOUIS, MissouriMIT CLUB OF ST. LOUIS

Friday, December 29: Luncheon at 12:00 noon at theUniversity Club, 3607 Washington St., St. Louis.

TORONTO, Onario. CanadaMIT CLUB OF ONTARIO

Wednesday, December 27: Luncheon at 12:15 at theBoard of Trade Club of Toronto, Adelaide St., Toronto.

TULSA, Ok1ahomaMIT CLUB OF OKLAHOMA

Thursday, December 28: Afternoon 'neeting starting at3:30 p.m. at the home of Dr. Richard Mungen, 4341So. Atlanta, Tulsa.

WASHINGTON, D.C.MIT CLUB OF WASHINGTON

Thursday, December 28: Luncheon beginning at 11:30af the Cosmos Club, Massachusetts Avenue at FloridaAvenue,' N.W., Washington, D.C.

WILMINGTON,, DelawasreWilmington Educational Council and Club Committee

of the MIT CLUB OF DELAWARE VALLEYWednesday, December 27: Luncheon at 12:15 in theMontchanin Room at the Dupont Country Club, Wil-mington.

WORCESTER, MassachusettsMIT CLUB OF CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS

Thursday, December 28: Dinner at 6:30 p.m. and tourat the Wyman-Gordon Co. plant; MIT Director ofPlacement, T. W. Harrington, speaker.

QU

0-

cs

rJ

2

-r:I

4

jeica

E

t

iI'i ii;

I·i.i r

I ijii ;iiiI

rI

ii

i& 1 ~ erlEa ~a a· I

~E~rP&~ha~aa~rm~_ aL~I~PBI*R~pr~anna-- - - - I 11 M -Puts=

-- ~~~~ _~~~_~~·-X~~~~B~~~n~~P· -- - - - --- --- ~~~~~~----- -

I

Nliem

I

i

I-

21

I

MEETI#GS~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I..

CL�BIsT ALUIWIDURING CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS

II I .~TI% Jo -�o14 j �jo

j 24 "A

I-V

6

11 J J .1�7� -1k,

Page 3: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

Ad fln car to swe u Alcsrowqr~nftd PmL- in all gnd.

twisg wzAd pax aM-1

Beam by P ARNELL; mW oXWA: co &er~afs k A,

ca"40" dwhome aew m amd we=ma

MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED

is emlswm w cht-su""ex mms. 2"7=0.~ ~ a9

CHARLSThe Tech Tailor

e CLEANINGo PRESSING. REPAIRINGe LAUNDRY

Always At YEr Serce In he

MA$S AVENUEEIL 4e2g DW Le -3"

_ _ _~ ~1~ ~BV~WU~

s�inmsa�a�wr�i� ansm�armmas�a�amn

I~~~~BIIW~~~~~~~~~BI~~~~~·~~~~L~~~~I~~~~D D~~~~~L~~~~~~

PROGRAMMERSPar+or Full-Time

If you have 360 BAlx, COBOL, or 7070 Autocoder program-ming experience, we would like fo talk fo you. Work firsf orsecond shift with this/rapidly expanding computer consulting firm.Call 969-4444 and ask Mr. Silk for an appointment; or write

Business Computer Services210 Needham St., Newton Upper Falls

·�mrsll*r�q�s�Bra�CB� Wrrm�Ala asara

i�WYQ�Bsr�Bpp� Wm I �--·--�us. -�U --

pg,,

i

I

I

loVietfnamn

alti8ough(C'on/it/cld f'to:I Page I)

Ihe previous Inscomm meetingand that it had already completedits assigned duties, these fewargued that Inscomm should notwaste timne with such a "trivial"matter.

'Beaver Key is stupid'Herb Finger '68, chairman of

Beaver Key (hence, chairman ofField Day), responded that since'one, Beaver Key is stupid; two,Field Day Chairmen are stupid,"Field Day wvould continue to berun the same ,way year after year,unless sonicme study were made by

iI

iiI

I

I

.m

I ii

... 9

a

Inscoomm. He argued that withoutsuch a report Beaver Key mem-b bers would copy the previousField Day without bothering to

t study its structure.Role of (oeds debated

The strongest attack on the com-niittee's report was delivered byKarla Hurst '68, McCormick HallPresident. She objected to the useof coeds for "comic relief." MarkMathis, President of the Class of'69, explained that in view of hisattempts to get coeds for the tug-of-war, this was a touchy situation.Coeds want to participate in FieldDay, yet not be laughed at. Theydo not want to perform in eventsthat might make them appearmasculine, "especially the onesyou might want" for such anevent.

Several members expressed fearthat acceptance of this report byTnscomm would constitute a finaldecision of the structure of nextyear's Field Days. After the last

--4I

m

rn7P--q

ranrnCmOT

EnmK

.-

(DFrnCDm

paragraph of the report was point-ed out - "the proposals were onlyof a general nature and that Beaver Key should fill in the details,"the report wvas accepted withoutobjection.

Vietnam poll soughtAlso passed at the meeting was

a resolution to conduct a poll onthe war in Vietnam, subject to ap-proval of the questionnaire whencompleted.

Of course, the resolution wasnot passed quite that easily. MikeKrashinsky '68, Senior HousePresident and chairman of the adhoc committee established toformulate a questionnaire, ex-plained that the various politicalgroups on-campus were being con-tacted in order that all viewpointsmight be represented. As a re-sult, there was no discussion ofthe individual questions on thepoll.

iII

I

TYPEWRITERS & CA:MERASLiquidate balance estate. Rerm-ington typewriter $18; late RoyalElectric (orig. $500Q) only $98;beautiful I.B.M. Selectric, bar-gain, etc. Also, fine still & moviecameras & photo equipment realcheap. Private home. 527-0311.

I1. ' 1 22 ?1 -_ I- ", = 1)

Knock it off, Lester. I'mtrying to get some sleep.

2." /222. '( 1 3 "z _2 2 =?,-\. ...

Look, I've got to beup tearl for'theIntramurall )Dart T(oss.

W7hv couldn't I haverooltnd with afun person?

,4, ( {

· ~ '~ ,5,,3 .

1ell m(', Le tcr,wha}t i.s aill thisgoing to ,bit voul?

5. It's already gotten me a(gclat iolb with E(luitable.Challenging work. Good pay.lResponsibility. And thechanlce to move up to animportant Imanagt':nentposition.

