9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be...

20
High-school students see project M a tenants drop plans i esra~fIYC. fajorl te nan dro p ans J _ . ,,~~~gn e -- + A s4 C fr er ^ 1II v to rent in Technology Square Gus-av rier'63 deonsraes curren work by elecrical engineer- Gustay Drier '63 demonstrates current work by electrical engineer- ing students to high-school students and instructors at the Junior Science Symposium here last Thursday and Friday. Two hundred high-school stu- dents and instructors attended. -Photo by Stephen Bless IBM and C-E-I-R will not occu- py space in 545 Technology Square at the present time. The International Business Machines Corporation had planned to occu- py Floors 2, 3, 4, and 5 of the nine-story building, and the Cor- poration for Economic and Indus- trial Research would have leased Floors 8 and 9. IBM has signed a lease for the four floors with Technology Square's developer, a joint cor- poration of MIT and Cabot, Cabot & Forbes Co. Now, however, IBM is subleasing to other tenants. MIT has temporarily moved its Accounting Office to the second floor of the building. Other likely tenants for the IBM floors include a government agency and several small cffices, according to Pay- son Hunter, manager of real es- tate for IBM's Data Processing Division. 'Internal reasons' IBM and C-E-I-R decided not to occupy because of "internal reasons," said Robert Walker of Cabot, Cabot & Forbes Co. James Martin, financial manager of C-E-I-R, said his firm canceled its plans because "we could do bet- ter cost-wise." He also stated that internal reasons played a part in the company decision. Martin added that C-E-I-R had considered canceling its occupan- cy plans last summer, but made the final decision only a few weeks ago. He said that C-E-I-R considers Technology Square's lo- cation ideal. A $15.7-million computer facili- ty had been planned for the build- ing by C-E-I-R-, an electronic first in four years MIT will hold its first Open The budget for the Open House grams to be distributed to visi- Also, student guides will be on House in four years this Satur- Committee is about $3000. This tors. Also, the committee is pur- hand to advise and assist. day, from noon to 5:00 pm. figure is approximately $1000 high- More than 150 exhibits and dem- er than the original estimate, re- onstrations from academic de- ported Bob Blumberg '64, co- partments and research centers chairman of the committee. will be presented for public in- Of this budget, $2000 has been 2 spection. allotted for printing of t :isaeln the pro- /. / ?:: ? .{.: :;: . ... :: : :.Z:....}' * - - ?: Open House Section Pages 9-14 ..... . . - ..- " DuPont gift endows professorship A gift of $500,000 has been 1926 to 1940 and chairman of the chasing 10,000 copies of this Refreshments will be served in week's issue of The Tech for dis- specified locations. Ample free tribution to the guests. A large number of student ac- tivities will be represented. Color-coded routes will guide visitors through the buildings. Maps and brochures describing the events and how to find them will be available in Building 7. parking will be available. Through newspaper, radio, and television publicity, MIT it ex- tending an invitation to the gen- eral public. Brief public-service announcements have been sub- mitted to four Boston television stations for broadcast. THE data-processing firm. The facility would have included an IBM 7030 STRETCH computer system, three IBM 1401's, and an IBM 1410. It would have been the largest com- mercial data-processing system in existence. Tenants sought To fill the vacancies caused by the decisions of IBM and C-E-I-R, Cabot, Cabot & Forbes Co. is (Please h;riz lo page 2) No Bexley applications should be made now, says Dean Fassett No applications should be made for rooms in Bcxley Hall at this time, according to Dean of Residence F. G. Fassett Jr. Af final arrangements cconcern- ing the availability of space in Bexley have not yet been com- pleted, students should apply for dormitory rooms as if Bexley were not available. All applicants will receive assignments in the present four dormitories. In a week or two Dean Fas- sett hopes to post information concerning applications for Bex- ley. He will then go through the applications, attempting to ob- tain a cross section of classes and houses, and make assign- ments accordingly. "Those who subsequently are assigned to Bexley Hall will of course be released from prior as- signment to one of the houses," explained Dean Fassett. TECH .~ made to endow a Lammot du Pont Professorship of Chemical Engineering. The new professorship was made possible by contributions from members of the family of the late Lammot du Pont, of Wilmington, Delaware, who died in 1952. After graduating from MIT in 1901, he was president of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. from Foreign opporfunitiei Open meeti Overseas job opportunities, ! study fellowships, and graduate field programs will be discussed at an open meeting at 5:00, Tues- day, in the Kresge Little Theater. The leader of the discussion. which wvill be open to all graduate and undergraduate students, will be Prof. Kenneth R. Wadleigh, dean of student affairs. Professor B. Alden Thresher Will speak on the Fullbright, Mar- shall, and olhler foreign fellow- ships. Professor W. Gilbert Strang 'will disc'uss thel Rhodes Scholar- ship; s aid Prof(essor Dan Nyhard will xpllaitn the Course-15 grad- board until 1948. The Lammot du Pont Profess- orship is the first fully endowed chair in the Department of Chem- ical Engineering, and one of eight sought by the Institute in the $66-million Second Century Pro- gram. The David Flett du Pont Ath- letic Center was made possible by a one-million-dollar bequest in 1955 from a son of Lammot du Pont. ing Tuesday Office, will speak on opportuni- ties for working overseas. Paul Shapiro '63 will explain student activities in the field of foreign opportunities. After the speeches, there will be a question-and-answer period and informal discussions with the speakers. '_ _'~'uuu'~-a~ I" - is At -T I-n 1881 Esta6lished At MIT In 1881 Vol. 83, No. II Cambridge, Massachusetts, Wednesday, April 24, 1963 Five Cents City policy may change Cambridge ponders taxing married students' dorm By Bill Judnick The Cambridge Board of Assess- ment is considering the alterna- tives of full taxation or payments in lieu of taxes for the married students' housing. Should the board choose the for- mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi- tories are novw considered aca- demic property not subject to taxation. Past Cambridge policy has per- mitted MIT to make payments in lieu of taxes on all but invesl- ment properties. MIT's payments have often made the school the largest taxpayer in Cambridge for the past few years. schools, both supported by tax revenues, in no way justifies their exemption from full taxation, he said. Thomas F. Gibson, chairman of When asked if MIT had been the Cambridge Board of Assess- officially notified, Gibson replied, ment, stated Monday night that NIIT officials had been notified in conferences that Cambridge would consider the new ap)artmnents "ful- ly taxable, as any other income- producing property."'' "How official can you get?" and affirmed that the city's position had been made clear to MIT of- ficials in their conferences with the Board. lie saw no reason why the city However, Institute Treasurer should "subsidize" the Awives and c'hildren of married students. Their use of public utilities and Chi Phi takes Olympic Games trophy Uale f('llowships in Africa. .... 1The Inlter-Ameiican Program of lhe Civil Engineering Deparl-ment : illhe explained by PrIofe!ssor Fred Mc';a'ry. Mi'. Thomas Har- rngion, of th, Student I Placemennt Exam schedules out Al stludents may obtain a final '-' .: I~ Vxaminalition sc(iedule at the In- fo(nmiationi Offi-e. Rootm 7-111. Fraternity men and their dates took part in Olympic Games at the opening of Interfraternity Confer- -Mnl-s not listesd and (onflict s ence Weekend last Saturday afternoon on Briggs Field. Chi Phi, the winner of the competition, was awarded in v('Xams mrust he re>por ted l a trophy by Dean of Residence Frederick H. Fassett at Saturday evening's dance in the armory. Second and 'n ft he r(poI'd lo th(A third place finishers, Alpha Epsilon Pi and Alpha Tau Omega, received plaques. *d'gistla';s Office( by Monday, At left, Phil Strause '65 AEPi, goes into the final lap of the tricyle race, which the AEPi's won. At right, teams compete in the leap frog contest. Chi Phi won this event. Joseph J. Snyder stated that he expects official notification in the form of a "documented commu- nicatlion" during the coming year. Other local universities are awaiting developments and the elffect these developmenls will have on their own projects. A precedenl was set in 1959, when Boston University com- men('(ed litigation over a proposed tax on their married student proj- ect. The controversy was settled out of ('ourt, in favor of payment in lieu of taxes to the city of Boston. ItHarvard University is novw be- ginning conslruction on an 18- to 20-story apartment house for mar- ri(ed students. The building will bhe ('ompleted in 1964. Payments in lieu of taxes are generally considered more favor- able to the taxpayer than full taxation in that taxes are based upon a "sliding scale," whereas payment amounts, once fixed, re- main constant. A1 · i. :'3 fl I ! 9 -L I L I i i11 I i II .i( h I II ,I II i rI f I I I I r- II L 7 i II R "B I i I I L.-l I I I I r demourbli-a a vu c I i- 5yrnpowulmVI~n eien House a tur ay

Transcript of 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be...

Page 1: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

High-school students see project M a tenants drop plansi esra~fIYC. fajorl te nan dro p ansJ _ . ,,~~~gn e -- + A s4 C fr er ^ 1II v

to rent in Technology Square

Gus-av rier'63 deonsraes curren work by elecrical engineer-Gustay Drier '63 demonstrates current work by electrical engineer-

ing students to high-school students and instructors at the Junior ScienceSymposium here last Thursday and Friday. Two hundred high-school stu-dents and instructors attended. -Photo by Stephen Bless

IBM and C-E-I-R will not occu-py space in 545 TechnologySquare at the present time. TheInternational Business MachinesCorporation had planned to occu-py Floors 2, 3, 4, and 5 of thenine-story building, and the Cor-poration for Economic and Indus-trial Research would have leasedFloors 8 and 9.

IBM has signed a lease for thefour floors with TechnologySquare's developer, a joint cor-poration of MIT and Cabot, Cabot& Forbes Co. Now, however, IBMis subleasing to other tenants.

MIT has temporarily moved itsAccounting Office to the secondfloor of the building. Other likelytenants for the IBM floors includea government agency and severalsmall cffices, according to Pay-son Hunter, manager of real es-

tate for IBM's Data ProcessingDivision.

'Internal reasons'IBM and C-E-I-R decided not

to occupy because of "internalreasons," said Robert Walker ofCabot, Cabot & Forbes Co. JamesMartin, financial manager ofC-E-I-R, said his firm canceled itsplans because "we could do bet-ter cost-wise." He also stated thatinternal reasons played a part inthe company decision.

Martin added that C-E-I-R hadconsidered canceling its occupan-cy plans last summer, but madethe final decision only a fewweeks ago. He said that C-E-I-Rconsiders Technology Square's lo-cation ideal.

A $15.7-million computer facili-ty had been planned for the build-ing by C-E-I-R-, an electronic

first in four yearsMIT will hold its first Open The budget for the Open House grams to be distributed to visi- Also, student guides will be on

House in four years this Satur- Committee is about $3000. This tors. Also, the committee is pur- hand to advise and assist.day, from noon to 5:00 pm. figure is approximately $1000 high-

More than 150 exhibits and dem- er than the original estimate, re-onstrations from academic de- ported Bob Blumberg '64, co-partments and research centers chairman of the committee.will be presented for public in- Of this budget, $2000 has been2 spection. allotted for printing of t

:isaelnthe pro-

/. / ?:: ? .{.: :;: . ...:: : :.Z:....}' * - - ?:

Open House SectionPages 9-14

.......- ..- "

DuPont gift endows professorshipA gift of $500,000 has been 1926 to 1940 and chairman of the

chasing 10,000 copies of this Refreshments will be served in

week's issue of The Tech for dis- specified locations. Ample free

tribution to the guests.

A large number of student ac-tivities will be represented.

Color-coded routes will guidevisitors through the buildings.Maps and brochures describingthe events and how to find themwill be available in Building 7.

parking will be available.

Through newspaper, radio, andtelevision publicity, MIT it ex-tending an invitation to the gen-eral public. Brief public-serviceannouncements have been sub-mitted to four Boston televisionstations for broadcast.

THE

data-processing firm. The facilitywould have included an IBM 7030STRETCH computer system, threeIBM 1401's, and an IBM 1410. Itwould have been the largest com-mercial data-processing system inexistence.

Tenants soughtTo fill the vacancies caused by

the decisions of IBM and C-E-I-R,Cabot, Cabot & Forbes Co. is

(Please h;riz lo page 2)

No Bexley applicationsshould be made now,says Dean Fassett

No applications should bemade for rooms in Bcxley Hallat this time, according to Deanof Residence F. G. Fassett Jr.

Af final arrangements cconcern-ing the availability of space inBexley have not yet been com-pleted, students should apply fordormitory rooms as if Bexleywere not available. All applicantswill receive assignments in thepresent four dormitories.

In a week or two Dean Fas-sett hopes to post informationconcerning applications for Bex-ley. He will then go through theapplications, attempting to ob-tain a cross section of classesand houses, and make assign-ments accordingly.

"Those who subsequently areassigned to Bexley Hall will ofcourse be released from prior as-signment to one of the houses,"explained Dean Fassett.

TECH.~made to endow a Lammot duPont Professorship of ChemicalEngineering.

The new professorship wasmade possible by contributionsfrom members of the family ofthe late Lammot du Pont, ofWilmington, Delaware, who diedin 1952.

After graduating from MIT in1901, he was president of E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co. from

Foreign opporfunitiei

Open meetiOverseas job opportunities,

! study fellowships, and graduatefield programs will be discussedat an open meeting at 5:00, Tues-

day, in the Kresge Little Theater.The leader of the discussion.

which wvill be open to all graduateand undergraduate students, willbe Prof. Kenneth R. Wadleigh,dean of student affairs.

Professor B. Alden ThresherWill speak on the Fullbright, Mar-shall, and olhler foreign fellow-ships. Professor W. Gilbert Strang'will disc'uss thel Rhodes Scholar-ship; s aid Prof(essor Dan Nyhardwill xpllaitn the Course-15 grad-

board until 1948.The Lammot du Pont Profess-

orship is the first fully endowedchair in the Department of Chem-ical Engineering, and one of eightsought by the Institute in the$66-million Second Century Pro-gram.

The David Flett du Pont Ath-letic Center was made possibleby a one-million-dollar bequest in1955 from a son of Lammot duPont.

ing TuesdayOffice, will speak on opportuni-ties for working overseas.

Paul Shapiro '63 will explainstudent activities in the field offoreign opportunities.

After the speeches, there willbe a question-and-answer periodand informal discussions with thespeakers.

'_ _'~'uuu'~-a~ I" - is At -T I-n 1881Esta6lished At MIT In 1881

Vol. 83, No. II Cambridge, Massachusetts, Wednesday, April 24, 1963 Five Cents

City policy may change

Cambridge ponders taxing married students' dormBy Bill Judnick

The Cambridge Board of Assess-ment is considering the alterna-tives of full taxation or paymentsin lieu of taxes for the marriedstudents' housing.

Should the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiatingthe apartments from housing forsingle students. Student dormi-tories are novw considered aca-demic property not subject totaxation.

Past Cambridge policy has per-mitted MIT to make payments inlieu of taxes on all but invesl-

ment properties. MIT's paymentshave often made the school thelargest taxpayer in Cambridgefor the past few years.

schools, both supported by taxrevenues, in no way justifies theirexemption from full taxation, hesaid.

Thomas F. Gibson, chairman of When asked if MIT had beenthe Cambridge Board of Assess- officially notified, Gibson replied,ment, stated Monday night thatNIIT officials had been notified inconferences that Cambridge wouldconsider the new ap)artmnents "ful-ly taxable, as any other income-producing property."''

"How official can you get?" andaffirmed that the city's positionhad been made clear to MIT of-ficials in their conferences withthe Board.

lie saw no reason why the city However, Institute Treasurershould "subsidize" the Awives andc'hildren of married students.Their use of public utilities and

Chi Phi takes Olympic Games trophy

Uale f('llowships in Africa. ....1The Inlter-Ameiican Program of

lhe Civil Engineering Deparl-ment : illhe explained by PrIofe!ssor

Fred Mc';a'ry. Mi'. Thomas Har-rngion, of th, Student I Placemennt

Exam schedules outAl stludents may obtain a final '-' .: I~

Vxaminalition sc(iedule at the In-fo(nmiationi Offi-e. Rootm 7-111. Fraternity men and their dates took part in Olympic Games at the opening of Interfraternity Confer--Mnl-s not listesd and (onflict s ence Weekend last Saturday afternoon on Briggs Field. Chi Phi, the winner of the competition, was awarded

in v('Xams mrust he re>por ted l a trophy by Dean of Residence Frederick H. Fassett at Saturday evening's dance in the armory. Second and'n ft he r(poI'd lo th(A third place finishers, Alpha Epsilon Pi and Alpha Tau Omega, received plaques.

*d'gistla';s Office( by Monday, At left, Phil Strause '65 AEPi, goes into the final lap of the tricyle race, which the AEPi's won. Atright, teams compete in the leap frog contest. Chi Phi won this event.

Joseph J. Snyder stated that heexpects official notification in theform of a "documented commu-nicatlion" during the coming year.

Other local universities areawaiting developments and theelffect these developmenls willhave on their own projects.

A precedenl was set in 1959,when Boston University com-men('(ed litigation over a proposedtax on their married student proj-ect. The controversy was settledout of ('ourt, in favor of paymentin lieu of taxes to the city ofBoston.

ItHarvard University is novw be-ginning conslruction on an 18- to20-story apartment house for mar-ri(ed students. The building willbhe ('ompleted in 1964.

Payments in lieu of taxes aregenerally considered more favor-able to the taxpayer than fulltaxation in that taxes are basedupon a "sliding scale," whereaspayment amounts, once fixed, re-main constant.

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Page 2: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

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Two companies swill not occupy Technology Sq. E

(Continued from Page 1) seeking new tenants for 545 Te4 nology Square. The tenants lpresent are the Institute of Na valStudies, the MIT Accounting Of fice, an MIT computer group,Grumman Aircraft EngineerijCorp., a Servend restaurant, a Larry's Barber Shop.

Technology Square, when corn. pleted, will be a $15-million uJdustrial research center composed of four buildings. Ground-breaking for the second building will takeEplace tomorrow.

This building is to be of te same design as the one alreadyconstructed. Nine stories in height and faced in walls of cast stone and gray glass, it will have155,000 square feet of floor space¢The ground floor will be available ifor commercial facilities, incl4j

ing banks, restaurants, and shops,

Two more buildings Two additional buildings are_

planned-a twenty-story tower and a two-story display center or ex.ecutive office building. In all, Technology Square is to have m800,000 feet of floor space.

The center is being built on a14-acre site. Five acres of this,Iknown as the Rogers Block, waspurchased from the Boston Rede_velopment Authority after tene. ments and other buildings on itfwere cleared.

The largest portion of the site-was purchased from Lever Broti. ers, whose buildings there wereobsolete and idle. The closing d ,streets within the project area imade possible the joining of thevarious parcels of land.

The property when developed1will be fully tax-paying.

· ~~~~~~In the original announcement of plans for Technology Square, ilr. jGerald W. Blakeley Jr., presidentEof Cabot, Cabot, & Forbes, com. mented, "Our firm . . . findslthat the m a j o r factor in tie choice of their location has been -proximity to MIT. Now throug¢this unique collaboration we willbe able to provide modern facili.ties directly adjacent to the lab_oratories, libraries, and other m_sources of MIT. Up until now it, has been necessary for companiesdesiring this association to locateas far as eighteen miles away.

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tics curriculum to prepare stu-dents to work in research. Thus,8.031 and 8.041 are taken in thesophomore year, and gas dynam-ics, rather than aerodynamics, isrequired in the junior year. Ad-vanced calculus and solid mech-anics similarly replace the ve-hicle structure courses of the En-gineering program.

Like the Engineering program,the Engineering- Science pro-gram is designed to serve as aterminal program. It is expected,however, that a rearrangement ofcourse content to permit asmooth transition into graduatework will be a common feature.

A special Honors Course forstudents in both programs is alsooffered by the department. Alimited number of students ofsuperior ability are invited by thedepartment to participate duringtheir junior year.

The program requires comple-tion of all units and humanitiesrequirements for the bachelor'sdegree and for either the mas-ter's degree or the degree of en-gineer in aeronautics and astro-nautics. Each student receiveshis master's and bachelor's de-gree simultaneously at the endof his fiffith year, and is requiredto do only one thesis.

The Department of Chemical involves one term of study at The Department of Aeronauticsand Astronautics will hold anorientation open house for fresh-men interested in Course 16 to-morrow at 4:00 pm in the DuPont Room, 33 - 207.

Aeronautics and Astronauticsdeal with the problems of man-ned and unmanned vehicles thatoperate above the earth's surface.Operation of aerospace systemsrequires solving the problems ofsupport, air resistance, propul-sion, strength of minimum weightstructures, control, and measure-ments under difficult environ-mental conditions.

It is the primary objective ofthe department to give a clearunderstanding of all these impor-tant problems.

Course 16 offers three programsof study. The Engineering pro-gram is aimed at students in-terested in-design; it terminatesin the bachelor's degree. Theemphasis in this program is onflight- vehicle engineering.

