candidates speak on rights inscomm gives approval by to …tech.mit.edu/v82/pdf/v82-n17.pdf ·...

12
-------- · J dk.l ii gJ Down-To-Earth Spufnik Analyzed Here I I By Ronald D. Frashure Iand Joseph Sullivan iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied their views on civi-rig: Iproblems last Wednesday in Fk lge AuditOriumn Th e candidates were Stuz l ughes (Independent), Ted R( nedy (Democrat), and Geop L~odge (Republican) runningI the UJ. S. Senate; Endicott Pe body, Democraticc candidate:I governor; and Edward Brooke, R~epublican runing for attorn, general- Francis Kelly, -te Den cratic candidate for attorney ge eral, was unable to appear E sent an envoy. ]Pallel Questions Questioning thle candidates w. a panel representing the sponsc ing organizations-Massachuset Fair Housing Association, -thee N tional Association for the A vancement of Colored Pe~ople, al te Congress on Racial Equalit, Each candidate answered hr( questions and then made a fitv minute statement. Hughes on Cloture Hughes advocated amendir {he Senate cloture rule, which i, permitted filibusters to defez civil-rights legislation, so that simple majority could limit d bate. Kennedy and Lodge agreed o finis point, though Kennedy fa: ored a thiree-fifths majorit amendment as politically mor feasble. Hughes also -advocated imnprol ing existing low-stan d ard h ousir facilities as an alternative to coi struction of newl housing tA; might be beyond the income c the present occupants. Kemnedy on Housing Ted KennedY expressed his sur (Pledsre tarn to page 9) lnfluenza Shots Now Being Given By Medical Dept. Free influenza :shots for the stu dent body are 'now being offere( by the MIT Medical Department Students not covered by tll SUT health inuance policy wil be charged $1.00 per shot. Shot( are available at the Medical Clin. ic on the first flocor of Building 11, For Students Only "4At the Present time, there h not a sufficient amount of inlu. MMz vaccine available from thel Wholesale drug firms to imunize the whole MIT commnunity. It has, therefore, been decided that what vaccine is available will be re,. served for students only until sup. plies axe :nore plentiful," said Dr. Samulle D. Clark, Associate Director of thle M1n Medial D~e Partinent. Shots will, be given on a first- come, first served basis. persons who have never had a flu Shot should have two injections, four ado six weeks; afat. -lose who have had flu shot nee only one boDoster shiot. Influenza is already preent in the Boston area, and it is pCJs_ sible that the-re may beme sort If an epidemic durig thie win- ter mionths, continued Clark. Epidemic Possible Dr. Albert Seeler, Medical Di- Xlctor, feels there is a distinct possibility of an influenza epi- lemic this winter. Huenza runs 1n cycles and the number of cas- 1s Of flu should rise this year. Ile last major epidemic of in- luenza was in 1958, when the in- idence of "Asian" flu was quite .gh- "Those who cannot or do not receive flu shots need not feel un- duly concerned since the efficacy Of the vaccine is far from being 10017, "Furhernore, about 20% of ose who are injected may expe- o'nce harmless but, nontheless riher uncomfortabie reaction for 4 day or so," stated Clark. If More vaccine 'becomes avail- able, it will Ibe offered to other Iemnbers of the MIT community. -- Photo by Sieve Teicher Edward Kennedy, H. Stuart Hughes and George Lodge (1. to r.) clarified their positions on civil rights last Wednesday evening in Kresge Auditorium. Bonmb Hoax Falls To Break Up Civil Rights Meeting in Kresge By Allen Womack An anonymous bomb threat failed to ;break up the program at which tHe MIT Civil Rights Committee presented six major Massachusetts political candidates last Wednesday. Unknown to the audience which ovrerflowed into the aisles of ]Kresge Auditorium, a caller warned of a bomb on the audito- rium that was set to explode dur- ing the discussion. Bill Ferris, Kresge electrician, said he answered the telephone about 8:40 and heard a young man say, "There is a bomb in le auditorium, get those people out. It is set to go off in five