Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel...

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Townes award ed lobel Prize in Physics Photo by John Torode Dr. Charles H. Townes, winner of the Nobel Prize in physics for 1964, is greeted by an enthusiastic crowd of MIT colleagues and well-wishers at Logan Airport as he returns to Boston from California early Saturday morning. Placement Bureau releases student employment data A total of 8492 interviews were handled by the Student Place- ment Bureau during the 1963-64 academic year. Three hundred and thirty-one companies, 34 government agencies and 10 grad- uate schools conducted the inter- views, which involved 830 repre- sentatives and 1519 undergraduate and graduate degree candidates. These 'and other data on stu- dent employment were released to The Tech last week in the An- nual Report of the Placement Bureau. This year the detailed breakdown of offered salaries by courses of study is being withheld from general publication to pro- tect the interests of employers and prospective employees. How- ever the overall figures for all courses combined are: Low Med. High CE T S.. 475 625 790 S.M. 525 735 910 Ph.D. 735 1000 1425 These figures represent indus- trial monthly base salaries.and do not necessarily represent accep- tance levels. The placement of all but fifty of the graduating bachelor degree class of 1964 has been determined by the Office. Fully three-fourths of those accounted for in the class headed for further studies after graduation - 31% at MIT and 44% of the class at other schools. Thirteen percent of the class went directly into industry, and 4% into government work other than military service, which itself claimed two percent of the class. Course VI S.B. interviews ac- counted for 31% of all undergradu- ate interviews; the next largest share went to Course XV pros- pects, followed by Course II and Course X jobseekers. Directory available Graduate students and off-cam- pus residents may obtain copies of the MIT Student Directory to- day at the Alpha Phi Omega booth in Building 10. After today, the phonebook will be obtainable only in the Information Office, 7-104. The directory is published each term by the MIT Publications Of- fice. Last Saturday APO delivered the phonebooks to fraternity houses. By Allan Green The Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week to Dr. Charles Hard Townes, Pro- vost of MIT, for his fundamental work in quantum mechanics lead- ing to the maser-laser principle. Dr. Townes shared the $50,000 physics prize with two Russian scientists, A. M. Prokhorov and N. G. Basov, who carried out similar work. The first MIT faculty member in the school's history to become a Nobel Laureate, Dr. Townes re- ceived word of the award last Thursday in Pasadena, where he had gone to attend a NASA ad- visory committee. meeting. Abruptly awakened He first heard the news at 4 am when a New York radio sta- tion phoned him for confirmation. It was not until the afternoon that the official cablegram from Swed- en arrived. On his returnm to Boston Satur- day morning, Dr. Townes was met by a crowd of well-wishers carry- ing placards reading "Scientists and Engineers for Townes." Two of his graduate students, Elsa Garmire and Ray Chiao, had in- stalled a new red carpet in his office. In an interview later that day, Dr. Townes declared, "I'm very much honored. This is the most important recognition a scientist can get; and there's nothing more important except being in the middle of making a scientific dis- covery." When asked about the increased obligations of winning the award, he said, "Every Nobel prize win- ner is the focus of attention, and this naturally puts an added re- sponsibility on him." He added, however, that he did not think his new recognition would affect his work at MIT. As Provost, Dr. Townes shares with President Julius Stratton, the responsibility for general super- vision of the educational and re- search programs of the Institute. In addition, he carries out re- search in optical masers. Mrs. Townes said that all four of their daughters would accom- pany them to Sweden for the De- cember 10 ceremonies. She said that the two Russians who shared the prize were per- sonal friends and were "very genial." Dr. Townes added that they were "fine scientists who de- serve to be honored too." Townes was an undergraduate at Furman University, in his home town of Greenville, South Caro- lina. Graduating summa cum laude at age 19, he completed work for a master's degree in physics at Duke University. He did his doctoral work at the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology on isotope separation and nuclear spins. (On his recent return from California, Dr. Townes noted that "Caltech President Lee Dubridge had a fine time pointing out my connection with Caltech.") Maser developed After working for Bell Telephone Laboratories during the war, Dr. Townes started work on micro- wave spectroscopy which he fore- saw as a new analytical tool for scientific study and as a poten- tial new technique for controlling electromagnetic waves. He joined the Columbia Univer- sity faculty in 1948 and continued work in the field of microwave physics. The idea for the maser was conceived three years later during a trip to Washington, D.C. A chief objective of scientists then (Please turn to page 13) Glove fight, mystery events scheduled for Field Day The 1964 Field Day, November 14, will have not one but three mystery events, one of which will involve 100 members each from the freshman and sophomore classes. Also scheduled are three major classical events - a glove fight, a stagecoach race, and tug- of-war. These revelations, as well as a list of rules, were announced recently by Tom Jones, chairman of the 1964 Field Day Committee of Beaver Key. Jones has directed both previous Field Day efforts of the Class of 1966. The prevailing class in the glove fight will receive 35 points. The standard 100 yard by 50 yard field will be used; competitors will not be limited in number. The tug of war consists of two sep- arate events-a coed limited, in- volving 15 girls from each side (5 points), and a general urim- ited (9 points). Four teams of ten men each will pull the "lavishly decorated" stagecoach 440 yards. Eight coeds from each class will drive these teams, one serving as driver and a second as "shotgut" for each of the four laps. In addition, the coach will carry two passengers for each lap. According to the published rules, the coaches shall be equipped to "project water at the other class," arnd also have "an appropriate noise device." Coaches must be able to withhold 1200 pounds of stress under test conditions. Ten points will be awarded to the winner of the race, an addi- tional 10 points to the team with the best decorated coach, and 5 points will go to the class 4vith the best dressed set of coeds. As has been customary in re- cent years, the losing class will be responsible for cleau Briggs Field immediately fo ing the events. The second mystery event will involve 25 men from each class and a device described as "a three-foot pole, four inches in di- anmeter, with a flat disk on top which rotates and is capable of holding a 100-pound test force." The final mystery event (5 .pints) will involve the freshman and sophomore class officers, and the officers of the Quadrangle lub. Flag appears atep Student Center; Original contract fulfilled 'iday _-Vol-. 84, No 22 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Nov. 4,.1964 5c VoL. 84, No. 22 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Novr. 4, 51964 5c , , - ~ ,; -- . ; Photo by John Torode An American flag raised over the fourth floor of the Student Center Friday marked the completion of construction under the terms of the Institute's original contract with W. B. Wexler and Company. Construction will continue until next June on the sec- ond awarded contract, which includes the fifth floor parapet and reserve book reading room. This "topping off" ceremony indicated that the revised building schedule has been met. Work in the coming winter will be concentrated on interior walls of the first three floors and the basement. Construction is being financed by two federal loans and Second Century Fund gifts. For synthesizing penicillin Sheehan receives Scott Award Dr. John C. Sheehan, professor of organic chemistry, has been presented the John Scott Award for 1964. The Scott award, presented to "inventors who have benefited mankind," is administered by the City of Philadelphia and consists of a medal, scroll, and $2,000 premium. Dr. Sheehan received this year's award at the annual National Meeting of the Interscience Conference on Anti-Microbal Agents and Chemistry sponsored by the American Society for Microbiology in New York, October 26. Mr. G. Curtis Pritchard, Secretary of the Board of Directors of City Trusts of Philadelphia, cited Dr. Sheehan's total synthesis. of penicillin and the synthesis of certain analogue of penicillin in presenting the Scott award. Previous Scott Award winners include Sir Arthur Fleming, who first isolated penicillin, Dr. Jonas Salk, Dr. Glenn Seaborg, Dr. Vannevar Bush, and Dr. Charles Townes, who received the Scott Award in 1963. Dr. Sheehan joined the MIT faculty in 1946 as an assistant professor of chemistry; he was named associate professor in 1949 and professor of organic chemistry in 1952. He has served as consultant to the President's Scientific Advisory Committee, .- former chairman and present member of the PSAC Committee on Military Applications of Chemistry and Biology, and a member of the PSAC Limited War Panel. INDEX Newxt week's issue of The Tech will be published Tuesday, No- vember 10.. Deadline for news entertainment features Is 10:00 am Sunday. Letters to Editor must be submitted by 12 noon Saturday. Campus Topics .......................... 4 College World ........... 2............. Editorials .................................. 4 Entertainment ...................... 8-10 Kibitzer ...................................... 4 Letters ...................................... 4 Looking Back ........................ I I Peanuts ...... ................................ 4 Sports ................................ 1 3-16 A I

Transcript of Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel...

Page 1: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Townes award ed lobel Prize in Physics

Photo by John Torode

Dr. Charles H. Townes, winner of the Nobel Prize in physicsfor 1964, is greeted by an enthusiastic crowd of MIT colleaguesand well-wishers at Logan Airport as he returns to Boston fromCalifornia early Saturday morning.

Placement Bureau releasesstudent employment data

A total of 8492 interviews werehandled by the Student Place-ment Bureau during the 1963-64academic year. Three hundredand thirty-one companies, 34government agencies and 10 grad-uate schools conducted the inter-views, which involved 830 repre-sentatives and 1519 undergraduateand graduate degree candidates.

These 'and other data on stu-dent employment were releasedto The Tech last week in the An-nual Report of the PlacementBureau. This year the detailedbreakdown of offered salaries bycourses of study is being withheldfrom general publication to pro-tect the interests of employersand prospective employees. How-ever the overall figures forall courses combined are:

Low Med. HighCE TS.. 475 625 790S.M. 525 735 910Ph.D. 735 1000 1425

These figures represent indus-trial monthly base salaries.and donot necessarily represent accep-tance levels.

The placement of all but fiftyof the graduating bachelor degree

class of 1964 has been determinedby the Office. Fully three-fourthsof those accounted for in the classheaded for further studies aftergraduation - 31% at MIT and44% of the class at other schools.Thirteen percent of the class wentdirectly into industry, and 4%into government work other thanmilitary service, which itselfclaimed two percent of the class.

Course VI S.B. interviews ac-counted for 31% of all undergradu-ate interviews; the next largestshare went to Course XV pros-pects, followed by Course II andCourse X jobseekers.

Directory availableGraduate students and off-cam-

pus residents may obtain copiesof the MIT Student Directory to-day at the Alpha Phi Omega boothin Building 10. After today, thephonebook will be obtainable onlyin the Information Office, 7-104.

The directory is published eachterm by the MIT Publications Of-fice. Last Saturday APO deliveredthe phonebooks to fraternityhouses.

By Allan GreenThe Nobel Prize-the highest

honor bestowed in the world ofscience-was awarded last weekto Dr. Charles Hard Townes, Pro-vost of MIT, for his fundamentalwork in quantum mechanics lead-ing to the maser-laser principle.

Dr. Townes shared the $50,000physics prize with two Russianscientists, A. M. Prokhorov andN. G. Basov, who carried outsimilar work.

The first MIT faculty memberin the school's history to becomea Nobel Laureate, Dr. Townes re-ceived word of the award lastThursday in Pasadena, where hehad gone to attend a NASA ad-visory committee. meeting.

Abruptly awakenedHe first heard the news at 4

am when a New York radio sta-tion phoned him for confirmation.It was not until the afternoon thatthe official cablegram from Swed-en arrived.

On his returnm to Boston Satur-day morning, Dr. Townes was metby a crowd of well-wishers carry-ing placards reading "Scientistsand Engineers for Townes." Twoof his graduate students, ElsaGarmire and Ray Chiao, had in-stalled a new red carpet in hisoffice.

In an interview later that day,Dr. Townes declared, "I'm verymuch honored. This is the mostimportant recognition a scientistcan get; and there's nothing moreimportant except being in themiddle of making a scientific dis-covery."

When asked about the increasedobligations of winning the award,he said, "Every Nobel prize win-

ner is the focus of attention, andthis naturally puts an added re-sponsibility on him." He added,however, that he did not think hisnew recognition would affect hiswork at MIT.

As Provost, Dr. Townes shareswith President Julius Stratton, theresponsibility for general super-vision of the educational and re-search programs of the Institute.In addition, he carries out re-search in optical masers.

Mrs. Townes said that all fourof their daughters would accom-pany them to Sweden for the De-cember 10 ceremonies.

She said that the two Russianswho shared the prize were per-sonal friends and were "verygenial." Dr. Townes added thatthey were "fine scientists who de-serve to be honored too."

Townes was an undergraduateat Furman University, in his hometown of Greenville, South Caro-lina. Graduating summa cumlaude at age 19, he completed

work for a master's degree inphysics at Duke University. Hedid his doctoral work at the Cali-fornia Institute of Technology onisotope separation and nuclearspins. (On his recent return fromCalifornia, Dr. Townes noted that"Caltech President Lee Dubridgehad a fine time pointing out myconnection with Caltech.")

Maser developedAfter working for Bell Telephone

Laboratories during the war, Dr.Townes started work on micro-wave spectroscopy which he fore-saw as a new analytical tool forscientific study and as a poten-tial new technique for controllingelectromagnetic waves.

He joined the Columbia Univer-sity faculty in 1948 and continuedwork in the field of microwavephysics. The idea for the maserwas conceived three years laterduring a trip to Washington, D.C.A chief objective of scientists then

(Please turn to page 13)

Glove fight, mystery eventsscheduled for Field Day

The 1964 Field Day, November 14, will have not one but threemystery events, one of which will involve 100 members each fromthe freshman and sophomore classes. Also scheduled are threemajor classical events - a glove fight, a stagecoach race, and tug-of-war.

These revelations, as well as a list of rules, were announcedrecently by Tom Jones, chairman of the 1964 Field Day Committeeof Beaver Key. Jones has directed both previous Field Day effortsof the Class of 1966.

The prevailing class in the glove fight will receive 35 points. Thestandard 100 yard by 50 yard field will be used; competitors will

not be limited in number. Thetug of war consists of two sep-arate events-a coed limited, in-volving 15 girls from each side(5 points), and a general urim-ited (9 points).

Four teams of ten men eachwill pull the "lavishly decorated"stagecoach 440 yards. Eight coedsfrom each class will drive theseteams, one serving as driver anda second as "shotgut" for eachof the four laps. In addition, thecoach will carry two passengersfor each lap. According to thepublished rules, the coaches shallbe equipped to "project water atthe other class," arnd also have"an appropriate noise device."Coaches must be able to withhold1200 pounds of stress under testconditions.

Ten points will be awarded tothe winner of the race, an addi-tional 10 points to the team withthe best decorated coach, and 5points will go to the class 4viththe best dressed set of coeds.

As has been customary in re-cent years, the losing class willbe responsible for cleau BriggsField immediately fo ing theevents.

The second mystery event willinvolve 25 men from each classand a device described as "athree-foot pole, four inches in di-anmeter, with a flat disk on topwhich rotates and is capable ofholding a 100-pound test force."

The final mystery event (5.pints) will involve the freshmanand sophomore class officers, andthe officers of the Quadranglelub.

Flag appears atep Student Center;Original contract fulfilled 'iday

_-Vol-. 84, No 22 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Nov. 4,.1964 5cVoL. 84, No. 22 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Novr. 4, 51964 5c

, , -~ ,; -- . ;

Photo by John Torode

An American flag raised over the fourth floor of the StudentCenter Friday marked the completion of construction under theterms of the Institute's original contract with W. B. Wexler andCompany. Construction will continue until next June on the sec-ond awarded contract, which includes the fifth floor parapet andreserve book reading room.

This "topping off" ceremony indicated that the revisedbuilding schedule has been met. Work in the coming winter willbe concentrated on interior walls of the first three floors and thebasement. Construction is being financed by two federal loansand Second Century Fund gifts.

