16
Vol. 86, No. 40 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, Oct. 25, 1966 I 1;t ISC. Arab Club to conduct 1: 0 1 2aday se minor on Lebanon It The International Students Coun- dcil in aooperation with the Arab Club at MIT is sponsoring a 2-day semnaz on the 5th and 6th of Novernbr, entitled "Lebanon: A Case Study of Democracy and aissez-Faire." The semWi is going to be conducted on a purely academnic level with students participating in the presentation of papers tiat will be discused by series of panels of experts. Experts on The experts will include Profes- sors Carles Kindleberger, Daniel Lerner, Everett Hagen, and Paul Oppemmann from M.I.T.; Profes- sors Nadar Safrau, Kamal Salibi, end Ahrnad Farna from Harvard, Professor Hisham Shaabi from Georgetomwn University in Wash- ington; Miss Pheobe Murr of the Center for Mddle-Eastern Studies, Halvard; and Mr. Leonard Katz, a member of the science advisory boards of Presidents Kennedy and Johson. The topics will cover introduc- t(0.M, ~mir dii wrng-- Leber- on's history and culture. This will be followed by sessions on Leban- on's free enterprise economy, low- cost housing projects, democracy in Lebanon and problems of the vast number of the Lebanese im- migrants with special mention to those in the USA. In connection with the semninar the Lobdell dining room is going to provide a comrnplete Lebanese menu at lunch and dinner on Saturday, November 5, 1966. By Karen Wattel The recent excavations at Ma- sada were the subject of a lec- ture by Professor Yigael Yadin of the Hebrew University, at Kresge Auditorium on Friday afternoon before 800 people. MIT Hillel sponsored the presentation. Introduced by Edgerton Harold E. Edgerton, Professor of 'lectric-al Engineering, who By Mark Boltin The traditional Field Day matching of the Freshman Class against the Sophomore Class, slated for 10 pm Friday; Nov. 11, will take on a new twist this year. In addition to occurring on a Friday for the first time, Field Day will have a unifying theme underlying each of its events. Field Day theme The theme of Field Day will be that of war game exercises by Galactic Rivals, centered on Ve- nus. Whenever possible, this theme is to be worked into each class's costuming and construc- tion. For those who are not familiar with Field Day, the event is de- signed to be a series of contests matching the wits, strength, and organization of both classes. Therefore, Field Day is composed of both the actual events on the field and preparations before Fri- day. Class flag required In the way of preparations, each class must have a class flag. This flag must be of the class color- green for the Class of '70 and blue for the Class of '69. These flags must be presented to Field Day Chairman Dick Coul- ter '67 for inspection, approval, and certification at least one week before Field Day. Each class is responsible for protecting its flag from capture by the opposing class, as failure to have the flag for Field Day will result in loss of points. Further, each participant in Field Day must have his name affixed to his back when Field Day begins. All are urged to wear their class's colors throughout Field Day. Events for the day The events for this year's Field Day are: Field Ambulance Serv- ice (Bed Marathon), worth 15 had met Yadin before, introduced him to the audience as a patriot, military leader, teacher, and ar- chaeologist who a few days earl- ier, had had a book published. After a brief introduction, Pro- fessor Yadin showed slides he had taken during the eleven- month project at Masada, narrat- ing both the history and the story of use e -avatios- he Whst illg Faculty spomlih h i erigron na s oarbor By Dave Kaye Beneath the bottom of the Bos- ton Harbor, embedded in sedi- mfent, is a mountain known as the MIT Peak." It was discovered by Professor Harold E. Edgerton in a survey of the Boston Harbor utilizing sonar techniques he has recently developed. Photographie techniques A pioneer in the fields of high speed and underwater photog- raphy, as well as sonar and elec- thonic flash techniques, Dr. Edg- erton first came to MIT in 1926 to obtain his Master's Degree in 4ee-trical Engineering. In subse- quent years he earned two more degrees (Sc.D. and D.Eng.), his preset position as Professor of Ilectrical Measurements, and the title of Institute Professor. Atop Prudeniat Bulldg tbr high school physics texts t! the top of the Prudential Build- g, rsults of Dr. Edgerton's studies in high speed photography and electronic flash techniques !m'iest themselves. Yet few real- e how diverse the applications of esearch in this field are. For example, the First laser was stim- Professor Harold E. Edgerton, well-known for his work in high-speed photography, stands with some of the equipment he often uses. The stroboscopes he has worked with have been used in such places as atop the Prudential Tower or the Green Building. ulated by a neon flash lamp he developed. His work in gaseous diffusion in lamps has found ap- plication in plasma physics, and his photographic techniques are used in such fields as medical re- search and particle physics. Snar to map sea floor Although Professor Edgerton is known primarily for his work in high speed photography, he is at present extremely interested in sonar techniques. About ten years ago, Dr. Edgerton started using sonar in conjunction with his stud- ies in deep-sea photography. From the first rudimentary application of sonar to control the depth of his deep-sea cameras on Jacques Cousteau's ship in the Mediter- ranean, Dr. Edgerton has pro- (Please turn to Page 5) points; Field-Repair Maneuvers (Tank Movements), worth 15 points; Nursing Corps Training (Unknown Event I), worth 10 points; Discipline Maneuvers (Un- known Event II), worth 10 points; Routing Entrenched Troops (Tlug- of-war), worth 15 points; and Hand-to-hand C o m b a t (Glove Fight), worth 35 points. Bed Marathon The Field Ambulance Service will be a half-hour race on a standard single bed, equipped with rubber wheels and safety de- vices. The bed, along with one coed "nurse" atop it must be pushed around a 440-yard oval course. If, at any time during the race, the sheets on a particular bed are deemed "unsanitary" by the Beaver Key Marshall, that bed must come in for a change of sheets. Five of the points to be awarded for the event go to the class with the "best-made" bed and nurse combination. For the Field-Repair Maneuv- ers, each class must construct an extra-terrestial combat tank. The tank must be pushed across an erratic course, laid out by Beaver Key to avoid enemy fire. (Please turn to Page 6) Speaks before $SRS Morrison tells experiences of,Rosenberg spy case By Paul Johston Professor Philip Morrison, of the MIT Physics department, spoke on "The Rosenberg -Sobel Case and the Climate of Scientific Research" at a New England- wide meeting of the Society for Social Responsibility in Science, held Saturday in the Student Center. The meeting followed a 12:30 luncheon in the Lobdell Dining Room. Remarks on S S R S Attorney Albert Allen of Boston opened the meeting with some preliminary remarks about the SSRS. He observed that at the time of its founding in the late 1940's and early 1950's the "or- ganization (was) unprepared to cope with the times," but that it now makes every attempt to keep abreast of new develop- ments. He said that the organiza- tion is aimed at scientists, but others are welcomed as associ- ate members. along. In 1963, he had been asked by the Hebrew University and other backers to lead an archaeo- logical expedition to Masada, a site in Israel, which he termed the "mausoleum of martyrs." At this spot, in 73 AD, three years after the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus, 960 Jewish Zealots "defied the might of Rome." On th ve e of Passver, as they were surrounded by Rom- an legions, they decided to "die free rather than submit." They burned nearly everything and then drew lots to see who would be the last to die. Lots found The most dramatic moment on the expedition, according to Yad- in, was when the diggers found what they believed to be the lots of the last eleven men. They are flat stones or shell about one inch square with nicknames on each in ink. One bears the name of the commander of the Zealots. Refuge for King Herod Originally the site was fortified by King Herod the Great as a potential refuge for himself, as he was not sure of his city's loyalty and was especially afraid of Egypt's Cleopatra. It was a royal citadel - not an ordinary fort, with a palace and villas. It was not until the expedition, however, that his actual refuge was found. Yadin felt that it was the simple things of the Zealots which gave spirit to Herod's surrounmdings. Volunteers come How the site was to be dug was the first problem to be faced. It would have been sacriligious to hire the usual laborers, Y a d i n said, so they asked for volunteers. Thousands of applications came in, from over 28 countries, des- pite the warnings of bad food (Please turn to Page 11) Photo by Steve Rife Professor Philip Morrison speaks before the SSRS on the appeal of the famous Rosen- berg-Sobell Case. Dr. Morrison then began his talk, which concerned itself prim- arily with his own experiences with the Rosenberg - Sobell case during the last few months. The effects of this much litigated case, he said, have greatly af- fected the American mind, and it is now, ornce again, being in- vestigated. Beganm with phone call Last June Dr. Morrison receiv- ed a telephone call from a lawyer in New York City. She was work- ing in "Civil Liberties" law, and was concerned with re -investi- gating the case of Morton Sobell and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. As a result of their trial the tvc-ke Ssat mvYoeit vfar Rosenergs were - fr espionage, and Sobell, who was only slightly connected with the conspiracy, was imprisoned for thirty years. During the trial, David Green- glass, Mrs. Rosenberg's brother, and a co - defendant, confessed his involvement in the conspiracy, asking for clemency. In his tes- (Please turn to Page 5) $eni@rs receve mod-school ls The Faculty- Graduate School Booklets for the Class of 1967 are now being distributed. Seniors living in either dormitories or fraternities should already have their copies; apartment dwellers may receive their copies at the Josh White booth in Building 10. The booklet has been prepared mainly to assist those who are as yet unsure of what Graduate School they might wish to attend. Provided is an alphabetical list- ing, by department, of faculty members, their college affilia- tions, and fields of interest. It is hoped that one will obtain from these faculty members first-hand information concerning schools in which one is interested. A number of extra booklets has been printed; interested non- seniors may acquire these at the Josh White booth also. i i i I I I t 11 I L ,I I f I I K I II It I 11I ,I i I I iil, II Ii I I a Im I ROUINce me a evein s aln, 0In S la s on asa a re u e

me a evein s aln,ROUINce - The Tech - MIT's Oldest and ...tech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N40.pdf · and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. As a result of their trial the tvc-ke Ssat mvYoeit vfar

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  • Vol. 86, No. 40 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, Oct. 25, 1966

    I

    1;t ISC. Arab Club to conduct1: 01 2aday se minor on LebanonIt

    The International Students Coun-dcil in aooperation with the ArabClub at MIT is sponsoring a 2-daysemnaz on the 5th and 6th ofNovernbr, entitled "Lebanon: ACase Study of Democracy and

    aissez-Faire."The semWi is going to be

    conducted on a purely academniclevel with students participatingin the presentation of papers tiatwill be discused by series ofpanels of experts.

