16
Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committee now daccepTing nQominadTins Wiliam Christie Samuels '65 is the new Undergraduate Associ- ation Presidet. In preferential balloting yesterday, he defeated Arthur Bushkin '65 and David Nolan '65. - T htle .st - e -pacvotes were as follows: Samuels, 1067; BushlIn, 366; Nolan, 306; others, 48, in- eluding 21 blank ballots. The total vote in the election was 1787, as compared to last year's 1833. Samuels make his home in Can- andaigua, New York. He is en- rolled in Cotre 14 -A. He has been class president this year and is a member of Delta Upsilon. eH has participated in ross- roads Africa, and sepnt a sum- mer in Kenya. Samuels released to The .Tech the folowing statement concern- ing his victory: "The election is over, but the, Royalty to arrive Queen contest coming The Sprring Weekend Committee has announced plans for the Spring Weekend Queen Contest The queen will be selected by the committee on the Friday night of Spring Weekend, April 17, 1964. Six finalists will be seleted by preferential balloting of the stu- dent body during the first week of ticket sales for Spring Weekend. Contestans piurets will be accepted through March 13, 1964 and may be in black and whibe or in color. Pictres, larger han 3" by 5", should be subnimted to Betty Hem- dricks in Litchfield Lounge, 50-110. Maiad Fer s ad the Plat- Numerous changes plan ters wil appear with the queen and her court Fiday igt April as Professor Locke bec 17, at Ihe Hotel. Bradford. T'he Brandywine Singers on Salturday By Al Green afternomi, the DoveUsl, the C s- With the appointment of Dr. fires, the Angels, and the Contaim- William Locke as full time direc- entels at the HamJptm Beach tor of the MIT Libraries, sev- Party Saturday night, cormprise eral changes are planned in the the rest of the Spring Weekend en- Institute library system. tettarnment. tetanmet. tch changes During intersession, the Rotch Submit all nominations Library was the object of a $13,- 000 renovation. Using a plan pre- individuals and activities pared by librarian Katherine for tADB Award by Mar. 6 Murphy and Prof. Marvin Goody, the architecture librarv has been The deadline for inations rearranged to reduce overcrov for the Activities Development ed conditions. Board Awards has been set at New facilities for magazir March 6, according to Mark Rad- and a light table for the sli win, '64. collection have also been The seven-member screening quired. During the summer 1 committee has received "only a office of retiring Dean Pietro E few" returns to date. "Any mem- luschi will be added to the ber of the Instute community," brary to provide more space. explained Radwin, "is in position The Dewey Library, also c to nominate any person or activ- sidered overcrowded, will occu ity for an award." the first two floors of the n "It appears," he continued, School of Industrial Managemr "that many deserving people facility as soon as' that build and / or activities have not yet is completed. This will more ti been nominated." double the present space in The awards will be presented library. on the evening of April 25 at the Proposals have also been ma Awards Convocation in Kresge to extend the engineering libn Auditorium. down one floor in Building 10 Red Spies op C Top-Secre Formiula wd- nes ac- the 3el- li- on- upy lew ent ing han the ade ary to Photo -by Steve Teicher John Ryon as Prof. Peter Probe is surrounded by spies Chris Calloway as Olga and David Fan as Chew In-foo while Norm Rubin as Harold Hoosie stares blankly in the '64 Tech Show. (See complete review on Page 9) real important work remains. I only hope that whethcxr it be as Chairman of Inscomm or at a meting in the Dean's Office that I merit the confidence that has jst been placed in me. "The success of student g;- eminent depends not only on my ability as an administrator or as an irnnovator. It depends on the interest you as students take. If you have a, new idea or a criti- cism it should be communicated. But more than that, we want participants. "Subcommittee elections are coming up soon. If you are in- terested, for example, in SCEP, Finance Board, Public Relations Committee, or Secretariat, come forward and inquire. There's always room for a good man. Then, together, we can make next year a beneficial one." ned for MlT libraries romes full-time director an area now occupied by the Electrical Engineering Depart- ment. All clerical operations would be moved to the fourth floor, freeing the' entire fifth floor for seating space. Students would enter the library on the lower floor, then take an internal ele- vator to the upper areas. Locke's comments A-ccording to Dr. Locke, the li- braries should have a minimum seating capacity for one. student in five. Now there are 1,100 seats for 6,500 students - provisions for one in six. "Because of this," the Director said, "expaLsion is as much a matter of necessity as of choice." Calling attention to what he called our "inadequate" humani- ties book collection, Locke noted that MIT has only 75,000 humani- ties books compared to 500,000 in many liberal arts schools. He hopes for the establishment of a more complete humanities li- brary in the future. For the present, the Institute is continuing to build its book collections at the rate of 35,000 new volumes each year. With the 800,000 books now in the library system, this amounts to an annual growth of about four and one half per cent. Students can obtain President's Report in Room 3-333 Copies of the November 1963 President's Report Issue of the MIT Bulletin, covering the aca- demic year 1962-63, are available without charge to interested stu- dents from the Publications Of- fice, Room 3-333. The document includes the genm eral report of the President, with respect to education, expansion, research, and statistics for the year. It also contains reports con- cerning the five Undergraduate Schools and the Graduate School, various Vice Presidentail reports, honors and activities of the MIT staff, and publications associated with the Institute. Last year approximately 200 copies . of the report were dis- tributed. Student narninations for the seczid Baker Award far QOtstand- ing Undergraduate Teaching are now being accepted. The Everett Moore Baker Foun- dation offers Iojis award to rec- cgnize exceptional teaching by a faculty member below the rank of Full Prorfesr. The award, a $250 honorarlum, and a bronze medal will be presented at the Awards Cmnvocation April 25. Nominatidn for this award may be made by any MIT undergrad- uate. Nominations should be sent in writing before March 27 to Robert Kimmel, Baker IHouse 626, 362 MemoriaSl Dr., Cambridge. The Baker Foundaaton was es- 'tablished in 1951 to perpetuate the memory and the ideels of Dr. Baker, farmer Dean of Students at MIT from January, 1947, until his death in an aiirplane accident in August, 1950. He was a vigorous proponent of a broad educational policy, a dynamic extra-curricular pro- gram, and a congenial physical and intellectural envirvnment at MIT in the opinion of many con- menltatbors. The Committee aoatinu.ously uses the income of the Foundation to assist and administer projects which embody that philosophy. Vol. 84, No.4 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Mar. 4, 1964 5c 20 chem lectures Bellhausen visiting prof essor Dr. Carl Johan Ballhausen, Ar- thur D. Little Visiting Professor of Chemistry, will deliver a series of 20 one-hour public lectures on "The Electronic Structure of In- organic Complexes." The lectures are being presen- ted at 1 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays in 4-370, and will extend to April 29, with the ex- ception of March 30 and April 1. A pioneer in research on the structure of inorganic chemicals, Dr. Ballhausen is widely known for work on ligand field theory, a body of knowledge fundamental to the study of such solid state phenomena as flourescence, phos- phorescence, and laser activity. He has more recently made im- portant ccntributions in research on the motion of nrclei and the distribution of electrons within molecules. Dr. Ballhausen studied at Har- vard University in 1955-56 after graduating from the University of Copenhagen. He has directed the Institute of Physical Chemistry at the University of Copenhagen since 1959, and is Danish editor of the Journal "Acta Chemica Scandinavica." The Arthur D. Little Professor- ship is made possible by a grant from Arthur D. Little, Inc., of Cambridge, in memory of the firm's founder. Dr. Little gradu- ated from MIT in 1885, and was a member of the Institute's C(hem- istry Department from 1893 to 1916. j Bill Samuels INDEX College World ........................ 12 Critic's Choice ........................ 8 Editorials .................................. 4 -Entertainment ...................... 7-1 1 Footnotes .................................. 4 inside Inscomm ........................ 4 Kibitzer ....... 4 Letters ...................................... 5 Peanuts .................................... 4 Sports ................................ 13-16 -- ,, - sc _ i,. Class Election Results Class of O'64 Permanent President ............. Steve Glassman (Baker) Permanent vice-president ........... Jerry Luebbers (SPE) Permanent executive .......... Richard Carpenter (BTPi), committee Mark Barron (DU), Bruce Carpenter (DKE), Stephen Miller (KS), John Morrissey, Robert Scoff (Baker), Kim Sloat (DU), Bruce Strauss (Baker) Permanent secretary-treasurer .......... Ron Gilman (ZBT) Class of '65 President ............................ Dick Tsien (BTPi) Vice-president ....................... Perry Seal (SAE) Secretary-treasurer .................. Jesse Lipcon (ZBT) Class of '66 President ......................... Henry Perrift (SAE) Vice-president ....................... Dick Sayre (DU) Secretary-treasurer ................ Ken Browning (SAE) Class of '67 President ...................... George Piccagli (Baker) Vice-president ................... Steve Douglass (Burton) Secretary-treasurer ................ Jim Swanson (PSK) _ _ I__ _ _ __ I ~-~ -1"~"1"""~""-~~11~""~I"YII·I·IY· - - --------, -- ---- -------- -. IIII al-a-·-r·4·ID-·111 IIn I L I-orI A"~ab a"~ .. .durt-,,ly"Jui· ~l, BIV~~,I 7 I I I d 0% A 0 0 0 a AMk a , I e ec ion Vic or

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Page 1: Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward - The …tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N4.pdf · Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committee ... Dr. Ballhausen is widely known for work

Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committeenow daccepTing nQominadTins

Wiliam Christie Samuels '65 isthe new Undergraduate Associ-ation Presidet. In preferentialballoting yesterday, he defeatedArthur Bushkin '65 and DavidNolan '65. -

T htle .st - e -pacvotes were asfollows: Samuels, 1067; BushlIn,366; Nolan, 306; others, 48, in-eluding 21 blank ballots.

The total vote in the electionwas 1787, as compared to lastyear's 1833.

Samuels make his home in Can-andaigua, New York. He is en-rolled in Cotre 14 -A. He hasbeen class president this year andis a member of Delta Upsilon.eH has participated in ross-roads Africa, and sepnt a sum-mer in Kenya.

Samuels released to The .Techthe folowing statement concern-ing his victory:

"The election is over, but the,

Royalty to arrive

Queen contest comingThe Sprring Weekend Committee has announced plans for the

Spring Weekend Queen Contest The queen will be selected by thecommittee on the Friday night of Spring Weekend, April 17, 1964.

Six finalists will be seleted by preferential balloting of the stu-dent body during the first week of ticket sales for Spring Weekend.Contestans piurets will be accepted through March 13, 1964 and maybe in black and whibe or in color. Pictres, larger han 3" by 5",should be subnimted to Betty Hem-dricks in Litchfield Lounge, 50-110.

Maiad Fer s ad the Plat- Numerous changes planters wil appear with the queenand her court Fiday igt April as Professor Locke bec17, at Ihe Hotel. Bradford. T'heBrandywine Singers on Salturday By Al Greenafternomi, the DoveUsl, the C s- With the appointment of Dr.fires, the Angels, and the Contaim- William Locke as full time direc-entels at the HamJptm Beach tor of the MIT Libraries, sev-Party Saturday night, cormprise eral changes are planned in thethe rest of the Spring Weekend en- Institute library system.tettarnment. tetanmet. tch changes

During intersession, the RotchSubmit all nominations Library was the object of a $13,-

000 renovation. Using a plan pre-individuals and activities pared by librarian Katherine

for tADB Award by Mar. 6 Murphy and Prof. Marvin Goody,the architecture librarv has beenThe deadline for inations rearranged to reduce overcrov

for the Activities Development ed conditions.Board Awards has been set at New facilities for magazirMarch 6, according to Mark Rad- and a light table for the sliwin, '64. collection have also been

The seven-member screening quired. During the summer 1committee has received "only a office of retiring Dean Pietro Efew" returns to date. "Any mem- luschi will be added to theber of the Instute community," brary to provide more space.explained Radwin, "is in position The Dewey Library, also cto nominate any person or activ- sidered overcrowded, will occuity for an award." the first two floors of the n

"It appears," he continued, School of Industrial Managemr"that many deserving people facility as soon as' that buildand / or activities have not yet is completed. This will more tibeen nominated." double the present space in

The awards will be presented library.on the evening of April 25 at the Proposals have also been maAwards Convocation in Kresge to extend the engineering libnAuditorium. down one floor in Building 10

Red Spies op C Top-Secre Formiula

wd-

nes

ac-the3el-li-

on-upylewentinghanthe

adearyto

Photo -by Steve TeicherJohn Ryon as Prof. Peter Probe is surrounded by spies

Chris Calloway as Olga and David Fan as Chew In-foo whileNorm Rubin as Harold Hoosie stares blankly in the '64 TechShow. (See complete review on Page 9)

real important work remains. Ionly hope that whethcxr it be asChairman of Inscomm or at ameting in the Dean's Office thatI merit the confidence that hasjst been placed in me.

"The success of student g;-

eminent depends not only on myability as an administrator or asan irnnovator. It depends on theinterest you as students take. Ifyou have a, new idea or a criti-cism it should be communicated.But more than that, we wantparticipants.

"Subcommittee elections arecoming up soon. If you are in-terested, for example, in SCEP,Finance Board, Public RelationsCommittee, or Secretariat, comeforward and inquire. There'salways room for a good man.Then, together, we can makenext year a beneficial one."

ned for MlT librariesromes full-time directoran area now occupied by theElectrical Engineering Depart-ment. All clerical operationswould be moved to the fourthfloor, freeing the' entire fifth floorfor seating space. Students wouldenter the library on the lowerfloor, then take an internal ele-vator to the upper areas.

Locke's commentsA-ccording to Dr. Locke, the li-

braries should have a minimumseating capacity for one. studentin five. Now there are 1,100 seatsfor 6,500 students - provisionsfor one in six. "Because of this,"the Director said, "expaLsion isas much a matter of necessityas of choice."

Calling attention to what hecalled our "inadequate" humani-ties book collection, Locke notedthat MIT has only 75,000 humani-ties books compared to 500,000 inmany liberal arts schools. Hehopes for the establishment ofa more complete humanities li-brary in the future.

For the present, the Instituteis continuing to build its bookcollections at the rate of 35,000new volumes each year.

With the 800,000 books now inthe library system, this amountsto an annual growth of aboutfour and one half per cent.

Students can obtainPresident's Reportin Room 3-333

Copies of the November 1963President's Report Issue of theMIT Bulletin, covering the aca-demic year 1962-63, are availablewithout charge to interested stu-dents from the Publications Of-fice, Room 3-333.

The document includes the genmeral report of the President, withrespect to education, expansion,research, and statistics for theyear. It also contains reports con-cerning the five UndergraduateSchools and the Graduate School,various Vice Presidentail reports,honors and activities of the MITstaff, and publications associatedwith the Institute.

Last year approximately 200copies . of the report were dis-tributed.

Student narninations for theseczid Baker Award far QOtstand-ing Undergraduate Teaching arenow being accepted.

The Everett Moore Baker Foun-dation offers Iojis award to rec-cgnize exceptional teaching by afaculty member below the rankof Full Prorfesr. The award, a$250 honorarlum, and a bronzemedal will be presented at theAwards Cmnvocation April 25.

Nominatidn for this award maybe made by any MIT undergrad-uate. Nominations should be sentin writing before March 27 toRobert Kimmel, Baker IHouse 626,362 MemoriaSl Dr., Cambridge.

The Baker Foundaaton was es-'tablished in 1951 to perpetuatethe memory and the ideels of Dr.Baker, farmer Dean of Studentsat MIT from January, 1947, untilhis death in an aiirplane accidentin August, 1950.

He was a vigorous proponentof a broad educational policy, adynamic extra-curricular pro-gram, and a congenial physicaland intellectural envirvnment atMIT in the opinion of many con-menltatbors.

The Committee aoatinu.ouslyuses the income of the Foundationto assist and administer projectswhich embody that philosophy.

Vol. 84, No.4 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Mar. 4, 1964 5c

20 chem lectures

Bellhausen visiting prof essorDr. Carl Johan Ballhausen, Ar-

thur D. Little Visiting Professorof Chemistry, will deliver a seriesof 20 one-hour public lectures on"The Electronic Structure of In-organic Complexes."

The lectures are being presen-ted at 1 p.m. on Mondays andWednesdays in 4-370, and willextend to April 29, with the ex-ception of March 30 and April 1.

A pioneer in research on thestructure of inorganic chemicals,Dr. Ballhausen is widely knownfor work on ligand field theory, abody of knowledge fundamentalto the study of such solid statephenomena as flourescence, phos-phorescence, and laser activity.He has more recently made im-portant ccntributions in research

on the motion of nrclei and thedistribution of electrons withinmolecules.

Dr. Ballhausen studied at Har-vard University in 1955-56 aftergraduating from the University ofCopenhagen. He has directed theInstitute of Physical Chemistry atthe University of Copenhagensince 1959, and is Danish editorof the Journal "Acta ChemicaScandinavica."