For synthesizing penicillin

Sheehan receives Scott AwardDr. John C. Sheehan, professor of organic chemistry, has been

presented the John Scott Award for 1964.The Scott award, presented to "inventors who have benefited

mankind," is administered by the City of Philadelphia and consistsof a medal, scroll, and $2,000 premium. Dr. Sheehan received thisyear's award at the annual National Meeting of the InterscienceConference on Anti-Microbal Agents and Chemistry sponsored bythe American Society for Microbiology in New York, October 26.

Mr. G. Curtis Pritchard, Secretary of the Board of Directorsof City Trusts of Philadelphia, cited Dr. Sheehan's total synthesis.of penicillin and the synthesis of certain analogue of penicillin inpresenting the Scott award.

Previous Scott Award winners include Sir Arthur Fleming, whofirst isolated penicillin, Dr. Jonas Salk, Dr. Glenn Seaborg, Dr.Vannevar Bush, and Dr. Charles Townes, who received the ScottAward in 1963.

Dr. Sheehan joined the MIT faculty in 1946 as an assistantprofessor of chemistry; he was named associate professor in 1949and professor of organic chemistry in 1952. He has served asconsultant to the President's Scientific Advisory Committee, .-formerchairman and present member of the PSAC Committee on MilitaryApplications of Chemistry and Biology, and a member of the PSACLimited War Panel.

INDEXNewxt week's issue of The Tech

will be published Tuesday, No-vember 10.. Deadline for newsentertainment features Is 10:00am Sunday. Letters to Editormust be submitted by 12 noonSaturday.Campus Topics .......................... 4College World ........... 2.............Editorials .................................. 4Entertainment ...................... 8-10Kibitzer ...................................... 4Letters ...................................... 4Looking Back ........................ I IPeanuts ...... ................................ 4Sports ................................ 1 3-16

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Page 2: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Nobel award to Townes

Townes and family gcBy Jeff Trimmer

Just how does one react to ,thenews that you have been award-ed the Nobel prize? ProfessorCharles H. Townes, Provost ofMIT, inventor of the maser, andnow Nobel-laureate, was awak-ened at 4:30 am. Thursday, Oc-tober 29, by a local radio stationand asked this question. Fronmthat timne on the phone' neverstopped ringing, Professor Townesrecounts.

The official notification of theaward did not reach Townes un-til that Thursday afternoon whenhe was finally able to reach hiswife and find that she had theofficial cable. Later that same af-ternoon the Swedish ambassadorcalled to notify him that he hadwon the award.

How does one feel? "I, ofcourse, feel very honored," hesaid. "One cannot be as excitedexcept, perhaps, when one is inthe middle of a discovery." Henoted also the responsibility of aNobel winner to society in all re-marks or actions he might take.

Plans for the trip to Stockholmare not yet complete. The RoyalSociety of Sweden makes no ar-rangements, but as Mrs. Townesnoted, "Scandanavian Air Linesexpressed great interest in ar-ranging things for us." Towneswill take his wife and four daugh-

Honored by associates Junior Prom Queen voting-begins today;.+ n Swedenn Five finalsts to participate at formal dance

ters with him for the ceremonies.The oldest daughter, Linda, 21, isa senior at Swarthmore; Ellen,17, is a fresinnan at ConneticutCollege for Women; Carla is 15;and Holly is 12. Dr. Townes hopesto spend more time than the verybusy three days of ceremonies inSweden.

The excitement of winning theaward has spread across the con-tinent. In California where Dr.Townes was participating oncommittee for NASA when thenews reached him, other formerNobel winners joined in cogratu-laiting him. Townes arrived backin Boston Saturday, October 31,and was met by contients ofhis family students and friendswith signs proclamying "Scien-tists and Engineers for Townes"a n d "Congratlatior Dr.Townes." He even got to kiss thebaby of one of the laboratory tech-nicians. "Never felt more like apolitician," he remembers.

Also greeting him were hordesof cogratulatory telegrams andletters. One, from the AmericanPhysical Society, read congratu-lations to the next President, An-other from the two other winnerswho will share the prize withTownes, Drs. Basov and Prokho-rov, congratulated him. Townesand the two Russian physicistsare good friends; Basov and Prok-

Voting for the Junior Promhorov visited with the Townes' Queen begins today at the JP

family in 1961. booth in the lobby of Building 10.How about encouraging further Any undergraduate student may

Nobel winners? To Ihis, Townes vote in the contest which extendsspoke of encouraging the indi- through Friday. Pictures of thevidual scientist in their research. contestants will be posted at theHe noted the importanee of stu- jp booth.dent work with scientists as re- According to Don Schwanz '66,search, he feels, is an important entries f6r the contest were sub-part of the teaching process. Iheimportance of adequate equip-ment and what the Committee anEducational Policy called an aca-demic atmosphere.

Does Dr. Townes expect his

statue to appear' on the pedestalsin Building 7 supposedly reservedfor .MIT winners? "I wasn'taware of the ramor," he said,"but I suppose those are for peo-ple who've died, and I don't ex-pect to be there just yet."

The future for Dr. Townes'work will be divided between ad-ministrative work as Provost andsome research. He's very inter-ested in the effects of light inter-acting with acoustic materials.Work on the precise measurementof distance, relativistic effects,and the asotrophy of space arealso interesting. The third areawith which he is interested is inhigh-resolution spectroscopy usingmaser devices. He is not expect-ing to spend time developing amaser-laser "death ray."

these are big stripes. Bold stripes. The kind you'll never get lost with in a crowd. This isArrow Cum Laude: a bold new breed of sport shirt that asserts itself, but always in goodtaste. Has long swooping collar points and a tapered body line to match. Made to yourexact sleeve length, like a dress shirt. In red and gray, or red and black combinations.Pure, soft, "Sanforized" labeled cotton. All for a timid price of q_ D O'r.qac .$5.00. A bold new breed of shirt for a bold new breed of guy.

mitted Monday and Tuesday.Each fraternity could submit oneentry and each dormitory was al-lowed three entries.

The five finalists chosen by pop-ular vote will be presented at theFriday night-formal dance of JPWeekend, November 13-14. TheQueen will be selected by mem-bers of the JP Committee and theofficers of Beaver Key, the juniorhonorary.

This year the JP Queen willhave a bigger role in tire entireweekend, according to Schwartz.She will present the Field Daytrophy to the winning class Sat-urday morning. The Queen is alsoscheduled to make a special en-trance at the Four Preps concert

in Kresge Auditorium Saturdayafternoon.

Tickets for the Saturday nightperformance of Bo Diddley areavailable at the JP booth in thelobby of Building 10.

The tickets for the Bo Diddleyconcert are the only ones remain-ing. All Weekend tickets havebeen sold.

Dorm Council meetsA meeting of the MIT Dormi-'

tory Council was held at BakerHouse on Oct. 29, 1964.

George Jelatis, of SeniorHouse, was elected DormitoryJudcom Chairman. The dormpresidents have met with Execu-tive Committee and have tenta-tively decided that no changesin dorm representation should bemade in the proposed studentgovernment reorganization.

Janet Romanowych, president.of McCormick, annmnced thather entire dorm will vote onHousmeom's recommendation toapply for admittance to dorm-corn.

PHYSICISTS

MATHEMATICANSTechnical representativesof The MITRE Corporation

will be conducting interviewson campus

November 6, 1964

MITRE is chief technical advisor and systems engineer to the AirForce Electronic Systems Division of the Air Force SystemsCommand. In this capacity, we design and develop such global,computer-based systems as the NORAD Combat OperationsCenter, Back-Up Interceptor Control System, and the NuclearDetonation Detection and Reporting System. Other commitments:development of a future air traffic control system and supportingthe Defense Communications Agency in the development of theNational Military Command System.

For the young systems engineer, this is uniquely rewarding work.You associate with the top men in your field. You work in anatmosphere that allows you to extend your capabilities profession-ally and academically.

At, MITRE, men trained in single disciplines are encouraged togrow beyond their original fields of interest. Systems designers learnto work from an increasingly broad base.

You may work in such diverse areas as information theory, com-puter design, display techniques, propagation, or human engineer-ing. You may, analyze. You may synthesize. You may deal withsystems or individual components. At the highest levels, you mayhave to consider political, economic and social factors... as well asthe available and predictable technology.

Requirements: M.S., or Ph.D. in these disciplines--electronics,physics, mathematics. MITRE is located' in pleasant, suburbanBoston and also has facilities in Washington, D. C. and ColoradoSprings. If an interview will be inconvenient, inquiries may bedirected in confidence to Vice President - Technical Operations,The MITRE Corporation, box 206, Dept. CNE, bdfrd, Mass.

ARRANGE FOR AN INTERVIEW THROUGH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE.

THE

M ITREAn Equal Opportunity Employer

Pioneer in the design and development of command and controlsystems, MITRE was chartered in 1958 to serve only the UnitedState Government. An independent nonprofit corporation,MITRE is technical advisor and systems engineer for the Elec-tronic Systems Division of the Air Force Systems Command, andalso serves the Department of Defense, and the Federal Aviation

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Page 3: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Charifies Drive nets over $1200, New programCancer Society principal recipient ASAs scientists for spe

Nhr'A wn Pil ftrniv do ths, i st NASA., seeks scientists for space -venures11riLL cvd The National AeronauticsU t U andfour times the Iam~ t received The National Aeronautics andfrom fraternity residents lastyear. Twenty-two fraternities andall six dormitories had reportedby Monday in the 1964 drive.Alpha Phi Omega solicited fromthe dorm residents, while theTechnology Community Associa-tion handled the fraternity end ofthe drive,

Individual donations were made

out to the participating charities,which included: the World Uni-versity Service, the United Fund

of Greater Boston, CARE, theAmerican Cancer Society, andCambridge Settlement Houses.Undesignated donations could al-

so be made. The cancer societywas the chief recipient of studentdonations.

qRELIGIOUS LIBRLARY

and

READING ROORMBASEMENT, 317 MEMORIAL DRIVE

Scripture

HistoryEcumenics

Engineering &

TheologyReferencePeriodicals

Space Administration has an-nounced a recruiting programwhich will seek out 10 to 20 scien-tist-astronauts. The publication ofthe criteria for selection and fu-ture training plans at. this timewas partially in response to therecent orbiting of a Russian doc-tor, the first trained scientist toenter space.

Criteria for the candidates weredeveloped by the Office of SpaceScience and the National Academyof Sciences. Screening of the can-didates will be done by the Aca-demy and members of the MannedSpacecraft Center in Houston.

To be eligible for the program,an applicant must have a scien-tific, medical or engineering spe-cialty and:

1. Have been born on or afterAugust 1, 1930, be a U.S. citizen,and be no taller than six feet.

2. Have a bachelors or doctor-ate degree in the natural sciences,medicine or engineering, or equiv-alent experience.

3. Have transcripts of academicrecords sent directly to Scientist-Astronaut, Post Office Box 2201,Houston, Texas, 77058.

4. Have Graduate Record Ex-amination scores sent to the sameaddress from the EducationalTesting Service in Princeton, N.J.The January 16, 1965 series arerequired.

~I BEAUTIFUL C

ROS, GARDEIg ORCH

603 UcMass ,Ave.,

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5. Submit federal StandardForms 57, 89, and 78, which in-volve medical examinations andemployment procedures. All are

available at the Boston Post Of-fice.

Deadline date for these applica-tions is December 31, 1964.

After preliminary screening,some applicants will be asked tosubmit additional material includ-ing published or unpublished sci-entific and engineering reports;essays on field experience, re-search activities, or hobbies re,lated to space missions; and in-dividual thoughts on scientific ob-

jectives for manned missions inspace.

Before final selection as astronauts, applicants will receive a

thorough physical examination and

will take part in a limited spacesimulation program. The simula-tion program will tamiharize themwith the space environment anddetermine their ability to with-stand the stresses of launch, spaceflight and re-entry.

Selected applicants who are notalready qualified pilots will begiven individual flight training ne-cessary to qualify them as pilotsof high performance aircraft andhelicopters.

IFC Presidenfs' Conference held;Fasse+t speaks af Endicoff affair

"It is important for the frater-nity to set itself as a model ofurban living for the community,"commented Dean of HousingFrederick Fassett at the annualPresidents' Conference.

The gathering of the presidentsof all the fraternities took placelast Friday night at EndicottHouse. John Roach, vice presidentof the IFC acted as chairman forthe dinner and discussion meet-ing.

Dean Fassett spoke at lengthabout neighborhood relations in

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At General Precision Aerospace

At General Precision Aerospace the young graduate steps right into actual space engineering assignments.During his first year he works on many projects in several departments through a rotational training pro-gram and under the close supervision of experienced professionals (many are former training programgrads). It's the best way we know of to broaden his exposure and help him find where he fits best inour multi-faceted space effort.

This effort is so broad... it's hard to find a major space and defense program that doesn't use GPAprecision guidance and navigation instrumentation: Apollo, Explorer, Gemini, OSS, Mariner, Polaris,SUBROC, Surveyor, Ranger, and LEM. A complete list would fill this page.

Looking ahead - and the research and development behind it - is our prime business. Visionaryprograms now in progress will someday yield optical laser gyros and accelerometers, stellar iner-tial guidance systems, maneuverable re-entry guidance and control systems, strap-down inertialguidance systems, precision microminiature inertial navigation systems, solid state sensors,complex space information systems for spacecraft, missiles, and aircraft.

Down-to-earth expansion programs shore-up these ambitions. A multi-million dollar equippedResearch Center in Little Falls, N. J. was completed in 1962. An extensive Systems Engineer-ing Facility was put into operation in late '63. All together the GPA facility represents1,500,000 square feet of the most advanced equipment complexes in the East devotedto research, development, and production of systems for aerospace.

Initial Assignments Available in:KEARFOTT DlVISION-Electtonic Systems & Equipment * GSE * Microelectronics * Digi-

a~firx i.ng tal Data Handling Systems * Electro-optics e Precision Gyros * Gyro Reference PlatformAnalog Computers * Digital Hybrid Computers * Electrohydraulics * Synchro Resolversand DC Devices * Gimbal Mounted Components * Servo Motors and Tachometers.

SYSTEMS DIVISION - Inertial and Stellar Inertial Guidance * Adaptive Flight Con-trol * PCM Telemetry * On-Site Flight Test * Guidance Systems Test Analysis * Tra-jectory and Targeting Analysis a Error Analysis * Scientific Programming * Aero-

space Ground Equipment o Radiation Systems * Astrosensors a Digital Systems.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: Wednesday - Nov. 18Arrange an appointment with your Placement Director now. Or write toCollege Relations Supervisor.

mi MN /,a [I KEARFOIT DIVISION

[]D cm, [0(5 $([ rOI GPL DIVISION

lE~I[-$ [ ^( SYSTEMS DIVISIONGENERAL PRECISION, INC. RESEIARCH CENTER

general and discussed methods ofimproving neighborhood contract.He stressed the fraternities' re-sposibility in the ommn-ity andsuggested that the houses try tomaintain better relations throughpersonal contact.

Alan Steinman, Public RelationsChairman for the IFC, reportedon his conferences with the presi-dent of the Back Bay Neighbor-hood Association. "MIT's fratern-ities," he said, "have been throwntogether with those of Boston. Uni-versity and Northeastern in astereotyped picture of collegestudents. The community oftenoverlooks our participation in so-cial services, our blood drives,and our community services."

The Conference also discus&the Independent Residence Devel-opment Fund, a loan fund design-ed to provide money at low in-terest rates to independent livinggroups who want to build, or toimprove their houses. Dean Fas-sett commented that "the IRD ismagnrfificent evidence of the faithMIT has in its fraternities."

Finance Board budgetis $53,000 for year

The Finance Board has com-pleted its final review of budgetsand requests for the fiscal year1964-65, and recently announcedmost of the awards and grantsto se made this year.

