20
Blackout! NewEngland pmower foims By P. B. Comm Wexler Construton Company will turn over the top floor of the Student Center to MIT for oc- cupancy about November 20. This should enable the mrT li. tbrary staff to prepare for opening of the reading room floor on Mon- day, November 29; a November n opening is possible but not probable. These and other facts concern- ing the construction work and program in the Center were dis- closed last Wednesday at a stu- dent-adminiUstration· meeting. - Stu- dents attending were from the Ins- comm Executive Council and the Student Center Committee; others included the Center architect, Prof. Eduardo Catalano; Al Za- velle, Tech Coop manager; Carl Carey, Bursar; Vice President Phillip Stoddard; Frd Grotheer, dining service manager; Paul Barrett and Jim Murphy, of Phys- ical Plant; Prof. William Locke, Director of Libraries; and John Mati!, Director of Publications. The questions and discussions ranged over a wide variety of the incompleted services and facili- ties which will eventually be in- MIT debaters win Amherst match; defeat 23 teams Mrr's Debate Teamrplaced first last weekend at a 24-school tourna- ment at Amherst College. Each of the two teams, affirna- tive and negative, won five out of five debates. The overall 10-0 record was tied by Rutgers Uni- versity, but MIT had higher in- dividual speaker ratings. The topic of the debate was the following resolution: "that law enforcement agencies in the United States should be given greater freedom in the investiga- tion and prosecution of crime." The affirmative debaters were Bill Arthur '69 of Phi Delta The- ta and Gary Ketner '69 of Delta Kappa Epsilon. The negative speakers were Gary Epling- '67 of Theta Delta Chi and Alan Guth '68 of Baker House. In the area of individual speak- er points, Arthur took 4th place affirmative, and Guth and Epling took 5th and 6th place, negative, respectively. ff i L ~ II 1-9 W, A ~ ~1 ~ M11 --- _- Photo bD John Torode 'Empty bookshelves await duplicate copies of all, library system reserve books, as new Student Center Reading Room nears completion. Target date for the opening of the new facility is Novmber 29. It's scheduled to operate 24 hours a day when opened. corporated into the building. No tumel yet In response to a query about a tunnel or bridge to cross Massa- chusetts Avenue, Prof. Catalano said that several plans were un- der consideration, but that no de- cision had been reached regard- ing the idea. As funds for such a project are not in sight, com- pletion would be at least three years away.- Pool by Xmam The recreational area in the basement will ,be among the last to 'be completed, it was revealed. The complex will consist of 5.pool tables, eight lanes of bowling, and a row of snack and cigarette vending machines. The area has been designed to permit access to the machines even when the recreational facilities are not op- rating. Best guess of the group for a completion date for the area: just before Christnas. Captains for the student staff that will operate the complex have been 'chosen, and they are recruiting workers. Mr. Zavelle reported that the general sales in the new Tech Store appeared to be very good, and that the all-day Saturday op- eration was especially worthwhile. In response to student questions, he indicated that Sunday opening of the small Lobby Shop was being studied, but that there are legal problems in the Common- wealth regarding such Sunday five JP queen finlists chosen; more entertainment announced The five fin a s in the JP Queen contest -have been selected by the balloting of the student body. The finalists in alphabetcal_ order, are: MLss Rita Harrington, date of John Schwarz of AEPi; Miss Nancy Miller, date of Ted Nygreen of SAE; Miss Bobbie McCreary, date of. Gary Garmon of PGD; Migs Jean Spottswood, date of Simeon Mas- manian. of East Campus; and Miss Melinda Swenson, date of Wrilliam Flor of LCA. The Junior Prom Queen will be chosen by Miss Melinda Swenson a eommitltee of Beaver Key members during the intermission of the formal dance Friday night. Additional entertainment has been acquired for JP Weekend. The Folkmen, a New York group along the lines of The Smothers Brothers and The Kingston Trio, will provide entertain- ment during the intermission of Friday's for- mal dance. Anyone who wishes to get back the picture of his JP Queen entrant may do so by stopping Wss Bobbie McCreary "TT, 'Vl 11 I 1 I, at the Inscomm office. Miss Rita Harrington Miss Jean Spottswood Miss Nancy By Bob Horvitz The largest power failure since man harnessed electrical power swept 90% of the northeast por- tion of the US into blackness last night. From Philadelphia, Pa. north- ward to 75 miles past Toronto, Canada, 40 million Americans 'were thrown into a state of mass confusion as a 2-million kilowatt power line from the Niagara Falls Power Plant began to back up. Circuits throughout the New England area became overloaded and finally failed in the midst of the rush hour, at 5:27 pm. With all traffic signals failing, the en- tire northeast corridor highway system rapidly became a state of mass chaos. 25 persons were stranded in the Boston Prudential Building. All transportation systems came operations. quickly to a halt, as t Fmulslgas not ready for New York City w, Some of the final touches in as far as Bermuda. furnishing the building may re- An uprising by priso quire several mon'&s more work, pole State Penitentia it developed. According to the controllable for 1% architect, the elaborate rugs for duty police were requ the Sala de Puerto Rico "are still port for duty. Presid being woven in Irar." One of the announed all natior grand pianos ordered is of a type were available for that the Baldwin Company only use. But the Great D manufactures in January of each Tech remained ever year. The cinderblock walls may In the Boston ar not 'be -painted for about nine months. Two fifty-foot light tow- ers for the front walkways of the Center should be installed "in about six weeks." i The students present also ar- ranged individual meetings with those non-students present regard- ing the location of a building di- rectory, a calendar of events, a sign on Mass. Avenue to identify the Center, the activities floor furniture situation, and bulletin 'i ' boards. Civil Rights Comm. [ starts Sat. classes for Roxbury youths Thirty junior high and high Vol. 85, No. 23 Cam school students from Roxbury learned math and science hmm MIT students Saturday as theMIT Armory prc Civil Rights Committee began its mm enlarged Saturday Enrichment program. The program, run entirely by students, is financed by a $400 By Jdm con grant from the Undergraduate As The Non-Resident 9 soeiation. It is completely 'separ- ate from the faculty-run Saturday ciation (NRSA) is program for Cambridge youths for a probable reloc under the direction of the Insti- will be caused by the tvte Committee on Educational of #e new wing of Opportunity. Hall. Twenty MIT students participa- ted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM: cipated in informal discussion se- -ry. The Institute h/ minars. The program is an outgrowth theS plan because it of a pilot project last year. Its the resources to bu purpose. is to give the culturally new house or a win deprived students 'a greater ex- existing West Campu posure to math and science than L ted In Ar they would normally receive. T o_ Any MIT students interested in The HoUsing Offic the program should contact Larry seven rooms surmTo Risman, x3161 or dorm line 8-421. located just imide Chemistry instructors are needed right of the Massachu most. eq.trance. The NRSI Vietnam poll indicates Student opinion on U.S. foreign US role," and "Direct US war policy in Viet Nam was expressed with Red China." last Friday in a poll conducted by Complete approval ran highest the MIT Science Fiction Society. for statement 3 (continuation of 1099 undergraduates and 410 present policy), although the vote graduates participated. was 'below a majority, and lowest The ballots presented five state- for direct war. Complete disap- ments concerning US policy, and proval ran highest for US with- asked for shades of approval or drawal (788 undergraduates, 265 disapproval of each statement on graduates). The second most dis- a scale from 1 to 5. The state- approved course of action was di- ments lead, "Complete withdraw- rect war (629-248), and the least al of US from Viet Nam," "A disapproved course coincided with smaller US role," "A continuation the most approved, continuation Miller of present US policy," "A larger of present policy. planes -bound ere rerouted ners in Wal- try was un- hours. Off- uested to re- .ent Johnson nal facilities emergency ome here at lighted. -a, students quickly'filled the streets. Boston University soon requested that all girls remain indoors. Other girls' schools wouldn't even allow in- coming calls. In the nmeantime, conflicting stories as to the source of the trouble were developing. "The tower is down at Niagara Falls and has knocked out the main line," blared. one radio report. "A block in the grid system caused the present power failure," claimed another, while yet a third blamed the problem on "mechani- cal failure." The Federal Power Commission declared they detected trouble at the Moses Switching Station 10 miles southwest of Niagara Falls. However, the Mohawk Power Company, which operates the plant, maintains that they haven't spotted any problems. Auxiliary power systems were prepared eveywhere. In the MI area the South Boston generator was put into service, with all of Boston re-lit by 10:33 pm. As power was restored, one power company official comment- ed, "There will probably be some significant changes in the way we provide electricity, since one fail- ure caused so much of the US to go entirely black." It makes one wonder just why the entire New England area was ever connected in series. ~t~,~~~~wv~~'.a~ .e . .~;:~,'.WI -t,,,, s ,'' ibridge, Mass., Wednesday, Nov. [0, 1965 $c bable prepares transfer .- win Connmmiltee is working on plans to tudret Aso- iowert these morns into adequate ~w planning ' living group facilities. cation which Robert B. Gago , NRSA c tnstcton President, indicated that he felt McCbrmick the disadvantages of the move threaten to outweigh the advant- ages, which include proximity to tion aa L the Athletic and Student Centers. in the Ar"m- "in esmbrce," he explained, "a as suggested house in which all four floors are cannot fiad used extensively will be put into seven rooms. Even with smod- ild either a proofing, .tis will be inadequate. ng tto aY The trmaition from offices to a is s -tute. living group atmosphexe will be rmory difficul"t. cnist of Gagos'ian went on to express his fear that the social situation of aing a the NrSA I deteriorate. "Somehow and tt Mrpme the idea of taking a date hack to A EttsAverue fhe Armor just doesn't appeal ,f Exectve me." cBmd onations He earnente further on pro- jected study conditions in the Armory. "They will leave much to'be desired for those who can- not study in rhythm to a bouncing basketball. Furthermore, the Resi- derit graduate tutor at 318 Me- morial Drive will be replaced by an undergraduate tutorial pro- gram, and this logs will be felt a great deal." Hopeexrsd Gagosian concluded by express. ing reserved hope that NRSA will continue to function at its present level. He placed the challenge to the students: "All the advances of die last 3 years will turn to declines unless the conmuting student~ face the problems of the Armory with the attitude of tying to build it into a living group." I I I mm u VA'k n - en er ans coni e e approval of US POIDICY

mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

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Page 1: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

Blackout!

NewEngland pmower foimsBy P. B. Comm

Wexler Construton Companywill turn over the top floor ofthe Student Center to MIT for oc-cupancy about November 20. Thisshould enable the mrT li. tbrarystaff to prepare for opening ofthe reading room floor on Mon-day, November 29; a Novembern opening is possible but notprobable.

These and other facts concern-ing the construction work andprogram in the Center were dis-closed last Wednesday at a stu-dent-adminiUstration· meeting. - Stu-dents attending were from the Ins-comm Executive Council and theStudent Center Committee; othersincluded the Center architect,Prof. Eduardo Catalano; Al Za-velle, Tech Coop manager; CarlCarey, Bursar; Vice PresidentPhillip Stoddard; Frd Grotheer,dining service manager; PaulBarrett and Jim Murphy, of Phys-ical Plant; Prof. William Locke,Director of Libraries; and JohnMati!, Director of Publications.The questions and discussionsranged over a wide variety of theincompleted services and facili-ties which will eventually be in-

MIT debaters winAmherst match;defeat 23 teams

Mrr's Debate Teamrplaced firstlast weekend at a 24-school tourna-ment at Amherst College.

Each of the two teams, affirna-tive and negative, won five outof five debates. The overall 10-0record was tied by Rutgers Uni-versity, but MIT had higher in-dividual speaker ratings.

The topic of the debate wasthe following resolution: "thatlaw enforcement agencies in theUnited States should be givengreater freedom in the investiga-tion and prosecution of crime."

The affirmative debaters wereBill Arthur '69 of Phi Delta The-ta and Gary Ketner '69 of DeltaKappa Epsilon. The negativespeakers were Gary Epling- '67of Theta Delta Chi and Alan Guth'68 of Baker House.

In the area of individual speak-er points, Arthur took 4th placeaffirmative, and Guth and Eplingtook 5th and 6th place, negative,respectively.

ff i L ~ II 1-9 W, A ~ ~1 ~ M11 --- _- Photo bD John Torode'Empty bookshelves await duplicate copies of all, library

system reserve books, as new Student Center Reading Roomnears completion. Target date for the opening of the new facilityis Novmber 29. It's scheduled to operate 24 hours a day whenopened.

corporated into the building.No tumel yet

In response to a query about atunnel or bridge to cross Massa-chusetts Avenue, Prof. Catalanosaid that several plans were un-der consideration, but that no de-cision had been reached regard-ing the idea. As funds for sucha project are not in sight, com-pletion would be at least threeyears away.-

Pool by XmamThe recreational area in the

basement will ,be among the lastto 'be completed, it was revealed.The complex will consist of 5.pooltables, eight lanes of bowling, anda row of snack and cigarettevending machines. The area hasbeen designed to permit accessto the machines even when therecreational facilities are not op-rating. Best guess of the group fora completion date for the area:just before Christnas. Captainsfor the student staff that willoperate the complex have been'chosen, and they are recruitingworkers.

Mr. Zavelle reported that thegeneral sales in the new TechStore appeared to be very good,and that the all-day Saturday op-eration was especially worthwhile.In response to student questions,he indicated that Sunday openingof the small Lobby Shop wasbeing studied, but that there arelegal problems in the Common-wealth regarding such Sunday

five JP queen finlists chosen;more entertainment announced

The five fin a s in the JP Queen contest-have been selected by the balloting of thestudent body. The finalists in alphabetcal_order, are: MLss Rita Harrington, date ofJohn Schwarz of AEPi; Miss Nancy Miller,date of Ted Nygreen of SAE; Miss BobbieMcCreary, date of. Gary Garmon of PGD;Migs Jean Spottswood, date of Simeon Mas-manian. of East Campus; and Miss MelindaSwenson, date of Wrilliam Flor of LCA.

The Junior Prom Queen will be chosen byMiss Melinda Swenson a eommitltee of Beaver Key members during

the intermission of the formal dance Fridaynight.

Additional entertainment has been acquiredfor JP Weekend. The Folkmen, a New Yorkgroup along the lines of The Smothers Brothersand The Kingston Trio, will provide entertain-ment during the intermission of Friday's for-mal dance.

Anyone who wishes to get back the pictureof his JP Queen entrant may do so by stopping

Wss Bobbie McCreary� "TT, '�Vl11 I 1� I,

at the Inscomm office.

Miss Rita Harrington Miss Jean Spottswood Miss Nancy

By Bob Horvitz

The largest power failure sinceman harnessed electrical powerswept 90% of the northeast por-tion of the US into blackness lastnight.

From Philadelphia, Pa. north-ward to 75 miles past Toronto,Canada, 40 million Americans'were thrown into a state of massconfusion as a 2-million kilowattpower line from the NiagaraFalls Power Plant began toback up.

Circuits throughout the NewEngland area became overloadedand finally failed in the midst ofthe rush hour, at 5:27 pm. Withall traffic signals failing, the en-tire northeast corridor highwaysystem rapidly became a state ofmass chaos.

25 persons were stranded in theBoston Prudential Building. Alltransportation systems came

operations. quickly to a halt, as tFmulslgas not ready for New York City w,

Some of the final touches in as far as Bermuda.furnishing the building may re- An uprising by prisoquire several mon'&s more work, pole State Penitentiait developed. According to the controllable for 1%architect, the elaborate rugs for duty police were requthe Sala de Puerto Rico "are still port for duty. Presidbeing woven in Irar." One of the announed all natiorgrand pianos ordered is of a type were available forthat the Baldwin Company only use. But the Great Dmanufactures in January of each Tech remained everyear. The cinderblock walls may In the Boston arnot 'be -painted for about ninemonths. Two fifty-foot light tow-ers for the front walkways ofthe Center should be installed"in about six weeks." i

The students present also ar-ranged individual meetings withthose non-students present regard-ing the location of a building di-rectory, a calendar of events, asign on Mass. Avenue to identifythe Center, the activities floorfurniture situation, and bulletin 'i '

boards.

Civil Rights Comm. [starts Sat. classesfor Roxbury youths

Thirty junior high and high Vol. 85, No. 23 Camschool students from Roxburylearned math and science hmmMIT students Saturday as theMIT Armory prcCivil Rights Committee began its mmenlarged Saturday Enrichmentprogram.

The program, run entirely bystudents, is financed by a $400 By Jdm congrant from the Undergraduate As The Non-Resident 9soeiation. It is completely 'separ-ate from the faculty-run Saturday ciation (NRSA) isprogram for Cambridge youths for a probable relocunder the direction of the Insti- will be caused by thetvte Committee on Educational of #e new wing ofOpportunity. Hall.

Twenty MIT students participa-ted. After the math or science The tentative relocaclass the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:cipated in informal discussion se- -ry. The Institute h/minars.

The program is an outgrowth theS plan because itof a pilot project last year. Its the resources to bupurpose. is to give the culturally new house or a windeprived students 'a greater ex- existing West Campuposure to math and science than L ted In Arthey would normally receive. T o_

Any MIT students interested in The HoUsing Officthe program should contact Larry seven rooms surmToRisman, x3161 or dorm line 8-421. located just imideChemistry instructors are needed right of the Massachumost. eq.trance. The NRSI

Vietnam poll indicates

Student opinion on U.S. foreign US role," and "Direct US warpolicy in Viet Nam was expressed with Red China."last Friday in a poll conducted by Complete approval ran highestthe MIT Science Fiction Society. for statement 3 (continuation of1099 undergraduates and 410 present policy), although the votegraduates participated. was 'below a majority, and lowest

The ballots presented five state- for direct war. Complete disap-ments concerning US policy, and proval ran highest for US with-asked for shades of approval or drawal (788 undergraduates, 265disapproval of each statement on graduates). The second most dis-a scale from 1 to 5. The state- approved course of action was di-ments lead, "Complete withdraw- rect war (629-248), and the leastal of US from Viet Nam," "A disapproved course coincided withsmaller US role," "A continuation the most approved, continuation

Miller of present US policy," "A larger of present policy.

planes -boundere rerouted

ners in Wal-try was un-hours. Off-

uested to re-.ent Johnsonnal facilities

emergencyome here atlighted.-a, students

quickly'filled the streets. BostonUniversity soon requested that allgirls remain indoors. Other girls'schools wouldn't even allow in-coming calls.

In the nmeantime, conflictingstories as to the source of thetrouble were developing. "Thetower is down at Niagara Fallsand has knocked out the mainline," blared. one radio report.

"A block in the grid systemcaused the present power failure,"claimed another, while yet a thirdblamed the problem on "mechani-cal failure."

The Federal Power Commissiondeclared they detected trouble atthe Moses Switching Station 10miles southwest of Niagara Falls.However, the Mohawk PowerCompany, which operates theplant, maintains that they haven'tspotted any problems.

Auxiliary power systems wereprepared eveywhere. In the MIarea the South Boston generatorwas put into service, with all ofBoston re-lit by 10:33 pm.

As power was restored, onepower company official comment-ed, "There will probably be somesignificant changes in the way weprovide electricity, since one fail-ure caused so much of the USto go entirely black."

It makes one wonder just whythe entire New England area wasever connected in series.