The Arthur D. Little Professor-ship is made possible by a grantfrom Arthur D. Little, Inc., ofCambridge, in memory of thefirm's founder. Dr. Little gradu-ated from MIT in 1885, and was amember of the Institute's C(hem-istry Department from 1893 to1916.

j

Bill Samuels

INDEXCollege World ........................ 12Critic's Choice ........................ 8Editorials .................................. 4-Entertainment ...................... 7-1 1Footnotes .................................. 4inside Inscomm ........................4Kibitzer ....... 4Letters ...................................... 5Peanuts .................................... 4Sports ................................ 13-16

-- ,, - sc _ i,.

Class Election ResultsClass of O'64

Permanent President ............. Steve Glassman (Baker)Permanent vice-president ........... Jerry Luebbers (SPE)Permanent executive .......... Richard Carpenter (BTPi),

committee Mark Barron (DU), Bruce Carpenter (DKE),Stephen Miller (KS), John Morrissey,Robert Scoff (Baker), Kim Sloat (DU),

Bruce Strauss (Baker)Permanent secretary-treasurer .......... Ron Gilman (ZBT)

Class of '65President ............................ Dick Tsien (BTPi)Vice-president ....................... Perry Seal (SAE)Secretary-treasurer .................. Jesse Lipcon (ZBT)

Class of '66President ......................... Henry Perrift (SAE)Vice-president ....................... Dick Sayre (DU)Secretary-treasurer ................ Ken Browning (SAE)

Class of '67President ...................... George Piccagli (Baker)Vice-president ................... Steve Douglass (Burton)Secretary-treasurer ................ Jim Swanson (PSK)

_ _ I__ _ _ __ I

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Page 2: Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward - The …tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N4.pdf · Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committee ... Dr. Ballhausen is widely known for work

" Student Center library0IC Insscomm supports idea'

Dufth Cleaners233 Massackusetfs Ave.

Opposite NeccoTPowbridge 6.5662

Quality - Service. .

- a IILI�--�-� ·----C--·-�-�-· ·---�-P--·-�L� -- P-·pP·I �-s --- --

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By Henry lchstein

+ The idea of a M floor on the°^ Student Ceater to be devWed to,4 reserve books; and study areasI was given support by the Istiutte0 Caanunttee on 71amrsday evenn.

~Locket s remarkssAcaording to Dr. William A.

- Locke, Director of Libraries, fthe< proposed aditions would dupli-a caWe the present reserve book" collections, toWang nearly 12,000Z volumes and would provide 5WLO individual study seats iin "a nice3 library atmosphere." Additionally

there nay well be a collection ofabiout 5,000 general interest books.

Stating "thie overall plans'arein hand," Locke noted "the bigStumbling block is money." The

~ addition, if arramgement aremade now, wot~d cost about2 $650,000. Prof. Catalano, who de-signed hie Studelnt Centr, envis-aged a fifth floor for thie futwre,an-d .n~aiad 1h- wl accx-dily.

Remairg ."It may never getdone if we don't do it now," Dr.Locke noted that the addition, if

put in after the pmeent centeris completed, would be very ex-pensive and incarverient to con-stbraut. However, money must beacauied som if the libraxy is tobe included in the present con-

strueoim plais.

Ihe discussion in Inscorm wasCentered around the conflict between the idea of uw-luding aca-denuc activities in the center andthe realization that, if not put upnow, the fifth floor might neverbe added. It was the hope of Inscomnm that the floor would even-tually be put to shtdentectvitjluse: with fthat as a basis, theygave full support -to the proposal.

Kennedy LibraryLriscomm, voted to back a na-

tion-wide drive on college cam-puses to raise money for the JohnF. Kemedy Library to be con-structed in Boston.

Also, election for Finance Boardis imminent: i£ anyone is inter-ested, he may contact Stevre M-ler for details.

The Adxnirstrmion recmdy re-leased the failure percentages inmany courses offered in thespring Term, i963, and releasedlast month to staff members. Agrade of E, F, or O is considered'to be failing - for the purposeat the calculatons.

':2% of those emlled flun k-ed: 2.401 - 2.672 - 5.14 - 6.05-R-wr f n(;tTr _ 6.2T R 6.2

2L11 - 21.54 - 21.68 - 23.12-23.92.

3 - 5% ad the shkments takingtie following were dipilarlyhandled ,by tihe Ittarte: 2.021 -6.02 - 6.08T - 6.14T - 7.02-8.04 - 8.053 - 8.06 - 3.72 -10.13 - 01 - 14.02.

Also in the 3 - 5% group are18.02 - 18.03 - 18.06 - 18.15-18.18 - 18.26 - 21.02 - 21-04-21.91.

6-80o of those registered in2.403 - 5.62 - 6.252 - 6.4 -8.02 -- 8.041 -and 18.05 receivedPiling grades.

9 - 11% of the students in5.02 - 5.42 - 8.01 - 18.04 - and18.20 - were deried credit.

Physics 8.07 Wedhe list in ap-parent general diffiedty, as 15-17% were c o c

Few 9balf !mem-beil of M e

T uch ere prmaoted at a meet-ing of the board of d*irects Sat-

uirdaly.Ted TmublWd, '6, was ad-

vanced froun sports staff bo acf&

ing assoche spwts editor.ln e News Departmen, E;dwT

Glaltbeiorn: was ~prw~ted I> ffe 6.342 - 6.44 - 670 - 6.72 -poddm -of asgofa -te news efithr; 8.10 - 10.31.cama aks Miark Rolanan and Atso in the -2% bracket areHarvey Sckhitz, bdth '67, were 14.004 14.51 - 14.70 - 15.01-given news staff sfatus. 15.71 -16.201 - 18.10 - 18.2Z

Dean Johnson announces Course 15 revisions;curricula to include ,nore qluantatafive studies

Howard W. Johnson, Dean ofthe Scool of Industrial Manage-ment, announced in his annualreport some major changes in theMaster's Orriculum, teh S l o a nFellowships, and thze undergradu-ate curricula.

The principal revisions in theMaster's curriculum were madeto increase -its quantitative con-tent. A new first-year subject inManagerial Models, integrafingmaterial previously taught inother subjects, is now required.

In the Sloan Fellowship Pro-gram, emrse stucture revisionsin the quantitative studies andthe humanities began in the sum-mer of 1963. '1he program is un-der study by a committee head-ed by Prof. Stanley M. Jacks.

The undergraduate curriculumhas been augmented by an exper-imental programa entitled 'Under-graduate Systems C=uriculum."

Prof. Richardson to getthe mechanical engineers'Pi Tau Sigma Goldc Medal

Profissor Herbert H. Rtidiaird-son of NfI T &-clently rervived 4hePi Tau Sigma Gold Medl d theAmerican Society of Melhanial

The mnedal was awurded for out-standbiorlg addevemerit in ena~em-r-ing within, tk -i yeam after griadua-fion.

Accrrding to the report, thecourse will stress ftndamental inP·sights into the industrial systemand the way it behaves as a re-sult of system practices, stucu-tWxre and interactions.

The currliclum was developedby a faculty committee directedby Prof. J. W. Forrester.

By RICHARD MILLMPAN MIT's policy toward the Lazn

gtage requirement for the degreeof Doctor of Philosophy here re-cently been clarified.

Last spring the Cirmmittee ongraduate Sicol Policy approvedan altena.;tp the stndard requirement of. a 'reading knowledgeof two foreg languages. Instead,a student may now demonstrate

'"ssubstantfbl competence" inspealdng and reading one foreignlanguage.

"Substantial competence" is de-fined as (1) Passing a writtenreadtilg examination with an A;f2) Illustrating ability to discussin conversation ideas presented inlecture; (3) nlly, demonstat-ing ability to converse clloquial-ly in tihe foreign language.

A foreign student must stilldemonstrate cwmpetence in read-ing and speaking English.

Prof. Harold Hazen, Dean ofthe Graduate School, has notedthat, although trwslations-of sci-entific & technological literaturehave increased at a rapid rate inrecent years, there remains nosubstitute for a personal EkInl-edge of foreign languages. In sup-port of his belief he cited per-centages of those who used theirforeign language in preparing

An unusa one-yearcollege program.a~srsB B

Write fork

Juio Yar Program t4sEwr

' College porm D1 ~~~~~~~~~~s: :

e O

r Xinxo~a Prgrm

* New York University N>v; YoAr t1New York 3', N. Y.

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their theses: 85 per cent in chem-istry; 75 per cent, mathefnatics;62 per cent ,physics; 54 per cent,engineerhV; 17 per cent, psyrchiol-

The Committee on GraduateSchool Policy, Dean Hazen,notes,has reflected a strong tendencytoward recognizing the value of aworking knowledge of a foreignlanguage to a professional sci-entist. According to Dean Hazen,this attitude has been influemedby the success of intenrive cours-es in scientific German, Frenh,and Russiaxn instituted oy Prof.William Locke, when he was Headof the Department of ModernLanguages.

Dean Hazen, cor8mentirg on themotivation of the bnT require-men2s, has said: "By our one-language 'subitantial -competence'alternative we recognize foreignlanguage in its role as a mark ofthe educated man.

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FourTheTech IFailure distributions revealed;staff members a . a . A aoneasixw meSI'eal -ced ltr A.oearn promotions -----

cvommiteeo dlers poslicy toward doctorate language requiremaent Free Spring Weekend Invitations

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Brandywine SingersSmith -JU 4-2700

6C(i 7)8l-with that crisp, clean masculine aroma!

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We Carry a Completge Line of Ales, Beers and Wines

MAHLOWITZ MARIKET INCe

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By Thmotft Proctor"The 1959 Fard Faoudatien

grant is of special saxfice tothe School o Enge 1 _' saidDean Gordm S. Brown in theSchools' femfly released report.

"Applicable across the wholespectrun of oaur teaching in en-gineering," the grant was alsothe largest made to any 'rstitu-tion for the study of engineeringeducation up to that time, andhelped boost the ifant SecondCentrey FuEb&The Reprt cited several ma-

jor interrelated danges alreadymade using the Ford funds. Inearly 1959, for example, the In-stitute set up new graduae pro-gramns in materials gherngiat the Doctor's and Engineer'sdegree level.

Student soliitors to askTech undergrads to giveblood to Red Cross Bank

Solicittions are curently inprogress for ftfs year's MIIT BlowdDrive. All individuals between theages of IS and 59 are eligible todonate blood.

Student solicitor have a boothin Building ID and are Contac-ingdormitory and fraternity resi-dents. The booth m Building 10,vil remain open throuh F'ridayfor donation appients on teweek of March 23.

As a result of successM BloodDrives at IvnT, all members ofthe MIT community are present-ly membes of a Red CrossBlood Bank and may obtain bloodwithout charge, if the need shouldarise.

'Me student efflort for the AITBlood Drive is being conductedjoi/ty by Alpha Phi Omega andthe Technology CommnunityAsoidaion.

Susequentlv, the MealurgyDepartment decided to offer acomplete underadua programin Malerials Sciene, using theFord grant to develope n=es,course programs, study groupsand, especially, improved labo-tories.

Increased interest of students inother Depatment; ledl o the for-mation of a "coampleely new"course in Engineerig Metals forsophomores and juniors. This in·trn led to the development of afresuhmnen elective, "Stmmure ofMetals" (3.09), ami a coordirnatelaboralto course, 3.10, as wellas several Feh n Seminars.Finlly, related comures tu'ough-out the Institute were strength.ened to provide a better back.ground for the new curses.

Dean Brown also detailed a"surge of interest in laboratoriesbuilt around project-tbpe ativi-ties." The D]~tment of Me-cha.cal Engirem developedan undergraduate projects labor-atory whidh was cited by DeanH. Guyford Stever of flie -Depat-mert as havimg "important edu-cational aspects."

The Department of Aeronauticsand Astronautics built -up a dmri-lar lab, whose subjects "havecotinued to be an outftasingsuccess in education," accordingto Dean Charles S. Draper. Sim-ultaneously, the Department ofElectrical Engineering employedsome of' the Ford funds to con-struct take-home kits and otherequipment designed to increaseinlividual work.

Stimulation of a different kindwas provided in the Departmentof Civil Engineming by the FordPostdctoral Fellowship Program .Dean Miller of the Departmentstated that "no other sile re-sult oaf the Ford grant has prov-en to be so valuable . . . to thetotal program of the Depart-

Dean Brown empasized: "Notady have great dcges takenplace within the School, but thesehave interated with a wide rangeof activities tu hut the Insti-tute.". Among these in erations was

the formation of the ZachaiasCanmmittee to review the coreprogram.The diseovery of cosmiderable

obsolescence in many practicingerl s and the growth of aninterdepartmental approach To theproblems of the ShooL of Engi-neerin was another.

The thirtieth annual"A BIB'all" to be heldof Walker Memorial

The thirtieth annual FranisAmasa Walker Assembly will beheld Frisday, April 17, at WalkerMemorial. The ball, white ,ie andtadis TFeiste, will commence at10 pm with a reception by Presi-dent and Mrs. Straton and oterguests of honor.

Music ulW ,be provided byHarry M a r s h a r d's orchestra.Other entertainment will includeseveral performers as yet to beanounced.

By D. F. NolaaThe MIT Young Republcans

sent 50 delegates to the New Eng-land College Young Rexpublicans'mock presidential minagconvention held at Wellesley Col-lege last Sat.day

Outnumbered ornly by the Har-vard and Wellesley delegations,the MIT club cotrolled two keystates, Texas and Ohio.

The club president, Charles Da-ney '66, was state chairman ofthe Ohio delegation; the assistantchairman was Dick Cunningham'66. The Texas delegation washeaded by Kathy O'Hara of theKaty Gibbs Seatarial School,asisted by Mike Leavitt '66.Leavitt is curently the ActingCo-ordinator of the MIT Studentfor Goldwater.

In addition to controlling twomajor states, MIT students head-ed two candidates' floor strte-gies and made teir nomiumngspeeches. David F. Nolan '65 wasCandidate Committee Claihnanfor the GCldwater forces; Cur-

ningcam an the Nixon effort, andmade Nixon's n cmiut speech;the, Goldwater noninaK.atg speechwas made by Willis G. North '65.

Due to delays in registration,difflties in bringing the conven-tion to order, and a lengthyspeech by Congrsm Bob Doleof Kansas, there was only timefor one ballot.

Of a possible total of 645, Gold-water received a substantial plu-rality with 293 votes, falling shortof a majority by only 30 votes.Rockefeller came in second with178 votes, while lHenry CabotLodge, Willian Scraton, andThurton Moroan each receivedapproximately 45.

Former ice-President RichardNixon received 16 votes, withplinter-grsoup candidates accant-

ing for six votes.

Aufo Insurance* All Risks * Easy Payments* Open 9 to 9 & SaturdayJAMES F. BRENNAN Ins. Agency11 Unio Sq., gSomerville, Mass

Call 666-5600

TFris ct-lotron ias built and opterating by tlhefall of 1930 and reportedat the l'asihington April Meeting (Plys. Rev. 37, 1707, 1.931). Thediameter of the chamber was abolut 5 inches. Placed between the .-inchdiameter poles of a magnet with afield of ,12, 700 gauss and 27,000 ,oltson its single (fee, it produced 80,000'volt hydrogen molecule ions iruppedand rmeasured in a Faraday cage to wzhich a measured and adequate de-ceplertineg vol/ntage soeld be ap/lied.

The do-it-yourself:with.sealirng-wax days are gonefiom cyclotron technology forever. The tiny in-strument invented by Dr. Ernest O. Lawrence atBerkeley in 930 has been superseded many timnesby increasingly larger and more powerful instru-mnenlts of nltclear research.

Today the business of discovery is carried on by3200 people at the Berkeley site of Lawrence Ra-diation Laboratory, overlooking the Universityof California campus and San Francisco Bay.And the challenge of innovation remains for en-gineers-in advanced accelerator design and in adynamic unclassified research program.

EE's: Major electronics developmenct programs at LR, dealwith nuclear instrulmentation, automated data handling andacquisition, radio frequency and high voltage power supplysystems, fast-counting techniques and semiiconductor devicedevelopllment.

ME's: Our Mechanical Engineering work concentrates on de-sign of accelerators and the instrumnentation' associated withthem, on mlagnet developlnent, high vacuum systems, shieldingproblemls and mechanical engincering applied to biomedicalresearch.

Engineering graduates at all levels who want to learn moreabout LRL should contact the Placemnent Office for appoint-Inents. Campus interviews will be held on Friday. March 6

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THE ociTECHI£b,~~~~r"" foP-

''

Editorial Staff ........... Alan Rinsk 'o 4News Staff M .ichael =o '64

Stephen Katzberg '65, Henry Lichstein '615David F. Nolan '65, Richard Millman '66

Stuart Orkin '67, Mark Rockman '67Harvey Schultz '67, Elaine Cravitz

Features Staff Barbara Cohen '64Steven Lipner '65. Anthony Pappas '66

Michael Shorenstein '66. Ed SteinberE:'66Jeff Trimmer '66

Sports Staff Don Soseck '67Neal Gilman '67, Charles Willman '67

Entertain ment Staff .... Gilberto Perez-Guillermo '64Joseph Lamnbert '66, Lawrence Stark

M~ona Dickson '66

Unsigned editorials in The Teech are the opinionof 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 inpart, if deemed by the editor to be of sufficient in-terest or benefit to the coammunity. Brevity increasesthe chance of Dublication. Anonymnous letters will notbe printed, but nomes will be withheld upnon request.