minutes." In the background, Mr. Ferris heard what he de- scribed as young children whin- ing. Jim Murphy, manager of Kres- ge, then informed the TVIT Se- curity Patrol and the Cambridge Police and Fire Departments. The Patrol felt that the large crowd made it Impossible to evacuate without panic. Meanwhile, a search of the au- ditorium began, and Rev. Myron Bloy, chairman of the program, informed the candidates of the call. They all decided to stay. No one was seen leaving the auditoriumn immediately after the call and the police assumed that if a bomb existed it would not be in the audience area. The Cambridge Police branded the message the work of a crank, tbut the search was continued. About 8:55, the caller repeated that a bomb was in the auditorium. Mr. Ferris replied, "Yeh, you told us fthat before." Both calls originat- ed outside the MIT telephone system. The meeting continued as sched- ued. The audience left unaware that any threat had ever existed. The Cambridge Police Depart- ment warned that overflow crowds will not Ibe tolerated in Kresge in the future. If overflow crowds are anticipated, two City of Cambridge firemen must be employed to assure that the au- ditorium's seatmg capacity of 1238 is not exceeded. Reverend Bloy commented latt- er that there was "no question" that the caller's intent was to break up the meeting because of the nature of the sponsoring group. Massachusetts law pro- vides for both fine and imprison- ment of persons falsely report- ing the location of an explosive. One-third of the undergraduate student body was on the Dean's List last term. The seniors lead the other three classes with 38% of their class, receiving term averages of 4.0 or better. The freshmen came in a close second with 35% on the Dean's List, while 32% of the sophomores and 28% of the jum- iors were also named. The Class of '62 also leads the undergraduates with a 3.8 median average, followed by the Class of '65, with 3.7, and the Classes of '63 and '64, tied with an average of 3.5 Four per cent of the grades during the 1961-1962 school year in undergraduate subjects were '"E"1 "F"1 or "10". 71e general average of frater- nity groups was 3.6 while non- fraternity living groups posted a 3.7, compared with 3.6 and 3.5 respectively for the two preced- ing termis. Beta Theta Pi was the highest individual living group Nvith a 4.1. The pledge class of Phi Beta Epsilon had the highest freshman average of any living group with a 4.3 Average 1. Beta Theta Pi 4.1 2. sigma Chi 4.0 3. Bexley Hall 3.9 4. Phi Beta Epsilon 3.9 5. Zeta Beta Tau 3.9 6. Cti Phi 3.9 7. Phi Sigma Kappa 3.9 8. Delta Tau Delta 3.8. 9. Alpha Epsilon Pi 3.8 10. Alpha Tau Omega 3.8 11. Sigma Alpha Mu 3.8 12. Sigma Nu 3.8 13. Alumni Houses 3.8 14. Faculty Houses 3.7 15. Kappa Sigma 3.7 16. Sigma Phi Epsilon 3.7 17. Delta Kappa Epsilon 3.7 18. Baker House 3.7 19. Phi Kappa Theta 3.6 20. Theta xi 3.6 21. Burton House 3.6 22. Sigma Alpha Epsilon 3.6 23. Student House 3.6 24. Lambda Chi Alpha 3.6 25. N R S A 3.6 26. Phi Delta Theta 3.5 27. Tau Epsilon Phi 3.5 28. Delta Upsilon 3.5 29. Pi Lambda Phi 3.4 30. Theta Chi 3.4 31. Theta Delta Chi 3.4 32. Phi Kappa Sigma 3.3 33. Phi Mu Delta 3.3 34. Delta Psi 3.2 35. Phi Gamma Delta 3.1 · - P .----- · - ·1 I -, · · ·- ·· c ·- r ··· -- 1-* ·· " .. 'L·-c_ i r - -, "rh C - If · "'"- ·- ' · I '^ =U L -I -- I i;C'1;7kr;ts;,T, * rl ."*Cruc lUl·4--' -··4r C ·--- 4··. .- -\.·i· .. I -- - 'QI iiCI -u ·- - r·C-aI C 1-- -I `r- ·-rU · rr h 521 -CC D ;j·IL. Olrr7 cc n-hL·U -L :'- '··) 3;j·IS: ;,n·. rat c · Zut- -, Ur.. , ·-- -ncp , .uc ;Ec-;,- nw Ic ;·· "....i · iP& L-.-UC-' ac---. I .