The largest single item in thefinal budgets wras $16,682, whichwill be used by the Institute Com-nlittee and its related subcom-mittees for operation this year.InscQmm Operations during theimmediate past academic yearwere budgeted at $14,252. Thesefigures include two $1000 grantsmade towards the expenses of theAWS Symposium on Women inScience and Engineering, one eachfiscal year.

The second largest sum wasgranted to the Technology Com-munity Association, which in ad-dition to $325 capital expenditureon the publicity center, will use$14,610 for its operations.

The Combined Musical Clubs re-ceived a total of $12,920, whichwill be used for travel, publicity,and organizational expenses. Otheractivities which received regularannual budget grants includedWTBS, Beaver Key, the DebateSociety, and the Social ServiceCommittee.

Total funds allocated into eitherdirect budget or reserve accountswas $52,838, a figure very near thetotal annual grant that the Ac-tivities Development Board makesto the Finance Board.

Future work of the Board willbe directed towards preparationof a tentative budget r-,uest forthe next two years ilb. . ADB.Estimates of activities and stu-dent government expenses will becomplicated by the highly uncer-tain status of Student Center usesand costs, according to Jim Tay-lor '65, Chairman of FinanceBoard.

IJonn ll .neynaLu : um. u

Lindsey '66, co-chairmen of the

1964 Undergraduate CharitiesDri ve, announced Monday that

this year's total, to that date, ex-ceeded the funds collected in lastyear's drive.

As of Monday $1,273.73 had been

collected from the undergraduatestudent body; approximately $920was collected in the 1963 drive.

The dormitories contributed$769.54 to Monday's total whichis a slight rise from last year.The remaining $502.19 came from

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Page 4: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

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The Nobel Prize: a proud achievementThe Tech extends its heartiest con-

gratulations to MIT's first Nobel Prizewinner, Provost Charles H. Townes. The

- entire Institute shares in the pride of hiso- accomplishment.

It is interesting to note that Dr.Townes is assisted in his work by both

, graduate and undergraduate students,c who are thus given an opportunity to, have an intimate part in the vital re-o search which is the mainstay of the Insti-z tute's preeminent position. This oppor->_ tunity for involvement with men of Dr.< Townes' calibre characterizes MIT's aca-n demic atmosphere.LU At MIT involvement is a key wordc involvement in classes, in research, in in-Lu dustrial and government work, and in

administration. As Dr. Townes pointed

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out in an interview yesterday, it is theInstitute's responsibility to scViety to be-come involved. This responsibility canand should include students as well asfaculty.

A vital part of MIT's education is thisopportunity for involvement. Any stu-dent who merely attends classes and eturns in assignments can pass his cours- ves; but he has missed the opportunity cfor creative development by association. aUnfortunately some students seem ignor- sant of the resources which lie within dtheir reach.

As the CEP Faculty Survey indicates, cand as Dr. Townes has demonstrated, cthere is considerable interest in the un- edergraduate; but first the student mustshow interest. It is MIT's pride not onlythat a member of its faculty won the PNobel Prize, but also that it has offered sto the student involvement with men of athis rank. For this reason the under- p

graduates can sincerely say that they gshare in the pride of Dr. Townes' achieve- wment. Ai

Vol. LXXXIV No. 22 Nov. 4, 1964BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman ........................... Howard M. Brauer '65Managing Editor ............................. John Reinties '66Editor ........................................... John Montanus '66Business Manager .......... Kenneth.Browning '66News Editor ................................... William Byrn '66Features Editor ............................... Jeff Trimmer '66Sports Editor .................................... Dave Kress '67Photography Editor ........................... John Torode '66Entertainment Editor ...................... Mona Dickson '66Advertising Manager ............. Michael Weidner '66

Associate News Editors ............ Allan Green '66Charles Kolb '67Associate Sports Editor ..... W. Thomas Compton '67Associate Photography Editor .... George Jelatis '66

Controller . .................. John Flick '66Treasurer .......................... James Triant '67Circulation Manager ... ............ Donald Paul '67Assistant Treasurer ............ Joseph LaBreche '67

Managing Staff .................. Joel Shwimer '61Editorial Staff .................... Alan Rinsky '64News Staff ................. ... Stephen Katzberg '65

Henry Lichstein '65, David F. Nolan '65Richard Millman '66. Stuart Orkin '67

Mark Rockman '67, Harvey Schultz '67Elaine Cravitz

Features Staff ................. Anthony Pappas '66Michael Shorenstein '66, James Veilieux '66Lydia CastleSports Staff ......................... don Bosack '67Neal Gilman '67

Entertainment Staff .......... Richard C. Art Jr. '66Lawrence Stark

Photography Staff ............. Sanford Libman '65Joseph Baron '66, Isaac Bornstein '66Saul Mooallem '66, William Park '66

Paul Stamm '66, William Bloomrnuist '67James DeRemer '67, Steven Rife '67

Business Staff ................. Thomas Nakagami '67

Staff Candidates .............. George Russell '65Norman Neff '66, Nicholas J. Couatla '68

M. William Dix '67, David Hill '68Gerry Banner '68, Alan Bernstein '68

Mark Bolotin '68, James Carlo '68Jim Cornell '68, Benjamnin Cox '68

Leonard Fehskens '68, Eric Goldner '68Mark Green '68, Jerry Grochow '68

Sherry Gulman '68, H. Mark Helfand 68Bob Horvitz '68, William Ingram '68Bob Kendrick '68, John Kopolow '68James Leass '68, Jonathan Lehr '68

Louise Lentin '68, William Mack Jr. '68Reh Marlin '68, Roy Maxwell '68

Diane Mechler '68, Scott Mermel '68Russell Mosteller '68, Allen Moulton 11I '68

Arthur Perlman '68, Paul Richter '68o.James Robertson '68. Jerrold Sabath '68

Johrt Seaouist '68, Andy Seidenfeld '68Steven Silverstein '68, Mark Silvert '68

Alfred Singer '68, Jeff Stokes '68Mark Wallace '68, Brenda Zimmermann '68

Philip Ryals '68

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts.The Tech is published every Wednesday during thecollege year, except during college vacations, byThe Tech, Room 50-211, 142 Memorial Drive, Cam-bridge, Massachusetts 02!39. Telephones area code617, 876-5855; 876-5856; 864-6900, Extension 2731.

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

Unsigned editorials in The Tech are the opinionof The Tech's Board of Directors, not that of MIT.

The Tech welcomes letters from its readers. Spacepermitting, such letters will be printed in whole or inpart, if deemed by the editor to be of sufficient in-terest or benefit to the community. Brevity increasesthe chance of publication. Anonymous letters will notbe printed, but names will be withheld upon request.

AppointmentThe Board of -Directors of The Tech has

accepted with regret the resignation of WilliamJudnick, '65, as News Editor, and is pleased toannounce the election of William Byrn, '66, ofPhi Beta Epsilon and Newport News, Virginia,as News Editor.

The Faculty Survey of the Committeeon Educational Policy released last weekcontained some interesting sidelights onthe morale of the faculty. It reveals gen-erally a vote of approval for the MIT en-vironment, but there are also some sig-nificant complaints.

On the positive side, about half thefaculty said they would "very much" liketo spend the rest of their careers here;another 35 per cent said they would"pretty much" like to. Over one third ofthe engineers and one fifth of the human-ities department rated their departmentor field best in the country. Another halfrated it among the few best. But amongthe scientists, only 12 per cent thoughttheir department best in the country (an-other three fifths thought it among thebest).

This difference in the attitude of sci-entists also extended to their criticisms;while the engineers complained mostabout pressure, the scientists decried thelack of an academic atmosphere, size andlocation of the Institute, and non-academ-ic chores. Their chief approval went tothe facilities available.

It is hard to tell how much believinga department is best helps contribute tomaking it the best: it is natural at thispoint to speculate what effect the addedstatus of a Nobel Prize winner will haveon the scientists at MIT.

00oomsdaypredictiouYears ago it was the tradition for the

track coach, affectionately called "Oscar"in the headlines, to predict the winningclass on Field Day. Alas, Mr. Haedlund isno more, and his successors, being moreprudent in light of the current trends, aresilent. Dutifully we will leap into thebreach.

Obviously the freshmen will win. Thisis not due to any sterling talent on theirpart; but the match has been conceded.The sophomores, instead of eagerly an-ticipating the fray, are drooping theirjaws to the ground. morbidly reflectingon their fate at the hands of vastly su-perior numbers of frosh. Such thoughtsnaturally tend to discourage attendanceby the more wavering souls.

Regardless of our prediction, how-ever, we shall still send reporters to thescene of the carnage. Even in Coach Hed-lund's time, classes were known to riseup and prove him wrong.

73.

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Summer work abroadgoal of subcommitiee

By Patrick WinstonLast summer the Inscomm For-

Aign Opportunities Subcommittee,which I now chair, found techni-;al and business jobs abroad forin experimental group of twentystudents, both graduate and un-lergraduate. From Sweden torurkey participants were .placedwith excellent results. All since:ontacted found their jobs techni-:ally instructive and the experi-rnce tough to match.

Meeting ThursdayThe good feedback- allows ex-

ransion of the program this year.students with the technical ability.nd drive to make a good im-?ression abroad are urged to ap-Aly. More details about the pro-gram and application procedure

All be the subjects of a meetingIhis Thursday, November 5, at:30 in the Library Lounge, 14N-10.The Foreign Opportunities Com-

nittee started work in the sum-mer abroad area in the fall of63 believing that such work wouldive students a taste of foreignife without forcing them to for-eit a summer's technical experi-nce. The cash factor enters too;he work idea probably minimizeshe costs involved. In a sense,

To the Editor:Shortly after ten o'clock this

morning, I was treated to a showof one of the sorriest events of thisentire bitter and sordid campaign.

At the time, I was in the lobbyof building ten passing out litera-ture in support of the protest tick-et of Walter Cronkite and DavidBrinkley in the straw vote. Allcampaigners present were behav-ing in an orderly manner, whenI was told by Mr. William Samu-els, UAP, that not only was Ibeing forbidden to campaign forthe candidate of my choice, butthat my campaign materials them-selves were being confiscated, al-most as if they were somethingsubversive. When I asked whythis was occuring, I was told that

the program also substitutes forjunior year abroad plans used atother schools. The F.O.C. and theforeign study advisor, ProfessorNorton, are working hard on de-veloping acceptable study yearprograms, but it is clear thatsuch programs will be individual.ly planned and restricted to a fewspecially qualified students.

Language ProblemsThe language problem is far

more acute in studying. Yearsof training are generally required.For a summer's work,- however,most get away with a minimalamount of language background.Students returning from Swedenand Denmark report that Englishsufficed nicely since their bossesand friends spoke astonishinglygood English. A bit of study paysoff, though; it increases the en-joyment of foreign living consid-erably, and it leaves the peoplewith a far better impression ofthe USA.

Of course, working and study-ing are not the only ways to gaina valuable foreign experience.Crossroads Africa, the World Uni-versity Service, and the AmericanFriends Society all sponsor ex-cellent goodwill work camp programs.

my candidates were "not on therolls" in any state, unlike theothers. After the Lodge-Hatfieldticket was mentioned, somemumbling was done to the effectthat the Lodge people had gonethrough him, this apparently giv-ing them some sort of benedictionand abolution.

After retreating to the positionthat the other campaigns had all"discussed the issues," I askedhim whether he had been sowrapped up in the bureaucratictrivia of his office that we hadfailed to notice the numerousCronkite-Brinkley posters aroundthe Institute, not to mention mail-box stuffing at all dormitories per-

(Please turn to page 5)

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North-South vulnerable; Westdealer.

Opening lead: 2 of dubs.This hand is an outstanding ex-

ample of declarer having a widevariety of play possibiliies. Hegroped his way successfullythrough the maze and ended upwith a profitable score.

PEANUTS appears daily and Sunday in the Boston Herald.

After a fairly standard biddingsequence, West's two of club open-ing was covered by the five,queen, and South's ace. Southcounted one more clhb trick,three hearts, three spades, andone diamond. Having decided toplay for overtricks, he led aheart to North's ten to unblockhis own hearts. East's king wonand a heart was returned, Westdiscarding a club. South now hadconsiderable information. East'ssix card heart suit and West'sprobable four card club suit leftWest with at least four cards inone if not both of the other twosuits. Clubs and spades lookedbrighter than diamonds. The jackof club lead was taken by West'sking. The nine was returned asthe best of many poor leads butgiving South two clubs. Southmade them good and cashed thequeen of hearts to squeeze, dis-carding dummy's diamonds andWest discarding two diamonds.South noticed West's reluctanceto discard spades and led thejack of hearts. This was too muchfor West and he sluffed the twoof spades to protect his king.Two spade leads, ending up inthe hand ot be safe, establishedthe spades and the rest of thetricks. South's careful playingnetted him two overticks.

Note: All hands appearing inthis column have actually beenplayed at some time. In the ad-vancement of better bridge, I willgladly accept interesting hands.Call at 247-8691, or x3206.

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Letters to The Tech

Page 5: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Debaters win in BU tournament;Freshmen place 7th at Dartmouth

The NIT Varsity Debate team received top honors in the four-man team division of the Boston U. Invitational Tournament lastweek. At the same time four MIT freshmen representing the DebateSociety finished seventh out of 21 participating schools in theDartmouth Fall Novice Tournament.

The collegiate debating topic for this academic year concernsthe advisability of a Federal public works program to aid theAmerican unemployed. MIT debaters Bender and Stock (affirmative)and Johnson and Hello (negative) finishedd with a record of tenwins and six losses in the four-man BU competition.

On November 13 and 14 the Debate Society will hold its annualMIT Invitational Tournament. Approximately 25 teams from 16schools in the New England area are expected to participate.

Interested students are invited to the final rounds of thetournament, which will be held at 4:30 Saturday in the LittleTheatre of Kresge.

An explanation of the process bywhich smell is transmitted by the

nerve membranes at the receptor

olfactory nerve in the presence of Drs. Gesteland and Lettvinan odor has been proposed by twoMIT professors. Drs. RobertGesteland and Jerome Lettvin be-lieve that the transmitting elec-trical signals in each nerve fiberdepend on two different receptormechanisms.

One increases the rate of im-pulse-firing, and the other de-presses that rate. The electrical

showed that there were at leasttwo processes of permeability andresulting electrical current flowrinvolved in the receptor mechan-isms. They also found that theelectrical pictures of the actionsof large groups of aggregates ofreceptors' could not be explainedby a linearly-related unitary pro-cess common to both mechanisms.

action of both mechanisms are Armenians give $200somewhat different and are notable froshlinearly related. for suoable frosh

Olfactory nerve, fibers have theirendings in the mucosa, or surfaceof the lining of the nose. Herethey eornse inr coatSwt with mole-cules of odor-producing substanceswhich produce a stimulus at spe-cial receptor sites.

Using frogs as experimentalsubjects, the two men recordedboth the activity of single fibersand the average electrical activityof the frog olfactory mucosa be-fore, during and after stimulation.The result of these measurementsseem to indicate that the odorantmolecules apparently alter tem-porarily the permeability of the

With each day, Bell Systemcommunications become morqimportant to homes, businessesand defense.

You can get in on the begin-ning of a new era of communi-cations. Your skills and talentscan easily be matched to aforward-looki ng job assi gnment.

Your prospects for earning atop management job are excel-lent. Our management jobs arefilled from within-it's policy.And those who move up arethose who can quickly evaluatecompetition, make sounddecisions, and are fully account-able for their responsibilities.

We'd like to talk with youabout career futures we canoffer. Sign up now at yourPlacement Office. The Bell Sys-tem-where people find solu-tions to exciting problems-matches benefits, salaries andworking conditions of othercompanies. The Bell Systemcompanies are equal opportu-nity employers.