    Experts onThe experts will include Profes-

    sors Carles Kindleberger, DanielLerner, Everett Hagen, and PaulOppemmann from M.I.T.; Profes-sors Nadar Safrau, Kamal Salibi,end Ahrnad Farna from Harvard,Professor Hisham Shaabi fromGeorgetomwn University in Wash-ington; Miss Pheobe Murr of theCenter for Mddle-Eastern Studies,Halvard; and Mr. Leonard Katz,a member of the science advisoryboards of Presidents Kennedy andJohson.

    The topics will cover introduc-t(0.M, ~mir dii wrng-- Leber-

    on's history and culture. This willbe followed by sessions on Leban-on's free enterprise economy, low-cost housing projects, democracyin Lebanon and problems of thevast number of the Lebanese im-migrants with special mention tothose in the USA.

    In connection with the semninarthe Lobdell dining room is goingto provide a comrnplete Lebanesemenu at lunch and dinner onSaturday, November 5, 1966.

    By Karen WattelThe recent excavations at Ma-

    sada were the subject of a lec-ture by Professor Yigael Yadinof the Hebrew University, atKresge Auditorium on Fridayafternoon before 800 people. MITHillel sponsored the presentation.

    Introduced by EdgertonHarold E. Edgerton, Professor

    of 'lectric-al Engineering, who

    By Mark BoltinThe traditional Field Day

    matching of the Freshman Classagainst the Sophomore Class,slated for 10 pm Friday; Nov. 11,will take on a new twist thisyear. In addition to occurring ona Friday for the first time, FieldDay will have a unifying themeunderlying each of its events.

    Field Day themeThe theme of Field Day will be

    that of war game exercises byGalactic Rivals, centered on Ve-nus. Whenever possible, thistheme is to be worked into eachclass's costuming and construc-tion.

    For those who are not familiarwith Field Day, the event is de-signed to be a series of contestsmatching the wits, strength, andorganization of both classes.Therefore, Field Day is composedof both the actual events on thefield and preparations before Fri-day.

    Class flag requiredIn the way of preparations, each

    class must have a class flag. Thisflag must be of the class color-green for the Class of '70 and bluefor the Class of '69.

    These flags must be presentedto Field Day Chairman Dick Coul-ter '67 for inspection, approval,and certification at least one weekbefore Field Day. Each class isresponsible for protecting its flagfrom capture by the opposingclass, as failure to have the flagfor Field Day will result in lossof points.

    Further, each participant inField Day must have his nameaffixed to his back when FieldDay begins. All are urged to weartheir class's colors throughoutField Day.

    Events for the dayThe events for this year's Field

    Day are: Field Ambulance Serv-ice (Bed Marathon), worth 15

    had met Yadin before, introducedhim to the audience as a patriot,military leader, teacher, and ar-chaeologist who a few days earl-ier, had had a book published.

    After a brief introduction, Pro-fessor Yadin showed slides hehad taken during the eleven-month project at Masada, narrat-ing both the history and the storyof use e -avatios- he Whst

    illg Faculty spomlih h

    i erigron na s oarbor By Dave Kaye

    Beneath the bottom of the Bos-ton Harbor, embedded in sedi-mfent, is a mountain known as the

    MIT Peak." It was discoveredby Professor Harold E. Edgertonin a survey of the Boston Harborutilizing sonar techniques he hasrecently developed.

    Photographie techniquesA pioneer in the fields of high

    speed and underwater photog-raphy, as well as sonar and elec-thonic flash techniques, Dr. Edg-erton first came to MIT in 1926to obtain his Master's Degree in4ee-trical Engineering. In subse-quent years he earned two moredegrees (Sc.D. and D.Eng.), hispreset position as Professor ofIlectrical Measurements, and thetitle of Institute Professor.

    Atop Prudeniat Bulldgtbr high school physics texts

    t! the top of the Prudential Build-g, rsults of Dr. Edgerton's

    studies in high speed photographyand electronic flash techniques!m'iest themselves. Yet few real-e how diverse the applications of

    esearch in this field are. Forexample, the First laser was stim-

    Professor Harold E. Edgerton, well-known for his work inhigh-speed photography, stands with some of the equipment heoften uses. The stroboscopes he has worked with have been usedin such places as atop the Prudential Tower or the Green Building.

    ulated by a neon flash lamp hedeveloped. His work in gaseousdiffusion in lamps has found ap-plication in plasma physics, andhis photographic techniques areused in such fields as medical re-search and particle physics.

    Snar to map sea floorAlthough Professor Edgerton is

    known primarily for his work inhigh speed photography, he is at

    present extremely interested insonar techniques. About ten yearsago, Dr. Edgerton started usingsonar in conjunction with his stud-ies in deep-sea photography. Fromthe first rudimentary applicationof sonar to control the depth ofhis deep-sea cameras on JacquesCousteau's ship in the Mediter-ranean, Dr. Edgerton has pro-

    (Please turn to Page 5)

    points; Field-Repair Maneuvers(Tank Movements), worth 15points; Nursing Corps Training(Unknown Event I), worth 10points; Discipline Maneuvers (Un-known Event II), worth 10 points;Routing Entrenched Troops (Tlug-of-war), worth 15 points; andHand-to-hand C o m b a t (GloveFight), worth 35 points.

    Bed MarathonThe Field Ambulance Service

    will be a half-hour race on astandard single bed, equippedwith rubber wheels and safety de-vices. The bed, along with onecoed "nurse" atop it must be

    pushed around a 440-yard ovalcourse. If, at any time during therace, the sheets on a particularbed are deemed "unsanitary" bythe Beaver Key Marshall, thatbed must come in for a changeof sheets. Five of the points to beawarded for the event go to theclass with the "best-made" bedand nurse combination.

    For the Field-Repair Maneuv-ers, each class must construct anextra-terrestial combat tank. Thetank must be pushed across anerratic course, laid out by BeaverKey to avoid enemy fire.

    (Please turn to Page 6)

    Speaks before $SRS

    Morrison tells experiencesof,Rosenberg spy case

    By Paul JohstonProfessor Philip Morrison, of

    the MIT Physics department,spoke on "The Rosenberg -SobelCase and the Climate of ScientificResearch" at a New England-wide meeting of the Society forSocial Responsibility in Science,held Saturday in the StudentCenter. The meeting followed a12:30 luncheon in the LobdellDining Room.

    Remarks on S S R SAttorney Albert Allen of Boston

    opened the meeting with somepreliminary remarks about theSSRS. He observed that at thetime of its founding in the late1940's and early 1950's the "or-ganization (was) unprepared tocope with the times," but that itnow makes every attempt tokeep abreast of new develop-ments. He said that the organiza-tion is aimed at scientists, butothers are welcomed as associ-ate members.

    along. In 1963, he had been askedby the Hebrew University andother backers to lead an archaeo-logical expedition to Masada, asite in Israel, which he termedthe "mausoleum of martyrs."At this spot, in 73 AD, threeyears after the destruction ofJerusalem by Titus, 960 JewishZealots "defied the might ofRome." On th ve e of Passver,as they were surrounded by Rom-an legions, they decided to "diefree rather than submit." Theyburned nearly everything andthen drew lots to see who wouldbe the last to die.

    Lots foundThe most dramatic moment on

    the expedition, according to Yad-in, was when the diggers foundwhat they believed to be the lotsof the last eleven men. They areflat stones or shell about one inchsquare with nicknames on eachin ink. One bears the name ofthe commander of the Zealots.

    Refuge for King HerodOriginally the site was fortified

    by King Herod the Great as apotential refuge for himself, as hewas not sure of his city's loyaltyand was especially afraid ofEgypt's Cleopatra. It was a royalcitadel - not an ordinary fort,with a palace and villas. It wasnot until the expedition, however,that his actual refuge was found.Yadin felt that it was the simplethings of the Zealots which gavespirit to Herod's surrounmdings.

    Volunteers comeHow the site was to be dug was

    the first problem to be faced.It would have been sacriligious tohire the usual laborers, Y a d i nsaid, so they asked for volunteers.Thousands of applications camein, from over 28 countries, des-pite the warnings of bad food

    (Please turn to Page 11)

    Photo by Steve Rife

    Professor Philip Morrisonspeaks before the SSRS on theappeal of the famous Rosen-berg-Sobell Case.

    Dr. Morrison then began histalk, which concerned itself prim-arily with his own experienceswith the Rosenberg - Sobell caseduring the last few months. Theeffects of this much litigatedcase, he said, have greatly af-fected the American mind, andit is now, ornce again, being in-vestigated.

    Beganm with phone callLast June Dr. Morrison receiv-

    ed a telephone call from a lawyerin New York City. She was work-ing in "Civil Liberties" law, andwas concerned with re -investi-gating the case of Morton Sobelland Julius and Ethel Rosenberg.As a result of their trial the

    tvc-ke Ssat mvYoeit vfarRosenergs were - fr

    espionage, and Sobell, who wasonly slightly connected with theconspiracy, was imprisoned forthirty years.

    During the trial, David Green-glass, Mrs. Rosenberg's brother,and a co - defendant, confessedhis involvement in the conspiracy,asking for clemency. In his tes-

    (Please turn to Page 5)

    $eni@rs recevemod-school ls

    The Faculty- Graduate SchoolBooklets for the Class of 1967 arenow being distributed. Seniorsliving in either dormitories orfraternities should already havetheir copies; apartment dwellersmay receive their copies at theJosh White booth in Building 10.

    The booklet has been preparedmainly to assist those who are asyet unsure of what GraduateSchool they might wish to attend.Provided is an alphabetical list-ing, by department, of facultymembers, their college affilia-tions, and fields of interest. It ishoped that one will obtain fromthese faculty members first-handinformation concerning schools inwhich one is interested.

    A number of extra bookletshas been printed; interested non-seniors may acquire these at theJosh White booth also.