Can they use a top-notchdart .thrower?

lFor carcer olpp(ortutfiti. at Equlitable, sc(c vol l'lyac.llemlnt Officer, orwrite: Jamlls I,. liorice, lamIwger, College Emnployment.

The EQuITABILE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHolme ()ffice: 1_2S5 A-,(. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10()19Anl Eqlutll O()p)porttunity Entlployer, MI/F a Eq;litalle 1967LIME, REGULAR

AND MENTHOL1

views to be- soug tpo not yet written

Look for he tn me-u Tene an t.,1967! Colgne-PO.lmolive Compony. See "The Flying Nun." Thursdoy evenings, 8-8 X0 NYT. ABC-TV.

Page 4: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

n7..' " o : . S :

aewie ries at0 0 a

.- uilI ion,, raises and I rio[Tuition raises have become a most

unwelcome bi-annual tradition at MIT

The tuition increase riots have provedto be one way of voicing dissatisfaction,and generally letting off a little steam.In the end, everyone returns to a warm

room and readjusts next year's budget

to accommodate the increase.As long as the term riot remains an

overstatement of the actual state of af-

fairs, as long as everyone obeys some

basic ground rules of behavior, propertyis protected, and administration and stu-

dents alike take it in a friendly vein,

then it is being just plain stuffy to con-

THE T~rri

Vol. LXXXVII, No. 52 Dec. 12, 1967

Chairman Guille Cox '68-

Editor . Mike Rodburg '68

Managing Editors . . John Corwin '68Tom Thomas '69

Business Manager -Dan Green '68

News Editor .. Mark Bolotin '68

Features Editor . Michael Warren '69

Sports Editor Tony Lima '69

Entertainment Editor . Jack Donohue '69

Photography Editor Bill Ingram '68

Advertising Editor Nick Covatta '68,-~~~~~~~~~~~,

Associate Managing Editor . Greg Arenson '70Associate News Editor ..... Steve Carhart '70Associate Sports Editor - George Wood '70Associate Entertainment Editor. Barry Mitnick '68Intramural Sports Editor . Joel Hemnmelstein '70Associate Photography Editor Jeff Reynolds '69Accounts Receivable . . Pat Green '69National Advertising Manager Jack Swaim '68Assistant Advertising Manager Regan Fay '70Treasurer . . Steve Tharp '71Controller' . ... Steve Kinney '70Secretary . . . Linda F. Stewart

M.anaging Staff .... . Karen Wattel '70Maan Larry Siverstorn '70, Leslie Horwitz '71

Wells Eddleman '71, Jim Altman '71Lee Swislow '71, Bill Hahn '71

Mitchel-l Serota '71News Staff . .. Dave Kaye '68

Peter Meschter '69, Carson Agnew '70John Foran 70, jack Katz '70n

Don Minnig '70, Dean Roller '70Pat Szymanski '70. Barry Weiss '70

--- Greg Elerohatdt-71, ft7by-f-w ,,1 '-·

Mike Mihalka '71Features Staff Lee Shaeffer '70-

Ed Chalfie '70. Louis Zarfas '70Bob Dennis '70. Philip Seiwyn

Second-class postage paid at Boston. MassachusettsThe Tech is published every Tuesday and Fridayduring the college.year, except during college vacationsby The Tech. Room W20-483, MIT Student Center. 84Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139Telephone: Area Code 617 876-5855, and.864-6900 extension 2731. United States Mail subscription rates: $4.2%,for one year, $8.00 for two years. _

Front page photo of rioting near the Student Centerby George Flynn. . ,--

demn the demonstrations. Like Har-'

vard's spring rites, or East Canmpus Day, we suppose such festivities have a place

(dubious as it may be) on campus, andwe would be disappointed with a studentbody whose reaction to a tuition hike

was no more than a shrug and a whimper.What is alarming, however, is there ap-

pears to be no end in sight.The villian of the piece is not MIT,

for the problem of increasing costs andsubsequent tuition increases is not pecu-liar to MIT, but affects all privately enldowed universities. The plight of the pri-ate institutions is becoming critical asthey find it necessary to meet a majorportion of operating expenses throughtuition, which today means higher andhigher tuition. There is a limit to howquickly scholarship and loan funds canbe expanded to offset some of the effects.State universities, relying on public mon-ies, have likewise needed to hike studentpayments, but the problem has not yet

reached the proportion it has for the pri-vate schools. And such schools as theUniversity of Michigan and the Californiastate schools have indicated that a state'

can maintain a high caliber university.The result may very well be that high-

cost private schools price themselves outof the market for' some highly qualified

students.There are a-number of alternatives to

lessen somewhat 'the burden of high tui-tions. Of course, a major effort on be-half of scholarships and loans. is alwaysapplicable. The suggestion that tuitionbe tax deductible would probably helpconsiderably, too. But, ultimately, themoney may have to come from the pub-lic coffers-much more federal and stateaid to .education in the form of directtuition aid to students, or money toschools without the usual strict govern-ment controls.

Perhaps if-the next time tuition israised, the MIT students joined forceswith Harvard. Yale, Cornell, CalTech,etc., and marched on Washington shout-ing "$2400 (or whatever), TDM," some-::ne who canhelp would listen.

by Mh cha Warren

i 17. A few enterprising Tech- 120. The silk screen room on themen from the second floor of acdtivities floor of the StudentBurfon House made a surprise Center was condemned as atrip to Wellesley this past week- fire hazard for a lack of ventila.end, leaving a few mementos fion. When the Institute's Safe.behind them. The Burfonites ty Officer entered puffing onplaced a Christmas f ree in the a large cigar, he immediatelywell at the girls' school, and mentioned that ihe'room need.took down the banners from ed a "big 'No Smoking' sign."various men's schools adorning 121. The long waits and thethe area. Instead, they left just frequent milk runs have beenone, large MIT banner. unable to persuade people in118. The astute reader of the the Student Center to use theInstitute directory might notice stairs rather than the elevators,that Henry F. Faery Jr., a -However,' more and moreCourse XVI graduate student, is people who have taken thefollowed' by Paul D. 'Fagg, a elevator on the east side of thesophomore in Course 2. building are chlnging to the119. Most Institute telephones 'stairs. The catalyst seems to bedo not have+he facility to make a loud rasping sound as theoutside calls. However, a few elevator passes between theprivileged individuals have first and second floors. Thosephones on which, if one dials 9, in the know claim the noise ishe can get an outside line. A!- just the elevator casing rubbingthough such phones are usually against the second floor, and isnot the properfy ':f undergrad- nothing to worry about. Yet,

uafes, thfere is at'least one-in a many of fhe people who havemajor dormitory, and at last recently taken to climbingword, it was being well put fo stairs don't seem impresseduse. - with the safety of the vehicle.