26) BELL SYSTEMAmerican Telephone and Telegraph Co.and Associated Companies

The Hai Guin Club of Bostonhas announced the offering of a$200 scholarship to be awarded toan Armendan-American studentborn and residing in Massachu-setts and currently attending col-lege.

The funds will go towards thesecond term tuition of a fresh-man. Applications must be com-pleted by December 1, 1964; theaward will be based upon needand scholastic ability.

Interested students should con-tact the Student Aid Center forfurther information.

We workl in space...

and under the sea...

and over the land...to provide the world'sfinest communications

Letters:(Continued from Page 4)

mitting it and the handing out ofliterature at that very moment.

When he finished hemming andhawing about agreeing with ourright to protest, he finally man-aged to get out his real "accusa-tion." He "accused" us of thehideous crime of possibly-appeal-ing to some people who mightvote for Cronkite as a hack, ajoke.

It was this charge that reallyscared me. The right to laugh atour candidates and our electionshas long been an American tradi-tion. But Mr. Samuels did noteven go through the gestures ofattempting to reconcile his actionwith that tradition. He assumedthat the only issue was whetherwe would attract hack, or joke,votes. That to attract such voteswould be an offense was left asan unspoken assumption. Sincethis charge was too serious to dis-cuss in such a casual manner, Iwithdrew to the accompanimentof murmurs about"creating a badimpression."

Although I voted for Cronkiteand Brinkley as a protest againstall of the candidates, major andminor, laughing at the entire elec-tion is certainly the right of everyAmerican. Regretting that politicsshould ever come to such a pass.

Erwin S. Strauss, '65

Student DirectoryTo the Editor:

Have you looked at the new Stu-dent Directory? Tried to contactanyone? If so, the odds are highyou share my frustration and an-noyance. In keeping with previousstandards, the MIT PublicationsOffice has produced an amazinglyshoddy attempt at a simple listof student addresses & telephonenumbers. If you're not familiarwith recent years' editions of theDirectory, you might come to theinnocuous conclusion that this isjust one of those occasional mis-haps that befall any publisher.But those of us who have beenhere longer know that the consist-ent. and total failure of MIT topublish a reasonable student di-rectory proves beyond a doubtthat the Institute is utterly incap-able of performing the task. Andlet us not minimize the error:forty- one of the forty - six stu-dents on lmy floor were incorrect-ly represented in the Directory!And we know who it is that paysfor this publication, don't we?

I think it is clear that the timehas come to relieve the Publica-tions Office of their insupportableburden. I for one would be gladto pay 25c for a reasonably ac-curate Student Directory. AlphaPhi Omega used to handle the jobquite well, four years ago. Whydon't they or some similar re-sponsible student group assumethe job now, and the profits?

The whole student body wouldbe indebted.

Robert S. Zucker, '66

Courtesy in lectureTo t+he Eitor:

MIT students are reputedly sup-I posed to be a mature group. Itseems to me, then, that our classhas a bit of catching up to do..

This is evident in the disappoint-ing lack of courtesy, respect, andinterest exhibited during our lec-ture periods. Wasn't one of thereasons for coming to MIT thetremendous opportunity for study-ing under the best faculty in thecountry? How then can we be sofoolish as to drive a very enjoy-able and interesting lecturer fromthe room in disgust? I believe thatProfessor Mattuck deserves a sin-cere apology from us, and I hopethat we wise up in the future, Itwould be a shame to see the po-tential greatness of our class hand-icapped with a bad reputation.

Bill Klein, '66

Im

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Page 6: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Project Transport to study high-speed An"Goldwaterites amass on Memorial Drive;tr an sp or ta t, orio n { o r No rth e a sCorrido - oMarch travels across bridge to Commonsralisportiat~ion for Northeast Corridor

By Bob Horvitz-' Project Transport! HSGT!a- These two terms should come

into common usage here in thevery near future as MIT, at the

a request of the Department ofCommerce, is undertaldng a com-

r prehensive study of the techno-> logical potential for high speedO transportation in the NortheastZ Corridor.>: Project Transport's, as this< study is called, participants in-C l dude a number of the nation'su foremost experts in the field ofZ transportation technology drawnUJ on a broad basis from several

Schools and Departments of theInstitute, including Civil Engineer-ing, Medanical Engineering, El-ectrical Engineering, Aeronautics,

I Political Science and City Plan-nO ing.

"The Project," explained Prof.L Robert J. Hansen, the Project Di-I rector, "is concerned with theF evolution of an entirely new sys-

tem to transport people at highspeed from door to door in theregion between Boston, Mass. andWashington, D.C., through 1980."

Project Transport is an attemptto identify research areas inwhich progress could advancetransportation technology, andthis will necessitate detailed ex-ploration of various alternatives.

High speed ground transporta-tion (HSGT) systems are beinganalyzed first. Two different me-thods are possible to perfect HS-GT. First of all, present daymodes of transportation could beupgraded. Secondly, there is thepossibility of new types of HSGT,which may go far beyond anypresent day modes. Objectives,system requirements, range ofpossibilities, technological re-search requirements, methods ofachieving such a 'system, and re-lated issues and factors are someof the initial questions being ana-lyzed by the staff of Projectrransport.

Any transportation system hascertain basic objectives:

1) Geographic Mobility - Doorto door transport: As the diffusionof the population and industry inthe Corridor increases, it will nolonger be possible to think oftransportation between centers oflarge metropolitan areas. Ideally,in other words, good transporta-tion should be suitable from doorto door, where the doors are ran-domly located.

2) Minimium time door to door- Speed is of the utmost import-ance. Slower systems always yieldto more rapid modes of passengertransportation.

3) Safety, comfort and conven-

ience- These factors will alsoaffect public choice between trans-portation modes. Safety, particu-larly, is an important considera-tion.

4) Cost of transport- Althoughlow cost is a significant objec-titve, the issue is not one ofminimum cost but of acceptablecost, and the specific goal shouldbe to design transportation serv-ices whose cost is acceptiable inview of the services offered andthe problems solved.

5) Social, political, and econom-ic considerations- A new trans-portation system should not gen-erate side effects and after ef-fects which contradict or contra-vene any stated social, political,or economic goals of the com-munity, either local or national.

One possibility of improvingtransportation would be to up-grade one of the present daymodes, i.e., highways, rail, or air.Highways should continue to sat-isfy a significant percentage ofthe transportation needs through1980; however, when closelyspaced end points of a journeylie in areas of high populationdensity, automobile travel be-comes much less efficient.

In railway transportation, bothspeed and accessibility are prob-lenms. To compete on a door-to-door time basis with airplanes,train speeds of around 200 mphare necessary. Also, although thepresent track layout gives acces-sibility to the major metrpolitancenters and at some smaller onesalong the ight of way, poor ac-cess to new off-track areas willdevelop by 1980.

In both rail and air tramspor-tation, the time required to stopand start necessitates exceedinglyhigh actual speeds to averageoverall the same times as an au-tomobile. In addition, there arenot enough aiarports, and as theydevelop, problems of safety andcapacity of airlines and airportswill result.

Thus it seems there is a needfor an additional mode, possiblysome new type of high speedground transportation meeting therequirements of speed, accessi-bility, comfort, cost, frequency,and safety, while being readilyadaptable to alterations necessi-tated by increases or shifts inpopulation, or changes in travelhabits.

(Please turn to page 11)

You're looking -.at the Intelligent product of one week'swork. (Some might be in your campus library.l They'retechnical bulletins written by some very talented scientistsand engineers at the Jet Propulsion laboratory. JPL peoplewrite over 500 such documents each year. Documents withtitles like "Evaporation Effects on Materials in Space," and"Simple Guidance for Deep-Space Booster Vehicles."Pretty heady stuff.

But then designing spacecraft to reach the Moon and

Photo by Steve Silverstein

A ">Boston March Against Goldwater," organized by theseHarvard students, was held last Friday on the Boston Common.These students from MIT, Harvard, Tufts, and Brandeis gatheredat the intersection of Mass. Ave. and Memorial Drive, one ofthree rallying places, before the march. Sponsoring MIT groupsincluded the Scientists and Engineers for Johnson and the MITYoung Democrats. William_,Hodes, a Harvard junior, stated thepurpose of the march was "to urge voters to go to the polls notonly to defeat Goldwater as a candidate, but to crush completelythe reactionary forces which have captured the Republican Party."

planets is a pretty head-y assignment. And it takes a lot ofbright people to make it happen. Where do these brightpeople come from? Better colleges and universities aroundthe country. Yours, for example. Why not sign up for aninterview with a JPL man? Besides working at the mostfascinating job in the world, you'll also have lots of goodbooks to read.

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I I . I m I I I , " Iaw-~ 9g-~- r~---n ~n~ls~·slllap-rsa~raaaan~s~llls~

ON CA-MPUS INTERVIEWS: Novw r & i, 1964Contact UnIvyi kede for AppoinOtra

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PRICEClip this advertisement and return itwith 'your check or money order to:

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I 1 YEAR $12 [l 6 mos. $6

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Page 7: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Course VI professor visits Soviet Unionunder a new arrangement between countries

A Course VI professor, actingunder an arrangement establishedby the Soviet Academy of Sciencesand the US National Academy ofSciences, is spending this Fall ina professional visit to the SovietUnion.

Alan H. Barrett, whose ownwork includes research on the de-sign of the Mariner II investiga-tion of the temperature of Venus,

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Boston It. Mass.

1. Check and mate. How aboutanother game?

I'd like to, Fred, butI have to get set fora job interview.

3. "Good morning, Mr. Fishwick."

"Hi there, Freddie boy,buddy, old pal."

5. "You seem well rounded.What's your major?"

"Musicology, cum laude.But I'm getting my M.A.in experimental psych."

2. Let's act it out. I'll bethe boss. Try and sell me.

Okay.

4. "Just give me the facts."

"Well, sir, I took Quine'scourse in mathematicallogic, got a B inWittgenstein's linguisticanalysis, and I'm abug on 16th-centuryFlemish painting."

6. "You're just the kind of man weneed-a disciplined thinker whocan tie a lot of things togetherand use logic to solve complexbusiness problems. The M.A.helps, too. Systems engineeringor operations research workat Equitable is for you."

Say, how'd you knowI'm interviewingwith Equitable?

For complete information about career opportunities at Equitable, seeyour Placement Officer, or write to Edward D. McDougal, Manager,Manpower Development Division.

The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United StatesHome Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019 © 1964

An Equal Opportunity Employer

planned visits to the LebedevPhysical Institute in Moscow, andobservatories in Leningrad, Abas-tuman, and Byurakan.

Professor Barrett is expected toreturn to the US in late Novemberor early December. He proceededto the U.S.S.R. following the meet-ing of the International Astronom-ical Union in Hamburg, Germanythis summer.

A second interest of Dr. Bar-rett's concerns detection by radio f ,methods of -the OH radical inspace; he hopes to relate thiswork, now being done at LincolnLaboratories, with Soviet astron- -

omers' efforts. .

MIT library system ..begins replacementof Dewey numbering Hallow

The MIT library system has be- dorm condgun a gradual program of change back at thetowards the Library of Congress fastening asystem of classification. The cur-rent system in use is the Deweydecimal system - largely numeri- rcal. The new system, which is be- Ling used in the classification of all 0 O 0new books received uses both al-phabetical and numerical charac- Dr. Emil

cellor of thters; it is considered to have great- fornia at Daer flexibility. ond annual

Implementation of the change Memorial Lebegan last year in the Science, him for hisGeneral Humanities, and Reserve advancemenBook libraries; full use of the Dr. Mraksystem is not expected for a few fobid ind of detryears. cent experin

Sample classifications include of pigs, wheA-General Works, B--Philosophy decrease theand Religion, C-F-History, J-K_ ham to somPolitical Science, L-Education, He also M-Music, N-Fine Arts, P-Lang- ture of mill

hoped, willuage, Q--4cience, R-Medicine, T with respecl-Technology, U-V-Military Sci- fat in milkence, and Z-Bibliography. velop a new

Will the ghost return?

Hanging haunts Senior HouseF_0l! ~

Photo by Ed Eisenmanve'en is celebrated at Senior House party as crowdeditions are relieved by reveling, residents. Meanwhile,e great dome, figures resembling freshmen were seenweird design.

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Arak speaks at dinner,ring food science workMarcel Mrak, Chan-

Le University of Cali-xvis, spoke at the sec-

I Underwood-Prescottecture, which honoreds contributions to thet of food science.

explored the possi-,eloping more efficient·ies. He discussed re-nents on the exerciseere the object was toe fat content of thele extent.speculated on the fu-R. The geneticist, he"reverse the picture

t to concentration ofand eventually de-

w strain of dairy cat-

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The mostwalked aboutSlacks onCampus contain"DACRON"'

Hubbard Slackshave a facultyfor fashions of65% "'Dacron"*polyester and 35%combed cotton.Styled in Classicplain front andtraditional GayBlade models forwrinkle-free goodlooks and carefreecomfort, at BetterStores everywhere.*Dupont's registeredtrademark

tle that will produce milk richin protein and low in fat.

The population explosion willplay an important part in thefuture of food technology, Dr.Mrak noted. The middle man(the animal processor) may benecessarily eliminated and thefarmers induced to produce alfal-fa or other plants high in pro-tein so that they may be madedirectly into protein products 'byplant processors. Perhaps, he ex-plained, in less than a century,animals may be inadequate meatproducers, making it necessary totake the protein and other ele-ments animals now provide hu-mans directly from the land forfabricating into synthetic foods.

Dr. Mrak also discussed thepossibility of using genetics toimprove the quality of food andat the same time make mechard-zation of the growing process pos-sible. B yproducing - say toma-toes, high in solids, flavor andcolor, and improving the rigidityof the stems, new tomatoes wouldstand the abuse mechanizationwould impose upon them.

The food processor and thefarmer have a closer relationship-today than ever before, accordingto Dr. Mrak. This relationshipmust become ever closer, he ex-plained, because the processor isconfronted with farming problemsmore and more.

The Underwood-Prescott Memo-rial Lectureship was establishedin March, 1963, by the WilliamUnderwood Company to honor thescientist selected annually by MITfor his contributions to the ad-vancement of food science. TheMIT selection committee said Dr.Mrak was the first food scientistto recognize the advantages ofcoordinating into one body ofknowledge what had been sepa-rate approaches to the agricul-tural sciences on one hand, andto the principles of food canningon the other.

The evening's program includ-ed introductory remarks by Dr.Samuel A. Godblith, Professor ofFood Science at MIT;_ George C.Seybolt, President of William Un-derwood Company, and Dr. Je-rome B. Wiesner, Dean of Sci-ence at MIT.

I

Wulff gets awardfor good teaching

Professor John Wulff, who holdsthe Class of 1922 endowed Pro-fessorship of Metallurgy, was re-cently chosen for the 1965 AlbertE a s t o n White Distinguished

Teacher Award by the American

Society of Metals.

Professor Wulff currently di-

rects 3.14, Engineering Materials.

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Page 8: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

*aI ~ ~ ,Movie Schedule ASTOR - 'Lilith,' 9:30, 11:30, 1:30, LOEW'S ORPHiEUi - 'Rio Conocos,'

3:30. 5:30. 7:30, 9:30. 9:45, 11:40, 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40,9:45.

BEAkCON HILL - 'Topkapi,' no timeavailable.

BOSTON CLNERAIMA - 'Mediteranian" HliHdays,' evenings 8:00, matinees

° Wed., 2:00 Sat. and Sun. 2:00 and- 5:00.

BRATLE - Ben Jonson's "Volpone"through Saturday. Starting Sunday:

L> First Boston showings of HaroldLlI Pinter's "The Guest," adapted fromcr his Mlayr "The Caretaker." Shows

daily 5:30, 7:30, 9:30, matinees Sat.Lo] j and Sun. at 3:30.

o COAPRI - 'One Potato, Two Potato.10:45, 12:35, 2:25, 4:15, 6:05, 7:55,-

Z 9:45; sun., 1:45, 3:35, 5:25, 7:15,9:05.