The second program, Engineer-ing- Science, is aimed at thosepreparing for graduate study.Less emphasis is placed on flightvehicles and more emphasis 0nexperimental projects.

This program also stresses anadvanced pyhsics and mathema-

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field stations in industry.The undergraduate subjects are

designed to provide basic studies.in physics and mathematics, amajor concentration in chemistry,and a strong core of chemical en-gineering. Considerable-latitude inarranging a selection of subjectsis available to each student sothat he may best fit his needsand develop his aptitudes.

A professional minor, in suchfields as humanities and industrialmanagement, is required. It maybe equivalent to as much as oneand a half terms of full study.The choice of a field is up to thestudent, but guidance is providedby faculty counselors.

In addition to the above pro-gram, the department offers aprogram in materials science andengineering. The degree require-ments are essentially the sameas those for chemical engineering.

Engineering will hold its orienta-tion open house for freshmen thisafternoon in the Walker Room,12-011, from 4:30 to 5:30.

The Department's main aim isto cultivate its students' capaci-ties for handling new problemswith competence, since the chem-ical engineer must be equippedto do more than handle presentproblems.

New areas in synthetic organ-ics, microbiology, pharmaceutic-als, plastics, petrochemicals, newmetals, and atomic energy all fallwithin his domain. The chemicalengineer must understand theprinciples involved in these newdevelopments and must be pre-pared to pioneer in unknownareas.

Two programs are offered lead-ing to either of two bachelor-of-science degrees: one in chemicalengineering and one in chemicalengineering practice. The latter

Crown Prince Johann-Adam,son of reigning Prince Franz-Joseph II of Liechtenstein, touredMIT last Wednesday afternoon.

Upon his arrival, the eighteen-year-old Hapsburg descendentspoke briefly with Malcolm G.Kispert, vice-president in chargeof academic administration, andthen toured the Computer Center.

During his visit, the prince ex-pressed an interest in the role ofgovernment in research and in-quired about the extent of stu-dent participation in government-sponsored research.

On a six-week trip through theUnited States, Prince Johann firstvisited his younger brother inTexas. Thursday he traveled toWashington to visit PresidentJohn F. Kennedy.

Currently studying in Switzer-land, the prince said that hewould like to come to the United

States and "perhaps attend Har-vard for a year."

Liechtenstein, with a populationof 17,000 and an area of some 61square miles, is the sole survivorof the 343 states which once madeup the Holy Roman Empire.

Display in Building 7 lobbyhas 3000 German books

Contemporary German books,reflecting the literary, artistic,and scientific activities in the Fed-eral Republic of Germany, areon display. in the main lobby ofBuilding 7. The exhibit openedApril 11 and will continue throughtomorrow.

The exhibition, organized bythe German Publishers' Associa-tion, is being presented in sixmajor United States cities. Morethan 3000 volumes are on display.

I. Witlh graduatioll conming up. lookslike we'll have to start thinkingal)mit the future.

My- phllilosopllhy is to livefrontm day to (day.

o. Thlat's fine when you have noresponsibilities. But halancesare you'll have a wife to thinkabout soon.

I may just decide to leadthl bachelor life.

3. Hardly- likely. sinlce 93 per celltof all men and womene get married.

Is that so'

4. Yes, indeed. What's more, you'llhave children to consider.

Maybe we wonut have any.

.5. I ioult that,-after all. 9) per(ent of the womeiil -who get marriedtidhty have (childreni. And!. on tilenx'eraige. they lanve all theirchlildren before tlhey 're t7.

All my life I've shlirkedlre.splolsibilit'. IlIVreil aalII.eijoy yourset lf--t Ihat's 1m1imtto. Now. ill tI do Ilnlil!tes.y(u've give1 m( .1 wifte an(d

wilo k;ows how many ('hildren

to t;lk (' are of. Whan.t.hi,,llhl I de,? \\Whenr lo, I iegiln?

6. First relax. Tllen, look into sonmegood insuralllce... like LiviNngI,)surrn.cc e from Eqluita;lll . Itgives tile kindo of p)rotectiollevery flmrily slhoulil(l Ilave. ilelpsyou sav\e for tile futlre. too.A\d d nlll't worrv y--()ur('han(e.s for a haplluy familylift are \very good(.

I slshuld n:ever .have ro()omedx: i t! a .lat i,ti 's rimo.

The one lotion that's cool, exciti - brisk as an ocean breeze l

The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates... gives you that great-tc to R talive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... . s',,, . , o10'and wins feminine approval every time., Old Spice After Shave Lotion,

zDa c~ () * ~1.25 and 2.00 plus tax. 5 H U LTON

- Mhe shave lotiOn men recommend to other men /

1Tie E(tuital]e ,if. :\s.suirac t.e Society of tihe Ullitedl States (D1963!hlome Office: f1285 \ve'clue of tl(. Aml('ic;a%, N('. w' Y)rk I ), N.,\e Y(ork

For i::f()]rnaticmn ab)m)it Liviit Itinnurl¢.S(-, T](' . a rom P lJquitalblt. ill vyourcommunitv. For ifm'maltion albot career Oplortulitics at Equitabhl, .se(

your Plheuact ()Ofietar. ur write William E. Bhlevils, lx ntilylme-nl(Xst Mlanaiger.

lb

Last two departments hold freshman open housesChemical Engineering Aeronautics and Astronautics

Liechtenstein crown prince visits campus

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Page 3: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

The 1963 Alpha Phi Omega Spring Carnival will

S begin at 7:30 Saturday night in Rockwell Cage.

Voting for.the Carnival Queen is being con-

t ducted this week at the Carnival booth in the

'' lobby of Building 10. Dean of Residence Frederick

- G. Fassett Jr. will crown the winning contestantl at the carnival.

The carnival this year will have a record num-.ber of booths. The dunking, hamster-race, and

Cost $6 m

FOR SALE: NEW Fisher x 100 Lab i>§ stereo amplifier and Dynakit 70-Wzwatt stereo with preamnps. Call SvrlrsSeerl es

i' Larry Erdmann, 491 2569 or ext.i 2869. tors from he I

Force and DeN LARGE HOUSE for renf near Hat- fense will partic

vard Sq. Perfect for student co-operative club; sleeps 15f nine bed- cation of the no

-2 rooms, 2 baths, large kitchen, liv- lar National MP ing room, basement; only $300 per next Tuesday.;. month, available after June 15; ex- The new labcAl tremely convenient, pleasant loca-

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over $30. Also used i7 in. PhilcoTV, $25. Call Jeff Race. ELiot 4-2926.

A CROSS COUNTRY TRIP - 6-8weeks - camp along the way. If

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SPACIOUS, low-priced 5 room apt.to let June I-Aug. 30. Perfect for

3 6 persons, 629 Commonwealth.one block from Kenmore Sq. CallH. Ellis, x-3205 or 267-7670.

1960 SIMCA ARONDE, 4 door. ra-dio, el. fuel pump, $500-best

offer. Weekdays 6-9 p.m., weekendmornings 262-9468 or 267-7829.

WANTED TO RENT - MIT Gradwishes to sublet furnished bach-

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Morrowfield St.. Pittsburgh i7, Pa.WIl, consider Back Bay, Brookline,AlIston, perhaps Cambridge. I g r, Ir I'L--- --- ·---- ---- ---- --- I -- -. 1

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The annual Awards Convocationand the ground-breaking ceremonyfor the new Student Center willtake place as a combined exer-cise May 15 in front of KresgeAuditorium.

Classes will be cancelled from11: 00 am to noon for the hour-long program.

Public presentation of sixawards will be omitted this year-to allow time for the ground-breaking. These are the six pure-ly academic awards.

According to a tentative sched-ule, the Awards Convocation willbe opened by Jerry Luebbers '64,Undergraduate Association presi-dent.

He will be followed by Prof.Ross Smith, director of athletics,who will present the CliffordAward to the outstanding athleteof the year. The CochraneAward will be presented for ath-letic excellence and sportsman-ship.

|There will follow a combinedpresentation of the Athletic As-sociation Awards-Beaver KeyTrophy and Q-Club Award.

Baton Society will then presentits awards to seniors making not-able contributions to music at-MIT. Tau Beta Pi's OutstandingFreshman Award is scheduled to-be followed by the Scott PaperFoundation Award given to thejunior showing high characterand community consciousness.

The final awards will be theKarl Taylor Compton Prizes giv-en to persons promoting high

standards of achievement andgood citizenship in the eMIT corn-munity. The presentation will bemade by Mrs. Karl Taylor Compton, who will be introduced byKenneth R. Wadleigh, dean ofstudent aftirs.

The assembled group will thenmove to the northwest corner ofKresge Plaza, midway betweenthe auditorium and the Du PontAthletic Center, for rthe ground-breaking ceremonies.

President Julius A. Strattonwill make a few opening re-marks, followed by an introduc-tion by Dean Wadleigh of honoredguests who have worked for thenew Student Center.

Henry Bowman '63 will speakbriefly and then proceed to ajoint ground-breaking with Dr.Stratton. Dean Robert J. Holdenwill close the convocation.

Donna Klimoski, NewEngland Conservatory ofMusic, is the date ofJohn W. Miller '64.

Arlene Rifkin, BostonUniversity, is the date ofFred Tawfik '64.

Marcia Wegner, Sim-mons College, is thedate of John Eulenberg'64.

Carol Morse, BostonUniversity, is the dateof Stuart Madnick '66.

Carolyn Mullin, Whea-ton College, is the dateof Carl Mampaey '64.

Donna Eastman, Editorat Little, Brown, andCo., is the date of Jif7Well '65.

car-wreckinig booths, which were events at lastye.r's carnival, will appear again this year, alongwith sfrengfih-tester devices and other new com-petitions.

APO will award four trophies: a grand prizefor the most successful booth, a trophy for themost original booth, the queen trophy, and aseccnd-place trophy.

The proceeds from the carnival will be usedby APO for its service projects.

will generate intense fields foruse in research. Of particularinterest to current researchersis the effect of these fields onruclear, atomic, and molecularstructures and on the propertiesof materials.

The dedication-day prog amwill include guided tours of thelaboratory starting at 1:30 pm,dedication ceremonies at 4:rO inthe laboratory's large motor-generator hall, and a dinner atale Faculty Clllb in the evening.

Among those who have accepted invitations to be present atthe dedication is Endicott Pea-body, governor of Massachusetts.

The laboratory is at 170 AlbaniaStreet in Cambridge.

Arch administra-United States Airlpartment of De-cipate in the dedi-tew six-milliondol-lagnet Laboratory

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1951 Cadillac Reductions on Quantity OrdersBy The SR. HOUSE COMMITTEE

Ambulance -$ 0or highest bid by April 28.

Call Harry Baya, Theta Delta ChiEL 4-4694, or Institute ext. 3227

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Page 4: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

To prevent this:

-Photos by Joseph Baron

We suggest this:

A traffic islandHardly a week goes by without a col-

lision at the Massachusetts Avenue-Memorial Drive intersection. All of thecollisions are expensive, and often peopleare injured. Most of the mishaps involveleft-turning vehicles.

To prevent these accidents we sug-gest that a traffic island be built acrossthe intersection. It would run along thecenter of Massachusetts Avenue fromthe bridge to the bus stop, and wouldprevent all left turns and conflicting traf-fic moves. It should also speed up trafficflow and reduce peak-hour congestion.

White tie and tailsEach year the Walker Student Staff

works long and hard to finance andprepare a formal dance which it givesfor the Institute Community-the As-semblies Ball. Few people are aware ofthe several thousands of hours of effortthat made A-Ball a memorable eveningfor over 350 couples Friday night. MITis almost unique among American uni-versities in having an annual white-tieformal affair.

TWHEJECH-' h a

Vol. LXXXIII No. I I Apr. 24, 1963BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman ............................ Tobias Zidle '63Managing Editor ............... David Trevvett-'65Editor ................... Jason Fane '64Business Manager .............. Howard Brauer'65News Editor ................... Howard Ellis'65Features Editor .......... Richard Schmalensee '65Sports Editor ................. Clifford Weinstein '65Photography Editor ................ Joseph Baron '66Entertainment Editor .............. Mona Dickson'66Advertising Manager .......... Bernard Yaged '64

Associate Managing Editor ....... Linda Rollin '64Associate Editor . ........ Ronald Frashure '64Associate Sports Editor . ...... John Reinties '66Associate Photography Editors . Maxim Smith '64

Conrad Grundlehner '64Copy Editor . . Lyall Morrill '66Controller . ........... Kenneth Grace '63Treasurer . Malcolm Wheeler '66Circulation Manager..... Kenneth Browning '66Typographic Consultant . . Joseh Hanlon '63

News Staff ... Alan Rinsky '64. Alan Weinstein '64Chris Blum, Donald Goldstein '65

Stephen Katzberg '65, Ronald Lundquist '66Gary Spittal '66. Joseph Sullivan '66

David Vanderwerf '66Features Staff .. Clare Fetrow '63, Barbara Cohen '64

Steven Lipner'65, George McQuiiken '65Susan Hemrley '66, John Montanus '66

Anthony Pappas 66. Richard Russell '66Eugene Sherman '66, Michael Shorenstein'66

Edward Steinberg '66, Jeffrey Trimmer '66James Veilleux'66

Sports Staff James Taylor '63. John Eck '64Christopher Miller 64. David Schlossberg '64

Donald Siefkes '64, Richard Minnick '65Ted Young '65. Robert Frommer '66

Robert MacDonald '66. Michael Newhouse '66John Rible '66

Photography Staff Ralph Grabowski '63Harold luzzolino '64, Sanford Libman '65

Arthur Sindoris'65, Saul Mooallemr'66William Park'66, Stephen Teicher'66

John Eulenberg'64, John Torode66Photographic Consultants . . . Boyd Es us '63

Curtis Wiler '63Reviewers Paul Zakrzewski, David Johnson '63

Lawrence Stark, Gilberto Perez-Guillermo '64Business Staff Robert Lurie'66. Henry Perritt'66

Ernest Cataldo'66

Second-class postage paid at Boston. Massachusetts.The Tech is published every Wednesday during thecollege year. except during college vacations, by TheTech, Walker Memorial (Room 50-211. 142 MemorialDrive, Cambridge 39. Massachusetts. Telephones:TRowbridge 6-5855: Trowbridge 6-5856: UNiversity4-6900, extension 2731. United States mail subscriptions$2.75 for one year. $4.25 for two years.

II a - _ , I

Change at MITTo carry out MIT's mission of edu-

cating for leadership, this universitymust be a dynamic enterprise, with lit-tle sentiment for the past. Change is onedominant aspect of MIT.

Three major areas of change plannedby MIT concern education, research, anduniversity environment.

Education. Professional scientific ed-ucation is made complicated by the grow-ing mass of information in all fields. Itis essential to teach the new concepts.However, students would be o v e r-whelmed if new material were simplyadded to the old. New teaching tech-niques are needed. Three recent develop-ments at MIT are:

1. Teaching by computers. Manage-ment games, political games, and struct-ural models analyzed by computers giveinstant evaluations of the student's de-cisions.

2. Home laboratorykits. Each student is given Newequipment to conduct ex-periments outside the lab- teachingoratory. He is allowed to techniquesdo as many experiments ashe likes.

3. Freshman seminars. Small groupsof freshmen meet for several hours eachweek with a faculty expert and conductindividual research projects.

Each of these techniques is designedto give students quickly the kind of in-tuitive insight that usually comes slow-ly from experience.

Research. To create new facilities forresearch, MIT is building five interde-partmental centers: Aeronautics and As-tronautics, Communication Sciences,Earth Sciences, Life Sciences, and Ma-terials Science and Engineering. Thenew centers will permit closer coordina-tion of research in overlapping fields.

The Green Center for the Earth Sci-ences, a 20-story building, is now risingon the East Campus. Construction of theother four centers will soon begin.

Environment. One of the importanttrends at the Institute is the growth ofthe non-academic environment. Under-graduates have first priority on the useof the recently built Kresge Auditorium.The chapel, Du Pont Athletic Center,and the forthcoming Student Center areother facilities to improve the campusenvironment.

On-campus housing is also expandingin quantity, quality, and variety ofgroups served. Apartments for marriedstudents and the women's dormitory areunder construction, and additional spacefor several hundred men is expectedshortly.

During the past centu-Cosmopolitanry, MIT, formerly a local

technical school with allstudents commuting, has

LllV evolved into a residenceuniversity. Last year's stu-

dents came from 49 states, and 13 per-Dent of the student body comes from 75other nations. The student body today isthe most cosmopolitan in the UnitedStates.

This university's increasing contribu-tion to the Boston-area economy is an-other significant trend. Route 128, orElectronics Row, is lined with space-agefirms attracted by proximity to MIT.Over 120 Massachusetts firms have beenfounded by Institute graduates.

An extraordinarily high rate ofchange is the dominant fact of this cen-tury. The Institute's willingness tochange is in step with the times. ButMIT is holding fast to one central goalin this era of change.

As President Julius A. Stratton says,this goal is "to send forth men and wom-en of the highest professional compe-tence, with the breadth of learning, theunderstanding, and the character to dealwith the increasingly complex problemsof this modern technological society."

In planning for next year, thequestion of a second weekend hascome up again. It is a personalbelief that there is not a satura-tion phenomenon at work-thereis a market for a spring-termweekend at MIT. Alpha Phr Ome-ga has come up with a very in-teresting proposal which may of-fer the variety needed for a suc-cessful social function.

They have proposed a weekendin conjunction with their annualcarnival, and have volunteeredtheir service in running it.

For Friday night, the tentativeschedule includes a dance. Satur-day events would be informalliving-group participation in build-ing competitive "super-carnival"booths during the morning; top-name entertainment in the after-noon; and the carnival, possiblywith a rock-and-roll band, Satur-day night.

The living-group competition forcarnival prizes would add neededenthusiasm.

In conjunction with the plamingof social weekends, several pertnent questions arise:

(1) What time of year?(2) Should the dance Friday

night be formal or informal?(3) Should the dance be held

on campus or at a country clubor Boston hotel?

(4) What type of entertairment?(5) Should there be a name

band Friday night or a top en.tertaining group Saturday after.noon?

(6) What special events shouidbe included (such as a boat ex-cursion, a sports day, a beach'picnic on Saturday)?

Answers to these questions willbe sought in a meeting of socialchadmirmen some time in the nexttwo weeks.

In order that your chairmanmay 'be well informed, how aboutstopping him in the hall, cor.raling him at dinner, or pound.ing on his door and filling hJnin on your ideas?

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NORTH-SOUTH were vulnera-ble at match points. West dealt.WEST NORTH EAST SOUTHPass Pass 4# 445+ 54 AI., PASS

West led the four of diamonds.Duplicate bridge players often

with seeming abandon make bidsand plays that a conservativelyorientated rubber bridge playerwould never think of making.

Today's East player took a veryaggressive four-diamond bid inthird seat after two passes. Sincehis hand contained at least sev-en losers by itself, he risked aseven hundred-point set. As thecards lay, he was down five hun-dred points, doubled at four dia-monds, but since North-Southcould make four spades for ascore of six hundred twenty, itwas a good result.

South next took an even moreaggressive bid. Four spades couldeasily be set eleven hundredpoints. But as the cards lie, Southcould make four spades. It wouldhave been better technique how-ever, for South to pass. Northwould then have balanced dou-

ble, giving South the opportunityto show his spades.

West next bid five diamonds,hoping that four spades wouldmake and that five diamondswould be off three tricks. Northprobably should have doubled,but he, too, chose the aggressivepath and bid five spades, wherethe auction ended.

West opened the four of dia-monds, East winning with theace and continuing the suit, Southruffing. South drove out the aceof trumps, and pulled the remain-ing defender's trumps.

South now needed the balanceof the tricks, but was faced witha club and a heart loser. He nowinvoked the basic theorem of du-plicate bridge: When playing inan unusual contract, if there isonly one distribution of cardswhich will permit the contract tobe fulfilled, you must play for it.

South therefore led a smallheart, and when West played low,inserted the ten from dummy,which won the trick. If Westsplits his honors, South wins, andplay proceeds similarly. Southnext led the queen of clubs, fol-lowed by a small club to his handwhere he cashed the Ace andKing. South now had broughtabout this position:

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Page 5: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

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year, are swamped by their tech-nical flawvs.

Impressive heightsBut there are many productions

each year that rise above theirphysical problems to quite im-pressive heights. The dining hallof the new wing of Quincy Househas seen two impressive produc-tions of Shakespeare: 'Romeo andJuliet' last year, and 'RichardIII' last semester. Both produc-tions were excellent technically.'Richard III' was one of the bestproductions at Harvard this year,and many people found it muchmore impressive than Olivier's in-terpretation. Winthrop House,which does several productionseach year, just finished a shortrun of 'Where's Charley?,' one ina series of quite successful musi-cal comedies which have ap-peared in their dining hall.