~t~,~~~~wv~~'.a~ .e' ¢

..~;:~,'.WI -t,,,,s,''

ibridge, Mass., Wednesday, Nov. [0, 1965 $c

bable

prepares transfer.-win Connmmiltee is working on plans totudret Aso- iowert these morns into adequate~w planning ' living group facilities.

cation which Robert B. Gago , NRSAc tnstcton President, indicated that he feltMcCbrmick the disadvantages of the move

threaten to outweigh the advant-ages, which include proximity to

tion aa L the Athletic and Student Centers.in the Ar"m- "in esmbrce," he explained, "aas suggested house in which all four floors arecannot fiad used extensively will be put into

seven rooms. Even with smod-ild either a proofing, .tis will be inadequate.ng tto aY The trmaition from offices to ais s -tute. living group atmosphexe will bermory difficul"t.

cnist of Gagos'ian went on to express hisfear that the social situation of

aing a the NrSA I deteriorate. "Somehowand tt Mrpme the idea of taking a date hack toA EttsAverue fhe Armor just doesn't appeal ,f

Exectve me."

cBmd onationsHe earnente further on pro-

jected study conditions in theArmory. "They will leave muchto'be desired for those who can-not study in rhythm to a bouncingbasketball. Furthermore, the Resi-derit graduate tutor at 318 Me-morial Drive will be replaced byan undergraduate tutorial pro-gram, and this logs will be felt agreat deal."

HopeexrsdGagosian concluded by express.

ing reserved hope that NRSA willcontinue to function at its presentlevel. He placed the challenge tothe students: "All the advancesof die last 3 years will turn todeclines unless the conmutingstudent~ face the problems of theArmory with the attitude of tyingto build it into a living group."

I

I

I

mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e

approval of US POIDICY

Page 2: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

Why, not add listening and reading plea-sure to those leisure,-hours? Choose fromthe Tech Coop's outstanding collection fine records and books. Here's ,a samplingto whet your appetite.

Fine Arts' recording the late BeethovenQuartets. 5 record set, $9.00

Choose from other Fine Arts' perform-ances of Mozart, Mendelssohn, Bartok,Hindemith, etc., $1.98; '5/$9.00

Arehive--DGG now $3.90; 4/$15.00

Nonesuch, $2.19; 3/$6.00. Mono andstereo.

Complete keyboard works of Bach. 5record set only $8.00

Mix and Match. Mono and stereo, $1.98;5/$9.00

Choose from Concert-Disc, Desto, Everest,many others.

Complete Folkways catalogue, 12" were$3.98, now $2.98; 3/$8.25 --- 10" were$3.76, now $2.76; 3/$7.50

'LOCAL I T EREST BOOKS"The Cambridge Book 1966" (CCA),

$2.95

"'Reporting the News" (Louis M. Lyons),$6.50

"Galley Slave" (Austen Lake), $3.95

"The Gentle Americans" (Helen Howe),$6.95

"Mrs. Jack" (Louise Hall Tharp), $6.95

"Cambridge" (Knowles and Whitehill),$5.00

"East Cambridge" (Camb. Hist. Comm.),$3.00

"Buildings of New England" (Barker),$4.00

"New Architecture in Boston"" (Goody),$2.95

MoLT. AUTHORSJerome Wiesner -- "Where Science and

Politics Meet"9, $6.95

Tom Cole - "An End to Chivalry", $4.95

Charles Abrams -- "The City is the Fron-tier"", $6.50

Myron B. Bloy - "TVhe Crisis of CulturalChange", $3.95

M. IC, Goodall - "Science and the Politi.'- cian", $2.65

GMENERAL INREREST

'6The Sense of Wonder" (Carson), $4.95

"The American Heritage History- of theGreat West", Pre.Christmas Reg. Ed.,$12.95; Pre.Chiistmas D e I u x e Ed.,$15.45

"The New Yorker Album 1955o1965",$7.50

"Larrousse W o r 1 d Mythology", $19.95(before Jan. 1)

"The Dawn of European Civilization"(Rice), $23.50 (before Jan. 1)

"Family" (Margaret Mead), $10.00

6'The Work of Frank Lloyd Wright",$37.50 (pre-Christmas)

"Sierra Club" (Everest), $25.00"Zero Mostel", $10.00

"The Great Comic Book Heroes" (JulesFeiffert), $9.95

"World Without Sun"' (Cousteau), $10.00

,"The New Cosmopolitan World Atlas",$16.95

"Kennedy" (Theodore Sorensen), $10.00

"1000 Days" (Schlesinger), $8.50

"Oxford History of the American People"Morison), $12.50

"My Life in Little Russia" (Nally), $3.95

THE TECH COOP -OF THE HARVD COOPERATNE

IN 'THE NEW M. I.T. STUDENT CENTER

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Page 3: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

School of Architecture CrosPrds Af Redcl iker. Stark appointedbuilding otch ex anson applications fall duegg pofssosbuilding Ratch expansion Tuesday,6Nv. 16 engineering professors

The Rotch Library of the Schoolof Architecture and City Planningis being expanded.

The library is now on the sec-ond floor of building 7. A firstfloor addition is under construc-tion, and will be finished sometime after the first of the year.The cost is about $90,000.

TIhe addition is necessary be-cause of the recent creation ofthe Department of City Planning,

And · ,~l Cr&:~~%~~''S<''"'-:::., '~i_

new courses in art and history ofarchitecture, and an expansion ingraduate studies.

There will be 15 study carrelson the first floor, a new, largerreserve book section, and storagespace for theses, rare books, andreference material. The entranceto the Rotch Library will remainon the second floor; a stairwayand book elevator will connectthe new sectionfacilities.

to the present

Applications for participation inthis summer's Operation Cross-roads Africa are due Tuesday inDean Fassett's office, where theforms are available.

All nationalities are eligible, in-cluding Africans going back totheir native country for the sum-mer. The fees total $1800. Theyare partly subsidized, leaving thestudent with the obligation to raisethe remainder. The Operationfeels that raising the funds onone's own is a valuable experi-.ence. The Foreign Opportuiitiescommittee has suggestions in thisregard. Questions may be direc-ted to Rich Krasnow, x3205, thechairman of the Foreign Oppor-tunities Subcommittee of Ins-comm.

Dean of Engineering Gordon S.Brown recently announced the ap-pointment of two new facultymembers.

Dr. Robert H. Rediker of Lin-coln Laboratory will begin as Pro-fessor of Electrical Engineeringin July, 1966. Captain Robert E.Stark, USN, has joined the Facul-ty as Professor of Naval Construc-tion in the Department of NavalArchitecture and Marine Engi-neering, and as Professor andHead of the Department of NavalScience.

Dr. Rediker, a native of Brook-lyn, received his SB in EE andhis ,PhD in Physics from MIT.Since then he has worked at Lin-coln Laboratory, where he wasappointed Group Leader in 1959.

Captain Stark, a native of Lodi,New Jersey, graduated UnitedStates Naval Academy before

Furniture sale sponsoredby Technology Matrons

Photo by Bill IngramConstruction materials litter the first floor of Building 7 as

the Architecture and City Planning Rotch Library expands downone floor. The expanded facility is due to open January I withstudy carrals and extra books.

By Sue DownsThe Student's Furniture Ex-

change will hold a sale on Thurs-day, Nov. 18, from 10 am to3 pm.

The Exchange, sponsored bythe Technology Matrons, gathersused furniture from many sourcesand sells it to MIT students. Sincethe Exchange will close afterThanksgiving, all-the stock must',be sold. At this clearance sale,students may buy stoves, refrig-erators, a double desk, an allmetal 1kitchen cabinet as well asmany other miscellaneous itemsat very reasonable prices.

If furniture is returned to theExchange at the end of the term,

% L:-,;'gTm ::'--. ¥ .::: . .' '·- - ' ·',&;~ ~3

Phi,"2' h~

HEERITAGEis on the

MIT map

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Only Heritage Travel is so convenient. Just a few blocks from all parts of theInstitute. Why make needless trips into Boston or rely upon undependable mail orderticketing when Heritage can process reservations and all airline tickets requirements inminutes.

Heritage Travel is open 9:00 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, anduntil Christmas from 9:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. Just call or drop around to our office.

Room 403, 238 Main Street (Kendall Sq.), CambridgeTel.: 491-0050,

in reasonable condition, the stu-dent is refunded 2/3 of the costof any pieces. Profit from thesetransactions is used for studentactivities sponsored each year bythe Matrons.

The exchange is located on 224Albany10 to 3days.

Street and is open fromon Tuesdays' and Thurs-

serving aboard the USS Phila-delphia in World War II. He laterreceived an MS in Physics fromMITr. In 1964 Captain Stark be-came a staff officer with theChief of Naval Operations, andbecame director of appraisal forthe Bureau of Ships.

Metallurgists honorBckefen, Turner, Avery

Three MIT staff mmbers werechosen winners of the AmericanSociety for Metals 1965 HenryMarion Howe Medal for work donein metallurgy.

The three honored are: Dr. Wal-ter A. Backofen, professor of Me-tallurgy; Ira R. Turner, labora-tory assistant; and Dr. DonaldH. Avery, assistant professor ofMetallurgy.

They were honored for their'paper, "Superplasticity in an Al-Zn Alloy," which was published inthe December, 1964 edition of theASM publication "TransactionsQuarterly." At the time of theirwork, Mr. Turner was an under-graduate in the department ofPhysics and Dr. Avery was a Re-search Associate under Prof.Backofen.

The medals and certificates inrecognition of their work were pre-sented to Dr. Backofen, Mr. Tur-ner, and Dr. Avery at the AnnualASM Awards Luncheon, Tuesday,October 19, during the ASM Na-tional Metal Exposition and Me-tals/Materials Congress.

Prof. Mahoney elected coun ilman

I _'.

Photo by John TorodeMIT Professor of History Thomas H. D. Mahoney is congrat-

ulated by his brother,'Father Leonard Mahoney, SJ, Professor ofHistory at Boston College, on his re-election to the CambridgeCity Council last week. Professor Mahoney ran fifth out of nineelected Council members to gain his second two year term. Pro-fessor Mahoney is MIT's first faculty representative on the Coun-cil this century. He will return to his teaching duties next Sep-tember, after a year's leave from duties.

Inside Inscorem -Juniors fo get rings this weekas Inscomm reverses past vote

By Bill Byrn _

,By a 13-3 margin, the InstituteCommittee voted last Thursday toreverse its decision of last Mayand allow the Class of 1967 to re-ceive their class rings this week.Accordingly, George Piccagli, pres-ident of the class, has arrangedfor distribution today and Friday.

A wide variety of other topicswere touched on at the meeting,,

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which ran to 12:15 a.m. and drewa crowd of about 50 studentguests. Among the other itemsdiscussed were schemes for al-lowing a broader use of the newUndergraduate Association print-ing press, which was purchasedthis summer at a total cost of$3300 and is now in the LectureSeries Committee office. The finalscheme for use of this press willbe approved by the Activities De-velopment Board, a joint student-faculty body.

In other action, the Interfra-ternity Conference was requestedby the Institute Committee to pre-pare a financial statement of in-come and expenses related to theIFC dance on October 23.

Richard Engle and Bob Ramn-ers, both seniors with consider-able curricular and extracurricu-

(Please turn to page 14)

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Page 4: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

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Vol. LXXXV, No. 23 Nov. 10, 1965BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman ................................... Kenneth Browning '66Managing Editor .................................. Dave Kress '67Editor ............................................ John Montanus '66Business Manager ........................ Stephen Teicher '66News Editor ..................................... Charles Kolb '67Features Editor .............................. Robert Horvitz '68Sports Editor ..................................... Gerry Banner '68Photography Editor .......................... John Torode '66Entertainment Editor ............................ Jeff Stokes '68Advertising Manager ................ Michael Weidner '66

Associate Managing Editors ........ Louise Lentin '68Mark McNamee '68

Associate Sports Editor ........ Russell Mosteller '68Controller ............................. Guiile Cox '68Treasurer .......................... Scott Mermel '68Assistant Ad Managers ........ Joseph LaBreche '67

Nicholas Covatta '68Assistant Treasurer ............ Nicholas Covatta '68Accounts Receivable .................. Dan Green '68Office Manager ...................... Rob Taylor '66Unsigned editorials in The Tech are the opinion

of The Tech's Board of Directors, not that of MIT.The Tech welcomes letters from its readers. Spacepermitting, such letters will be printed in whole or In

part, if deemed by the editor to be of sufficient in-terest or benefit to the community. Brevity increasesthe chance of publication. Anonymous letters will notbe printed, but names will be withheld upon request.

_1 1 Second.class postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts.The Tech is published every Wednesday during thecollege year, except during college vacations, byThe Tech, Room W20.483, 84 Mass. Ave., CambridgeMassachusetts 02139. Telephones area code 617,876:5855; 876-5856; 864-6900, Extension 2731.

United States mail subscription rates: $2.75 for oneyear, $4.25 for two years.

Front page photo of the Charles River side of theold boathouse taken by Art Kalotkin.

Time for a changeIt was interesting to hear that only 12

single-event tickets have been sold to theJP Saturday "blast" in the Armory. Wewonder if that heralds a changing tastein the student body.

Student taste has been the topic of alot of official conversations in the Bostonarea, particularly when that taste becamepublic. Students in Back Bay apartments,few if any of them from MIT, have madea general bad name for all the schools inthe area. The result has been, amongother things, the creation of those "li-quor purchase identification cards;" therehas also been talk of setting up a regula-tory board for the actions of area stu-dents.

All of this simply means that, like itor not, students may be forced to changetheir taste in parties--especially the loud-er kinds. Several groups on campus havealready discovered that neighbors docomplain to the police.

Frankly, we aren't bothered by noisyparties, but we have to face the fact thatsome people who are can cause a lot offuss. There is absolutely no question offighting it; it just looks as though thetaste level of parties may have to change.And thanks to the general trend of af-fairs, on-campus parties are no exception.

We prefer to approach the matterpositively; rather than bemoaning partieswhich won't exist, let's look for some dif-ferent ways of enjoying ourselves than"blasts." The Student Center is of coursethe outstanding place for experiment;- wewould like, for example, to see the SpringWeekend semi-formal there. And it seemssensible to use this purposely social facili-ty more than the Armory, which was de-signed for athletics.

Various groups have tried to makesome changes in the year's social calen-dar; the Student Center Committee is of-fering active support for any who wantto use the new building, whether the af-fair is an Outing Club square dance (No-vember 12) or an open bid fraternityparty. So far the new types of partieshave proved fairly successful.

Variety is the spice of life, and attimes it has seemed to be nearly absenton Campus, with the round of "blasts"and folksingers occasionally punctuatedby a formal. It is admittedly much moredifficult to think about something newthan to grind out an old successful formu-la; but the total s ocial life of the campushas suffered from such conservative, un-original planning. If the current civicsituation can bring about some innova-tion, it will be worth it.

NRSA rters-Current plans for the new addition to

McCormick seem to indicate that theNon-Resident Student Association housewill have to be torn down; since wve haveheard rumors about the intended fate ofthe NRSA, we feel it time to clarify thesituation publicly.

There is no ideal location now on awcampus for the NRSA to move to, so the fi

administration has planned to move the oorganization temporarily into the Armo- airy offices. To the students here now this P"temporary" plan may seem permanent; n,they may graduate before anything bet-ter is found or built. But this is not in- Atended to discourage the organization 1

o,and activity of non-resident students. The administration recognizes the C

value of the NRSA, and its contribution a,to the extracurricular life of students notaffiliated with any other group. NRSA. $~teams and social events have a definite tcplace on campus. Non-resident participa- altion in activities indicates their general ,interest in the community life.

Everyone recognizes, too, that the StNRSA needs some "home base" of its own fi,to work from, some informal gathering ofplace and nucleus of organization. It isperhaps unfortunate that something defi- dinite has not been planned for the next Tryear or two, but the non-residents should mbe assured that both administration and student leaders are aware of the problem ticand are working toward the quickest pos- tr4sible solution. M

Preiction time nuAs the Big Weekend approaches, b'

re,there are many questions on a thousand flcUlips: Will the Spirit of '67 save JP? Will anGeorgio remember to stand behind the dcQueen when he crowns her? Will the anrope break again? But of course the big .anquestion is, will '69 win Field Day? Pa

Alas, the poor freshmen have notbeen sparkling with enthusiasm. Very Belittle propaganda has floated down the feAcorridors of the main building, no myste-rious markings have appeared on the imbridge, and the '68 officers have sufferedno harassment, or even inconvenience.

We propose, therefore, to give thekiss of death to the sophomore cause bypredicting that they will win Field Day. .After their ignominious defeat last year(and, of course, our helpful prediction oftheir victory) the class of '68 is out forblood. If they can get a turnout like '67did last year, they'll have it made.

We hope that Beaver Key can at least 4give the freshmen the benefit of the doubt vthis year and order enough gloves. There is no need for more than one predictionto be wrong.

A night of star-sLooking through old volumes of The'

Tech, we discovered a glorious traditionthat has been allowed to fall by the way-side-the All-Star Basketball Game. Thistitanic struggle was waged annually be-tween two stalwart faculty teams, usual-ly Humanities and Science vs. Engineer-ing and Administration, with a cheeringcrowd of a thousand students.

We have determined to revive this _sadly neglected event, for several rea-sons. First, The Tech always sponsoredit; second, the campus could use a differ- 6ent sort of entertainment; and finally, thethought of Dean Wadleigh runningaround in shorts is too irresistible topass up.

Various members of the faculty havebeen warned; we are now searching for asuitable date for the carnage. More aboutthis night of stars will be gradually leaked out in succeeding issues of The Tech.

I0° t. - X 0 tes

by Chuck Kolb 93. MIT's much regarded im.

ge moved downward last,eek, down from the thirdloor of Building 3 to the sec-nd floor of Building 5, that is,s the Public Relations andublications Offices moved toew locations.

The PR Offices, home ofhose inspiring periodicalsrech Talk' and the 'Calendarf Events,' can be enteredhrough 5-21 . The Publications)tfices are located at 5-221nd 5-205.

94. The High Voltage Re-earch Lab which was forced* move when old Buildings 28nd 30 were torn down lastear has new quarters in auilding by itself on the cornerf Mass. Ave. and Alibanytreet beside the Instrumenta-on Lab. Official designationf the facility is N Ib.The HVR Lab is under theirection of Professor John G.rump and does research inedical applications of highnergy X-rays and studies onradiation as a food preserva-on process with a 4 Mev elec-on accelerator and two 2!ev X-ray machines.

95. For those of you whon'ft know how widespread the

Ember of designation of MITtildings is: Burton House isally W51; Baker House is of-:ialily W7; McCormick, W4id W3; Bexley, WI3; Ash-Dwn, WI; East Campus, 62d 64; and Senior House, E2d E3. The President's Housereally El while the Sailing

vilion is 50A.It is not true that the Phita Epsilon house, home of ourarless UAP, is Building 007.

96. The Institute shined itsage and advanced its corn-

mnitment to apply fair employ.mert policies last week when,by invitation of Governor Vol.pe, if became the first educa.tional institution to join theMassachusetts Plan for EqualEmployment Opportunily.

MPEEO is an association ofF nearly 70 employers in the

state pledged to promote fairemployment.

97. Professor T. WilliamLambe, a soil mechanics expertin the Department of Civil En.gineering, has been appointeda member of the Lunar SurfaceSubcommittee of NASA's Sci-ence and Technology AdvisoryCommittee for Manned SpaceFlight.

Other members of the sub.committee are Caltech Presi.dent Dr. Lee DuBridge, Har.yard astronomer Dr. Leo Gold.berg, Princeton Geologist Dr.Harry Hess and Dr. GordonMacDonald of the University ofCalifornia. Chairman of boththe main commiiffee and thesubcommittee is Dr. CharlesTownes, Provost.