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    McGrwaw-Hi. iViTes you to an exciirng diSplay of bouks featuring M.ioT.- a .h or.STh!ursday 1 November 3 at The Tech Coop Book Departmen+. Meet McGraw-Hit -Officers, Editfors, Auhors,McGraiw-HiiI Books (Bold Face authors are associated wifh M.I.T.

    William P. Alis and Melvin A. Herlin: THERMODYNAMICS ANDSTATISTICAL MECHANICS. $8.50

    Isadore Amdur and Gordon G. Hanmmes: CHEMCAL KINECS.$9.95

    Michae -Atws and Peter L. Falb: OPTIMAL CONTROL. $x9.5.Leonid V. Azaroff and Martin J. Buerger: THE POWDER METHOD

    IN X-RAY CRYgrALLOGRAPHY. $11.ERiCard B. Battin: ASTRONAUTICAL GUIDANCE $17.5

    Manson Benedict and Thomas Pigford: NUCLEAR CHEMICALENGINEESING. $12.

    Warren G. Betams: CHANGING ORGANIATIONS. $s.95Klaus Biemanm: MASS SPECTROMETRY. $14.50Robert Bierstedt-Eugene Meehban-Paul A. Samueksow: MODERN

    SOCIAL SCIENCES $8.5John Ms. Biggs: INTRODUCTION TO STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS

    Charles Broxseyer: INERTIAL NAVIGATION SYSTEMS. $s5.BrItton Chance-Robert L Hu er-E. F. MacNichol- F. C. Wliiams:

    ELECRONIC TIME MEASUREMENTS, MIT Rad Lab Series,Vol. 20. $,O.00

    Stephen E. Crandal: ENGINEEING ANALYSIS $1l.s0Stephen H. Crandall-Norman C. DPal-Robert R. Archer-

    Nathan H. Cook-Frank A. McClntock-Ernest Rablnowicz-George S. Reichenbach: AN INTRODUCION TO THEMEEHANICS OF SOLIDS. $9.95

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    iOUR Both ANNIVERSARY YISARp~~

  • Noonhour se minar

    Foreste lO ea5dLast Thursday Innisfree Maga-zine ratified a new Constitution,creating an entirely new function-oriented masthead. Chiefly theConstitution allowed for only threeelective officers, Publisher, Editorand Business Manager, the rest,of the officers all being appoint-ive.

    I

    At the same meeting electionswere held to fill the three posts.

    Elected were: James A. Smith

    '69, Publisher; Sam Cohen '68,

    Editor; and Neal Wasserman '69,Business Manager.

    The .first issue under the newsetup comes out November 1.

    encounter"By Steve Carhart

    "Encounter". is the fitting namegiven by the Student Center Com-mittee to a new series of lunch-time discussions with prominentmembers of the MIT Comm unity.-Each Thursday at noon, the

    East Lounge of the Stu d entCenter plays host to anyone whowants to stimulate his mind aswell as his stomach. There is nocharge or fixed program; eachparticipant may bring up any top-ic which interests him. One maybring a lunch, buy a lunch in Lob-dell, or go hungry.

    Forrester speaks-The first of this new series of

    seminars was held Thursday.The guest was Jay W. Forrester,Professor of Management, whospoke to a large group of interes-ted students and faculty.

    One of the major topics of dis-cussion was Professor Forrester'sapproach to his new book, whichwill be a less technical treatiseon somewhat the same problemsdealt with in his previous book,Industrial Dynamics. In his newbook, Professor Forrester hopesto present scientific analysis ofcorporate systems in a mannerunderstandable to those who havenot had sufficient mathematics

    _r m I I I~"~cc~w l"~sl~aa~-I

    NEW AND CONTINUINGPROGRAMS AND PROJECTS

    PHOENIX Missile & Fire Control SystemSURVEYOR Lunar Landing SpacecraftSynchronous Communications SatellitesTOW Anti-Tank Missile SystemATS (Applications Technology-Satellites)AIM-47A/AIM-4E MissilesVATE Automatic Checkout EquipmentCORDS

    These examples of Hughes Aerospace activities are rep-resentative of more than 230 major product and servicecapabilities ranging from aerospace vehicles to ASW sys-tems. Diversification such as this promises long-rangestability both for the company and its employees.

    NEW MISSILE SYSTEMS DIVISIONMore than 900 engineers, scientists and technicians willsoon be at work on expanding R & D programs at Hughesnew 85-acre Canoga Park complex in the San FernandoValley. Unexcelled facilities and the professional atmos-phere at Hughes encourage creativity and achievement.

    .. *...-.-- .~ .......- . 'N... · .. x ... ·

    II

    Photo by John Roderick

    Professor Jay W. Forrester (rear), Professor of Management,leads discussion Thursday -in the first of the weekly lunchtime"Encounter" discussions held in the Student Cenfero

    background in order to under-stand many of the analytical tech-niques currently employed in this

    field. He hopes to accomplishthis by using integration ratherthan differentiation which, hefeels, is not as natural a conceptto explain the relationships whicharise in detailed analyses of cor-porations.

    Enghneerg asnd afnagmnent

    Later the discussion moved tothe relationship between engineer-ing and management, a field in

    GROWTH OF THEENGINEERING Additions to Engineering StaffSTAFF (eat)

    1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1956

    Of the over 11,000 employees of the Aerospace Divisions,almost 4,000 are Members of the Technical Staff. Averageexperience is 11.7 years. Average age is 37.9 years.

    HUGHES-CULVER CITY/CANOGA PARK

    Hughes Aerospace Divisions at Culver City, and CanogaPark offers Engineers and Scientists a unique combina-tion of urban and suburban advantages. Located adjacentto major freew..ays. Los Anneles Civic Center is about ahalf-hour distant--beaches, just a short drive. Attractiveresidential neighborhoods are nearby. l.C.L.A., U.S.C.and Cal Tech offer outstanding educational facilities.

    II

    IMPORTANT OPPORTUNITIES, steady CAMPUS INTERVIEWSgrowth, diversification, long-range stability, professionalatmosphere, advanced facilities, fine living conditions- O ber 31 November 1these are the advantages which Hughes Aerospace Divi-r sions can offer you at Culver City and Canoga Park. I !

    ' HUGHES iFor additional information and to arrange an appointment !with our Technical Staff Representatives; please contact L… …----___-,_J

    HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANYyour College Placement Office or write: Mr. Robert A.-. , I AEROSPACE DIVISIONSMartin, Head of Employment, 11940 W. Jefferson Blvd., An equal opportunity empoyer / U.S citizenship requiredCulver City, California 90230.

    which Dr. Forrester has done agood deal of writing. The prob-lems considered in managementinvolved, -said Dr. Forrester, anumber of the'same conceptswith which ergineers are faced,but on a much more complex andless clear level. Working withpeople is every bit as worthy achallenge as working with physi-cal laws, and it offers the addeddifficulty that it is much moredifficult to analyze human inter-action than a chemical reaction.

    Need for non - specHalizationThe person who will be of

    greatest importance in the future,then, will be the one who canmaster both technology and "hu-manology," that is to say, muewho can work within and betweenmany fields and penetrate to thatwhich is really of importance inany given activity.

    A problem, however, ariseswhen we set out to educate suchpeople. Too often an interdepart-mental course becomes a havenfor those who are not really comn-petent in any one field. Thenagain, the serious iaterdepart-mental major often becomes thetarget of pressure from both ofhis departments to change to afull departmental major or meetthe standard major requirementsof both departments and in effecthave two majors. Often the solu-tion is to become fully competentin one field before branching out.

    Mathematical models

    Another -topic which was touch-ed on was the difficulty thatarises when one attempts tobuild a mathematical model of ahuman institution such as a busi-_s s, Most models of a businesare perhaps ten times more com-plex than those ordinarily dealtwith, and even these leave muchto be desired insofar as predictingthe behavior of a real systemgoes.

    eFuture "elncounters"

    Future discussions promise tobe as rewarding as that led by

    Professor Forrester. The upcom-

    ing guests include: Oct. 27, Hans-

    Lukas Teuber, Head of the De-

    partment of Psychology; Nov. 3,

    Roland B. Greeley, Directr of

    Admissions; Nov. 10, Ross H.

    Sminth, Director of Athletics; Nov.17, John Wulff, Professor of aMet-

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    Draper, Director of the Insxs-

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    8, William C. Greene, Professor

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    To the editor of a student newspaperthe United States mail system is one

    - huge conduit of other people's propogan-- da. Lately, with the exception of the us-> ual garbage from the campaign head-O14. quarters of Massachusetts politicians, the

    X entire flow of material seems to be basedO on the same triple theme: 'The Student,U Viet Nam, and the Draft.'

    0Last weekend a 'northeastern region-

    < al conference on Students, the UniversityaV and the Draft' was being held at CityLJD College of New York under CCNY

    physics professor Arthur Bierman.Cornell's student government writes

    a friendly letter containing their studentgovernment's random resolutions against

    - the war in Viet Nam, the draft, etc, andinvites us to sign their resolutions and

    - organize a conference on (you guessedit) Viet Nam,and the Selective Service.

    And so the mail goes, full of soundand fury, signifying nothing. Whatbothers us is not the fact that so manystudents and faculty are so busy resolvingand conferring, at worst it serves to letoff steam, while at best it provides aworthwhile and sometimes thoughtfulcross discussion of the issues at stake.The sad fact is that as long as the samegroups of students and faculty keep ontalking to themselves at conference afterconference and meeting after meetingtheir effectiveness will continue to benegligible.

    In fact there seems to be some sort ofgame within the half real world ofnational student politics. The rules seemto say that the only way to become a bigwheel in the NationaL Students Associa-tion or one of the other national studentorganizations, to get yourself written upin 'Time' or 'Newsweek,' or to bringthe status of a 'Berkley' to your campus,is to organize your own protest confer-ence, bigger and better than the last one.It's the in way to be.

    Meanwhile the real opportunities forstudent and other academic based opin-ions to make themselves heard seem toget lost in the shuffle. New York Times-man James Reston pointed out a classicexample in the October 16th issue of theSunday Times.