'Babel' now plaingCharacteristics of the house

show, which is often an originalplay or musical written by resi-rents of the house, is 'Babel.'This original play with music,written by Harvard students, willplay at Lowell House April todaythrough Saturday, with two shows(7:30 and 9:30) Saturday. Manynew works by students see firstproduction as house shows. Mostnotable was 'Sing, Muse!'-a mu-sical based. on the Iliad, whichwent from Harvard to an off-Broadway theatre where itmade its author, Eric Siegal, acomfortable profit. Arthur Kop-it's early one-act plays were alsofirst seen as house productions.

At term's endThe only other production so

far announced is the Eliot Houseproduction of 'Measure for Meas.ure,' scheduled for May 24 and9-12. But the year is young. Mosthouses take advantage of thelengthy schedule, and work for anentire semester on one show.Thus, they all seem to get intoproduction near the end of thesemester, about reading-period.Last year Harvard houses mount-ed five productions in the sameweek, making things difficult forthe determined theatre-goer. De-spite the hyper-activity at Loeband Agassiz this season, you canbe sure that in the comingmonths the houses will be equallyprolific.

By Charles Foster Ford

With the Loeb Drama Centerand Agassiz Theatre on both sidesof Brattle Street, perhaps you'dthink the Harvard theatrical com-munitY would be brimming overwith time and space for their ac-tivities. But no; not content withthese facilities, the dramaticallyinclined at Harvard every semes-ter mount several productions intheir dormitories themselves.

The "houses of Harvard," asthey are called, almost all havedrama societies to which the en-

t tire house can devote time andtalent. Often, one of these housesocieties will act as the producinggroup for a show mounted at Loebor at Agassiz. More often, how-ever, they produce the show en-tirely themselves, on temporarystages erected in dining halls orcommon rooms.

Excellent theatreSome of the finest theatre at

Harvard is produced in the hous-es. This is partly because thereis a lot of team spirit involvedin producing a show in a diningroom, and partly because thewhole student community of thehouse acts as a work force whichcan be pressed into service when-ever needed.

Unlike workers at the Loeb orAgassiz, they can work aroundthe clock if necessary to iron outtechnical problems. Also, sincemost houses do only one show ayear or one a semester, theirwork schedules are usually muchlonger than those in the busy the-atres.

Technical challengesThe house show itself presents

many challenges to technicalcrews that would never occur intheatres. There is never any fly-space for storing sets, and noarchitectural provisions for light-ing equipment. Except in a fewhouses where permanent sectionsof stage have been constructedand stored, everything must bebuilt from scratch.

Some shows can take advantageof their technical difficulties, aslast year's production of 'On TheTown' did by restricting sets to aminimum of sketchy signs andprops. Others, like 'The CountryWife' in Winthrop House last

Work of MIT artistswill be shown by TEN

An Art Show and Sale, spon-sored by the Tech EngineeringNews, will open Friday to runfor two days.

The exhibition, to be held inthe lobby of Building 10 from 9:00am to 5:00 pm, will include paint-ings, drawings, and sculpturesubmitted by students, alumni,and employees at MIT.

The show will give aspiring art-ists the chance to have a publicviewing of their works and willalso allow the public to purchaseoriginal art work at a relativelylowv price.

Prices will be set by the contrib-uting artists. Profits from sales"ill go to the artists, with a five-per cent commission being re-tained by TEN to cover exhibitionexpenses.

Art works eligible for the showill be accepted at the Architec-

ture Department headquartersuntil tomorrow..- ..... __

By David E. TrewettThe combining of the Boston

Dance Theater and the MITSymphony Orchestra to present aprogram of three ballets lastweekend was a truly significantoccasion. It represented the intro-duction of a new level of art andentertainment into the MIT spec-trum.

Overall, the evening was a greatsuccess. The greatest shortcomingof the dancers was a lack ofprecision and coordination. Onefrequently felt that their actionsshould be together, although theyobviously weren't.

The evening opened with theclassical ballet 'The Seasons,' tothe music of Glazounov. This per-formance was easily the weakestof the three. The choreography byRuth Ambrose, though brilliant insome places, lagged miserably inmany others.

Missing in many places was arapport between orchestra anddancers. Although together intiming, they were frequentlywidely separated in mood. Theorchestra showed a wide rangeof emotion, but the dancersseemed unable to capture thespirit of the moment.

The highlight of the ballet wasthe 'Summer' pas de deux byEllen Wollenhaupt and BostonConservatory faculty memberWilliam Costanza. There wereprecision, grace and finesse intheir dancing; and from an artis-tic as well as a technical stand-point, there was little left to bedesired in their portrayal.

Next on the program was'Roots of Sand.' A woman who

lives in memory of'a youthfullove affair awaits, and is thenconfronted with, her former lov-er. Confused, bewildered, she sud-denly relives in a dream sequenceboth the affair and the tormentwhich followed. Realizing thatwhat she loved in the boy is nolonger present in the man, shecan return to reality, enjoy afew moments of gaiety, and thenin confidence turn away.

Gerry Siddons did a remark-able job with the score. Therewas drama, gaiety, tragedy, com-edy, everything necessary for thecontrasting moods and themes ofthe ballet. The choreography ofRobert Gilman, of the BostonConservatory faculty, captured al-most everything desirable.

The dancers in this ballet wereexcellent. Sally Lee, who dancedthe lead, gave a performance be-yond superlatives. Costanza, a,the returned lover, was again su-perb. The entrance into thedream sequence was a master-piece of choreography and light-ing, as both scene and costumechanges for the two leads wereskillfully blended into the dancing,actually adding to, rather thandetracting from, the total effect.

Lighting during the dream se-quence was quite effective, anddancing was truly professional.In the scene following the relivingof the love affair, for example,Puritan figures close in on MissLee from all sides and grotesqueforms appear from every shad-ow, relentlessly accusing her. Aslights rapidly change color andthe music grows louder and fast-er, she races frantically around

MIT SYMPHONTY ORCHESTRA.John Corley, conducting, withthe BOSTON' DANCE THEA-TER: A ballet program. pre-sented in Xresge, April 19, 20,and 21, by the Baton Society.Lighting by Robert Mackey;stage manager, David O'Con-nell.

PROGRAM'The Seasons'

Music by Alexander GlazounovChoreography by Alexander Gla-

zounovChoreography by Ruth AmbroseCostumes by Ruth Ambrose and

Sally LeeSet by Katrine Hooper

'Roots of Sand'Music by Gerald SiddonsChoreography by Robert GilmanCostumes -by Sally Lee and Den-

nis RagerSets by Eric Levenson

'The Incredible Flutist'Music by Walter PistonDance play by Jan VeenCostumes and set by Marco

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the stage, unable to escape. Acrash, and sudden quiet, thedream has ended. This scene,powerful in its effect, was thehigh point of the ballet, if not ofthe entire evening.

Most satisfying in this balletwas the fact that the orchestraand dancers seemed to jell, work-ing as a unit. The harmony ofmood which had been lacking inthe Glazounov was here quite ap-parent and most effective.

The final ballet on the programwas a revival of Piston's 'The In-credible Flutist,' a comic piecewith some loud, boisterous music.The town is shown as siesta comesto an end, and the townspeopledrift (or bound) onto the stage.A circus _arrives with its manyattractions, interrupting the pro-ceedings. The flutist and one ofthe merchant's daughters arrangeto meet at 8:00 that night.

They meet, as do the mer-chant's three other daughters andtheir respective lovers. The mer-chant himself has a rendezvouswith the rich widow, who yieldsto his wooing..They embrace, butare discovered; she swoons. Theflutist awakes her with his flute,and all the circus and towns-people join together for a happyand colorful finale.

The troupe caught the mood ofthe piece very well. Costanzascored again as the flutist, un-questionably walking off with thegreatest laurels for the evening.Reeva Gibley as the widow, Car-ole Ann Pastore as the merchant'sdaughter, and many others gaveoutstanding performances.

One disappointing feature of theevening was the lighting, whichofter failed to fit in with thescene being portrayed on stage.The opening of 'Roots of Sand'provides a g,-A example: Thescene is a roadhouse. The or-chestra wails a weary blues tuneas the town drunk sways backand forth in front of the bar.What lighting is used? A harsh,bright yellow spot, totally out ofkeeping with the mood.

All in all, however, the eveningwas a triumph for all those par-ticipating, and pure enjoymentfor the audience. We can orlyhope that we'll see more produc-tions of this nature in the future.

e AS LITTLE AS$10 DOWN

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Harvard houres" theater groups m music at minit. ato present several productions Kresge balIet

I~~~~~~~~Kecebleproves mixed success

Northeastern management lectures to start Mon.'The Management of Scientists,' a series of six lectures spon-

sored by Northeastern University, will begin Monday at 8:3G in theUniversity's Alumni Auditoriurn.

Dr. Everett Mendelschn, assistant professor of the history ofscience at Harvard, will begin the series with a lecture entitled 'TheChanging Role of Science in Government, Industry, and the Uni-versity.'

Subsequent lectures will be given by Dr. Royden Sanders, presi-dent of Sanders Associates; Dr. Norman Kaplan, associate professorof sociology at the University of Pennsylvania; Dr. Anne Roe, lec-turer in education and research associate at Harvard; Dr. HerbertShepard, professor of behavioral science at Case Institute of Tech-nology; and Dr. Albert Siepert, deputy director, Launch OperationsCenter, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Cape Can-averal.

:- ARE YOU ASTRAPHANGER?

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Page 6: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

Prof. William L. LangerHarvard University

The Black Death and Nuclear War'Some implications of the Great Plagues

for modern warfareTUESDAY, APRIL 30Jimmy Fund Auditorium :3TUESA0 .APRmL30

35 Binney St., Boston Admission free

Sponsored by Physicians for Social Responsibility

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'Here Today'Yacting. The author fights themzevery line of the way, but thek .attempt is admirable. True, Richard Kendrick as the 'intellec. Etual companion', Stanley Dale,delivers his many punch-lines as Mthough he thought -they were straight-lines, but then theysound as though they.were meantto be straight-lines anyway, and perhaps he has given up trying. _

As the novelist Philip Graves, Peter Hobbs tries often te be a dry, urbant, spectator type of _wit, in on many of the ioltk, and able to enjoy them. He some -times enjoys himself more than the audience. His is perhapsthe smost ennobling struggle, for the playwright gives him no aide at _ai. -_

Much more satisfying is the work of Estelle Winwood, playing Ethe Bostonian dowager, Mrs. ,Windrew. She has filled this E-theatrical vacuity with voice _tricks, with grimaces, with pau. ses and 'takes' which come clos- est to being the only plausiblecharacterization all evening.

But Athe star is, of course, Tal. Ilulah. In that last act and a Mquarter, it is her timing of even the most inane lines which move the show along, just as in the first act it is her indifferent play. =

ing which palls. For, after all, _Miss Bankhead is here playing an old familiar role, one she createM in innumerable interviews and 'public appearances: The role of Tallulah Bankhead.

0

Center seeks new way ito teach college physics

The Science Teaching Center is -attempting to evolve a new pat _tern for teaching college physics.

Dr. Nathaniel H. Frank, profes.sor of physics and a member of ithe center, emphasizes that the significance of whole areas of Iclassical physics has been changed when judged in the light of modern physical principles.

Dr. Frank states: "Any really -significant change in the struc.-ture of college-level physics teach. -ing must break entirely awayfrom classical and traditional iforms."

A new approach in the class Iroom, based on the picture of thephysical world as drawn by mod '

ern physics, is needed. "It is nec -essary" says Frank, from time to

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This week the EntertainmeytDepartment argued about wheth-er to send me to the opening ofTallulah Bankhead's new vehi-cle, 'Here Today,' or to Ithe dressrehearsal of 'The Braggart War-rior,' by Plautus, at the LobDrama Center. I lost. The an-cient Roman play may not havebeen much funnier than Tallu-lah's, but it was probably newer.

We have here a noveliSt, whohas suddenly fallen in love withthe bright young daughter of anOld B=._-,cn Family. She loveshim, but she is engaged to aHarvard Business School type,and her M'ma just wculd not un-derstand. (If you hear echoescf 'The Philadelphia Story', for-get them. They're there, butthey're awfully tired.).

Then we have the novelist'sfirst wife, and her drinking part-ner and collaborator in writingplays. ("You are my intellectualcompanion, darling. I like totalk to you.") They barge intothis vacationing clan of puritani-cal Bostonians, and by actingvery, Vcry New York throw ev-crytc:ly into a tizzy. They queer'the noveli:t's reputation as agcn'leman; then they ccntrive tcb!a:;kcn1 the fiancee reputation in

.c: tc fix things; -and Tlhen'ey- . . .

EBu' that would spcil things.(Ix you are reminded of 'TheMan Who Came to Dinner,' for-

HERE TODAY, by George Oppen-heimer, staged by ThomnasBlock, designed by Scenic Back-

_griunds, Inc., associate -produ-cer ·Eleanor Peters, produced byThomas Brock and Robert Car-son.

Cast:Jeffrey Windrew .. Jimmy O'HayesGertrubde -....... Isabell SandfordPhilip Graves ...... Peter HobbsClaire Windrew Patience ClevelandMrs. Windrew .. Estelle WinwoodStanley Dale .. Richard KendrickMary Hilliard..Tallulah BankheadSpencer Grant .... John Granger

get it. George Oppenheimer i.net another Kaufman nor a Hart,and no matter what she soundslike, Tallulah is nat another Mon-ty Wccley.)

There is, I must admit, a goodact and a quarter bire, thoughsince they are the final act anda quarter, it is doubtful if manypeople will stay long enough tosee them. (Tqallulah fans antiiheatregoers over furh:y are ex-cepted, of course.) Until Tallu'decides to forge an inscription inan insurance textbook, ,to queerthe engagement, everything isturgid and tired. After thatpoint, there is a snap and abrightness to the dialogue, andv-igor in its delivery. Those whogo at all should resolve to stayto the end of Act Two, no mat-ter what embarrassing foolish-ness they must endure until then.

There are a few people onstagewho try bravely to give this tiredold situation some sincere comic

time to re-examine traditional pat- terns of teaching to avoid dilut .ing the contest by simply adding new material."

The methods necessary to keep !college physics up to date withcontemporary research developments are of concern to the groupat the center. "What is import-ant," Dr. Frank states, "is thecontinuing injection of new prin-ciples and patterns of thouht,rather than an attempt to followshort-term contributions from research. On this basis, the timelag should be no longer than thetime it takes for the universalacceptance in the profession ofsuch new principles and patternsof thought."

The center has already produced several films, two of whichpertain to relativity, and a num'ber of experiments. These filmsand experiments, because of theirbasic nature, are expected to beuseful regardless of the Enacourse forms which evolve. In ad-dition, preliminary written mater-ial, some of which was used inconnection with a freshman seon-inar last semester, {has been Prepared.

The Science Teaching Center,was established at ,MIT in 1960under the directorship of FrandsL. 'Friedman, professor of physicswho died last August. Its presentdirector is Prof. Jerrold R. Zach-

T~e oe .. W r419S ! A Sataste of Springtime...so soft and refreshing. Puff after puff... pack after pack...Salem smokes fresh and flavorful every time. Smoke refreshed... smoke Salem!

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Page 7: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

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Clark Kerr to speakfor Godkin Lectures

Harvard's annual Godkin Lec-tures will be given today and to-morrow at 8:00 in the SandersTheater, Cambridge.

Clark Kerr, president of theUniversity of California, willspeak on 'The Use of the Uni-versity.' His topics will be: to-night, 'The Realities of the Fed-eral Grant University;' tomorrow,'The Future of the City of theIntellect.'

The Godkin Lectures werefounded at Harvard in 1903 inmemory of E. L. Godkin, theBritish-American journalist whofounded The Nation. The lecturesdiscuss aspects of 'The Essentialsof Free Government and theDuties of the Citizen.' ,l

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f~ England Consersatsry - piano·enrmble, Jordan Hall, S:30, April24' Bach Sonata in G major, Cou-

-n.'s 'Deux Musetes,' Brahm'soarations on a Theme of Haydn,'scbapero's Sonata; free.irarm .akea,--Kresge Audtlorium,.:30, April 27- $2.50, '$2.'75, s3.00.

Frmeia Taglisvini - tenor, April 24,F:c30, Harvard Square Theatre; $5.00,s .oo00, 3.00.

Ie~ England ('Inservatory Symphonyorchestra - Jordan Hall, April 25.

-30' 'Night Music' by George Roch-berg, 'Catacoustical Measures' byDaniel Pinkham, Strauss's 'Le Bour-geois Gentilhomme Suite,' Ravel's'La Valse,' Men.lelssohn's 'Overtureto the Fairy Tale of the BeautifuiNIelusina.'

Patrick O'ilagan - tenor, April 26,Symrnphony Hall; S4.50, S3.50, $2.50.

The Limelighter. -- April 27. Syrn-phony Hall; S4.75, $3.75, 52.75.

S,, E;ngland Chamber Players-April2h, Jordan Hall, 3:00; SchubertSymphony in B-flat major, Schumann'Deux pieces en form de Canon,'Pierne's 'Pastorale.'

Gardner Museum - Infger Wikstrom,pianist, April 2., 3:00; works ofGneg, Nielsen, SchuBbert.

('t(ic Symlphony Orchestra, of 11ston--

Cage, 7:30-12:00, free admission.NEXT WEEK

kMUSICNew Erngland ('onservatorT - Reginalld

Hachey and Roland Nadeau, pianists,Jordan Hall, May 1, 8:30; Saeger'sToccata and Fugue for Two Pianos,Poulenc's Sonata for Two Pianos,Baoh's Concerto in F minor anklConcerto in C minor for Two Pianos;free.

Ray ('hares - Donnelly Memorial,iMay 4. 8:00, 10:30; $2.50, $3.00,S4.00, $5.00.

Gardner Museum - New England Con-servatory Tour Chorus, May 5, 3:00.

Eofs-on Y'outh S3nlphony Orchestra -May 5, 3:00, Jordan Hall; Mozart'sPiano Concerto in C Minor, andClarinet Concerto in A Major, Ros-sini's Overture to 'La Gazza Ladra,'Bruckner's Symphony in E-flat Ma-jor, Goodman's Canon for Percus-sion, Rimsky Korsakov's 'CapriccioEspagnol.'

'Tech Night at the 1'op.' - May 5,Symphony Hall. S8:3/.

LE(URIFS*The i'ortable Nash' - Ogden Nash,

Kresge Auditorium, May 1, S:00.'The Mlanagement of (Scientists' -

Northeastern University, Alumni Au-ditoriumn, .:30; May 2, Dr. RoydenaSanders, 'Interface Problems Be-tween Scntists and Others in Tech-nically Oriented Companies,' May 6,Dr. Norman Kaplan, 'OrganizationWill it Choke or Promote the Growthof Scientists?'

C'layton Lectunres - Tufts University,:May 1, Cohen Auditorium, X:30, J.William Fullbright, 'The AmericanAgenda.'

Ford Hall Forum - May [, JordanHall, s:00, Prof. H. Stuart Hughes,'The Politics of Peace.'

3 ISCELLAN EOU S,International Student Atsoclation -

Fun Fair, May 4, noon to midnight.

S M T W T F24 25 26

28 29 30 1 2 35 6 7

aldine Page, Ed Begley. Based onTennessee Williams' successful Broad-way play about an aging actresswho falls In love with a young manand the complications that arisewhen he falls Ln love with a young-er woma..

LECTURES(Godkin lectures - Clark Kerr, presi-

ldent of University of California, 'TheUses of the University.' SandersTheater, R:30; April 24, 'The Reali-ties of the Federal Grant Univer-sity'; April 25, 'The Future of theCity of the Intellect.'

Harvard Law Scle}wl Forum - April26, Sanders Theater, :30; 'TheAmerican Cinema as an Art Form,'Davidl Sussklndl, Shelley Winters;SI.0.

('layton Lecture. - Tufts University,Cohen Auditorium, .9:30, J. WilliamFullbright, chairman of the SenateCommittee on Foreign Relations,'Prospects for the West'; April 23,'Russia and the West'; April 30.'A Concert of Free Nations'; May 1,'The American Agenda.'

'The Management of Scientists' -Northeastern University, Alumni Au-dit. April 29, 9:30, Dr. EverettMendelsohn, Assistant Professor ofthe history of science, Harvard; 'TheChanging Pwle of Science in Govern-ment, Industry, and the University.'

'Cinema as Art and Technology' -Department of Humanities, April 29,.S:00, ,Roomn 1-0-250, Prof. RobertGessner, New York University.

'The Black Death and Nuclear 'War'-April 30, .S:30, Prof. William I,.Langer, Harvard, Jimmy Fund Au-ditorium; free.

.MISCELLANEO EUSArt Show and Sale - Building J0,

April 26-27, 9-5; paintings. dawings,and sculpture by members of theMIT community.