We suspect that the presenceof so many Cambridge andCalifornia people on the sub.committee means that NASAfears the worst--that the lunarsurface has the consistency ofa mixture of smog and CharlesRiver water.

98. From November's 'Tech.nology Review' comes the in.formation that for the 1915.1916 school year only 67 of the1960 students registered werecandidates for an advanceddecqree.

This year's enrollment shouldevent out to about 3600 un-dergrads and 3600 grads. Let'shope that 50 years from nowthere aren't 670 undergradsand 19,000 graduate students.

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abled East to attempt a ratherbold but well calculated play, toset an otherwise cold contract.

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(Please turn to Page 5)

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Loyalty Oath FundTo the Editor:A letter was recently circulated

at MIT in which my name waslisted as a member of the MITCommittee for the Loyalty OathFund. Whilst I agreed to colectmoney in my department in sup-port of Professors Pedlosky's andWatson's legal action against theloyalty oath, I am not in fact amember of the above Committee.

George WolfAssociate ProfessorDepartment of Nutritionand Food Science

Food on SundayTo the Editors of The Tech:

Sunday night. I'm getting hun-gry, but let's just finish that prob-lem set first. Aaaaah. Now to eat.

Through the cool night air, overto new Student Center, haven forTechmen. To Lobdell. Eighto'clock, closed. Damn. But GrillRoom is supposed to be open tillall hours, isn't it? Go upstairs.Closed too.

Rumble, rumble. Mutter, mut-ter. Always knew Sunday was aday of rest. Never knew it wassupposed to be a day of fasting.Open random door. "Hey, any ofyou guys know where I can getsomething to eat?" Not here."Mutter, mutter. If Stouffer's won'trun any place to eat, why not getTSE to do it?

Oh, .well, so it shouldn't be atotal loss, down to the Lobby

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Shop to get a tube of toothpaste.Also closed.

This is bad news. But then, ifyou can't eat, who needs tooth-paste?

Daniel P. Smith '66(This problem is currently

under discussion in the StudentCenter Committee, with the ad-ministration and Mr. Grotheer.Right now the problem is staffhiring. There is no immediatesolution in sight -Ed.)

Tholma lectureTo the Editor:

"Pure opinion, however sub-stantial it may appear to the in-dividual mind which fosters it, isa totally inadequate means ofcommunication ... sound logic isthe only suitable medium of com-munication." Personally, I 'wassurprised to find that ThomasNesbitt's review of Norman Tho-mas's speech made so little useo fthis medium.

At th estart of the second para-graph, Nesbitt admits that he isbiased against Mr. Thomas'sviews, thereby voiding all furtherremarks on the speech as beingprejudiced. The remainder of thearticle is characterized by vague,unsubstantiated opinions, sly re-marks, and a pickaninny (sic.) at-tention to semantics - none ofwhich prove Nesbitt's contentionthat the speech was "pure opin-ion." To further sadden any lo-

(Please turn to page 6)

Looking Back

By Bob Horvitz

"He who shuns the dust andheat of the arena shall not en-joy the cool shade of the olivebranch of victory": so proclaim-ed the victory cup of the originalTech Field Day back in 1901.

This first Field Day was a re-placement for Cane Rush, inwhich the frosh were given a caneand were supposed to defend itfrom the sophomores. After fif-teen minutes, a pistol was firedas a signal to end hostilities. Thewinning class was the one whosemembers had the most hands onthe cane.

Frosh killed in '00At the last Cane Rush in 1900,

an unfortunate incident occurredin which one freshman was fatallyinjured and another was carriedfrom the field with a hemorrhageof both eyes and a heart injury,never to recover fully.

Obviously, a substitute event orevents which would be just aspopular but would call for thedisplay of skill rather than thatof brute force was necessary.President Henry Pritchett, theAdvisory Council on Athletics,and two undergraduate commit-tees finally developed the idea ofField Day.

In the years following WorldWar I, Field Day lasted two days,beginning with the famous T e c h

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Night opening hostilities, in whicha small fight would usually beginin a local theater and spreadthroughout the streets of Bostonand Cambridge. Trouble with lo-cal authorities caused the discon-tinuance of this practice.Sophomore Banquet introducedFrom 1923 to 1926, the Sopho-

more Banquet replaced TechNight. The primary aim of thefreshman class was to disrupt theproceedings of the banquet ascompletely as possible. They weremost successful in 1926, as thatyear's Sophomore Banquet be-came known as the Tech Riot.

The following editorial appear-ed in the Boston Post after thisriot: "If a crowd of young menfrom the tenement districts ofBoston, let us say, had invadedthe Back Bay on Thursday night,s m a s h i n g windows, wreckingdance halls, raiding automobiles,tearing up subway station gatesand ending by raising havoc withtunnel cars, the police-would havebeen called out for riot duty andthe disturbers would have beenclubbed into submission. And thepublic would have correctly term-ed the outbreak as an exhibitionof unadulterated hoodlumim.

"That the youths who did justthese thing happened to be stu-dents at the Massachusetts Insti-tute of Technology makes themno less hoodlums - mom so, ifanything, since they are supposedto have a rather high position tomaintain. Education presumes theancient feeling of 'Noblesseoblige.' "'

Glove fight main eventIt was then decided that a re-

placement for such activities wasneeded, and following the TechRiot, the Glove Fight became themain event of Field Day.

In the period from 1926 to 1934,the classes gave vent to theirenthusiasm by throwing variouskinds of refuse at detractors. Un-fortunately, the thrower's aimwas usually poor, and this prac-tice was also discontinued by theInstitute.

During the '30's Field Day tookon a new and practical signifi-cance for the freshman class.The frosh class had to followthree "Freshmen Rules":

1. All freshmen shall wear reg-ulation ties, four-in-hand, withcardinal and grey stripes. (Theties were sold, of course, by theCoop.)

2. Freshmen are expected tospeak to all members of the fac-ulty and to tip their hats to thePresident of the Institute and theDean.3.- Freshmen should riot loiteraround the Main Lobby or situpon the benches in the lobby.

Whenever the Freshmen wonField Day, this third regulationwas suspended for the rest of theyear.

All tied upSince the introduction of Field

Day as we knew it today, num-erous experiments in warfarehave been tried. In one year, dur-ing the tug-of-war, one class add-ed an extension to its end of therope, and then tied this exten-sion to a nearby telephone pole.The judges evidently did not no-tice, and as a result the teamwith brains as well as brawnpulled their wearied opponentsacross the line.

In 1956 the sophomores held aMug lift. That beer which was notconsumed by the sophomores wasused to soak captured freshmen.These activities continued untilthe frosh retaliated with theirsecret weapon - a skunk!

Athletic events once commonPrior to 1957, in addition to the

traditional Glove Fight and tug-of-war, Field Day featured athleticevents such as tackle football,crew races, and swimming meets.In 1957 the Athletic Associationdiscontinued Field Day because itfelt that these activities were in-jurious to varsity athletics.

The following year, Field Daywas reinstated under the direc-tion of Beaver Key, the JuniorClass Honorary Society. In itspresent form, Field Day is a ser-ies of events designed to test theclasses' ingenuity, organization,and participation.

The major events of the pres-ent Field Day program are gadg-et races, such as boat races onthe Charles, totem pole races,bed races, litter races, and stage-coach races. Mystery events havealso been added to the traditionalGlove Fight and tug-of-war.

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suit and one, maybe two, spades. of clubs. With that lead, South'sUnless West had the Ace of spades hopes dropped. If he let the Kingand South at least a singleton, in hold the trick, the defense couldwhich case the contract couldn't cash another diamond and abe made, the defense needed to trump. If he won the Ace, theregrab its tricks off the top. How- weren't enough entries to get anyever, unless West had that Ace sloughs on the spades. Neitherthe defense couldn't get enough did he have enough time to rufftricks off the top. East saw an- out his losing diamond.other possible way to set the con-tract; that is, if South had at East's play of leading the Kingleast two clubs, at least three dia- of clubs is known as the Des-monds, and only one spade. chapelles Coup and is an impres-

On that assumption, East de- sive but occasionally useful waycided to knock out the entries to of knocking out entries. If East

leads a low club, South can winAll Makes -'Large VariefySQUASH 4RACQES in his hand, unblock spades bySQ A R LaCe Q E cashing his Ace, and later throwTennis Squash Shop off a losing diamond on a long

67A MP. Auburn St., Cambridge spade. Without a clu blead, SouthTRpp. owell H541ouse has time to discard a diamond

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BCENTRAL SQ. FLORJISTIBEAUTIFUL CORSAGES FOR J.P.

GARDENIAORCHID

603 Mass. Ave., Central Sq.-EL 4-7553tBring this ad in for 50c off

Letters to The TechA short history of Field Day

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LO ~ BgBy MimE Rodburg0 A correlation between the an-

- nual pattern of sunspot activity

& and the degree to which the- sun's corona will reflect radar

: pulses has been found throughLLa: long-term radar studies of the sunE from El Campo, Texas.> Averaged out over a year, theO more active the sunspots are theZ more readily will the sun's corona> reflect radar pulses back to earth.< The finding was reported by Dr.o Jesse C. James in a paper pre-, sented before the Northeast Elec-Z tronics Research and EngineeringuJ Meeting (NEREM) in Boston,3 Friday, Nov. 5. Dr. James is di-

rector of the world's largest solarradar facility which is operated atEl Campo by MiT's Center forSpace Research, under supportfrom the National Aeronauticsand Space Administration.

wI Supports theoryE lThe proportional annual corre-

lation, Dr. James said, does notcome as a particular scientificsuprise since theory would in-dicate that such violent solar erup-tions as associated with sunspotsshould influence the radar reflec-tivity of the corona. But it is thefirst experimental data yet ob-tamned to bear out the otherwisethoeretical correlation and shouldbe helpful to scientists in deter-mninfg the properties of the vari-ous sections of the sun.

Direct proportional correlationscannot be observed with El Campoequipment over short periods suchas day to day or even week toweek, Dr. James noted. Onlywhen data for an entire year iscompiled and analyzed can thesunspot-reflectivity correlation beseen. Dr. James and his asso-ciates at the field site have been

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studying the sun's corona withradar since April, 1961.

The corona is sometimes thoughtof as a sort of solar atmospheresurrounding the visible solar disk,except that it is proportionally farlarger than the earth's' atmos-phere, extending out into spaceseveral solar radii. The turbulentcorona is composed of charged,high-energy hydrogen nuclei, elec-trons, and, other particles releasedfrom the continuous hydrogen ex-plosions that represent the sun'ssource of energy.

Vast particulate cloudsVast clouds of charged particles

that streak away from the sunand through interplanetary spaceat speeds near that of light-clouds that are somnetimes calledsolar winds-come from the tur-bulent corona and imake up whatis called the "extended solar cor-ona."

The E1 Campo solar radar an-tenna is a fixed array of 1,024dipoles, small metal crosses,spread out over a nuie-acre fieldin eight orderly rows. The powersource is a 500,000 watt radiotransmitter, operating at a fre-quency of 38.26 megacycles persecond (7.84 meters wavelength).The antenna's view of the sky is

a fan shaped one-15 degreewide east and west and % of o4degree north and south; the latte]is slightly larger than the anglesubtended -by the sun's disk a:seen from the earth.

Operated dailyThe radar is operated for 3:

minutes every day around nowwhile the sun moves through the15-degree antenna field of viewFor the first 16 minutes-the timeit takes a burst of radio energto travel from earth to sun an(back-the MIT scientists transmjcoded radar pulses. For the las16 minutes, they shut down thetransmitter and receive thechoes. A computer is used tanalyze the data and _select thetrue signals from backgrounsnoise from the sun and from elsewhere in the sky.

Dr. James informed the NEREBmeeting that the echoes alwaye x h i b i t "doppler spreading,'shifts in freuency which indicatthat they are being reflected brapidly moving material in th,corona. Precisely what these rapi,motions are, he said, is stillmystery. ",But they are fthougto be wave motions of some solthat are responsible for the healing of the corona," he concluded

Letters to The Tech(Continued from Page 5) are all perfect personifications od

the grungy 'Tech Tool' of illgician, Nesbitt confused the plan repute.of action Mr. Thomas proposed I'd therefore like t suggest a

s the original called for a Geneva I'd therefore like to suggest ae conference before the withdrawal serious entry -(because, for oner of the GI's. ing, the prizes and regonitione Aside from this, the tone of the are not small and I feel thiss review implies that opposition to young man could use them as well

the war in Vietnam is based on as any MIT man I know). Hispure opinion, whereas cold (or namne is John Hoche. He is a

2 rather "cold-hearted") logic sup-. senior from Winmter Park, Fla,n ports it. This has been debated in course XXI, heading for mred.

e many times before now, and has ical school next year. He is onea. never been "proven" one way or of my fraternity brothers and ae the other. good friend.

Y As a final note, it was interest- Though his wardrobe is hardlyd ing to see that this article ap- extensive, it is quite tasteful andit peared in The Tech as a "fac- well coordinated; his "fashion;t tual" review, whereas Ted Ny- awareness" is extensive and verye green's article on the groaWth of reliable.e the "hate-ccmn.inunists" dogma in He is no politician, and I doubto America was .prefixed by "This that unless a ballot stuffing cam.e article does not necessarily re- 'agn is launched he will receiveLd fiect the opinion of. - ." more votes than the jokers.

- ~ - ~ Lee Seldon '67 I hope this hurried note willreach the right hands and pre

r1unntv Tnnls vent an embarassing election.

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To the Editor:In the light of your note in the

last issue of The Tech on thestatus of the Esquire Fashion Con-test, I would like to point outsomething I'm sure you mustknown by now.. Most of the primeentrants you listed were obvious-ly put up as a joke-those onthe list whom I know personally

Tom Scott '66

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A man whose taste has grown up.A man with a thirst for a manlier brew.Graduate from beer. Graduate to Ballantine Ale.It's light like beer, but what a difference.Real tangy. Bolder. Keener. More to the point.Try Ballantine Ale... you'll be an Ale Man, too.

(Planning a party? Call your local distributorfor Ballantine Ale. He'll be happy to serve you.)

NXcFwEPlP. BALLANTINE & SONS, NEWARK. N.J.

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Corona still mysfery

Radar pulses affected by sunspots

RACQUETS RESTRUNGPrompt Service

Tennis & Squash Shop67A Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

(Opp; Lowell House)I TR 6.5417

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Page 7: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

Mass. Corps interviewsRecruiters for the Cornon-

wealth Service Corps will be atAMr in Building 10 all day Thurs-day, November 18, to interviewprospective volunteers.

The Comnonwealth ServiceCorps is described as "the na-tion's first domestiePeace Corps."Volunteers work part or full timeat projects designed to alleviatepoverty and suffering in Massa-chusetts. They are unpaid, but

1. Talking to yourself?

Rehearsing a speech.I'm running forPresident of theStudent Council.

3. What's your platform ?

Do I need one?

5. Already been used.

"Tippecanoe andTyler too"?

are reimbursed for texir epenses.Projects for this year includecounseling dropouts, aiding pro-bation officers and physical ther-apists, and assisting in the edu-cation of economically and social-ly disadvantaged childen.

Additional information can bebtained- from the regional office

of the C.S.C. at 15 School St.in Boston, or from the MeT SocialService Committee, Room 441,Student Center, x2894.

2. Angela's idea?

She says it will helpme develop a senseof responsibility.

4. You have to give people areason for voting for you.

How about "A chickenin every pot"?

6. Look, if you want to showAngela you're responsible,why not sign up for LivingInsurance from Equitable.It's one of the mostresponsible things you cando-because' Living Insurancewill give your wife and kidssolid protection.

"I would rather beright than President."

For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: Patrick Scollard, Manpower Development Division.

The EUlITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHome Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 ©Equitable 1965

An Equal Opportunity Employer

IC11ee A^

By Jeff TrimmerNow that the term is well under

way and the first round of quizzeshas hit or is presently poundingstudents into submission, it mightbe well to dwell for a momenton the pitfalls that often befallstudents as they continue theirstudies.

One of the greatest causes ofstudent academic demise is theillness known as Compulsive Card-Playing. The compulsive card-player, as everyone must know,is the one who just has to get in"a couple of hands" before din-ner, after dinner, for a studybreak, or in between studybreaks.

The problem has grown greatlyin recent years, and raids by ad-ministration officials on a seriesof dormitories and fraternities ina midwestern university nettedsome 8,000 packs of playing cards.The orgies precipitated by card-playing are disastrous, accordingto administration officials.

The crackdown, as reported byDon Sockol of the Michigan StateNews, was the result of leaks toscholarship chairmen that mid-term week would set the scenefor increased orgies of bridge,hearts, and euchre. Reportedlythe administration condones lessharmful and addictive games suchas canasta, gin, and solitaire.

Canasta called "safe""The academic mortality rate

of a game like canasta is so lowas to be statistically negligible,"noted one agent.

"Canasta and solitaire don'thave enough kicks in them to geta 'student hooked," said another.

Bridge is one of the prime caus-es of academic mortality. Bridgeplayers usually don't play formoney. Money means nothing tothem.

Perhaps the most terrible partof the whole thing is the "push-er," according to Sockol. Thepusher is an addicted bridge play-er who feels compelled to teachothers the nefarious game just tocontinue his own satisfaction. Un-suspecting freshmen are often thetarget for his activities.

cademic mortality rate of CCPseen to be at dangerous level

Just what can be done with theproblem is a difficult question.Society must face the problemthat the addicted card-player isnot an evil, dirty person whoshould be punished by flunkinghis midterms, but is actually asick person, and must be treatedfor his illness.

Sockol proposes that clinics beset up in areas hardest hit bybridge addiction. This hopefullywill free those closely associatedwith the addict from feelingashamed. To hide, condone, oraccept the addict will certainlynot help the unfortunate victim.

Until these clinics can be setup there are several things thatcan be done:

1. If you find a deck of cards,turn it in to your scholarshipchairman.

2. If you live off-campus anddiscover a deck under your room-mate's mattress, tie him to achair while you burn the deck.When he ceases to be violent, youmay untie him and he will thankyou for what you have done.

3. If you catch a younger childplaying cards, beat his dealinghand with a hammer and hit himwith a chain made of decks ofcards reinforced by steel. He willlearn to associate cards with painand avoid them...

The WCTU are a..."Hell hath no wrath as that of

a woman scorned," or somethinglike that. Michigan State Newswriters discovered this when theyprinted a quote by a professor ofhistory calling the Women's Chris-tian Temperance Union (WCTU) abunch of sleepy old ladies.

Well, if they were sleepy or oldthey surely woke up fast. At leastthat is the conclusion which mustbe made from the response whichwas immediate and vociferous.

To quote from some of the let-ters: . .. the WCTU is not asleepbut very much awake and theirmembers do not wear sneakersbut hard toed boots that are sulit-able for stamping out the evilsthey see around them.

Not like Harvard, please"Two of my family attended

if h doesnt gve it to yOu g...-get ft yopurslf!

IMichigan State and I would hateto see it going down the road ofHarvard and Yale. As one personsaid, 'I would never allow mychildren to go to Harvard of Yaleor any college where students arein controL'"

Another comments: "Trying toplay up to the galleries, aren'tyou?"

And another: "You see we areliving in a dangerous age and weneed to keep our minds clear sowe can avoid the pitfalls we seearound us. I am proud to be amember of the Women's ChristianTemperence Union-and I dareyou to print this letter in yourpaper."

Well, The State News did printthat letter along with eight others.And for those in doubt, the WCTUstands for clean living, the UnitedStates of America, apple pie andice cream, the American way,hotdogs, and other "good" things.