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachuseis.The'Tech is published every Wednesday during thecollege year, except during college vacations, byThe Tech, Roomn 50-2 11, 142 Memorial Drive, Camw-bridge, Massachusetts 02139. Telephones area code617, 876-58655, 876-5856, 864-6900, Extensiosn 2731.

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

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programs-has this past year taken onnew proportions. The 1962-63 depart-menltal and interdepartmental researchexpenses,' excluding Lincoln Laboratoriesand the Instrumentation Laboratorycosts, exceeded for the first time in re-cent years the purely educational ex- penses of the Institute by a few millon dollars.E

New ways--more direct ways - ofhaving the benefits of our research en-vironment precipitate down to the un-dergradluate's education should be ex- Icplored .

Teaching awards SThe detection and rewarding of good

teaching can contribute much to the'worth of the MIT undergraduate exper I-ence. Currently such awards as theGoodwin {Medal and the new Baker Foun-dation award promote the most out- istanding examples ofc good teaching in cthe faculty. However, more awards and Iother encouragements are needed. Themany good teachers should have the re- fspect of their colleagues and due con- siderati~on at promotion time.

Commenting on President Stratton'sannual report, The New York Times dfFebruary 14, 1964, noted:i

"The professor who does a superbIjob of teaching physics or calculus cannormally expect little beyond the grati-tude of his limited number of students..The same energy poured into researchwill, if it produce-s a significant finding,result in fame, promoxtiotis, and lucra-tive consultantships ...-The Times went on to note that- this

disparity between the rewards for goodteaching and research sharply raises thedanger that many university facultymembers may be slighting teaching infavor ofl research. The answer to theproblem of overemphasis on researchseems to be, as The limes wisely ob-served, "to increase the awards for goodteaching in and out of the classroom.'}

These problemsbalancinlg researchwith other objectives, awarding goodteaching, -handling the School of Sci-ence's exparslo~n-are very real and dif-ficult. Wve are 'confident, though, thatDean Wiesner will attempt to find ima-,ginative and workable solutions after hehas made the full transition from his top-level work in W~ashington.

uampus eteunortsThis week's issue of The Tech carries

full coverage of yesterday's campus elec-tions. This coverage was made possible,by the Secretariat's recent decision tochange the- elections date from today,March a=, to March 3.

This change, supported by The Tech,was made possible through the com-mendable efforts of Dick Carpenter '64,Chairman of the Secretariat,, and JimWolf '65, Chairman of the ElectionsDivrision.

AppointmentThve Board of Directors of t1he Tech has ac-

;repled with regret the resignation of CliffordWleinstein '65 as Sports E~ditor dand is pleasedto aznnounce the appointment of David Kress '67,o9f Theta Chsi and South Bend, Indiana, asr Ac-ing Sports Editor._

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c We welcome Dr. Jerome B. Wies-ner's return to Cambridge to take onnew academic responsibilities as Dean of

the School of Science.0 Dean Wiesner has had wide experi-

° ence in science administration as Special+ Assistant for Science and Technology to

the President of the United States. ThisQ background should be an excellent prepE, aration for the multitude of problems> which currently face the School of Sci-

ence. The major problems, as we see> them, are outlined below.

< Ow~Riing enrollments-LU The persistarnt rise in undergraduate

enrollments in the School of Science will

W continue to test the academic resources

3and resourcefulness of the School. Be-

cause all of the graduate schools are cur-

rently expanding at a planned annual

rate of 21/2 per cenlt, each of the seven

X academic departments that Dean Wie-

VU ner administers must plan carefully the

utilization of teaching staff materials,

LU and laboratories.One Institute official, familiar with,

the trend toward more majors inl science,

attributed some of the student influx toignorance of the real work of scientists

and confusion of some aspects of science

with engineering. Prospective science

majors, must be given a clear and accu-

rate view in their science courses and in

counselling of the vocation . they will

take up.Research and teaching

Another perennial problem-manag-

ing and overseeing academic research

seem to be the Mendelee-modern physics.

16. "'Hack" design engu-lng jobs will VANISH bythousands across the n-once rrolec4' 't M 'A Cthrough wiAh its work onputer-aided-design (CAB)J

{It all started a coupinyears ago when a marthesis was written in CeVI, developing the oriLprinciples. In essence, itlows one design engineersit before a computer's scwith a Eight pen and dowork of ten men. (Details:The Tech, September 25, 1Vp. 3).

Funding, restaurantWe have at present

scant indicaiions as to v-will be going on in the "closmeeting of MIT's Corporathis-week. One thing for sthough: they'll launchfunding effort needed toplement the recommendaf.of the CSE Report on Un,graduate Housing (cf. Felary 19 lead story).

ITEM: The Institufe-direcsearch for a restaurant:near Senior House has gi=up the ghost, perhaps makcompulsory commons ar mprobable lufure reality in farea.

Movie cameramen willwade the Institute in Aprilfilm a programh on science ahumanities at MIT for -United States Informat.Agency. The only other tiUSIA was here Was at -

rCentennial.

I think it would be fair tocall the first pediction belowfhe "leak of the week," in theDense that someone who hadab1solutely no business know-ing about it gave me the firstlead.

The Crystal Ball12. The School of Industi.

al Management will formallychange its name in the NEARfuture.

(Speaking of leads, "'ips" ifyou prefer, . they're - alwayswelcome and the source willbe held in the strictest confi-dence.

13. The course 16.63, Expear-imental Projec*s 11, will beDROPPED as a required coursefor those engineering-sciencestudents in Course XVI nextyear. (The departmental ruling9came too late for inclusion inSpring course assignments; yetthe advisors of juniors in hatcourse aren't volunteering anyinformation about itfoX theircharges.)

14. Charlie - +he-Tech<Tailorwill have to MOVE from hispresent location across fromSenior House in the next threeto four years.

15. Professors Murray Gell-Man (Ca0Tech) and YuyaiNe'emen (from Israel) will wina NOBEL PRIZE for their the-orefical work poredicting theexistence of the O~mega MinusWd. last week's story on pageone) two or three years fromnow after furgher work is donetos confirm the finding. They

BOARD. OF DEIIPECTORSChairman ................................ Howard M. Brauer '65Editor ..................................... .... Ronald Frashure '64Business Manager .... ............... Kenneth Browning '66News Editor ................ ............. William Judnick '65Features Editor ........................ David Yanderwerf '66Photography Editor .................... Stephen Teicher '66Entertainment Editctr .................... John Montanus '66Layout Editor .................................. John Reinties '66Advertising Manager ...................... William Plice '66

Acting Sports Editor .................. Dave Kress '67Associate Editor .................. William Byrn '66Associate News Editor ........ Esther GlotzhoberAssociate Photography Editors ...... Maxim Smith '64

John Torode '66Controller ........................... John Flick '66Treasurer .......................... James Triant '67Circulation Manager ................ Donaid Paul '67Assistant Editor ...................... Alan Green '66Assistant Advertising Manager .. Michael Weidner 166Assistant Treasurer ............ Joseph LaBreche '67Office Manager Timothy Proctor '67Adoting Associate Sports Editor ................ Ted Trueblood '67

Kg bitzerfi By Alan Rinmiky tw.caS,:oo~3t{8;. e

West led the Jack of DiartarLSouth won the oeing ie

with the Ace of Diamonds. (Ifhad played the Ten on -the opeing lead, the would have insurhinself two dianond tricksmost. By playing the Ace, the

F 9 2 is still a chance, however sli) 8 6 3 of wining a ticsk each with tJ Ten and the Queen ).

Deelarer then led the FourClubs, East played the Jack, cclarer the Av and Wesgt Rlowed with the Six. It was nca questin as to whether FE-

St VVulner- started with a King-Jack doubt,ton od Clubs or a Jack-Ten dobleton, or possibly some oth-

it mout holding, such as the Jack sirr=s 16 tow

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tions, and if these tasks are super-imposed on the almost frighteningApril schedule, the concepts oforder and control are totally frus-trated.

To the student body, the impli-cation is clear. Elections for themany student government posi-tions is rnuinent, and the time tothink about them. is now. I'm con-fident the new UAP will be ad-vising you of the particulars, soI will content myself with simplylisting some of the offices soonto be vacated: Finance Board,Chairman and 6 members; Sec-retariate, Chairran, Divisionheads, sophomore -members;SCEP; FCC; PRC; Judcomnm;ISC; and a number of others. Any-one interested in these positionsshould be referred to the appropriate chairman for information.

have gained approximately threeweeks over last year's schedule.Further, we now intend to turnthe reins over to the new group inabout two weeks.

Our seasons for this accelerationwere basically these: 1) The mostactive time of the academic yearfalls in the April-May period.

2) The new Inscomm membersneed a little time to accustomthemselves to the demands oftheir new positions. 3) The firstfeirr weelks must necessarily betaken up by planning and elec-

Elections are over' I'm aboutto set to work in earnest on mythesis, as are most of the out-going seniors. However, as wehave now nearly completed ourtour of dety, we have the tradi-tional rights of reflection, and youwill be confronted with these inthe coming weeks.

I would like, though, to stressone point at this time. This year,throuh advancing the due date.for petitiois, by compressing thecampaign period, and by holdingelections earlier in March,- we Peanuts appears daily and Sunday in the Boston Hleralid-

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New Dean of the Sechool of Scaence

Vol. LXXXIV No. 4 March 4, 19-64

Inside InseommUsP emphasizes nearness

of Inscomm elections.By Jerry Luebbers, UAP

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urgBel-hBSIg ISamuel Bluestein Co."Complete School Supplies"

TYPEWRITERSSALES - SERVICE- RENTAL

1080 Boylston St. 345 Main StreetBoston J Malden

COpley 7-1100 DAvenport 2-2315

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SKI EQUIPMENTLarge Variety

Teais & Squash Shop67A Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

(Opp. Lowell House)ITR 6-5417 1

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food does not have to be bad.Brandeis University, for example,serves food that is really cormmendable for campus dining balls.Not only is the food moe thaedible, -but 'here axe unlimitedseconds on vegetables, meat, allfood in fact except dessert. It istrue that food may cost morethere, -but it is definitely worth it.An investigation of the Brandeisdig halls operation and of foodservices on other campuses shouldbe made and improvements thatcan be instituted at MIT shouldbe made.

Stanley Feder '66Bernard Horn '65Paul N. Blurnberg '65Keynem Aux& '66Charles R. Morgan '65Anthony Robinson '64Cary Salsberg '65

Walker food assailedTo the Editor:

Before I depart from these hal-lowed halls, I wouldl.like to regis-ter a formal protest against thequality and variety of food servedin Walker Memorial. I believethat the undergraduate is beingswindled by the Institute, for lackof interest, and by Stouffer Cor-poration, for profit. This goes forthe war-surplus turkey sand-wiches as well as the lipid spat-tered green beans.

As MIT marches toward its glor-ious nook in the universe, I findthat the' scientific Renmissance hasfailed to penetrate the depths ofthe Neanderthal kitchens prevail-ing on campus. How much longerthe clientele tolerates the grislyroast beef (au jus), soppy toma-toes, and apple seed pie may welldepend on their unbelievable pas-sivity and the carcinogenic effectsof the food. The fraud is so evi-dent that no one can conceiveof an improvement. A trip to Dur-gin-Park for a 95c lunch or tothe English Room for a $1.90spread can only bear this out.Alas, the Institute wails that theoverhead is enormous. Granted,paying students the minimumwage and heating a drafty barnlike Morss Hall would break theChase Manhattan Bank.

Savants of science, rejoice. The'staphing' of the Student Union byStouffer's will unveil culinary tri-umphs never before imagined orcommitted by man. It is commonknowledge that the prospect ofcompulsory commons has un-leashed a tidal wave of hosannasthat has been felt all the way toNew York, where Col. Stoufferchuckles and clips his coupons.

Anthony Robinson '64I

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Conditions criticizedin Senior House

To the Editor:There are certain aspects of

living condiios at Senior Housewhich should have been irmprovedin the past. Now, in the light ofthe fact that boh dormiatory rentsand Walker food prices are beingraised, serious consideration

Senior House and probably in allthe doams should be extended.Presently all the janitor does isempty wastebaskets and keep the"public areas" clean. The ma-jority of the student's time isspent i his room and not in pub-lie areas of the dorm. The dlean-linefs of the students' roomsshould be equally, if not more,important than the clearliness ofhalls and stairways. Students donot always have the time to cleantheir rooms regularly by thenl-selves and many of thenm do nothave the desie. Yet, tfis is noreason why the rooms should beleft dirty. Having the porter dustand sweep aut the rooms once ortwice a week and having thefloors washed once a month doesnot seem unreasonable. The jani-tors seem to have enough freetime anyway.

The second point is WalkerMemorial, which not only affectsSenior House and East Campus,but a major part of the MVITcommunity as well. The food isdull, bland, uninspired, and justplain lousy. Variety is limited andportions are meager. Stouffer's oranyone unning Walker has mon-ooly, but this is no reason whythe MIT community should beforced to accept it. Because Stouf-fer's does have a monopoly theyshould at least have the pridenot to make it their only attri-bute. The Walker food must beimproved, especially if prices aregoing to be raised.

If one visits other campusesone will see that insttitionalized

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West played the Seven and Southplayed .the Nine from the dummy,and East's Kig dropped.

East led a low diamond (heshould have led his King) whichSouth won with the Ten in thedummy.

As East possessed the Queenand Jack of Hearts and the Dia-mond King, he became the vic-tim of a squeeze. Declarer ranhis remaining clubs and tooktbreetspade tricks, ending up inhis hand.The situation was this:

NORTHf A K 10 5

WEST EASTimmaterial V Q J 9

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South led the Jack of Spadesand discarded the Heart Fivefromm dummy. East had to dis-card the King of Diamonds orurguard his hearts. Either playgives declarer one extM trick.

The. hand wvas taken from thelast MIT Bridge Club Mas ter-point tournament.

as vv "v" e VVV)V /

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EVOL SPELLED BACKWARDS IS LOVE

They met. His heart leapt. "I love you!" he cried."Me too, hey!" she cried."Tell me," he cried, "are you a girl of expensive tastes?"*"No, hey," she cried. "I am a girl of simple tastes.""Good," he cried, "for my cruel father sends me an allowance

barely large enough to support life.""Money does not matter to me," she cried. "My tastes are

simple; my wants are few. Just take me riding in a long, new,yellow convertible and I amt content."

"Goodbye," he cried, and ran away as fast as his littlestumpy legs would carry him, for he had no yellow convertible,nor the money to buy one, nor the means to get the money-short of picking up his stingy father by the ankles and shak-ing him till his wallet fall out.

Campus Inlterviews March 23 [I -

" 1ra cle6dia~tes§ae~~C-p iszmvs 0 Ae MES -He knew he must forget this girl, but lying on his pallet at

the dormitory, wvhimpering and moaning, he knew he could not.At last an idea came to him: though he did not have the

money to buy a convertible, perhaps he had enough to rent one!Hope reborn, he rushed on his little stumpy legs (curious to

tell, he was six feet tall, but all his life he suffered from littlestumpy legs) he rushed, I say, to an automobile rental companyand rented a yellow convertible for $10 down plus ten cents amile. Then, with many a laugh and cheer, he drove away topick up the girl.

"Oh, bully!" she cried when she saw the car. "This suits mysimple tastes to a 'T.' Come, let us speed over rolling highroadsand through bosky dells."

Away they drove. All that day and night they drove andfinally, tired but happy, they parked high ona wind-swept hill.

"Marlboro?" he said.

And games. And talking horses. It's allin a day's work. Because our engineersare in the business of thinking up, per-fecting and producing first-of-their-kind toys like Chatty Cathy--the dollthat really talks-prized possession ofmore than 5 million little girls. Produc-ing her, and hundreds of other sophis-ticated toys and games, has seen ourindustrial engineers solve lots of first-of-their-kind problems, too-using jigsand fixtures in highly original line lay-outs to provide volume production, yet

w"Ylum, yum," she said.They lit their Marlboros. They puffed with deep content-

ment. "You know," he said, "you are like a Marlboro-cleanand fresh and relaxing."

"Yes, I am clean and fresh and relaxing," she admitted."B'ut, all the same, there is a big difference between Marlborosand Ille, because I do not have an efficacious white Selectratefiler."

They laughed. They kissed. He screamed."What is it, hey?" she asked, her attention aroused."Look at the speedometer," he said. "We have driven 200

miles, and this car costs ten cents a mile, and I have only$20 left."

"But that is exactly enough," she said."Yes," he said, "but we still have to drive home.""Oh," she said. They fell into a profound gloom. He started

the motor and backed out of the parking place."Hey, look !" she cried. "The speedometer doesn't move when

you are backing up."

He looked. It was true. "Eureka !" he cried. "That solvesmy problem. I will drive home in reverse. Then no more mileswill register on the speedometer and I will have enough moneyto pay!"