APO Carnival - April 27, Rockwell

S27

4

April 30, 9:30, Jordan Hall; Dvar-alk's Symphony No. 6, Plston's 'Vari-ations,' Kodaly's 'Psa Imus Hungar-icus'; S3.00, S2.00, Sl.00.

1Bpton Pop% - April 30, SymphonyHall. 8:30, matinee Sun., 3:00: S3.50,S3.00. 82.50, $2.00, S1.50, $1.00.

THEAT&RE])ramashop - 'The Trial,' Kresge

Little 1heatre, April 24-27, ,:30;$1.50.

L]wb Drama ('enter - 'The BraggartWarrior,' April 24-27, 8:30.

Harvard Mu.lecal Theatre ;roup -'Babel,' Lowell House, April 24-26,S:30, April 27. 7:30, 9:30.

LS.' ('lasic. Series - · Rules of theGame,' April 26, Kresge Auditorium,6:30, 9:00. On the eve of World WarII, Jean Renoir .directed this mordantsophisticated, brilliantly funny trag-edly of a man of feeling in a societytthat had no use for it. France 1939.

LSNC Entertainment Serles - 'SweetBird of Youth, April 27, Room 10-250,

5:15, 7:30, 9:45. Paul Newman, Ger-

WEDNESDAY8 am-Rise and

ShineNews at 8:30and 9:30

9:45-Sign OffMusic Libraryon Audio Lines

5-Music USA6 - News. The

Joe Martinson8--DePartures in

Music (NewClassical Re-leases)

10 - Master-works

11: 50--N ews12-Jazz at Mid-

night1: 30-SiRn Off

TH U RSDAY-- Rise 8 Shine

News at 8:30and 9:30

9:45-Sign OffMusic Libraryon Audio Lines

5-Music USA6-News, Tempo7- Ramblin'

Round8:45- Limelight

Review9- Evening at

the Opera11: 50-News12-Jazz at Mid-

night1:30-Sign Off

FRIDAY8-Rise & Shine

News at 8:30and 9:30

9:45-Sign OffMusic Libraryan Audio Lines

5--T.G.I .F.6--N ews, Sta i r-

way to thestars

7-Jazz Special9-R a i si n' a

Ruckus To-night - FolkMusic fromCafe Yana

10-News. NightOwl (Tele-phone Re-quest)

11: 50-News12-Night Owl2--News

Sign Off

SATU RDAY3-Rock and

Roll MemoryTime

5-Jazz Spot-i'ght

7-Theatre To-night

8: 50-News9-Night Owl

(TelephoneRequests)

11: 50-News12-Night Owl2-News.

Sign OffSUNDAY4-The World of

Sound5-This Is the

Blues6-Music at MIT7-Omnibus9-News. Class-

room Concert11: 50-News12-Jazz at Mid-

nightI: 30-Sign Off

MON DAY8--Rise & Shine

News at 8:30and 9:30

9:45-Sign OffMusic Libraryon Audio Lines

5-Perloo. Stompand Glee

6-News, TheJohn C. HeineShow

8- Masterworks10--UN News

Review, Mas-terworks

11: 50--N ews12-Jazz at Mid-

night1: 30-Sign Off

TUESDAY8-Rise & Shine

News at 8:30and 9:30

9:45-Sign OffMusic Libraryon Audio Lines

5--like Young6--News.

Like Young7-Folkside8:30-The Arab

Club Show9- Masterworks11: 50-News12-Jazz at Mid-

night1: 30--Sign Off

II

'Cinema as Art and Technol- by students of the Polish StudentFilm Academy.

Robert Gassner, professor ofcinema and television at NewYork University, will conduct theprogram. He recently spent sev-eral weeks in Poland, living withthese students and studying film-making.

ogy,' a lecture sponsored by theDepartment of Humanities, willbe given Monday at 8:0 inRoom 10 - 250.

The lecture will consist of afifteen-minute talk followed by anhour of examples of films writ-ten, directed, edited and filmed

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Concert byFerruccio Tagliavini

tenor

Resuming Tomorrow'"To Kill a

M lo(kingl}ird"We designed two new cars-and builta lot of our record-setting Avanti into,them: supercharged R2 engines...heavy duty springs and shock absorb-ers, plus anti-sway bars, front and rear.. trac rods, rear...racing type discbrakes, the safest known and oursalone.

We named them R2 Super Lark and R2Super Hawk and had Andy Granateili

take them out to the infamous Bonne-ville Salt Flats for final performanceand endurance tests.

We could scarcely believe the results,but the official U.S. Auto Club timersconfirmed them: R2 Super Lark-132mph! R2 Super Hawk-140 mph! Two-way averages-under the most punish-ing weather and surface conditions.That kind of performance, combined

with their gentle 'round-town man-ners, told us these cars were ready.R2 Super Lark and R2 Super Hawk arenow available on special order at yourStudebaker dealer's.

Flash: front seat safety belts nowcome factory-installed on every car-another advance from Studebaker.

- IC 0 R P 0 R A T I 0 11

TR 6-4226 uL'r a

m '-CLEO FROM 5 TO 7" plus Short Subjects

s5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.

"THE RED AND THE BLACK" · " ~ 5:15, 7:30, 9:45

Saturday Matinee at 3:00 3 Starting Sunday: Bunuel's

c "THE CRIMINAL LIFE OF ARCHIBALD DE LA CRUZ" -

CZ ~ 5:30, 7:30, 9:30Sunday Matinee at 3:30

!LIEJUMLJNOU USUmum umnmnJumomam UN

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WTBS scheduleThe following is WTBS's revised

program schedule as of April 1.WTBS broadcasts on 88.1 mega-cycles FM, 640 kilocycles AM.

,: ' :: " " <t :' : "".::;:;?:J:' : -:5"'.. . . -. .. '. : , .- :.

:::: Making the Sce::e -:' :;::G: :': : -:: :- M1Makind~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' ...................... '' ..... '+: "' :"~::": :: ... '''" q " .....~~

'Cinema as Art and Technology'Presented by Dept. of Humanities

Page 8: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

Cleaning - PressingRepairing - Laundry

Quick ServiceCharlie The Tech Tailor

71 Amherst St.. Cambaridge EL 4-2088

BUY MENNEN NOWVi THE COOP

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Movie Schedule WednesdaY. April 24, tru TueS4,

April 3-0 (Unless etherAvie state dthe SundaY scliedule is the same -the wveekday schedtule except that I moviees are shown before l:Oo PM)}

ASTORt - -The Longest Day, '8:15.Wel-nesdaY. Saturday. Sunday' 2e: -Sunday, 7:30.' -

BEACON HILL - '"M~iracle of tbe White Stallions,' 10:00, 12:00, 2:004:00, 6:00, N:00- lu:Ou; 'Sunni' 1 :J0, 3:30. 5 :30. 7 :3i0, 9:30. all'

BOSTON' CINERl5A-MA How the Was Won.' evenings, 8 :30, matinet-Sunday. 4:45. te

RHATTLE£ - XCleo fromn 5 to 7';lu short subjects, 5:30, 7:3o, 93 Thursday, FridaY, Saturday: 'The Red and. the Blaok,' 5:15, ?:30, 9 s5 matin~ee SaturdaY at 3 :00- StariinSunday. Bunuel's The Criminal Lill-of Archibalzd 4e la Cruz, Sunday at 3:30, 5:30. 7 :30, 9 :30, 'weekdays_5:30, 7:30, 9:30.-

CAPRtI - 'David and Lisa,' l0 ft12:00, 2:00, 4 :00, 6:-00, *q:6b '10 Q'i

CiOOLIDG(E; CORNE:R - 'To Rilli i .5lockingbirdi 1 :oO. S:30; Saturday, ISunday, 2 :00, 5 :00, 3 :00.

EX.5ETERI - 'Playboy of the WesteD -World,' 2:10, 3:o55 5:45, 7.30, 9- -FEWA, T , - * Sundiays and Cyele; ( no timnes available ).

.GAIC - 'Lawrence of Arabia.' eve.-nings, R9:00; matinee Sunday, 0b -

HARVARD SQUA^RE - Tonight at -.:3,concert by Ferruccio al.

vini, tenor. Resuming tomorrow: ToHill a Mockingbird,' shows 2-0oo 4:30, 7:00, 9:20. -

KE:ITH MEM.5ORIAtL - 'The Bird9:50. 12:10. 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 93Sun-day, 1:00, 3:06, 5:12, 7:1S, 9:2i '

.3lAY'lLOWE'l K-*Man from the Din-er's Clueb,' 11:15, 2:35, 5:55, 915 e'Sunday, 2:30, 5:5CI, 9:10; 'F'ury 01,the Pagans, ' 9 :45, 1 :00, 4 :20, NO4;-Sunday, 1:00, 4:15, 7:35.'

311T - FridaY, 'Rules of the Game' Kresge Auditarium, 6:30, 9:00; Sat-urday, '.Sweet Bird of Youth1,, Room 10-250, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45.

MU'SICt HALL - 'The Ugly AmericanX -10:00, 12:15, 2:35, S :OO, 7 :20, 9 41)Sundlay, 1:00, 3:05, 5:15, 7:25, 9-35'

PAiPA-MOUNT - 'Days Of Wine and -Roses,' 10:20, 1:00, 3:45, 6:30, 9:1S

S;AXON - 'M.Nutiny on the Bounty,, -evenings, .S:15, matinees, 2:15.'

WE'LLli.SLF.,Y COMMUN~tNITY PLAI:HOUE~k - through April 27, -A-Child is Waiting,' 'Watch Your *Stern,' *7:45; starting April 28, 'That-Touch of Mink,' 'Scream. of Fear,, 7:45.e

lUPTOWNP - 'Diamond Head,' ll o, 2:30, 6:10. 9:50; Sun'diay, 2:40, 6:1j, 9:50; 'Waltz of the Toreadorsl:

* 12:40, 4:20, 7:55; Sunday, 1:00,4:30 -8:00.'-

Theatre Schedule,CHAP-LES PLAT HOtSE; - 'Candida .

Wednesday-Friday, 8 :30; Saturday,I 5 :30, 9 :00; Sunday. 3 :00, 7:00.I.1L4GE - 'The Master Bzuilder,' Tues.

day-Fmriday, E3:30; Saturday, 5:00,-9:00_

LOI:B DRA.NIA CENTER-"The 'Brag.gart Warrior,' A~pril 23-2, 8:30.

LOWXELL. HdOUSE - Harva!rd usida Theakre Group, ' Babel, ' April 24-26,.4 :30, April 27, 7:30, 9:30.

I 11T DR{t51ASHOP - 'The Trial,, Kresge Little Theatre, April 24-27,-.S :30.

WIl LBU R - ' Here Today, ' evenings, , .K:3Q.

Fellowships Draw Scholars-Doctoral felloships providing

tuition -plus stipends of up to $6,00 -a year lhave been set up at the.

.School of Industrial M~anagementto at-tract men now in business-and government into managemenlteachling -and research.

Dean Howard W. Johnson of te-m nanagement s~chool said thie fel.-lowships, support~ed -by the -AlfredP. Sloan Floundation, are pail of-an effort to increase the nation'sreservoir of Ph.D.-level Scholars:for teaching and research in man.agement. Candidates must hold~the master's -degree and have be-hintd them several years of signifi;cant experience in business gov-ernment.

JZ 0~~~~iff 041,-

Folksinger Miriam Makeba. willappear this Saturday night atKresge Auditorium at 8:30.

The perfornance, sponsored byCrossroads Africa, will benefitMIT's two representatives to theCrossroads program this year,Bill Samuels '65 and Mike i~f-schitz '63.

Mfiss Makeba, formnerly withHarry Belafonte, will present aprogram of African folk songs,including the Xosa wedding, or'Click,' song and the song of thelion hunt, 'Wimowai.'

'Tickets are now on sale in thelobby of Building 10. Prices are$2.50, $2.75, $3.00.

By Charles Foster Ford lcose and flabby example of their'The Sorcerer' is an excellent art. The first act seems terribly

THE SORCERER, a comic opera written by W'. S. Gilbert, ~coma posed by Arthur Sufllivan; pro-docel by Ernest P. Sachs; stagedirector, David H. Mills; musicdirector, Thomas R. Walker;scenery by John Freedman; co~s-tumes by Lewis H. Smith; light-ing by Jonathan Bingharn. AtAgassiz Theatre, April 24through 27.

CA-S:Constance ........... Melanie AdamsMrs. Parlett ........Mirandla SampsellDoctor Daly ........ Joel MartinLady Sangazure ........ Susan BlyAline ...... Carolyn WV. KimballSir Mlarmaduke Poindextre ...

Lucian RussellAlexis . . H. 'Thornas BtellCounsel,.. Philip H. EartmanPage .. .- Jeffreyt CrbbJohn Wellington Wells .... .....

Peter L. Sk;olnik

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example of what should be done%with Gilbert & Sullivan. The- usualstudent production of G&S, is apallid parody of d'Oyly Carte,with voices inadequate to the task.The only productions I have en-joyed were those few %which tooka wholly original approach, andrefused to be pretentious. DaveMills' staging of 'The Sorcerer'showrs just such originality.

This was the first full lengthcomic opera %which Gilbert & Sul-livan wrote together, and it is a.

long because most of it goes byin static inactivity. Also, thereare several places where comicideas are thrown axvay in one se-quence, where better craftsman-ship would have seen material forwhole new plays in them. SirMarmaduke and Lady Sangazuremoan that they never marriedbecause they were too polite toadmit their passion, but after onesong the possibilities are dropped.Dr. Daly discourses on the sexappeal he had in his youth, yetnone of these impassioned youngladies appear in act two. Gilberthad barely begun to write.

But the triumph of the eveningis the staging. Dave Mills hascome up with a kind of theatricalprestidigitation in which the stag-ing is quicker than the ear. Hiscast is full of nineteenth centuryposes and attitudes, oat of someancient handbook for moderndance. Tine word 'stylized' is palein their description. Instead ofbattling his singers' natural ten-dency to "stand and deliver" inrather stiff postures, he has usedthis frustrating handicap as thebasis of his approach. The re-sults are hilarious. In fact., thecareful composition of gesturesand attitudes is so well done that,in at least two cases, they qaattention away from quite atro-cious voices. There is too muchfull to watch for the ear to beannoyed.

Thlis technique comes off best,of course, when executed by good,supple actors with decent -voices.Melanie Adams, for instance,opens the show with a delightfultale of her sad. love for Dr. Daly,

the vicar, followed by Joel Mar-tin's vicar musing on his lostyouth. Miss Adams looks like asemi-successful ballerina, Mr.Martin like a plump, cld-sch}oolShakespearean doing a wistfulHamlet. They open the long firstact with a promise of visual de-lights which the rest of the castworks quite hard to fulfill.

The plot is set into mzotion byH. Thomas Bell as Alexis. (Hisvoice is terrible, but he is, asseveral young ladies remarked,beautiful, and his gesture-patternsare so well executed that he willbe forgiven anything.) It is asimple variation of the lo've Po-tion theme from 'Midsumnmer.Night's Dream,' except that in-stead of royalty in love with im-mortals, we see nobility in lovewith commoners. The modernequivalent of Puck is J. Welling-ton Wells, a sorcerer by trade.(Gee, dad, the title!) Peter Skol-nilc plays him, in appearance andmovements, as a delightful oldMad Hatter.

John Freedman's sets are fullof the yellow-green of happyspring, and Lewis Smith's, cog.turnes are the colorful blossomsof that season. (Constance, witha change of hat, literally burstsinto bloom in act two>.) Every-thing about the show is delightful,except the music. There are manybad voices, a lot of bad temnpos,many wrong notes. But, thanksto Dave Mills, even the orchestraitself is too busy watching . . .and laughing . .;. to notice, andonly the purists could care.

Mennen Spray delivers 3 times the antiperspirant power of anyother leading men's deodorant. The fine spray mist gets throughto the skin where perspiration starts. Deodorizes. Effectively. Andworks all day. Is it any wonder. more men use Mennen Spray inthe handy squeeze bottle than any other deodorant? (i)

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I N IW %OL % 'Sorcerer,' opera af Agassiz

MIT DRAMASHlOPPresents Franz Kafka's

THE TRIALAdapted and directed by

Joseph Everinwgham

Kresge AuditoriumLittle TheatreAPRIL 24-27, 8:30 pm

All seats reserved $1.50Box office UN 4-6900 ext. 291 0

real stopper

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Arrows to show tour rouLes

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ton and Baker Houses, MIT's net-men will compete against the

v University of Massachusetts,r starting at 1:30 pm. MIT boasts

a solid tennis squad with a 64record and a three-meet winningstreak going into Saturday's con-test. Number-ne player BentAasnaes '63 is the singles cham-

. pion of the Eastern Collegiate-Athletic Conference tennis tourna-ment.

RugbyMIT's Rugby Club will meet

i. Holy Cross at 1:30 pm. This con-test should be of interest both tothose who are familiar with the

. British version of football and tothose who know nothing about it;

X there are 52 million Britons whov claim that this is the way the

game should be played. The MIT- squad has won all of its spring. contests to date.

BaseballA Tech team can be seen com-

petinlg in the national pastimeStarting at 2:00 pm against Mid-

dlebury. The Tech nine has hadits troubles this year, sporting a

- 2-10 record, but the last two con-:tests were lost in the ninth inning.-. and the baseball team will at-

tempt to provide a good show forthe large Open House crowd.-i ~~Lacrosse

-> inally. the MIT lacrosse teamMt7KX~l let Amherst at 2:00 prn.

.Lacrosse' is a rough and rugged', port, and an excellent spectator

m-sport The Tech stiCckmen have.- *lost all eight of their contests to>adate.

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By John Montanus the Institute's 21 departments willAt MIT's first Open House, in be on display. These will give a

1922, one of the newest scientific view of the major research fa-devics on display was an X-rayc lities and of the smaller labs,

devices on display was an X-ray where an idea is pursued, tested,tube, and humming steam tur--and developed.

have to limit their excursions andcover the most interesting toursfirst. -Not included on any of thetours will be the day's athleticevents and the extracurricular ac-tivities; many organizations willhold open houses or present spe-cial exhiibits.

Open House is a student-organized program. The specialOpen House Committee is headedby co-chairmen Robert L. Blum-berg '64 and C. Bert Knight '64.The committee is aided -by theFaculty Administration AdvisoryCommittee and many volunteerstudent workers and guides.

bines attracted te attention ofseveral hundred visitors.

Saturday, fromn noon to 5:00 pm,an estimated 25,000 visitors tothis year's Open House will see anuclear reactor, space probe sat-ellites and capsules, electron mi-croscopes, lasers, and a machinecalled Davo, which synthesizeshuman speech.

Also on exhibit will be elec-tronic computers (some of whichwill challenge visitors in variousgames of strategy, such as tictac toe), a new tdmiqque of foodpreservation called freeze-drying,and a recently developed methodof removing the salt from seawater.

150 exhibitsThe purpose of Open House is

to shone what modem educationand research look like in engi-neering, science, architecture, thehumanities, and industrial man-agement.

More than 150 exhibits in all of

Six toursSix different tour routes will be

marked by six different-coloredseries of arrows. Student guideswill be posted along the way tooffer directions and answer ques-tions. Signs along the route willindicate directions to exhibitslisted as off a given tour num-ber.

Total coverage is quite exten-sive, so visitors will probably

mixture which was removed be-cause of maintenance problems.

Below the main auditorium isthe Little Theater, seating 214, forchamber music, conferences andsmall-scale dramatic productions,It also has facilities for televisionbroadcasting.

Serpentine-shaped dormDesigned by the Finnish archi-

tect Alvar Aalto during his stayas visiting professor of architec-ture, 194749, Baker House, theserpentine-shaped dormitory justsouthwest of Kresge, has been in

Besides the classic architectureof the main buildings surroundingthe Great Court, many otherarchitectural styles are represent-ed at MIT. Three of the morecontemporary buildings on cam-pus are Kresge Auditorium, Bak-er House, and the Chapel.

The most unusual feature ofKresge Auditorium, completed in1955, is its domed roof, or shell-a curved slab of concrete, tri-angular in shape. The dome isnot structurally joined to the restof the building. The tops of in-terior walls are separated fromthe dome by as much as fourinches, the space being filled by

Refreshments will be servedcontinuously during Open Houseby several student groups.

The Associaltion of Women Stu-dents will serve punch and cook-ies in the Margaret CheneyRoom, 3-310.

Beaver Key, the junior honor-ary society, will be serving Cokesand popcorn in Room 7-106.

The Non-Resident Student As-sociation will also serve refresh-ments at its headquarters, 318Memorial Drive.

rubber gaskets. The steel win- use for 14 years.dow frames are not joined to thedome either, but to metal angleslip joints which permit slightmovement between them.