Glue-sniffing gets toughGlue sniffers and enthusiastic

model plane builders may be infor a hard fight, as legislation tolimit airplane glue sales is beingintroduced in many states.

The fad, which began severalyears ago, when young childrenwere found getting high by snif-fing the fumes or vapors fromairplane glues, has caused furorsin many states.

According to several who havetried the action, the inhalation ofthe vapors produces feelings ofexhileration and excitement simi-lar to alcoholic stimulation. In-creased sniffing produced slurredspeech, drowsiness, stupor, oreven unconsciousness.

Dr. Kinsey of Indiana Univer-sity's Institute for Sex Researchannounced that a study is plannedon "Sex in College." Reported theNew York Times: "It hopes tolighten its staff's load, by. trainingstudents to do much of the fieldwork on that one."

"Bitch-in" resultsNot too long ago a "bitch-in" at

the University'of Colorado was re-ported. Now the outcome of thisunusual experiment can be re-ported.

The bitch-in was originally plan-ned to allow the 2800 students atColorado to protest administrationpolicies. Half the crowd sat, sleptand did homework on the floor,while others milled about tryingto think of a "bitch" they mightair. One coed from Californiapaced the ballroom floor, wrappedin red ribbon with a sign on herback stating "I protest the redtape at the University c4 Colo-rado."

Although faculty and admini-strators were expressly invited toattend, virtually none were there.

HAVE FUN WORKING iN EUROPE.

E UR PELuxembourg - AR types ofsummer jobs, with wages to$400, are available in Europe.Each applicant receives a tra-vel grant of $250. For a 36-page illustrated booklet con-taining all jobs and applicationforms send $2 (handling andairmail) to Dept. N, AmericanStudent Information Service,22 Avenue de la Libert6,Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.

m I-- B-I -- I

The ProspectorsSki Club

presents WARREN- MILLERand his latest color film

"THE BIGSKI SHOW'"

Wednesday, November 17at 8:!5 p.m.

Cambridge High & LatinAuditorium, Trowbridge St.,

Cambridge $2.00 tax incl.

RIVERSIDEMotorcycle SalesSuzuki, Norton, Ducati227 River St., Camb.

491-7007Service specialists in allmakes scooters & motor-cycles.

All Service WorkGuaranteed

Quality and Low Prices

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JADE THE TECH COOP

IN THE NEW M. I.T. STUDNT CENTER.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f

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Page 8: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

U U

if nThe Bulletin BoadgUUUUUUUUUUUUUU ..UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU ESUUSUUUEU3U3UUE

Compiled by the Public Rela-p tions Committee of Inscomm, The

o- Bulletin Board is a weekly serv-- ice of the PRC and The Tech.

- Meetings and events may be in-e cluded in this article and in the

u MIT Student Bulletin by filling out: a form in the Inscomm office or'" in Mr. Jim Mvurphy's office in the0 Student Center at least 12 days inZ advance of the week the event is

- to occur.-< The deadline for events of the

c week of November 22-28 is today,co November 10.Z Further information may be ob-CL tained from Bob Howard (x3783),

editor of the NMT Student Bulletin.Wednesday, November 10

12:00 noon-Episcopal CommunionService. Speaker: Fred Cleve-land, followed by lunch, MIT

I Chapel.5:00 pm--Tau Beta Pi. Student

Center, Room 407.Lu 5:00 pm-MIT Concert Band re-I hearsal. Kresge Auditorium.F 5:00 pm--MIT Glee Club rehear-

sal. Kresge Auditorium.5:00 pm-Lecture by Klans Liep-

mann: An Introduction to theBeethoven String Quartets. Ad-mission: free. Music Library.

Night-Voo Doo make up. W20-460.

7:00 pm-International StudentsCouncil. Student Center, Room467.

7:115 pm-TCC-VCF-Ist LutheranChurch Forum Film: QuestionSeven. Admission: free. Coffeeand doughnuts. Room 26-100.

7:30 pm-Gilbert & Sullivan Socie-ty rehearsal. Kresge Auditorium.

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10:00 pm-Lutheran Vesper Serv-ice. MIT Chapel.

Thursday, November 11Veteran's Day: no school.6:00 pm--I.F.C. Dinner and Busi-

ness Meeting. Hotel Kenmore,Crystal Ballroom.

7:00 pm-MIT Rocket Research So-cieiy Meeting. Student Center,Room 467.

Friday, November 121:00 pm-MIT Islamic Society: Ju-

ma Prayers. Kresge RehearsalRoom A.

5:00 pm-Tech Catholic Club:Philosophy Lecture Series. Room3-133.

5:00 pm Science Fiction SocietyMeeting. Spofford Room 1-236.

5:15 pm-Vedanta Worship Serv-ice. MIT Chapel.

7:00 pm-L.S.C. Movie: Car-touche. Admission: 50c. Room26-100.

7:30 pm-MIT Outing Club: Inter-collegiate Square Dance. Call-er: Richer -Castner. Admission:75c. Refreshments. Student Cen-ter. Sala de Puerto Rico.

7:30 pm-MIT Hillel: Friday Eve-ning Service. MIT Chapel.

8:00 pm--J.P. Formal Dance.Sheridan Boston, PrudentialCenter.

9:30 pm-L.S.C. Movie.Saturday, November 13

Morning-Field Day. Briggs Field.12:00 noon-Varsity Sailing: Fowle

Trophy. Sailing Pavilion.I1:00 pm-Gilbert & Sullivan Socie-

ty rehearsal. Kresge RehearsalRoom B.

1:00 pm-War Games Societymeeting. Student Center, Room473.

(Please turn to page 13)

$800 in awards offered in annualundergraduate Course II contest

Undergraduates in the Depart-ment of Mechanical Engineeringare being offered the opportunityto compete for the annual Luis deFlorez Awards for Outstanding In-genuity in Mechanical Engineer-ing. First prize in the MIT-spon-sored contest is $600; honorablemention is $200.

Rear Admiral Luis de Florez '11became a distinguished engineer

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and prolific inventor. He set asidefunds to establish the annualawards, and since his death in1962 a trust has provided for thecontinuation of the de FlorezAwards in his memory.

Any substantial work in whichthere is "evidence of ingenuityand creative skill" in the- field ofmechanical engineering is accept-able entry material. Original proj-ects as well as class projects andassignments in various course IIsubjects are eligible. Senior thesisare also acceptable.

The contest rules require thatentrants obtain a sponsor familiarwith the project. A resume not toexceed 'two typewritten -pagesmust be submitted.-.

Prof. Zeldin dies,taught at MITfor over 40 years

Dr. SaGnwel Demitry Zeldin,Associate Profeisor oa Mathe-.matics, Emeritus, died Tuesday,November 2, at the Mount AuburnHospital in Cambridge.

Professor Zeldin retired fromfulltime teaching in June, 1960,but continued as a lecturer in theMa'th Department until failinghealth caused his complete re-tirement in March, 1964. Duringhis long career of teaching atMIT, ,begun in 1919, he alwayshad a deep interest in studentsand was friend and advisor tomany. In research he was especi-ally involved in the theory ofcontinuous groups and contributedseveral papers on the subject.

Tr~~~a -0 M Ad EL

The lusty life is backAnd it starts at

the Sign of the PubUncork a flask of Pub Cologne. If you hear tankards clash

and songs turn bawdy, if the torches flare and theinnkeeperlocks up his daughter for the night.;-.it's because you've been into the Puband unloosed the lusty life.

Pub cologne, after-shave, and cologne spray. $3.75 to $10.00. Created for men by Revlon.

SALES SERVICE

VOLVOThe Swedish Wonder Car

DALZELL MOTORS805 Providence Highway

Deaham Plaza 329-1100

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Van Heusen Shirts & SportswearAvailable at

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Page 9: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

'Andorra,' a drama by Max Frisch, Cinerama ...staged at Harvard's Adams House C

iHL|U Ciner ·ama refines its technique

Julie Goldsmith as Barblin and Karl Nagin as Andri in atense scene from Max Frisch's 'Andorra,' a compelling parablefor the modern theatre currently being produced by Harvard'sAdams House Drama Society. Tickets for the November 12, 13,and 14 performances can be obtained at the' door or by calling864-6493.

By Mona DicksonEvery new picture done in Cin-

erama proves the old adage thatpractice makes perfect, or atleast better. 'Hallelujah Trail' isno exception. Not only has theinstability at the juncture of theside screens been eliminated (itnever was very noticeable fromthe orchestra), but the directorsare learning to take advantage ofthe medium.

Gone are the scenes designedsolely to justify filming in Cine-rama; the effects are more 'subtle-ly used. Instead of a few "rollercoaster" scenes the Cinerama ef-fect is spread with less intensityover the entire film. It is notuntil your stomach slowly startsto turn over during the wagonstampede or a tcoch of hangoverappears as you see the worldthrough a drunken Indian's eyesthat you are reminded that thisis Cinerama.

Also gone is the tendency tokeep the action on the centralscreen. In a conversation betweentwo people or a large group, thecenter screen stays in the centerof the group. Actually sitting inon a round-table discussion is aninteresting feeling;

Graduation was only the beginningof Jim Brown's education

Because he joined Western ElectricJim Brown, Northwestern University, '62, camewith Western Electric because he had heard aboutthe Company's concern for the continued develop-ment of its engineers after college graduation.

Jim has his degree in industrial engineering andis continuing to learn and grow in professionalstature through Western Electric's Graduate Engi.neering Training Program. The objectives and edu-cational philosophy of this Program are in the bestOf academic traditions, designed for both experi-enced and new engineers.

Like other Western Electric engineers, Jim-started out in this Program with a six-week courseto help in the transition from the classroom toindustry. Since then, Jim Brown has continued totake courses that will help him keep up with thenewest engineering techniques in communications.

This' training, together with formal collegeengineering studies, has given Jim the ability todevelop his talents to the fullest extent. His presentresponsibilities include the solution of engineer-ing 'problems in the manufacture of moly-permal-loy core rings, a component used to improve thequality of voice transmission.

If you set the highest standards for yourself,enjoy a challenge, and have the qualificationswe're looking'for - we want to talk to you! Oppor-tunities exist now for electrical, mechanical andindustrial engineers, and for physical science, lib-eral arts and business majors. For more informa-tion, get your copy of the Western Electric CareerOpportunities booklet from your Placement Officer.And be sure to arrangecfor an -interview when theBell System recruiting team visits your campus.

e'0ternj Electric MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM AN EQUAL OPPORTuNITY EMPLOYER

Pincipal manufacturing locations in 13 cities 0 Operating centers in many of these same cities plus 36. others throughout the U.S.Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N.J. OTeletvpe Corp., Skokie, Ill., Little Rock, Ark. O General Headquarters. New York CityI~~~~~~~~~~~~~~',.

'Hallelujah' is also distinguishedby a tighter plot than that of anyprevious Cinerama picture: theevents leading up to that infamouswestern Battle of Whiskey Hillsand the subsequent rout. dubbedthe Battle of Quicksand Bottoms.Four separate, though related,chains of events converge at thesebattles.

Horrifed at the thought thatDenver might be cut off from theworld without liquid solace, theDenver Miners Union orders fortywagon-loads of whiskey to be de-livered'in a wagon train by FrankWellingham, a stubborn Dutch-man with Irish teamster laborproblems. Somehow the peacefulIndian tribes learn of the trainand set out to get some for them-selves. The third chain comes intwo parts from Fort Russell; acavalry unit sent out to protectthe train and, hard on its heels, atrain of women temperance work-ers led by that foe of demon rumCora Templeton Massengale andguarded by that guzzling he-manCol. Gearhart -with another col-umn of soldiers. Having heard noword of the wagon train forweeks, the miners form the Den-ver Citizens Militia and set outto intercept the whiskey.

Imagine a valley bounded bya large mesa to the north andtwo lesser mesas to the south.

Unable to find a summer jobwith local -businesses, a 19 yearold MlT student did the next bestthing - he set up his own com-pany.

Tim A. Gill '67, sought employ-ment at local industries, retailstores and construction compan-ies. When these attempts failed,he turned industrialist, regrind-ing scrap plastic and selling thematerial to state toy companies.

Before he could even 'begin pro-duction, Gill ran into the usualproblems which plague any pros-pective small businessman. First,he obtained a temporary lease forspace in a building. Next he

From the east the wagon trainis moving in with its cavalryguard riding parallel to it. Fromthe west the ladies are arriving inwagons and surreys followedclosely by the colonel's column,which is keeping 'detached con-tact' because moving with the la-dies has proved too much for thecolonel. Up from the south, be-tween the two mesas, come theDenver Militia on foot. Lined upin three columns on north mesaare the Indian tribe that won thebid to get the wagon train. Atthis point a sand storm hits. AsCol. Gearhart says later, neverhave so many shots been fired inso many directions at such a con-centration of people in so shorta time without any casualties.

The cast is excellent, all theway down to the sub-chief Walks-Stooped-Over, sometimes calledSky-Eyes because a slight discre-pency in his ancestry gave himblue eyes. It is occasionally ob-vious that the stars are havinga hard time taking their partsseriously, but then only a Sphinxcould.

Fortunately, characterizationsare far from deep. On the otherhand, the comedy is not slapstick.The plot is one complex joke aid-ed by a terrifically funny scriptand a narrator who "documen-tizes" with practiced elegance.

The music is well-integrated,thoroughly appropriate, and of acalibre unusual in movies. Thesetting allows the magnificentshots for which Cinerama is fa-mous. Whole or dissected, 'Halle-lujah Trail' makes one hope Cine-rama will turn out more than thepresent one or two movies a year.

named the firm T.T. Plastis Co.Further delay came in prepar-

ing the shop for production. Gillsaid he was forced to wait severaldays while firemen inspected theelectrical wiring -- which he alsodid himself.

It was July 1 ,by the time Gillcould begin-production, 'but thenhe started on a grand scale, proc-essing from 1,500 to 2,000 lbs. ofscrap plastic per week. The ma-terials came from local appliancemanufacturers, who sold him de-fective cabinets at a low cost. Tosped up production, Gill developedhis own method of removing paintand grinding the plastics.

'ILHE ILLEJLUJAH TRAIL,'; pro-dcuced and directed by Jo Sturges;written by John Gray; music byElmer Berstein; starring Burt Lan-caster as Col. Thadldeus Gearhart,Lee Remick as Cora TempletonMassengile, Jim Hutton as Cap.Slatter, -Pamela Tiffen as LouiseGearhart, iBran Keith as FrankWellingham; xnow playing at theBoston Cinerama.

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Lack of summer emp'loyment causesstudent to found plastics firm

Going toEurope the way

everybody else isthis winter?

See Italy(the way nobody else will)

Ask your travel agent to tailor your trip to your own taste and pleas-ure. Or write to the Italian State Tourist Office, Dept. I (E. N. i.T.)nearest you: 626 Fifth Avenue, New York 20, N. Y.; St. FrancisHotel, San Francisco 2, Calif.; 203 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 1, Ill.

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Page 10: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

s City approves 'beer in thea a m it .M Norm & Judy coming this weekend 2w : (

CT~~~ ~~ ~:ui :: ----- -- R A^^;r V Graduate life at iMIM received

a big bst last week when theBeard of the License Comnisionof the City of Cambridge voted toapprove MIT's request to haveentertaiment along with beer atthe Thirsty Ear, the graduate stu-dent pub at 305 Memorial Drive.Formeirly MCT's license did notpermit entertainent where beerwas sold.

The ruling means that, as thephrase goes, 'There's beer in theEar' again. During the lastseveral weeks, the Ear has beenin operation, but wixthout beer.Now that the License Commissionhas approved entertainment uderthe license already owned by MrrT,all will be back to normal.

Last week's news comes just alittle less than a year after theThirsty Ear featured Oscar Brandin its openi show, in lateNovember, 1964. During the firstthree months of 1965 the Ear

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Today and Friday, Roir's go version of "The aower Oepths," * 5:30-7:30-9:30. ii Thurs Kurosawa's version of

"The Lower Depfts,"pE~ ~ 5:1S-7:30-9:45.

t Week of Nov. '120, "VarietyLights," 5:307:30-9:30.

· ~~~~~~~

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Today, "Sabrina" at 3:30 & 7:40; p"Stalag 17" at 1:20-5:30-9:35.

* Thurs.-Fri.-Sat., "Rotten to the at Core," at 3:30-:30-9:35;

"Nobody Waved Goodby" m at 2:00-6:05-8:10. c

Mon.-Tues.-Wed. '"Becket"at 2:20-5:30-8:30.

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became firmly established on theeMIT campus as a friendly place

to down a few while listening tofolk music, Dixieland, or an oc-casional rock and roll group.

Then, in the middle of the sprirgsemester, the rof fell in whenauthorities discovered that oper-ation under the existing MIT maltlicense was illegal. With that,everythin ground to a Suddenhalt.

However, Al Hollander and PeteBenjamin, managers of the Ear,began to explore every possiblemeans of reopening forthe 1965fall semester. Holander wasgraduated in June of 1965, buttBenjamin continued to push duringthe summner and early fall, andfinally, with the aid of Dean Ken-newth Wadleigh, convinced theCambridge authorities 'to grantpearmission for regular operatmwith beer.

Norm and Judy, a fok-singingduo, will appear his Friday andSaturday. Plans are also beingconsidered for a graduate studentbeer blast later in the semester.

Theatre Companyoffers discounts

The Theatre Company of Bostonrecently announced that it willoffer disomt to theatre partiesof s8teen or more. Discountsrange from $.20 on the $2.25 seatsto $.25 on the 2.75 seats and $.30on the $3.25 seats, with higherdiscounts for larger groups. Infor-mation concernng discount ratesand theatre party dates can beobtained by contacting CharlesCohen at the Theatre Company ofBoston, 200 Tremont Street, Bos-ton, HA 6-6609.

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By Allen WiegnerJohn A. Bavicchi's 'Festival

Symphony' highlighted the MITConcert Band's first concert lastSaturday in Kresge Auditorium.

The premier performance of theSymphony written especially forthe MIT group was warmly re-ceived by an audience of about500.

Also featured was Alan Cope-land, cello soloist, in the 'Concer-to Pour Cello et Orchestra D'In-strument A Vent' (Concerto forCello and Wind Instruments), byJacques Ibert.

The concert opened with Gian-nin's 'Praeludium and Allegro,'which set the pace for an eve-ning of relaxation. A backgroundof mellow horns and a throbbingbass yielded to an exchange be-tween clarinets and basoon, be-fore the rest of the band joinedin as the piece came to a climax.

The most hitriguing selectionwas 'Meditation,' by Gunther.Schuller. It had the eerie yet un-obtrusive sound of the backgroundof a science fiction or mysterythriller. The contrast betweenflutes and contrabassoon createda kind of hypnosis which madethe piece end all too soon.

Schonberg was featured next inhis "Theme and Variations Op.43A;' one of the most difficultpieces of the concert. The varia-tions enabled the Concert Band toshow its versatility.

A ten-instrument ensemble re-placed the band on stage for thecello-woodwind concerto. The threemovements were quite different,the third being by far the mostpleasing. Mr. Copeland, though anaccomplished cellist, seemed lim-ited in the first movement, andsomewhat so in the second. How-ever, the third movement gavegreatly expanded opportunity forexpression, and he took advantageof it as he demonstrated many ofa cellist's tricks, including pizzi-cato, glissando, and 'avec lesbois'. The wind instruments were

New YBy Jeff Stokes

The New York Camerata, in aconcert sponsored by the Humani-ties Department Monday, Novem-ber 1, demonstrated to an audi-ence of 150 or more how well thenew Student Center's MezzanineLounge is suited to chambermusic. The Lounge, situated justacross from the Grill Room onthe third floor, has for a ceilingthe same pattern of recessed con-crete cubicles-seen elsewhere inthe building. Whatever weirdacoustical properties this ceilingmay have,- apparently cooperatequite well with the softening ef-fects of a wall-to-wall carpet andlots of people in cushioned chairs,with the result that the soundsreaching the audience are honest:no ringing echoes, and almost nomuffling of overtones. Very likelythe Mezzanine Lounge will see thesuccess of many more such smallconcerts.