- *L 'R- Q -I';L·LILCI-·-·'yC''LI- .C_..I·L=ILIC- " ·- -·- · ;c^; CUI-IP I · ZE- ,i· I r ;----- "ce -- '-" Llli uur"- ,, ·-F· '-· "' -re '2·arr, ·- Y; tLiLL4UUh*-C -. ;n- .."pJI ,,, trlrre- --- r, I. Vol. 82, No. 17 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, October 3, 1962 Five Cents By Anne Vallee A 20-pound piece of Sputnik IV which fell in Wisconsin on Sep- tember 5 has been analyzed by Professor Grant of the Metallur- gy Department. Grant, a specialist in high tem- perature materials, did the anal- ysis in cooperation with the Smithsonian Astrophysics Labora- tory at Harvard. Metric dimension construction in the welded steel piece labelled it as non-American. The presence of radioactive ar- gon-37 and manganese-54 proved that the 5-ton satellite had orbit- ed in space. Manganese-54 is formed when cosmic rays strike steel. The large amount of un- stable Mn-54 which had decayed into chromium-54 showed the ex- tended length of -he flight. The flight began on May 15, 1960. MIT ikept a six-pound slice and sent the remainder to Los Ala- mos for radioactivity measure- ments. Analysis showed that the object was ordinary carbon steel. The Russians seemingly were more interested in a heavy pay- load thlan in sophisticated mate- rials. The small carbon content of the uneven part of the object (0.07%), compared with that of the other parts (0.21% to 0.31%), showed that the object had melt- ed during reentry. Temperatures in the melted area reached about 1500°C. The rest of the chunk reached temperatures of 500 to 8000C. Several other pieces have been found in the area of Manitowac, Wisconsin. None have been defi- nitely identified. In accord with a U.N. agreement, the chunk will be returned to IRussia as soon as U.S. investigations are completed. Conditilon Exams The Registrar's Office announces that applications for condition ex- aminations are due Monday, Oc- tober 8, in Room 7-142. Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval To New'Weekend' Plans By Herb Eagle Inscomm has giver, informal approval to a plan for holdhig a campus social wekend February 22-24 (Friday, February 22, is Wash- ington's Birthday). The weekend, which may begin with a basketball game-dance on Thursday right, would feature a big-name-band formal on Friday night, and an entertainment show on Saturday night. Committee memtnirs expressed the view that proximity to final exams was the major cause of poor attendance at last year's May weekend; hence the positioning of the new "Winter Weekend" at the end of the third week of the second term, hopefully before the first barrage of exams. Council Reorganimaflon Shelved A plan to reorganize the Freshman Council on the basis of living- group rather than section representation was shelved by Inscomm after close to two hours of intense debate. Those favoring the reorganization, which would have Freshman Council members elected by fraternities and dormitories on a pro- portional basis aLrgued that: (1) the present system of electing oouncil members in the sec- tions does not provide any effective structure for meetings or perso- nal discussions between the section leader and his constituents; (2) member of a section do not know each other well enough to form a basis for viable representation or communication - some freshmen belong to ninny sections or to none-whereas the freshmen in one frateri.ity u-r on one floor of a dormitory enjoy a more con- stant and ;inimate relationship. Thus the new council would be more effective in introducing the non-participating freshman to the operations and possibilities of student government; (3) the Dresent political nature of the council (i.e. its members are elected after a brief campaign and then constitute a voting body) ill befits its primarily academic and communicational nature. Those who favored reorganization pointed out that a new, larger council (membership would be increased from 35 to about 60) could be divided into co^nmittees to research and discuss specific freshman problems, and then make recommendaticons upon which Inscomm could act. Defenders; of the status quo noted: (1) the new system would encourage a division of delegates into fraternity and dormitory groupings, whereas present representation crosses living group lines; (2) the present system is better suited to the proposed "fresh- man-feedback program", in which the Freshman Council would en- deavor to assemble the, suggestions and reactions of the freshmen (Please turn to Page 11) OneThird Of Undergrads Rafed On The Dean's List Last Term .11 ) 4