Thinner than eggshellThe concrete shell is only 3 /2

inches thick-thinner -in propor-tion to its area than the shell ofan egg. Newly installed is a cov-ering of sheet lead-one-eighth ofan inch thick. The lead cover re-places an acrylic and orestone

The glass-enclosed dining roomwhich extends from the buildingproper toward Memorial Drivewas described by Aalto as the"focus" of the building's exteriordesign. It is lighted by numerousspecially-designed round skylightsand lamps mounted above theskylights for use after dark.

The dormitory was named afterDr. Everett Moore Baker, Deanof Students, 1947-50, who waskilled in an airplane crash inEgypt in August, 1950.

T h e windowless cylindricalchapel was dedicated May 8, 1955.Designed by Eero Saarinen tomeet the needs of all faiths, thechapel is one of the few in thecountry to be used for regularservices by Catholics, Protestants,and Jews alike.

A solid brick cylinder, the chap-el stands within a water-filledmoat next to Kresge Auditorium.Structurally, tWere is completeseparation of interior from exte-rior. The building amounts -to aplatform for the congregation andfor the altar. Ine walls arestructurally independent of -thefloor.

Cult -into the bottom of thechapel cylinder are irregularlyshaped and irregularly spacedarches. Light is reflected fromn thewater of the motet into the inte-rior of chapel through thesearches.

Through the participation of 11academic departments, the Re-search Laboratory of Electronicsconducts research in three broadcategories: general physics andengineering, plasma dynamics,and communication sciences.

Four laboratories will conductdemonstrations during OpenHouse: communications biophys-ics (Room 20A-204), sensory aids

(Room 20A-219), picture proces-sing (Room 20A-221X, and statis-tical communication (Room 26-305).

The demonstration by Prof.Murray Eden, in Room 20A-206,will include visitos' participation.Prof. Eden's study of human per-ception will test visitors' judg-ments concerning a series of optical illusions.

The Center for Materials Science and Engineering is under construction in the area behind the GreatDome. The new building, to cost six million dollars, will serve as the focus for research in chemical and solid-state physics, molecular science and engineering, metallurgy, and materials science and engineering.

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President Stratton greetsvisitors at Open House

Dr. Julius A. Strattonz, president of the corporation, extendsthje following welcome to Open House visitors:

On behalf of the students and faculty of MIT, I wish to welcomeyou most warmly to our twenty-secound Institute Open House.

The program that has been arranged for you was planned anddeveloped largely by a group of undergraduates witf the advice ofa faculty committee representing each of our academ-ic departments.It is intended to give you an opportunity to see a variety of ourfacilities for teaching and research and ito catch some of the flavorof our educational programs in engineering, science, architecture,the humanities, and industrial management; The schedule also in-cludes many exhibits and presentations of student extracurricularactivities, including athletics, which axe an integral part of our cam-pus life.

The purpose of the Open House is to provide an occasion onwhich all our friends and neighbors may come to know us a littlebetter, and the program has been designed with many differentinterests in mind. ' hope very much you will have a most enjoyableafternoon.

5 sports events contributeto Open House program

By Cliff WeinsteinFive athletic teams may be seen in action on the TIT home

fields this Saturday.Track

The trackmen will begin a triangular meet with Bowdoin andNew Hampshire on the outdoor fields at 12:30 pm. Tech's cindermenare in the midst of one of their best seasons ever, and are comingfrom a 9540 ronp over lufts 'in their last outing..

Open House visitors will see over 150 exhibits

Kresge. Baker, chapelshow modern architecture

Students will serve refreshments

Perception ethibit to showseries of optical illusions

Materials Center largest constru tion project

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0Op- Open House guests view educ,Civil Engineering displayseffects of H-bomb blasts

Civil engineering deals with the conception, design, andconstruction of facilities directed toward the improvementof the human environment.

The Department of Civil Engineering carries on basicresearch concerning the behavior of materials such as soil,

steel, fluids, plastics, and many other natural and artificial substan-ces. Some of these research activities will be on display at the OpenHouse.

In the Soil Engineering Laboratory, Room 1-350, examples willbe shown of how one can add chemicals to dirt in order -to constructroads or houses. Demonstrations of ultrasonic waves in water andquicksand as well as a display of what happens to buried structureswhen subjected to H-bomb blasts will be presented.

Many exhibits and demonstrations will be shown in the hydro-dynamics laboratory in Building 48, a major unit for experimentalresearch in fluid mechanics, coastal engineering, and water resour-ces.

The techniques of fabricating and testing small models of build-ing-type structures will be illustrated in the laboratory for structuralmodels, Rooms 1-235 and 1-241.

The department's computer facility in Room 14-00, is equippedwith an IBM 1620 computer. The use of -the computer in structuresand materials engineering and urban transportation planning will beillustrated.

ME Dept. to show control devices,analog computer, programmed labs

Mechanical engin-eering is concernedwith ideas and meansto produce power; tomake, build, or shape

materials and machines for use-ful purposes; and to control de-vices and processes. It drawsheavily on the basic sciences,mathematics, and the engineer-ing sciences.

The Department of MechanicalEngineering thus conducts re-search in many and varied fields.For Open House, it has tried itopresent a sampling of theseareas.

In the Surface Laboratory, inRoom 35 -033, lubrication sys-tems for use in space environ-ments will be shown. In Room 1-

307, the Materials Testing Lab-oratory, detreminations of ten-sile strength will be featured.

The Materials Processing Lab-oratory will' present demonstra-tions of machining-tool experi-ments. Remote manipulative con-trols systems will be on displayirn Room 3- 365; in Room 3- 355an analog computer and an ex-perimental study of programmedlab instruction will be shown.

Cutaways of various engineswill be on display on the firstfloor of Building 31. The Engin-eering Projects Laboratory, inRoom 3-143, will feature an ex-hibit of student projects.

Exhibits in Room 1-223 willdeal with experimental stressanalysis, and will include apolariscope and a strain gauge.

Metallurgy Department

Students will run foundryThe Metallurgy De-

partment encompassesthe sciences of metal-lurgy itself and of ma-terials science.

Metallurgy can be described asthe science concerning the pro-duction, structure, and proper-ties of metals. Materials sciencetreats of the structure, proper-ties, and behavior of materialsof all kinds.

The Department of Metallurgywill display several facets of itsstudies at the Open House. Oneexhibit will be a superconductingmagnet (Room 8- 110), whichpermits electric current to flowwihtin it with no resistance, and

is thus potentially capable of pro-ducing higher magnetic fieldsthan have ever been achieved be-fore.

The foundry (fourth floor,Building 35) will be in continuousoperation and will be the site ofstudent demonstrations of vari-ous techniques used .in castingmetal.

Other exhibits will include: TV-miscroscopy as used in teachingmetallurgy (8 - 436), eledctronicmaterials (8 -241), structure ofmeteorites (8 - 102), microscopicchanges in the structure of ma-terials (8- 436), and solidificationof materials (fourth floor, Build-ing 35).

Department of Architecture, first in nation,to present students' models and drawings

As the first institution to organize formal architectural4 education in the United States, MIT has steadily held tothe belief that the basic prerequisites for the Study ofarchitecture are sympathy for human institutions, esthe-tic perception, and the ability to understand engineering

methods.The same precepts have governed the policy of the Department of

City and Regional Planning-the second in the United States.During the Open House program, -the School of Architecture and

Planning will present a display of designs by architecture students.These lifelike models and drawings, on te fourth floor of Build-

ing 7, must be constructed before an architect's ideas pass into steelwntl nnnrptp

Electrical engineer-ing includes two ma-jor areas: communi-cation sciences - deal-ing with the communi-

cation between man and man,or man and machine, or machineand machine; and electromagne-tic energy conversion- the har-nessing of electrical energy tothe tasks of mankind.

Ten major exhibits will high-light the activities of the Depart-ment of Electrical Engineering,

Earth Sciences Center to be finished by this fallLocated on the -East Campus, the Green Center

for the Earth Sciences will provide 126,000 squarefeet for geology, geophysics, meteorology, ocean-ography, and for the newly emerging and relatedfields of space and planetary science.

11The 20-sUory structure, 120 feet long and 50 feetwide, will be unusual in several respects. Fourcorner columns will support it; placing all shafts

in the building's ends will leave all floors free

U8B" U XU91NiiiEo! . . of structural obstructions. The floors will be pre-stressed concrete joists, resting on floor-high truss-es which will transmit their loads to the conersupports.

The center will be completed this fall.

the largest of all departments atMIT.

Two exhibits will be set up inBuilding 10. The Electromagne-tic Laboratory (Room 10-050) willhave demonstrations of forcesand fields, in which a magneticinduction field will force a con-ducting ring to jump abruptly in-to the air, and demonstrations ofmicrowave communications.

Stroboscopic lamps will be onexhibition on the balcony ofBuilding 10. The lamps willflash a microsecond burst oflight several hundred feet downa corridor and reflect it to meas-ure the speed of light.

The Stroboscopic MeasurementsLaboratory (Room 4-405) willhave a permanent exhibit onhigh-speed photometry in addi-tion -to numerous demonstrationson the effects of stroboscopiclight and various flash lamps.

An analog computer will sim-ulate a space navigational prob-lem in the Experimental Elec-tronics Laboratory (Room 3-402).In addition, a tic-tac-toe machine,a wristwatch calibrator, and adelayed - speech demonstrationwill be shown.

The Computer Research Labor-atories (Room 26-260) will featurethe TXO and PDP-1 computers.The electronic brains will playspace war, three-dimensional tictac toe, and mouse in the maze.

Student activities will be shownin the Systems Laboratory (Room32-114).

Other open laboratories will in-clude the Electronic circuits andSignals Laboratory (Room 3409)

Physics to exl

8The progress of phys

the first half of thecentury has been unpiin the history of sciergreat advance of quant

and the theory of relativity havphysics to move far beyond ccareas.

These advances have led toably complete understanding ofture of atoms, molecules, and buof elcetronics; of gas discharge

Guide for visitors:

The maze ofNumbers are the key to

numbered. Departments are jects are referred to by theinames. Numbers are a stan-guage of MIT.

In fact, students themnnumber as part of the Insti cessing records by computer.

Every room at MIT isinumber, such as 10-250. ~hyphen give the number of tdigit after the hyphen givest/ing digits indicate the room.

Academic departments, tithe convenience of Open Henumbers have been inset into-department activities. The co0

Aeronautics and Astronautics 16 Ala*Architecture .. ............... 9..... 4 heBiology ........ ....-.-.... ........ 7 MeChemical Engineering .... 10Chemistry ....................... 5 Aex-Civil Engineering ......... . ModEconomics and Social Science 14 NaXvElectrical Engineering ...... 6Geology and Geophysics .. 12 NuaHumanities .................. 21 NuME

Industrial Management . 15 Phy

The Department of Ch&erprogrami in chemistry as iv-for students in other coursmstudy and research in phisdar, and analytical chemistr

The department will present its labithere will be an exhibit in Room 4Ztions of spectroscopic techniques to the.and properties of compounds, especi*asimilar compounds. -

The second phase of the program -graduate physical and analytic cherw104 and 2-105.

Biology Department

DNA model to-Biology today en- pla):-

compasses and sur- olpasses physics and pchemistry in its scope Tnyand application to hu- chi-

man life. It has become an exact and-science; therefore, its methods ad-and concepts are especially at eithome at MIT. paif

The Biology Department contri- the~butions to Open House will em-phasize this facet of the life sci-ences. There will be exhibits ofan operating electron microscope (I(Room 16-524), a preparative cen-trifuge (16-534), and paper elec-trophoresis (16-534).

A liquid scintillation counter, inRoom 16-534, will demonstratethe latest type of equipment fordetermining radioactivity. Therewill be an X-ray diffraction mod- .el of the DNA molecule, the pri-mary carrier of genes, in Room16-744. The microscope and the chX-ray equipment will be ex- cfaplained at the exhibits. o

There will also be student dis-

hibit high-energfi;ics during atomic and molecular slP

twentieth ture of light. E,recedented The discoveries of ra

mic rays, and of nuclearrnce. The have led to an increa-'um theory the atdmic nucleus and ].'e enabled The program for the l)nventional exhibition will include

sophomore physics labor

a remark- including the constrlctionsby several freshmen, a

the struc- plasma physics, modellslk matter; Mariner II, a cosmic ai Ys; and of eral particle acceleratorsI

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Page 11: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

departmentsVisitors to participatein economic experimentwith bargaining games

The Departmentof Economics andSocial Science con-sists of three prin-cipal sections; Ec-

onomics, Political Science, andPsychology.

The areas of teaching and re-search interest in the departmentcover most of the concerns ofman - how he produces goodsand services, governs himself,and responds to his environment.

Some hypotheses in economicsmakes certain assumptions abouthow people react in bargainingsituations. One way of gaining in-formation about the validity ofthese assumptions is through ex-perimental situations using bar-gaining games.

Some examples of these gameswill be available in Room 52- 180.Visitors may participate in theseexperiments as well as hear lec-tures on the theory they repre-senlt.

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Aeronautics to show student labs, Math Dept. presents game problemsflutter tunnel, Mercury capsule to demonstrate applications of math

The functions of the 'Mathemalics Department areManned and un- orbit, will be displayed in the 1 to provide a good mathematical fodation for all stu-

1 6 m a n n e d vehicles lobby of Building 7. The capsule dents, to provide a mathematical consultation serviceoperating above the itself is shaped like a bell; it is fcarryM on research in pure and applied mathematics.earth's surface are about ten feet high and about * * - -eThe mathematics exhibits will attempt to demonstrate somethe province of the six feet wide at the base. simple and interesting applications of mathematical ideas and will

artnent of Aeronautics and There is a heat shield on the try to give the visitor an idea of the nature of marhematical reason-onautics. A wide variety of base to protect the astronaut ing.lems, ranging from inertial from the intense heat encounter- The exhibits are designed to include the participation of the

visitor, who will be presented with several mathematical problemsgation to aerodynamic heat- ed on re-entry into the atmos- to try.are enounterded in this fdield phere. The capsule contains sev- The applied mathematics exhibit will present the cycloid pendu-are studied in the departmen- en and a half miles of wiring for lum as a mathematical solution to a physical problem in Room 2-·esearch laboratories. its instrumentaftion. 151. The birthday problem will be demonstrated as part of the gamee department will hold a gen- Th department will also ex- theory and probability exhibit in Room 2-143.

open house in its head- The history of mathematics will be discussed in Room 2-135.ters, Building 33. Student la- hibit a Space Mobile in the park- Other exhibits sponsored by the department are: topology, in Roomtory projects will be exhibi- ing lot of Building 33. 2-139; number theory, in Room 2-170; and geometry, in Room 2-146.in the basement. On the sec-

floor mezzanine, visitors will Institute symbolized In Morss Hallbe able to watch a flutter tun-

nel in operation.

A Mercury capsule, like the one

which carried John Glenn into

Towing tank +o be shownNaval architecture and maine engineering envel-

ops the problems of engineering, management, andconstruction associated with vehicles operating belowand just above the surface of the sea.

The wide variety of interests in the departmentwill be shown in the various Open House exhibits.

In Building 48, a 108-foot ship.towing tank will be on demonstra-tion. Small models of ship designs will be tested in conditions sim-ulating a variety of sea conditions.

The propeller-tunnel demonstration (Room 3-269) will show thedepartment's work in the areas of cavitation and propeller design.

In Building 5, the Hart Nautical Museum (first floor) and anexhibition of machinery models (basement) will be open.

In addition, continuous showings of 'Something New Under theSea,' Parts I and II, and of 'Specification 12 Meters' will be featuredin Room 5-134.

Earth science exhibits to include movies,mineral display, and seismograph apparatus

The origin, age,12 > and composition ofthe earth, the phy-sical state of theearth's interior, and

the origin of the oceans andatmosphere are among the mostchallenging and perplexing prob-lems of science. They all liewithin the domain of the Depart-ment of Geology and Geophysics.

The department's areas of hi-terest will be exhibited in Build-

a movie, five or six short filmsdealing with various aspects ofthe earth sciences will beshown continuously in Room 321.

In Room 309, students andstaff members will be on handto describe a mineral and fossilexhibit, and to provide tours oflaboratory facilities.

A seismograph will be set upin Room 417. This apparatus willregister vibrations caused bypeople walking in the halls out-

ing 24. For those who want to -side. Oceanography research willsit down and relax by watching be shown in Room 409.

Wring Departmentlonstrates desalination of water

Lun O mon with both the chemist andII en- his fellow engineers; with the[Ocused first because of the chemicallustrial nature of his problems; with theich are second because of his concernrrence with large - scale industrial pro-

cesses.com- The Chemical Engineering De-

acceleratorsThe Van de Graff generator, in BuildingW, ill be on display. Achieving a charge

8.- million electron volts, this device ised to study' collisions between nuclearrticles.

The synchrotron, in Room 24-036, will alsoOpen all day. This machine is used to

celerate electrons for various research(jects.

The third accelerator to be exhibited byE department is the linear accelerator, inmrn 20D-014. Constructed in 1949, it

:l~eves Energies up to 17 million electron

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Above is the mural on the north wall of Walker Memorial. Below, left and right, are the left and rightpanels, respectively, from the south wall. All were painted by Edwin Howland Blashfield '69 and his assistant,

reaching completion in 1930.

Editor's note: The descriptionof the Aforss Hall munrals in thefollowing article were writtenby Dr. James Rhyne Killian '26in a pamphlet published in1935. Dr. Killian is nowt chair-man of the MIT corporation.

The murals in Walker Memori-al's Morss Hall were painted byEdwin Howland Blashfield '59 andhis assistant, Vincent Aderente.The work took seven years, reach-ing completion in 1930. It wasfinanced by Everett Morss '85,former treasurer.

Walker Memorial itself was

partment will offer a wide varietyof displays demonstrating variousresearch projects now underway.Fundamental studies now beingcarried on in the area of semi-conductor catalysis will be ex-plained in Room 12- 166.

The work being done in thedepartment on desalination ofwater will be shown in Room 12-132. Exhibits here will includedesalination by reverse osmosisand preparation of ultra-thinmembranes for desalination.

There will be demonstrationsof gas chromatography and infra-red spectroscopy in R o o m 12 -092, and a film on crystal growthwill be shown in Room 12- 011.

A variety of projects will be ondisplay in the Fuels ResearchLaboratory, on the second floorof Building 31A. Exhibits will in-clude radiation from laminardiffusion flames, soot formationin laminar diffusion flames, andmixing in a jet flow.

built by alumni as a student unionin memory of the Institute's thirdpresident, Francis Amasa Walk-er.

North muralThe mural on the central panel

of the north wall is titled 'AlmaMater.' The central seated figureis Alma Mater holding Victory inher right hand, while her lefthand rests on the Seal of theInstitute. On her lap lies thegreat seal of the State of Massa-chusetts. The world is at her feet,as shown by a terrestrial globesupported by a cherub. At herright is a personified representa-tion of learning through the print-

'ed page, and on her left is asimilar figure representing knowl-edge through experiment.

The figures turned toward AlmaMater on each side of the centerrepresent the various branches ofknowledge. The lower part of thepicture represents the CharlesRiver Basin with a misty sugges-tion of the Technology buildingsin the distance.

The left panel on the south wallconveys the. thought that chemis-try has given mankind almost un-limited power and raised thequestion: shall that power be usedto build up or demolish civiliza-tion?

'Ye shall be as gods'The symbolic figure of the sci-

entist stands between two greatjars containing beneficent andmaleficent gases, or constructiveand destructive possibilities. Thegroup below represents diplo-mats and officers at the counciltable of the world. In the uppersection of the panel a figure ofHygeia is depicted placing acrown on the head of the scien-tist.

Animal figures symbolic of thedogs of war lurk beside the jarof evil gases, while in the back-ground may be seen the figure ofFamine. The large figure stand-

ing in the shadow of the tree ofknowledge represents Nature.

At the foot of the panel twochildren support an inscriptionfrom Genesis: "Ye shall be asgods, knowing good and evil."

On right panel of the south wall,Humanity, represented by themother and her children, is beingled forward by Knowledge andImagination from chaos to light.

In the foreground, children areshown carrying the scales of jus-tice, without which no real pro-gress is possible: Above, the doveof peace hovers, and beyond inthe background the stars and plan-ets whirl in celestial space.

research

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Page 12: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

Tours also offered

Management will give panel talk, 'MThe School of Industrial Management has two

° ] aims: to assist men to prepare themselves for futurepositions of business leadership, and to increase the

· ~ effectiveness of industrial management through re-CN u ~search.

--j At the departmental open house, there will be guided tours ofc the Sloan Building from 12:00 to 5:00. These tours will emphasize< the computer center, the human behavior laboratory, the work study>2 laboratory, and a model of the proposed management center.

From 3:00 to 4:00 the school will present a panel discussion,o 'Pioneering in Managemernt.' Six students, led by Prof. Douglas

,,) McGregor, will discuss the importance of applying computer scienceZ to the complex world of industrial technology.