< COOLIDGE CORNER - 'The PinkoAd1 Panther,' 3:0(, 9:35, Sat., 5:55,Aft 9:55, Sun., 1:30, 5:40, 9:35; 'FraomLU Russia with Love,' 1:00, 7:30, Sat.z 4:00, 7:60, Sun., 3:25, 7:30.

EXETER - 'Murder Ahoy,' 2:00, 3:45,5:35, 7:20, 9:10.

GARY - 'Mary Poppins,' 9:00, 1,1:30,2:00, 4:30, 7:30, 9:30.

HARVARD SQUARE - "Becket" plusshot subject "The Astronauts"; corn-

-I plete shows 2:00, 5:05, 8:10 (through.M~onday). Tuesday: Review Day.

LUI'- KEITH M.EMORIAL -- 'Send Me No-LUn FFowers,' 11:25, 2:50, 6:10, 9:40;

'Blood on the Aorw,' 9:40, 1:00,I- 4:25, 7:50.

MUSIC IHALL - 'Where Love HasGone.' no -time available.

PARAMOUNT - 'Joy House,' 11:25,2:45, 6:10, 9:30.

PARK SQUARE CINEMA - 'Seducedand Abandoned,' 1:30, 3:35, 5:40,7:45, 9:55.

PARIS CINT - 'Lili,' 2:00, 4:00,6:00,- 8:00, 10:00.

SAXON - '.My Fair Lady,' evenings8:30, matinees Wed., Sat., and Sun.,2:00.

ULPTOWN - 'A House is Not a Home,'IL:00, 2:35, 6:05, 9:45, sun., 2:46,6:15, 9:45; 'Divorce Italian Style,'12:50, 4:15, 7:55, Sun., 1:00, 4:25,7:55.

WEST END CINEMA - 'The EmptyCanrvas,' 11:35, 1:35, 3:30, 5:25,7:20, 9:15.

TheatresHOTIL BOSTONIAN PLAYHOUSE -

'Caligula,.' opening Nov. 5,. weekdays 8:30, Sat. 6:30, 9:46, Sun.,5:00, 8:30.

COLONIAL - 'Poor Richard,' startingNov. 9, 8:30, matinees Thurs. 2:15,Sat_, 2:30.

SHUBERT - 'She Stoops to Conquer,'Nov. 10, 8:30.

WILBUR - 'P.S. I Love You,' even-ings 8:30, matinees Wed., Sat., 2:30.

YESat flOTOROA !aMotorola offers the student at the BS level an opportunityto advance his career and education concurrently. Workand achieve a Master's Degree in an environment of con-stant challenge.

-THE ENGINEERING TRAINING PROGRAMOpen to BS graduates in Electrical Engineering, Chemi-cal Engineering or Physics with a B average or better.While pursuing an MS degree at Arizona State Univer-sity each trainee is placed in a rotational program cover-ing four engineering activities at Motorola.

THE MARKETING TRAINING PROGRAMOpen to BS graduates in Electrical Engineering or Phys.ics with a B- average or better. Marketing trainees maywork toward an MBA or an MS degree. Rotational as-signments are in the marketing area.

On Friday, November 13th, Dr. Jan A. Narud, Director, IntegratedCircuit Research & Development Department, will be on Campusto discuss career opportunities with interested candidates. Contactyour Placement Office for an appointment to talk .with Dr. Narud.

Direct Placement at all Degree Levels for ...a Electrical Engineers . Organic & Physical Chemistsi Physicists a Chemical Engineers * Metallurgists

in-Researct and Development, Quality Control,I Marketing, and Production.

If you are unavailable for an interview at this time writedirectly to: Manager, Professional Recruitment andTraining, Motorola Inc., Semiconductor Products Divi-sion, 5005 East McDowell, Phoenix, Arizona 85008.

MOTORwOLA INC.i Semiconductor Products Divirsion

A N EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOY, RNM__110II

BandBy David Vanderwerf

Showing balance and precision,the Concert Band presented anexcellent concert in Kresge Audi-torium last Friday night.

For several years, the band hasbeen unable to bring all sectionsto full strength. This has meantthat the musicians in short sec-tions have had to strain tomake up the difference in sound,and this has adversely affectedthe total sound of the group.

This year the band seems tohave the problem solved. Not onlyis the numerical balance greatlyimproved (for example, they nowhave a full complement of saxo-phones), but the balance in soundeven in soft passages (usually themost obviously bad spots) wasvery good overall. The smoothflow of dynamics, of precise at-tacks, and of controlled sound asa whole indicated that this wasa group controlled by the direc-tor, not a number of individualsfollowing the samrne beat.

The final point 'of balance wasin the program. The band thisyear seems to have shifted to asomewhat lighter repertoire, amove many members had fav-ored. The music, while still dif-ficult and varied, is weighted to-ward music the band can playwith enthusiasm, and that theband did.

Opening the concert was FelixMendelssohn 'Overture Fuer Har-moniemusik, Opus 24.' The pro-duction is heavy and dark, but

Open evenings 'fit 9 P.M.

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I concert proves best in years.

John Corley, director of thsoons in last Friday's concert iplayed works by Mendelssohn,Joio, and Gould.

leads into a light, cheerful, flow-ing theme which makes up themain body and conclusion. Theband was perhaps at its worston this number, but still turnedin a good rendition.

The second number, Vittorio Gi-annini's 'Fantasia for Band,' is asharp contrast to his third sym-phony, which the band performedhere two years ago. The thirdsymphony is light and flowing.This work is discordant and hea-vy. Development of the theme isalmost 'jazzy./

This was the only time whenthe band's balance left somethingto be desired. hie first part ofthe fantasia was written as adiscordant, uneven section, butnot to the extent it was played.While the band could handle nor-mal balance well, a deliberateimbalance appeared to be morethan they could control.

The final selection before in-termssion was William Schu-man's 'G e o r g e WashingtonBridge.' Schuman has. cieated avivid picture with this work. Evenfor one who has never seen theparticular bridge, the music con-jured up visions of bridges ingeneral.

The band was balanced and intune throughout. Where sharpnessand precision were needed, theyresponded. Where a more impres-sionisfic sound was needed, it wasunmarred by individual sharp-ness.- Leading off the second half ofthe program was Edward Mill-er's 'Three Pieces for Band.' Theband played this short' (four andone-half minute), twelve-tonepiece twice, since director JohnCorley felt that "there is so much

I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~~~~~I _. n _= s A

Photo by Phillip Dowdse Concert Band, cues in the bas-n Kresge Auditorium. The bandGiannini, Schuman, Miller, Dello

packed into it you don't get itall when you hear it the firsttime."

The Miller is a rarity, a twelve-tone piece which sounds almostharmonic. It makes great use ofpercussion, and produced a soundvery unlike the usual harsh oneof a twelve-tone piece. The banddid a good job on it.

The highlight of the programwas the next-to-last number, 'Var-iants on a Mediaeval Tune,' byNorman Dello Joio. This workranks as one of the greatest worksfor band, in my opinion. It isan unpredictable tune, with twistsof melody and phrase, and has un-usual scorings Which are veryeffective (piccolo and bass clari-net duet, for example). Low wood-winds came out to good advan-tage in this piece, especially thecontrabassoon, Which was playedmuch more competently than lastyear. Although tuning sometimesfaltered, the band gave an in-spired performance to an inspir-ing work.

Year's most hilarious comrnedy!

"SEDUCED ANDI ABANDONED"

aI ela13 l~l MONO_ s _~ __m_-m __s 0

Polly Adler story

."A House is Not a Home *I and "Easy Life"

I BBIIPgra~e~8~8~r~8~srrrs~eamI Al, imm:Jm

Rita Tushinghamin a tender love story

* "Girl with Green Eyes" Igem |

41 sI W N. a v.' a

a "BECKET" a plus short subject= "The Astronauts" aa, Complete shows 2:00, 5:05, 8:10a thru 'Monday a

M Tuesday: REViEW DAY

a 0showinBen Johnson 's aC

a starring Harry Baur and aa Louis Jouvet, thru Saturday a

Starting Sunday: Fist Boston * showing of Harold 'Pinter's a

° 'THE GUEST' go adapted from his playa "The Caretaker"a Shows daily 5:30, 7:30, 9:30, aA matinees Sat. and Sun. at 3:30 3

co

0

tolcx

Vincent

PianistPlays works of

Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin, Ravel and Sessions

JORDAN HALLHUNTINGTON AVE. and GAINSBOROUGH ST., BOSTON

TlWiedne sday, November I I at 8:30 P.M.For tickets at special rates:

Student Activities Office or Music DepartmentS·T-----~------·--- -·8= ~--~--- -- ·_C _ ~C_ --~I . .--

The MIT Concert BaniA. directedby John Corley, presents: 'O0uver-ture Fuer Hannroniemusik, Opus24', by Felix Mendelssohn; 'Fantasiafor Band', by Vittorio Giainnini;'Geaxge Washington Bridge', byWiliam Schuman; 'Three Pieces forBand', by Edward Miller; 'Variantson a Mediaeval Tune', by NormanDello Jolo; 'Jericho', by MartonGout4. Kresge Amditorium, October30(, 1964.

are

SYMC B L CSo are flowers

MAHEGAN FLOWER SHOP2 for your Prom Corsage

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Page 9: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

movies *.o

'Carfouche' fin(By Richard C. Art, Jr.

artouch~, st~ng ~Jean Paul Written by Philippe de Brooher hnCARTOUCIE: produced by Jose

Belmondo and Claudia Cardinale, E. Levine, starring Jan-Paul Bis fine Gallic humor. Cartouche is |Dai Cla.doia Cardinale, Mara mixture of Tom Jones spirit,Douglas Fairbanks action, and two companions ably playedKeystone Cops slapstick. Although Jean Rochefort and Jess HItRe dialogue is entirely in French, These three go "over the ithe subtitles are adequate and the with the payroll and in an"language barrier" is no problem. along the road to Paris they n

The plot is nothing exceptional, with Cartouche's gypsy swit involves the exploits of a Par- heart, Venus, and entrust her visian Robin Hood and his gang the take. In the scene at theand is filled with scenes consist- Belmondo demonstrates his iiient with this type of scenario. Car- leness and swordmanship intouche is a thief and an argument of the two best swashbuck)with the robber chief, played by fights that has appeared on iMarcel Dalio, causes him to join in recent years.the army to escape Dalio's wrath. Arriving back in Paris, they: While in the army he acquires that Dalio has kidnapped Ve

600 psychiatrists eof their professiol

Over 600 psychiatrists attendedan October 30 and 31 symposiumin MIT's Kresge Auditeroi.-m. Thesymposium on "The Teaching ofDynamic Psychiatry," was spon-sored by the Psychiatric Serviceof Beth Israel Hospital in Boston;its stated purpose was "a re-appraisal of the goals and tech-

Il 21 Making tTHIS WEEK

31USrcPiano ConcertJordan Hall, Nov. 4,

8:30; music of Beethoven, Chopin,Faure, Ravel, Bloch, Copland; free.

Folklore Concert Series--Josh White,John Hancock Hall, Nov. 6, 8:30;$4.00, $3.25, $2.80, $2.20.IIT Orchestra Concert-Nov. 7, Kre'sgeAuditorium.

King's Chapel ' Concert - CambridgeFestival Orchestra,. Nov. 8, 5:00, works

for choir and orchestra; free.Gardner Museunm - Volker winner,

organist, Nov. 8, 3:00, free.Boston University Symphony Orchestra--BU Concert HIa11, Nov. 9,, 8:30, free- BU Concert Hall, Nov. 9,8:30, free.

LECTUIREDr. Raphael Patal - 'What is Hebrew

Mythology?' Nov. 8, 8:00, KresgeAuditoriumn; free.

Ford Hall Forum - James Farmer, oncivil rights arn integration, JordanHall, 8:00., ,Nov. 8.

ITEATREIVellesley Experimental Theatre -' the

Love of Don Perlimplin and Belissain the Garden,' Nov. 6-7, JewettAuditorium, 8:00; $.50.

BU Opera Workshop - Nov. 13-14,8:30, BU Theatre; exerpts from DonGiovanni, Madame Butterfly, Fal-staff, and others.

NEXT WEEK

Budapest String Quartet - Nov. 13and 15, 8:30, Jordan Hall.

Chapel Organ Coneerts - Josepth Cout-ret, Nov. 15, 4:00.

Gardner Museum)--tMyrna Ruiz, pianist,Nov. 15, 3:00, free.

LEDCTUREFord Hall Forum - Isaac Asimov,

'Science Opens New Horizons for

M. A GawAfI Pcanos a

THE DELUR CONTSOR

JORDAN HALLTickets: 4.00, 3.25, 2.80, 2.20

l l GIBE 6-2i42 1

eph3el-reel

I byAhn.

innneetveet-withinn,nb-oneing

film

findanus

and taken the gold for himself. Inthe showdown that follows, Car-touche supplants Dalio as leaderof the gang and forty minutes ofriot begin. Cartouche gains virtualcontrol of the city by stealing, bri-bery and appeal to the lower.clas-ses. Although Venus is beautiful,Cartouche courts Isabell the wifeof his chief adversary, the chiefof police. While waiting for a ren-dezvous with Odile Versois thepolice capture Cartouche and pre-pare to bring him to a party theChief and his wife are giving. Onehas the feeling that the chief caresless about the courtship, which heknows of, than capturing Belmon-do who has completely usurpedhis power over the people.

As Cartouche is being broughti.crrrs a kin*... on the road to Paris, Venus, whoiscuss teacnhing is still faithful despite Cartouche's

@ ~~~~* ~seeming cold to her, executes an in Sympoesuum raid on the troop of guards andsets him free. We find that he still

niques in the teaching of psycho- loves her, but it is too late for sheanalytic psychiatry." Separate is shot as she is trying to escape.panels at morning and evening Cartouche carries Venus body tosessions treated problems with the Chief's party, where he stripsmedical students, psychiatric res- the jewels from the assembledidents, and physicians in the guests and covers Venus' bodycommunity. with them. He then pushes a

A principal banquet speaker, coach containing her jewel cov-Dr. Grete Bibring, treated "Can ered body into the river. The mov-Psychiatry be Taught?" ie ends here on a rather more

philosopical note than the bulk of"he Scene tFhjn ngo deesthe production, but the loss of thetrue heroine and the tendernessof the hero are all part of the

S M T W T F S formula. Cartouche is refreshing4 5 6 7 because this formula hasn't been

8 9 10 .11 12 13 14 used in American movies since15 16 17 the revival of the C.B. DeMille

point of view in the late fifties.Mankird,' Jordan Hall, S:00,, lov 15. Claudia Cardinale who plays

James Famer-National Director or Venus acts, well, but her part isCORE, Kresge AIudit., Nov. 11, 8:00, not demanding One senses poten-'donation' $1.00.

tial acting quality lacking in many"new" stars. Belmonldo is not a

Foreign Film Series-'Open City,' Nov.LI. 7:30, Bardwell Auditorium, pine handsome hero, but his nimble-

Msnor Junior College, Wellesley. ness and comic sense make hisKresge Little Theatre - 'The Rape of portrayal of the title role effective

Bunny Stuntz,' Nov. 12-13, 8:30;free. and enjoyable. The rest of the cast

THfE SIT DRAMASHOP - 'The Phy- is well matched, and although thissicists' and 'I'm Dreaming, but Am is by no means a "great" picture,I?', Nov. 6, 8:30 p.m.; admissionfree; refreshments, critique. it is well worth seeing.

i _I M. LOEW'IS

West End CinemaOpp. North Station 523-4050

PAUL NEWMAN

Piper Laurie - George C. Scottin Robert Rossen's

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I 1:20-1:50-4:15-6:40-9405 P.M.Sun. 1:35-4:00-6:30-855 P.M.