Upload: others

Post on 20-Sep-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

-------- · J dk�.l ii gJ

Down-To-Earth Spufnik Analyzed Here

I I By Ronald D. FrashureIand Joseph Sullivan

iSix candidates for major Mala,_usetts political offices preseIed their views on civi-rig:Iproblems last Wednesday in Fklge AuditOriumn

Th e candidates were Stuzl ughes (Independent), Ted R(

nedy (Democrat), and GeopL~odge (Republican) runningIthe UJ. S. Senate; Endicott Pebody, Democraticc candidate:Igovernor; and Edward Brooke,R~epublican runing for attorn,general- Francis Kelly, -te Dencratic candidate for attorney geeral, was unable to appear Esent an envoy.

]Pallel QuestionsQuestioning thle candidates w.

a panel representing the sponscing organizations-MassachusetFair Housing Association, -thee Ntional Association for the Avancement of Colored Pe~ople, alte Congress on Racial Equalit,Each candidate answered hr(

questions and then made a fitvminute statement.

Hughes on ClotureHughes advocated amendir

{he Senate cloture rule, which i,permitted filibusters to defezcivil-rights legislation, so thatsimple majority could limit dbate.

Kennedy and Lodge agreed ofinis point, though Kennedy fa:ored a thiree-fifths majoritamendment as politically morfeasble.

Hughes also -advocated imnproling existing low-stan d ard h ousirfacilities as an alternative to coistruction of newl housing tA;might be beyond the income cthe present occupants.

Kemnedy on HousingTed KennedY expressed his sur

(Pledsre tarn to page 9)

lnfluenza ShotsNow Being Given

By Medical Dept.Free influenza :shots for the stu

dent body are 'now being offere(by the MIT Medical Department

Students not covered by tllSUT health inuance policy wilbe charged $1.00 per shot. Shot(are available at the Medical Clin.ic on the first flocor of Building 11,

For Students Only"4At the Present time, there h

not a sufficient amount of inlu.MMz vaccine available from thelWholesale drug firms to imunizethe whole MIT commnunity. It has,therefore, been decided that whatvaccine is available will be re,.served for students only until sup.plies axe :nore plentiful," saidDr. Samulle D. Clark, AssociateDirector of thle M1n Medial D~ePartinent.

Shots will, be given on a first-come, first served basis. personswho have never had a flu Shotshould have two injections, fourado six weeks; afat. -lose whohave had flu shot nee only oneboDoster shiot.

Influenza is already preent inthe Boston area, and it is pCJs_sible that the-re may beme sortIf an epidemic durig thie win-ter mionths, continued Clark.

Epidemic PossibleDr. Albert Seeler, Medical Di-

Xlctor, feels there is a distinctpossibility of an influenza epi-lemic this winter. Huenza runs

1n cycles and the number of cas-1s Of flu should rise this year.Ile last major epidemic of in-luenza was in 1958, when the in-idence of "Asian" flu was quite

.gh-"Those who cannot or do not

receive flu shots need not feel un-duly concerned since the efficacyOf the vaccine is far from being10017,

"Furhernore, about 20% ofose who are injected may expe-o'nce harmless but, nontheless

riher uncomfortabie reaction for4 day or so," stated Clark.If More vaccine 'becomes avail-

able, it will Ibe offered to otherIemnbers of the MIT community.