"I think that is a smashing idea," she said, and she was righlt.Because today our hero is in the county jail where food, cloth-ing,L and lodging are provided free of charge, and his allowanceifs piling up so fast that in two or three years he will haveenough money to take his girl riding again. 1964 Max Shulman

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Letters to The Tech

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Every month the .. :.:Atla n tic provides a .platform for many of .the world's most ar- ':F -ticulate and creative ; men and women. Theresul It is always enter- taining and inforrnamtive,often brilliant, oc- casionally profound. More and more, theI fAtlantic is finding itsway into the hands of O N'discerning reapers. SALEGet your copy today. NOW

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Wiener warns of imminent danger: Pershing Rifles defeat Lincoln builds image converterman must contol the computer Boston U. and becomey - * * Lmln Labtev m te o ed to dared campsBy Steve Portnoy 'big button' " weren't bein h- New Engiand champs «nof l oh al-solid- so current w through the dic"The 'computer is just as valu- died at least artiallv by coin.- sate iMed-., .,a m * .. ...

able as the man usin it" admon-ishes Prof. Norbert Wiener in aninterview in the US News andWorld Report of February 24.

"It can allow him to cover'more ground in the same time.But he's got to have the ideas."Wiener warns that computers arebeing used intelligently in only"10 per cent of the cases," andthat this might pose a- graveproblem for all of mankind.

Prof. Wiener describes thesource of this problem. "The dan-ger is essentially intellectual lazi-ness. Some people have been sobamboozled by the word 'ma-chine' that they don't realizewhat can be done and what can-not be done with machines--andwhat can be left, and what can-not be left, to the human be-ings."

Machines dangerous?Far from suggesting that com-

puter advance is itself dangerous,though, Wiener notes the presentachievements and describes whatmight lay ahead.

The machine has been taughtto play checkers, and was "goodenough to be able, after a while,to systematically defeat its in-ventor until he learned a littlemore about checkers." The same.should hold for chess, accordingto Dr. Wiener, and computersare learning to recognize speech.

Possible changes in hardware,especially memory, are also fore-told by Wiener. He foresees theuse of materials similar to thosefound in human memory systems.Pointing to evidence that nucleicacids form the basis of memory,Prof. Wiener suggests that sub-stances like genes might be usedin computer memories.

Nevertheless, Wiener takesstrong cognizance of some mod-em computer uses that might, in'his opinion, prove dangerous.Computers are being used in mili-tary decision making, includingconsiderations of nuclear warfare.Wiener would be surprised if theproblem of "when to push the

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puters.He continues with the warn

i.ng: "There are no experts inatomic war. An expert is a man.who i; ex. , S L a..does not exist today. Therefore,the programming of war gamesby artificial criteria of successis highly dangerous and likely tocome out wrong."

Man must controlProf. Wiener reiterates his be-

lief that man must remafim incontrol of the machine. "Obvious-ly, they won't declare war unlesswe create a setup in which theywill." He concludes by answeringthe question: Is man hanginghis environment beyond his ca-pacity to adjust to it?

"That's the $64 question. He'scertainly changing it greatly, andif he's doing it beyond his ca-pacity, we'll know 'soon enough.Or we won't know-we won't behere."

The MIT P e ,z-fe -teamwon ,the Per- g Rf.e; NewEnribd ChmaAonrta lait Sat-urday. They defeated Boso Uni-vOrsty 910 it 598 at the Noth-ea.tenn range, .firi int four pIst-1,,cn ca inernatioml tagetEs.

High man for MlT was Joe Bol-ig '64 with a 367. F ekwingwere: Toma Hutzeinan '67 wvriha 320, and Jimnie McPherson '67with a 243.

The team has qualified for thesecond section of the NatioalPershing PRieis. it wil travellater hs month to Niagara Uri-versity to fire a ,polsl natclh.

Its members areat work all over the free world, helpingmillions of people to progress toward better lives.

In India, West Germany, Italy, and in the UnitedStates, they're building nuclear power plants, launchingthe age of low-cost atomic power.

In Samoa, they're developing an educational TV net-work to battle illiteracy .. . while in Pittsburgh, they'reworking with teachers to help high school students learnmore about computers.

In Wales, they're putting the final touches on Europe'sfirst computer-controlled steel mill. Near Los Angelesthey've scored a world first by putting a computer incharge of cement mill operations.

In Brazil, Pakistan and Ghana, they're providingextra-high-voltage equipment for huge dams to harnessthese nations' hydroelectric power. For Malaysia, they'resupplying high-power diesel locomotives ... for Norway,

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ooanveter. The nmit wfil be sim-pler and more flexBble than pres-ent day elecwolumiinescent mod-es.

The new MIT design omsistsof a photoxduber in series witha matrix of hIght-mprod-cng dio-des. The photocmndudiber can begerum, or one of several bin-ary geranium comnpoms, andIthe cdode radiatrs van be galiumnarsenide or a ga'lium arseidep de.

Operation is produced when avofltage is applied to the struc-ture 'induces a forward cuentflow tbhrough each diode. 1Tis in-jedton current is erwnerted intovisible raodition upon recomnbia-1Can. The phdbooondudter re|is-tarce controls lthe maount of in-jeclion current that flows into thediode and is subsequently con-verted to visible light.

A decrease in tfis .resstanceoccurs when the phibccnduber

Weis increased. This makes the di-ode radiate more visible ligt.

Acciordig to R. J. Keyes andT. M. Quist of Incoln Lab, theutlimnate refslubioai limit of thedevice depends only on the thick-nesrs of e piitoornducter andthe f-number of the optics.

For a 0.005-inch Atickness andf/1 optics, this resolution is 16microms. A converter with tisquariy would be equivalent bo a20-nch TV tube wth 25,000 lines.

The prsent practical iriit isabodt 100 fines per ich.

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a marine engine room to power one of the world's largestsupertankers.

The members of the "Progress Corps" are the menand women of General Electric, working to provide thekey to progress-low-cost electric power and better waysof putting it to work. Many are engineers. Many othersare international lawyers, physicists, financial special-ists, marketing experts.

General Electric is growing both at home and abroad.If you'd like to grow with us, talk to your placementdirector. He can help qualified people begin their Gen-eral Electric careers.

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Due dates approaching? Time isgetting shorter. Thesis, Resumes,Manuscripts, etc. typed. Pricesvary with length of paper andtime allotted to do typing. Pickup and delivery can be arranged.

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Raymond Sutherland of Lincoln Laboratoryreceives life sating award of Liberty Mutual

Raymond J. Sutherland of ir-raodn Labaibory recently received

a iberty Mutual arwance Coam-parny life saving awand var aorompt

Gulf Oil announcesgift; stipends to be-based on curriculum

An nretricdted grat of $2,291was given this year to MIT by

the Gulf O. Corparaion.It was one of 692 awards, tal-

ng $500,000, cot 4onkrise theAid-to-Eduatikm Pnrog of thatcompany.

The direct grants are calcukaedon the basis of a Aormula whichtbkes into account the qua-]ty ofthe school's curriculum, the ef-feciveness of is program, andthe amoLut o finanmal supportprovded by adlumni.

and effletve adton in saving thelife of a cb-woaker.

During a November /trip to theaiUoon Lab's fled statlon on RioNamur in the Iarshai B9ands,Suiherland witessed the man'sfallng on Tn enrgized rans-fonner.

A fellow employee, David A.Mudgett quickly d _ Medir t while R. J. Sutherland and1R A. Senke of Chance-VoughtCo. used a vacuum cleaner hasehooked ndhe vidtin's waistto remove him fromn contact withe current.

Sitarnd mmediately beganaitfitida respi~don and had re-stored natu-ral breathing in thevictim by the. time a spitalcorpsman anrived in an ambul-aIce.

Imusic at .it a . -

ShostakolBy David E. Tevvwett

The first half of last Sunday'sorchestra cocert was surprising-ly so-so; the last half was sur-prisingly good.

The additional 45 players fromBryn Mawr and Haverfordbrought the total number to 120-plus. This was nice for the Shos-takavitch, but unforturately Dr.Reese chose to employ the fullcontingent of strings even for theMozart; this included 44 first andsecond violins, 11 violas, 10 cel-los and 4 basses-a most unwieldyassortment.

And unwieldy they were as theylumbered into the Overture to TheMagic Flute. Dr. Reese seemedto be an outstanding classicistconductor, with every beat pre-cise and unmistakeable. But theorchestra refused to follow him.

The result was the lack of pre-cision and unity so typical of pastperformances. Although the situ-ation did improve With time, theorchestra never captured thelightness and crispness character-istic of Mozart.

Perhaps this would be the placeto make a few general commentsabout the entire performance:

1. The brass, though good, werenot as solid and reliable as inthe past.

The orchestra generally per-formed admirably in lyrical sec-tions, or in slow, full passages;but in the technical whirlwindsthe strings frequently scrambledaround randomly.

3. Members of a given sectionwere generally in unison with oneanother, but not with other sec-tions.

4. Changes in dynamics wereexecuted expertly, but changes intempo were less successful.

The Schumann suffered from

vich high

the same faults as the Mozart.Technical work in the first move-ment seemed better, although un-ity was still a problem.

The second -movement was apleasing change: The unison cellosolo was, in fact, in unison; thelyrical passages were beautifullyexecuted by strings and wood-winds; and a lengthy violin solowas performed quite nicely bythe visiting concertmistress, MissBarbara Dancis.

The third movement was per-haps too slow and the last wasa bit heavyb-haided at first, butit was in these two movementsthat the piece sounded most likea Schumann composition.

After the first half of the con-cert, the performance of Shosta-kovitch was a pleasant surprise;the opening of the first movementwas without a doubt the best-per-formed passage on the program.

The strings, particularly thefirst violins and cellos, have nev-er sounded better than they didhere; their unison and expressionwere near perfect. Mr. Corley'sslow, tense interpretation of thissearching, often dramatic sectionwas truly exciting.

Soon the piece started movingfaster, the violins started scram-bling, and the woodwinds becameshaky; whenever the pace slowed

lights I concertdown, howe ' . ntonation im-proved and\-- anI were morenearly together. Surprisingly, thewoodwinds didn't come throughas well as the strings in thesequieter sections.

Miss Janet Stober, MIT's con-certmistress, played outstandingsolos in the first and secondmovements, though that in thelatter was slightly stiff. Overall,the second movement was unsat-isfactory.

As a whole, the Largo wasthe best-performed movement ofthe concert. All sections were intop form, and cellos attainedhere a unity and sonority theyhad never achieved before.

Anyone reasonably familiarwith the Shostakovitch is prob-ably aware of the controversywhich has existed concerning thetempo of the last movementsince Mr. Bernstein's notable per-formance in Moscow some yearsback. As expected, Mr. Corleychose the Bernsteinian interpre-tation and took off at a breath-taking pace.

The orchestra had to scramble,but managed to keep up; thebrass were at their best in thismovement. The dazzling effect ofthe movement as a whole over-shadowed individual mistakes andgeneral confusion in the upperstrings. The ending was all thatcould be expected, and the or-chestra banged its way to a glor-ious finale.

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PRqOGRAM

Overture to The Magicute ................ ozart

SyAi hmny Nb. 4 ....... huannSymrlhonsr No. 5 ... Shostakovitch

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Making the Scene0CD

Beoston Symhony - Ieapold Stoo wskiC guest conductor. Mozart's SinfoniaStravinski's Suite from "Petrurdi-

ka", -Moart's Sinfonia. in E flat, alsoselections 1by Vivaldi, Rorem, Gabriel-li, and Harhaness. Mardh 6, 2:00 andMarch 7, 6:30.

" New England Conservatory - Praogram'0 of msic by Brahms anqd Janacek.2i Mar. 4, &:30 p,.m Jordan Hall, free.

Denaonstration and recital of the- Japanese violin teaching method.

"'t Works by Bach, Handel, and Vivald,at Jordan Hall, Mardh 10, 4:30 p.m.,firee.

Gardner Museum - Susan Lovesove,sopvrano, and IBarbara e B der, piano.program of mnsie by Haydn, Mozart,and clhbbert. Marcd 5, 3 pz.m. Music

Z by Brahms and Martinu, March 5,8:45 p.m. A -program of Dralhms,Milan, ad foil/k songs with Ray .len-nelle, Baritone, and Robert 1Sullivan,Guitar. la'h 7, 3:00 p.m. Free.

A Glenn Gould - at the Gardner MRse-y) un. Piano recital and lecture on thetL History of the piano sonata. MarchZ 8, 3:00 p.m. free.a lU Symphonle Band - Works of Bach,~L Braihins, and Farre, under ,direction

of Dr. Lee Cibrisman, in the Con-cert Hal, 855' Conmmonwealth Ave.,March 5. 8:20 P.m., free

Simaons College - Joint concert, Sim-mons Glee Club and Ensemble, andRensselear Polytechnic Glee Club, andOrchestra. March ,8, 8:00 p.m., Jor-dbn Hall.

MIT Glee Club - With the Smith Col-O lege Chir. Camlbridge Festival Or-11J ohestra, ,MIT Woodwind and BreassI--- Ensemlble, aqd soloists. Performance

of Stravinsky's Mass and Mozart'sVesperae Solemnes De Con-fessore, K.I 339; March 8, 3:00 p.m., Kresge.

F-- tickets .faree to members of the -MITcommunity in the lobby of Buildingli, 1$1.00 at the door.

Boston College Chorale - With ',heArpollo glee club of Yale, Berj Zamn-kodhian organist, 0. Alexander Pel-oquin pianist and Idirector, SyrphanyHall, Marloh 6, .S:30 p.mn., tickets$2.00-43.50, program includes wwksof Franak, Peloquin, and early relig-ious ohloral works.

Tech Sho1t - '-ow to succeed in Es-pionage Without Really Spying.'

I

S M I

815

916

1(,;

r W T F S4 5 6 7

0 11 12 13 147

Krese, March 6-7, 8:30 p.m., tick-ets $1.80 to $2.50 in the lorbbo ofBulldtig 10.

ISC Contemporary Series - 'MoiloCane' a supposedlty 'snmootlly in-tegrated collection of true to lifescenes whose .ba reality will amazeand sometimnes stupify the viewer.'BIY the producers of 'Women of theWorBdl.' Maa'ch 6, in 10-250, 6:30 and9:00 ,pm., s$.0.

ESC Entertainment Series - 'The Hor-izontal Lieutenant,' Roomn 10-250,March 7, 5:,15, 7:30, and 9:A5; AJim Hutton-Paula Prentiss cornedyset in the Pacific druring World WarII.

LSO Ciassic Series - 'Alexander iNev-sky,' Room l10-250, Mardh 8, 8:00p.m.; From the defense of Norvgorodin 1242, Lisenstien has fashioned amonumental history. In oillaiborationwith Prokofiev he realized the re-

125 firms show interestin letter sent by SCEP. Some 125 firms have "express-

ed definite .interest in receivingapplications from MIT studentsfor summer jobs after receivinga letter sent out by the StudentPlacement Office.

The letter stressed the "variedand intensive educational back-grounds" of Tech men, and wasmailed to over 500 firms that donot normally interview on cam-pus. 1t was drafted by a StudentConunittee on Educational Policysub-committee headed by PerrySeal '65, and over 200 replieshave been received to date.

More information is availableat the Student Placement Office(24 - 211).

i II"Oll- " - M-. . . I

IIla ionship of sound and inmage(USrR, 1938)

MIESCFEIAANEOUSFriedman Lectures - Dr. Phillip Mor-

rison,, professor of physics at ComrnellUniversity; 'Minimal Principles inPhysics,' two lectures, March .9-10,4:00 p.m., Room 6420

'Austria, Heart of the Tyrol,' - filmand lecture by William Sylvester,Sunday, March 8, 4:00 p.m., RindgeAuih:oirium, 4_9 Broadway, CCa-m-bridge.

Museum of Fine Arts - OpeningMardh 5, '10¢1 Masterpieces of Arm-erican Primitive Painting,' touringcollection of outstanding work; ad-nmission free for menmbers, .$.50 fornon-memnbe s.

Medieval France Exhibit - Hayden i-brary Gallery, Mairch 9 through 29,sponsored by the MIat Museum Com-mittee and the Humanities Depart-ment in connection with the fresh-man humanities course.

All-College Convocation - 'CollectingPaintings; an Exciting TreasureHunt,' Robert Vose, Vase Galleries,lecture iMarch 10, 10:30 a.cm, New-ton High School Auditoriumn.

Newton Junior Oollege - GalbrieliString Trio. an string members ofthe Boston Symphony in an all Mo-zart concert. Mardh a1 a 8:15 p.m.,OC:X>le;e Hall, Washirnton park, New-torwile, free.

New England Conservatory - A pro-gram of mnusic 'by Baxtok, ,March 11,8:30 p.m. at Jondan Hall, free.

KIng's Chapel Series - A program ofchoral works by 9chumann. ,King'scha.pel choir ar'd the Canmbridge Fes-ival (lirchestra. March 15, ,5:00 p.m.

Kirg's chapel, free.Donnelly Memorial - Boston Opera

Grcup; '.L'.lisir d'A;nore', Marcdh 11,8:30 p.m. The Kingston Trio, March14, 8:30 p.m.

Tufts University Concert Series - TrheNellie Fisher Ballet Compay, , March13, 8:30r p.m., The Cbohen Fine AirsCen' er, $2.25.

TIF,ATRELSC Contemporary Series - 'David and

Lisa,' Kres,,e, March 113, 6:00 and,9:00 p.m., v.m0.

LSC Entertainment Series - 'To Kill aMockingbird,' Roamn 10-230, 5:15,7:30, 9 :~4 p.m. ;.35.