The school offers courses leading to degrees of bachelor of sci-3 ence, master of science, and doctor of philosophy in industrial man-

agement.

Air currents, radar shown by MeteorologyThe Department of

1 t9 Meteorology seeksto enlarge and re-fine knowledge ofthe atmosphere of

the earth and of the other plan-ets. Studies of the internal mech-anisms of our atmosphere ac-company investigations of its in-

Humanities Dept.will give forum

In its determina-tion to achieve awell balanced edu-cation for all its un-dergraduates, MIT

provides through the Departmentof Humanities required and elec-tive courses in history, literature,music and philosophy.

In addition, the department ad-ministers Course 21, which com-bines the basic subjects in sci-ence or engineering with a con-centrated program in the humani-ties.

The books used in the requiredundergraduate humanities se-quence will be on display in theHumanities Reserve LibraryRoom.

In addition, music will be dis-played in the music library andpublications of members of thedepartment will be shown in thebookcase on the ground floor ofthe Hayden Library near the ArtGallery.

At 2:30 pm, a program will begiven in the Hayden LibraryLounge, 14E-310. This programwill consist of a short symposiumon 'The Contributions of the Hu-manities at MIT.'

teractions with the oceans, withthe solid earth, and with extra-terrestrial bodies.

While everyone else is hopingfor a beautiful day for OpenHouse, the Department of Meteor-ology is hoping for rain. Adrenching thunderstorm wouldproduce an excellent display onthe department's radar in Room24 - 618.

In Room 24-611, several fresh-man Seminar participants willdemonstrate analog representa-tion of atmospheric circulation.Utilizing such items as dry ice,sunlamps, and chemical flowmarkers, the dishpan analogthe patterns of air and watercurrents.

On the sixth floor of Building24, current weather maps will beposted, along with computerweather forecasts - based inpart on data gathered by satel-lites.

New housing units will open next fallAs part of the Second Century

Program, two new housing unitsare under construction.

The new Residence for WomenStudents, on Memorial Driveoverlooking the Charles River,was made possible by a gift fromMrs. Stanley McCormick, of Bos-ton, who was graduated in biolo-gy in 1904.

The first on-campus dormitoryfor women, it will provide ac-commodations for 116 students,with additional guest rooms andloungese for women students liv-ing off campus.

The house will be ready foroccupancy for the 1963-64 fallterm.

At the western end of the cam-pus, five new buildings are being

Algae experiment

built to provide housing for 210married-student families. This isa self-amortizing project financedby a three-million-dollar loan un-der the federal government's col-lege-housing program.

The new complex will be dom-inated by a sixteen-story towercontaining ninety efficiency and

sixty one-bedroom apartments.Around this high-rise building willbe four three-story garden-typeunits containing a total of sixtytwo-bedroom apartments.

Construction was begun thispast January, and the. apartmentsshould be ready for the fall of1963.

C IS to display books in DeweySince its founding in 1951, the Center for International Studies

has conducted research concerning international affairs. Today thecenter is primarily engaged in study ,in four areas: economic andpolitical development, international communications, the ComnunistBlcc, and military and foreign policy.

As its,contribution to Open House, the center will have a bookdisplay in the Dewey Library, on the third floor of Building '52.

Dehydration technique1 | ._ 1I ~ --- ~ r

Problems asso-ciated with therapidly increasingworld populationand with the rapid

application of s c i e n t i f i c andtechnological discoveries by thefood industry present an unprece-dented challenge for nutrition andfood sciences.

Although these areas originatedin chemistry, physics, physiology,and engineering, they are todayintegrated sciences serving as fo-

cal points for developments inin many disciplines.

The Department of Nutritionand Food Science will presentvarious displays in Building 16.Food chemistry and engineeringwill be shown in Room 134. Ex-hibits here will include: an or-ange juice concentration process,a display of freeze-drying as anew dehydration technique, acanning-machine demonstration,and a high-pressure retort.

The food toxology exhibit in

Tours to be guided through nuclear reactor facilities

22Nuclear

field whichmany cther

The Department of Nuclear En- and chemical engineering; physics; and mathema-gineering carries out a program of tics.teaching and research tedtowardching adapting nuclear enegy The nuclear reactor, on Vassar street, thoughfor the uses of man.

engineering is a highly specialized duction of power or fissionable material, is a ver-requires considerable knowledge of satile research tool. The reactor will be open all

fields, such as mechanical, electrical, day, and tours will be guided.

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Subscribe to The Tech now!Enclosed find ............. Please send The Tech for ( ) one (

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$6.25Send to The Tech, Walker Memorial, MIT, Cambridge 39, Mass.

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Room 238 will display varioustoxic substances from naturalfoods. - Another display is theflourescent antibody technique, amethod of identification of foodpoisons and pathogenic micro-or-ganisms. It is based on the ad-sorption of specific flourescentantibodies on the surface of theseorganisms.

In Room 238, a number of ex-hibits dealing with biochemicalengineering will be shown. A con-tinuous culture and growth experi-ment with algae has been con-structed.

It is a laboratory scale modelof a pilot plant for utilizing the

potential of algae as a foodsource.

A fermentation set-up for indus-trial microbiological systems willalso be on display, along with anexhibit on flavor analysis.

The human-nutrition and physi-ological-chemistry activities ofthe department will be on displayin Room 336. An amino acid ana-lyzer will be shown along withmetabolism studies in rats andguinea pigs and a display on thenutritional aspects of physicalwork.

Films entitled 'Hungry Angels'and 'Horizons in Food Technol-ogy' will be shown continuouslyin Room 310.

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Nutrition and Food Science to show food poisons

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"Tech Open House"will be cordially welcomed at

For many years, The Tech Coop has beenserving the students, graduates and facultyof M.I.T. in a semi-official capacity. Textand general books, men's furnishings, mer-chandise displaying the Tech seal and manyevery-day items form the complete stock ofthis interesting "campus store."

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Page 13: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

18 student activities and organizationsI to participate in Open House programs

Diorama also featured

Telstar among special exhibitsEighteen campus activities and

organizations will be spotlightedduring Open House. Student pro-grams and demonstrations willfocus attention on the multitudeof activities on the MIT campus.

The Althletic Association willhave an exhibit in the lobby ofthe DuPont Athletic Center. TheSailing Pavilion will be open aspart of the exhibit of the Nauti-cal Association. Diving and swim-ming exhibitions will be given inthe Alumni Swimming Pool underthe direction of the Swim Club.

Three MIT publications willparticipate in Open House. TechEngineering News, the studentprofessional magazine, will openits office (Room 50 -302) to thepublic. Tangent, the student lit-

erary magazine, will have abooth in the lobby of Building 10.The offices of The Tech, inRoomi 50-'211, will be open dur-ing the regular Saturday make-up session.

Also in Walker Memorial, theInstitute Committee will open itsoffices (Room 50-110), as wellas The Technology CommunityAssociation (R o om 50 - 105).WTBS, the student radio station,will demonstrate the functioningof its studios in the basement ofWalker.

Entertainment begins at 1:00pm with a one-hour program re-view sponsored by the LectureSeries Committee in Room 10-250. Showing will continue until4:00 pm. The Burtones, All-Tech

So.. winners, will present a con-cert at 3:00 pm in the lobby ofBuilding 7.

Alpha Phi Omega, the nationalservice fraternity, will show pre-paration for the Spring Carnivalin Rockwell Cage.

The religious clubs will con-duct tours of the Chapel throughthe afternoon.

Among the other clubs present-ing exhibits are the Hobby Shop(Room 2-051), the Model Rail-road Club (Room 20E-214), theRadio Society (50-358C), the Rec-ket Research Society (Room 2-025), and the Sports Car Club(east parking lot).

Several special displays will beexhibited during Open House.

A cosmic rays display will bein Room 12-142. The CambridgeElectron Accelerator will have adisplay in the lobby of Building6. Paintings and drawings by Bos-ton artist Conger Metcalf are ondisplay in the Hayden Gallery.

The -lobby of Kresge Auditoriumwill feature Diorama, an electron-ic systems exhibit that will ex-plain the integration and controlof the aerospace systems whichconstitute our nation's defense.

The exhibit will show how in-formation from early warningsystems, radar lines, satellites,picket ships, and air craft is

transmitted, and how these dif-ferent sources are coordinated toform the command and controloperation known as ACE, theAerospace Control Environment.

A Telstar exhibit will be set upin the lobby of Building 10. Thedisplay will explain the satellitewhich serves as a microwave re-lay in space to transmit tele-phone conversations, data, andtelevision programs across oceans.The self-contained power supplyof the satellite is also shown.

A film about Telstar will beshown at Kresge; three otherfilms are also given in continu-cus rotation. The other films are'Horizons Beyond,' 'To CreateStrength,' and 'Building of theMIT Reactor.'

Laboratory for Nuclear Scienceto exhibit space-physics projects

The Laboratory for NuclearScience has been organized toprovide support and facilities forthe experimental and theoreticalinvestigations of modern physics.

The laboratory has arrangedseveral exhibits for Open House,to be shown from noon to 5:00pm.

The Cosmic Ray Group will ex-hibit space-physics projecds onthe fifth floor of Building 26.These will include replicas of theMIT plasma experiment flown onExplorer X, and the Explorer XIGamma- Ray Telescope, as wellas smaller displays.

The Van de Graaf Generator,in Building 58, will be open tothe public. This huge device can

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create an electric charge of 8.5million electron volts. These highenergies are used to acceleratenuclear particles.

Even higher energies, up to 17million electron volts, are obtain-ed from the linear accelerator.This machine may be viewed inRoom 20D- 014. The Synchrotron,to be seen in Room 24- 036, is anelectron accelerator which com-bines a time-varying magneticfield with a radio - frequencyelectric field.

The particles travel a distanceof over 1100 miles around theevacuated doughnut-shaped ma-chine before they achieve a max-imum energy of 350 million elec-tron volts.

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ir University ShopLSH & WEAR SUITS

)oking, practical suits, madeve models, will serve you1 now...for travel in Sum-

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;ester and Cotton Poplins inOlive or Grey, $42.50

rter and Cotton Cord Suits inte and Grey-and-White, $4-0-yester and Rayon Suits inuhart Plaids, $47.50)acron® Polyester andted Tropicals, $65*itly higher west of the Rockies.

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National Magnet Lab grows as research center Four living groupsDuring its second year of exist- power supply units, magnet cells,

ence, the National Magnet Lab- and experimental equipment.oratory. has become a national With the addition of a new six-center for scientific research in million-dollar facility, to be for-magnetism and the effects of anally dedicated next Tuesday,strong magnetic fields on proper- greater power will be given toties of all kinds. such key research as the effects

The facilities of the laboratory(at 170 Albany Street) will be ong magnetic fields-up todisplay during Open House. Dem- 25,000 gauss-on nuclear, atomic,ohstrations include the uses of and molecular structures.

Modern Language Dept. will showLinguifrainer, computer translation

The Modern Language Department offers sub-3 jects o'the undergraduate and graduate levels inGerman, French, and Russian.

It also provides a program leading to the degreeof doctor of philosophy in linguistics. This program

aims to give a comprehensive knowledge of modern linguistics, withparticular emphasis on its experimental, quantitative, and theoreticalaspects.

The department, as part of its Open House program, will beexhibiting its Linguatrainer in the Language Laboratory, Room 20C-119. Computer translation will be demonstrated in Room 20D-102;and a film, 'What Is Linguistics,' will be continuously shown in Room2-131.

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wto be open SaturdayAmong the 3600 undergraduates,

about 2000 live in the four dorm-itories on campus. Two of these,Baker House, which holds 350students, and East Campus,where 417 men are housed, willbe open during the Open Houseprogram.

About 800 men live in the 28fraternities, all of which servemeals for their members. Twoof the fraternities on campus,Phi Beta Epsilon and Delta Kap-pa Epsilon, will be open to vis-itors.

In addition, they will be servingrefreshments all afternoon.

Sloan Fellowships aidpost-doctral studies

The chief business of universi-ties has been to teach undergrad-uate and graduate students. Butuniversities have also traditionallyplayed host to a few scholars whowished to continue independentwork in their respective fields af-ter receiving their doctorates.

By establishing the School forAdvanced Study in 1956, MIT gaveformal recognition to the fact thatpost-doctoral fellows have becomean integral part of this institu-tion. Since its founding, the num-ber of the school's fellows in anyone year has risen from 19 to 48.In all, there have been about 170fellows.

In order for a scholar to beappointed a fellow of the school,the MIT faculty member withwhom he is working must send anomination to the director.

Since 1957, the school has en-joyed a grant from the Alfred P.Sloan Foundation which has en-,abled it to offer a special kindof post-doctoral fellowship. Unlikemost fellowships, for which theburden of application rests withthe student, the Sloan Post-doc-toral Fellowships are invitational.

WOR INE UROPEEMORE TRAVEL GRANTS

Apr. 19, 1963 - The American Stu-dent Information Service, the onlylauthorized placement service forAmerican students seeking summerjobs in Europe, has increased from1500 to 2000 the number of travelgrants it will award students apply-ing for positions in Europe.

Job openings now available inEurope include positions at factories,resorts, hospitals, farms, summercamps and in offices. Applicationsare received until May 31.

Interested students may write(naming your school) to Dept. H.ASIS, 22 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxem-lbourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxem-bourg, for a 20-page prospectus, acomplete job selection and appiica-tion. Send t 1 for the prospectus,handling and an airmail reply.

The first 5000 inquiries receivea S1 premium for the new studenttravel book, Earn, Learn and Travelin Europe.

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Why spend a fortune on dates when you canhave fun? Invite your friends up to hear yourmusic system. Then show them how it works.

You can get started right now at the AUDIOWORKSHOP. Choose from a hundred differentstereo and monaural kits-at competitive prices.The WORKSHOP will loan you all the necessarytools for one week at no charge and when youbring the tools back, you cat use their testequipment to check out your component.

Make your room the best party room atM.I.T.

audio workshop30A Plympton Street, Cambridge

TR 6-4880

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Page 14: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

ANTHONY SALVATI BARBER SHOP | G. L. FROST Co., Inc.Tony, formerly of the Esquire Barber Shop AUTOMOBILE BODY REPAIRING & REFINISHING

Specializes in Flat Tops and Ivy League Cuts E.W. PERKINS 31 LANSDOWNE STREEt

8 BROOKLINE ST., CENTRAL SQUARE--Opp. Simeone's l J-l. ELiot 4-9100 CAMBRIDGE. MASS.l~~~~~~~CMRDE MAS

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The facilities of the Computa-

o- tion Center, on the first floor ofBuilding 26, will be on display all

C day throughout the Open Houseprogram.

Some problems will be demon-cL< strated on the 7090 computer. The

>:. computer has been prcgrarnme tc< play tic tac toe with visitors.

0c, When in progress, the game mayLUz be viewed on a cathode-ray c:cil-

Ul) loscope attached te the ccmputer.Alsc, the ccmputer will £¢lve

a set of equations describing themction of a bouncing ball. Thesolution to these equations will be

Tdisplayed on the cscilloscope.

[. The IBM 7093 cc.nputer re-L, placed the slightly slower IBMI 709 in January, 1952. The 709),

more effectively tran:istc-qze:]than its predecessor, runs ap-proximately three times faster-than the 709.

The Ccmputation Center is ccn-tinn.ally being used both by in-dustry and other institutions aswell as MIT. Every departmentnow uses the facilities of the cen-ter.

More than two dozen regularMIT subjects, graduate and un-dergraduate, plus more than cnedozen courses at other New Eng-land colleges use the 7090 as partcf the.r instruction program.

PMC reduces costsfor fraternity systemthrough quantity buying

Saving each of MIT's 28 frater-nities several thousand dollars ayear is the Purchasing Manager'sCouncil of the Interfraternity Con-ference. The PMC, headed byDrew Roskos of Alpha Tau Ome-ga, operates much like a clearinghouse for orders from all the fra-ternities.

The idea behind PMC, devel-oped a few years ago, was to setup a council of buyers from eachfraternity to pool orders on itemscommon to all of the houses. Inthis way goods could be bought inquantity.

The major programs of thePMC have so far been in itemssuch as meat, milk, liquor, owl,bread. and little items such aslight bulbs. The budget for meatalone last year ran more than$110,000; savings of from $8000 to$10,000 were realized.

As the IFC's largest standingcommittee, the PMC also func-tions as a complaint board. Asa result of its activities hasstandardized much of the pur-chasing in the various fraterni-ties.

Extensive new facilities, includ-ing a warehouse, are planned forthe PMC in the new Student Un-

J. L. Millard, Jr. J. O. Gallego!Ft. Hays State U. of New MexGary L Lewis John V. Erhart Byron D. Groff D. B. MacRitchie

U. of San Fran. Loras College Penn State U. of Michigan

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Morris S. BeU, of Georg

Justin C. Bumos Edward R. WasselSt. Bonaventure U Glarkson College

N.T.G. Rosania S, James W. Todd W.T. OliverKansasState Valparaiso U. (Staff) Lafayette College

Ancil K. Nanc P. S. HolderPortland State St. Mary's I

IMPORTANT! If you hold any of the 20 winning num-bers, claim your Pontiac Tempest LeMans Convertiblein accordance with the rules on the reverse of yourlicense plate. Girls! You may choose instead a thrilt-ing expense-paid 2-week Holiday in Europe-for

twol Plus $500 in cash!

6.

7.8.9.

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CONSOLAFTION PRIZE NUMBERSt

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116.17.;18.19.20.

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A237594A127588B686223B521492A057655

ion. Plans now callto carry and stockperishable items.

for the PMCvarious non If you hold a Consolation Prize number, you win a 4-

speed Portable Hi-Fi Sterec Set, "The Waltz" by RCAVictor. Or, you may still win a Tempest! (See officialclaiming rules on reverse of your license plate, and ob-serve claiming dates given above.)

seminars on IndiaAbout thirty students recently

organized Sangam, a club forIndian affairs. According to itsconstitution, the club is intendedto be a meeting point for all thcseinterested in India.

The club members propose topresent seminars and talks onIndian affairs. In addition, theyplan to organize social and cul-tural events, and to take part inthe activities of the InternationalProgram Committee.

The following students wereelected club officers: president,Raghu Nath; vice-president andtreasurer, MaheshBhogilal; andsecretary, Aiyub Hoosenally '63.

Membership is open to all stu-dents, staff, and faculty mem-bers. All inquiries and sugges-tions should be addressed to Rag-hu Nath, in Room 52- 417.

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Page 15: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

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Seven seniors and five facultymembers will work in SouthAmerica this summer with nativestudents and professors.

This work is part of the Inter-American Program of the CivilEngineering Department. TheSouth American participants willthen come to MIT the next year.This year the MIT students willstudy engineering and manage-ment problems in Columbia, Ven-ezuela, and possibly Mexico.

Participants will include Wil-

liam A. Jessiman, Dale Gladding,James E. Dailey, Richard M.Males, and Stephen C. Aldrich,all students in civil engineering;there will also be two studentsnow in industrial management.

Dr. Charles H. Savage Jr. andProfessors Paul 0. Roberts Jr.,Arthur T. Ippen, and T. WilliamLambe, all of the Civil Engineer-ing Department, and ProfessorWarren G. Bennis, of the Schoolof Industrial Management, willwork with the students.

up lby students in Caliormia as thF y attempt tot!-vl !the 26 miles to Catalina.

'Sorry'

A more conventional forrn of transportation-the automobile-might often cause more difficul-ties than would the motor-driven bed. Universityof Oregon sophomore Gary Moore has some first-hand experience.

Gary returned from a moVr:e late on the eve-ning of April 12 to find his car the possessor ofa large dent. He also found, on the windshield,the fo~loa~ing note:

'"I am writing this note to make people thinkI am giving you my address, but you look likeyou can pay for it. Sorry."

The damaskp came to more than $1r00..A few Election Procedure

It will certainly cost more than $10( to get ac-curate results in the hotly contested 1963 electionof the Ohio State Alumni Association. The OhioState Lantern reports that a Brinks truck, a certi-fied public accountant, and IBNI card are beingused in a newly instituted procedure to insureaccurate results.

Two slates of candidates havebeen nominated and special IBMcard ballots mailed to all AlumniAssociation members in goodstanding. The voters mail theirballots to a certified public ac-countant who is not an OhioState alumnus.

When the voting is completed,the Brinks truck will take theballots from tile accountant to"l e Collumbus division of IBM.IBM personnel Will open the bal-lots in the presence of tellers rep-resentinlg each side. The ballotswill be marked so tfhat they willb) 6.;ffult to duplicate A ma-chine will then count the votes,discardin; g any duplic ate or dis-fi-turc-d ballots in the process.

The results of the election,however, will not be announceruntil the Alunoni Day supper,May 25.

Expanding The AlumniIlTe Alumni Association of

Princeton University may soonhave to expand in scope to in-elude a new kind of merabcr-the alumna.