But enough praise of our preci-ous Student Center. The NewYork Camnerata, a trio dedicatedto chamber music, consists of cel-

)eland at band concert -

Photo by Art Kalotkin

John Corley directs the MIT Concert Band in its first con-cert of the season in Kresge Auditorium. As well as the featurework, John Bavicchi's 'Festival Symphony,' the program includedworks by ibert, Giannini, Schuller, and Schonberg.

also at their best here. A muted big-town street corner during thetrumpet and French horn addedvariety to the second and thirdmovements.

The long-awaited Festival Sym-phony was appropriately the pro-gram finale. It started with abang, as it were, the percussionsection setting a fast, strong pace.Antiphonal trumpets and trom-bones in the back corners of theauditorium added a brilliant louddiscordant effect during the firstand third movements. Their place-ment a distance away from therest of the band made them ef-fective, but also tended to cause

early morning hours.The antiphonal brass returned

for the third movement, as did theoriginal rhythm. This section wasmarked by a number of longruns through-the horns and wood:winds. The climax itself was ex-cellent and well played. It wasnot hinerently humAdrum, as manyclimaxes are, but was fresh andexciting.

Mr. Bavicchi himself appearedon stage after the concert.

The band's attack were gener-ally excellent, as were releases.Occasionally a lack of solid bas

somewhat of a sound lag during support was evident, but this de-staccato parts.

The first movement maintainedan excited, .r.hythmic patternthroughout. A moody French hornintroduced the second movement,more sustained than the firstLonely sounding trumpet soloscreated the image of a deserted

list Charles Forbes, pianist GleanmJacobson, and flutist Jayn Rosen-feld, as well as a lowly 'page-turner. Beginning in the classicalera with Haydn's 'Trio in Gmajor' and von Webe's 'Trio,Opus 63,' the Camerata advancedtoward the present with a trio byTucker and another by Martinu.

I am qualified to speak only ofthe last piece, sincee I arrived in

I!The sensation of the Newport Falk Festival I .

PAUL- ISUvER PRELDBLUES5 BAND

as BWMTL1oN ST.. BsTON=Te 26-971.t*E* r

traded very little from the musicitself.

Mr. Corley cemmented after-ward that he lmew the FestivalSymphony would 'stretch the tech-nique of the Techrmen,' and thatthey would need great effort toperform it well. And this they did.

the middle of the poco allegretto;but if what I heard in those sub-llime last few minutes is represen-tative of what went before, it wasa superior .concert. Tone wasnever sacrificed to technique, andflute, cello, and piano kept per-fectly in. tme. The surprisingthing is that they are all quiteyoung, probably sfftill in their twen-ties; certainly it can be said thatMlle. Rosenfeld and Messrs.Jacobson and Forbes have longand brilliant careers ahead ofthem.

They meant what they played.So totally absorbed were they intheir art that they could not keepfrom swaying to the motions ofthe music. It was a gratfyingsight to see such sincerity, suchapparent depth of feeling, espe&-ally since it was borne out by thequality of their playing. A rarething in this suave, urban worldto see such unbridled enthusiasmfor art.

As soon as I came in, the beautYof the music began to reach outto me, too, in my state of mentalinertia; and to entangle me AXththe musicians. For a moment Irealized genuine escape from thegrayness of a university educa-tion: as if by magic the stubborn,angular shapes of our proud con-crete buildings melted into aworld of soft and colorful fire.

The Deartment of Humanitisplans another chamber concertthis month. Soni Ventorum and hiSPuerto Rican Wind Quintet w~appear Monday, November 22, at8:00 p.m. in the Sala de PuertoRico. AS with the- November firstconcert, there will be no chargefor admission.

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EL S I E'SNoted for the best Sandwiches

to eat in or take out.FAMOUS ROAST BEEF SPECIALSANDWICH-KNACKWURST-BRATWURST with SAUERKRAUT

or POTATO SALAD"und die feinen Wurstwaron"

71 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge491.2842

PHIL & CLAUDETTE MARKELL

C

Sunday Evening November 14 at 8 o'clock

Dr. Adnan M. Pachachic-i- (Iraq's Ambassador to the United Nations)

"Problems of the Arab Middle East"'

]FORD 'MALL NORUNJORDAN HALL-, Gainshero St. cor. Huntington Ave. - BOSTONDOORS OPEN 7:45 P.M. EVERYBODY WELCOME

The New- York Camerata,JAYN ROSENFMLD Flute. ZJEINN JACOBSO -PianoC'ELkTu FORlBEk, Oeli

ProgramTrio in G- Major HayMdn

AllegroA.lareauteAllegro nmoderato

Trio, Opus 63 von WelberAlegro moderatoSherzoSobafers KlageFinale

Trio TuckerFantasyIrterludeRondo

Trio MartinuPo AlIlegretto -Adagio-AlUegretto Shrzando

Monday, lNovember 1, 19655:00 .

Mezzanine Lounge, Student CenterNext concert: The Departnent of

Butmanitles presents Soni Ven-toumn, Wind Quintet from PuertoRico; Saa de Puerto Rico; Mon-day, Novermber 22, 196, at 8:00P.m.; Admisson free.

101E E t I IN 9 i THUSE ME AR.'

Yes! The good old days have returned toThe Thirsty Ear.

Come on over and help us celebrate.

Norm and Judy head the show this Fridayand Saturday.

- 305 Memorial Drive -i

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Page 11: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

"The Yeoman of the Guard,"Gilbert and Sullivan's only tragi-comedy, will be presented Novem-ber-19 and 20 at 8:30 p.m. -inKresge Auditorium.

The produdtion is being stagedby the Gilbert and SullivanSociety, whose rendition of"Patience" last .spring won anInstitute .award for outstandingactivities development.

Steven N. Gilborn, an insh-rucorin the Department of Humanities,is directing the production, withthe assistance of Nancy Fitch andJohn Rainier. The cast includesstudents from M.I.T., Boston Uni-versity, Simmons and Emmanuel,as well as members of the M.I.T.Community.

Lead roles are being played byM.I.T. students Norman Rubin,Henry Goldberg and RichardRudy; June Cooperstein of B.U.;Ellen Stevens, Herbert Meily,Matt Lind, Martha Reardon,. _

Claire Thomson and Ron Mallis,members of the M.I.T. Communityand Ztaff.

Reserved seat tickets are $1.75and may 'be obtained by callingX2910. They may also be obtainedin the lobby of building 10.

Curtain nime is 8:30.

m Movies and theatres ,Feraydeau and..'-- Feydeau and

By Lee Linthicum .Last Friday and Saturday nights

the MIT Dramashop presented itssecond program of one-act playsfor the fall term. The two playspresented were "Brewsie and Wil-he," by Gertrude Stein, and,please Don't Walk Around in theNude!" by Georges Feydeau.

The series of one-act plays pre-'sented by Dramashop each yearhas become very popular at MIT.In^response to the success of itsfirst program this fall, the Dra-mashop presented two perform-ances of this second program.Yet the Kresge Little Theater wasfilled to capacity on both nights,and many people had to be turnedaway at the door. Those who ar-rived early enough to find seatswere certainly not.. disappointedby the performances.

"Brewsie and Willie" is basedon a series of conversations Ger-trude Stein had with some G.I'sin Paris at the end of World WarII. Set in a small Paris bistro,the play reflects the problemsthat both civilians and soldiersface at the end of a war. MissStein especially emphasizes thelack of infdividual thought and ex-pression in the world. She par-ticularly objects to the mold intowhich everyone's opinions seem tobe impressed.

She expresses these problemsthrough Brewsie, a natural phil-osopher and a gadfly among hisfriends. The primary target ofBrewsie's questions is Willie, abitter pragmatist at the outset ofthe play. Willie's primary concernat first is to find a job when hereturns to the States, and he re-sents Brewsie's disconcertingquestions.

Jane Paradise '67, the director,emphasized the ideas Miss Steinexpresses in 'Brewsie and Willie.'

Stein at Dramashop

Photo by Saul 'MooallemHochepaix, played by Norman Hawkins '68, looks on with

great interest as the daylight shines through Clarisse Ventroux'snegligee. Pat Saunders '68 plays Mrs. Ventroux, and Bob Moore'68 plays her husband Julian, shown here rushing to save face.The play is Georges Feydeau's 'Please Don't Walk Around in theNude.'

Jim Woods '69 did an excellentjob as Brewsie, the natural phil-csopher who is asking people tothink about what is happeningaround them. Larry King '67played a convincing Willie, thehardened realist who finally real-izes the value of Brewsie's query.However, the play is really tooshort to develop a transformationof his character. Moreover, MissParadise's emphasis on the ideaspresented in the play relegatedthe minor roles to a mere back-ground for the main message ofthe play. The audience didn't havea chance to examine them, andMiss Paradise used their dialogueprimarily as' a connection be-tween the parts of the play'smessage.

John Sowle's set design, com-bined with Guy Frindell's light-

ing, provided the realistic atmos-phere necessary to hold the audi-ence's attention to the abstractthought of the play. In addition,Paula Willmore's blues version of"When Johnny Comes MarchingHome" greatly complemented themood.

In contrast to "Brewsie andWillie," G e o r g e s Feydeau's"Please Don't Walk Around in theNude!" is a delightfully enter-taining farce. The play, set inpre-World War I Paris, shows howthe caprice of an aspiring FrenchDeputy's wife leads to his politi-cal ruin. Clarisse Ventroux's hab-it of going about the house wear-ing only a transparent nightgownplaces her husband in a most em-barrassing position while he isentertaining a political rival athome. David Liroff's direction, ac-companied by Pat Saunders' andRobert Moore's skillful acting,presented what easily could havebeen no more than a bawdy sat-ire as an hilarious comedy. Theentire cast of "Please Don't WalkAround in the Nude!" performedwell in their difficult comic roles.

I

Astor-"Ship of Fools", 10:30, 1:053:45, 6:20, 9:00.

Beacon HIll--"Situation Hopeless, butNot Serious", 10:00, 12:00, 2:00, 4:006:00, 8:00, 10:00.

Boston Cineranm- "'The alleiujahTrail" Wed. at 2:00 pm; CSat. Sunand hol. at 1:30 and 5:00 pm; eve.at 8:30.

Brattle-Renoir's "The Lower Depths".Wed. and Fri., 5:30, 7:30, 9:30;Kurosaiwa's "The Lower Depths",

Thurs. 5:15, 7:30, 9:45.Caprl-'.Bairbo1', 110:00, 12:00, 2:00,

4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00.Center-'Karamoja' and 'Why Bother

to Knock', 9:30, 111:15, 3:00. 5:45,8:30.

Cinema Kenmore Square---'Repuilsion'1:35, 3:35, 6:35, 7:35, 9:35.

Exeter-'The Eleanor Roosevelt Story'4:05, 5:55, 7:45, 9:35.

Esquire--'Repulsion', 7:30, 9:35.Fine Arts-'Divorce, Italian Style' 5:00,

,8:45, 'Yesterday, Today, and' T or-row'., 7:00, 10:00.

Gary-'Souno of Musie, eve. at 8:30;Sun. at 7:30; daily matinee at 2:00

Loew's Orpheumn-'The Ipcress File',0:00, 8:00, .10:00.

Mayflower-'Mozamnbique' and '!EkuIfanchbu" 6:00, 7:30.

Music Hall-'The Nanny', 10:00, .12:00:2:00, 4:00, 6:00., 8:00, 10:00.

Paramount-'King Rat'.Paris Cinema-"The Knack and How

to Get It', 1:15, 3:00, 4:44, 6:30,8:15, 10:00.

Park Square Cinema-'The MarriedWome.n' 1:30, 3:30., 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.

Savoy-Return from the Ashes', 6:00,8:00, 10:00.

Saxon-'The Agony and the Ecetacy',eve 8:30; Sun. 7:30; mat. 2:00 Wed.Sat. Sn. and holidays.

Symphony Cinema-'The Cool WorTd',7:00, 110:00, and "Paris Secrets",5:30, 8.45.

Uptown-'Darling' arid '.B io 70',11:00, 12:'40, 2:35, 4:10, 6:10, 7:50,

1 9:50.

I. A. GREENHILL proamA.:

West JEnd C/nea---'Crazy Paradise',11:45, 1:40, 3:35, 5:30, 7:25, 9:20.

THEATRES

Charles-'Poor Bitos', Tues. thru Fi.8:30; Sat. 5:30, 9:00; Sun. 7:30.

Shubert-'Ifa Grosse Valise' Mon. thruSat. 8:30; Wed. mat. 2:15; Sat. mat.2:30.

Theatre Co. of Boston-'Yes is for aVery Young Man", flues. thru Fri.8:30, Sat. 6:00, 9:30; S-un. 5:00, 8:30.

Wlnbur--'lhe Devils', Mon. thru ,Sat.8:00; Thuirs. mat. 2:15; Sat. mat.2:30.

Am EVEHIHG OF LUF5S

SATUROAY NOV 2 t8:30m sowERkn & BRWS MRITHME

Jim KwesIki-~~s~i · ,WlM J;EFF OUTCHEuON

In

$3.50,2.50,

3.00,2.00

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'A BEAUTY OF A FILM -BY ALL MEANS 601"-N.Y. Herald Tibune

"LOW JINKS ANDMmiii h"rwIrI"<

Joseph E Levine -Time Magaz

Jean-Paul Bemondo. Claudia Cardinale,Philippe de Broca's ,

ne

LSC CALENDARFriday, Nov. 12 WHAT

A CAST!CARTOUCHE WHAT

7:00&9:30 5Oc 26-100 APAST!MIT Identification- Required

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

Saturday, Nov. 13

WHAT A WiLYTO GO6

5:00 - 7:15 - 9:45

50c 26-100

M.I.T. Identification Required

A J. LEE THOMPSON Production -Produced by ARTHUR P. JACOBS- Directed by J. LEE THOMPSONUsmfiqb BETTY COMDEN and ADOLPH GREEN- ,..as , wi.E Ms.I -a.o byGENE KELLY

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HOUSE OF ROYREAL CHINESE FOODS

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

25 TYLER ST., Boston 11, Mass. Il. CHRISTMAS in

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G&S Society to start 1965-1966 seasonwith the tragicomedy 'Yeomen of the Guard'

JORDAN -NALL !t 84l1

GA LLERYOriginal Prinfi by

Chagall, Baskin,Degas, Villon,

Hartung, Wells,Toulouse-Lautrec

and others1168 Massachuseifs Avenue

2 p.m. to 9 p.m.

MITGilbert and Sullivan Society

presents

YEOHEHh, GUARDBook by W. S. GilbertMusic by A. Sullivan

Kresge AuditoriumFriday, November 19, 8:30

Saturday, November 20, 8:30Reserved tickets $1.75On sale Lobby Bldg. I0

or call ext. 29 1 0- - ~~~~~~~~--

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Page 12: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

,, nMAsic at Qm iuortIF

0fi Fine Arts 'u)tarfef'opensBy Dan AsimovuO The Fine Arts Quartet perform-- ed three ]Beethoven string quar-- tets Sunday, October 31, in Kresge

' auditorium. This concert was thefirst in a series entitled "The

,, String Quatets of Beethoven"m presented by the M Humanities> Department.> Sunday's concert was grealtly en-o hanced by the lecture by ProfessorZ Klaus Liepmann that preceded it.>. Last Thursday Professr Liep-< mann, Director of Music at MIT,

spoke on the quartets fhat wereto be played Sunday. He gave lhe

Z audience some historical back-ground, and managed to be bothinformative and amuin. He let

the audience know, for instance,that it is no longer acceptable torefer to the quaitets by numberinstead of opus.

The biggest benefit of the lec-ture was that PriesSor Liepmanmhad many of the themes of .thequartets on tape, and he playeddthers on the piano. This allowedthe listener to become familiarwith the themes, and when heheard them again on Sunday thesethemes were.not foreign to him.

A lecture by Professor Liep-mann will precede each of theBeethoven String Quartets perfor-mances. If you are going to thecornert, don't miss the lecture.

Sunday's concert itself met all

U.'I

Photo by Jeff ReynoldsA couple of grotesque Indians paddle the 'Ikanduit Canoe'across the back wall while members of the Technology tribe andtheir squaws whoop it up in the foreground at the annual SAEIorDance open bid party.

-WkgCIIV.. U I. r - , sse

S M T W T10 11

14 15 16 17 1821 22 23 24

THIN WEEK.MUSIC

New England Conservatory-Cvoca amnd instrumental mrusihedl ,b Helen Keaney and Darhm; Novr. 10, 8:B30 p.m.Hall; adsmssion free. Wrkkslham, Bach, and Antonio S

New England Conservatory -'Symhonyr String Quartet;8:30 p.m.; J'rdan Hall; ea2412 for tickets. Program:'String Quartet in G major,'Anton Webern's 'Five PiString Quartet,' and BrahasQuartet in A. nminor,' op. G5

Boston Symphony Orchestra-Burgin, conducting; Nov. 1Symoy Halt; ':berg, 'Cihaimlbr Symphony,''Debussy, 'La Mer'; SerilDivin Poeme,' Symphony Nonainor, op. 4.

Boston lSynmphony Orchestra -Torkanowsky, * guest conduct12, 2:00, and Nov. 13, 8:Iphony Hali; program: B''The Consecration of tlheH~onegger, yny No. 3;'Msi.c for a scene frort Soe7, and 'Ce'dea's MedltatDance of Vengeanrce,' ogStrauss, 'Til E ulenspiegel'Pranrks.'

The Thirsty Ear-Norm and J3usinging duet; Nov. 12 andAshi~zvn Hrouse Pulb; 305Drive, Cambidge, Mass.

Gardner MIuseum-Piano, Phylton: lolvr. 13; 3:00 p.m.; afree. Bralsn' 'Ftasies,'Htndemith, 'Sonata Nto. 3.'

Folklore Concert Series-Jackiington; Nov. 13, 8:30 pm,Hall; tickets: $3.50, 3.00. 22.00.

Humantles Serles--Fine ArtsNov. 14, 3:00 pm; Kresgesn; Beethoven, QRuartets inmajor, Op. 74, B flat minor,and C Sharp minor, Op. 1313.00.

Intertono al Student AssoeiatiConcert, with students fronEngland Conser ; Nov.p.m.; 33 Gardent st., Canilbr

Wellesiey-Oha~nl Music SoWellesley College; Nov. 1p.m.; Jewett Ha/l'; musiccell, Braln. and Schubert.

Humanities Series - Klaus Li'An Introduction to the 33String Quartets'; Nov. 10, 5:Music Librar; admission fr

Ford Hal Forum-Adnan Madci, 'Is War Inevitable in.East,' Nov. 14, 8:00 pan;Hall; a~lmission free.

F S Wellesley-R.B.Y. Scott, Ciaian ofthe Dept. of Rligi'n, Princeton Uni-

12 13 versity; 'The Word and the Prophet,'19 20' Nov. 16, 7:45 p.m.; Pe.ndleton Hall.

Cambridge Center for Adult Edueation--4lide talk by Rick Anderson, 'TheVisual Experienoe'; Nov. 16; 8:[s5;admission $.50.