-N .v .

Bush

To -the.. Editor:· .

Al,thugh '.-certaihy a. editorial byWeek: An Opserve as an Incussion that place between

The recentlyitory council hinterest in thetwo residenceperiod, whichentering freshing, however,ignored this iris also takinghaps we canlightened debsophies and a

There are sNeal's editorment. Althoorientation piwell ahead opromises ofelicited froma good dealseveral daysWeek. One (of many houwve thought,would find dmen in theRush Weekaround andthey might Ilife. Of cowas Uhis woul publicized, s/

,3.,. .'..-:..- ett .o. Te Tach I ' '...We ik bis ' man wh. as' to' explain 'this new 'in-"gress was dfiitely made -this .-campusei, and--ed ainly -:btter .:Baitlhe symli`ss

-novation in Rusfi Wek a'tivity at year, but we need a Cot more. than any drm onmodationsnovatian ini d~.usn wao acm atla.y: aTo the Editor:

... :- the pre-Rush Week Meeting -'-In JerTold Grochow '6 Neither of these impressions is I would like to protest the de-ush V~' 1968'"is Septemberit,;afof d t n o . '.-%';-.,,,-'',.''',/'.ush-- V ~~~~~~~~~Dormitory 4C~iicil Chairman h e

-September it Was foufid that not tru'iior y Council Chaiman tre. ' - facing of-londike Calendar (Thelong Way' off, the.Tom Neal, "Rush only was the Dormcon Chairman Misled depledge MIT fraternities are certainly Gene Davis painting hanging in

pen Question," xwill nriot goin- -to be :allowed to speak To the Editor not at a higher,. more mature Bldg. 7) by an overzealouspeaceTo~~~~~ ~ ~ee -than Edthor:a

nik. The result of -this malicioustroduction to the dis- but, in addition, he' was n t go- I am a recent depe h level than those at all or most

will inevitably take ing to be allowved to attend the would like to commnent about MITa whote s l s, fr ankly, only hooliganism is a larg e crayoned

now and then. a peg abooe ths which con- peace (ban-the-bomb) symbol innwanthmeeting. Mr. Neal points to the fraternities in general and pledg- 'antly haze. Rsees re led to the central lower portion of the

y reorganized dorm- -radical innovation" of having all ing and depledging in particular.haz s o e aer p tin o tBecause of' myhstatus as one of belieev that 'hazingis non-existant painting. Granted, barbarous acts

has taken a renewed three speakers at the- meeting- nly a few epledges, one migh at MIT, but even at MIT hazing are being committed in Vietnam

e relationship of the mention this p r o g r a m. Alter construe, what have to say as doesoccur at som e houses; rushees and MIT may share the guilt,

systems during t this ei but amitn ih as infer that 'pledging is kept to a but this vandalism is in no wayRhV (vis so crucial to the questioin maymrshew n, olet MIT b d, ur in t Irrnniv i a sensible response to the feelings

amen. It is interest- am cponvinced that, with the frank and honest a pen as possi- of shared guilt and longings for

that IFC, which ha s sexception of Dean Gray, thee ble. houses, pledging utoten jste m of te ninterpayl f or speakers did not give'sufficient MIT has very limited, and for sumes upwards to 15 hours weekly justice some of us feel. Animalism

nterplay for so long. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~in respnetaimls isei

another look. P er-mphasis to the informto Te tation about the most part, undesirable on- and, despite promises made to the n juponse to anmalism is ne-

rgamnothe lok.ier-the dormitory. The statistic that n campus living facilities, at least contrary during rush week, it does thr just, nor sensible, nor re-

o- ,over 60% of thosewho pledge compared with most non-resident intefere with schoolwork.MIT fra- sponsible, action.tate about the philo- s n ole wethe or not iTt This symbol had appeared last

aims of Rush Week. c(ludesd thoe noste ror not MIT ternties are supposed to off er the week scrawled in many places onluhsta pio Etwould support wls fratern ities as pledge a chance to ve in a ma- tute, and

;everat~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pons AISinyU TomCpu as a ho tel facilityetee

avidly as it does now if oneampus 'ture living group, but often pledgs the,everal points in Tom Canpus as a hotel facility between a these small, but widespread de-

rial that bear com- fraternity visits. It is also interest- living conditions were improved is duties are Awong in principle, non-

tuime Ina be teerally Hor ~ugh the normcon ing to note that in the December irrelevant; it does now b it seasical at times, and'deceptivel iy thr oes oatmed whoWrogram was planned 6 issue of INFOCUS, the IFC could not provide housing facilities based on the axiom that after 18 ever,thrcoeatiewn)f time, and several publication, in an article about the for all studentsdesiring them if years of living, one is not yetcooperation were recent IFC meeting on Rush Week, a significant number of freshmen good enough to be a brother. By is the time.

the IFC, there was it was reaffirled that "Dormcon who usually pledge decided not to.- this 'same axiom, after one term e on People, show some of

of friction during the officials) have no purpose. in Because of the support MIT of performing various duties while th e same kind of responsibilitY

just prior to Rush speaking at .the meeting, but gives fraternities, and the rumored the brothers take a vacation from 'you would like to see.-in others.just prior to R ush g f n dt mS. J. Pecsenye '69

o pinio n w a s g e n e r aii y in rIa v o r 01 r p n i l n ig a in nof the major resultsrs of joint meetings,was that freshmen

dormitory upperclass-houses during the

period to show themanswer any questionshave about dormitoryrse, a program suchI fail if not adequately;o the Dormcon Chair-

opinion was g enerally in favor otallowing the DormnComm (sic)chairman to attend." I sincerelyhope that the future discussionsabout Rush Week will find allparties willing to question prac-tices in the light of what is bestfor the freshman, attending. It isonly with this kind of completeanalysis that we can hope tokeep Rush Week meaningful. Pro-

undesirability of the dorms (andoften of the people in the dorms),and because of the praise withwhich MIT and its fraternity menextoll outr system compared toothers elsewhere, the rushee isalmost brainwashed into believinghe must join a fraternity. At theleast, he is virtually forced toacknowledge that fraternities hereare superitr to those at AT,I, other

many.i V 1 UL L1 i

which fraternipledge is sudderh.od. Themeaning to thiis forced toleave the houticeipate in a sshare thehouse also sha

ity life requires, the

!enly ready for broth- 7 " -. ' "" " ..assignments are de- " S

ie pledge because he CHRISTcomplete them or I

se, rather than par- C;ystem where all who Today-II A.M.advantages of thearee the work equally. Kresge AudiforiumLawrenee Poster '71 . ' - :