    Reston wrote about the President'sNational Advisory Commission on theSelective Service which President John-

    To the Editor:Since the Peace Corps is plan-

    ning a recruiting trip to MIT thisfall, I write to express a fewindependent ideas which may beof general interest. I think yourpaper would be am effectivemeans of presenting themr

    I would propose that the PeaceCorps' basic functions are, inchronological order:

    1) To give you some basictraining (mostly in the lan-guage);

    2) To place you in a job (with ahost country organization);

    3( To pla a .Thus,.y u could view the Peace

    Corps as a type of employmentagency that pays salaries instead

    I

    son appointed early last summer. Thiscommission's purpose is to present recom-mendations to the President on the en-tire question of future draft policies, in-cluding the concept of voluntary orcompulsory service to the poor and aged,yet even the most ardent activists ignoreits existence.

    It's about time the university activistsstopped talking to each other and start-ed talking to the real world.

    Vol. LXXXVI, No. 40 Oct. 25, 1966BOARD OF DIRECTORS

    Chairman ........................................... Dave Kress '67Editor .............................................. Charles Kolb '67Managing Editors ........................ Robert Horvitz '68

    Mark McNamee '68Business Manager .............................. Guile Cox '68News Editor .................................... Gerry Banner '68Features Editor ...................... Mike Rodburg '68Sports Editor ...................................... Tom Thomas '69Photography Editor .......................... Lew Golovin '67Entertainment Editor ................ Andy Seidenfeld '68Business Representative .................. Nick Covatta '68

    Editorial Associate .................. Jeff Stokes '68Associate News ,Editors ............. Mark Bolotin '68

    John Corwin '68Associate Sports Editor ............... Larry White '69

    Tony Lima '69Intramural Sports Editor ............ Herb Finger '68Associate Photography Editor ....... Bill Ingram '68

    Jeff Reynolds '69Copy Editor ........................ Brian Harvey '69Controller .......................... Dave Dewitte '69Treasurer .......................... Mike Ginsberg '69Treasurer.~~~~MikeaGinsberg '69Acc'ts Receivable ...................... Dan Green '68Nat'li Adv. Mgr ..................... Jack Swaim '68Bookkeeper . .......................... Ed Waibel '69

    Managing Staff ............ Jerrold Grochow '68Paul Richter '68, Steve Swibel '68

    John HavekotteNews Staff ....................... Susan Downs '68

    Dave Kaye '68, Roy Benveniste '68Geoff Russell '69, Mike McNutt '69

    Features Staff ... Stew Blickman '69. Jim Smith '69Jeff Weissman '69, Mickey Warren '69

    Sorts Staff . .. .. . .... Russell Mcst{-c!er '68Arman Vateressian '68, Steve Wiener '69

    Tom James '68. John Kopolow '68John Steele '67, Bob Sultan '68

    Chuck Hottinger '67, Jim Yankaskas '69Scudder Smith '69, Dave Lyon '69

    Entertainment Staff .................. Don Davis '67Sherry Gulmon '68, Jeff Stokes '68

    Eric Goldner '68. Sam Cohen '68Ric Klass '68, Dan Asimov '68, Dave Cook '68

    Jack Donahue '69, Allen Wiegner '69Tom Marks '69, Jerrold Levinson '69Thomas Nesbitt '69, Davis Grosz '69

    Photography Staff ................ Gene Skrabut '69Art Kalotkin '68 Larry Deutsch '67

    Ed Lamon ;67, Tim Holiner '69Steve Rife '67, Steve Silverstein '68

    Pete Blicher '69, Tom Dooley '69Chuck Howey '69, George Flynn '69

    Dave Pack '68

    Seccnid-ctass- postage paid at Boston, Massachu-setfs. The Tech is published every Tuesday and Fridayduring the college year, except during college vaca-tions, by The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT StudentCenter, 84 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Masse-chusetfs 02139. Telephones: Area Code 617, 876-5855, and 864-6900 extension 2731. United StatesMail subscription rates: $4.25 for one year, $8.00 fortwo years.

    Front page photo of the Green Buildingtaken by Brad Williamson

    of receiving fees. But, not sur-pringly, the Peace Corps doesnot care to accept the parallel.Unfortunately, the predominantattitude which starts with the ap-plication and prevails heavilythroughout the training is so heav-ily 'do you really want to dQ it?'that you'll have a great difficultyfinding out what the 'it' is thatyou may want to do. This meansthat going through training willnot give you a clear idea of whatyura work will be overseas (un-less yours is a rare taing pro-gram).

    If this vagueness doesn't dis-courage you, and if you do arriveoverseas, I think you'll find thattechnical jobs (in the broadsense) of a professional natureare available, and that you willbe well received in themn-prob-

    ably much better than if you werea liberal arts major working inthe rural areas.

    Your overseas pay varies fromcountry to country and may ormay not be sufficient. Unfortun-ately, where I am it's not. I thinka general average in Latin Amer.ica would be the equivalent of$100 monthly, in the host cou-try's currency.

    With respect to the language:in two years a person in his earlytwenties can learn a new la-guage quite well, but ten yearslater it would be much more dif-ficult for most people, and in thisrespect Peace Corps service isvery timely for a recent grad.

    Bill Graham '64Casilla 27-DSantiago, Chile

    By Ron KHoleAs Technique's sales campaign

    for the new school year begins,editor Roy Gamse is promising afresh approach to his prospectivereaders. In fact, this year's vol-ume is due for a major facelift.

    In the past, Technique has usedthe same basic format each year.This has been a sixty-four-pageopener of general interest followedby a chronological cataloguing ofthe year's major events. Nextcame the activities sections andthen the seniors.

    Viewpoints, photo-essaysThis year the opener, which. is

    the section of interest to most peo-ple, will be twice as long. Thesame bright beginning of pastyears will fill the first sixty-fourpages, followed by Technique'snew look. The second sixty-fourpages will be what Ganse callsthe "Viewpoint section." Thiswill be a series of short articlesand photo-essays covering morediverse aspects of MIT. To becovered are such topics as theco-ed's place at MIT, results ofinterviews with Benson Snyder,the campus psychiatrist, and per-sonality sketches of Tech facultymembers.

    The activities section will also

    In the interest of promoting themaking of spirit, the Delta DeltaDelta sorority of the Universityof Southeastern Louisiana spon-sored a "Yell like Hell" contest.Nine campus organizations en-tered the affair. Contestants wereallowed to use anW props, employcheerleaders, banners, pompoMs,hand motions and even plungersto raise spirit. Contestants wererated on the size, noise and en-thusiasm.

    Supreme Court

    Richmond Professional IStitutehas refused to register a studentbecause of a beard and log hairthat the aspiring student sports.slAt ~LU~t~StL7 VIWlWIlX 1fU1iIX-Marshall, applied to the Ameri-can Civil Liberties Union for legalassistance. After being tosedaround in several lower courts,the case has finally made the bigtime. it is now on the schedulefor the next sitting of the UnitedStates Supreme Camt

    I daty for the M _

    St. John's Univemsity has sc.-eral elevators in buildings aroundthe campus reserved only formembers of the faculty and bas-'ketball playerso However, all stu-dents regardless of race, creed,color or athletic ability, may usethe toilets.

    According to a University ofTexas Survey, the sixteen mostprevalent vices among collegestudents during the Prohibitionperiod of the 19's were: sex ir-regularities, cheatting, stealing,lying, vulgar talk, swearing, gam-bling, selfishness, drinking, idle-ness, gossip, sabbath-brealdng,

    BUT I IELIEE {T!.' I

    be on a new level. The plan is togroup similar activities togetherunder basic headings such as en-tertainment and sports instead oflisting them in order of occurence.This grouping is chosen to presenta more unified picture of the ac.tivities. Emphasis will be on goodmaterial, not on just filling aquota of pages per article. Anyspace not filld by good solid copy

    -will be used for pictures, includ-ing about twice as many colorpictures this year.

    A book for everyoneThe result of all these changes

    won't be a longer book, just a bet-ter organized one. For instance,much valuable space will begained by putting the senior bi-ographies on the samne pages asthe pictures. Thus the '67 Tech.nique will be less a senior bookand more a book for evewryone.

    Roy Gamse sums up the newlook of Technique by saying."These are the kinds of thingsthat twenty years from now won'tshow me what happened at MIT,but rather what the place waslike."

    (Activities '66 is a series han-died jointly by the Public Rela-tions Committee of Inscormm andThe Tech.)

    extravagance, snobbishness, smok-ing and dancing.

    The University of Oregon seemsto be endowed with parking lotsthat just beg for cas. Two fac-ulty lots were observed to be lessthan half filled for most of theschool year. Another faculty lotnever had more than 25 carsparked in it. The University hasdecided to consolidate the facultylots and use the remaining spacefor student parking.

    Operation SwatchThe students of St. John's Uni-

    versity seem to have been gettingthe raw end -of computer aideddates. To put the personal touchin blirnd dating, the sisters of

    - 1 ta r ydevisedL~mLKa .Chi sorority deLdtheir own computerless OperationMatch. About 1X entrants com-pleted the necessary forms. Dateswere set up ace to the an-swers on the questionares as wellas the pmnality of the partici-pants as known by the sisters.

    atRnes einIf a Columbus, Ohio billboard

    printing company had its way,Batman would be dead. So wasthe message pasted over severalbillboards surroundg Ohio StateUniversity. Several members ofSigma Pi fraternity, worried thatthe dastardly rumor might be cor-rect, sent an urgent telegram toBaomnan asking if he were imdeedalive. Batman sent the fraternitya return telegram advising themthat he was alive and neededtheir continuing help in fightingcrime in Ohio.

    In an attempt to save the vend-ing macanes from the angry feetof students and promishg youngsoccer players, the University isstarting an educational campaignto make sure that students real-ize that profits from the machinesgo towards their education.Whenthe machine fails, angry studentstake out their frustrations on themachines. The University has setulp complaint booths _'m_-d thecampus, hoping that a segment ofthe students will vocalize theircomplaints.

    fBy ickey Warren I 0 1 ej Pe ~~BY Mckey Warren

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    (Continued from Page 1)timony he presented to the courta drawing that he had made inhis prison cell. He testified thatit was a "rough reproduction" ofa paper he had given his sister,showing his view of how theNagasaki plutonium device wasconstructed.