LS.C Classic Series - 'Devil in theFlesh,' Rbo--nm 10-250, 8:00 p.m., S.50.

MISCELLANEOUSP'etry reading - Reed Whittemore,

head of the Caxlton College Depart-men' of Enllish, au:ho- of fiveL '-,k3 of poetry, Hayden Li-b:aryLcunce, (14-310) March 12, 8:15p.m., admission free.

Palntings by Ruth Abrans - M1TFacnlty. Club, March 12 throughApril 3. collection of small, abstractpain'ings called 'microcoams', freeto 'Jhe public.

Critic 9s ChoiceKramer's 'The Victors'

even worseBy Gilberto Perez-Gulflrmo

I must confess I went to see'The Victors' (at the Gary) witha strong premonition that it wasgoing to be bad, bad in a StanleyKramer sort of way. In fact, thefilm turned out to be even worse.As one gathers from the press re-lease, Carl Foreman, who wrote,produced and directed the picture,wanted to make a strong personalstatement against war and its de-teriorating effects on humanbeings, even when they are theviators. Mr. Foreman overstres-ses all his .pcints, which wererather simple-minded to beginwith, to the extent lat they loseall significanrce as a comment onreal people and real war.

The film is composed of a seriesof episodes, each containing a"message" announced with aflourish of trumpets and madeblatantly obvious to the mostslow-witted of spectators. In thismanner, Mr. Foreman tells us,for instance, that Arab soldiersare nice, that they even likebabies. When he is out to showthe distance between a tough Am-erican sergeant and a French warwidow who quotes Valery, they ap-pear to be from different planets.All throughout Mr. Foremanmakes very clear what we aresupposed to feel, what we aresupposed to think, but he neversucceeds in making us react ac-cordingly.

Particularly annoying is the cru-dity of Mr. Foreman's ironies,when he intercuts newsreel shotsfrom back home, or when he playscontrasting background music. Adeserter is executed to the soundof 'Have Yourself a Merry Christ-mas.' Two Negro soldiers arestabbed by racists while a radioplays 'Remember Pearl Harbor.'The musical score, in keepingwith the rest of the picture, isbombastic and obvious.

Most serious critics have given'The Victors' the bad review itdeserves. What bothers me, how-

.4

ever, is that they seem to havebelieved Mr. Foreman's press re-lease and have treated the filmas a serious, well-meant attemptwhich fails out of sheer lack oftalent. While I wholly agree thatMr. Foreman is not particularlytalented, I'm not ready to acceptthat he is sincere. Perhaps he dis-likes war, perhaps he really hopedthe world would be a paradise af-ter the end of World War II. ButI do not think he has made aserious, whole-hearted attempt toexpress his feelings. If one thinksabout the subject of the film, andof how Mr. Foreman has a way ofdriving his points home, one wouldrealize most of the episodes aresurprisingly mild, "conitrover-sial" only in the press release,sensationalized and sentimental-ized for mass-audience consump-tion. And if this were not sufficientproof, take the casting of Elke'Sommer, whose bad performanceshould have been obvious even toMr. Foreman, as one of the "sixmore exciting women in theworld."

Laurence Olivier's 'Henry V'(at the BU Student Union, Fridayat 8 p.m.) remains, after twentyyears, the most successful render-ing of Shakespeare on the screen.The film has been vastly over-praised, I think (James Agee in'The Nation' saw it necessary tomake clear that it is not the .bestmovie ever made), but it workspretty well within its self-imposedlimitations. Olivier has made noattempt at a cinematic creationindependent of the play, he hasmerely used the medium to serveit, as unobtrusively and effectivelyas possible. The film is .too re-spectful, I think, and, as JamesAgee pointed out, sometimes pat-ronizingly so. But it is a hundredtimes preferable to, say, OrsonWelles' overblown 'Othello,' inwhich cinematic effects oppressthe original work, and nothingsignificant is created in its place.

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March 7th, 1964Tufts Universiy, l.edford

For ticketf write Bob Dylan Concert, Post office box 66, Tufts, Mass.

Enclose stamped, self{addressed envelope.

Make checks and money orders payable to Bob Dylan Concert.

Tickets $3.00 - $2.50

MARCH 5, 6

Research I DevelopmentaI

ness AdministrationSystems Engineering

Engineering I BusMarketing/ Sales

If you cannot attend the interview, Iwrite or call: I

John DoQe Branch Manager I 'IBM Corp. If 4913 Park Ave. So. INew York 9, N. Y. I GR 7-2661. 1

Kinterview: '

"The future depends on people with ideas."This statement helps explain the work at IBMtoday: seeking and finding new ways to handleinformation, planning and building new machin-ery for the task, exploring wholly new methods.I The demand for ideas has never been greater.If you'd like to check into the new things going onat IBM-and the significant professional oppor-tunities opening up there for men and women-see your college placement officer and make anappointment to talk with IBM representatives. IIBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer. I

MOVE AHEAD-SEE- BM

than expected

Er - - -

SQUASH RACQUETSAll Makes--Larg- Variefy

TTei's & Squash Shop67A Mt. Aubun St, Cambridge

(Opp. Lowell House)TR 65-417

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Page 9: Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward - The …tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N4.pdf · Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committee ... Dr. Ballhausen is widely known for work

.. WTBS Schedule

I

drama at mitr..i Tech Showr mixes spies and song

By Mona DicksonCan anyone honestly expect an

amateur musical to overcome theproblems inherent when amateurmusicians, amateur playwrights,amateur actors, and amateur di-rectors compound their felonies?Not likely.

That is why it was such a sur-prise to find that this year's TechShow, 'How to succeed in Espion-age without Really Spying,' hadsome aspects of decent theatre in

The plot concerns a Beaver KeyClub in Boston set up by ChewIn-foo, a representative of the,People's Republic, and his Rus-sian assistant Olga. These two are vying to get a secret formula fromProfessor Peter Probe. Through-.out the play they manage to fouleach other's plans nicely. "Why,"In-foo asks, "out of all the agentsat the indoctrination school, didthey send you to be my facultyadvisor?"

Minor complications arise fromthe Daughters of the New Ameri-ca, who believe the club is un-American. To make mattersworse, the faithful chorus girlBeavers learn that capitalist de-cadency can be fun.

Prof. Probe's daughter, her

sweetheart, and faculty friends,plus random agents sneaking inand out,- provide the necessarycomplications.

The lines were good, and notonly in the script The Beaversdanced as lightly as a heard ofspastics, and some needed tothrow themselves into the spirit oftheir parts. But who, especiallya coed, can be objective about achorus line? Daphne, who gaveher all to get the secret papers,was especially convincing.

Joe the bartender proved to bethe best dancer or tile stagethrough sheer naturalness. Hispart in the twist sequence at thebeginning of the second act hadthe audience applauding everystep.

Madam No, played by StephanieHebron who is also the choreogra-pher, dances an interesting soloWtying to get the secret papersfrom the professor. It is difficultto say whether the chorus linedance sequences were the faultof the choreography or of theBeavers' inability to move.

The script is full of jokes. "WhorII

NM 1X

ThWarre lowe, a

Photo by Stephen Teicherle finale of the '64 Tech Show unites Sandra Rosenbloom,n Littlefield, Judy Scott, Norm Rubin, Geraldine Mar-mnd Barb Weaver after a hard night of singing and spying.

stole my papers?" the professorasks. "That was the work of theBeavers." "They did seem a biteager." This type of line does notlend itself to deep character de-velopment But it does give an ac-tor the chance to play a one-sided,over- exaggerated puppet, achance to be pure ham.

David Fan's' interpretation ofChew In-foo is an example of ham.Every look, every movement wasbeautifully over-exaggerated. Thecharacter came into "meller-dramer" life. Chew was funny be-cause he did not take himselfseriously.

The other performers fell intothe trap of trying to play "ThePerils of Pauline" as if it were"Joan of Arc". Bernard Simmons,as Joe, livened things up by act-ing natural. The only others tocome out from behind their act-ing were the Beavers. But howmuch acting does it take to actlike a Beaver?

The big factor that offset theacting was the music. Score andsongs were in the best satire tra-dition. 'Q.E.D.,' Dr. Trueblood'sscientific explanation of sex isa scream. 'Don't Let 'Em Touch,'the Beavers' lesson on how to beBeaver, was funny; but for somestrange reason the audience didnot react until the point wasshoved in their collective face.

Miss Prudence Probe's 'Song ofProtest,' gibing the feelings of theDNA, hits every institution that isnot previously mentioned in theplay. Its spirit is reminiscent ofthe coed version of "Officer Krup-kee' in last year's All Tech Sing.The score itself would do justice

to a motion picture. The musicblended beautifully with the actionand the moods that. should havebeen there.

After a slow start in the Over-ture, they warmed up into an ef-fective version of a full band.Since most of the musicians hadtwo instruments with them, theirperformance was truly praise-

worthy. Riley Sinder's flute partin the love song was especiallywell done.

Special effects tended towardthe hillarious. The eager news pho-tographer, Flash Gordon, who fol-loMs the DNA around, had a well-placed, out-of-date (ie, blue) TheTech press card tucked behind oneear. During intermission the cur-tains were not drawn. Dr. True-blood and her companion Dr.Diddlesmith sat alone in the clubplaying a game of chess. TheTechman lost.

Direction of the play is ratherdeficient to say the least. Hereagain is lack of a feeling for sa-tire. Many of the actors' move-ments were unnatural, and notonly because of their inexperience.

All of the songs are presentedto the audience from the foot-lights, an artificial device at best.The one semiexception, 'IntuitivelyObvious' a duet done with onecharacter in front and the otheron the second floor of the club,was refreshingly different.

I -l min - B

Inqmar Berqrndn's Latest Shocker!

B "The Silence" B"Bergman at Sis most powerful!" *

2u22DG3 8 ~eg3 1~8KENMORE 7SQ.

-X- mm - - m - -m

"The most shocking film I have ever seen!" 5 -- N.Y. News *I! INGMAR BERGMAN'S U

~"The Silence"

;sp8888 a7 I CINEMA IL_ _U542-2220

° Exclusive Showing!

I "Point'of Order" uArmy-McCarthy Hearings l

*939SSn.AlVE.NEAR HARVARDSQUAP.£

The followin is the WTBSschedule as of March. WTBSbroadcasts on 88.1 megacyclesF.M., 640 kilocycles A.ML

SUNDAY2:00 Sign On, Music of the

Twentieth Century4:00 World of Song5:00 lhis is the Blues7:00 Music at MIT8: 00 The Spoken Wbrd9:00 News9:10 Classron Concert

1.2:00 News12:10 Jazz at Midniglht

1:30 Sign OffMONDAY

S:00 Sign On, Rise and ShineNews on Hbur and Half Hour

9:45 Sign Off6:00 Sign On, John C. Heine Show7:00 News7:05 The John O. Heine Show8:00 Club Latino Show8:30 Arab Club Show9:00 News9:1)0 ,Masterworks

1 :50 News12:00 Jazz at Midnight1:30 Sign Off

TUESIlAYS:00 Sign On. Rise and Shine

News on Hour and Half Hour9:45 Sign Off6:00 Sign On, Perloo, Stomp & Mlee7:00 News7:05 ISangam Presents8:00 Folkside9:00 News9:,10 Masterworks

111:50 News12:00 Jazz at Midnight

1:30 Sign OffWEDNESDAY

8:00 rSign On, Rise and ShineNews on Hour and Half Hour

9:45 sign Off6-00 Sign On, Armenian Club Show7:00 News7:05 WTBS Presents9:00 News9:10 ~Masterworks

11:60 News12:00 Jazz at Midnight1:30 Sign Off

THIURSDAY8:00 Sign On, Rise and Shine

News am Hour and Half Hour9:.45 tign Off6:00 Sign On, Ramblin' Round7:00 News7:05 More Ramrblin' Round8:45 Limelight Review9:00 News9:10 Mastaerworks

11 :50 News12:00 Jazz at Midnight1:30 Sign Off

FRIDAY8:00 Sign On, Rise and Shine

News on Hour and Half Hour

9:455:007:007:058:00

10:0010:10

l 1:5012:002:002:05

3:00

5:007:007:059:009:10

12:0012:102:002:05

Sign OffSign On, Jazz SpecialNewsWTrB ForumCoffee Hause TheaterNewsNite Owq Part IMuLsic by Telepthone RequestNewvsNite Owl Part IINewsSign Off

SATURDAYSign On. Rock & ,RollMenory TnimeJazz SpotlightNewsSourd of SlatrndayNewsNite Owl Part IQMusic by Telephone RequestNewsNite Owl Part IINewsSign Off

OMMK- a U N 4-4580 uOuo

I 'Charade'O C

c- feature at 1:15, 3:15, .

: .~TR 6,4226 u.u

0c I.,~~~~~~~~

:; Through Saturday: aSarte's a

"NO EXIT"Sun.-Mon.-Tues.:

.o DeSica's aa "BICYCLE THIEF"

Shows daily 5:30, 7:30, r9:30; Matinees Sat. and d

a Sun. 3:30 c-'5tl -,,imi-T driMi (JDUoUniEoDu P

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Contemporary Series

'Mando Cane'Friday

6:30 & 9:00

10-250 60c

Entertainment 'Series

'T he HorizonalLieufenantf

Saturday March 75:15, 7:30 & 9:45

20-250 35c

Classic Series

'Alexandder Nevssky'Sunday

8:00

March 8

10-250

Admission 50c or membership card

A Lecture

Tuesday, March 10

John Kenlneth Galbraifh'Economics and Social Priority'

8:00 Room 26-100

Boston Sandwich ShopAt Mass. Ave. & Vassar St.

Across from Building 35

SUBMARINESOpen 7 a.m.-7 p.m.

Tedh Show 1964 presents HOWTO SUCCE'ED IN ISPIONAG-EWITHIOUT R"EAI.Y SPNYING:Book by Stephen A. Sehuman andJeffrey Meldmaan:; Music by StevenD. 'Stenan; FrToduced by GarySeligson; Directed by StephenSc/human; Designed by RichardKrasin; Cloreograrplhy StephanieHebron; star-ring I)avld* Fan asChew In-foo, Geraldine Marloawe asKitten, Christine Calloway as 0l-ga, 'Bernard Smimens as Joe, Lau,ra Hertzberg as Miss PrudenceProbe, Peter Amnderson as PhillipPfefner, Donna Chleldlricek as LoisKent,. Noman Rabin as Ha-oldHoosie, Sandra Rosenbloomn asPamela Probe, John Ryan as Prof.Peter Probe, Warren Littlefield asDr. Diddilesmith, Judith Scott asDr. Trueblood, Banbara Weiner asDaphne, Stephanie Hebron as Ma-dame No.

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Page 10: Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward - The …tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N4.pdf · Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committee ... Dr. Ballhausen is widely known for work

o movies...

McQueBy D. F. NOLAN

Good acting, better-than-averageI- photography and skillful directiono' almost manage to make Para-

- mount Pictures' new film, "Love: With The Proper Stranger," a

really good movie. Unfortunately,o an ultimately banal plot ruins theo' attempt. The result is certainly< presentable, but not inspiring in7 the slightest.> The film opens in a New York< musicians' hiring hall, wherea Rocky Papasano (Steve Mc-uL Queen), an itinerant jazz musi-Z cian, is wandering around lookingLU for work. He is confronted by a3 slight, attractive brunette who an-

nounces "I'm going to have ababy." Rocky looks mystified.From here on, it's downhill all

- the way.

',Love with the Proper Stranger,'LLI a Padcula-Mulligan production, star-

ring Steve MoQueen as Rooky andNatalie Wocid as Angie, with EBdie

[--' Adarrns as Barbara, H'fersdhel Ber-nardi as Dominick, and, Torm Bs-ley as Columbo. At the ParamountTheater.

The brunette, it turns out, isAngie Rossini (Natalie Wood), agirl with whom Rocky spent thenight a few months. back at asummer resort. It seems that shewants the name of a good abor-tionist, Rocky doesn't happen tohave one with him, but prom-ises to see what he can do. Hetries to get the hot poop from thegirl he is living with, a strippernamed Barbara (Edie Adams),and is bounced out on the streetfor his pains.

Eventually, Rocky and Angie getto an abortionist's, and are totallyrepulsed by the crude, filthymakeshift atmosphere of the "doc-tor's" office and by the "doctor"herself - a crude, filthy make-shift old crone. They leave, poorerby four hundred dollars, but wiserin the ways of the world.

Rocky drops Angie off at Bar-

Two MIT profs Sloan fellows,en stars as careless loverbar's apartment for the night(Barbara is at work), and goesoff to tell Angie's folks. Next timewe see him, he is with Angie'solder brother Dominick (HerschelBernardi) and is sporting a blackeye. They are greeted at the doorof Barbara's apartment by noneother than Barbara herself, whodemands an explanation or two.

Well-you get the picture. Rockyoffers to marry Angie. Angie re-fuses, because she doesn't wantto marry anyone who doesn't loveher. Rocky disappears into limbo,and Angie feigns an interest in"Clumsy Columbo," a kind anddevoted shmutz who is madly inlove with her. Needless to say, inthe end she winds up with Rocky,although not without some trouble,and everybody presumably liveshappily ever after.