I

I

I

EF-Ek

F

i

II

FS,R�kLFFEI

tIi7

k

rEi

FFf

iEF-

tI

f

vm

f

II

r--.--00-

c4

ue

LUr)Lu

C

(DLIJ

LJI IILIJ}--

W-W W-

I

-

S

IilI

Page 5: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

.L·~?IU-r*PiL~rri~c~·r- -. 'r -r 'Aa -r

comm erEFFRE SILVERMAN .

TWA Canpu: R.epresentative

He has command: :of a 172-jet fleet and ithe whole world ofTWA. He's waitingto set you up, for anadventure-any placein the U.S., Europe, Asia or Africa.

If you're shopping for facts-and figuresor a 50,'50 Club card, good for halrf faretravel in the U. S., he's the man to see.

You know what they say about all workand no play. So call Jeff at 734-7683. Andstart packing.P .S. Attention College Bands, Combos, Vocal Groups. Don'tforget the National Championships at the 1968 IntercollegiateJazz Festival sponsored by TWA. For information write: IJF,Box 246i, Miami Beach, Florida 33139.

Welcometo the world

Terans World Airines'... the alljet airline

*Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.

(Cou./iz)ied from Page 1)

where the. crowd shouted forT-shirts. The coeds complied witha few tidbits. Dean Wadleighasked the demonstrators to leaveagain, they objected again, andthey left again, except for onebrave soul who climbed into asecond floor window and wasnever seen again.

Amid cries of "HoJo" the crowdmoved down Memorial Drive tothe President's house. PresidentJohnson was aNway, so the crowdburned a few ceremonial com-puter cards and sang in unisonas Dean Wadleigh led them in"Silent Night."

To the sail

Someone shouted "The Sail"and they were off again. "That

they can have," said an .Instituteofficial who declined to be iden-tified. A fewv bonfires weresquashed by the Campus Patrolnear the sail, but then someonein Senior House pulled the firealarm. As the Cambridge Policearrived with the engines, the cry

was "Hide your Avatars!" By12:05, the "demonstration" hadrun out of places to go, and allthat remained was Dean Wad-leigh near the Sail, patiently ex-plaining to those who cared tolisten why the Institute was forcedto raise tuition.

Gray to adrmninrsaer plansfor Freshman-year change

(Con/finted from Page 1)

spent within one department,chances for innovation have beenmissed in the past. His job will beto act on decisions made by theCEP, which itself can only makerecommendations. By comparison,Prof. George Valley, undergradu-

. I'

McClean's Movingand Storage

Coast-to-Coast Moving24-Hour Service to New York,New Jersey and Pennsylvania,

Phone 522-8720

SUBGA DIVINGCLASSES

Coed - Boston YWCAKE 647940

ate Planning Professor, has beendoing research into the FreshmanYear, but is not in a position totake action.

WHI continue to teachGray is also professor in the

Department of Electrical Engineer-ing, and said that he would con-tinue to teach one recitation sec-tion at his new post. Dr. Gray isconsidered an authority on thephysical electronics and modelingof semi-conductors. He receivedhis BS (1954), MS (1955), and SCD(1960) from MIT, and was a FordPostdoctoral Fellow (1961-1963).

For the Holiday,treat yourself by coming to

D:IANA'S BARBER SHOPfor a haircut, razor cut or a hairstyle. We specialize in razor cuts

332 MASS, AVW.864-5288--Call for appointment

An eveninjn9W -

Melina a1raercu

Kresge A ditoriaum8:00 P.M.

Tickets: At T..A..; Lobby BlIlg. 0

Sponsored by the Greek students-of M.I.T.

BULLETIN No. 25h ss. lnsf te of T chnolgy

.... IL _ ti.t __ ,L

Ll4rCtlRTGK? 'EQUIP'NvT vFOIR

tYG bACtPA^CIetRE AND 4,COUIPtAttJ&lff!4

PC. s% 30tC.ab,.da. M as.& 02139

CVTAI.OiUS A 'ZI.a UAO ..

Store: ta4V C Oen.tlt% Avre.Alltron, moeG 6I7T, 4-d4S77

WINTER 1967-1968

OVER 25,00 1 acu UMr an, aun m |rs M.I.T.TIRES IN STOCK MAY PURCHASE IDENTIFICATION

INCLUDING . CARDFOREIGN AND REQUIRED

COMPACT SIZES t % [Vz E f TSAl w 40 loes~ale -priees

Qua lity~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~av~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

'Perfect Quality

dOODEM EARs Suburban;t.

'itrE8tto11I To.n & Co..try

ALL 13" & 14" SIZES

^t TAX .TRADE-IN

N M w RE9UIRED

TUBELESS

775175014825/800x14855/850114775/670x15/15171f82X15

90019151820x15

F.E.T.

$1.80

$2.21

$2.38

$2.s5

$2.23

$2.33

$2.53

$10>37'~l"$13 54

$1493Xo

$1 .596'15"$$13 54

$g @d43

$ 87'!4'""qS*'eNo Trade-In Required

NATION-WIDE GUARANTEENO LIMIT ON MILES eNO LIMIT ON MONTHS

(Adluition ; PtofolwlJ en TyfoJ D-plh. liold on Atlvol Cost Pr.ol

BAITEMES

F IR9 X TI RE M14JOU NT ING ; Most Cars

12 VOLT =.Ue G-mfa . ro.d-. flo b.ett

IU9ranM v*. 90 d-.