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Also Featuring Europe's Favorite Folk DuoESTER OFARIM and ABRAHAM

Tickets $4.75, $3.75, $2.75 tax incl.SEATS ON SALE AT SYMPHONY HALL

For Mail Orders: send self-addressed envelope toSymphony Hall 'Box Office

The Juilliard String Quartetwill present a concert of cham-ber music in Kresge AuditoriumNovember 8 at 3:00 as the sec-ond event of the HumanitiesSeries.

Their program this year in-cludes the Mendelssohn-Bartoldy'Quartet in D major,' Beethoven's'Quartet in F minor' and Bar-tok's 'Fourth String Quartet.'

The graop was established1946 as Quartet-in-Residencethe Juilliard School of Music

inofin

BSO ConcertFriday, Nov. 6. 2:00; Saturday, Nov.

7, 8:30: Symphony Hall, Sir JohnBarblrolli conducting: PUIRCIET--Suite from the Dramatick Music ofHenry Purcell (ar'. Ba.birolli);Haydn--Symphony in G major, "Ox-ford," No. 92; ELGAR--ymsnpphonyNo. 2 in E.flat, Op 63.

New York. In 196b1 they oecamethe first American string quartetinvited to visit the Soviet Union,and they will return in 1965.

Tickets for the entire Humani-ties Series are $10.00. Single per-formances are $2.50, at the KresgeBox Office.

M.I.T. Humanities Series presentsTe Juilfiard String Quartet

Quartets by

Mendelssohn, Beethoven, BartokSunday, November 8, 1964-3:00 P.M.

Kresge Auditorium, M.I.T.Tickets: $2.50 Kresge Auditorium

Box Office opens at 2:00 P.M. Sunday

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

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Tickets will be on sale in Bldg. 10 starting November 17. Admission $1.00

Julliard String Quartet to perform in KresgeGallic humor this Sunday for the MIT Humanities Seriese adze<: rlumor - s --. In. ok >

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Page 10: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

E° movies..Disr

Walt Disney's 'Mary Poppins,'now playing at the Gary Theatre,

.o combines all the elements of the7 standard Disney formula: whole-- some fun, colorful setting, and

happy ending with an unexpected,, dividend.C Besides being cute, the movie

I is actually funny. Two small chil-> dren are without a Nanny a cha-o otic situation in England. MaryZ Poppins, more youthful than her>h literary counterpart because the< children wanted rosy cheeks, ar-o rives in a gust of wind to fillLu the position. This same gust ofZ wind has neatly disposed of twen-'" ty or so venerable dames com-3 peting for the same position by

blowing them all over the roof-tops to the west.

Since Mary doesn't really want

B'nai Brith presentsanother Burg LectureDr. Raphael Patai, folklorist, an-

thropologist and Director of Re-search at the Herzl Institute inNew York, will deliver the eigh-teenth Morris Burk Memorial Lec-ture November 8 in Kresge Audi-torium at 8:00.

The Burg Lecture is presentedwith funds donated in memory ofMorris Burg, a well known Bos-ton businessman and civic leader,for the purpose of bringing aJewish scholar to the campustwice a year to address the com-munity.

Dr. Patai is a graduate of theUniversity of Budapest and theHebrew University in Jerusalem.Before coming to the UnitedStates, he was director of Re-search at the Palestine Instituteof Folklore and Ethnology.

In the United States, he hasserved as Professor of Anthro-pology at Dropsie College andas visiting professor at severalother universities and institutionsof higher learning. He is present-ly Director of Research at theHerzl Institute.

He has published some two doz-en books, the most recent being"Hebrew Myths: The Book ofGenesis!"

An informal reception in Dr.Patai's honor will follow the lec-ture. Admission is free.

I

VT-IANT9?N1%EW

IN WBE NOVEMBER

Canada: A Special Supplement dis-cusses segregation, the new Canadianleadership, Canada's struggle forunity, her authors and painters. Timelyarticles on: What Is Canada?, CanFrench Canada Stand Alone?, TheTrouble with Quebec, Canada as aMiddle Power, Education: Past andFuture, The Dilemma of the CanadianWriter, and other subjects.

"Pomp and Circumstance: C. P.Snow" by RobertAdams:An appraisalof Sir Charles' writings, his new book,Corridors of Power, and his contribu-tion to the two-cultures dialogue.

"Labor's Mutinous Mariners" byA. H. Raskin: A report on the rivalrybetween Joseph Curran of the NationalMaritime Union and PaulHall of the Seafarers Inter-national Union.

Every month theAtlantic provides a ,platform for manyof the world's mostarticulate and crea- I.tive men and women.The result is always ""-'~:entertaining and in-formative, often bril-liant, occasionally [":*_x'.'profound. More and 3 .

more, the Atlantic isfinding its way into '-the hands of discern- / > ONing readers. Get your SALEcopy today. I NOW

iey produces another gemMARY POP-PLNS: produced anddirected by Walt Disney, starringJiulie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke,color by technicolor, at the GaryTheatre, Boston.

to drag those kids around all byherself, a handsome young chim-ney sweep soon enters the pic-ture. Together, they change thelives of a banker father, whoseorderly life is upset by a singingcook, and a suffragette mother,who is too busy leading the ladiesdown at the prison in song tomind her own children.

Disney's master craftsmanshipis evident in this movie. MaryPoppins and following fly throughthe air, walk up smoke steps, andwin the Derby on wooden merry-go-round horses, with no oneblinking an eye, except the fatherwhen the tale is recounted.

In several delightful sequences,Disney has combined animationwith the live setting. This rein-forces the element of fantasy thatis so frequently juxtaposed withutter reality ,(We'll play a gamecalled clean up the nursery) thatthe viewer forgets to distinguishbetween the two.

Julie Andrews, who flies in pink

high buttons with her toes neatlyturned out, is excellent as theyoung Mary. Dick Van Dykeshows that he can sing and danceas well as clean chimneys; buthe is not the only one. Everyonesings, even prim and proper MaryPoppins. The songs will keep yousinging for days.* Half the charm of the movieare the two children who playnormal kids with freckled nosesand protruding ears. They helpto make it a warm, wonderful andtotally unrealistic movie. Disneyinitiates you completely into hismagic world of the clean sidewalkand happy ending where every-thing is viewed through rose-tint-ed glasses. It is guaranteed tomake your date misty.

The International for the Pro-tection of Animals has discoveredthat nylon stockings are far saferthan rope for securing the legsof animals prior to transportingthem to high ground. Rope is aptto injure the legs of a strugglinganimal.

Poetry anthology to be gatheThe Sheridan-Kent Press is preparing a multi-volume

of university student poetry from every major college andin the United States and Canada.

There is no limit to the number of poems a student m;on any style of subject, although shorter poems will be pre

The purpose of the anthology is to collect under one titlpoetry of today's students, poetry that would otherwise go

The poems, along with a short autobiographical note nthe college attended, and a self-addressed stamped envelopbe sent to Mr. M. David Lewis, Editor, 1093 McDonald Ave.,Quebec, Canada. Deadline is November 30.

French girl likes MIT 'boys better than IBy JEFF TRIMMER

DeGaulle may not be in com-plete accord with US policy, butone French girl likes MIT policy.Her name is Flavie Revillon, Par-isian debutante, who is on a visitto the United States with herbrother, Patrice, and her mother,Mme. Jacques Revillon, wife ofthe fur, perfume, real estate, andfinancial tycoon.

Flavie was visiting friends inWellesley, Massachusetts, whenshe was introduced to both MIT

and Harvard students.ferred the MIT studentshe "could speak theirthey were more interestidividualistic to talk to."from Harvard," shelooked and talked ali]them it was all "Monemoney."

The generally favorsments toward MIT studmade in an interview fcial column of the Chicacan.

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Through research, manufacturing andoperations, GT&E has become one of

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Page 11: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Contemporary work to be givenby MIT Symphony in fall concert

The MIT Symphony Orchestrawill present a performance ofBrahms' "Concerto No. 2 in B-flatfor Piano, Op. 83" on November7, 1964 at 8:30 p.m. in KresgeAuditorium. Prof. John Corley willconduct the orchestra;- Dr. Ken-neth Wolf of the Harvard Medicalschool will be soloist.

John Bavacchi's "Suite for Or-chestra" and Beethoven's "Over-ture 'Leonore' No. 2" will also beincluded in the program.

John Bavacchi, a former MITCourse XV student, has had workscommissioned by the New YorkWoodwind Quintet and membersof the Boston Symphony. He isat present an instructor at theBerkley School of Music in Boston

and is composing a "FestivalSymphony" on commission for theMIT Concert Band.

Members of the MIT Communitymay obtain free tickets at thebooth in Building 10.

Transporet studynotes travel facts

(Continued from Page 6)The problems the members of

Project Transport met in tryingto fulfill these requirements andconcepts which might possiblymeet them will be discussed innext week's issue of The Tech.

Building permit receivedfrom MDC for boathouse;Plans remain incomplete

The Institute has received abuilding permit from the Metro-politan District Commission au-thorizing construction of a newMIr boathouse. One proposed sitefor the structure, once included inSecond Century Fund campaignplans, lies along the Charles Riverbetween 403 IMVemorial Drive (Del-ta Kappa Epsilon) and 410 Mem-orial Drive, Conner Hall.

Sources within the Institutetold The Tech that the applicationfor a permit was a "formal pro-cedure," and that plans for theboathouse were incomplete and asyet lacking final approval.

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I LookirBy JEFF TRIMMER

75 Years agoThere are twenty-eight Co-eds

in attendance this term. They aredivided among the different cours-es as follows: Natural History, 3;Chemistry, 5; Archietecture, 1;General, 2; Special, 17 . . .

The Freshmen are having theirfirst taste of "those littleexams." . .

50 Years agoThe show for the Tech Night

this year is one of the liveliest andgirliest that Tech men have at-tended in a body. The dancing isexcellent, the singing good, thegirls are pretty, and they don'tcare who knows it.

- It is a mirthful melange of lin-gerie and laughter, that is wherethere is lingerie....

25 Years agoThe scheduled pie eating contest

between a sophomore and fresh-

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At the 1964 stockholders' meeting, Arjay Miller,President of Ford Motor Company, emphasized theCompany's far-sighted recruitment program and its accenton developing management talent:"One aspect of our planning is crucial to the success ofeverything else we do. It engages the best thoughts and efforts ofour whole management team, from top to bottom, throughout theworld. I am speaking of the development of management. Theimmediate future of our Company depends heavily upon the abilitiesof the people who are now key members of our management team.

"In the longer run, our future depends on what we are doing atthe present time to attract and develop the people who willbe making the major decisions 10 to 20 years from now. We aredeveloping management competence in depth in order to attack theproblems that will confront a company of great growth--andgreat growth (both in profits and sales) is exactly the goalwe have established for Ford Motor Company.

"We are continuing to emphasize recruiting. Last spring,-180 of ourmanagement people devoted part of their time to recruitingoutstanding graduates from colleges and universities throughoutthe U.S. Last year, these efforts resulted in our hiring over1,000 graduates, 220 more than the year before.

"We are seeking and we are finding young men-and young women,too-with brains and backbone-people who have the ability andthe desire to make room for themselves at the top. We give ourtrainees challenging assignments with as much responsibility asthey can carry. We promote them as fast as they are ready. Thosewho are interested in easy security soon drop out. Those whohave what we want stay with us, and move up quickly to increasedresponsibility and the pay that goes with it. Thanks to the qualityof the people we are recruiting and developing, J am firmlyconvinced that our outlook is most promising."

MOTRicOMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, Michigan

I

ig Backman team had to be cancelled.It seems that the glove fightcaused the boys to lose their ap-petite. At any rate there wereno coanestants . . .

Only a win in the Tug-of-Warsaved the freshman class frombeing whitewashed in the thirty-ninth annual Field Day competi-tion last Friday afternoon. Thefinal standings gave the Sopho-mores an undisputed 12-3 edge inpoints over their freshman ri-vals. . ..

Several dormitory scientists try-ing -to solve an 8:01 problem, lefttheir marks for posterity lastWednesday night, when a cannonball which they were trying toraise got out of control and dentedthe sidewalk in back of Wood.

The experimenters were pullingthe 600 pound weight up the fireescape, when the rope parted andreleased the sphere. The laws ofgravity operated fully, and the

.ball landed with a resoundingthud...

10 Years agoSenator Lyndon B. Johnson,

Democrat, was reelected fromthe State of Texas, Hubert Humph-rey, Democrat, was relected sen-ator from the state of Minneso-ta. . .

Is arise on glorious morn ofriotous ceremony known as feel-dai, is find much liquescence uponglebe, is much more of same inprocess of descent . . . (morningafter Field Day? - Ed.)

Committee finishedfor Spring Weekend

Selection of the eight-manSpring Weekend Committee wascompleted last Saturday after-noon. The election of seven out ofthe 45 applicants was made byDave Rubin '65, previously elect-ed chairman of the committee,and. the Inscomm Executive Com-mittee.

Those selected were: Norm Eck-stein '65 (ZBT), Jack Hudgens'65 (SPE), Tom Jones '66 (SC),Bruce Powell '66 (DTD)), JohnFreeman '66 (PGD), Mike Cohen'67 (Bexley), and Jerry Tomanek'67 (BTP).

Spring Weekend is scheduledthis year for April 23-25, the week-end after Easter.

Summer jobs abroadMIT students seeking jobs

abroad, with Course XV or XIVinterests, have a new opportunity.Tomorrow, the newly formed MITchapter of the Association Inter-nationale des Estudiants en Sci-ences Economiques at Commer-ciales will introduce a programof summer traineeships abroadfor interested students. The meet-ing will be sponsored by the For-eign Opportunities Committee ofInscomm in the Hayden LibraryLounge at 7:30 p.m.

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Page 12: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

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Editor's note: After fouryears, College World haschanged hands. Toby Zidle, oneof The Tech's most popular col-umnists, has finally had to re-linquish the job. I hope I cando a job worthy of my prede-cessor.

The Personal Touch>_ Now that the term is well un-o derway, many of you may be

wondering if transferring mightZ not solve your problems. If so,D reports the Technology News of

the Illinois Institute of Technol-ogy, there is a place where youcan guarantee a personal rela-tionship with faculty eager toplease you. What's more, there's

I no tuition-you pay one lump sumUu, for all fees, and from then onH you have the run of the campus.a The school? Carthage College,I Carthage, Illinois. The reason for

this arrangement? Carthage is forsale. Price-$1.5 million. Yes,friends, for only 1.5 times theInstitute's annual operating defi-cit, you, too, can own a college.Included in. the school are 37buildings and a 30 acre campus.For this paltry sum you can become Biggest Man on Campus,get personal attention from thestaff, and, most important, ceaseto worry about parking problems.

No Parking?Speaking of parking, employees

of Michigan State University, re-ports the State News, were doing

By David Vanderwerf .mg

Looking for personal instruction?Consider investment in Carfhage

more muttering than speakingabout that school's new parkingregulations.

Employees, it seems, must buyparking stickers in order to parkon campus. They may buy one,costing $18, which entitles themto park on any available spaceon campus. For an additional $30they may buy a sticker for aspecial reserved spot in whichonly they can park. One JerryPuca, an employee of MSU's DataProcessing staff, bought thecheaper stticker.

When Puca arrived for work,however, here were no spacesleft in the lots, except for a fewreserved for people with the ex-pensive stickers. In fact, through-out the day the reserved spaceswere empty. Somewhat perturbedby this, Puca investigated.