SCEANEOUSoncert of Eilm Series,-Car Sietbab, Wednes-ic; diecot- day, November 10, 7:30 pm; Newniel Pink- England Life Hall admission by In-; Joan stitute Memberslhip Card.by Pink- Harvard Adamns House Drama SocietyOler. -'Andorra,' by Max Fisoh; Nov. 12,

13 and 14, 8:30; Adams House,- Boton Plympton Street, Cambridge; 864-/N'bv 12 .lg,li ED, 6-iMiozart's LS 'Cartouclhe,' Nov. 12, 7:00 and

K' . 3S7, 9:30 pm; Room 26100; admissionieces for s.o.

'Stringil, no. 2. LSC-'W~hat a Way to Go,' Nov. 13,

5:15, 7:30,, 9:5; Ron 26-100; ad--liard mission S.50.1l, 8:30; Junior Prom-Nov. 12 and 13.

Schoen-op. 9OB; NEXT WElI E

bin, 'Le MUsIc3. in C UI3. n C New England Conservatory-Symhony

Orchestra-Frederik Prausnitz, con--Werne ductor; Nov. 17,, 8:30 p.m.; Jordan

tor; IHall; admission free. Program: Schlu-,0o; SNv. bert's Symphony No. 3 in D, lliote0; strn- C3arter's ',VoubdLe Concerto,' Stravin-eethoven, sky's 'Cbncerto in D for Strings,';Houszier and Mtlzaxt's 'Piano Concerto in D,'IBarber, K'ley,' op.tion and Boston Sympheny Orchestra Open Re-t. 233-A; hearsal-Nbov. 1S, 7:30 p.m.; gym-s M'erry phOny Hall. Season subscription,

$17 50.dy,, fok- Gilbert and] Sulllvan Society-. 'The13; fMT Yeoman of the Guard, ' Nov. 19 andMemorial 20, 8:30 p.m.; Kresge Anuditor'um,

reserved seats, S1.75.lli - Folklore Series - Sonny Terry ani

~,dm Brownie WrG-hee, Rev. Gary Davis,p. 16; and. oters; Nov. 2; Jordan H-al; fortickets call IU 2-1827.

The Cantata Singers-A pro ofe Wash- .Bah; Cnbrdge Sanders Theatre;

,Jordan Nov. 20, 8:30 p.m.; admission $1.2;.50, and tickets at 1070 Mass. Ave., C(am-

bridge.Quartet; Chail Organ Series - Jack Fischer,Auditori- (Emanuel Churdh; Nov. 21, 3:00

El flat p.mr.; M/IT Chapel; axlimdssion free.Op. 18,sticet e Student Center-oni Ventorum, Wind

QUintet Of Puerto Rlco; Nov. 22,8:00 p.m.; mezzanine lounge; admls-Ision free.[on--Jaz.z

the New New England Conservatory-Plamo con-14, 8:00 cert; Nov. 24, 8:31 p.m.; Jordanridge. - HaIR; admission free; music by

Brahms, Chopin, Ravel, Liszt, Bar-ciety of tok, Henry Mlolicoe.

14, 8:00by Pflr- NSEN0

ISO Movie--'anana Peel,' Nov. 19,7:00 p.m. and' 9:00 p.Lm.; Room 26-100; admission $.50.epanann;

3eethoven LSC Movie---'Night of the Iguana,'00 p.m.; Nov. 20, 5:15, 7:30, and 9:30; 26-100;ree. adln.issmln $.50.E. Path- Ford Hall Foranm - David K. Nlesthe Far (Memoriai 1 Lecture: Max Lerner 'Can

Jomdan We Win the FIuure?' Nov. 21, 8:30p.m.; Jordan Hal; admission't free.

aseriesexpedtations. It conited of thequartets in E flat major, Opus127; F major, Opus 18, No. 1; andC major, Opus 59, No. 3. Theperformers were Leonard Sorkin,violin; Abraham Loff, violin; Ger-ald Stanick, viola; and GeorgeSopkin, cello.

The quality of the performancewas uniformly good. The E flat.major was the subtle§ of fthethree quartets, azd it was donefirst. Its delightful Scherzandovivace was beautifully done, andthe piece was well applauded.

The F major was the earliestBeethoven work of the three. It isHaydnesque in nature, and wasplayed to a T. The pretty Scherzoand the brilliant finale made spiece shine. The playing here wasalso brilliant, and -the timing per-fect.

The C major was from Beeth-oven's middle period, and it wastypically between the other twoquartets in its intricacy. The firstmovement began with a very longtheme, at times difficult to follow.The second movement rehlied heav-ily on pizzicato, the technique ofplucking the strings with thefingers. The effect of this wasreally unusal, and lent the wholepiece a mystical aura. The lastmovement was a vibrant fuguethat one could not help ernoyingon the first hearing.

It is grayng to find fthatKresge can be nearly filled by aclassical music peformance.There are slill seats available forthe coming concerts, so by allmeans rush out and get tickets.The next Beethoven Quartet pro-gram will be on Sunday, Novem,ber 14, and its erta- nding lec-ture will be on Wedneday, Nov-ember 10.

BULLETIN No. 21

NEW iPerfQualij

Russkij Dom plays host at dinnerfor Russian scientists, engineers

Visiting Russian scientists, en-gineers, and teachers waere enter-tained Sunday, November 7, at adinner in the Student Center. Thetwenty-six representatives of theSoviet Union are part of a Sovietcultural group currently on .aUnited States tour sponsored bythe State Department.

Hosts for the foreign visitorswere Mr. Laurence Scott of themodern language department andmembers of the Russkij Dom. Mr.Scott is the faculty member incharge of the Russkij Dom, MIT'sRsian speaking dormitory (TheTech, October 27, 1965). Also pres-ent for the dinner were so-nmeguests from the Wellesley CollegeSlavic Society.

The meal was served in theGames Room of the Student Cen-ter, which was -bedecked for theoccasion with the red flag of theRusskij Dom. -

The Russian national anthemplayed softly in the background.After dinner the delegates retiredto the Russkij Dom at 486 BeaconSt. for informal discussion in theRussian atmosphere of the dormn.

According to Dave Niccoli '66of the Russkij Dom, this particu-lar event was not originally partof the delegates' genermal itinerary,but Mr. Scott saw -it as a goodopportunity for lIfT and the Russ-

SDS +to discussMIT conference

The MIT chapter of Students fora Democratic Society (SDS) willhold an open meeting tomorrow,at 4:00 p.m. in Room 2147.

Primary topics of discussion at'the meeting will be a civil liber-ties conference at MIT and theThanksgiving march in Washing-ton, D.C.

FACULTY & PERSONNEL

kij Dom. The Soviets arrived atMIT from a luncheon engagemntat Wellesley earlier in the day.

Among the influential people ithe group were Mr. Saktagen Bai.shev, Vice-President of the Aca.demy of Science, Kazakstan; .Rafael Dwaly, Vice-President ofthe Academy of Science, Georgia;Mrs. Rita Koukain, Director of theInstitute of Microbiology; andVladimir Maslin, DepartmntChairmn of Znanie.

"Znanie," iVIr. .Sctt said, "sRussian for knowledge. In theSoviet Union it represents an or.ganization devoted to the advance.ment of science. It is sonrethilike our popular science," he ex.plained.

Also present were Mr. KerimMashrykov, Vice-President of theAcademy of Science, Turkman;Mr. Ionas Grigonis, Prorec,State University, Vilna; Mr. BorisBortsov, Head of the Art Institute,Kiev.

There were lecturers and scien.tists representing all parts of Rus.sia and fields of interest rangingfrom microbiology to theatricsand aviation. Mrs. Marina Pouch.kova acted as Tour Conductor andInterpreter.

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Page 13: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

al asaaMenge sag aBea u 933 usagle a atla a B asl e b laala*aSa a as as*

I U

I The Bll mmm Dmm a mUm

I 5 U l"X---"e"X-""-|"-*"-"-"w-"-

(Continued from Page 8)1:00 pm--Y.A.F Symposium on

Viet Nam. Room 26-100.1:30 pm-MIT Bridge Club. Walk-

er Memorial, the Blue Room.130 pm-MIT Bridge Club meet-

ing. The Blue Room, WalkerMemorial.

1:30 pm-MIT Chess Club meet-ing. Student Center, Room 473.

2:30 pm-J.P. lan and SylviaConcert. Symphony Hall.

5:15 pm-L.S.C. Movie: What AWay To Go. Admission: 50c.Room 26-100.

7:30 pm-L.S.C. Movie.8:00 pm-J.P. Rock and Roll Blast.

Armory.9:45 pm-L.S.C. Movie.

Sunday, November 149:15 pm-Roman Catholic Mass.

MIT Chapel.1-:00 pm-Protestant Worship Ser-

vice. MIT Chapel.12:15 pm-Roman Catholic Mass.

MIT Chapel.1:00 pm-Gilbert & Sullivan Socie- -

ty rehearsal. Kresge RehearsalRoom A.

1:30 pm-MIT Chess Club Meet-ing. Student Center, MezzanineGame Room.

3:00 pm-Humanities Series: TheFine Arts Quartet. Admission:$3.00. Program: Beethoven's EFlat Major, Opus 74; B FlatMajor, Opus 18; C Sharp Minor,Opus 131. Kresge Auditorium.

4:15 pm-Roman Catholic Mass.MIT Chapel.

6:30 pm-MIT Concert Jazz Bandrehearsal. Kresge Auditorium.

Monday, November 155:00 pm-MIT Concert Band re-

hearsal. Kresge Auditorium.S:00 prnm- MIT Outing Club meet.

ing. Student Center, Room 491.7:00 pm-Gilbert & Sullivan Soci-

ety rehearsal Kresge, Rehear-sal Room B.

7:00 pm-United Christian Fellow-ship: Area-wide meeting. Cof-fee and dessert. Student Center,Sala de Puerto Rico.

7:30 pm-MIT Choral Society re-hearsal. Kresge Auditorium.

8:00 pm-Parapsychological Re-search Group meeting. TheJackson Room, 10-280.

Tuesday. November 165:00 pm--MIT Glee Club rehearsal.

Kresge Auditorium.7:00 pm-Gilbert & Sullivan Soci-

ety rehearsal. Kresge, RehearsalRoom A.

7:15 pm--Christian Science serv-ice. MIT Chapel.

7:30 pm-Arnold Air Society meet-ing. Student Center, WestLounge (Level 3).

7:30 pm-MIT Symphony Orchestrarehearsal. Kresge Auditoriqm.

7:30 pm-MIT Sports Car Club.Student Center, Room 467.Wednesday, November 17

12:00 noon-Episcopal CommunionService. MIT Chapel. Followedby lunch at 317 Memorial Drive.

5:00 pm-MIT Concert Band re-hearsal. Kresge Auditorium.

5:00 pm-MIT Glee Club rehear-sal. Kresge Auditorium.

7:00 pm-Gilbert & Sullivan Soci-ety rehearsal.- Kresge Auditor-ium, Rehearsal Room B.

7:30 pm-APO meeting. StudentCenter, Room 491.

10:00 am-Lutheran Vesper Serv-ice. MIT Chapel.

Thursday, November 189:00 am-5:00 pm-IFC Hemophilia

Blood Drive. Student Center.5:00 pm-Tangent meeting. Student

Center, Room 485.5:00 pm-MIT Glee Club rehear-

sal. Kresge Auditorium.7:00 pm-Gilbert & Sullivan Soci-

ety dress rehearsal. KresgeAuditorium.

7:00 pm TCA Mental Hospital Proj-ect. Meet in Student Center,Room 450.

7:15 pm - Tech Catholic Clubmeeting. Cider & donuts. Stu-dent Center, Room 400.

eeT Aud- meet-and SH SCSFriday, November 19

12:00 noon--Voo Doo: Stunt, Lob-by Building 10. Sales in Build-ings I0 and 2.

I:00 pm - MIT Islamic Society:Juma Prayers. Kresge, RehearsalRoom A.

5:00 pm - Teeh Catholic Club:Philosophy Lecture Series. Room3-133.

5:00 pm-Science Fiction Society.Spofford Room, 1-236.

(Please turn to Page 15)

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'The Hill' a study in cruelfyBy Jack Donohue

'The Hill' is a story set in war,but it is not a war story. It is adrama of man's latent cruelty,brought out in military command.The setting is a British prisoncamp during the war. The in-mates are British soldiers whohave committed crimes. The mostprominent sight in the camp is ahuge hill, made of dirt and stone.The opening scene shows prison-ers working on this hill, and onepasses out of exhaustion. Welearn that Major Appleby had thishill built by the prisoners anduses it as- a means of discipline.Major Appleby's philosophy isthat men can only be made intogood soldiers by means of strictdiscipline. On the other hand, Ser-geant Williams, his assistant, pun-ishes the prisoners for pleasure.

In one scene, their attitudes aresummed up when it is said thatMajor Appleby enjoys 'making toysoldiers,' and Sergeant Williamsenjoys breaking them.

The other main characters arefive prisoners: Roberts, played bySean Connery, of James Bondfame, who is in for striking anofficer who ordered him to leadhis men into battle; King, a ne-gro, charged with stealing whis-key; Montey, a fat, servile char-acter, who is imprisoned for theninth time for selling contraband

'Duel of Angels' at HarvardA~I " " , Immim-

ery ke pys Lucillend er We pys rmnd in

Ellery Akers plays Lucille and Peter Weil plays Armand inJean Giraudoux's 'Duel of Angels,' produced by the HarvardDrama Society at the Loeb Drama Center.

Ogrganization of 67th Tech Showcontinues as show managers named

Preparations are now under-way for the 67th -annual TechShow as efforts are being extend-ed on all fronts to incorporate theparticipants into an effective or-ganization. Students from MIT,Emerson, Boston University, andSimmons College, as well as fac-ulty members from MIT, are aid-ing the various aspects of theproduction.

Klaus Liepman, Chaihman of theMIT Music Department, and othermembers of the department, are

cooperating on many of the mus-ical aspects of the show. Choralwork.and orchestration are beinghandled to a large extent by theMusic Department faculty.

Managers and directors forTech Show have now been selec-ted: John Sowle '66, director;Steve Alter--'67, author; Dave Es-par '67, Business Manager; BobBengen '68, Publicity Manager;Bob Shisko '67, Sales Manager;Scott Mermel '68, Program Man-ager; and Stu Vidockler '66, Gen-eral Manager.

goods; McGrath, a bellicose Scots-man, caught drunk; and Stevens,a timid deserter. Williams pro-ceeds to harass the prisoners, es-pecially Roberts, who does nothide his contempt for him, andwho makes him feel inferior be-cause of his inexperience in com-bat. Williams attacks him for cow-ardice, though he himself hasnever been in battle and 'is con-ent to stay behind the lines andexpend his energies devising hardships for the prisoners. His petti-ness is clearly seen when he en-ters their cell -(the five are allhoused in one cell, as part ofthe 'discipline) and overturnstheir beds and belongings, out ofsheer malice, Appleby does notcheck him, and the commandant,though nominally in charge, israrely seen, except in a prosti-tute's bedroom. The climax ofWilliam's persecutions comes withthe death of Stevens, 'who is theweakest and consequently hismost likely prey. The rest of thepicture is concerned with Roberts'efforts to see Williams punished(aided by King, who emerges asthe second hero).

The character portrayal in thismovie is excellent. The charac-ters are quite human, and the in-teractions with each other andtheir conditions is an interestingstudy. Roberts' philosophy in par-ticular bears mention. He refusedto follow an order which he knewwould lead to the death of hismen. He is morally justified, buthe deplores his action because herealizes that the whole militarystructure depends on obedience toorders. He knows the rules shouldbe changed, but knows it is im-possible. Throughout the movie wesee a slavish obedience to thehandbook of regulations. The triv-iality of these sacred military in-stitutions is graphically, presentedwhen we see fat Montey doing aludicrous double-time, with hismess in his hands, spilling it allas he jogs along.

There are some fine photogra-phic effects, as when we see afly buzzing around the face of asoldier standing stiffly to atten-tion.

The overall mood of the film isone of sustained brutality. Attimes, the intensity of cruelty cver-whelms, and one wants to escape,but this movie is one that shouldbe taken in toto and pondered.

'THE HLL'; praoced by Ken-netLh IHyman; directed by SidneyLumet; starring Sean Connery,Harry Andrews, Ian Bannen, andIan Hendy; playing at the Para-nmmnt Theatre.

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Page 14: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

y7r wuih

MIT on the Ganges

Indlia school modeled after US type."By Mike lodburg' A study is now progressing to

India's Institute of Technoilgy build the institute into the fastat Kanpur is a new kind of school growing industrial complex in thefor India, but Techmen might find Kanpur region by encouraging in-it vaguely reminiscent of a school dustry-oriented research and train-near the Charles instead of the ing.Ganges. - Dr. Ashley and his colleagues

Though India has five institutes introduced many American con-of technology, Kanpur promises cepts and techniques to the proj-to be far different from the others. ect. One student was heard toPatterned after MJlT and ether comment, "American professorsUnited States 'technical schoL-- encourage free thinking. We getwith science, humanities, and interested." Dr. Ashley studied atsocial science course paralleling Cal Tech as an undergraduate. Hethe engineering courses-it pro- came to MIT for graduate workvides the broad base necesary after the war.for well-rounded educatiz,=, re- At Kanpur both Dr. and Mrs.search. - Ashley were active in campus

Prof. Holt Ashely, .wT Profes- life. Dr. Ashley coached the bas-sor of Aeronautics and .Astrut- ketball team, while his. wifeics, and a consortium of nine worked on the studen newspaper,American universities financed by Spark, and an embryonic Studentthe Agency for International De- Placement Office., velopment helped apply this new The consortium of colleges in-concept in foreign aid to advanced volved in the project includes Cali-education in developing nations. fornia Institute of Technology,

Carnegie Institute of Technology,Case Institute of Techniology, OhioState University, Princeton Uni-versity, Purdue University, theUniversity of California, the Uni-versity of Michigan, and MIT.Educational Services, Inc., oWatertown, Mass., served as thecontracting agency for the group.

The group approach was de-cided upon so-that the Kanprproject would not overtax the re-sources of a single university. Theconsortium provides . a pool ofhighly-specialized experts to KJn-pur, through financing by the U.S.

.Agency for Internatioal Develop-ment- (AID). The Kanpur Instituteis an bintegral part of the U.S.foreign aid program in India, butPresident Kennedy called it abirthday gift -to Prime lMnisterNehru, who happened to be Iin theU.S. on a state visit on his 73rdbirthday in 196.

(Please turn to page J 6)

Inside !n5scO n-(Continaed from Page 2)

lar background in foreign PolicyTwill represent MIT next month atthe West Point conference pre.iously mentioned in 'this colunm

To repeat an-earlier announce.ment: Freshman picturebooks forthe class-of 91L9 have gonethrough' a second printing, and arenow available in the hsconmm of.fice for $1.00..

David Mundell, chairman of theIntercollegiate Conference Coin.mittee, reported at" the meetingon :the general progress of theconference, which will- be heldApril 13-16 -and is. etitled "TheUrban Chalenge." The total comn.mitment of Undergraduate Asso.ciation funds for this project isto date $3,000.

A reminder to recently electedpresidents of MIT activities andclubs: you are constitutionally re.quired to check by the Iscomnrnoffice with an up-to-date listing ofthe recently elected officers.