CAMBRID'GE TIR-E 6O MPANY COPYGHT 1967

"Wholesale Warehouse Distributors" AT-E 290 ALBANY STREET e CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 02139 SAE

Off Mass. Ave. Near M. I. T.

t o * TELEPHONE 864-7575 * o e PRICESHOURS - 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. WE SEIL

Monday and Wednesday: 7:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. R' .ne' Saturday: 7:30 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. DEAURS

'" ° ; ' 3. A EIR tS.TII e% 1C631Vlf:v'vZt A- HnALr .Lfi6UKt Uvr ;sWVIE:

MEMBER: GREATER BOSTON AND CLMsIDGE CHAMBERS OF COMMRBCE

I

--

m

rn

Cm

mm

m'0-

-

nc

(3Tl

ORIGINALEQUIPMENT

WHEELSFORALL

CARS

SAFETY - SPWINTER

TIRESGME YOU

Up to 60 % V educIbkl.ng d9itoae.

Up io 500 % 9 retolon o. ie. or poked

- - -marrarnaa~~

-olas~axra i~s~·~a~arrsasaar m

�rm�

I

L

II

r

'I

II

iI

III

iIi

I

an te Apa m~m

-

.1

10 ers visi 0 Jokaoo, i a aI

ONLY, ON-,SUNDAYDECEMBER 17

~~ola~~~~~t I

Page 6: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

THE CODONCORPORATIONspeel .computer s'semn

Several {ull and part-kimepositions exist for:

real-fine systems aalyssprogrammersconfl systems engineer

Please ceal or wrie:

THE CODONCORPORTION---Posf Ofice Bo= 137Cambridge, Mass. 02140

49268t70An Equal Oppodrunihy Emploer

-5~~~~~l BB~ i Sao R L B a~~~~~

oC§B cB -'"BaONNIE AND CLYDE"

2:00, 5:45, 9:35 D~~~~~= '"TOKYO OLYMPIAD" °g 4:05 - 8: 00

g Wednesday and 3 Thursday only:

6 "IIS$B"BUDDHA" '

e :30, 4:00, 6:30, 9:00

3 0

B~r CO~~~~~~~~~

Jeanne Moreau as "MADEMOISELLE"

5:30, 7:30, 9:30a ~~Wednesday: c

a '"TOM JONES"I S;U3XIaxuBn

_ _ _ _ _.--· · lr

~~C~LC~L~C~I~)~CIIi i pe�l�B�I�I��B�B�II�B��

Ysyocl /

t _mmmiaa

Headquarterso BOOTSo PARKASo PEACOATS

433$ MASS AVECentreal Sqare

Cembrdge I_ _ _ _-- -- 1 1--

M.I.T DRMASHOP&rviSs n he Ixht

By Berfolf BrechfDirected by Joseph Everingham

Wednesday through Safurday, Dec. 13-168:30 P.M.

tLITLE THEATREKRESGE AUDITORIUM, MlI

Tickets $1.50Res: UN 4-6900, Ext 291 0O

'Ar ESSAY IN CE-3UATIC TRUTHTELLIHGr'!

-Thime Magazine

BOB U9tAN

I W-Pw~a�

I

-

Club He hry IVCuisine par-Pierre-

Chef; Prop.(Formerly with the French Line)Lunch 12-2 Mont. thru Sat.Dinner 6.9 Mon. thru Thurs.

Open Friday-.fill 9 p.m.Saturday ill 10 p.m.

(Closed Sunday)s864-9-061 354-388

�s�L

�;�-"�--"------------------- *i P -- - --- --

VFmrai~n ---- --- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

, _~-- , .- - ------ -

I

I

I

I

III

I

I

I

I

l-

5a

iLP

7f

tz9vI

tr

z

t

s

I

II1.

-4D0

ce

I-l-00-

6

ILlcli

>=LU

Io<I--.T

B-LIIT'

I--

Ii

Photo by Peter HandlerThe Grafeful Dead, San Francisco blues-acid-rock group,

played at the Pschedelic Supermarket this past weekend. Stand-ing (I. to r.) are Phil Lesh, Bill the Drummer, Bob Weir, and Pigpen.Seated is group leader Jerry Garcia.

The Grateful Dead, one .f thecurrent popular San EranciscoBay area groups to make it bignationally, made teir Bostondebut Friday night at the Psyche-delic Supermarket. The most imn-pressive thing about their sets wasthe personal involvement and rap-port they had with the audience.If there is one characteristic be-sides the geographical that theSan Francisco groups have incommon, it is this genuinewaamth, openness, and just plainfriendliness: the idea, that-. "welove you." In a conversafion be-tween sets, guitarist and groupleader Jerry "Captain Trips"Garcia reflected this musical phil-osophy.

| MusiJcal fendshipsGarcia is generally recognized

as one of the four or five bestrock guitarists. He and theamorphous object knoAn only asPigpen form the nucleus of thegroup. (Pigpen's real name, ac-cording to Dead guitarist Bob.Weir, is "'Hogg Corralf-two g's,two l's.") The group hasalso hadtwo drummers for two monthsnow. The woe group are goodfriends with all the Bay Areagroups, going back to the time

when they were all starving on thestreets together. For example,Garcia is very close to JorrmaKaukonen and Jack Casady of theJefferson Airplane, as well as BigBrother and the Holding Com-pany's Janis Joplin, who alongwith Pigpen is SF's nwnumber oneposter idol, and whom Garcia calls"the best chick blues singer thereis."

C5ontac with audieneeDisappointed that the audience

sat and listened rather than danceddurirg the first Set, they openedthe second show with a freely i-provised half-hour version of "Inthe Midnight Hour," which includ-ed bits of "Get on Up" and othersongs. Mr. Ross Laver, whso runsthings at the Supermarket, said,"I've been trying to get people todance for two months, and thisis the first time it's happenled. It'sgreat."

Recording historyThe Dead's performance live is

completely distinct from that ontheir Waraner Brothers album.Their songs, which average tento fifteen minutes inr person, werecut, except for "Viola Lee Blues,"to lengths compatible with theusual L: fornat. For this reasonthey will probably never have ahit single, although they put out"'he Golden Road (To UnlimitedDevotion) "/"Crearn Puff War"last spring. They are scheduled torelease another single in Febru-ary, and a new album, which Wvillcontain live tracks, in March.

win thJOAN BA3EZ

bQsm.; XAAi~t ,BROOME=_Imuff

WILL YOU PLEASE TAKE ABOUT $4 FROMYOUR WALLET AND THROW IT AWAY ?