-- Photo by Sieve TeicherEdward Kennedy, H. Stuart Hughes and George Lodge(1. to r.) clarified their positions on civil rights last Wednesdayevening in Kresge Auditorium.

Bonmb Hoax Falls To Break UpCivil Rights Meeting in Kresge

By Allen WomackAn anonymous bomb threat

failed to ;break up the programat which tHe MIT Civil RightsCommittee presented six majorMassachusetts political candidateslast Wednesday.

Unknown to the audience whichovrerflowed into the aisles of]Kresge Auditorium, a callerwarned of a bomb on the audito-rium that was set to explode dur-ing the discussion.

Bill Ferris, Kresge electrician,said he answered the telephoneabout 8:40 and heard a youngman say, "There is a bomb inle auditorium, get those peopleout. It is set to go off in fiveminutes." In the background,Mr. Ferris heard what he de-scribed as young children whin-ing.

Jim Murphy, manager of Kres-ge, then informed the TVIT Se-curity Patrol and the CambridgePolice and Fire Departments. ThePatrol felt that the large crowdmade it Impossible to evacuatewithout panic.

Meanwhile, a search of the au-ditorium began, and Rev. MyronBloy, chairman of the program,informed the candidates of thecall. They all decided to stay.

No one was seen leaving theauditoriumn immediately after thecall and the police assumed thatif a bomb existed it would notbe in the audience area. TheCambridge Police branded themessage the work of a crank, tbutthe search was continued. About8:55, the caller repeated that abomb was in the auditorium. Mr.Ferris replied, "Yeh, you told usfthat before." Both calls originat-

ed outside the MIT telephonesystem.

The meeting continued as sched-ued. The audience left unawarethat any threat had ever existed.

The Cambridge Police Depart-ment warned that overflowcrowds will not Ibe tolerated inKresge in the future. If overflowcrowds are anticipated, two Cityof Cambridge firemen must beemployed to assure that the au-ditorium's seatmg capacity of1238 is not exceeded.

Reverend Bloy commented latt-er that there was "no question"that the caller's intent was tobreak up the meeting because ofthe nature of the sponsoringgroup. Massachusetts law pro-vides for both fine and imprison-ment of persons falsely report-ing the location of an explosive.

One-third of the undergraduatestudent body was on the Dean'sList last term.

The seniors lead the otherthree classes with 38% of theirclass, receiving term averages of4.0 or better. The freshmen camein a close second with 35% on

the Dean's List, while 32% of thesophomores and 28% of the jum-iors were also named.

The Class of '62 also leads theundergraduates with a 3.8 medianaverage, followed by the Class of'65, with 3.7, and the Classes of'63 and '64, tied with an averageof 3.5

Four per cent of the gradesduring the 1961-1962 school yearin undergraduate subjects were'"E"1 "F"1 or "10".

71e general average of frater-nity groups was 3.6 while non-fraternity living groups posted a3.7, compared with 3.6 and 3.5respectively for the two preced-ing termis.

Beta Theta Pi was the highestindividual living group Nvith a 4.1.

The pledge class of Phi BetaEpsilon had the highest freshmanaverage of any living group witha 4.3

Average1. Beta Theta Pi 4.12. sigma Chi 4.03. Bexley Hall 3.94. Phi Beta Epsilon 3.95. Zeta Beta Tau 3.96. Cti Phi 3.97. Phi Sigma Kappa 3.98. Delta Tau Delta 3.8.9. Alpha Epsilon Pi 3.8