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Page 15: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

,C. .B- --- -".·-- - S SiE l?.:.,l :':*~~ ~ ~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ , :: .u. ....m. <"::" ...... Flum oru'm'

:]lieate oiey UU I ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . t' Honor Sociey Conference resuls§gS",Buqsetlns"-l""""-si-ag"-""-w""-~l '>..;..'' (Continued from Page 13) ing. Waiker Memorial, The Blue

5l5 pm-Vedanta Worship Sery- IRoom. ,.' Pm Ve da nta Wrship-Serv- , :30 pm-- MIT Chess Club meet-

ice. MIT Chapel. ':..7:00 pm..- L.S.C. Movie: Banana in. Student Center, Mezzanine

Peel. Admission: .50c. JRoom -26-- am Ro .Peel.Admisso:50c. Room - 26- 1:30 pm - Swim Clinic Lecture:Psychology- of Coaching Swim-

7:30 pm-MIT Hillel: Friday Eve- ming. Speaker: Coach Broo[' ofning Service. MIT Chapel. Harvard. MIT Pool.

-8:00 pm-MIT Chess Club: MIT vs." 2:30 pm -. Swim Clinic Lecture:Cambridge, YMCA. Mezzanineamridge YM CA. MezTechnique of Swimming. MITGame Room..P ' ' ~~~Pool. '

8:30 pm - The Yeomen of the 3:00 pm-MIT Film Society: OpenGuard, presented by the Gilbert Screening. All films welcome.& Sullivan, Society. Admission: Admission: 25c per person.$1.75 per person. Kresge Audi- Room 54-100.forium.-...~torium. . -- 3:30 pm-Swimming Clinic Work-

9:00 pm-L.S.C. Movie. shops and Discussion Groups.Saturday, November 20 The Student Center.

11:30 pm - Swim Clinic Lecture: 5:15 pm--L.S.C. Movie: Night ofPsychological and Mechanical the lguana. Admission: 50c perPrinciples of Swimming. Speak- person. Room 26-100.er: Coach Samuelson. The MIT 6:00 pm-Boat Club Steak Fry. ThePool. Boat House.

Afternoon - Crew: Class Day 7:30 pm-L.S.C. Movie.Races. The Boat House. 8:30 pm - The Yeomen of the

1:00 pm -- War Games Society Guard, presented by the Gilbertmeeting. Student Center, Room & Sullivan Society. Admission:473.. $1 .75 per person. Kresge Audi-

1:30 pm-MIT Bridge Club meet- torium.

...'..'...R gg By Judy Risinger

-This month's Student Committeeoni Educational Policy meetingwill be held tonight at 7:30 inroom 400 on the fifth floor of ftheStudent Center. Visitors are wel-come.

Honor Society ConferenceLast Saturday 'SCEP held a con-

ference for the heads of thehonorary and: professional socie-ties. Represented were the stu-dent branches of the AmericanInstitute of Chemical Engineers,the American Institute of Physics,and the Institute of Electrical andElecidtronics Engineers, The Stu-dent Metallurgical Society, TB(Engineering honorary), T(course 2), (course 5),HKN (course 6), T (course16), Baton Society, Beaver Key,and .Course XXI Society. Themorning session was a discussionmoderated by Terry VanderWerff ('66. TB ) on the admis-

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sions policies and activities of theprofessional . horamies .. Therewas a general agreement that ad-mission to an honorary should bemore than a rubber stamp of astudent's cumulative average. Thedifficulties of selection on thebasis of breadth of interest orodther such nebulous criteria werepointed out, and the suggestonwas made tat one of the func-tions of an honorary might be togenerate broader interests in thosestudents who are recognized foracademic excellence.

The afternoon session followedan interest (the most p6liteadjective for the Lobdell Room'squality to price ratio) luncheon inthe Student Center. The sessionwas devoted to a discussion of therole of the honorary and prues-sional societies in academic af-fairs. It was led by Mike Telsm('66) SCEP's secretary and chair-man of the sub-committee on feed-back. The current programs of thegroups at the conference werediscmsed along with the feabilityof improving student-faculty re-lations with formal programs ofcourse feedback as well as in-formal and professional gather-ings. One suggestion was toestablish awards by the students'to faculty members in their de-partments for outstanding teach-ing. SCEP is currently workingwith Professor George Valley'soffice to establish a course evalu-

ation program; an dthe societiesattending the conference were in-vited to participate. The confer-ence revealed that the communi-cations among groups workingtowards better student-faculty re-lations in academic affairs arealmost non-exiStent, and SCEPhas agreed to serve as a clearinghouse for reports of projects incourse feedback by any interestedgrouPs. Summnaries of what isbeing done in all departments willbe made available to these groupsand other interested indiviidualLs.

A final result of the conferencewas that the societies presentagreed to hold one meeting everyterm for a coitnuing evaluationof .progress 'in student participa-tion in academic affairs. Minutesof the conference will be sent toparticipats and the faculty, andwill be available in the INSCOMMoffice in the next few weeks.

Dis g hed guest onMT Campus

Steve Lipner, president of TBP,proposed at Saturday's conferencea program sp red - by thehonoraries to invite a distinguishedAmerican businessman or states.man to the MIT campus for afew days to participate in a seriesof lectures, seminars and discus-

(Please turn to Page 16)

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PROFESSIONAL GUITARIST wishesto take on limited number of stu-dents-beginner and advanced. For .more information call Don Gadbois,49 1-6272.

SENIORS AND GRADUATES, bil-lion dollar, 1 50 year old New Eng-land company wants on campus ap-pointment secretaries, flexiblehours, high income. Call WilliamM. Raeder at COngress 2-1255.

STUDENTS FOR PART-TIME WORK:Warehousemen and tire changers.Automatic -machinery. Experiencepreferred, but.,not necessary. $1.50per hour. See Leo. Cambridge TireCo., 292 Albany St., Cambridge.

Motorola offers the'Student at the BS level an opportunityto advance his career and education concurrently. Workand achieve a Mastet's Degree In an environment of con-stant challenge.

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Page 16: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

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The mostwalked aboutslacks onCampus areIHUBBARDslacks with"'DACRON"

w Great Hubbard styling with0 the lasting neatness andLU

care-free comfort of "Da-cron", in these slacks of55% Dacron poljyster, 45%worsted wool. Styled in tra-

I ditional Classic and Gay'F Blade. plain front models,,u in all the favorite colors, atI better stores everywhere.

Also available in blends of70% Orlon* acrylic, 30%worsted wool, or "Dacron"with "Orion'".Vdu Pont Reg T.M.

Singer -to speak to HillelMIT Hillel will present the 20th

semi-annual Morris Burg Memori-al Leture on Sunday, November21, at 8:00 p.m. in Kresge Audi-torium. The ndted author, lsaacBaishevis Singer, will speak on thetopic, "The Kabbala and ModernMan."

Among Mr. Singer's wwrks are"Satan in Goray", "The Slave",and "The Family Moskat"; thelatter won the Louis Lamed Prizefor Literature. His short story"Gimpel the Fool", is part ofthe curriculum for 21.03.

Honor Society Conference results . . .(Continued from page 15)

sions. This would allow studentsmore time foir discussion on amore informal level than the usualvisiting lecture situation. TB isnow forming a committee to lookinto this project. If such a pro-gram is worked out, it should pro-vide a unique educational ex-perience -for MIT students.

Library QuestionnareSCEP will be passing out its

library questionnaire in the-lobbyof building 10 next week frnMonday through Friday. Studentsare asked to suggest the type ofbooks (or specific titles) that theywould like to see in the StudentCenter Library leisure reading col-lection. There will also be ques-tions to determine student opirionof library hours and those fields

I

in which the students feel thereis an inadequate selection of booksin the MIT libraries.

New members for SeEPFreshmen, sophomores, an d

juniors interested' in joining SCEPmay pick up applications in theINSCOMM office on Monday,November 15. They are due backin the INSCOMM office by Fri.,Nov. 19, at 5 p.m.

Compass SeminarA Compass Seminar has been

scheduled for Tuesday, Novem-ber 16, at 4 pm in Room 54-100.Dr. T. Hagfors of the LincolnLaboratory will speak on the sub-ject of "Radar Observations ofthe Moon."

Professors serve as consultants;Kanpur provides needed engineers

(Continued from Page 14)By 1970, when the institute will

be in full operation, U.S. assist-ance will have totalled more than$30 million. In addition, the Gov-ernment of India has committedrupees equivalent to more than$18 million to the institute.

Midway through its developmentprogram, the institute has alreadycome a long way. It opened in1960 with a small faculty, 100undergraduates, and rented quar-ters in the city of Kanpur. Todayconstruction still continues on the1,000-acre campus on the southbank of the Ganges River.

Today there are more than 1,000students (200 in graduate work),and a 121-man faculty that in-cludes some of the nation's top-flight talent. When completed itwill accommodate 1,600 under-graduates and 400 post-graduates,besides research scholars andpost-doctoral fellows, and a 250-man faculty-all resident on thecampus.

The Kanpur Institute has settleddown to its long-term task of pro-viding the engineers India needsat every level of its economic de-velopment.

The U.S. has dispatched an IBM1620 for use by the institute and

the Indian industries as well asthe American talent there. A sec.ond computer (IBM 7044) will ar-rive by the end of this year.

MIT professors, and others,serve as consultants and professos -at Kanpur. Cnsultants comefor one-to-six month assignment,the professors for one to twoyears. Some become so involvedthat they agree to extend theirtours of duty. Thirty U.S. facultymembers have returned aftercompleting their work. Many'lookforward to returning once againto continue their work in India

Open Christmas partyset for Student Center

The Student Center Committeewill sponsor a Christmas party forall students Friday, December 11.The party will be held in the Salade Puerto Rico in the StrattonBuilding from 4 to 6 p.m. Refresh.'ments and entertainment will beprovided in order to give the oc.casion a holiday atmosphere.

The Student Center Committeehopes that all social chairmen in.clude the party in' their livinggroup's planned activities for De,cember 11.

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Page 17: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

Hla rry Yegi coach

Judo club offers instructionBy Steve Wiener

Although judo is not an inter-collegiate sport at MIT, Harryyanegi tutors a group of thirtyboys who practice Saturday after-noons at the DuPont Athletic Cen-ter. mr. Yanegi, with a fifth de-gree black belt, is the highestranking expert in New England.While the club provides the oppor-tunity for experienced boys toparticipate in tournam ents and im-prove their rank, it also enablesbeginners to learn the sport.

Returning for action this yearwill be brown belts Pete James'67, Dennis O'Hara '66, Bob Gil-more '62, and hopefully black beltDon Morrison '66. Don tore a car-tilage earlier this year and prob-ably won't be participating untilthe spring. Heading the freshman

AQUACAPERS coming;

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Clown divers Richard Kimball(top), world professional divingchampion and 1964 OlympicCoach, and Ron O'Brien, for-mer NCAA-AAU diving cham-pion,. exhibit part of the actthat they will put on Noverriber20 in MIT's AQUA-CAPERS.Also performing will be FrankGorman, silver medalist in the1964 Olympic diving competi-fion, the Wellesley Water Ballet,and the MIT Logarhythyms.There will be two shows, one at7 p.m. and the other at 9 p.m.

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turnout will be Robert Takahashi,a black belt ffom J-flats, Los An-geles.

Judo is sportUnlike karate or jiu-jitsu, judo

is a sport rather than a means ofself defense. The founder, JigaroKano, combined many of the Un-harmful tactics of the former two,molding a sport in which theknowledge of falling techniquemakes injury impossible. There-fore, Mr. Yanegi spends muchtime during the first few monthsteaching beginners the art of fall-ing.

Judo ranking systemTwice each year members of

the club are given the opportunityof attending the New Englind pro-motionals at which they can im-prove their rank. There are threeclasses of ability; white belt,which is sudbidived into threegroups, brown belt, which alsohas three groups and finallyblack belt which consists of tendivisions. Tenth black belt is thehighest ranking one may obtain.

The promotional test consists ofa demonstration of form, partici-pation in matches and a writtenexam. To graduate to brown belt,for example, one must demon-strate twenty-four different throw-ing technirques. A series of sevenor eight matches displays a par-ticipant's fighting spirit while theexam tests one's knowledge ofJapanese terms involved in judo.Bob Gilmore attended the Oct. 13promotionals and is now a firstdegree brown belt.

During the year, the club par-ticipates in tournaments, dualworkouts, and clinics, -the first ofwhich was held Nov. 5, at theTohoku judo club in Somerville.Experts talked to boys from MITand UMass. The highlight of theyear is the New England cham-pionships which were started byMIT in '62. Coach Yanegi's groupcaptured the first three crowns,but last year -bowed to a strongNortheastern team. The tourna-ment this year will be held inearly spring.

Turnout encouragedAll boys with any interest in the

sport of judo are encouraged tovisit du Pont some Saturday after-noon. Mr. Yanegi is welcomingbeginners as well as experts.Spectators at one of the early De-cember home matches will beentertained during half time byNew England's judo champs forthree successive years.

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Page 18: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

co Kindleberger speaks Senior House 0. Sela+on 0 Record now 3-7in c o fe e c e to ain conference today

on monetary policyFour leading US authorities on

n international payments and mone-_ tary policy will probe the balancec of payments crisis, analyze pro-- posals to increase world liquidity,at and review US monetary policies

in a symposium today.LU The conference on "World Re-o serves and International Liquidi-Z ty" will begin at 3:45 pm in Baker>2 Library auditorium of the Harvard< Business School. It is being spon-

sored jointly 'by the student Pub-Z lie Affairs Forum and the .Harv-mJ ard Business School Department

of International Business.Participating in the discussion

are Robert Triffin, professor ofeconomics at Yale University; Ed-

o ward Bernstein, private economicf consultant in. Washington, D.C.;,, Charles P. Kindleberger, profes-I sor of economics at MlT, who

served with the Federal -ReserveBank of New York; and FritzMachlup, professor ..of interna-tional finance at Princeton Uni-versity.

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Photo by Desmond BoothThe Senior House offensive line gets set to clash with the

defensive wall of Boston University's Shelton Hall football teamin a modified football game played Sunday, October 31.- TheSenior House 'men were not allowed to run "too fast," jump forpasses, or block aggressively. They also had to let: the girls. catchany passes they were able to. In a real defensive battffle, neitherteam could muster much' of an attack anid game ended' in ascoreless tie..

Booters lose to UConn 3-0By Steve Weiner

The soccer team 'bowed 3-0 toa strong UConn eleven Saturday,Nov. 5. Though the Techmenworked well together in their sea-son finale, they were hurt by mo-mentary lapses and the absenseof .All-American -nominee CaptainSavit Bhotiwihok '66.

For the first ten minutes MITcontrolled the ball but' failed toscore. Then, half way through theinitial period, an opponent's shotrebounded off goalie Markovitz'schest into -the Tech net. Defensedominated the game for the next,ten minutes as neither teammounted a charge sufficient toscore. During this period. AvrimnMark6ovitz '67 registered seven ofthe nineteen saves he tallied dur-ing the contest. '

The second half commenced-with a score by UCom's Tony

iDudas,, ,.then the final goal wasscored at 2:15 of period four byvisiting left. wing John Gardina.

Though Tech had the ball in theiropponent's territory the majorityof the time, they were tlrottledby the defense of lConn's full.backs. As a result only ten saveswere required to keep them offthe scoreboard.

With this loss Coach CharlieBatterman's team closed out itsrecord at three and seven.

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Page 19: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

thesportsspot

By Larry WhiteWith the fall sports season al-

most over for MIT, our teams,competing in seven official sports,compiled a winning record of 31wins, 28 losses and one tie, a sig-nificant improvement over lastyear. Although this record is madeup of winning records from someteams and 1 o s i n g ones fromothers, almost every team showedimprovement from last season.

Heading the list of winningteams is the fantastic sailingteam, which compiled a record of6-3; not wins and losses, but 6first places and 3 second placesin regattas that had as many asten or eleven teams entered. Com-peting against the best teams onthe east coast, our varsity sailorsdemonstrated that they are oneof the two best teams along withthe University of Rhode Island.

The meets the team has wonto date are: Pine Trophy at CoastGuard, Pentagonal Regatta atCoast Guard, Danmark Regattaat MIT, NEISA Sloop Champion-ship Elimination, Finn Class In-vitational Regatta at Harvard andthe' NEISA (New England Inter-collegiate S a i 1 i n g Association)Team Championship Prelimina-ties. In addition, Don Schwanz '66won the individual sloop cham-pionship for New England for hissecond time. With Schwanz, Cap-tall Terry Cronburg '66, and therest of this fine team back wecan expect a fine team for springsailing.

Frosh sailing encouragingThe frosh sailing team made a

pretty good showing of its owntis fall and prospects look goodfor it this spring also. In theirfirst meet of the season at CoastGuard, they finished first in afield of eleven. Thereafter, theyfinished seventh and fourth twicein their other three regattas, arespectable performance. The var-sity team has three more meets

Fall season evaluation

this fall and the freshmen have team split its six matches, beatingone to go. Brandeis twice and Babson once,

Another team with a fine' show- while losing to Vermont, Rhodeinc. thiTn f;ll Isle . .. c-.,,-mgL uns mu.L was ue cross-countryteams, both varsity and freshman,but especially the freshman. Dur-ing the regular season, the varsityharriers registered a 44-1 recordincluding wins over RensselaerPolytechnic Institute, WorcesterPolytechnic Institute, Coast Guardand Boston College. Topping thesquad with consistently fine run-ning were captain Rob Wesson '66and number one man SumnerBrown '66. Their loss next yearwill be sorely felt, but when CoachFamrnham's stable of freshmanrunners join the varsity next year,the team should recover.

The frosh harriers, led by sensa-tional Stanley Kozubek, ran to a7-2 record with one of those lossesby a mere 2 points. The seasonincluded victories over Rensselaer,Worcester, Coast Guard, NewHampshire, Boston Col., Spring-field, and Tufts. The climax of theseason so far came Tuesday, No-vember 2, when MIT came in 4thin varsity and 3rd in frosh in theGreater Boston College Champion-ships, both being our best show-ings in that event. In addition,Kozubek won the individual fresh-man title, running 11:32 for 2.5miles, and defeating the one per-son who had previously beatenhim by 100 yard.

Two miles in 9:32Stan was timed at the two mile

mark in 9:32, so he has an excel-lent chance of bettering the fresh-man 2-mile track record of 10:16.In fact, the first six freshmanrunners all have better two nile'times than the record here, so thetrack team should 'be good thisspring. Both the freshman andvarsity have two more meets torun in: the New Englands andthe ICA4 in New York.

Both the tennis and golf squadshad short fall seasons as preludesto their spring schedules. The golf

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Island and Boston College. GerryBanner '68 and Ben Roach '68played the best golf and shouldlead the team this spring to awinning seasore This year, aspring -trip to North Carolina andVirginia has been scheduled, withthe team playing Old Dominion,North Carolina, and other schools.

The tennis team had an ex-tremely short but extremely suc-cessful fall season, defeating bothBrandeis and Rhode Island induel matches. In addition, CarlWeissgerber '68 and Dave Chand-ler '66 won the team title for MITin the Brandeis Invitational Tour-ney. These results indicate a verypromising season for the nettersthis spring.

Soccer, rugby dsappoinfingThe soccer and rugby squads

had disappointing seasons. Thebooters won three of ten games,beating Tufts, Boston Universityand Brandeis. Many of the gameswere very close and could havegone our way with a little luck.The freshmen also had a losingseason. Injuries were the cause ofmost of the .defeats and rarelywas the whole starting teamhealthy at once. There were sev-eral individual players on thefreshman team who will help outthe varsity next year, includingJeff Weissman, Carl Everret, andSteve Bridges. These, along withBayo Ajadi '68, George Busby '68and Avrim Markowitz '67, shouldcomprise the nucleus of an im-proved team next year.