The answer to the problem wassimple. Since the reserved spacestickers also gave their ownersthe right to park anywhere on thelots, their owners were not usingthe reserved lots, but were usingthe nearest space to their offices,in the unreserved section. Whilethey could take an unreservedspot, however, drivers with thecheap stickers couldn't occupy thereserved spots.

Diplomacy seems to have paidoff, however. Owners of $48 stick-ers, when informed of the prob-lem, agreed to take the reservedspace-and the longer walk.

Big SisterIt's surprising that parking vio-

lations haven't flourished at MSU,though, considering the peoplewho give the tickets. To free thecampus police for other duties,the University has hired two"parking patrolwomen."

Patrolling the area on radioequipped motor scooters, the la-dies will, to quote the chief ofpolice, "not just write tickets"but "check on compliance withall parking rules." This, concludesthe news, may cut down on epi-thets directed at ticket-writers.Getting a ticket may not be thatmuch fun, though-both of thepatrolwomen are married.

70+40= ?Parking isn't the only space

lacking in schools these days, re-ports the Colorado aDily. About 40men at Colo. State Univ., saysthe story, are spending their firstweek in dormitory lounges. Anadditional 70 are living three toa double room.

The reasons for this crowdingwere two. First, the $50 non-returnable deposit for dorm roomswhich was instituted this yearhas discouraged people from leav-ing. Second, off-campus housinghas been in short supply due tothe refusal of landlords to signan anti-discrimination statementrequired by the university.

Meanwhile, the women's hallshave approximately 100 vacan-cies due to a new ruling thatgirls over 21 mayr live in anytype of off-campus housing. Col-lege officials, apparently, did notconsider the obvious (to Tech-men) solution.

Can you relocate?Back at Michigan State, though,

Colorado's problems seem trivial.A 50 day strike of constructionworkers was worrying administra-tion officials, since if two dormi-tories under construction were notcompleted, some 2400 studentswould have to be temporarily re-located. It was finally decided topush construction on rooms, andto complete the other facilities(lounges, classrooms and kitch-ens) 'as soon as possible there-I after. And you think Tech hasconstruction problems.

-

Oiver 65 sign for Pu+nam contest;$2500 fellowship awails winner

Over 65 undergraduates have signed up for the twentyfifthWilliam Lowell Putnam Competition, to be given to math studentsthroughout America and Canada on December 5. First prize in thecontest, which is sponsored annually by the Mathematical Associationof America, is a $2,500 fellowship for graduate study at HarvardUniversity.

In addition to the single competition, many schools enter teamsof three students. MIT has traditionally fared well in this competition,in past years members of the Department of Mathematics havecontributed to the operation and composition of the contests.

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Page 13: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Rights speech givenby CORE's FarmerJames Farmer, National -Direc-

tor of the Congress of -RacialEquality will be at MIT KresgeAuditorium on Wednesday, No-vember 11, 1964, at 8:00 pm.' Hewill speak on "The Civil RightsMIovement in the North."Tickets will be on sale at the

Civil Rights Committee Booth,November 5-10 in the lobby ofBuilding 10.

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IFC begins drive forhemophelia group

The Interfhaternity Conferenceis sponsoring a blood drive amongthe MIT fraternities.

Jim Sweeney '66, chairman ofthe drive, announced that thedrive will end on November 19when the Red Cross will collectblood from the pledged donors.The blood collected will be cred-ited by the Red Cross to the NewEngland Hemophilia Association.

'By Monday, 370 pledges of bloodhad been collected from fraternitymembers. Sweeney stressed thatthose prospective donors under 21must get parental permission togive blood.

Last year's IFC drive netted211 pints of blood.

THE SAFE WArm ' to stay alertwitout harmul stimulants

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Another fine product of Grove Laboratories.

Townes wins Nobel Prize for masers(Continued from Page 1)

working in radar and microwavespectroscopy was the productionof shorter rnicroaves.

At that time the idea came tohim to produce shorter micro-waves by controlled molecular oratomic activity. This led to ex-Ferimentation and the develop-

ment of the maser--an acronymfor "microwave amplification bystimulated emission of radiation."

The first maser developed byDr. Townes and his associatesused ammonia as the active me-deiurn, and in 1954 the first ex;perimental proof was obtainedthat amplification with the me-dium was possible.

In 195S, Dr. Townes and hisbrother-in-law, Dr. A. L. Schaw-low showed theoretically that themaser principle could be appliedto waves in the optical region. To-gether, they hold the fundamentalpatent on the laser.

Research continucsDr. Townes came to MIT as

Provost in 1961. Beside his admin-istrative duties, he is carrying outfundamental research in associa-tion with Professor All Javan, whocontinues full-time work on maser

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research and application.He cited -three main areas of

his current work: studies of in-teractions of light waves andacoustic waves in materials; the

IntramuralResults

BasketballAEPi 58, Grad House C 17Burton C 49, Baker D 20Lambda Chi B 24,

East Campus Fourth 20Theta Delta Chi A 33,

Grad House B 28Delta Tau Delta 51, Theta Chi B 44Baker C 46, Senior House C 12Student House 41,

Chemistry Dept. B 34Bexley Hall 31, ATO B 24DKE 56, Burton "Rebels" 30Burton B 39, Sigma Phi Epsilon B 24DU 49, Chinese Students Club 40Nuclear Eng. 59, Phi Delta Theta 28Tau Epsilon Phi 40,

Burton Fine Fifth 26East Campus Monroe 46, TDC B 22Baker E 40, Pi Lambda Phi 22

very precise measurement of dis-tance; and high resolution spec-troscopy employing infra-red lightused by maser techniques.

Tech riflemen willhold rally Thursday

By Karl FrederichA rifle team rally will be held

at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Novmber5, in room 20-E- 021, for the bene-fit of all freshmen and upperclass-men interested in shooting. Techriflemen have outshot every teamin the Greater Boston CollegiateRifle League for the past fouryears and hold the present Leaguematch record score. Freshmenwho shoot during the second andthird quarters are eligible forPhys. Ed. credit. Free cider anddoughnuts will be served.

Look what's back!The raccoon coat ina new 1965 version!

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First at Sallingers. Dashinglystyled trotteur length clutchcoat. Test-tube wonder of 100%modacrylic fiber-a combinationof 55% dynel and 45% verel.Ideal answer to New Englandweather. Goes well with a StutzBearcat.

SalSin ers545 MASS. AVE.

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Page 14: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Harriers 2nd in Easterns; Brown 3rdSailors 4th in Priddy Trophy

By John Kopolow-o The MAT freshman sailing team

ended its fall competition this,t past weekend with the meet for

fthe Priddy Trophy held here atu MIT. Twenty - two New England

colleges were represented on Sat-u urday, only ten of which could> qualify to race on Sunday. TechO finished fourth in the first day's

competition, qualifying e a s i 1 y.>2 However, they could do no better< than fourth again on Sunday andv) as a result, finished 29 points be-

hind the winner, the UniversityZ: of Rhode Island. URI totalled 94

a points, followed by the C o a s tGuard Academy (74), WilliamsCollege (71), MIT (65), and Colby(63).

Foote leading SkipperThe leading skipper among the

Lu Tech sailors was George Foote,whose crewman was Peter Hurl-ey. They managed to win merely

- one of the ten races on Sunday,thus accounting for their medi-ocre fourth - place finish. How-ever, fall sailing is generally con-sidered to be a warm- up for themain competition, which takesplace in the spring. Last year'sfrosh took the New England Sail-ing Championship, and t h e r eappears to be no reason why thisyear's squad can't repeat.

Cross - countryThe freshman Harriers had a

disappointing w e e k, finishingpoorly in both of their meets.Northeastern literally ran awayfrom both MIT and Tufts, asthey took second through sixthplaces and finished with twentypoints. Tufts had 52, although oneof their freshmen, Bruce Bald-win, captured first place with atime of 12 min., 50 sec. Tech ac-cumulated 63 points as Dan Ho-ban and Howard Friedberg finish-ed 1- 2 for them, ninth and fif-teenth overall.

Fourth in EasternsFour colleges participated in the

Eastern Meet on Tech's homecourse at Franklin Park. CentralConnecticut came in first, falling

MI.T ruggetrs snaprun of losses tyingHarvard team twice

By Neal GilmanThe MIT Rugby Club ended its

losing streak last Saturday bytying both games in a matchagainst Harvard on Briggs field.Although still winless, the clubbettered its season's record to 'nowins, 6 losses, and 2 ties.

The team played its best matchof the season Saturday. Losingboth games a few weeks ago toHarvard by 6-11 and 8-19, theclub held Harvard to a scorelesstie in the first game and a 3-3tie in the second. MIT was thefirst to score after three halvesof aggressive play. In the middleof the first half of the secondgame, Ton Van Tienhoven '66 re-ceived a relay from a fellow backand sprinted 50 yards into theend zone for a try. Against astrong wind he attempted a con-version, but failed. Five minuteslater, Harvard also scored a try,bringing the score to a 3-3 tie.These were the only scores ofboth games.

MIT, with renewed hope, facesthe Harvard Business School hereon Tuesday and Brown, away, onSaturday.

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just three points short of a perfectscore with 18. Providence Collegewas far behind, in second- place,with 46 points; Trinity had 77and MIT 109.

Central Connecticut's GeorgeConefrey finished first in a timeof 13 min., 36 sec. for the 3.1 milecourse. The number one Techrunner, Dan Hoban, could do nobetter than seventeenth with atime of 14 min., 58 sec. The froshnow point toward the All - N e wEngland meet at Franklin Parknext Monday in hopes of makingan improved showing.

ISHow They DidnICross country

MIT (V) placed 2nd in EasternsMIT (F) placed 4th in EasternsNortheastern 19, MIT (V) 45,

Tufts 67Northeastern 20, Tufts 52, MIT (F)

63Sailing

MIT (V) placed 2nd in WhiteTrophy at Coast Guard

MIT (F) placed 4th in PriddyTrophy at MIT

SoccerBridgeport 5, MIT (V) IMIT (V) 4, Brandeis 0 -

By Armen VarteressianMIT placed second in the 4th

annual E.I.C.A.A. cross-countrychampionships held last Fridayin Franklin Park. ProvidenceCollege was first by a large mar-gin, with 19 points, followed byMIT's 71, with Central Connecti-cut State College a very closethird with 72.

Brown 3rd in EasternsIndividual honors went to Barry

Brown of Providence, who defeat-ed all opponents by running the3.7 mile course in 20:32. Brownwas followed by teammate PaulHarris, who finished in 20:51.Close on Haris' heels was the firstTech scorer, Srmnrer Brown '66.Last year's individual champion,Ray Crothers of CCSC took 4thplace in 21:14.

Tech scorers were: Brown, 3rdin 20:51; Rob Wessn '65, 14th in22:50; Dick McMillin '65, 17th in23:06; Bill Purves '66, 18th in23:10; and Mike Oliver '65, 19thin 23:23. All Tech runners exceptBrown showed remarkable im-provement over last year'splaces. In '63, MIT placed 3rd inthe Easterns, with Brown 3rd,Wesson 19th, Purves 20th, McMil-lin 21st, and Oliver 28th.

Dunsley tops BrownTech's Sumner Brown suffered

his first defeat in regular compe-tition earlier in the week as oldrival Dave Dunsky of Northeast-ern took honors in the MIT-North-eastern-Tufts meet held last Tues-day. Dunsky ran the Franklinpark course in a remarkable17:53, with Brown 23 seconds be-hind.

Northeastern took first place inthe triangular with a near-perfect19 points, leaving Tech and Tuftsfar behind with 45 and 67 points,respectively.

The other Tech scorers in themeet were Bill Purves, 8th; RobWes-on 10th, Dick McMillin 11th,and Mike Oliver 14th.

Yesterday the squad ran in theGreater Boston meet at Franklin

Park with Dunsky and Brownagain fighting it out. Next Mon-day the harriers will run in theNew England Championships alsoat Franklin Park, expecting toimprove on last year's 11th place.

Kiernan fo speakDr. Owen B. Kiernan will ad-

dress the Technology Matrons atMIT's Endicott House in Dedham,Tuesday, November 10 at 10 a.m.

Dr. Kiernan, Commissioner ofEducation for the Commonwealthof Massachusetts, and a memberof the MIT Corporation, will speakon "Educational Priorities in theMid-Sixties."

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Page 15: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

Bridgeport soccer tops MITr -1;Stepaniuk scores lone Tech goalForty seven seconds into the

second period was all it took forthe University of Bridgeport soc-cer team to take a lead which itnever lost and finally built up to ai1 romp over MIT at Bridgeport,Saturday.

MIT scored the first goal of thecold, windy afternoon as NickStepaniuk '65 booted one in at 7:45of the first period. However, thislead was to last only nine minutesand fifteen seconds, when EdKoolakas tallied the first of histwo goals.

It didn't take long for the hoststo take the lead, as Ron Vere'ffies

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scored the only goal of the sec-ond period, when he drove in thewinning score at 0:47.

The second half proved to beeasy sailing for Bridgeport, feat-uring another goal each by Ver-tailles and Koolakas, inside rightand inside left, respectively. Theirgoals came within one minute ofeach other, at 6:15 and 7:08 of thethird quarter.

The fourth period, in which subson both squads saw plenty of ac-tion, had only one goal, when BillAlton, a Bridgeport sub scored at0:50, thus making the score 5-1.

The game was very disapn...t-ing for the Techmen as it loweredtheir record to 3-5-1 with only twogames remaining. This week MITwill entertain Brandeis on Mondayat 3:30 and the University of Con-nectcut on Thursday at 3:00. bothgames to be played on Briggs.ield.

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IM Basketball

Defenses strong in Ist week's gamesBy Russ Mosteller

The first week of major leagueintramural basketball producedno really surprising results.Games generally were fairlyclose and defense was predomi-nate, as no team scored morethan 63 points. Grad Economics,Grad Management Society, GradHouse A, and Political Science-the supposedly number one andtwo teams in each league-allopened the season with victories.The only result that might havecaused a few lifted eyebrows wasTheta Chi A's tromping of West-gate, 63-36.

Grad Economics, last year'splay-off champion, opened its de-fense of its American League ti-tie with a 48-37 win over Lamb-da Chi Alpha A. The game wasactually a lot closer than thescore indicates.

Grad Econ led by seven pointsat the end of the first half, butit was still a touch-and-go gameuntil the middle of the fourthquarter. Both teams began to foulto get possession of the ball, andGrad Econ was able to converttheir free throws into points whileLXA could not.

In a battle of dormnitories, Bak-er House A beat Burton House A44-37. The game promised to bea run-away as Baker jumped outto an early 214 lead. Burton,however, kept plugging away andtheir half-time deficit was onlynine points, 25-16. Freshman Den-nis Matthies accounted for morethan half of Burton's tallies,amassing 19 points.

In the closest game of theweek, Senior House A defeatedSigma Alpha Mu 37-36. The Sam-mies led most of the game (22-15 at half-time), but Senior Housefinally overtook them late in thefourth quarter. With only a frac-tion of a minute left, SeniorHouse led by 3 points, but a-Sammie field goal cut the lead toone. At this point, Senior House

I went into a stall. The Samniiesgained possession of the ball withone second left, but were unableto get off a shot.

Grad House started the seasonon the right foot with a 47-34

Photo by EBill Ingram

TEP guard Stu Vidockler '66 shoots against Baker House inan intramural basketball game played last Thursday night in theMIT Armory. He scored a total of six points in the game whichTEP won by a score of 42-29.

drubbing of Alpha Tau Omega.

Grad House jumped off to anearly lead and maintained a tento fifteen point advantage through-out the game. The second halfwas played on about equal terms,but Grad House's thirteen pointhalf-time lead left the rest of thegame devoid of excitement.