Steve McQueen as Rocky is ex-Icellent. His portrayal of the in-dependent but fair-dealing musi-cian is skillful and consistent. Onecannot help but sympathize withand to some extent identify withthe gruff, forthright maverick whois firmly convinced that marriageis a prison, but gives himself upin the end.

Natalie Wood is pretty, as usual,and performs creditably as Angie,although she lacks the sinceritywhich McQueen puts into his per-formance. According to Para-

Sonny'TERRY

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Ile Unicoran 825 Boylston

For Information

mount Pictures, she should get anAcademy Award nomination forthis, but I doubt it-then again,I never have found Natalie Woodvery impressive.

Edie Adams is excellent as Bar-bara-the scenes with her and hernumerous pet dogs are among thefunniest in the movie.

Herschel Bernardi and Tom Bos-ley as Angie's brother Dominickand her would-be lover Columbolend able support to the lead stars-the parts of the over-protectiveold-world older brother and thesincere but hopeless suitor arestereotyped, but handled well.Dominick reminds one somewhatof a large bear, while Columboemerges as a basset hound whosetail has been stepped on.

Browsnie

Stiee, _ oB isoSIreet, Boson i Call 262-9711 I

Pronfessor Kennefth M. Hoffmanand Dietmar Seyferth have beenawarded grants for basic re-seardi in marteia;ics and chem-istry, respedtively, from the Al-fred P. San Foundation, it wasannmunced Monday.

Ninety-two dther Sloan Fellowswere hosen frn the faculties of40 universities and colleges in theUnited States and Canada.

According to Everett Case,Foundalfi Presidert: "In noarea is (compldte freedom ofdoice more importanlt than it iSin basic researdh." TBerefore,Sloamn FeulwB are not required

I

4- -

i51

MONDAY,

to submit a project plan; thegrants are unrestrited

Dr. Lar1kn H. Faribdt, Fbun.dation Vice President m c geof Scientific Affairs, expressedsathaeftimo with -te Foundats 'ssucess .in identifying promisingand creative young scienrts.

Candides for Sloan Fellow-ships are nominated by their de-patmnealt chairmen. Noniizmirsbare reviewed by a Program Caon-mittee of outside scientific ad-vises.

James R. Kil.ian, Jr., Caairmanof the MiT Carporatin, is amember of the Foundation Com-mittee on Sieric Affairs.

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VORLD. WI DESATELLITE TRACKINGANOR /I AND SrO(I7' Afv/E f" 'EL/ne 'PAfR ICA MIgDL A;,D fA EAST - PA i 6/Cfor men with backgrounds in

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Page 11: Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward - The …tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N4.pdf · Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committee ... Dr. Ballhausen is widely known for work

FUN 'ROUND THE

TOWE'S GREATSKI DORM-Warm, casual, glowing with good

4ompanionship, the Round Hearth'st:he lodge to rest and refresh your-

elf. Hearty fare, dancing, relaxing.round the famous circular fireplaceit adds up to fun! Only $7 dailywith two meals, $45 weekly, Write

or folder or Tel. STOWE, Vt.,,Lpine 3-7223.

maintain high-quality teleFAnd the entire managemnand their work rests withside Wire Chief, Dick Kt

'Dick (B.S.C.E., 1957and, in less. than a year,

How Dick handled hispeeded his promotion. F

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Architecture Department to describe curriculum movie schedule LI . ...at open house for freshmen and sophomores

The Department of Architecturewill hold its Open House for fresh-men and interested sophomoreson Wednesday, March II, in theEinerson Room, 7-403, at 4:00p.m. The meeting will affordthose attending a first-hand lookat undergraduate opportunities inCourse IV and a chance to dis-cuss the'curriculum with leadingprofessors and upperclassmen inthe department.

Architecture at MIT seeks tocombine artistic imagination withsound structural technology. Thefive-year undergraduate profes-sional course leads to the degreeof Bachelor in Architecture.

It combines a program of gen-eral education emphasizing sci-

ence, mathematics, and -the hu-manities with a program of de-partmental and basic engineeringstudies designed to provide a gen-eralized but thorough introductionto architecture. Supplemented bypractical experierce, this five-yearprogram provides preparation forindependent practice.

Required departmental coursesinclude 2.701 and 2.702 Archi-tectural Geometry; 4.021 and 4.022Form and Design; 4.04 Lightand Color; a sequence of coursesin Architectural Design; a se-quence of courses in Structures;and a sequence of courses in thehistory of architecture. An eigh-teen hour thesis ris also requiredait the end of the final year.

Wednesday, Mardh 4 throug2i Tues-day, Maroh 10 (unless otherwisestated, the Sunday sdiedule is the sameas the weekday schedule except thatno movies are shown before 1:00 p.m.

ASTOR - 'Seven Days in May,' 10:15,12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:50, Strn.1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:30, 9:20.

BEACON HILL - 'Tom Jones.' 10:15,lC2:30, 2:45, 5:00, 7:16, 9:30; Sun.,1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40.

BOSTON CINERAMA - 'It's a Mad,Maid, Mad, Mafd Wold,' eveningsat 8:00 Sun. evenings 7:30, matineesWed., Sat. & ,Sun. at 2:00.

BRATTLI,E - qThrough Sathrday: Sar-tre's 'No Exit.' Sun. -Mon.-Tues.:DeSica's 'Bicycle Thief.' Shows daily5:30, 7:30, 9:39, matinees Sat. andSun. 3:30.

OAPRI - 'The Doll,' Mon-Sat. 10,102, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, Sun. 1:30, 3:30,5:30, 7:30, 9:30.

EXETER - 'The Easy Life,' 2:00,3:50, 5:40, 7:30, 8:20.

GARY - 'Thae Victors,' Sun. eveningsat 7:30; other evenings at S:00,matinees Wed., Sat. & Sun. at 2:00.

Theatre ScheduleCHARLES PLAYHOUSE - 'Man and

Superman,' Tues.-Fri: 8:30, Sat. 5:30and 9, Sun. 3:30 and 7:30, tickets$2.40 to $3.95.

COLONIAL - 'Canelot,' eves, exceptSun. at 8:30, mats. Wed. and Fri.at 2:15, Sat. at 2:30.

HOTEL BOSTONIAN PLAYHOUSE -"The Quare Fellow,' by Brendan Be-han, Wed. 7:30, Sat. 7:00 and 9:30,other eves., except Mon. 8:30, rnat.,Thurs. 3:00.

IMAGE - 'Yerma,' by Federico Lorca.eves. except Sat. 8:30, Sat. at 7:00and 9:30.

SHUBERT - 'A Funny Thing Hap-pene!d on the Way to the Forum,'eves., except Sun. 8:30, mats. Thurs.2:15 and Sat. 2:30.

WILBUR - 'Beyond the Fringe 1064,'British comedy Teview, eves. exceptSun. at 8:30, mats. Thurs. and Sat.at Z:30.

TELEPHONE COMPANIESDICK KNORRees, 4 foremen, and 2 clerks tophone service in Pittsfield, Mass.ent responsibility for this teamNew England Telephone's Out-

norr.) joined the company in 1962rose to Outside Wire Chief.is earlier, assignments certainlyVor instance, the professional job

he did as Wire Chief in North Adams, the precise work-load forecasts he made in Pittsfield, the thorough way hescheduled work while Control Board Foreman in Pittsfield.

When his latest opportunity came, Dick's experienceand demonstrated ability cinched it!

Dick Knorr, like many young engineers, is impatientto make things happen for his company and himself. Thereare few places where such restlessness is more welcomedor rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business.

BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES

HARVARD SQUARE- 'Charade.' fea-tures at 1:15, 3:15, 5:25, 7:30, 9:40.

KEITH MEMORIAL - 'Man's Fav-orite Sprt,' 11:00, 2:35, 6:05, 9:35.

LOEW'S ORP ,EIM - 'Mail OrderBride,' 10:40, 112:30, 2:25, 4:15, 6:10,8:05, 10:00; Sat. 10:10, 12:00, 2:05,4:05, 5:40, 7:45, 9:50; Sun. .1:35,3:35, 5:30, 7:25, 9:20.

'MAY¥FLOW'ER - 'Children of theDamnned,' 11:30, 2:55, 6:10, 9:25,Sun. 2:45, 6:00, 9:15; 'GladiatarsSeven,,' 10:00. 1:20, 4:35, 7:55, Sun.1:10, 4:30, 7:45.

MUSIC4) HALL - 'Merlin Jones,' 9:30,111:30, 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30,Sun. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00.

PARAMOUNT - 'Love with the Prop-er Stranger,' 10:00, 12:25, 2:45, 5:00,7:15, 9:30, Sun. 1:00, 3:05, 5:15.7:25, 9:30.

SAXON - 'The Cardinal,' evenings8:30, matinees Mon-Fri., 2:00, Sat.-Sun., 2:00, 5:00.

UPTOWN - 'The Prize,' except Sun-day, at 12:50, 5:15, 9:40; Sun. at1:00, 5:15, 9:40; 'In the FrenchStyle,' weekdays 10:45, 3:05, 7:30;Sun. at 3 :,19, 7:30; Also Liston-Clayfight pictures.

Student Personnel hasmany jobs availablefor interested students

The Studert Peironnel Officenow has a number of jobs avail-able or interested students, ac-cmding to Wiamn H. Carlisle,Jr., Manager uf Student Perm-nel.

ITis ds a oxnewbat unusual sit-uatm for the Office, he said,since normnaly more studetswant jobs thn are available.

The Office, which has been Mnexistence since 1951, has the jobof coordinalting all requests forjobs fram departments and of or-ganizing al jb applicatis. Rtalw advises groups on rates ofpay and advises students seek-ing jobs. It also keeps records onperfrmance of tudents in jobsaxound the Imnstitute.

There are two types of jobsavailable through the office. MioStof the jobs are part-time aroundthe Institte or in various placesin the area. Stating at this timeof year, however, summer jobsare also listed.

The descript/ms of sone of thejobs are interesting in theirvagueness. One mentons an 'ex-periment in psycho-physics in bi-noral localimzation of sounds.' An-other is listed an only for some-one who is taking a term offfrom school. It involves tutoringof ltwo high-school students, butthe students are located in Tri-idad.

`Other jobs are more mundane,such as 'public relatiors work forthe admissions officer' and workon the CEA, but a number ofjobs for people with certain qual-ifications are still open.

LEARNTO SKI

IN JUSTONE WEEK

WITHNATUR TEKNIK!

JOIN THE FUN ON THESLOPES THIS YEAR AFTERONLY ONE WEEK OF IN-STRUCTION. THAT'S THEUNPRECEDENTED GUAR-ANTEE MADE BY WALTERFOEGER, ORIGINATOR OFTHE NATUR TEKNIKMAETHOD AND HEAD OFTHE WALTER FOEGER SKISCHOOL AT JAY PEAK,VERMONT. YOU GET-SEVEN DAYS (28 HRS.)OF EXPERT INSTRUCTIONPLUS USE OF ALL FACILI-TIES FOR ONLY $35. ANDYOU'LL BE SKIING PAR-ALLEL AFTER THIS WEEKOR RECEIVE A FULLREFUND. FOR INFORMA-TION, WRITE OR PHONEJAY PEAK, NORTH TROY,VERMONT.

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c dIlege TireclkI d^ Try

o- Are you grwing tired of the- quantitativeness of MIT courses?+' Would you like to try somethingI a little more qualitative? Theno perhaps you'd like to try a courseOe given at Ohio Stat-Introdution< to Household Equipment.

The objective of the course is>- to learn to judge household ap-< pliances on the market in orderkn to make effective buying choices.U And the objects of study rangeo from dishpans and spatulas toWL vacuum cleaners and home freez-3 ers.

To learn which models are best,students study the materials usedin the product and how these ma.-

I: terials are assembled. They thenU rebuild a gas and an electric- range 'to see how the appliancesu± are constructed.I:,. Also, they study body medhan-

ics in relation to the appliancesin an attempt to determine ifwasted or uncomfortable motionis involved in the use of theequipment. Other areas coverheat principles and the study ofgas, electricity, and water.

And, as with many scientificcourses, Introduction to House-hold Equipment comes completewith a laboratory - one in whichseveral types of the various ap-pliances are maintained.

Five Face Court ActionThe simulated kidnapping of a

student from a California highschool has mushroomed into anincident demanding civil and aca-demic action against five Cal-tech freshmen.

The five had entered the class-rooms of the high school and,after a brief, realistic struggle,succeeded in dragging off one ofthe students. The freshmen, beingpursued by a growing number ofhigh school students, escapedwith their victim into two carswaiting outside the school.

The kidnapping, of course, wasnot real. The final details, infact, had been worked out justtwo hours earlier. The "victim"

_ 0, i~ 0 L a- t, ToB y Tby ?Idle 8 8_I.

d of taking quantitative courses?, Household Equipment at OSUwas an ex - Caltech sophomorewho had flunked out and who hadregistered at fihe high schol onlytwo days previously. The prankwas soon disclosed and the storysoon appeared in the local Pasa-dena newspaper and on the LosAngeles radio stations.

The principal of the school wasinfuriated and, while refusing totalk to these "punks, hoodlums,ruffians," involved, made clearhis intention of prosemting themin the civil rts to the fullestpossible extent.

The freshmen were scheduledto appear in ecmurt to face pos-sible charges of trespassing (car-rying a maxinun sentence of$500 and six monfths in jail) or ofviolating Section 16701 of theState School Code (punishable bya $10 to $100 fine).

At the Caltech end, one of thestudents was suspended for theremainder of the year and theother four placed on strict pro-bation. In. addition, their dormi-

p.

tory was ordered to elect a emanslate of officers and also wasfined $150.

he Humane ThingFrom fthe pages of The Minme-

sota Daily comes the followingnews story:

"A make, rabbit and rat whichhad been peacefully coexisted inan underground storage tank inWagga, Wagga, Australia, wereput to death last month at theinsistence of the Royal Societyfor Prevention of Cruelty to Ani-mnals.

"The Society claimed that therabbit and the rat had been liv-ing in mortal fear of the snakeand that the humane uiiing to dowould be to kill them."

WE DELIVERThe N. Y. Times and BostonHerald, daily and Sunday,

on and off campus.Place your order by calling

UN 4-1326 anytime

Peace Corps exam this MarchAn anea Peace Caors Place-

ment Test will be give on March14, 1964, at 8:30 a.m. in .BrihonH.igh Sdhaol, 25 Warren Street,Bdghtmn, blass.

VAiumteers must be Anmeicancitzens at leat 18 years ocd.MiarWied duples are eligible ifboth qality and have no depesd-edbs under 18.

The placenert test is not con-petitive- and anyone with theequivalen t of a high schooA ediu-cation s eligible. To qualify the test, fill out a Peaoe CaopsQuestonnaire, which is availableat Post Offices, froenm the PeaceCapps, Wa rmibgfi, D.c. 20525,and sed it ba Ie Peace ops orbafg it to dte test cbter.

New Concert Band officers; Diephuis PresidentRicard Diephuis '65 has been

eleded Presiderit of dte ConcertBand He soceeds Glenn Oren-sten '64.

E1ected Concert Manager wasWi=iam 'Sc.reiber '65. The As-

istanLt Concert Managr is Ri-

I1

. TIME ILIFE

1 year for $4.50 1 1I year for $3.50 I(less Than 9c a copy) (less than 7c a copy)

21 weeks for $1.97 s6 months for $2.50 L02 years for $8.00 2 years for $6.75 E

ald Zelao '66, the new PersOme--Manager is Eric FiedOer '65.

PauI Maain '67 is the ewPoperfies Nanager, and Mithae.Pries '67 the new Librarian.

The new officers will take officeefodllwiig ithe next band concert.

Enjoy the Finest Italian-American Food

Sand Delicious Pizza

ITALIAN-AMERICAN RESTAURANTChoice Liquors and Imported Beers

INE STREET, CAMBRIDGE - Tel. EL 4.9569(at Central Square)

Open Every Night 'til Midnight - Free ParkingAsk About Student Discount Books

11 ---- I-·-III[Si - i~a

MITHRAS was estabJished in 1961 to undertake research and development in the interrelated areas of applied high-speed aerothermodynamics; electromagnetic guidance, detection, and communications; and solid state physics.

MITHRAS was founded by engineers from MIT-if is technically oriented and technically directed

I If you would prefer the environment-and the op-portunities for individual recognition and initiative-that exist in the smaller company

0 if you are interested in sharing in the rewards thatwill come to those who contribute to its growth;

0 if you are interested in remaining in the educationaland research atmosphere of Cambridge-and incontinuing to take courses under company sponsor-ship;

Oif you would like to use your knowledge of gasdy-namics, physics and electronics to help solve thereentry communications blackout problem for futureaerospace systems; or to

0 protect high speed vehicles against destructive rain-drop erosion damage by the use of sophisticatedaerodynamic techniques; or to

Ddevelop seeker-tracker systems for new missiles orfor satellife rendezvous; or todevelop photographic or electronic reconnaissancetechniques that can penetrate the excited sheathsurrounding high speed vehicles; or to

*develop active and passive devices based on quan-tum magnetics research; or to

O investigate fhe theory of optical-properties of metalions in ligand fields.