10. Alpha Tau Omega 3.811. Sigma Alpha Mu 3.812. Sigma Nu 3.813. Alumni Houses 3.814. Faculty Houses 3.715. Kappa Sigma 3.716. Sigma Phi Epsilon 3.717. Delta Kappa Epsilon 3.718. Baker House 3.719. Phi Kappa Theta 3.620. Theta xi 3.621. Burton House 3.622. Sigma Alpha Epsilon 3.623. Student House 3.624. Lambda Chi Alpha 3.625. N R S A 3.626. Phi Delta Theta 3.527. Tau Epsilon Phi 3.528. Delta Upsilon 3.529. Pi Lambda Phi 3.430. Theta Chi 3.431. Theta Delta Chi 3.432. Phi Kappa Sigma 3.333. Phi Mu Delta 3.334. Delta Psi 3.235. Phi Gamma Delta 3.1

·�- P .----- ·�- ·1I -,· ··- ·· c ·- r· ··--1-* ··".. �'L·-c_ i r- -,"rh C - If ·"'"- ·-' ·I '^ =UL -I -- Ii;C'1;7kr�;t���s;�,�T,

L·r· r· *rl .�"*Cruc� ���lUl�·4--' �� -·�·4r C ·---4··. .-�-\.·i· ..I -- -

'QI iiCI -u ·-�- r�·C�-a�I

�C 1�--

-I `r-

·-rU ·rr h 5�21 -CC �D ;j·IL��.�Olrr7�

ccn�-h�L·�U� -�L :'-�� '··) �3;j·IS: �;,�n·.rat c ·Zut-� -,Ur.. , ·--�-nc�p ,.�uc ;Ec-;,- �nw Ic;··"....i ·i�P& L-.-UC�-' ac---.I� .- *L 'R- Q -I';L·LILC�I-·-·'yC''LI- .C_..��I�·L=ILIC-"

·--·- ·;c^; C�UI-�I�P I�·ZE- ,i· I r ;----- "ce

--'-" Llli� uur"- ,,-· ·-F· '-· "' ��-re '2·arr, ·- Y; �tLi�L�L4UUh*-C -.�;n- .�."pJI,,�,� trlrre�-

---r, I.

Vol. 82, No. 17 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, October 3, 1962 Five Cents

By Anne ValleeA 20-pound piece of Sputnik IV

which fell in Wisconsin on Sep-tember 5 has been analyzed byProfessor Grant of the Metallur-gy Department.

Grant, a specialist in high tem-perature materials, did the anal-ysis in cooperation with theSmithsonian Astrophysics Labora-tory at Harvard.

Metric dimension constructionin the welded steel piece labelledit as non-American.

The presence of radioactive ar-gon-37 and manganese-54 provedthat the 5-ton satellite had orbit-ed in space. Manganese-54 isformed when cosmic rays strike

steel. The large amount of un-stable Mn-54 which had decayedinto chromium-54 showed the ex-tended length of -he flight. Theflight began on May 15, 1960.

MIT ikept a six-pound slice andsent the remainder to Los Ala-mos for radioactivity measure-ments. Analysis showed that theobject was ordinary carbon steel.The Russians seemingly weremore interested in a heavy pay-load thlan in sophisticated mate-rials.

The small carbon content ofthe uneven part of the object(0.07%), compared with that ofthe other parts (0.21% to 0.31%),showed that the object had melt-

ed during reentry. Temperaturesin the melted area reached about1500°C. The rest of the chunkreached temperatures of 500 to8000C.

Several other pieces have beenfound in the area of Manitowac,Wisconsin. None have been defi-nitely identified. In accord with aU.N. agreement, the chunk willbe returned to IRussia as soon asU.S. investigations are completed.

Conditilon ExamsThe Registrar's Office announces

that applications for condition ex-aminations are due Monday, Oc-tober 8, in Room 7-142.

Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives ApprovalTo New'Weekend' Plans

By Herb EagleInscomm has giver, informal approval to a plan for holdhig a

campus social wekend February 22-24 (Friday, February 22, is Wash-ington's Birthday).

The weekend, which may begin with a basketball game-danceon Thursday right, would feature a big-name-band formal on Fridaynight, and an entertainment show on Saturday night.