The Political Science-Phi MuDelta game could basically be de-scribed as five against three.John Yeasley '66, Paul Dalgren'68, and Francis Tolve '66 con-tributed a total of 42 points to thePMD cause, but their teammatesadded only three. Political Sci-ence jumped out ,to a 216 leadbut actually trailed 41-40 late inthe fourth quarter. Political Sci-ence won 51-45.

Neither of the remaining games(Grad Management Society vs.

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A vs. Westgate) were even close.Grad Management wasted no

time in disposing of the Fijis, 52-32. Theta Chi A had an eveneasier time of it with Westgate,63-36. Dennis Hinrichs '64 tossed

in 23 points for Theta Chi, equal-ing the total scored by Stu Nem-ser '66 for Sigma Alpha Mu ear-lier in the week. They were theonly individuals to reach the 20-point mark during the week.

The coming week promises to bean exciting one. The Americanleague features a contest betweenGrad Economics and the surpris-ing Theta Chi team.

Nafional League action will behighlighted by games between Po-litical Science and Baker A, andPhi Mu Delta and Grad House A.

IM cross country teams to run Veteran's DayIntramural cross-country run-

ners take to Briggs Field fortheir annual fall meet next Wed-nesday, November 11 at 3:00 pm.They will be shooting for theteam title held by Burotn House

and the individual title taken byPete Staecker '64. Last year some63 runners and 14 teams enteredthe relatively new sport, and this

Bell System

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Students in the upper half of their class preferredin all majors. Appointments may 'be made throughthe Placement Office. All Bell System Companieswill be represented by interviewers from:

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year's turnout should be evenlarger.

Teams consist of five men; forgroups entering ten or more men,the first five make up the A .teainm,the second five the B team, andso on. Non-finishers and emptypositions on incomplete teams aregiven last place points. The coursewill be two laps around BriggsField, about one and three-quar-ters miles. Rosters are due thisFriday by 4:00. Questions shouldbe directed to manager Dick Ny-gren '66 at x3204.

A-38~_SPACE AND PRIVACY near MIT, 5room apt. unfurnished. $1 10 per mo.2 bedrooms, large study, 2 desks,large living plus kitchen with newrefrig. Heat and c.h.w. included.Also one 3 room apt. as is, $75 permo. Call IV 4-5476.

TWO SIMPLY FURNISHED singleguest rooms, with a bathroomshared with two graduate students,are available at a cost of $5 pernight to visitors for brief periods.Please make reservations in ad-vance by calling the house manager,Mr. Weir, MIT ext. 2963.

LOST: One pair glasses, brownleather case. Lost Wed., Oct. 7, atapprox. 9 a.m. inside light green'63 Pontiac Catalina, en routeacross Mass. Ave. Bridge. Call RobTaylor, KE 6-1 139 or x37 82.

5 INCH SCOPE: Heathkit Labora-tory oscilloscope, Model 0-10,works fine $40 or best offer. CallJeffrey Race, 491-7862.

FOR RENT: 2 bedroom apartment innew air-conditioned building. Largerooms. Free parking. Convenient toMTA. $185. Call 566-4366.

For our present 3.14 class, we needsecond-hand copies of Volume Ill,Mechanical Behavior of Materials-STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OFMATERIALS, by Hayden, Moffattand Wulff, published by M.I.T.Please contact Mrs. Stratton, Rm.35-316, Ext. 3231, if you have acopy to sell.

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Page 16: Placement Bureau releases student employment data Glove ...tech.mit.edu/V84/PDF/V84-N22.pdfThe Nobel Prize-the highest honor bestowed in the world of science-was awarded last week

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Sailors come in second asprotests occur frequently

By W. Thomas Compton4- The MIT sailing team raced ato- Coast Guard Saturday and Sun-

- day for the White Trophy and the: New England Sloop Champion-r ship. Although MIT was heavilyL' favored, University of Rhode Is-E land edged past with a six pointW margin.o This is the first time this yearz that the sailors have failed to

- win a trophy race. Last year Don> Schwanz '66 skippered the team

to victory.W Winds were light on SaturdayZ but picked up on Sunday. At the

end of the first day of racing MITand URI were tied for first place.But several incidents on Sundayproved the undoing of Tech.

Quadruple protestEverybody was across the start-

( ing line at the beginning of oneOD race and two boats were trying- to get back. A third boat prevent-

1C ed their return and a fourth boat- was hit in the confusion. Four

protests were filed simultaneouslyand three boats were thrown outof the race. Later, in a highly ir-regular double hearing, the pro-tests were redecided and URIwas reinstated. This tied URIwith MIT for the lead, instead ofputting them seven points be-hind.

MIT immediately jumped to alead Sunday but on the third race,

Beta Theta Pi captured the in-tramural wrestling crown heldlast Friday and Saturday in theduPont wrestling room with a 57-point total. Three champions andtwo fthlird-place finishers led theBeta A team over second-placeBurton A, who had 35 points.

Defending champion LambdaChi Alpha A fell to fourth placewith 27 points in a field that waslarger and much tougher than anyin previous years. Last year's sec-ond-place team, Phi Delta A,picked up third place with 33points.

There were individual- dcamp-ions crowned in each of the eightweight classes,, and third andfourth place finishers were alsodetermined in consolation rounds.The field this year consisted of145 individuals and 35 teams, arecord turnout.

In the 123-pound class, SteveBishko '68 of Beta A scored asecond-period win over Tom Lang'68 to take the crown. Bishkopinned three opponents on his wayto the championship, including a20-second pin in the first round.His toughest match was a 2-0 de-cision over Ken Helstrom '65 ofEast Campus, who finished inthird place. Karl Frederich '65from Senior House picked upfourth place.

The 130-pound class was takenby Bill Harris '68, Burton A, bydecisioning Dixon Cleveland '68,representing Phi Delta Theta A,by a 5-0 count. Harris won hispreliminary matches by taking-two decisions and a forefeit. DanaBallard '67 of Pi Lambda Phitook third place on a decisionover Steve Passage '68 of AlphaTau Omega A.

Ralph Kaden '67 took the 137-pound championship with 3-0 de-cision over Brad Sermon '68,wrestling for Burton B. Kaden,wrestling independent, also tookquickest pin honos with a 13second first period win in thesecond round. He won his otherthree matches by very close one-point decisions. Frank March '67,Burton A, won third place at 137with a decision over Doug Sprang'65 of Phi Delta Theta A.

Norm Hawkins '68 of Phi Del-ta Theta A emerged victoriousover the 147-pounders by pinmingDale Stahl '68 of Delta Upsilonin the second period. The increas-ed competition in the class wasdemonstrated when last year'schampion, Don Oestreicher '67,cculd manage only fourth in los-ing third place to Tom Chen '68

they took a-chance -that lost theregatta. MIT was on port tackand crossed in front of a boat onstarboard tack. Schwanz thoughtthey had room to cross but theskipper of the other boat did not,and came about. He later filedprotest. Since there were no wit-nesses and it was only one man'sword against another's, the boaton starboard tack was awardedthe protest because it had theright of way.

Late Sunday URI fouled an-other boat but nobody protested.If a protest had been filed, URIwould have been thrown out ofthe race and Tech would havewon.

Jack Turner '66, Ed Shaw '65,and Jim Cronburg '67 crewed forSchwanz as they won three of theten races. They also had two sec-onds and two thirds.

MIT and Dartmouth were tiedin number of points and numberof times they beat each other,but MIT had more first placesand were awarded second place.Dartmouth was third, and North-eastern, Trinity, and Holy Crosswere far back in the pack.

There are only three regattasleft on the fall schedule and twoof them are here on the Charles.Next week is the Schell Trophyand the week after is the StaakeTrophy.

by Art PerhmanIn the finals in the A Division

Beta Theta P, defeated defendingchampions SAE in a highly ex-citing, low scoring contest 8-0.The game was marked by bril-liant defensive play and both of-fenses were highly contained.Earlier in the week, Beta ThetaPi beat Delta Tau Delta 12-8 ina re-play of the semi-final tie. Inthe B-League final, Phi KappaTheta outscored Nuclear Engi-neering 24-18 to take the cham-pionship.

Betas score safetyIn the second quarter SAE was

forced to punt from deep in theirown territory. The Betas rushedfcur linemen, ba-cking the SAE'sinto their own punter and block-ing the punt. Bob O'Donnel '66caught the blocked ball behindthfile SAE endzone, scoring a safe-ty. Later in the same period theBetas drove again. Quarter SteveSchroeder '67 hit Dick Carpenter'64 with a 30-yard pass puttingthe ball on the 15-yard line. Apass to Mike Ryba '67 put the ballon the three but time ran out.

The second half was mostly areplay of the first. As play began,SAE was rolling but their mna-chine was halted at the 15-yardline. There was no more scoringin the game until all but threeminutes of playing time hadgone. Schroeder hit Greg Wheeler

Photo by Scott Mermel

Steve Bishko '68 of Beta Theta Pi rides Ken Helstrom '65 ofEast Campus in the second period of the IM 123 lb. wrestlingchampionship match. Bishko won on a late reversal 2-0. Thematches were held Friday and Saturday in the wrestling room.

of Beta A. John Fishback '68 ofDelta Upsilon won the 157-poundclass in a thrilling 7-5 overtimevictory over Don Pryor '68 ofBeta B. Fishback made his wayinto the finals with two second-period pins and a 9-3 decision.Rick Young '68 of Beta A wasgiven third place by virtue of aforfeit when Ted Nygreen '66 ofSAE was injured.

The 167-pound class saw BobThomas '65 of Sigma Phi Epsilontake the championship with atight, 4-2 decisicn over Ken Mor-ash '65 of Lambda Chi A. Thomasalso scored two tight decisionsand a 27-second first period onhis way to the finals. Ed Foster'65 of East Campus A pinnedRichard Gardner '68 of Burton Cto take third place.

In the 177-pound class, BobO'Donnel '66 of Beta A picked upthe crown by pinning Bob Wileyof Phi Delta A in the secondperiod. O'Donnel scored two otherpins, one in 15 seconds of thefirst period, and a 1-0 decision tomake it to the finals. Steve Reim-ers '68 of SAE pinned Jeff Silver-man '68 of ZBT A for third placein the division.

The unlimited division crownwas taken by Dave Penny '66 ashe scored a first period win/ overDave Waltz '65 of Sig Ep. Penny

inmed two other opponents in .thefirst period and won a forfeit insweeping the heavyweight class.George Berbeco '66 of ZBT A

out-pointed Alan Simon of TauEpsilon Phi A for third placeamong the unlimiteds.

This year's tournament sawsome new and better ideas. Mostimportant was numerical order-ing of the matches to give wrest-lers a better idea when theywould wrestle next. The use ofthree mats instead of two alsohelped speed things along consid-erably. Medals for first and sec-ond places were also awarded forthe first time. Stan Wulf '65 andhis squad of varsity wrestlers asreferees did a very fine job ofrunning the tournament.Final team standings:

1. Beta Theta Pi A ........ 572. Burton A . ............... 353. Phi Delta Theta A ........ 334. Lambda Chi Alpha A 2.... 75. Sigma Phi ]~psilon ...... 25

(Tie) East Canpus A .... 257. Burton B .......... 24S. Alpha Tau Omega A ...... 209 Delta Upsilon ............ 1

10,1 Zeta Beta Tau A ........ 1611. Burton C ................. 13

(Tie) Indepenlent ........ 13Sigma Alpha Epsilon ...... 13

11 n~On DeckkToday, Wednesday, November 4

Soccer (F)-Phillips Exeter, Away,.3:00 pm

Thursday, November SSoccer (Y)-Connecticut, Home,

3:00 pmSaturday, November 7

Sailing (V)-Schell Trophy at MIT(thru -Sunday)

Monday, November 9Cross country (V)-New Englands

at Franklin ParkCross country (F)-New England;

at Franklin Park

Photo by Scott

Ted Nygreen '67 of SAE comes up from safety to stop Betaquarterback Steve Schroeder '67 for a short gain as John Ruther.ford '67 moves in. The Betas won the Sunday game by an 8-0count and took home the iM football trophy.

67 with a 40-yard sideline pass pass. The Delt score came on ain one of the few lapses of the 60-yard pass reception by PaUsuperb SAE defense. Two plays O'Lague.later, a pass to Wheeler was good In the B Division final Phi Kap.for six points and sewed up the pa Theta outscored Nuclear En8-0 win. . gineering 24-18 to gain the chain.

The entire game was a big de- pionship. Phi Kappa Theta scoredfensive struggle. The- big Beta in each of the first three quartersline stopped the SAE rushing and to build up an 18-0 lead going intokept SAE quarterback Fred Souk the final stanza.'65 corraled with a hard rush. The Nuclear Engineering, howeverSAE secondary stopped the Betas' came roaring back with threeshort pass and run game with just TD's in the fourth quarter to thieone lapse. Stars for the Betas it up, thus sending the game intowere quarterback Schroeder, pun- overtime.ter Dick Nygren '66, and line- In the overtime period, PHibacker Tom Chen '68. Souk play- Kappa Theta got the kickoff anded his usual good game for SAE. was forced to punt on fourt

To get into the finals, the Betas down. Nuclear Engineering thenhad to beat the Delts in a replay- ran' two plays, but a timely ined game earlier in the week. The terception by Larry Schwoeri '66original game had ended in a 6-6 gave the ball to Phi Kappa Thetatie- after two overtime periods,, near the Nuclear Engineering Dbut a protest had been lodged by yard line.the Betas. When the protest was ' Schwoeri then proceeded toupheld, tihe Delts' touchdown was score on a 5-yard pass severachanged to a safety and the game plays later for the winning mar.was played from the point of gin in the sudden death play.protest near the end of the first Scoring the points for Phi Kappahalf. Both teams scored again in Theta were Schwoeri with 12the replayed half,, making the fin- points, and Al Tervalon '65 andal score 12-8 in favor of the Betas. Tom Jernick '65 with six pointThe Beta score was set up on a apiece. Jerry Sovka picked uP25-yard Schroeder to Wheeler two touchdowns and Larry Foulkepass. Kent Groninger '63 scored one touchdown for the losing Nu.on the following play on a short clear Engineering cause.

Taech fail season stronqWith most of the fall sports com-

ing to a close in a week or two,it looks like the Tech sports fancan look back on a really finefall. The teams' combined rec-ords stand at 23-12-1 with onlythree events left, giving them a.653 percentage, quite a record.

The sailing team continues tobe the headliners, although theylost their first trophy competitionof the entire fall season last week-end with a second in the WhiteTrophy at Coast Guard. Thisleaves them 5-1 in trophy racing,with the Schell and Staake Tro-phies yet to go. Even at this dis-tant time, the squad looks likestrong favorites in the Nationalsnext summer.

The varsity cross-country squadis having their best season everso far. this year, though only afew observers are genuinely sur-prised. With all' five top runnersreturning from last -year's team,which was hailed as one of thebest ever, the fall running lookedbright. The- team lived up to theirpromise, finishing the dual meetseason 6-3, losing only to the topsmall-colleges in New England.They also finished the best everdone by MIT in the Easterns witha 2nd place behind Providence.

The team's number one man,Sunner Brown '66, has also doneall expected of him so far afterhaving overcome an early-seasoninjury. His only dual-meet losswas to his constant nemesis DaveDurnsky of Northeastern, and headded a couple more course rec-ords to his list. He improved hisplace in the Easterns from 10th

to 3rd and is now looking for.ward to improving on last year's19th in the small-college Nation.als.

The varsity soccer team hasbeen somewhat disappointing sofar and will have to hustle againstConnecticut tomorrow to pull theirseason record up to the .500 markEight returning starters pointedtoward a promising season, butthe loss of All-Star Bob Mehrabi.an to graduation proved to be abigger blow than had been esti.mated.

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