Silly? Not if you nowhave a personal checkingaccount on which you pay

-- a monthly service charge.Why? Because only witha Coolidge-bank "NOSERVICE CHARGE"Personal Checking Accountis the service chargecompletely eliminated.Look at the monthlystatements on yourpresent account anld findout how much you'll savein a year with a Coolidge-bank account. And when

you maintain a hundred ,dollar minimum balanice'

through the month, youcet unlimited free -checkswith your name imprintedin any of our three attractive

styles, along with a monthlyNORTH TROY.VERMONT

(~ or s aa.2~u~0wamn mm ptums so rmwStStMw~lMAROOtow rvfo u tlsoffIYou couldstate ment .save as much as a $1-00a year if you:

RETURN CONVENIENT COUPON TODAY !

i -So c(CODE)':~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.¥

:585 M\ount AulbuAlrn St.S.. Wat(ertown l'hone 9)2G-140( ' E.?~~ Branches in Watertown Square and in Harvard '.

Squae and the Fresh Pond Shopping Center -in Cambridg e.

Yes, I'd like to 'e all serviicet charl es oil my checkin~tgaccounlt, Ildeaset forward(l pp)liecattion fornms to:

NAME ,

ST. &NO .......

CITY, STATE, & ZIP - X

.:ll three Coo* */lidge Bank Ofic., asrc * pt .* 'rtm 9 A.;1. to 172:J0

.9 . se Ird.ty. At1T- 1{'f I II(, flC1f l i rdg of ie yu antia*Iil9:00 P'.M. fn Thursday at)nd Fridi!l.MEINIBER FE)EIRAI, D)EPI'()SIT INSU l'AN(E C Ol, 11.Smme 8S, &ftm 1wfi$ 101fi8 $Elk& Wm N1k1X ;I'm, mark NXt4*1 AI,$R= W d

... B SBy Steve Grant

AilJay Peak Vemneall thisand Wafter too!

N ew 61 pmrgern tram triplespur skiin tinme

. Weter Foegees f== waturTekni Ski School

* instant IY replay*t Oer 4 bails and slopes* East's higest snowmaeing area* Attrcthie st week rates

SKI EQUIPMENT Large Variely - Famous Brands

Tennis A Squash Shop67A Mt. Aubur St., CambridgeOpp. Lowell House TR 6.5417

Peace Corps rge G WN- FM -

LET'S TAKE A CgAtg ATCOaT AaMS, IB(@.@..@@

. ~ ~~~ ~ ~~ .,

Dow Chemigal has suffered enough!

Peace Corps meeting Tuesday, December 12--7:30 P.M.

Booth in Building IO

Page 7: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

l denfify is major heme of Pinfer'sBy Ray Hagstrom

Recently a lady wrote Harold

Pinter, -in reference to one of his

plays, "Who are the two men?-

Where did they come from?-Are

they supposed to be normal?" The

playwright replied, "Who are you?-Where did you come from?-Areyou Supposed to be normal?"--theanswer was not as devious as itmight seem. The theme of iden-tity is again foremast in Pinter'slatest production, 'The Dwarfs,"now playing at the Theatre Com-pany of Boston.

Three facets of one man

The plot of "The Dwarfs" re-volves around three characters

You 'AreEligible

If you live or work inMassachusetts, you areeligible for low cost,high quality, life insur-ance in a mutual or-ganizat/on with anoutstanding record offinancial soundness.Founded as a publicservice in 1907, Sav-ings ank Life In-surance is sold onlythrough Mutual Sav-ings Banks direct tokeep cost low. And al-though not guaranteed,dividends have beenpaid to policyholdersevery year since 1908,to reduce cost stillfurther.Savings ok Life In-surance policies areavailable in a wide va-riety of forms. To findout what Savings BankLife policy will meetyour needs best, visita mutual savings bankand ask for persona!counselling about Sav-ings Bank Life Insur-ance. It could be one

cial moves you'll ever.a' 1 ,

CAMIbEBDGEPORTSAVINGS

RIGT- INt

8e -s5 -86545271

whose identities meld as the playunfolds. By the end of the play,Mark, Len and Pete resemble thethree facets of personality. Markis the vain one who never blowshis cool, he needs the other char-acters to serve him. Pete is soberand businesslike-he fought hisway up the social ladder from arustic background to the city. Hesays characteristically, "Thinkinggot me into this and thinking'sgot to get me out." Len is caughtbetween these two. They do battlefor his attention. He feels no greatneed for the other two characters,yet he bows to their wishes.

He is further persecuted by theDwarfs. The' Dwarfg intend to doMark and Pete harm, but Len is·trying to protect them. The focusof the plot is the gradual realiza-tion that in spite of their clashes,the three men need each other tosurvive. The conclusion of this is

stated, "We depend on these con-trived accidents to survive."

The play itself is another suc-cess for Pinter. There is a verynatural unfolding of the actionthroughi the characters. Never dothey react out of countenance.Skillful acting and directing ironout the difficult parts where aweaker performance would makethe action implausible.

Williams seems crude

Pinter himself picked "The Lo-cal Stigmatic" by Heathcote Wil-liams as the running mate for"The Dwarfs." Pinter is a hardact to follow. The characters bycomparison seem out of place.The action is blunt--Williams triesto beat some response out of theaudience. Certainly this is a validmeans of eliciting reaction, but itseems crude after Pinter's finesse.Williams' best-used tactic is the

The Dwarfs"well delivered obscenity. The play

culminates in the beating and tor-

ture of an innocent man. The

actors rise to the situatiorn with a

more than adequate performance.

This play is well done and well

written. Its appeal is different

than "the Dwarfs."

The Theatre Company of Boston

has moved to a new location.

They have remodelled a theatre

located at 136 Mass. Ave., just off

Boylston. The new quarters are

much better than their previous

rather spartan arrangements at

the Hotel Touraine. This new lo-

cation, being quite close to cam-

pus, coupled with the well chosen

repertoire this season promises to

make TCB a likely spot for an

evening out.