We invite you to talk writh our representatives; at the Placement Office on Friday, March 6, 1964; or if you prefer to call for an

appointment to visit MITHRAS (Telephone TR 6.3400)

A number of opportunities are opean for Aeronautical Engineers, El ectronic Engineers, Solid State or Chemical Physicists and Inorganic

Chemists.

380 Putnam Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusets

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; -Ims Xw

SKI EQUIPMENTLarge Variety

Tennis & Squash Shopb7A Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

Opp. Lowell HouseTR 6-5417

�I�is�e�

Noted for the best Sandwichesto eat in or take out.

FAMOUS ROAST BEEF SPECIALSANDWICH-KNACKWURST-BRATWURST with SAUERKRAUT

or POTATO SALAD"und die feinen 'Wurstwaren"71 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

491-2842

ELSIE & HENRY BAUMANN

21 HARRISON AVE.

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The Department of IndustrialManagement will hold its OpenHouse for freshmen and interestedsophomores onWednesday, March11, in the Schell Room, 52461, at4:30 p.m. Several professors inthe course will discuss opportuni-ties in management at M.I.T. andprovide information about recentadditions to the curriculum.

The undergraduate Course in In-dustrial Management is designedespecially for students who com-bine an aptitude for science and

engineering with the qualities nec-essary for effective adminiistra-tion. The program rests upon theunderlying disciplines of the so-cial sciences, especially econom-ies. Students who plan to. studymanagemert 'should anticipatetheir future work by taking a bas-ic subject in economics duringtheir sophomore year.

Much of the work in manage-ment is quantitative, and severalof the prescribed subjects offer animmediate introduction to the use

of the many rapidly developingmathematical and statistical tech-niques for solving industrial prob-lems. The science of engineeringprograms in the course emphasizematter of a fundamental naturerather than the details of its appli-cation.

The department's required sub-jects include 15.01 and 15.02, In,-dustrial Management; 15.30, Per-sonnel Administration; 1541, Fi-sonnel Adn'iirsion: 15.41 Man-agerial Information and Control;15.71, Production Management;15.81, Marketing; and a twelve-hour thesis leading to the degreeof Bachelor of Science in Indus-trial Management.

By RICHARD THURBERLast week the MIT varsity

hockey team completed its sea-son with games against the Uni-versity of Massachusetts at Am-herst Monday and against Am-herst College here Wednesdayafternoon. The team lost bothgames, 7-0 and 7-1.

U Mass rompsAt the University of Massachu-

setts, goalie Joe Kirk '64 playedhis third scoreless period of theseason, stopping all twenty-oneshots fired at him in the thirdperiod. Massachusetts' size andspeed prevailed in the last twoperiods however, as they wenton to shoot in seven goals.

Kirk Stops 52In a penalty-ridden game here

Wednesday, Amherst barely lostcontrol of the puck. Although Kirkstopped fifty-two shots, Amherstscored seven times. MIT's lonescore was notched in the last per-iod by Stu Colten '64. MIT piledup thirty minutes of penalties inthe game.

Next Year Looks BrighterThe team posted a 0-16 season,

but the young team, composedmostly of sophomores, gained val-uable experience which coach BenMartin hopes to exploit next year.The loss of seniors Joe Kirk, StuColten, and Dick Cease will surelybe felt; however, Steve Queeney,Pete Getting, and other talentedfreshmen-are expected to streng-then the team considerably.

Deck-:4 :~:j:5:::,::::~::.5~~.:~::::::::::.

Friday, March 6

Squash (V) N.I.S.R.A.-- atDartmouth running through

Saturday, March 7

Wrestling (V&F)-New Englandsat Amherst running through

Saturday, March 7

Soturday, March 7

Pistol (V)-Brown, Massachusetts-Home

Rifle (V)-Norwich, Away

Swimming (V)-Coast Guard,Away, 2:00 pm

Track (V)--I.C.A.A.A.A., NewYork

-IJCD

to(DSwp

I sELSIE

By Richard ThurberTheta Delta Chi's 10-0 victory

over Graduate House' highlightedthe past week's playoff tourna-ment action. Way.ne Pecknlmold ledthe attack with six unassistedgoals to help his team win aplace in the tournament finals.

Other action saw Theta Chi andGraduate House each move intoSunday's semi-final game. Al-though Theta Chi lost to ThetaDelta Chi 4-2, they came backwith a 2-0 win over Fiji A anda 3-2 edge over Senior House.Pete Staecker '64 scored two goalsagainst Senior House.

Graduate House secured theirplace in the semi-finals by stop-ping Lambda Chi Alpha 3-0. Thewinner of the Theta Chi-GraduateHouse game will play Theta Del-ta Chi for the tournament cham-pionship early this week.

IM Hockey Playoff ResultsTheta Delta Chi 4, Theta Chi 2

Graduate House 3, Lambda Chi

Alpha 0NRSA 2, Sigma Chi 1

Zeta Beta Tau 4, Beacon St.Ath Club 3

Phi Gamma Delta A 2, NRSA 0Senior House 1, Zeta Beta Tau 0

Senior House 3, Lambda ChiAlpha 1

Theta Chi 2, Fiji A 0Theta Delta Chi 10. Graduate

Hiouse 0Theta .Chi 3, Senior House 2

Pistol squad beats HarvardRoot, Boling help lead teamto first place in division

At the Harvard range last Sat-urday, the MIT varsity pistolteam soundly defeated the Crim-son by a score of 1255-1228. Thepistolmen now have a 13-9 sea-son record, due in a large partto the consistency of shooters JoeBoling '65 and Dave Root '65.The Techmen have only a singleloss in the Greater Boston PistolLeague, and lead with only onematch remaining.

be on campusto talk withgraduate andundergraduate studentsinterested in thefollowing trainingprograms:Manufacturing & ServiceSales & MarketingFinance & Accounting

For an interview,contact thePlacement Director.

0"Bg'9a4)

Imm

0

REPRESENTATIVE ,j"T-oSEE OUIWHEN HE VISITS YOUR CAMPUS ON

ONE OF TPtE COUNTRY'S LARGEST SUPPLIERS OF ENERGY 339-63

Discussion of management eopportunities currieulumwill highlight Indusriial Management Open House

Icemen lose to UMass, Amherst;finish rebuilding season at 0-16

On':~ ' ~.¥ '¢,:-:>.~:':'':-::-::: -':.':.'.: ::':.::::::::..-::

WBliNGau LlIOfIS !D ~l~i~

aLL FLIGHTS ] AI

Save as MUCH as84 ROUfD-TJIiPI Theta Delta Chi reaches IM hockey finals

I AIRUgil1ES;70 !esesTvai7On DeLUXE COMMUTfel Se91VIOC I

HA 6-42 .0 Unpuablished Life(Between Essex & Beech pho~os on exhibit

Streets, Boston) photos on exhibitiSLAND & CANTONESE q Photgraphs of November's

FOOD ® EXOTIC DRINKS Field Day, taken by Ted Polum-Authentic Hawaiian Luaus baum for Life Magazine, will be

MPoderate Prices on exhibit in the case outside the 'i1 a.m.-3 a.m. Hayden Art Gallery, March 9-16.

Daily & Sunday The photographs, taken last fall,were not published in Life.

Monday, Marech 9th,and Tuesday, March 10th,

an Olivetti UnderwoodRepresentative will

interviews for

IOSIENMMNEadINgPOSITIONS leading totechnical and managerial careers.

18 month training programs,

MARCH 13PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC AND GAS COMPANY

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

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1 Fencers defeat Holy Cross 21-6c1 lose to CCNY for 8-8 season tally

By Herb TrachtenbergThe MIT varsity fencers split

two -meets this last week, beating.o Holy Cross 21-6 on Wednesday

and losing to OCNY Saturday af-ternoom by a soere of 15-12.

Holy Cross lacks coachI During te Holy Cross meet° every man who dressed saw ac-< tion, many of them not fencingZ their usual weapon. Credit must

be given to the Holy Cross team,< however, because it is made upD of nine men who 'wok out onu their own since they have noZ coach. The squad scores were 8-1a in foil, 7-2 in sabre, and 6-3 in

epee.Debonte has 27-10 record

Against CCNY epee man TomSeddon '66 was ahead 4-3 in hissecond round bout when he was

o injured and forced to forfeit hisLu bout. His first round win, together

with two wins each by Bill De-bonte '65 and Karl Kurnz '66 gave

r- the epee squad a 5-3 record forthe afternoon. Debonte now holdsthe best season record on theteam, having won 27 bouts andlosing 10. Kunz, who has gene 17

Squash team edgedby Wesleyan 5-41to enter tournament

Hard-fought victories by TedCruise '64, Don Ward '65, LarryKing '66, and Fergus Gomersal'66 were not quite enough to en-able the Tech racketmen to topWesleyan Saturday, as the- menfrom Wesleyan scored a 54 vie-tory.

Cruise, Jon Gruber '64, KenComey '65 and Thomas Guillermo'66 will represent MIT at the Na-tional Intercollegiate SquashTournament at Dartmouth nextweekend.

and 3 since the middle of the sea-son looks very good for next year.Ralph Zinnmernan '64 took twobouts which together with CaptainArt Best's one victory broughtthe sa/bre team's total to 3-6.Best's season tally is now 26-6.Two foil victories by Herb Norton'65 together with one vidtory' eachby Craig Wheeler '65 and MikeStulbarg '66 gave the foil teama 4-6 score.

The defeat by CCNY broughtthe Engineers record to 8-8. Dur-ing the next several weeks theteam will travel to Trinity for theNew England Champonships, toNavy for the Easterns, and toHarvard for the Nationals.

Tech riflemen win two;top Harvard 1334-1265,

St. Michaels 1412- 1356By Karl Frederick

The Tech riflemen outshot St.Michael's, 1412-1356 (regular tar-gets), and Harvard, 1334-1265 (in-terational targets),- in matchesheld Friday night and Saturdaymorning at Tech's range.

Friday's match saw Joe Boling

Dave Hamada '65, 284; JimDownward '65, 282; and ZachAbrams '65, 277, turning in thetop scores.

Saturday's score of 1334 tookthe Greater Boston League rec-ord away from previously topranked Northeastern University.outstanding marksmanship dis-played by Olah, 273; Downward,271; and Hamada, 270; was sup-ported *by Jim Bridgeman '65,260; and Boling, 260.

Remember: there are many healthful ways

thoughtful people of all ages can exercise.

Stroll down to the bank, for instance.

Appirinz for Savings Bank Life Insurance

exercises good sense, and economy too.

D}0n'Xlet itthrowyou!

Skiers place I 0th in EasternsRacing .against an extremely

strong field of expert skiers, in-cluding at least _six of the 1964Olympic candidates, MIT's skisquad finished with a surprisinglygood tenth place in the EasternChampionships held during theWilkiams Carnival at Williams Col-lege February 28 and 29. Tech'sski team made only the third en-try of an MIT squad in the his-tory of the Easterns; and, con-sidering dthe competition theymet at WVilliams and the bad luckthey had in both the cross countryand slalom events, their tenthplace showing is the best MIT hasdone in skiing in many years.

Wessel 14th in DownhillOn a very fast and twisting

downhill course, Tech's skiers allheld their 65 m.p.h. line, thusplacing eighth in the race but lessthan a point off from fifth. TeamCaptain. Henrik Wessel '64 camein fourteenth in a race packedwith such international stars asJohn Clough of Middlebury, whonarrowly missed a place on theOlympic team, and CharlesVaughan, who recently set a newspeed record on skis in excess of106 mph. Ed Roberts '65 and Gi-ovanni Emo '65 were a coupleof seconds slower than Wessel.

Two black-out in cross countryOnly three of MIT's six racers

finished the arduous 15-km, cross-country course. Wessel made aheroic effort to keep up with Na-tional Champion Ed Williams ofDartmouth, but the pace was too

hot and two miles from the finish,Wessel blacked out. Karl Kehler(65) also blacked-out near the fih-ish, and since Stan Brown (65)had missed the start, only GeorgeCarey ('64)s Emo and Robertsfinished the gruelling race.Techmnen have little luck in slalom

or jumpingWith little to lose, the skiers

staked everything on the slalom,but Wessel had an unlucky fall inhis first run, and Roberts, in thelead for MIT in the second run,had a spectacular crack-up fromwhich he was fortunate to escapewith only minor bruises.

With the gallant efforts ofBrown, Kehler, Emo and BrucePowell ('66) in the jump, the skiersfinished tenth in the East.

Dartmouth, who won the meet,Middlebury, Wiliaarms, Vermontandflarvard will all go to the Na-tion al. Collegiate ' Championshipsnext week.

Frosh lacrosse rallyAll freshmen interested in play-

ing or managing lacrosse thisSpring should assemble at a Ral-ly in the duPont lobby 5:15 pmMonday, March 9. Experiencewith the stick is not necessaryfor neophyte lacrosse hopefuls.

L

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MORE SUN

ORaSMREVW

MORIE SNOWo

For folders, information orreservations, write lodge ofyour choice or Box 206 CgStowe Area Association,Inc., Stowe, Vermont.

THE ENGAGEMENT RING WITH

THE PERFECT CENTER DIAMOND

True artistry is expressed in the brilliantfashion styling of every Keepsake diamondengagement ring. Each setting is a master-piece of design, reflecting the full brillianceand beauty of the -center diamond . . . aperfect gem of flawless clarity, fine colorsand meticulous modern cut.

The name, Keepsake, in the ring and onthe tag is your assurance of fine qualityand lasting satisfaction. Your very per-sonal Keepsake diamond ring is awaitingyour selection at your Keepsake Jeweler'sstore. Find him in the yellow pages. Pricesfrom $100 to $2500. Rings enlarged to showbeauty of detail ®Trade-mark registered.

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BEFORE YOU BUYANY LIFE INSURANCE

GET THE FACTS ONLOW-COST

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XW filliams unbeaten

G rapplers romp in last twoBy Dave Kress ey" Whiter

The wrestling squad finished decision v

the dual-meet season strongly with Fredricksonresounding victories on the home and Tommats over Tufts and Worcester forfeit at 1:Polytechnic Institute last week to WPIfinish the season with a 6-7 rec- The teanord. The squad swamped Tufts .pins against33-2 last Wednesday and then out- WPI team.wrestled W P I 31-3 on Saturday. quickest, uCaptain Mike Williams '64 met his man'stwo very good 157-pounders and mat. Tech'sscored two wins to finish the sea- by Hultgreyson at 12--1, and to become the in 5:27,afirst unbeaten Tech wrestler in . omany years.

Tufts Swamped very toughAgainst Tufts, the squad scored before. H

four pins over a clearly out- match befomatched team. Heavyweight John picked up tButler '65 had the quickest one, sion 10-2, w]needing only 1:20 to pin his man. feit.Other pins were scored by 130- The squacpounder Hal Hulgren '66 in 7:31; England C167-pound Bob Wells '65 in 3:31, herst next Iand 177-potund Dick Nygren '66 in hopes of ret5:00. Williams' opponent was un- year's seco.defeated going into the match and , Mike Willgave Mike a very tough match be- bet for a Nfore going down 10-8 on a late ship, whiletwo-point reversal by Williams. Al- Whiteman;so in the match, 147-pound "Whit- should gain

A

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We're looking ahead 15 years, because withinthat period Con Edison will have about 800 top

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k;economists . math majors.. .and chemists whoScan be trained now, to be ready to move into

these important posts.immediate prospects at Con Edison are bright,

Woo, for the right men: good starting salary...an

AN INVESTOR.OWNED UTILITY

man '66 gained a 4-3wrhile 137-pound Doni '65 scored a 3-3 drawMcAuley '65 won by23 pounds.I Easily Beatenn also registered fourt a stronger than usual· Whiteman was thesing only 3:55 to puttwo shoulders on thes other three pins weren in 5:17, Fredrickson

nd Wells in 5:42. Wil-onent from WPI wasand had lost only once[e gave Mike a goodre losing 5-0. McAuleythe squad's other deci-rhile Butler won by for-

.d now goes to the NewChampionships at Am-Friday and Saturday intaining or bettering last,nd-place finish.liamns looks like a goodrew England champion-Bob Wells, "Whitey"

and Hal Hultgrengood places.

,::How They Didnii Trackmen take closing meet of their 6-2 seasonby trouncing Bowdoin with lopsided 84-29 margin

MIT iF) 95-Tufts 77Coast Guard 85-MIT (V) 80MIT (F) 63-Coast Guard 39

FencingMIT (YV) 21-Holy Cross 6CCNY 15-MIT (V) 12Harvard 21-MIT (F) 6

HockeyU Mass 7-MIT (V) 0Amherst 7-MIT (V) IAmherst 12-MIT (F) 0Rivers Country Day School 4-

MIT (F) 0Pistol

MIT CV) 1255-Harvard 1228Rifle

MIT (V) 1412-St. Michael's 1356MIT (V) 1334-Harvard 1265

SkiingMIT (V) placed 10th in Eastern

ChampionshipsSquash

Wesleyan 5-MIT {V) 4Wesleyan 9-MIT (F) 0

SwimmingBrown 55-MIT (V) 40Springfield 64-MIT IV) 31Brown 56-MIT (F) 38Springfield 69-MIT (F) 26

TrackMIT iV) 84-Bowdoin 29MIT (F) 60-Bowdoin 51

WrestlingMIT (V) 33-Tufts 2MIT (F) 25-Tufts 8MIT (V) 31-WPI 3MIT (JV) 26-Brandeis 6.