Committee memtnirs expressed the view that proximity to finalexams was the major cause of poor attendance at last year's Mayweekend; hence the positioning of the new "Winter Weekend" atthe end of the third week of the second term, hopefully before thefirst barrage of exams.

Council Reorganimaflon ShelvedA plan to reorganize the Freshman Council on the basis of living-

group rather than section representation was shelved by Inscommafter close to two hours of intense debate.

Those favoring the reorganization, which would have FreshmanCouncil members elected by fraternities and dormitories on a pro-portional basis aLrgued that:

(1) the present system of electing oouncil members in the sec-tions does not provide any effective structure for meetings or perso-nal discussions between the section leader and his constituents;

(2) member of a section do not know each other well enough toform a basis for viable representation or communication - somefreshmen belong to ninny sections or to none-whereas the freshmenin one frateri.ity u-r on one floor of a dormitory enjoy a more con-stant and ;inimate relationship. Thus the new council would bemore effective in introducing the non-participating freshman to theoperations and possibilities of student government;

(3) the Dresent political nature of the council (i.e. its membersare elected after a brief campaign and then constitute a votingbody) ill befits its primarily academic and communicational nature.

Those who favored reorganization pointed out that a new, largercouncil (membership would be increased from 35 to about 60) couldbe divided into co^nmittees to research and discuss specific freshmanproblems, and then make recommendaticons upon which Inscommcould act.

Defenders; of the status quo noted:(1) the new system would encourage a division of delegates into

fraternity and dormitory groupings, whereas present representationcrosses living group lines;

(2) the present system is better suited to the proposed "fresh-man-feedback program", in which the Freshman Council would en-deavor to assemble the, suggestions and reactions of the freshmen

(Please turn to Page 11)

OneThird Of Undergrads RafedOn The Dean's List Last Term

.11 �)4

Page 2: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

1962 Vespa Scooter3 months old $235

AL 4-1 154 - Ask for:STuart- mornings

Sumner - afternoons

FROM HAWAIIOrispy-fnresh 3 flower VANDAORCHID Coarsagte air c~livered,$2.50 e*.; bulk order: 10, $1.75each; 20, $ 1.50 each.

POLYNESIAN EXOTICS410 Nlaihua Si, Honioulu, Hawa:li I

Il.I '.-

�- CqL�;I�·l �,qlC�·l

~s--, lM~~I~e

)�1)

~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~i. , ' .s. , .'he%~ I~~Dg~iE iSamnuel Blurestein Co.iEngine replaced 1953 DO GE Schoo-Engineerin Supl

-Engine replaced-1959 Ask About Student Discount$125 , 1080 Boylston St,, Boston

CO 7-1102f:l, hi '81 O"Jlt I v 345 Main St.. MaldenCal DME 289 7-Ba6 DA 2-23 15! ~"-_

I

Politml Advertisemen t Poltal Advertisement Polti Advertisement

HUGHES NEEDS YOU!

UN 4-6629--__ a- -- -~ONNO-~~~~~~~~~I U-- I I1~ 1 1=- -I , _ ~ a al r

I1.

1-

I:-

Ii

I

I

[

H

I

Iw

iI5

For all sections using the Thomas Text B [NOTE: No books or notes may be used. If brought into the room,

they must not be left on the desks.------- ~-------- -- -- - -- -- -- - -- -- -- - -- -- -- - -- -- -

Arrows indicate the primary differences between The quiz,fop, which circulated on Thursday and has since been disownedby the mathematics department, and the quiz, below, given onFriday to i8.01 students.

-I

I

IIi

I

iI

IiII

IiI

I

i

JI5MIa;9M

i

I

5

I

I

oq

C14

O0-LLXco0

OV)

en

za

LU

I

By Joseph SullivanRichard Martin, '63, and Lau..

rence Demick, '63, both membersof Sigma Nu, were injured earlyMonday morning in a fire which

struck the basement of the apart-ment house in which they wereliving.

Martin was admitted to Bos-ton City Hospital with a severedartery in his arm. He was listedas in good condition Monday. Heput his arm through a plate glasswindow while fleeing the blaze.