    Evidence impoundedGreenglass hadworked as a

    machinist at Los Alarmnos duringthe time at which the atomic de-vice was constructed, hence hisdrawing was viewed by the courtas a sort of plan for a plutoniumbomb. Therefore the part of thecourt record containing testimonypertaining to the drawing wasimpounded so as not to endangerthe security of the United States.

    The Counsel for the Defense,Eramanual Bloch, a New YorkLabor union lawyer, said he wasnot interested in testing the qual-ity of 'this evidence, because todo so would mean sacrificing thesecurity of the nation by makingpublic information about the im-

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    I c!te'iel Xplosion mechanism that triggersthe bomb. This decision came inspite of the Government's willing-ness to drop security becauseBloch was troubled with severepolitical difficulties in New York,and the responsibility for givingthe enemy an edge would cer-tainly destroy him politically.

    Elvidence releasedThus the court records were im-

    .pounded unrtil, this year, newlawyers became interested in thecase. Upon looking into the casethey discovered that the hiddendocuments were available for aMpeal, but not for publicity. Theyfelt that a nineteen - year - oldmachinist with no college experi-ence could hardly. be expected totransmnt speciaized teclnical in-formation without coaching, andthey turned to Dr. Morrison for ajudgment of Greenglass's draw-ing.

    Drawing 'mecurateSince Dr. Morrison had worked

    on Project Manhattan at LosAlamos, and because of his ex-

    pert backgroumd, he was a logicalchoice to make an appraisal ofthe diagram. Dr. Henry Lins-chitz, who had been the boss ofDavid Greenglass at Los Alamos,and who is now a professor atBrandeis, was also asked for hisopinion. Both men were of theopinion that the drawing was thework of a person with limitedtraining, who had indeed workedon an implosion device. The pic-ture mixed things up, and wasapparently how Greenrglass saw,"from gossip and his own work,the implosion bomb." As the in-formation the drawing containedwas not of technical significancethe drawing was made public.

    Professor Morrison then statedthat his testimony does not in-fringe on the guilt of the steal-ing of classified information, buthe feels that the trial was basedon the issue that the drawingwere the "hot blueprints of theatomic bomb," and that excessive,courtroom theatrics resulting inthe exaggeration of the signifi-cance of the diagram might haveinfluenced the decision of thejury. He believes, as apparentlydoes the Germnment, that thecase is similar to that of the manwho broke a jewelry so win-dow to steal an expensive dia-mond necklace and later discov-ered that the necklace was onlyof rhinestones.

    RtilpossibleThe New York lawyers presnt-

    ed their case for an evidentialhearing, and a decision should be

    Fur+..; -r,^ ,U. hus Lgis held, Morton Sobell will bebrought to court, and the hearingwill be on errors in the old trial.The judge then could dissolve theold trial and hold a new one.Optimists feel that such a newtrial will pardon Sobell, and savehim from another fifteen years inprison.

    Deep-sea PhO.Vled to sonar wonk

    (Continued from Page I)gressed to the point where he nowuses sonar to map beneath thesea floor. In this manner sub-bot-tom mappings of Boston Harbor,Monaco Bay, and the EnglishChannel have been obtained.

    Aid tb aheologyHis work has even found appli-

    cation in archeology. On Novem-ber 2, he will be cruising the wa-ters off the coast of Greece insearch of sunken ships of archee-logical importance which mayhave settled under the ocean'sfloor.

    Although Professor Edgerton isgenuinely interested in studentsand teaching, he is not offering acourse this tennrm as he is on aleave of absence. Last yefr hetaught a class entitled "ElectronicL i g h t Measurements" (6.202),which he describes as "largely acourse in instmfimemtation."

    Screwdriver an solderefg IronAs any enumeration of his re-

    search reveals, Dr. Edgerton isparticularly interested in labora-tory work. In fact, he maintains,"I'm never happy without ascrewdqver and soldering.iron inmy hip pocket." Nonetheless, heis quick to add tlat "I can use apencil," and as an electrical en-gineer is "trying to exploit Max-weUl's equations in all possiblewayTs."P

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  • 'Dead Heat on a .Merry-Go-Rounld,vith James Coburn as Ely Kotch,'amilla Sporu as Inger Knudsen;tso with Aldo Ray, Nina Wayne,robert Weber, and Todd Armstrong.

    vember 14 at 4:00. Hanard Uni- The research center, which isvyersth President . Naa n M. the first of its kind in this partpusey will preside and US Repr- of the country, is located on acentative John E. Fagarty of 140-acre plot in Southborough,Rhode Island will deliver thae dead-.Massachusetts. Its facilities areicatorY address. open to the faculty of any institu-

    Rep. Fagarty is well known as, iion of higher learning in the Newa major congressional spokesman England area.

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    restricts hirmnelf to sleep-in maids.Raising money is not a prob-

    lem for Coburn alone, it is also aproblem for thie viewer. For bet-ter than half thie movie, one hasabsolutely no idea why Coburnis trying to raise o0,000. In fact,for almost half the movie there islittle indication that Coburn isdoing anything except carrying ona series of unrelated seductions.

    'Me vagueness of the plot is notthe only thing to hamper the mov-iegoers' enjoyment of 'Dead HeatOn A Merry-Go-Round,' the vague-ness of the haraeter Coburn por-trays is another stumbling blockCobuam, in his role of con-man,assumes several aliases and theircorresponding personalities. Yet,Ely Kotch, the con artist, has nopersonal identity of his own. -heswitch from one false identity to

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    IHere's the heartbreaker. . .'67 Dodge Coronet 500. A campus favorite with its great new looks, ride,and list of extras that are standard. Like bucket seats with either a-companion seat in the middle or acenter console. Plush carpeting. Padded instrument panel. Padded sun visors. Seat belts, front andrear. A choice of Six or V8 models. And lots more. So get with '67 Dodge Coronet and get busy.

    DO- DGE DIVISIO CHRYSLER.MOMRS CORPORATION

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    . 0'is a medley of confusion

    o arounUa. It is tre perfect execu-tion of anothler peect crime donein James Bond moderm

    Robbing the International Bankrlof Commerce at Los Angeles In-ternational Airport is not easy,especially when the airprt isswarning with police because theSoviet Premier is arivring, but afearless foursome headed by su-per con artist Ely Kiteh-(JamesCoburn) demonsoates once againthat bank robbery is only a so-phisticated form of shoplifting.The movie proves quite unequivo-cally that the real problem inbank robbery is raising the moneynecessary to buy the bank plans,a problem which requires Coburnto s,,ce at least four wnoB.Not having the good looks, goodtaste, and money tlat JamesBond does, Coburn appropriately

    another is so quick and absolutethat the viewer often loses hisbearings. Even after leaving thetheater one has no distinct im-pression of the true character ofEly Kotch. There is no personalityto pin all the aliases on, just anebulous group of fake identities.

    The tension that should arisefrom a thlriller never appears in'Dead Heat Onr A Merry Go-Round.' The obstacles thie burg-lars must overcome are too slightand thie chances of failure are,toosmall for any dramatic conflict toappear in the movie. The almostinexorable machinery of the rob-bery leads one to the inevitableconclusion that men who usewomen as their means alwaysachieve their ends.

    Charfies /rive Ms"I1C,6WIef fgl ichols setsyeasr% $2,gaa 00O

    The annual Charities Drive,spnsored by TCA wil be con-ducted next week, October 31-November 4. Donations will becollected within the living groupsby thie respectivre TCA chien.In addition a booth will be set upIn Building 10.

    The drive gives members of theM rr comnm-unity a chance tomake a single donation which canbe applied to any charitable or-ganization they designate. Theprincipal beneficiaries of the driveare the United Frmd, the WorldService Organization and the Can-cer Foundation. The Urnited Fundis a local oranization which col-lects and distributes funds formany charities. Ths eliminatesthe need and the inconvenience ofindividual drives thrughout theentire Massachusetts Bay area.

    Charities Drive chairman JayNichols '68 has set a god of $209for this year's drive. This is morethan double the amnout collectedin last year's drive. In view of theMIT students' increased aware-ness of social problems, Nicholsex-pressed confidenee that the goalwould be realized. Anyone imter-ested in aiding in. the CharitiesDrive should contact Nicholsthrough the TCA office or at ThetaXi, X3207.

    IM Bridge tou neyopens November 5

    The intramural bridge tourna-ment will begin next month. Thecompetition, sanctioned by theA m e r i c a n Contract BridgeLeague, awards both trophies andmaster points to the whiners.

    Teans consisting of 4, 5, or 6players will play 24 boards ofduplicate bridge. Rosters and afive dollar entry fee must beturned into John Hrones or JeffPassel by Nov. 5.

    The toohJ i ari on et.t's1I, l

    afa Theatme of antasy @

    Evren WAhen She Answers, He Still Gets the Busy Signal.DEAR REB:

    -'+ . Lately, every fime I call my girl, she's either "not in" or "no inter-.- ''":i ' ~ ested." Last week I called her 23 times and couldn't even make a

    coffee date. The trouble started when she started dating a- guy· ~ : ... ~ ~who owns a Dodge Coronet. Now she goes to parties with him,i-- , ~~ ~

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    Pusey, Fagqa t ospeak Mvieresearc cenrer o3peniang 'Dead Heab

    Dedication ceremofies for te for medical research. He will rep- By Paul &nsay~rvard-developed New England resent the National Institutes'o The makers o 'Dea etOn aprimate Research Center wvl be H ealth, which subsidized the two Merry-Go-Round' have decided to ca

    and one-half million dollar proj- give the same old story another Rheld on Mv/onday afternoon, No- ect.

    Ji- E;~ LOUS Y. BARD DOPTOMETRIST

    ANNOtUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS NEW OFFICE-

    i 879 BEACON STREETI~ AT PARK DRIVE-- BOSTONSpeciatling in the {fiing 6ofCONTACT LENSES

    436-{222

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    FOR ADULTS Brecht's

    Eveningsat.8:!0O era

    Nov. 8 throWu NOV .'TI Ticets: .3.75,.. & MSO 1

    FOIR GHILD9EN

    I Nov.t 4 pm.(tenefit Bostoa Children's Theatre)

    Nov. 11: 11 a.m. & 3 P.m.Nov. 12: l1 a.m. & 3 P.m.