/

j f a To: Eastern Air Lines, Inc. IB Poster Offer #2 2AI adz | Box 4211 I Grand Ceniral Station

New York, N.Y. 10017

!Please send me the three psychedelic posters, for which I enclose 3a $2.00 money order or check (payable to Eastern Air Lines, Inc.,Poster Offer).

Name

Address

City State Zip

C ] Send me a Youth Fare Application, too.% I ~ ,8._.................. oa .....................

We wanTEveryone to flyWe want everyone to fly.

4 MEN NEEDED$3o00 per hourCALL BOB HEWITT

326-31 4

RACKETS RESTlUNG

Tennis & Squash Shop67A Mt. Auburn St., Cambride

(Opp. Lowell House)TR 6-5417

Tm-qmC)©

--ICm

rr)

mE1

-Dm70

a,

-4

All Makes - Large VarietySQUASH RACQUETS

Tennis S quash Shop67A Mt. Auburn Sp., Cambridge

(Opp,, Lowell House)TR 654B17

................... _- - - ~

HOUSE OF ROYREAL CHINESE FOOD

Open daily from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m.Food Put Up To Take Out

25 TYLER STREET, BOSTON I 1

DE 8=8882

I- - - - - - -.. - - - -- - - - -

f-

I - q

__3a~aaar~mraaLlapr 88~

on-ma-mosm - - - - - -m-m- gum

~8p1~D1

i

i

1

1i

I

IF

I

I

i.J~

Ft

I

i II%

I

- k% I -

~~ne ~~c~v, %W

Page 8: Abraham b$egeI receives oman Schoooi ap&-notmenttech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N52.pdf · 2008-09-26 · teen MIT Alumni Clubs throughout the country will be holding meet- ings ... Engineering

m zymniasts stop Dartmouth- Te- CagVI @de@ RPI, 6$ 67gSophss-+ar in 24-i107 win

,By George Novosielskd aorig N ..... __t_ .…L .. ........ 1i ravelng to anrmoutm, tne varsity gymnasts smasnea mtem

124-107 for their second straight win. The Techmen were led by cap-tain Dick Hood '70 with two firsts and Phil Miller '70 with a first anda second.

The match stayed close for the first four events before theBeavers widened their lead at the finish. Dartmouth took the floorexercise, but Mike Devorkin '69 came right back with a first on theside horse. Next, Hood and Tom Hafer '70 combined to take one-twoin the still rings.

After losing the trampoline, Miller and Hood swept long horsevaulting. Hafer then took a second on the parallel bar and finallyHood and Miller reversed places to place one-two in the high bar.

Coach Wright's forces look to their third victory tomorrow whenthey invade Plymouth State.

For those not familiar with gymnastics, it is a great spectatorsport. Similar to diving on -the competitive level, the porformance ofthe competitor is based solely on the quality of his performance.

GrapplersBy Armen ¥Varteressian

In their first dual meet of theseason, the Tech wrestlers pound-ed a young but strong squad from.the University of Connecticut fora convincing 29-8 victory. Techlook the first eight matches, los-.ing only the 177 and 191 poundbouts of the eleven on the bill.

Joe Baron '70 started the after- ,.noon off in the 115 pound contestwith a 7:39 pin over Rich Ruka. '" Captain Bill Harris '68 followed ':-with a 5-0 shutout over Laird Rich- :mond, and Gregg Erickson '69 .,Abrought the score to 11-0, defeat- .:ing Dave Kievit 9-2. :

UConn's Art Johnson was thefirst victim of Steve Bishko '68,back from a 2-year absence from WMalthe mat. Bishko scored two take- pound wdowns and an escape in a 5-4 de- ing Passeeision victoryv Tech,_mrlled on as f;,. A,..Jack Maxham '69 blanked BruceMeller 7-0, and Norm Hawkins '68 Though icoasted to -a 9-0 decision over Ed legiate rrnNusbaum. The 160 pound -match escapes awas a repeat of last year's firosh opponent.New England finals as Rick Wil-- The heloughby '70 met Stewart Levine. Fred AndThough Rick pinned Levine last UConn's Iyear, he had to settle for a 13-5 parentlyvictory this time. The meet score ponent'srose to 26-0 as Walt Price '70 rode tage, beato a 13-1 victory over John Pas- gained ccsarini. early in -

UConn finally scores rained inUConn put its only points on the more tha:

board in the 177 and 191 poufid eight-minimatches, as former New England tory.2nd place medalist Pat Ford- The eng'pinned Tech's Joel Mosher '70 in. sity of Ne4:07, and ex-heavyweight Vie Kin- day at 3:on defeated Jeff Cove '70 14-3. nasium.

The Tech pistol team had afield day Saturday as they de-feath a yLg _noston State ternrm2196-1872. Considering that theusual margin for a pistol matchseldom exceeds 50 points, thevictory was fairly decisive. Lead-ing the home shooters was EddieBusick '68 with a 566. The otherthree qualifying shooters wereDennis Swanson '68 with a 560;Dave Asbell '70, 544; and DonFujimoto '69, 526. The next match,on December 16, will be withNavy, national champions lastyear.

Sharpshooters split twoThe Tech riflemen suffered their

first loss of the season last Thurs.day when they lost to BostonCollege 1297-1273. All five of thetop shooters for the Tech teamshot below their average, aseveryone seemed to have troubleadjusting to BC's rifle range.

The engineers bounced backSaturday with a 1279-1233 victoryover Providence College. CaptainDemnnis Artmen led the Tech

Photo by Bill Swedish

Pistol captain Eddie Busick'68 fires in the meet with, Bos-ton State, which the engineerswon by over 300 points. X

squad with a 268, backed up byDave Hunt '69, 257; TomStellinger '70, 253; Karl Lamson'70, 249; and Bob Kirkpatrick '70,247.

BBy Steve WienerDave Jansson '68 poured five

points through the hoop in thefinal eighteen seconds to lead thevarsity cagers to a 68-67 squeakerover RPI ' over the weekend.Down -by seven with less thanthree minutes to go, Tech wentinto an effective full court pressto set the stage for Jansson'sheroics and even their record at2-2.

Opening in a zone defense,Tech stymied the RPI attack inthe first few minutes. However,Jansson was cold from the out-side, hitting only 4 of 14 from the

floor durirn the half. Alec Bash"68 picked up some of the scoringload by netting five of six drives.