It is now a "theoretical possi-bility" that Princeton may admitundergraduate women The T~ni-v ersity is participating in. the newCooperative Undergraduai e Proz-g; ~am for Critical Larguag(-aloIng with 32 other schools, someoi which are coeducational.

"'Girls will theoretic ally beablzle to applys for admission fromthe cooperating inst~itutions just.Ili the boys will," said David H1.B3lair, assistant deart of the col-lege.

NeeAW: 12 PlayersAs scarce as the c:ceds at

Princeton are the acrial ballplayers at the UnivXersity ofX.ashingtonl; there aren't any

.yet. The Physical Eiducation De-partment at UWN added a new- port -- aerial ball -to its Spring,cquar'er lroster. The only pr ok '(mwva. t>(t 'no one wa-- courageou~senough to sign up for it.

So now the gym coach is look-ing for 12 players who haven't al-ready registered for the springquarter. The game, he explains,is a cross between hockey, foot-ball, and basketball. It is playedon a field about the size of ahockey rink, with a goal on eachend of the field approximately thesize of a hockey goal. The sixplayers on each side field the po-sitions of hockey players.

The ball, on the other hand, isa football. The playing rules aremodifications of those used in bas-ketball. A player, for example,may be disqualified on four per-sonal fouls.

UWs gym coach expects thatthe simplicity of the rules and thewide open nature of the play willmake the game very attractive.

Anyone for aerial ball?

Intramural rifle competition gotunderway with a meet Saturday,April 13; 26 teams participated.The meet was won by Sigma PhiEpsilon A with 768 points, fol-lowed by Alpha Epsilon Pi, 757;Baker D, 754; Phi Kappa SigmaA, 743; and Grad House, 729.

Each of the four men on a

team fired 20 shots from a proneposition. High possible teamscore was 800. Quentin Pankey ofBurton House led individual scor-ing with 198 of a possible 200.

The first meet of its kind, itwas held under auspices of theMIT pistol team, whose membersserved as court officials.

The Daytona 500 is one of America'stoughest stock car events. It measuresthe toughness, stability, over-all per-formance and economy characteristicsof the cars that take up its challenge-in a way that compresses year>; of drivingpunishment into 500 blazing miles. Thisyear mechcnical failures claimed over a0per cent of the cars that entered. That'swhy Tiny Lund's victory in a Ford (withfour other Fords right behind him) is a,remarkable testimony to sheer engineer-ing excellence.

Lund attributed his victory in part tothe "missing pit stop." He made one lesspit stop for fuel than his competition-proving that Forl economy can pay offin some fairly unlikely Situations!

Economv and the winner of the Day-tona 500 might Sound like odd bedfellowsat first. Y et economy is basic in every carwe make . . yes, even the Thunderbirdis an economy cur in its own waye Here'swhat we mean...

Economy is the measure of service andsatisfaction the customer receives in rela-tion to the price he ply.s for it. It doesnot mean, however, austerity . . . youhave taught us this. Americans want-and we try hard to give them-eQars thatare comfortable to ride in, fun to drive,and powerful enough to get out of theirown wall. N'ot manv Americans welnt tosettle for basic transportaltion. Y-ou steethis in our sales figures-more than halfof our 1963 sales fre coming from the topof each.model line. W'e're selling con-vertibles, hardtops, the jazzyr cars . . .the bucket-seat, high-performaLnce, lux-ury editions tare going like hot ckes.

Yet for all the fun that people aredemanding in their cars, they still are

very conscious of the element of thrift-of avoiding unnecessary expense. This isthe kind of economy we build into everycar from the compact Falcon to the lux-urious Thunderbird.

There's a special economy, for instance,in Ford's freedom from service. Everycar and virtually every wagon can travel36,000 miles before it needs a majorchassis lubrication. Other routine servicehas been reduced, too-because theseFords are simply built better-and ofbetter materials-tharn ever before.

In its own elegant way, even theThunderbird gives you economy. It willtravel 100,000 miles or 3 years before youhave to lubricate the chassis. Thunder-birds have a way of becoming classics-as a look at their remarkably high resalevalue will quickly tell you. This, too, iseconomy.

Once, long ago-before the arrival ofthe Income Tax-aa wealthy lady wasasked to comment on the solid goldplumbing of her latest villa at \Newport."So thrifty, my dear," said the dowager.. .nit will never, erer rust."

Economy then, is many things to man)people. WNhaltever economy me.n.s to you,y-ou're pretty sure to find it in al Ford.

America's liveliest,most care-free cars!

FORDFalcon * Fairlane - Ford - Thur~derbird

FOR 60 YEARS THE SYMBOLOf DEPENDABLE PRODUCTS

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Students to work in S. America this summer 'ftff5. ,.'>f a . : ~ By Toby Zidle '63 ;

students cross Channel I>horsepower-driven bed 5

Ii CColleye Liverpool

% aisro0 d on five-lAmong the bigger fads to sweep through the

itation's colleges last year was that of bbed-pushing.One or two students would aboard a bed and bepushed by fellow students for miles across hilland dale. This idea, with a few modifications, hasjust caught on in Great Britain.

Mae most significant changes are that studentsare no longer pushing and that the bed is nolonger crossing hill and dale. Outfitted with afive-horsepower outboard motor, -e bed made thelong trip across the English Channel. It was keptafloat by two 40-gallon oil drums.

Two Liverpool University students set out Ap-ril 13 from Dover, England on their ornate Vic-torian brass-knobbed bed. Many hours later theyreached Calais, France.

Said one of the students: "It was a beautifulday, with a blue sky and high clouds. The sea attimes was rathier heay and it took us muchlonger than we calcul-atrd" 'Ite twro had maderile ,iurmey in answer to challen ,- by students

at Manchester and Sheffield Unmver.,ities.l: is expected that te-.e fad will soon be taken

26 teams open IM rifle competition

How Ford economy wonfor Tiny Lund at Daytona

Page 16: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

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a handsome 91/4"x 121~4" volumfull of rare and fascinating pictures. Orig. Pub. at $7.S0.

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A History of Gambling in thUnited States: PLAY THE DEVILOver 50 illus. Lively history ogambling from 1492 to presentthe raffish episodes, lotteriescards, dice, horse racing, stocmarket and land speculations explain a compeling American urgeOrig. Pub. at $7.50. Only $2.9

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The famous Beethoven 'FestivalRecording& made by the LondonSymphony Orch. conducted byJoseph Krips. Without questionthe outstanding presentation ofatl 9 masterpieces, recorded withextraordinary technical skill, on8 magnificent 12" Long Plays.Handsome 2-color soft coverbook presents a Pictorial His-tory of the Composer's Life andTimes, extensive notes on thesymphonies, over 30 illustrations.Packaged in sumptuous leather-ette gift case.Monaural. Pub. at $39.50.

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HtlGTORY OF THE SAILINGfO. BY Howard I. Chapelte. 200

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IPLETE BOOK OF OUTBOARDI ISING. -y Robert Schref. Illus.o aver I00 photos. Completele, from the selection of the boat

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,RLD HISTORY OF THE 'PANCE.Curt Sachs. Illus. The famous,dard work on the dance from thee Age, through classical anti-y, the middle ages up to the

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mer '64 drove across e win-ning run with two men out inthe bottom of the eighth.

In other close games, BurlonB defeated Phi Gamma Delta7-5, Chem Engineering slipped byAEPI 6-5, and Zeta Beta TauB decisioned Chi Phi 7-5.

Baker Shows PowerBaker House played three

games while rolling up a totalof 52 runs compared to their op-ponents 12. Baker B smashedPhi Mu Delta 17-0, while the Cteam rolled over UCF 17-5 andZeta Beta Tau C 18-7.

Soores:

SPE 15, Grad House 3GHDS 20, PBE 8GMS 11, ,PE B 8LCA 410, Burton A 9Baker B 17, PMD 0Baker C 17,, UCF 5Burton B 7, PGD 5Chem. Eng. 6, AEP 5ZBT B 7, CP 5Baker C 18, ZBT C 7PKS 14, TC 11TEP 12, GEA 11SAE 16, PDT 12

By Robert MacDonaldThe intramural softball sched-

ule was relatively light in itsthird weekend with only thirteenout of fourteen scheduled gamesbeing played Saturday and Sun-day.

LCA, Burton in OvertimeThere were many tight games

this week including an extra-in-ning contest between LaxnbdaChi Alpha and Burton A. Bur-ton A jumped off to a 7-0 leadin the second inning while Lamb-daChi tallied four runs in thebottom of the third. This account-ed for all of the scoring until thetop of Athe sixth when Burton in-creased their lead to 8-4. LCAresponded to this by scoring fiveruns in the home half of the in-;ling to lead the game for thefirst time 9-8. Burton A pushedacross a run in the top of theseventh to force -the game intoextra innings, and the game wasfinally won by LCA as Jim Scho-

Kibitzer(Con/inued /rom Page 4)

South now led the king oftrumps, and West was squeezed.South held a club in his hand andthree hearts on the board, andWest could not guard them both.He finally pitched the jack of

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CHINESE ART. 'By Judith and ArtHart Burling. With 248 illustratio9 in Color. A welt-illustrated acomprehensive text on all phases,cluding: pottery and porcelain, scuture in wood, stone and ivory, gosilver, jewelry and ironwork, paintitextiles, architecture, costumes, abroidery, carpets, etc. Orig Pub.$10.00. Only $4

king of hearts for game.North-South were an aggressive

partnership, but South fortunatelyhad the playing skill necessaryto land his ambitious contract.Flirting with defeat, which eachof today's players brought them-selves to do, is what makes du-plicate the exciting game thatit is.

THE BETTER WAY TO CHESS.Fred Reinfeld. Illus. with many 4grams. How to recognize the staard openings and moves to pwinning chess. Pub. at $4.95 Only $1

THE NINE SYM'PHONIES OF BTHOWEN IN SCORE. The scores cle

ly reproduced with an original systfor simplifying the reading ofscores. Historical and critical ccment precedes each symphony. La9" x 12" format, in soft reinfor(binding suitable for use on mlstands. Orig. Pub. at $7.50 Only $A

Tcheidkovsky: SYMPHONY No. I (Win-ter Drearms). Historic recording ofthe little-known melodious master-work. Swarowsky cond. Vienna Phil-harmusica Symph.Pub. at $4." Only S1 ."

Tchaikovsky: SYMPHONY No. 1. Ster-eo. Pub. at $S.98. Only $1.8

George Sheoring: LOVE WALKED IN.The brilliant piano stylist offersLove For Sale, Stranger in Paradise,9 others. Pub. at $4.98. Ony $1.98Sg958. George Shearing. LOVEWALKED IN. Stereo.Pub. at $5.98. Only $1.98

'Haydn: STRING TRIOS. 3 lovelyworks for piano, violin and celloperformed by three virtuosi: Four-nier, Janigro and Badurs-Skoda.Pub. at $4.98. Only $1."

Beethoven: PI'ANO CONCERTO No. 4Guiomar Novaes play the most ro-mantic of Beethoven's concertos.Ahso Moonlight Sonata. Swarowskycond. Pro Musics Symph. of Vienna.Pub. at $4.". Only 1."

Bach: SONATAS FOR FLUIE ANDHARPSICHORD. Zotan Janel is flut-ist, Paul Ange er, harpsichordist, inthese delicate sonatas. Pub. at rS "'

Oniy $1."

Listz: PIANO OONCERTO NO. I.Sakit-Saens: PIANO CONCERTO No.2. Emil Gillels plays two melodicmasterworks of the romantic era.Koandrachin cen.Pub. at ."9. Only $1."

Henry Miller. LIFE AS I SEE IT. Thefamous author discusses a variety ofs,,biects ranging from Our InsectWorld to a comparison of Frenchand German prostitutes.Pub. at $4.98. Only $1.98Mozart. SERENADE FOR WIND IN-STRUMENTS. The Wind InstrumentGroup of the Viennr Symph. performsthis charming piece with melody andfeeling.Pub. at $4.98. Only $1."Hindemith: REaIUIEM "FOR THOSEWE LOVE." Stereo. Pub. at $S."8.

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Thirteen games played as softballenters fourth weekend of action Book and Record Spectacular i

SPECIAL SELECTION of books and . records at LOW, LOW PRICES-All less than orig.inal publisher's prices! Here's an extraordinary array of entertaining, beautiful and infor.mative books for year 'round reading and browsing. Here also is a truly distinctive groupof Monaural and Stereo records . . . mostly the elusive, hard-to-find variety . . . All itemsare brand new . . . all in perfect condition.

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Page 17: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

Frosh sportsBaseball team defeated by Milton Academy, Dean

ning. Twice in the last two in-

nings MIT had the bases loaded

with only one away, but both

times the team could not score.Netmen Lose Two

The tennis squad dropped their

meet with Harvard 9-0 Friday.

In Saturday's match at Wesleyan,all the Techmen lost their match-es except number two Dick Thur-ber. Thurber made a comeback

PLAS LIVELIER! STAYS LIVELIER! LOWER i- csEL~irS llWELER! STASllV rrErrER! LOWER rN cosH

I.

Riflemen beat Wentworthpionships. In addition, MIT hastaken the annual Boston Handi-cap Tournament the last twoyears. inis year's handicapmatch is slated for next Saturdayand will terminate the 62-63 sea-son competition.

Fencers choose Art Bestcaptain of '63-'64 squad

Art Best '64 was elected cap-tain of the 1963- 64 MIT fencingteam. He had the best win -lossrecord on the team (24-11) andtook second place in sabre com-petition in the New England In-tercollegiate Championships.

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a four-bagger in the seventh in- from a first set deficit to win, 0-6,By Mike PNewhouse

The freshman nine lost to Mil-

ton Academy last Wednesday, 6-2.

Jack Mazola pitched a no-hitter

until the fifth inning when two

hits and two costly errors let

across six uns. Dean Jr. College

visited MIT Saturday and left

with e 2-1 victory. Dean got bothits runs on a homer by the catch-er, and pitcher Larry Calof ac-counted for Tech's sole tally with

6-3, 6-3.The lacrossemen were topped

by Dean Jr. College 6-3 Thursday.Tom Bush, Pete Grant, and Den-ny Sivers scored the goals forTech. Harvard came to Briggsfield Saturday and defeated thestickmren 154. Experience wasthe determining factor in thisgame, as many of the Harvardmen had played in high school.Bush and Pete Kirkwood had twotallies apiece for MIT.

Trackmen Edged 61-55The cindermen met Governor

Dummer Academy at homeWednesday and were edged 61-55.For Tech, Rex Ross took a firstin the 220 and a second in the100 yd. dash. Ross also won thebroad jump. Sumner Brown tookfirsts in both the mile and the880, and Joe Rife won the discusand the shotput. The Techmentravelled to Andover for a trian-gular meet with Tufts and An-dover. Tech placed second with46 points, behind Andover's 852.Tufts finished third with a 21Y

points. Ross and Brown again

split five firsts between them in

-their respective events.

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The MIT attacker (hidden behind John Lambert. No. 12) is aboutto scoop up the ball in Saturday's lacrosse contest against Amherst. JimAnderson and Wayne Matson (second and third from right) follow theplay. Amherst won, 4-3. -Photo by Joe Baron

Lacrosse team drops close battlesTo Holy Cross and New Hampshire

ASHAWAY VANTAGEFor Tournament PlayApprox. Stringing CostTennis ............ $

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point lead and win the game.Tech goals were scored byWayne Matson, '64, Mike Mons-ler, '64, Jim Anderson, '63, andTony Weikel, '63.

Before a large home crowdSaturday, the MIT squad droppedits second contest of the week.This was a hard-fought battle allthe way, with UNH getting theedge. Tech goals were scored byMatson and Monsler.

The MIT lacrosse team droppedtwo games by one-goal marginslast week. The stickmen lost toHoly Cross by 7 - 6, Tuesday,April 16, and fell 4 - 3, to theUniversity of New HampshireSaturday, April 20.

The MIT squad was leading bythree goals at one point in theHoly Cross game. However, theHoly Cross team played a strongsecond half to pull into a one-

MIT's rifle team downedWentworth Institute 1409-1336 lastWednesday. MIT's record nowstands at nine wins and one lossin the Boston Rifle League.

Captain Dick Ludeman '63, whohas had the highest average onthe team all season, once againled the team with a 289. DaveHamada '65 followed with 284and Joe Boling '64, fired a 281.Jim Downward, '65, 278 and KarlFrederick '65, 277 filled out therest of the high five for thematch.

For the third straight year,MIT has captured both the Bos-ton and the New England charm-

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Page 18: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

By John EckThe MIT golf team began its

spring schedule of New Englandmatches with a 5/2-11/2 win overTrinity and losses to Tufts (6-1)and Williams (4-3) last week. Thelinksters record now stands atfive wins and five losses.

Tufts Wins 6-1The Golfers met a tough team

from Tufts and suffered a 6-1loss Monday. Peter Lubitz '65,who was low man for MIT, tiedhis opponent with a 76. NeilHull '63 scored the other half-point for Tech, tying his oppon-ent while shooting a 90. Otherscores for Tech were 80 for BillLakin '65, 90 for Bill Graham '64,92 for Roy Carver '64, 89 forMike Finson '63, and 94 for GlennStith '64.

Tech Downs TrinityTech played a triangular

Accounting, payrll offices Golfers downed by Tufts, Williams;X moved to Technology Sq. Olitfhnnt Trinitv fnr first NF win

The Comptroller's AccountingOffice, Room 5-330, and the

_ Comptroller's Payroll Office,.o Room 24-211, were moved Fri-oc day to temporary quarters on the

second floor of the TechnologycN Square Building.-J The two offices will be movedca to permanent quarters in the< D ag g e t t Building on Ames

Street, as soon as alterations of>- that building are complete.0

,Z Student fined $146CX An MIT student who failed to

register his car with the Cam-bridge Police Department was re-cently fined $146.

The chief of Cambridge police,Daniel Brennan, refused to di-

U vulge the student's name but saidXu that the offender's home state

was New Jersey.U The reasons for the large fine,~- according to Chief Brennan, were

that the student had failed to re-port after several parking viola-tions and that his home state carregistration was out of date.Moreover, he had not registeredhis car with the Cambridge au-thorities.

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CrewVARSITY HEAVIES

Won by Columbia 9:55; 2, MIT10:24

JV HEAVIESWon by MIT 10:09.5; 2, Columbia

10:24FROSH HEAVIES

Won by Columbia 10:04; 2, MIT10:18.7

VARSITY LIGHTSWon by MIT 6:34.9; 2, Dartmouth

6:46.6; 3, Yale 6:50.6JV LIGHTS

Won by MIT 6:41.1; 2, Dartmouth6:54.6; 3, Yale 6:59.1.

IST FROSH LIGHTSWon by MIT 6:52; 2, Dartmouth

6:58.6; 3, Yale 7:20.52ND FROSH LIGHTS

Won by MIT 6:50.8; 2, DartmouthGolf

MIT 5 I/2-Trinity I 1/2Tufts 6-MIT IWilliams 4-MIT 3

LacrosseHoly Cross 7-MIT 6

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match beating Trinity, 5% - 51/2,while losing to Williams by 4-3,Wednesday. Lubitz was again lowman for Tech, shooting a 79 whilebeating both of his opponents.Stith followed with an 83, alsobeating both of his opponents. AlPogeler '65, John Sinnott '65, andGraham shot 87, 87, and 84 re-spectively while beating theirTrinity opponents and losing totheir Williams foes. Carver shotan 87, beating his opponent fromWilliams while tying his adver-sary from Trinity, and Finsonshot an 86 while bowing to bothof his opponents.

Techmen Meet WesleyanThe golfers have two matches

slated for this week. The Tech-men play at Wesleyan today andmeet Merrimack and the Univer-sity of New Hampshire at homein a triangular match Friday.

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HOW TO SEE EUROPEFOR ONLY $300 A DAY: NO. 1

Summer vacation is just around the corner, and naturally allof you are going to Europe. Perhaps I can offer a handy tipor two. (I must confess that I myself have never been toEurope, but I do have a French poodle and a German shepherd,so I am not entirely unqualified.)

First let me say that no trip to Europe is complete withouta visit to England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, France, Germany,Spain, Portugal, Italy, Lichtenstein, Holland, Belgium, Luxeln-bourg, Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Po-land, Czechoslovakia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Russia,Greece, Yugoslavia, Albania, Crete, Sardinia, Sicily, Hungary,Rumania, Bulgaria, Lapland, and Andorra.

Let us take up these countries in order. First, England.

The capital of England is London-or Liverpool, as it issometimes called. There are many interesting things to see inLondon-chiefly the changing of the guards. The guards arechanged daily. The old ones are thrown away.

Another "must"' while in London is a visit to the palace ofthe Duke of Marlblorough. Marlborough is spelled Marlborough,but pronounced Marlboro. English spelling is very quaint, butterribly disorganized. The late George Bernard Shaw, authorof Little II'omen, fought all his life to simplify English spelling.They tell a story about Shaw once asking a friend, "What doesg-l-o,-t-i spell?"