    Tickets: .2.0 & $S1.S

    with music (in English)JOHN HANCOCK HALL

    200 Berkeley St.HA 1-2000 A

  • co

    d Movies &m.O~~VIm-Theatres E

    MOVIESAstor-'Alfte' 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30,

    9:30.Beacon Hill - 'The Ruians Are

    0'- Coming.' 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30. 9:40.Boston Clnerama-'Russian Adven-

    lture,' Wed., Sat., Sun., 2 pm. eves.LO 8: 30, Sun. eves. 8." Center-'Macabro' and 'The Party's

    Cie Over,' 2:15, 5:45, 9:15.LI Cinema Kenmore Square -'Shame-

    less Old Lady.'Cleveland Circle - 'Farntastic eVory-

    O age,' 1, 3:05. 5:10. 7:20, 9:30.Esquire-'La Fuga,' 3:00, 5:00, 7:00,

    O 9:00.- Exeter- 'The Endless Summer,'

    2: 00, 3:40, 5:25.Fine Arts-'Sunday in Cybele,' 5:30,

    C" 8:45, 'Hard Day's Night,' 3:30,c) 7:00, 10:00.

    Gary- 'Hawaii,' mat. 2:00; Sun.7:30, 8:15 weekdays.

    - Loew's Orpheum - 'Kaleidoscope,'3:40, 5:40, 7:40, 9:40.

    Mayflower-'How to Steal a Mil-lion,' 'Space Flight,' 4:15, 7:30.

    Music Hal-'Dead Heat on a Mer-ry-Go-Round,' 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.

    Paramount -% 'Seconds,' 2:30, 5:30,9:10, 'Waco' 1:00, 4:10, 7:40.

    Paris Cinema-'Romeo and Juliet,'mat., Sat., Sun., Wed., 2:15; eves.

    LU 8:15.Park Square Cinema--'A Man and a

    t- Woman,' 2, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00,1i0:00.Savoy3r-'Alvarez Kelly,' 1:30, 3:30,

    5:30, 7:30, 9: 30.Saxon-'Dr. Zhivago,' Mats. at 2

    Wed. and Sat., Stun. and HoLt. eves.8:15, Sun. 7:30.

    Symphony I Cinema-' Lord of theFlies,' 2:00, 5:45, 8:45; 'Davidand Lisa,' 3:45, 7:00, 10:00.

    Uptown-'l-Harper,' 5:15, 9:10, 'NeverToo Late,' 3: 20, 7:20.

    West End - 'The Shoo on MainStreet,' 1:55, 4:20, 6:40, 8:55.

    THEATRESCharles Playhouse-'Love for Love,'

    8:30; thru Oct. 30.Colonial Theater-'Don't Drink the

    Water,' thru Oct. 29.Shubert Theatre- 'Holly Golighty,'

    ovens Nov. 1.Savoy Theatre - oyly Carte per-

    form G & S opens Nov. 1.Theatre Co. of Boston - 'Marat/De

    Sade.' Wilbur-'My Sweet Charlie.'0 I

    Kresge Auditorium was nearlyful. A sign fin the balcony read"Dizzy for President". A greyingman -with a wisp of a eard, ahint d a o e and afreaktrumpet ben to blow. The bassplayed a catchy Brazilian phase.The drummer tapped out bossanow acompm a smooth,flowing piano. The flutwst blewsweet counterpoint. An eveningwith Dizzy, Gillespie had begun.Or perhaps we should say Am-bassador Gillespie.

    In his travels for the state de-partment, Ambassador G. hasblown and preached the univer-sality of jazz as an expression ofthe ento man. In his opion, it all men can dig, why can!tall men likewise live together inpeace? Dizzy has taken up thiscause using th emtionali ofjazz andthe raticnality of an or-gar~zaton called the World LawFund. is is the man's cause.It is an outgrowth of his music,however. So first thing first.

    Fluttst James MoodySmM the solo ststat with

    Dizzy was James Moody, the sea-soned and mellowed saxophonist-flutist. is saloes were the hig-lights of .the concert. On flute, hewas in complete control, wheplaying haunting counter-melodesor giv the word "swng" e lan-fled meaning. Is sax playing wasquite nteworthy as well. Thelat tme of the eveing, 'NoBlues' feated James o alto.out of sight!

    Kenny BarrThe pianst was Kenny Barromn,

    a relatively yomg man Wo willcertainly be heard more in thefuture. His .pl g was, like thatof the entire ensemble, in a veinwhich might be paadoxdcally yetaccurately called "trdi

    miodem" jazz, much like VictorFeldman or Joe ZawinuL Hishandling a ballads was tenderand expressive, as could be heardin the definitive version of 'Shdowof Your Smile.'

    Drmn - Chady OnchThe longest and loudest ovation

    of the evening was deservedlygiven to drtummer, Candy Fch.Besides being a solid and imag-inative percussmonist behind thegroup, his long solo in 'Salt Pea-nuts' (duiing which he was theonly man on stage, a a JoeMorell) was marvelous. His co-bol in shifting between fast andslow rhyt was impeccable.His use of ;bodily muted tom-tomand cymbals and Ms playing ofbass dnu with sticks establishedCandy as not nly a tasteful, ex-pressive drmmer, but some whatof a tmonist as well.

    The oly menber o the goupwhich left this writer at all un-stisfied was the bassist, FrankSchifano. I supse I was undulyprejuiced at the outset becausehe played elecic ,bass-n nsu-ment which so simrgy sum essrock and roll these days -that ajazz player must necessarily befantastic in order to overcome thesterey. The kindest h tobe said about Mr. Scfa is thlthe was less thn fantastic. slines were anticipated at best, andtrite at the oe extre . Theistrment was also slightly too

    The best word .D describe thequintet as a whole is "ogether".

    T~r-msi was smot, poihdand, well,- - . Dizzy's selec-tion c tmes was quite represent-afive. His inevitable humor washeard and seen t ghout theconcer And it was enjoyable. Tome, that's what Gillespie repre-

    Examining produce in an open-air marketplace in Lisbon is one way to broaden one's knowledgeof the ways of the Portuguese people. These girls found exploring the markets of cities around theworld a relaxing change from studies undertaken last year during a semester at sea on ChapmanCollege's floating campus.

    Alzada Knickerbocker of Knoxville, Tennessee,-in the plaid dress-returned from the study-travel semester to complete her senior year in English at Radcliffe College.

    Jan 'Knippers of Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, a graduate of the University of Tennessee, and aformer Peace Corps Volunteer, first pursued graduate studies in International Relations and returneda second semester as a teaching assistant in Spanish on the world-circling campus.

    The fall semester voyage of discovery, aboard the s.s. RYNDAM, for which Holland-AmericaLine acts as General Passenger Agents, is carrying 450 other students to ports around the world asyou read this.

    Still another 450 will leave from Los Angeles in February for the spring 1967 semester set totransit Panama Canal and call at ports in Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Senegal, Morocco,Spain, Portugal, The Netherlands, Denmark and Great Britain, returning to New York.

    For a catalog describing how you can include the spring semester aboard the RYNDAM in youreducational plans, fill in the information below and mail.

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    r o - _ _... . . . . ....- - - - ; - ~ ";'~ C h -pman -Director of Admissions . ChapmanCihfaaa Cotege College

    I Orange, California 92666 O 2[ Orange. California 9266 6[I Name

    (Last) (First) Present StatusAdrs College/University

    Address(Indicate Home or College/ University) Freshman 13

    Sophomore E] City State Zip Junior 1

    j Telephone Age M.__ ,F Senior E lGraduate El I

    L The Ryndam is of West German registry. … .- ….. .

    4

    The Dizzy Gillespie Quintet piayed to a nearly full KresgeAuditorium audience last Saturday night. The concert, sponsodby the Dormitory Council, included the showing of a Gillespie.narrated film, The Hat.

    set tertig, fun jazz. Verygood music, very solid music, butbasically entertainment, release,sit-back-and4-g. Ius dzzy's newbug, sit-up-mdthink (The WorldLaw Fund) seemed a bit on-grum if not altogether uncalled/or.

    Narrates filmJust be/oee hnmnissim, a film,

    naated in part by Dizzy andfeaturing his c as back-grmm, was s. Called 'TheHat,' it dealt wth the ~ o mdern day over-amament asexemplfying man's unatuL"

    hatred of his fellows. The dia--logue' between two cartoon borderguad, who marc enessly oneither side c an emphatic dIe, cosse of an e~dvesool an imp d cve s between Gillespe and his -initially

    Te deligh y art ted dehaxac-ters become involved in an obvi-ously lbsurd dspute over a hatwhich fell off the head of oe ofthe guars, WuMM in enemy ter-rtory. As might be expeted, thetwo sokder sn realize the silyfI o t heir uMtMral cMflictand became involved min folk-Wo-

    abt the irnmnantyIarmed border lines. And thusit went. Ana rossd freelyover the brder yet himans cOuldnot. Ancdent civlzations fell be-

    catse of 'l4ines'inuw we're doingit ourselves.

    The film was tastefully done.The animtion was superb andvery imagintve. The dialgueseemed very eal min discussing aproblem wich, when dealt with inaeig but folk terms, beburdere, losing its htmnreality in favor of rationality. BI question its a oppriateness inlast ght's concert.

    In the middle 6f an evenin ofhappy, humorous, easy music, theaudience was wrced to florget tr/orgettin ad cmne to tens wfia pblemn as weighty as eworld itself, guided by the filmand a queston and answer piled by Dizzy immediately theafter.

    I have the utmost respect forthe man, his music, end icause. But excmnging what arenecessay platitudes with anMWT audience during a jazz ccert (which was repeatedly mnik.ed by carefree humor) in mymind, just didn't make it.