The Rugby Club has also hada hard time, winning but twogames. The team showed a lotof spirit, however, and it managedvictories over Harvard twice aswell as a hard earned tie againsta rugged Brown club. There areseveral excellent individuals: cap-tain Tom Van Tienhoven '66, Mar-shall Fisher '65, and Jim Larsen'65. The team has two remaininggames with Dartmouth and Tufts.

Three other teams, lacrosse,

nformal games heldbaseball, and crew, had informalgames this fall to get in shape forthe spring schedule. The baseballteam played four games, experi-menting to find a starting team.The team looked good even thoughit only won one game, but therecould be a lack of good pitcherson the team. The lacrosse teamand crews also competed iinfor-mally.

On October 16, MlT's crewscompeted in the Head of theCharles Regatta and did quitewell. The lightweights took firstand second in their divisions. Twoheavyweight shells and a singlescull also competed for us. Indi-cations are that the crews, asalways, will be among the topteams in the east.

Judging from the fall perform-ance of MIT's teams, prospectsfor the winter and spring sportswould have to be rated as ex-tremely hopeful.

Around the Cage

Lifters go to championshipsBy Gerry Banner

Gene Robersm, runner-up thispast September in the heavy-weight division of -the NationalWeightlifting Championships, willlead an unofficial TIT delegationto the Eastern Powerlifting Cham-piorships at Boston's HuntingtonYM1CA November 20. The Techteam will include Ernie Ander-son '67 and alt least three otherweightmen who will compete inthe 165 lb., 198 lb., and heavy-weight classes.

A course VI grad student frcmAuburn University, Roberson miss-ed winning the national title by amere five pounds. He did, how-ever, set a new record for abench press-482 lbs. In the squatpress, which consists of a deepknee bend with the weight on one'sshoulders behind the neck, Rober-son has done 703 lbs. His bestthree event total, consisting of abench press, a squat press, anda dead lift from the floor to histighs, has been 1885 pounds.

Roberson works outwiLth his fel-low weightmen every Monday,Wednesday, and Friday, in heweight room of Dupont. He hasbeen liftng for seven years xmw,and he stands 5' 9" and weighs275 pounds.

The 'basement .of the Amoryhas been undergoing some signifi-cant remodeling. A new rifle rageis going to be set up north of theDupont locker. room where form-erly there were bowling alleys,and more recently a rowingtank.Perhaps rifle and pintao can thenbe added to the Institute's alreadyextensive physical education pro-gram. A new weight room hasalready been established acrossfrom the Hobby Shop.

Changes are also in store forthe second floor of the front ofthe Armory. Teritative plans n-clude a dorrnitory to house visitingteams, and a room to be used bythe Music Department of Kresge.

$ * *

Rosters are due on Friday,November 26, {or the intrmnural

swimming meet. The preliminaryraces will be held during theevenings of November 30 andDecember 2 with, the finals takingplace on Sunday afternoon, Dec-ember 5.

Some teams have already begunpracticing at the Alumnd Poolwhich is generally open from 3 to5 p.m. during the week. BurtonHouse and Sigma Phi Epsilonfinished one-two last year andshould again be strong. Questionsshould be. referred to IM manag-er Howie Gilis at X3616.

With the fall intramural sportsseason concluded, Beta Theta Pimaintains a 48.5 point lead overSigma Alpha Epsilon in competi-tion for the All-Sports Trophy.With victories in fodtball andcros country, and a third inwrestling, the Bedtas have amassed254 IM points to SAE's 205.5. Bur-ton House, winer for the pasttwo years, is a dose third with204.3, largely the result of itswrestling tle.

Phi Delta Theta is currently infourth place with 152 poants. Infifth is Phi Gamma Delta, runer-up in cross country with 115.Alpha Epsilon Pi, tennis cham-pion, is 6th at 99.3.

All those interested in varsityor freshmen skiing who did notattend the ski team rally on Mon-day can contact coach WilliamMorrison or Captain Dave -Avrin'67. Experienced skiers are need-ed to fill gaps caused by gradu-ation.

A ski club has been formedover in East Campus as a sub-conmittee of the East CampusHouse Committee. Over 50 skiershave shown interest and severaltrips, including one on November20 have been planned. The clubis now closed to East Campusresidents, but there is a possi-bility that the club could becomean all institute adtivity in thenear future.

Coed sailors win Tech InvifiaionaI;Girls cheer in vain- for Patriots

In the last and perhaps the big-gest regatta of the year, the MIT-Radcliffe Women's InternationalRegatta, the iT women's sail-ing team carried home all thehonors this past weekend.

Competing against nine otherschools, the girls placed first andwon the Mann Lab Trophy for thesecond consecutive year. This twoday regatta is spo red anmmuallyby MIT and is held at the MITsailing pavillion. However, sincethis is the second year of the re-gatta's existene, MIT has notyet had to part wifth the trophy.

Representing MIT were RuthBeckley '67 and her crew, Bar-bara Desmond '67, in A divisonand Alix Bernstingle '68 andDouggie Gordon '68 as slkipperand crew respectively in B divi-sion. Karen Ellers '68 and CarolHoffmian '67 subbed for Barbaraand Douggie on Sunday whileBarbara and Douggie were cheer-ing for the Patriots.

The final score stood as fol-lows: 'MIT 181, BU 140, Jacksan127, Radcliffe 119, URI 113, Mer-rimac 105, Simmons 94, Pem-broke 82, Wellesley 80, Boston

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ohher group of coeds was putting'its athletic capabilities to . gooduse. They were the MIT cheer-leaders, who cheered for the Bos-ton Patriots at their game againstthe Buffalo Bills Sunday, Nov. 7.The Patriots lost 23-7. Led byBarbara Desnmond '67, the groupconsisted of Douggie Gordon '68,Lou Lentin '68, Jenny Rudd '6,Sherry Gulmon '68, Sue Downs'68, and two newcomers, ElaineLancaster '67 and Dinah Schiffer'69.

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Page 20: mmu VA'k n - en er ans coni e e NewEngland foimstech.mit.edu/V85/PDF/V85-N23.pdfted. After the math or science The tentative reloca class the Roxbury students parti- the Housing OfficeM:

By Herb FingerA large number of close games

foretells a fine intramural basketball season this winter. The firsweek of competition saw 39 gamein the undergraduate league alongwith three graduate contests.

In Major League action thipast week Senior House "A'scored a decisive victory overTheta Chi "A" 59-32. Dave Pack'68 put on a strong show leadingthe scoring with 28 points; MarkLappin '64 gave Senior House 14.At the end of the first quarterTheta. Chi led 1-10, but as thesecond quarter started, SeniorHouse got on the move. Strongdefensive play gave them the ballfor a majority of the time as theyfast-breaked the Oxes and out-scored them 18-2 in the secondperiod. From then on it was easygoing as the Senior House boyskept up the fast pace for a 59-32victory.

AEPi takes firstEarlier in the week, Senior

House did not have such an easytime as they dropped one to AlphaEpsilon Pi 53-42. Gerry Banner'68 topped the scoring colramv with25 points, most of which came inthe first half. Sam Wilensky '59chipped in ten all-important pointsduring the final period.

During the first three periodsAEPi managed to stay- ahead ofSenior House by a slim 37-35 mar-gin. But in the final period, SeniorHouse began to press, but thePi's took full advantage of the

behind im in seond place wasNortheastern's Dave Dunsky.

Sumner Brown '66 once againran a good race to finish fifth inthe meet, and first for the team,with a time of 22:44. Captain RobWesson '66 finished fourteenth, in23:20, while Dan Hobant '68 wastwenty-sixth. Also scoring for theteam were Helge Bjaaland '67 andHarry Link '68.

After Harvard in the team totalswas Northeastern, with 45 points.Following them were Tufts, with99, MIT, Boston University, with125, and Boston College, with 141.Next week, the. team competes inits last meet of 'the season, theIC4A in New York. The prospectsare very good, both for the teamas a whole, and for SumnerBrown individually..

Varsity results-1. Starkus (BU),22:02; 2. Dunsky (NE), 22:22; 3.Kneeland (NED, 22:34; 4. Allen(H), 22:39; 5. Brown (MI), 22:446. Langebach (H), 22:48; 7. Stemp-son (H), 22:55; 8. Ryan (H),22:56; 9. Baldwin (T), 22:59; 10.Chaff (H),-23:01; 11. Baker (H),23:11; 12. Lobvan (NE), 23:18;13. Sheehan (NE), 23:19; 14. Wes-son (MIT), 23:20; 15. Baker (NE),23:26; 26. Hoban (MiT), 24:33; 30.Bjaaland (MIT), 24:52; 32. Link(MIT), 25:13; 34. Peckarsky(MIT), 26:14.

Idmft~ ,URI cham ionn Sai to 3nrdi Sweeshe r e ft_-- E~~~~~~ailor's 3rd in Schell regaff---

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Senior House "A" guard,Mark Lappin '64 lays one upagainst AEPi's Sam Wilensky'59, Mike Gelburg (20) andGerry Banner (14). AEPi won53-35.

By Tony LimaThe varsity harriers last week

made a surprisingly good show-ing in their first big post-seasonmeet of the season, the G.B.C.A.A.at Franklin Park. The Techmenfinished fourth out of six teams,totalling 107 points. Harvard re-peated as team champion, withfive men finishing in the top-ten,for a total of 35 points. GeorgeStarkus of Boston University tookthe individual honors, finishingthe 4.5 mile course in 22 minutes,2 seconds. Finishing 20 seconds

Rugby Club defeatsHarvard B-School

The rugby club trounced Har-vard's "B" team Saturday, Nov.5, by a score of 27-0. Wimg JimLarsen racked up seven pointswhile centers Jaques Tramoni '63,and Jnim Marshall '68 supplement-ed the scoring. Responsible forthe overwhelming margin was theplay of the Tech forwards whofollowed the ball extremely wellafter the breaks. The second halfwitnessed some sloppy play onthe part of the vistors, who hadracked up a 19-0 margin duringthe initial period. Tis was te"A" team's second victory of thefall season.

Photo by Thomas CambellSenior House "B" team forward John Torode '66 scores two

points on a rebound in IM basketball action against ChineseStudents "A" last Thursday. Defending are Frank Cheng '67(white shirt), Billy Shih, and Marty Chin.situation. Wilensky, AEPi center,was left fre at the far end ofthe court and easily put in-eight.points. After that it was clearsailing as AEPi beat Senior Houseby 11.

Marc Seelenfreund '68 and LarryIcermnan '67 combined for 31points to lead Burton "A" to their45-38 victory over Pi Lambda Phi.There seemed little question ofthe game's outcome as Burton out-scored the Pi Lams 9-3 in thefirst quarter, controlling both therebounding and the scoring.

In the second period the PiLams came to life, led by TerryMay '66, and closed the gap tothree. Burton again went farahead, dominating the boards inthe third period.

Burton on topAs the final period started, Pi

'Lam lid up five baskets to comewithin one point of Burton. Bur-ton put-on its final burst of fourbaskets to end the game 45-38.

n a close game Thursday, Sig-ma Phi Epsilon edged out DeltaTau Delta 37-31. There were nevermore than six points separatingthe two teams as the first quar-ter ended deadlocked 12-12. Athalftime Sig Ep led 22-20, and-they rerained their lead in thethird period, 28-24. Both teamsplayed a slow, deliberate gamewith neither teamxn surging-ahead.Bruce Olsen '66 was top scorerwith 11, followed by the Delts'-Art Von Waldburg '67, who had 10.

ZBT over FjiZeta Beta Tau won their first

game of the season last week bybeating Phi Gamma Delta 33-28.The first quater saw the Fiji'sman-to-man defense sl~.: up ZBT'so that the first quarter closedwith a one point difference. Thesecond quarter provided the mar-gin of victory for ZBT, as a lateperiod surge gave them a half-time lead of 22-13. Mike Rubin '64led ZBT's scoring with 12 pointswhile Wayne Baxter '66 was re-sponsible for nine of the Fijis'points.

Bill Dix, Intramural BasketballManager, reminds players thatthe spirit of Intramural Basket-ball is one of competition andthough tempers may flare, theyshould not get out of hand as theydid this past week when a playerstruck a referee.

By Johim KopolowFor the first time this fall the

MIT varsity sailing team failed tocome in either first or second ina regatta. Tech's ninety-five pointsin the Schell Trophy Regatta wereonly enough for third place. TheUnirversity of Rhode Island had120 points, followed by the lostCoast Guard Academy, -With 116.Ten schools, including Harvard,Princeton, and Dartmouth, fin-ished below WHT in the stand-ings.

The regatta took place Satur-day and Sunday. On Saturday tWemoderate winds made racing con-ditioms almOst ideal. However, onSunday thlere was amost no windat all. As a reult only six of theten scheduld races could be held.

·MIT's captain, Terry Croiberg,skippered 'in the "A" division,and as is his custon, he washigh-pnt skipper wit 59 points.URI and Brown folowed closelywith 58 'and 57 pdints respetively.

The absence of Don Schwanz

, Intram ur\

Bf40ballChem "A" 63, Celtics "A" The Team 50, Ash Hous. "A" 41Grad Econ "A" 38, Poly Sci 23SAE 53, ATO 35AEPi 53; Sen'Hou "A" 35ZBT 33, Phi Gamma Delta 23Sen Hou 59, Theta Chi 32Bur "A" 42, Phi Mu Delta 33DKE 32, Kappa Sig 24Bak "A" 42, Bur "C" 26Phi Kappa Sig 26, Kappa Sig 22DKE 40, Chem "B" 27Grad Econ "B" 37, Bur "C" 26Bur "B" 43, Bak "B" 25Phi Delta Theta 42, Sig Nu 39DU 66, Stud Cent 30-Sig Nu 51, Stud Cent 34Stud Hou 41, Sen Hou "B" 24

Fresh sports

Kozubek takes GreaterBy Tom Thomas - takes, maturing into the fine team

Stan Kozubek carried the MlyIT originally anticipated.harriers to a third place finishin the freshmen division of theGreater Boston College CrossCountry meet by finishing numberone in the 42-man event. He low-ered his best previous time overthe Franklin Park course by afull 16 seconds. Bob Bruen ofNortheastern, who last week de-feated Kozubek over this same2.5 mile course, failed to improvehis time and finished 14 secondsback in second place.. As a team, the Tech runners

were defeated by Harvard andNortheastern while overpoweringBoston College, Tufts and Bran-deis. -Teaming up with Kozubekwere Jim Yankaskas (13), TomNajarian (16), Rich Wolfson (17)and John Usher (20).Team Standings: 1. Harvard--34; 2.Northeastern--41; 3. MIT-67; 4. Bos-ton, -College-114; 5. Tufts-115; 6.Brandeis-171.

SailingTech's frosh sailors finally hit

their stride taking first place inthe Minor at Tufts. MIT, tied byBoston College in total points,owed its victory to Mike Bruce-Lockhart's two first place finishes.In the event of a tie the numberof top finishes determines the win-ner.

Bruce-Lockhart, skippering in"A" division with Dave Fay ashis crew, captured a fifth to go

'with lis two wins. "B" divisionskipper Dave Goodwill and hiscrew, Dick Smith, finished fourth,third and fifth in their heats.

The surprises of the meet werethe fourth and fifth place finishesby URI and Brown, previouslythe two top teams in frosh sail-ing. In beating the strong eleventeam field, MIT made no mis-

Final Standings: 1. MIT--53, 2. B.C,-53, 3. Northea.tern-50. 4. -URI---43,5. Brown-43. 6. Harvard-41' 7. Bow-dloin-39, 8. Tut---35, 9. WPI--20, 10.Dartrnouth-417, 11. U. Conn.-1f. '

SoccerFinishing their season, the frosh

kickers lost 1-0 to Phillips ExeterAcademy. Exeter- jumped out toan early lead by scoring in thefirst quarter when 'goalie JeffReynolds made a misjudgment intiming and left the goal unguard-ed. -

Tech failed to capitalize on afreak penalty when the 'visitors'goalie was penalized for holding.Center-halfback Jeff Weissmanmissed the attempt in the secondquarter.

The soccer team ended the sea-son- with a 1-7 log; however, theExeter game marked the fourthtime the MIT eleven lost by onegoal. Two of these losses came indouble overtimes. Ironically, in apreseason scrimmage the Techsquad defeated a Lincoln-Sudburyteam on its way to anundefeatedregular season and probably thenumber one ranking in this area.

For the greatest part of the sea-son, Coach William S. Morrisonrelied on a starting lineup com-

How They Did -Soccer

UConn 3, MIT (V) 0Phillips Exeter I, MIT (F) 0

Cross CountryMIT (V) placed 4th in GBC'sMIT (F) placed 3rd in GBC's

SailingMIT (V) placed 3rd in Schell

Trophy competitionMIT (F) won the Minor at Tufts

RugbyMIT 27, Harvard Business School

(B) 0 -Women's Sailing

MIT won the MlT-RadcliffeInvitational Regatta

took its toll in the "B" divii Though veteran skippers Chet Os. borne and Joe Smullin, who shared -the skippering duties in "B" di.vision, did a commendable jobMIT lost a ldt of ground to u*and the Cbast Guard Academy -The team was especially hurt by the lack of wind on Sunday ,had. all the races been completed MIT's sailors might have dinedmuch better.

Only two more regattas are left on the fall sailing schedule ofMIT. Toiorroaw, beging at9:30 am on the Charles, is thegreater Boston Dinghy Champim.ship. - Besides Tech, Babson, BCBU, Havard, Northeastern, Tufts will participate. Tis week. iernd here -at Tech will-be the megatta for the Fowle Trophy, wich -Mr, Coast Guard, Dartmk iand URI will try to take hoe=Thus no matter how the Tecsailors fare in thoese final twojevents, it'will have been a veryimpressive season for them.

al Results ; ,Theta Delta Chi 53, Pi Lam "B" 28 Westgate 35, Chinese Stud. 32Sigma Chi 46, Pi Lam "B" 28NRSA 53, Ash Hou Din 26EC "A" 49, Theta Chi 31 SEC "C" 49, AEPi mesons 44Ash Hou "B" 28, Theta Del Chi 19 -TEP 47, EC "B" 19Sig Ep 56, Sen Hou "C" 14 AEPi ala modes 25, Bur "E" 23Bur "D" 45, Phi Sig Kap 39Bex 43, ZBT "B" 31 Bak "C" 35, Theta Chi "B" 34Bur "A" 45, Pi Lam "A" 38Chinese Stud. 54, Sen Hou "B" 24 Phi Kappa Theta 45, Phi Delts 29Sig Ep 37, Delta Tau Delta 31The Team 62, Celtics "A" 14 LXA "B" 69, Bak "D" 21

Us

Boston tile Eprised of Steve Bridges, outside right; Tom Turai (co-capt.), irr side right; Joe Kadich, center; Ken Schwartz, inside left; Lloyd Wilson, outside left; Carl Everr (co-capt.), right halfback; Jeff IWeissman, center halfback; John Kaar, left halfback; Bob Haring- ton, right fullback; L. P. IpoitiS, ileft fullback; and Jeff Reynolds, goalie. .

~7~1On Deck,.Thuriday, November 11

Sailing oV) - Oberg Trophy at IhomeSaturday, November 13

Rugby - Dartmouth, awaySailing (V) - Fowle Trophy at

home (through Sunday)Monday, November 15

Cross Country (V&F) - ICAAAAat New York

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Harriers place fourth in Greater Bostons; ,Best showing ever; Sumner Brown runs fifth