The friend pondered a bit and replied, "Goatee."Shawv sniggered. "Pslhaw," said Shaw. "G-h-o-t-i does not

spell goatee. It spells fish.""fIow is that?" said the friend.Shaw: answered, "Gh as in enough, o as in wonmen, ti as in

motion. Put themn all together, you get fish."This was very clever of Shaw when you consider that he was

a vegetarian. And a good thing he was. As Disraeli once re-marked to Guy Fawkes, "If Shaw were not a vegetarian, no

l1)mb chop in London would be safe."HBut I digress. We were speaking of the palace of the Duke of

Marlborough-or Marlboro, as it is called in the United States.It is called Marlboro by every smoker who enjoys a fine, richbreed of tobaccos, who appreciates a pure white filter, who likesa soft I)ack that is really soft, a Flip-Top box that really flips.Be sure you are well supplied with lMarlhoros when you makeyour trip abroad. After a long, tiring day of sightseeing thereis nothing so welcome as a good flavorful Marlboro and a foot-bath with hot Epsom salts.

Epsom salts can be obtained in England at Epsom ,Downs.Kensington salts can be obtained at Kensington Gardens,Albert salts can be ob)tained at Albert lHall, Iiyde salts can I)eobltained at Hyde Park, and the crown jewels can be obtainedatt the Tower of London.

The guards at the Tower of London are called Beefeatersbecause they are always beefing albout what they get to eat.This is also known as "cricket" or "petrol."

Well, I guess that abiout covers England. In next week'.,colulmn we will visit the Land of the Midnight Sun--France.

' 1963 Max Shulman

Wherever you may roam in Europe and in all fifty states of theUnion, you'll find Marlboro ever-present and ever-pleasant-filter,flavor, pack or box.

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Page 19: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

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Ruggers smash Wesleyan, Boston Rugby ClubBy Susan 31. Rogers

The Rugby Club emerged doubly xictoriousfrom Saturday's encounters, tromping Wesleyan16-3 in the first game and Boston 23-6 in the see-end.

Wesley an Lacks FinesseApparently unfamiliar with rugby, the Wesleyan

team frequently seemed to think it was playingfootball. Blocking, offsides. and rough playabounded, with more knock-ons occurring thanwere called. Fred Knachman made NWeslevan'sonly try for a goal.

Tech took advantage of the strong wind in itsfaxvor during the first half, when it scored 12 ofits 16 points. Pinch-hitting as serum half for Cap-tain Marty Weber (who was getting married' wasJohn Lces.

Toni von Tienhoven '66 made tl;e first try andled the scoring with seven points, includinr, toi.cconversions made with an effective instep kick.Piling points against a fierce wind were John Lees,David Ritter. and Allan Newell.

The serum rode lower this wecek. PI-¥iy tiighten-ed up due to bet,.'er binding in and harder push-ing.

Koc.h Scs re~s TwiceSeveral newconmers to the sport played Boston

TRuSby Club's home team in the second game.Scoring tw'ice in his first game, gazelle-like DavidKcch '62 wiil be helpful later in the season whenTech takes on tougher teams. At 1:30 pm Satur-day the Engineers meet Holy Cross on Briggsfield.

Baker, Burton dominate ping pong finals;PBE, SAE, AEPi, PDT

By Dick Minnick place major division and secondThe regular season play in the place minor division teams will

intramural table tennis tourna- compete in a separate round-robinment was completed last week.Next sweek, the top two teams ineach major division league andthe top team in each minor di-vision league will begin a round-robin tournament to determinethe ranking of the twelve bestteams on campus. The third

playoff to determine the 13ththrough 20th places. Intra-mural points twill be awardedto the living groups on the basisof the results of these playoffs.

The finals will be dominated byBaker and Bur-ton House teams.Baker A, B, C, and D are all

Trackmen collect 12 first placesto score 95-40 romp over Tufts

MIT's trackmen crushed Tufts95-40 at Phillip's Andover Acad-emy last Saturday. Collectingtwelve first, ten second, andeight third places, and sweepingfour events, 'MIT dominated themeet from beginning to end.

Technlen Sweep ThreeMIT swept three events and

placed first and second in anotherto triple Tufts track point total.Jim Flink '64 took the 100 and200-yard dashes and the 120-yardhigh hurdles. Tom Goddard '63won the mile run while Mike Oli-ver '65 placed second. RogerButler '65 finished first in thetwo-mile run. Terry Dorschner'65 w`as the other track winner.beating teammate Al Terralon '65

to the tape in the 220 yard lowhurdles.

Eagleson Wins TwiceIn the field events MIT had a

little more trouble with Tufts butwere able to outscore their op-ponents. Eagleson '64 won boththe high jump and the javelin.Wrestler Kim Sloat '64 won theshct put with a heave of 46'8".In the hammer throw Jerry Das-sel '64, Jim Kotanchik '64, andTom Callahan '65 teamed to giveMIT a sweep. One-two finisheswere also engineered by GaryLukis '64 and Mike Keehner '65in the pole vault and Dave Car-rier '65 and Roger Hinrichs '63in the broad jump. Tufts sweptthe discus to hand the Techmentheir defeat of the day in anyevent.

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eligible, as well as Burton A, B,and C. East Campus A roundsout the eight teams which willrepresent the dormitories. PhiBeta Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsi-lon A, Alpha Epsilon Pi A, andPhi Delta Theta A, the top fourfraternity teams, will also battlefor honors.

The secondary playoffs will in-clude Burton D, Chi Phi A, Sen-ior House A, Grad House A, PhiKappa Theta A, Phi Delta ThetaB, and Sigma Phi Epsilon A. Thewinner of a tie-breaking matchbetween Sigma Alpha Mu andBurton E will also be eligible.

Final League Standing%Major I)lvision

League I

Baker AEast Campus ABurton DGrad House BChinese Students Club CSenior House CLeague 11Burton ABaker BChi Phi A]ast Campus BChlnese Students Club DGrai House Ci,eague IIIB;,p er CBurton BSer ic.r House AC. :nese Students Club AA!pha Tau Omn-;gar.' Izlle I rBur:cn CBaker DGrad House ASenior House BILambda Chi Alpha A

Minor lDivisionLeague VPhi Beta EpsilonPhi Iap)pa Theta AChi Phi BMIT Student HouseLamlda Chl Alpha BClub LatinoIA'aglle VISigma Alpha Epsilon ASigma Alpha lMuBurton EPhi Kappa Theta BPhi Sigma Kappa BPhi Mu Delta A!seague VIIAlpha Epsilon Pi APhi Delta Theta BPuI Sigma Kappa ASigma Alpha Epsilon BDelta Tau I)eltaSigma Phi Ep)silon B!.eaguie VIIIP'hi Delta Theta ASigma Phi Epsilon ASigma ChiA lphai Epsilon Pi BSigma .\lpha Epsilon CPhi Mu Delta B

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Page 20: 9-14 THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V83/PDF/V83-N11.pdfShould the board choose the for-mer, it would be differentiating the apartments from housing for single students. Student dormi-tories

fLights sweep Dartmouth,0-I

The lightweight crews startedtheir season by sweeping five rac-

m es against Dartmouth and Yale.o on a windy Husatonic River last- Saturday at Derby, Connecticut.q: Rowing conditions were gener-N ally good, and all times were' aided by a swift current. By the. end of the afternoon, the Tech< bantams had collected 75 Ivy

League racing shirts.

< Varsity Outsprints Dartmouthr) Yale jumped out to an early

Z but shortlived lead- in the varsitya race, but before the Eli coxswainu had passed the number six Tech-

man, the Engineers began tosteam back. Stroke Mark Barron'64 led the Techmen to about alength lead on both opponent

r shells with about three-quarters of° a mile to go. MIT held on to-- this lead for the next half milew by rowing at a powerful 31

I strokes per minute. With a quar-ter mile left, Tech raised thebeat to 34, and shook off themuch-improved Dartmouth crewwith their sprint. The Engineersfinished three lengths ahead ofDartmouth, and times were MIT6:34.9, Dartmouth 6:46.6, andYale 6:50.6.

JV's win by three

MIT rowed the JV race witha reshuffled bow four, and rowedto a solid three-length victory.The Tech junior varsity finished

in 6:41.1, with Dartmouth 13 sec-onds behind in 6:54.6, and Yalebringing up the rear with a6:59.1 clocking.

Sophomore stroke Don Smithpaced MIT's third varsity boatto a six length victory over Yale'sthird boat. The Techmen led allthe way in this race, and fin-ished in 6:51.7, as Yale crossedthe line in 7:15.7.

Frosh win close oneIn the first frosh race, MIT and

By C. R. Miller

The heavyweights split theirraces with Columbia last weekendwith the JV and third Varsitywinning, while the Varsity andFreshmen were unable to defeatthe Lions from Columbia. Theraces, originally scheduled forSaturday afternoon, were post-poned until-Sunday morning onaccount of high winds. Conditionson the Charles were only moder-ate on Sunday because of a head-wind blowing down the course.

Varsity OutrowedThe MIT heavyweight Varsity

started its race at about 43

Netmen score three winsfor six and four record

By Jim Taylor gens 6-1,Three straight wins in as many Clay Vor

days last wee brought MIT's number :tennis record to six wins and '-6, 6-1 vfour losses. The netmen beat The deBowdoin, 8-1, at home April 18, be the ntshut out Colby, 9-0, at home Ap- where 1ril 19, and pulled out a 5-4 vie- out an 11tory at Wesleyan the next day. lcyan's

Aasnaes Serves Underhand match lIcne halfBent Aasnaes '64, Tech's num- alone al

ber one player, was forced by a alone tashoulder injury incurred during win marthe Williams match to serve un- very detederhanded against Bowdoin. Des- Tedlpite this handicap he was still Techmrable to defeat Sam Ladd 6-3, 6-3. cessful i]At number two, Marty Ormond her one'64 came back from a one set lest to Bdeficit to win 5-7, 6-3, 9-7. The At two Lother singles were as follows: feared b,no. 3 Jack Moter '64 defeated SeldneckTom Tom 6-2, 6-1; Bob Blumberg mond la'64 tripped Steve Hecht, 7-5, 6-1; Older atTerry Chatwin '63 zopped Hugh The neHardcastle 6-1, 6-1, and Mike courts oeLong '65 blanked Louis Schwartz, 1:30 aga6-0, 6-0. Massacht

The only loss was sustained in the duPothe first doubles match where 29th at 3Chatwin and Blurnber lost toLadd and Schwartz 7-5, 8-6. Longand Jim Taylor '63 defeated EmHecht and Hardcastle 6-3,. 8-6.At number three doubles Moter Band Ken Comey '65 edged Tom The MITom and Craig Magher 6-3, 8-6. Boston

MIT Sweeps Singles, Doubles 9- 3, onColby proved to be a very weak to Bates

adversary. Coach Crocker decid- day, Aped to rest the ailing Aasnaes and seasonplayed Ormond at number one. games wOrmond came through with a ining.crisp 6-2, 6-1, victory over Col- B'by's Jack Mechem. At two Mot MIT saer defeated Jim Crawford 6-4, 6- 0. At three Blumberg overxhilni-ed Kim Snow 6-0, 6-2. Numberfour man Teiry Chatwin edgedPeter French 6-2, 64. Sopho-.!,<more Mike Long scored an im- pressive win over Dave Ander- -

son 6-0, 6-1 at five, and at six.Ken Comey nearly blanked Bob .:Lewis 6-1, 6-0. MIT fared equal- %:a4 l.;ly wvell in the doubles as all three .matches were won quickly by - i.-Techmen. '"

Chatwin Takes Deciding Match ...At Wesleyan Aasnaes returned '

tu the lineup (however he was -.still forced to serve underhandedand to keep away from the net. -lis back court game was l.ot

er.ough as he lost to Mike Burton4-6, 6-3, 6-1. Ormond again scor-ed a comeback win at two, 0-6, Bate6-3. 6-1 Moter had less trouble in Saturdat three winning over Torr Sra- win, 8-7.

6-2. Blumberg defeatedn Seldneck 6-3, 6-3. Atsix Mike Long scored aictory over Fred Millett..ciding match proved toumber five singles matchFerry Chatwin squeaked1-9, 6-3 victory over W'es-Tom Moreland. The

asted almost three andhours with the first set

king 2 and a half. Chat-naged to outsteady hisermined opponent.hmen Lose Doublesen proved much less suc-n :the doubles. At numn-Chatwin and Blumberg

Burton and Millet 6-3, 6-3.,ong and Moter were de-,y Ron Whyte and Von6-64, 7-5. Taylor and Or-st to Sragens and Bobnumber three 6-1, 8-6.

xt match is on the homen Saturday the 27th atinst the University ofusetts. Brown invades'nt courts on Monday the3:00.

;y Donald Siefkes[T baseball team lost toState Teachers College,Thursday, April 18, and; College, 8- 7, on Satur-

pril 20, bringing theirrecord to 2-10. Bothvere decided in the ninth

Yalea strong Dartmouth led Blue ofYale to the line. Times were MIT6:52, Dartmouth 6:58.6, and Yale7:20.5. With a half mile to go,the Dartmouth crew started tosprint, but Tech stroke and cap-tain Bruce Powell led his boatto the slimmest margin of victoryfor the Engineers that day.

The second frosh, rowing inabout the best conditions of theday, edged out Dartmouth byeight seconds in 6:50.8.

strokes per minute, which washigh for the prevailing conditions,but gained about a four-foot lead.Columbia started at 38, quicklycaught up to the MIT boat, andbegan to move ahead with aboutone-quarter of the race gone.MIT, overstroking Columbia formost of the distance, rowed thebody of the race between 31 and32 strokes per minute but theLions continued to move. The En-gineers' only challenge came atthe sailing pavilion when 10power strokes helped Tech gainthree seats on their opponents.With a bit less than half a mileto go, Tech decided to make alast bid to defeat their opponents,whom they now trailed by oneand one-half lengths. The strokerose to 35 and stayed there forthe rest of the race, but MITcould not gain, as the Lionsroared on to beat the Engineersby 9 seconds, with a winningtime of 9:55.

J V Endurance DecisiveThe Tech heavyweight J V crew

was not able to gain much at thestart, but they showed their en-durance as the race progressed.The Engineers, rowing at 30 beatsper minute, understroked Colum-bia by one stroke during the bodyof the race. In spite of the dif-ference, MIT had gained a six-second lead by the time thecrews had rowed to the Harvardbridge. For the next three-quar-ters mile, the Engineers appliedtheir knowledge of physics andpower, and though they sprintedat only 35 strokes per minute,Tech beat the Columbians by 16seconds, with a time of 10:24.

Third Varsity Wins EasilyThe third Varsity swept up the

Columbians on the Henley course,though the race appeared closeat the start. MIT 'and Columbiawere almost even as the boatsmoved into the body of the race.MIT then launched a drive thatColumbia could not compete with,and by the time the crews reach-

in the ninth inning when BostonState scored eight runs on fivehits to win the game, 9 -3. Techgot its three runs in the sixthinning when Lennie Ferrari, '64,doubled, Dick Adamec, '63, walk-ed, and Larry Demick, '63, washit with a pitched ball to loadthe bases.

3ston State Rallies Don Alusic, '64, knocked Fer-aw a 3- 1 lead evaporate rari and Adamec in with a single3':ralw k*a"n .i Al Ai _s sa. -- m

'4 , ~ n'- r- ~ ~ ~ ~ - ,c9*~ c 1i:z~ ~ ~~~~~~~··>~~~ ; ~ 4 i..$.~~~~~~~:9~

es runner slides safely into first base under the tag of Don Alusiclay's diamond contest at MIT. Bates scored two in the ninth to

-Photo by Joe Baron

West Point second

MIT wins second straightNortheastern judo crown

MIT's Judo Club scored 107 outof a possible 150 points to winits second successive Northeast-ern Collegiate Judo Champion-ship last Saturday. West Point,in second place, scored 92 points;while Harvard -took third with 70,and Northeastern was fourthwith 20.

The match was decided in thetwo final rounds when the Tech.men went ahead by 15 points bydefeating Nontheastern, sweepingall 50 points in their battle toclinch the victory for the Engi.neers. Harvard scored two vie.tories over West Point.

The representatives from Techwere Abraham Oort; second de.gree black belt; Don Morrison '6i,first degree black belt; Jim Omu.ra '62; third kyu brown belt; BobGilmore '62, third yu bronbelt; and Dana Lasher '65, fifthkyu white belt. West Point's JungHughes, third kyu brown belt le.ceived the award for the mostoutstanding individual perform.ance.

This was Ithe second year inwhich the MIT Judo Club, underthe supervision of Mr. Harry Ya.nagi, Judo Commissioner of theNew England area, has sponscredsuch a meet. The Judo Club,which meets on Saturdays at 1:6Gpm, always welcomes new niem-hers.

ed the Harvard Bridge, MIT was16 seconds ahead, and rowingcomfortably at 31 strokes perminute. MIT finished in 7:47, 30seconds ahead of Columbia.

Columbia Frosh WinThe first Freshmen never led

the Columbians down the course,but they were never out of therunning for the first mile of therace.

The second Fresh, understrok-ing Columbia by 2 strokes formost of the race, were not work-ing efficiently, and they lost tothe Columbia crew by 6 seconds.

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Wednesdy., April 24Golf-Wesleyan, Away, 2:00 pm,

Governor Dummer Academy (F),Home, 2:00 pm

Lacrosse--Massachusetts, Away,3:00 pm, Andover (F), Away,3:00 pm

Thursday, April 25Tennis-Dean Junior College (F),

Away, 3:00 pmFriday, April 26

Golf-New Hampshire, Merrimack,Home, 1:00 pm

Saturday, April 27Baseball-Middlebury, Home, 2:00

pm, Harvard (F), Away, 3:00pm

Heavyweight Crew-Yale at NewHaven

Lightweight Crew-BIGLIN CUP:Harvard, Dartmouth at Hanover

Lacrosse--Amherst, Home, 2:00

pm, Winchendon School (F),Home, 2:00 pm

Tennis-Massachusetts, Home, 1:30pm, Belmont Hill School (F),Home, 2:00 pm

Track-Bowdoin (V&F), NewHampshire (V), Home, 12:30 pm

Rugby-Holy Cross, Home, 1:30pm

Sunday, April 28Sailing-NEISA Championship

Eliminations at Boston University,Regatta at Providence (F)

Monday, April 29Baseball-Norfheastern (F), Away,

4:00 pmGolf-Greater Boston at South

Shore Country Club, Away,2:00 pm

Tennis-Brown, Homne, 3:00 pm(V&F)

Tuesday, April 30Baseball-Harvard, Away, 3:00 pm

Varsity sailors second to Harvardin Oberg race; frosh win at Tufts

The varsity sailing team placedsecond behind Harvard in thecontest for the Oberg Trophy lastFriday on the Charles. All theother teams in the local areawere also in this regatta, includ-ing: Bcston University, BostonCollege, Babson, Northeastern,and Tufts.

Klare 2nd High ScorerKen Klare '63 turned in a good

performance, taking high point

position in A division and seceon place in over-all scoring. How-ver, the combined forces of ScottHynek '65, Ed Shaw '65, andDave Schlosberg '64 could notback up Klare strongly enough,and Tech had to be satisfied witha second to the Harvard cor.bi-nation of Ford, Horn, and Stook-ey.

lFrosh First at TuftsThe freshmen ,vete bac!: at

Tufts last weekend, taking a sol.id first among six teams. Theyscored 79 points to Northeastern's71, with BU, Williamns, and Wes-leyan in the runner-up positions.Contributing to the victory wereskippers Terry Cionberg, JoeSmullen, Don Schwanz, Bob Purs.sell, and Jeff Erwin.

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and Demnick scored on an errorby the Boston. State left-fielder.Harold Branson, '63, was the los-ing pitcher. He went eight inn-ings and was relieved in the-inith by Rick Gander '65.

Bates Edges MITThis game was also decided in

the ninth inning when Batesscored two runs and MIT one tomake the score 8-7, in favor ofBates. Tech tied the score at 6-6, by scoring four runs in theeighth inning. Demick led offwith a single, Don Alusic, '64,walked, and Dave Dunford, '63,singled to load the bases, withnobody out. Demiqk was walkedhome; Alusic scored when JimBauman, '65, got on with a field-er's choice; Dunford came homeon another fielder's choice, andBauman was knocked in -on asingle by Ferrari. The winningpitcher was John Freeman, whowalked six and struck out 10.

Bob Yanus, '64, was the losingpitcher; he walked three andstruck, out nine while going theentire distance.

The team meets Middlebury onBriggs Field mnis Saturday, April27, at 2:00 and travels to Har-vard on Tuesday. April 30.

Varsity, frosh defeatedHeavyweight crews split with Columbia

h nine toppled twice in final inning

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