    I suppose I am bsicay ques-timing the role of theen ,taSerlo discussion would havebeen much easier to accept dur-ing a eoncert given by a musianwho as defined hielf by play-ing - ght - prvong music -OClane, or FKirk, or, in the folkI iiom, Rush or Seeger. Bu amusci who has given himsethe c acter of an easy'.gdgtgqbp 6

  • By Sherry Gfulmon

    'The Persecution and Assassin-ation of Jean-Paul Marat as per-formed by the inmates of theAsylun of Charenton under theDirection of the Marquis deSade,' or 'Marat / Sade' for short,is one of the most daring and un-usual emotional experienies everto be put on the stage. Flawlesslyacted, the ply represents a line ofthining that most people areafraid even to consider, the rela-tivism of reality.

    The year is 1808. The patients ofthe asylum, accustomed to enter-taining the local gentry of a de-cadent age, are re-enacting anhistorical event. One of the spear-heads of the French Revolution,Marat was actually killed in thebathtub by a woman named Char-lotte Chorday, in 1793. De Sade,played by F. M. Kimball, alsolived during Marat's time andspent his last years at Charenton.Much of his life was spent inJail, for his sexual excesses andgeneral immorality were intoler-able even to a society noted forits excessiveness.

    Greek Tragedy

    The form of the play is not un-like a Greek tragedy. The actionrevolves around Marat, but manyof his speeches are soliloquies.Played by Clinton Kimnbrough, heis dragged onto the stage andeased into a wooden bathtubwhere he sits, nervously clutchinga sheet until the end. His linesare spoken with a passion and in-tensity, but his face mirrors theworried detachment of the insane.He does not play the part as an

    'Marat-Sade' by Peter Weis, di side, enters at regular intervals'Marat-Sade ' b y Peter Weiss, di- a c hb

    rected by David Wheeler, p laying at and confonts m with biting an-Theatre Co. of Boston, with F.-M.Kimball, Clinton Kimbrough, andLisa Richards.

    actor would play it, but as if hehas been coercively persuadedthat he is Marat.

    Marat's assassin, played byLisa Richards, is a pale, haunt-ing beauty suffering from a formof melancholia. After each of herspeeches, erratically recited whilealmost unaware of her surround-ings, she swoons at the back ofthe stage.

    The ChorusThe shabbily costumed chorus

    is composed of two nondescriptmen and two women who are re-tired street walkers. They repre-sent the masses, and sing of theirfeelings and the events that hap-pen in something approximatinga raucous chant. The verses theysing have a Gilbert and Sullivanair to them. The rest of the pa-tients huddle at the back of thestage, kept under control onlyby the energetic activities of twodispassionate male nurses.

    The lines of the play reflectMarat as a lonely idealist whobelieves in the cause of the Revo-lution, and that man must de-fine the right and fight for it.He has the support of the people,but it is evident that he has losttouch with them. He speaks onabout equality of man while thepeople sing their more basic de-sires.

    De Sade's FantasyHowever, the character of Mar-

    at is not the focal point of thedrama. De Sade, who sits at the

    tagonism peculiarly inappropriateto his character as director. Buthe, too, is in the play because hecreated it as means of makingreality out of his private fanta-sies. He made Marat so that hecould oppose him with his ownideas about the reality of the in-dividual imagination.

    Finally reality loses its mean-ing. The emotion on the stage in-creases to an almost unbearableintensity. The excitement of thechorus mounts as it chants withincreasing fervor, glaring bale-fully out at the audience andmouthing obscenities. The anticsof the other patients become lessand less controlable, until sudden-ly everything explodes. It ex-plodes into the reality of the in-sane.

    Reality shiftsThe patients have been putting

    on a play about an event thathappened 15 years ago, but it isas real to them as anything thatenters into their world. The asy-lum director's constant interrup-tions to assert that times arereally better now only accentuatethis fact.

    As the actors move from theworld of Marat and the FrenchRevolution into their own world,the audience moves with themuntil suddenly it is the world ofthe insane which is real and ourswhich becomes illusory. This isthe chaos that ends the play, andfor a few minutes afterward, theaudience sits - nervously gropingits way back to the other worldfrom which it entered the theater.

    By Paul JohnstonThe MIr Oceanography Com-

    mittee held an all-day meeting ofscientists from Woods Hole Ocean-ographic Institution, MiT earthscientists, and graduate studentsinterested in oceanography onFriday, October 21, in the GreenBuilding Lounge.

    The meeting was organized aspart of the joint program in grad-uate education in oceanographybetween Woods Hole and MIT.Eleven MIT professors and nineWHOI staff members spoke brieflyabout their present and future re-search interests. Several coffeebreaks enabled the graduate stu-dents to meet and talk wiffth the

    $eminar to be heldon summer placement

    There ill be a seminar forundergraduates in Cowse XWI onWednesday, November 2, to helpthem in their quest for suammerjobs. The seminar will be held at4 p.m. in roam 35-225 by the MTrbranch of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.Mr. Thomas W. Harrington, Jr.,Director of the Placement Bureau,Prof. Rene H. Miller, PlacementOfficer for Course XVI, and upper-classmen from the departmentwill offer suggestions and answerquestions about professional place-ment in the industry.

    The addution of students to -aespeakers' list is an innovation inthe annual seminar. AtAA feelsthat the student-to-student trans-fer of trade talk will serve as avaluable supplement to the corn-pany interviews.

    Interested observers are wel-comne.

    visiting speakers about eachother's research interests andpresented them with an opportun-ity tofind a thesis problem.

    Professor R. R. Shrieck of theMIT earth science departmentserved as General Chaiman. MITspeakers were Professors HenryG. Houghton( Chairman for FluidMechanics), Erjk L. Mollo4ruis-tiansen, "research on dynamics ofthe small-scale processes in theatmosphere and the sea," HenryM. Storreel, "Cirulation patternsin the oceans," Norman A. Phil-lips, "Transient circulations," andRaymond Hide, "Dynamics of ro-tating fluids," also William S.von Arx, "Marine physical geo-desy," Frank Press (Chairman forGeophysical Oceanography), Gene,'Smons, "Heat flmow in theoceans," Shawn Biehler, "Geo-physical techniques as applied tothe Gulf of California," and Day-ton E. Carritt, "Trends in ma-rine hemistry."

    ~a~mm

    lo aLAST TIMES TODAY! o

    ~3' L"The Shop on 1Main Street'1~~S 0 ei 0@ I ~~~~~~~~~~a"1:20, 5:25, 9:35

    a~~~~~~~~~plus "'JUDITH' ,3:30 - 7:40

    a

    a ma JEAN-PAUL BELMONDO c

    o EFESTIVAL cao Today: U~~~~~~

    "Male Hunt" "=@ ~Wed.-Thurs.:

    u "Doulos the FInjer Man" oa = Shows 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 D

    | SUUUnfluroufriUuunanausuuuuu

    Wo theatres e s pyIvWoody Allens succeeds as playwriglhtBy Dan Aslmov

    Woody Allen decided he wanteda change from being a comedian,so he became a playright. Hisfirst play, "Don't Drink the Wa-ter," makes me hope he willwrite some more. It is by nomeans deep, but it is thoroughlyenjoyable.

    "Don't Drink the Water" re-volves around the plight of anAmerican couple and their daugh-ter when they go to visit Russia.The husband, Walter Hol1ander,has inadvertntuly taken a photn-graph of a restricted area, so theRussians think he is a spy andchase the family all the way tothe American Embassy. Li theembassy the Hollanders make hellwhile the temporary embassy di-rector bungles a few plans to getthemr back to the U.S.

    The play ends with the expectedhappy ending and all in the audi-ence are glad that they can finallystop laughing.

    The actors do a marvelous job.Lou Jacobi, in the role of WalterHollander, really hams it up ashe does a magnificent character-ization of a loud-mouthed, middle-aged Jewish suburban husband.That the Hollanders are Jewish isnever explicitly stated in the play,but is evident from a number ofweakly-masked hints.

    Vivian Vance, the Ethel Mertz

    of "I Love Lucy" fame, is fine asMrs. Hollander, although her partdoes not really require too muchof her comic talents. She playsthe role of a run-of-the-mill pleas-ant housewife-mother whose mainjob is to calm down her over-sensitive husband.

    The Hollanders' daughter Susan,a cute dish in her early twenties,is played with verve and spirit byMarilyn Wayne. Excellent comiccharacterizations are also givenby Theodore (I guess he doesn'thave a last name) as the Russianpolice chief, and by Dick Liber-tini as the slightly insane FatherDrobney who has been living inthe American embassy for sixyears.

    Gerry 'Matthews cannot be laud-ed, however, for his part of Kil-roy,. the utter failure of a diplo-mat who falls in love with SusanHollander. I think Woody Allencould have given Kilroy more ora personality than the miserablemoping loser he is. Matthewsplays the part with little enthusi-asm and does little to correct thissituation.

    The script almost screams thatit was written by a comedian. Thedialogue is filled with one-linecomebacks, mostly by Jacobi,which crack up the house. None ofthe roles really are developed toany extent, and . there is no at-tempt to have the audience iden-

    IM.I. huMANiTiES SEXES 17 66-67presents

    The Droic Quartet, Sun., Oct. 30, 1966The Hungarian Quareft, Sun., Nov. 13, 1966The Borodin Quartet, Thurs., Jan. 12, 1967

    The New York Chamber Soloists,ISun., Feb. 1 2, 1967

    The Beaux Arts Quartet, Sun., Mar. 5, 1967IAll concerts are in Kresge Auditorium and start at 3:00 p.m., withthe exception of the Thursday, January 12 concert which will

    jeries tickets: $10.00; Single tickets: $3.00. All reserved seats.Write Kresge Box Office, M.I.T., Cambridge 02139, or call

    UN 4-6900, ext. 2910.Mkc, checks payable to M.I.T. Humanities Series.

    tify with any one of the char-acters. Just the same, Allen sat-irizes just about everything hecan think of, and does it with witand finesse.

    Occasionally, there is a minuteor two in the play totally devoidof gags, and for a while the airseems a bit strained since "Don'tDrink the Water" depends entire-ly on its funny lines. But "skitstuff" though it may be, "Don'tDrink the Water" will provide agood evening's entertainment.