L

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The Tech varsity trackmen ranaway with their last regular sea-son meet by trouncing Bowdoinby a 84-29 score. This gives thesquad a 6-2 season record whichis one of the best for many years.

Jim Flink '64 led the squadwi"th three victories while settingone Cage record and tying an-other. He set a new MIT recordof 05.4 sec. in the 45-yard lowhurdles and tied the Cage recordof 05.4 sec. in the 50-yard dash.He also won the 45-yard highhurdles with a 06.0 sec. clocking.Ken Morash '65 also set a newMIT record by pole-vaulting to aheight of 13' 1/2".

Sumner Brown '66 took twofirsts in distance running by lead-ing an MIT sweep in the milewith a 4:44.5 time and taking the1000-yard run in 2:25.0. Joel Rog-ers '65 and Bill Purves '65 alsoled sweeps in the 600-yard run

and the 2-mile.The squad will be sending sev-

en runners to the IC4A Eastern

Championships in New York thisSaturday, March 7.

IIESILTSMile

I. Brown (MIT) 4:44.5, 2. MoMillin(SMITi, 3. Wesson (MIT).

Broad jump1. McDowell (B) 22' 0", 2. Ross

(MIT), 3. Carrier (MIT).35 pound weight

1. Sohul:en (B) 57'6%4". 2. Dassel(MIT), 3. Kotanchik (MIT).

Shot put1. Sloat (MIT) 45'3", 2. Coggins

(B). 3. Rernsen (MIT)..5-,vnq rd la.h1

1. Flink (MIT) 5.4. 2. Sivera (MIT).3. Akindoro (B).

600-yard run1. Rogers (OMIT) 1:26.5 2. Schwoeri

(MIT), 3. MacMillan (MIT).45-ynrd high hurdles

1. Flirnk (MIT) 6.0, 2. Good (B),3. Dorschner (MIT).

Two mile1. Puirves ('MIT) 10:29.5, 2. Wes-

son (MIT), 3. McMillan (MIT).1009-.yVrd run

1. Brown (MIT) 2:25.0, 2. Beren(B), 3. Oliver (MIT).

4.-yard !ow hurdles1. Flink (MIT) 5.4. 2. Darschner

(MIT), 3. Good (B).Pole vault

1. Morash ('MIT) 13' ;", 2. Ekdabl(B), 3. Lukis ('MIT).

Relay1. MIT-Rogers, MeMillin. Dorsch-

ner, and Schwoeri 3:38.1, 2. Bowdloin.High jumtp

1. Seager (B) 5'.10", 2. Carrier(MIT), 3. Jones (MIT).

Mermen topped by Brown 55-40despite MIT record by SI. Peters

By Neal GilmanThe MIT varsity swimming

team suffered two defeats thisweek at the Alumni pool, first toBrown on Wednesday and then toSpringfield on Saturday by scoresof 55-40 and 64-31, respectively.

FOR LEASE until Sept. 1964, two-room, unfurnished apartment onBeacon St. near Mass. Ave. $125less $30 for light work on premisesmeans only $95 per month. CallDick Sidell or Fred Souk, KE 6-1139 or X3782.

RADCLIFFE GIRLS!The RADCLIFFE REGISTER con-tains the name, dorm and pictureof every Cliffie. Still available for'65 end '67. $1.25 each. Sendcheck to Harvard Yearbook, Box 2,Cambridge 38, Mass.

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MIT MEN: Play Pool Free! $1 intable fees free. The Cue andCushion. New, beautiful, privatebilliard club. 876 Lexington St.,Waltham, Mass. 899-3031. Only 15minutes away-via Rfe. 2. Turn leftat Waltham Exit.

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In those two meets, two MIT rec-ords were broken and one wastied.

St. Peters sets nmakIn the Brown meet, Dick St.

Peters set a new Tech record inthe 200 yard freestyle by cover-ing the distance in 1:58.9. Helater gained a second in the 500-yard free, losing to Prior ofBrown in a fast time 5:36.6. War-ner of Brown also tied a pool rec-ord in the 100 yard free with atime of 49.9.

Brody, Peacock winBill Brody '65 and Cash Pea-

cock '65 gained the only otherfirsts in the 200-yard butterfly and200-yard breaststroke with the re-spective times of 2:30.2 and2:33.1. Eric Jensen '64, FrankMechura '65 and Steve Snover '65gained seconds for the mermenin the 200-yard Individual Med-ley, 200-yard backstroke and div-ing, respectively.

Skoog breaks Brody's recordSaturday in the Springfield

meet, Skoog of Springfield set anew pool record in the 200 yardfly, with a quick time of 2:12.4to break the record recently setby Brody. The MIT mermen againonly managed to win three eventsagainst the overpowering Spring-field team. St. Peters capturedthe 200-yard free, Mechura, the200-yard back, and Peacock, the200-yard breaststroke in times of1:59.6, 2:21.3 and 2:31.8, respec-tively. Dick Breinlinger '66, Bro-dy, and Jensen gained seconds inthe 100 free, 200 Individual Med-ley, and 200 back, respectively.

With these two defeats, the sea-son's record was brought to 7wins and 5 losses. The swimmers'last meet is with the Coast Guardon Saturday, March 7.

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Page 16: Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward - The …tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N4.pdf · Samuels defeats Nolan, Bushkin BakerAward committee ... Dr. Ballhausen is widely known for work

-0

CD0m

1 '-By Dick Perron

The Varsity Cagers closed outthe 1963-64 basketball season with

- losses to Tufts and Coast Guardo to bring their season record to-- 16-8. This past season proved to

-: be Coach Jack Ba.ry's se...d- best at MIT, second only to hisO 17-4 record in 1961-62. The entiree year was filled with the tense

excitement of dclose ball gamesand new pages being written in-

>: to the record book.< Started with a bangThe Beavers started the season

L off with a bang, winning fivezc straight and losing only two be-Lu fore Christmas. The first win was

a scorwing record setter over Bas-ton State, 106-86. This win wasfollowed by two close ones overTrinity, 82-81, and Wesleyan,

1 61-55.( ) Senior co-captain Jack Moter- then turned in the season's high-

w est point production, 31 pointsI against Brandeis in an 81-63 vic-- tory. The fifth straight Win was

over Norwich, 80-61. The firstloss of the season camre againstHarvard, 81-62, followed by thesecond against Northeastern, 82-74.

Through the Northeastern game,Tech's leading scorers were sen-ior co-captains Jack Moter andBill Eagleson with 19.7 and 16.3respectively. Moter also led the

squad with a healthy 0.624 fieldgoal percentage.- Eagleson toppedthe club's rebounding with 14.4per game.

Split Canadian TourneysOver the Christ-nas hlidays the

Engineers were busy competingin two tournaments in Canada.The first was the Bluenose Classicin Halifax, Nova Scotia. ThereTech camne in second to the Uni-versity of New Hampshire, los-ing to them in a heartbreaker74-73 after beating Acadia 42-37.Moving over to the Montreal Invi-tational Tournament, the Beaverspicked up first place for the sec-ond year in a row by beatingLoyola of Montreal 80-48 and Un-ion 67-61. Eagleson and Motermade the All-Tournament teamand Bob Grady, '65, got honor-able mention.

FolloWing the successful Cana-dian trip, the Varsity Cagers trav-eled north to play Bowdoin andBates. The 'owdoin game was asqueaker with Tech winning it inthe last seconds 67-63. At Bates,The Engineers trailed throughoutmost of the game, tying the scoreWith eight minutes left in thesecond half. But the loss of Mo-ter, who was high for the teamwith 15, was too much to over-come and Tech lost 63-56.

Adelphi rough opponent

Hoopmen finish 14-1 yearBy Charlie Willman

The freshman basketball team won its final ,two games la:t weekto conclude 'the htbes season .ilt has ever hhad. The hoopmen finishedwith a record of 14-1, their lone et:iback coming against Nc:!aheedtern.

Tufts and Coast Guard were the team's victims ait the eni ofthe year, as Tuft fell by a 95-77 score last Wednesday, and CC-stGuard was beaten on its own court, 63-39, last Friday. These gameswere typical ex-amples of t hesquad's perform-ances; t h e r ewere only fourgames that theEngineers failedto win by 10points or more.

In 15 contests,the team aver-aged 80 points a k-game as opposedto 65 for theiradversaries, and the Tecuhmen ran 1 up margLins a _ great as 30 pts. eoThe team lead-ers w e r e AlexWilson, Roy Tal-us , Don Santini,and Bob Hardt.Wilson averagedover 22 points agame to lead theteam in scoring,as well as pull-ing down about17 rebounds agame to lead inthat department. Photo by Stephen Teicher

ToaIu s with 16 Alex Wilson squeezes a rebound as Tech"spoints a game, frosh cagers are on the way to 95-77 win overand Santii with Tufts at duPont last Wednesday.14 also madevery valuable contributions to cindermen thus completed theirthe squad, as well as Hardt who season with a 3-4 record, with vic-scored 12 points a game while tories over Tufts and Columbia.grabbing down over 10 rebounds.The hoopmen's only loss, against SwimmingNortheastern 88-76, came as a re- Brown and Springfield's strongsuit of poor ball handling, but swimming teams took the mer-highlights of the season included men twice last week by scores ofvictories over Harvard, 68-65, 56.38 and 69-26 respectively. AtTrinity, 81-79 in overtime, Wes-leyadn, 98-88, and UNH, 73-58. We home against Brown last Wednes-salute the class of '67 frosh bas- day, Mike Crane won the? 50-yd.ketball team upon the conclusion freestyle and Ben Park took theof a great season! backstroke, but at Tech on Sat-

Wrestling urday the Engineers were corn-Wlot-Lj nuJre stlI JJ A y qnringr

The wrestling team also endedits season successfully with a 25-8triumph over Tufts to finish 64.In a meet contested at MIT lastWednesday, victories were scoredby captain Dave Schramm, whoended up with a perfect 10-0 sea-son, and Brook Landis who hadan 8-2 season. Both men will com-pete in the New Englands to beheld this weekend.

TrackThe track team scored a final

victory against Bowdoin last Sat--urday by a score of 60-51. The

pJiteiy uverouwetrauDy U Jt ~g-field. The squad now has a 5-4record, with a re-scheduled meetwith Wesleyan remaining.

Squash, fencing, and hockeyalso saw their seasons ended lastweek. The swordmen lost a 21-6decision to Harvard and finishedat 1-1; the icemen were white-washed twice: 4-0 by RiversCountry Day School and 12-0 byAmherst, and finished at 0-9.' Thesquashmen also lost twice to endtheir year at 2-9. The losses cameagainst Exeter, 5-0, and Wesley-an, 9-0.

This year's MIT varsity basketball squad who finished with a 16-8 record. First row: Rich-ard Shoemaker '65, Robert Grady '65, John Moter '64, Bill Eagleson '64, Don Alusic '64, FrankYin '65, James Larsen '65. Second row: Coach Jack Barry, James Simpson '64, John Mazola '66,William Briggs '66, Gerald Madea '66, Steve Kurtain '66, Peftr Kirkwood '66, Wayne Baxter '66,John Flick '66, and manager Ron Mandle '65. Absent when the picture was taken: George Mc-Quilken '65 and Perry Seal '65.

Back at home the Engineerswon three of their next four. Theybeat Lowell Tech 81-62 and KingsPoint 70-59. A strong Adelphi clubcame up from New York City tobeat the Beavers 81-75. Eaglesonled the team with 26 points withthe rest of the starters in doublefigures. To end the first term,Tech beat W.P.I. 82-65, With soph-omore Jack Mazola turning inone of his best games, leading thescorers wFih 21.

Eagleson breaks recordDuring the break between terms

the hoopsters traveled to the NewYork City area to play StevensTech, Newark College of Engi-neering, and Brooklyn Polytech.Irn the Stevens Tech game Eagle-son needed 22 points to tie DaveKoch's career scoring record. The"Eagle" picked up 23 and led histeammates to a 76-65 win overStevens. At N.C.E. the Beaverssuffered a reversal when bothGrady and Mazola fouled out andthey lost 73-68. The BrooklynPoly game was a run away, 89-51, with everyone seeing action.

Back home to start the secondterm off right, the Cagers beatBowdoin a second time, 70-62, af-ter a losing first half score, 31-24.Mater an Eagleson were highwith 22 and 21 each. Traveling

up to New Hampshire, the Bea-vers handed UNH a loss, 81-71.Moter was high with 27 pointswhile in the first meeting it wasEagleson who was high witi 27.

Close with 2 tough lossesThe last two games of the sea-

son were with Tufts and CoastGuard. The first was a homegame in which the Techmen werebeaten 66-65. The game was aheartbreaker with the lead chang-ing hands ten times during thegame. The final outcome hung ona foul shot by Dave Spath ofTufts in the last five seconds.The last game was played OtCoast Guard. Tech led in the firsthalf until just before the buzzerwhen Coast Guard went ahead41-39 for the half. When the sec-ond half started the Cagers putup a valiant fight but could. notbreak through Coast Guard's zonepress and lost, 85-80. Mazola washigh scorer for Tech in both con-tests with 18 and 23 points.

With the end of the season, theCagers had a 16-8 record andfour new records in the book.Bill Eagleson not only brokeDave Koch's old career scoringrecord but Billy also broke onethousand points for a career scor-ing total of 1058. The team had anew high score, 106 against Bos-

ton Stte, and a new two teamscore, 192 also Boston State, anda new point total for the sea-son, 1768.

Moter top season scorerAdded to these records were the

performances of some of theplayers. Jack Moter came fromsecond place in scor last yearto lead the team this year with17.7 points per game. Quite anaccomplishment to move fromscoring 25 points in his sopho-more year to 424 in his senioryear! Bill Eagleson is not to beslighted, scoring 407 and averag-ing 17.0 per game as well asleading the team in reboundswith 15.3.

Those who return next year aregoing to have to work hard to fillthe places left open by Bill Eagleson and Jack Moter. Juniors BobGrady and Frank Yin and soph-omores Jack Mazola and JohnFlick should be getting help fromthis year's surprising freshmanteam. A great amount is expectedof them after their 14-2 season.

Seoring LeadersJack Moter 424Bill a&IesonI 407Bob Gradyr 35;Jack -Mazola 269Frank Yin 163George McQuilken 62Jchn Fldkc 59Team total 1769Opp. to:al 1595

17.717.014.,S11.75.63.93.0

73.766.5

Constitution amended

Brody AA head; Malnde, Souk win officesBy Dave Kress

At the annual Athletic Associa-tion elections held Tuesday, Feb-ruary 25, Bill Brody '65 was elect-ed A.A. President, and Rich Lucy'66 was elected A.A. Secretary.The varsity members of the A.A.elected Ron Mandle as VarsityVice-president, while the Intra-mural Council elected Fred Souk'65 as IM Vice-president andFritz Schaefer '66 as IM record-er. There were also many chang-es made in the A.A. constitutionat the meeting.

Brady aims at publicity,policy planning

Brody has been quite active inMIT athletics and the A.A., beingvarsity swimming co-captain,working as IM swimming man-ager, and serving as A.A. Secre-tary. He is also a member ofBeaver Key and Eta Kappa Nuhonoraries. Some of Brody's plansfor this iterm include a long-needed study and re-definition ofthe role of students in the A.A.and a stepped-up publicity cam-paign both in and outside of MIT.He expects the A.A. to becomemore of a policy planning boardmaking real decisions rather thanthe rubber stamp for higher de-cisions that it now seems to be.Along publicity lines, he hopes togive especially the world outsideMIT a much better picture ofwhat MIT athletics are really like.He also has plans in mind for

adding water polo as an intra-mural sport.

Mandle will recruit managersMandle has also been quite ac-

tive in AMIT athletics, serving asvarsity basketball manager andplaying lacrosse. He is also amemnber of Beaver Key. His ini-tial plans include a big push formore varsity and freshman sportmanagers to admindstrate the in-tercollegiate program.

Souk heads IM councilIn the IM Council, Souk has

been quite active in Tech intra-mural activities. He has servedas IM bowling manager for twoyears and played varsity lacrosse.One of the main plans he intendsto carry out is 4 re-definton ofeligibility for varsity athletes inIM sports. The IM Council'hopesto make varsity athletes eligibleduring their own sport season fornon-contact IM sports which haveno varsity counterpart here. Inother words, a basketball playerwould be allowed to play volley-ball or badminton though he stillwould not be allowed to play IMhockey or basketball.

Rich Lucy has been active inthe A.A. as varsity hockey man-ager and IM softball manager.He is also a member of Q-Club.Schaefer has worked in the A.A.as IM manager of tennis andgolf.

A.A. purpose re-statedOne of the major dichanges in

the A.A. constitution was the re-

stating of the purpose of the A.A.as a policy-making board. Therewas also a shake-up in the officesof the A.A. also. The office ofClub Vice-president was eliminat-ed with the Secretary taking overhis duties. Also eliminated wasthe office of Publicity Manager,with the T-Club President takingover the publicity work.

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