Bash had Tech ahead by 25-21with five minutes left in the halfwhen the hosts' Bob Fergusonspearheaded a nine point rally.Bruce Wheeler '70 swished fromthe key, Lee Kamrnmerdiner '68hit a jumper from the side andBash tallied two to knot the score,but RPI regained the lead at35-33 just before the period ended.

Second half closeIn the second stanza RPI closed

up-.the key to Bash, forcing theengineers to -shoot from the out-side. Jansson set the pace bynetting two twenty-footers in thefirst minute. Wheeler added an-other from outside the key to tiethe count at 39-39 at 17:45.

With the score reading 63-56and 2:40 left in the game, CoachBarry sent MIT into a full court

- man-to-man press. Chamberlainpicked up his third- and fourthfouls, but RPI missed two of thefour foul shots. Jansson hit ajumped from deep on the sidewhile Bash made good on a driveand a free throw. The two teamstraded baskets, giving RPI a67-63 margin with thirty secondsleft.

Jansson then drove the middle,

Photo by Charlie Pastors

Captain Dave Jansson '68takes an outside iump shotagai'nst RPI. Jansson scored 27as he led Tech to a 68-67 win.

sinking his shot and drawing afoul, which he converted. Tlhehosts took the ball out wvith 17seconds left and tried a long passto break the press. Jansson in-tercepted and dribbled down courtfor the winning basket, and 27points to lead the scoring.

, WiTh. four-goal final periodPhoto by Jeff Reynolds

t Price '70 is in control of John Passarini, UConn's 167restler. Price had little trouble winning the match, beat-arini 13-1. Tech grapplers trounced UConn 29-8 in theiri meet of the season.

it was his first intercol-latch, Jeff scored threeagainst his older, heavier

eavyweight match sawtree '70 matched againstFred Cesana. Andree ap-did not notice his op-60-pound weight advan-ating Cesana 6-0. Fredontrol with a takedownthe first period, and re-n control of Cesana, forn seven minutes of thelute match for his vic-

gineers host the Uxniver-:w Hampshire this Satur-:30 in the DuPont gym-

Tech's hockey team bouncedback from losing its opening gameto UMass by beating WPI by ascore 0of 4-2 in the home openerhere Thursday night.

WPI. took the lead with a goal

By John WargoTech's indoor track team bowed 62-42 to a hard-running Bates

team at Lewiston, Maine Saturday. It was a highly competitive meet,with five meet records and three cage records set.

The engineers' strength in the distance events netted them only 12points to Bates' 15. Ben Wilson '70 eclipsed the meet.and cage recordsir the mile with a quick 4:18.8 on the 170 yard square track. Batestook second and third, with Geggatt breaking 4:22 for a new Batesteam record.

In the 1000, Wilson and John Owens '70 set a blistering pace forthe first 600 yards, only to beaten by a Bates runner in a fast 2:19.Wilson pulled in a second with the best time of his career in the1000, followed by a Bates man.

Jim Yankaskas '69 and Larry Petro '70 led the two mile untilLarsen of-Bates passed themi at the 11i/ mile point on his way to ameet record of 9:51.4.

Captain Steve Sydoriak '68 valuted to new meet and cage recordswith a 14' 42" to win the .pole vault.

Higgens of Bates set a meet record and tied the cage record witha5.0 in the 45 yard dash to barely nose out Larry Kelly '70 for first.

] Williams of Bates tied the meet record with a 5.9 effort in the 45 yardhigh hurdles to beat Henry Hall '70 by three yards. Owens capturedthe 600 in a fast 1:17.1, and Pete Maybeck '68 and Bruce Lautensch-lager '70 took one-two in the shot put.

Pa tou Sas will meet Gree ffieldIn thle IM pocket bi l'ards finas

An exciting match between twofine pocket billiards shooters willbe held in the Sala de PuertoRico Thursday, at 8 pm, for theIM championship.

George Pantoulias '70 will meetAlan Greenfield '69 in a matchthat promises to be very close.Pantoulias this past Saturday de-feated Peter Hamilton-Smith '70to gain his position in the match.Hamtilto-Smith, a little regardedcandidate at the outset of thetournament, proved himself to bean excellent competitor these pastweeks and he put up a fine battleagainst Pantoulias, who had runs

of 15 and 19 balls. Pantouliasfinally won by a score of 125-98.

Greenfield has had little troublein. his march to the finals. A fineshooter and strategist, he shouldprove to be an even match forthe dynamic and almost recklessstyle of -Pantoulias. The matchhas an added interest in that bothfinalists are from Pi-Lambda Phi.The match will be played to 125points, as it has been the pasttwo years. Elevated seating willbe provided for 300 spectators.The match will be open to allmembers of the MIT community.

after dominating most of the firstperiod. In the second period, itadded to its advantage with asecond score, as the Tech skatersfailed to take advantage of sev-eral opportunities.

Once the third period got under-way, captain Mike Harris '68brought the team back to life bycarrying the puck through virtual-ly the entire WPI team andpounding it by the goalie forMIT's first goal of the year. Afew minutes later, with a Wor-cester player in the penalty box,the power play paid off as MikeTalalay '69 managed to knock ina rebound. With the score tied,MIT continued to put on the pres-sure and with less than fourminutes left in the game ScottRhodes '69 edged around the de-fense and fired the puck on goal.Mike Neschleba '69 roared in toslap the rebound into the net forthe winning goal.

In the final minutes, WPI pulledits. goalie for an extra forward.With less than 30 seconds left, thepuck slid towards an open cornerof the Tech Net, but goalie SteveEriksen '69 managed to deflect it.In the final second of play,Neschleba fired the puck in theopen goal for the final score.

0-

i o .a,

0a z

f0 V X M

. 74 nV'23

C L~·V'

CN

.aLJ_U

IN_

u

1D>z-

Lu

k-

II

f

f-

I

9

tF

I-

r-IIrDI9EV

F

I

F Inal score 29-8

;=·: i:

i`F

['`'*

:`·� :···'··:r :�-����5-`·.. .�..��;.,x·., �: ·:a

·a``� `

�? :2:.:-

r

I

··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I'l 1.1, II Oi' ...~ rI

IRmn

,o~6nnro .u

Skaf~ers sf op \AIBPI, 4-2

V~ilsn, S rieak breakmeet and cage records

is o eam rouncnnes Bos on a co9ei er~s s w h C, rovi ence