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    theatre..0 Oceanography conferenceFM araf/Sade" explores nature of reality held for gradu'ate studentsI - - -1

  • A t:- re 't fhF 'ln§ Ii| W~eWrea zes e@ irage o e> on |3r., Kon,, , reseat.t..ga.'

    Underwoodfrecoff- W-AardBy Jeff Stokes

    ,o A recent import from England.oo- well worth seeing is Lewis Gil-

    bert's 'Alte.' Coming straightN from the land of 'Tom Jones' ando of 'The Girl with the Green Eyes,'Lu 'Alfie' shares with these earlier0 films the realism of expression

    and subtlety of detail that made0 for the popularity of these movies.> Alfie, in other words, is neither a< paragon of virtue nor a milk-

    drinldking cowboy. He is, neverthe-less, God's gift to women and hemakes the best of it, even out-doing his predecessor, Tom Jones.

    A homespu phlespherHe carries on like Mister Little-

    chap of 'Stop the World' fame,living life for himself alone, and

    L in the end reaches the conclusionIZ that he is a fool . -. 'I the birds

    don't get ya one way, they getya in another,' he laments. As heskips from girl to girl, lovingthem and hurting them, he ex-plains his motives and methods inthe autobiographical style fr-quently utilized by British filmwriters. His one worry is not- toget attached.

    We leave him by the river inLondon. Cher, off stage, is singinga melancholy song about him; hehas just looked back over his lifeand enumerated all the things he'sgotten out of it . . . 'Ah've beenwith all these birds, an' look whatah got . . . money, cars, lovin'

    . . and ah ain't got attached.. But 'ere's one fting ai 'aven't

    got, an' at's mah peace o' mind. . . 'And so the story ends sadlywith Alfie walking into the dis-tance, a homespun philosopherdiscovering that he's an emaptyshell.

    Sal commentaryThe film absolutely compels us

    to see the beauty and the tragedyin the life of flhis demi-god. Onof Alfie's lovers, Lily, a marriedwoman, becomes pregnant whileher husband is resting in a sanatorium. Lily has to get an abortion, so Alfie talks a mercenarydoctor into performing it. Thedoctor takes the money, and takes

    to Tech A

    President Howard W. Johnsonand Dr. James R. Killian, Chair-man of the Corporation, will give Ithe principal speeches at the MITNorthwest Regional Conference inSeatle, Wash. Saturday. The bone-day meeting on "Tomorrow's Rolefor Technology" is expected todraw more than one thousandpeople to the Seattle Center.

    Dr. John E. Burchard, Deanemeritus of the School of Human-ities and Social Science, Dr.Frank Press, Head of the Depart-ment of Geology and Geophysics,Dr. Irwin W. Sizer, Head of theDepartment of Biology, and Dr.Secor D. Browne, Associate Pro-fessor of Aeronautics and Astro-nautics, will also speak at theconference. Dr. Burchard, nowActing Dean of the College of En-vironmental Design of the Uni-versity of Califomrnia at Berkeleywill speak on "Prospects for aCivil Urban Life," while Dr.Press, a leading authority onearthquakes, will talk on "Ourataixgg rlazet." Dr. SiZer -wildiscuss the 'Molecular Basis ofLife," and Dr. Browne, who hasrecently been active in the SSTand "Jumbo" trn rt projects,will talk on '"ransportation Sys-tems of the Future."

    This is the first MIT conferenceof its kind to be held in Seattle,but similar conferences have beenheld in other cities to stimulatethought on modern problems. ThePuget Sound Chapter of the MITAlumni Association is host for themeeting. ''

    off, after the operation, leavingAlfie and Lily to face matters bythemselves. Her pale, haggardface and screams of agony drive.the multifold point home; we feelrage and pity for Alfie, and weare shocked by the baseness ofthe doctor. The fim ns out tobe both the saga of Alfie and acommentary on the social en-vifronmt that produced him..

    It has been said f 'Alfie:.' .:people are going to stop talkidngabout 'Who's Afraid of VirginiaWoolf?' and start g about'Alfie' .. . While 'Virginia Woolf'will be discussed violently for along time yet, 'Alfie' may become

    one of the most talked about mov- Dr. Stanisaw K. Kon, presidenties of the year. There is no doubtthat the acting is superb, especial-ly Michael Caine, who bears thetitle role, and Shelley Winters,who plays Alfie's high societyconquest.

    'Alfie' ends -in sadness, evenmore so than 'Virginia Woolf.' Un-like the Albee play, 'Alfie' is not alove story, for he never falls inlove; at least not with anyone buthimlself. Some will leave figsmovie depressed, some deeplymoved, some enchanted, some an-gry and indignant; but almosteveryone is sure to appreciateit.

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    of The Nutritio Society in Great.Britain, was awarded the fourthtrdewood - Prescott MemorialAward last Thursday. He waspresented- an , honorari and 'in-troduced to an audience about200 food scientists and goven-ment leaders. at .stn's MuseMn 'of cience by Howard W. Johm-so', president of Mf.'

    In a speech' Dr. Kon declared:"Of mne thing I am certain, tt

    ·. . .

    in the basic urge to satisfy humand -appetite nind will ttolerate: artless substitute"' epointed out that tenderloin steaand lobster will have the sneappeal in the year 2000, wi:eman is on mother sceships, teeath, or on a luar expediti

    *ored by m ' F2zwxti.Born in Poland, Dr. Kon

    ceived a Ph.D. fom the Univr.sity of Warmw in 1924. He be

    (Please tur to Page 11)

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    'ALFIE', based on the play byBill Naughton; produced and di-rected by Lewis Gilbert; star-ring Michael Caine, Julia Foster,Shelley Winters, Millicent Mar-tin, Jane Asher, Shirley AnnField, Vivien Merchant, and El-eanor Bron; now playing at theAstor Theatre.

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    (Continued from Page 1)and lodging and the fare to bepaid. Yadin described some ofthe people who came; a doctorfrom the U. S. who said the ex-perience would "make me orbreak me;" a portrait painterfrom Chelsea who moved heavystones herself, saying that shefelt good as no one had doneit before her; and a taxi-manand charwoman from France whowanted. to lose weight, and did.Yadin found the sight- of all thesevolunteers refreshing.

    Masada is- a large natural rock300 feet above the Dead Sea with

    mostly sheer cliffs. There is onesnake-like path: which takes about'an hour to climb and is near amain road and water and electri-city. There is another less-steeppath which is far from- civiliza-tion. ,They canipd near the sec-ond path, :-however, as it was eas-ier to climb and to.bring heavyequipment up this way.

    Ancienit Roman campThere was little level ground

    on which to camp as tnost of itwas covered with gullies. The

    best spot turned out to be one onwhich the 10th Roman legion inpursuit of the Zealots had camp-ed, and of which they found someruins. Instead of camping over

    .the spot, they set up camp nextto it.

    A double casement wall sur-rounded the top of Masada andhad about 100 rooms inside. Itwas mostly. these rooms whichthe Zealots inhabited. More thanhalf of the volunteers spent thewhole time rebuilding all 1300yards of it.

    ingenious water systemSince Masada is in the desert,

    one of the most obvious prob-elms would -be the water supply.The workers found holes in therock, 4,000 cu. meters each, whichwere once cisterns to hold water.Although it rarely rained, when itdid, it came down in torrents,quickly filling all the cisterns-from an intricate system of gul-lies and dams. From these, waterused to be carried up in bucketsto the top of the rock.

    Bones foundAlso in the side of the rock, the

    ava] Ship 2ystem$s Comand needs

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    diggers found a series of cavesfilled with bones. The H e b r e wUn:ive.sity forund them to bebones of men, women, and chil-dren, which suggests that theywere the bones of the Zealotsthemselves, possibly d u m p e dthere by the Romans.

    The heat was hard on theexcavators too. Many walkedaround in bathing suits, which ledProfessor Yadin to remark thatmany of the volunteers "weremore busy exposing the presentthan. the past." He added thatthey all worked very hard never-theless, and that the whole job -which would have taken about 25years in the ordinary manner-took less than ,one year.

    Coins, food, perfume founmOther things found as the place t

    was rebuilt and the ashes and thedirt were sifted were scarves,sandals, coins saying. "Feedomrof Zion," frescoes, the oldest mo-saics. in Israel, jars, and a temn-ple. There were also many largebaths. The storerooms they dugup were very well planned, ne-cessitating only one guard for alarge area. Even food, preservedby burial, was found, includingpomegranate, nuts and, olivestones. Cosmetics, p er f m e,spindles, and spoons were alsofound.

    Many of the scrolls. they re-covered fit in with other findingsfrom the area. One was attributedto be a lost original Hebrew scrollfrom the book of the Ecclesiastes.

    :The Masada allureToday the Israeli army swears

    on the Masada site seven timesa year that "Masada shall notfall again." In closing, ProfessorYadin remarked- that "Masadaappeals to everyone in his ownway."

    Commiffe e citesKen {or research

    (Continued from Page 10)

    a Brtish subject in 1936, and re-ceived the first Doctor of Sciencedegree from the University ofReading. In 1964 Queen ElizabehII ihonored Professor Kon by ap-pointing him a Cmmander of thleOrder of the British Empire.Then m 1965, he was elected pres-ident of The Nutrition Society inGreat Britain.

    Outstanding researchweThe eMIT Selection Conmittee,

    chaired -by Prof. Samuel A. Gold-blith, Executive Officer of theDept. of Nutrition, cited _ r. oKn'for his outstandng research intothe biological value of proteins,calcimn metabolisn and the ef-fects of commercal food proces-sing upon nutritive value."

    The Underwod-Pirescott Mem-orial Lectureship was establishedm 162 'by the Wm. UnderwoodCo., oldest food canners in Amer-ica. It hnors the late WilliamLyman Underwood grandson ofhe founder of that company, and

    the late Samuel Cate Prescott,MlT's first Dean of Science.

    Todes to talk tonight

    Dr. Samuel J. Todes, formerlyrofessor of philosophy :at MIT,

    viI udi"ver a lectr-e entitled"Technology and the Ideology ofSuccess"- in the Vannevar BushRoomn Tuesday at 8 pm. The lec-ture is co - sponsored by theCourse XXI Society and the S6oci-ety for Social Responsibility inScience.

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