Demick and Miss Vija Skudurawere discharged from the hospi-tal after treatment for smoke in-halation. Demick told The Techthat Miss Skudura was studyingin the living room of their base-ment apartment when the firebroke out. Both men were asleepat the time of the outbreak,around six a.m.

Fire officials termed the blazeas "suspicious" and said that thearson squad was being called in.

By David VanderwerfA!dditional security measures

may be instituted to protect 18.0exams, according to Arthur P.Mattuck, professor in charge offreshman calculus.

He made the statement Mon-day, four days after a mimeo-graphed sheet purporting to bethe first freshman calculus quizappeared in a raeshman physicslecture. This sheet, slipped inamong 8.01 assignment materialat a Thursday afternoon lecture,was denounced as a fraud by themathematics department imme-diately preceding the actual ex-amination on Friday morning.

Copies of the sheet had seenwide distribution among freshmenThursday night, but even thentheir validity had been questionedbecause of the number of typo-graphical errors and .mistakes inthe general form. Also noted wasthe lack of material irom asheet of special supplementaryhomework problems which hadbeen distributed by the math de-partnent during the previousweek, and from which it hadbeen announced one of the testquestions would ibe taken.

Several students had called himThursday night to inform him ofthe test's existence, ProfessorMattuck said. He verified the factthat it was not the actual exam-ination.

Also called was ProfessorGeorge B. Thomas, Jr., lecturerin the course and author of thetext used for 18.01, 18.02, and18.03.

Friday, September 28, 1962 Time: 9:00 - 9:55

Quiz No. 1

Elxamination In

18.01 CALCULJS

NME: Studenta are not permitted to use anyLv books,

notebooks, or papers In this sxamibstlon. If

brought into the room, they must not be left

on the desks.* X 4----- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Friday, September 28, 1962 Time: 9:00-9:55 A.M.Quiz No. I

Examlnation in

18.O1 CALCULUS

'He had looked at the test pre-viously and was able to checkthe general material in the finalproblem, he stated, and to as-sure himself that the two testswere not the same. ""It was ap-parently a harmless prank," hestated. "It was meant to shakethe students up, and accom-plished its purpse."

The .est was protected Thurs-day night by a member of thesecurity force, Professor Thomas

stated. This statement was con.firmed by Professor Mattuck,who added flat although testshad been stolen in the past, therehad always been sufficient timeto change the examination beforeits administration. "Maybe weneed a safe," he said.

Secretariat ConductsFreshmaan ElectionsIn Physics Sections

Elections for freshman sectionleaders are taking place all thisweek.

Sophomore Secretariat mernebers will conduct the electionswhich will be held in physicsclasses. Jack Dowie 64 is chair.man of the elections.

Balloting will be preferential;the second place candidate willbecome an alternate to freshmancouncil.

Freshman Council is responsi-ble for class officer elections,planning freshman participationinField Day, class pins, a classdance, and Freshman FeedbackCommittee, as well as smalleritems.

A plan to reorganize the Fmresh-man Council on the basis of liv.ing groups rather than sectionrepresentation was shelved by Ins-comm after close to two hoursof intense debate.

The new method would havegiven each fraternity one representative, NRSA two representa-tives, and each dormitory six.

Wie all jin i 'j omake mistakes . .

ERASE WITH OUT A TRACEON EATON'S CORRASABLE BONDTyping errors never show on Corrasable. The special sur-face of this paper makes it possible to erase without atrace-with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean-looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit downat the keyboard, make no mistake--type on Corrasable!

Your choice of Corrasable inlight, medium, heavy weights and /Onion Skin. In handy 100 / .::sheet packets and 500-sheet .. :boxes. Oniy Eaton makes ':' '---CoriaisaWl.B U

A Berk~ir Typewriter Paper a

jMATON PAPER CO1WORATION * PITTSFIELD, MASS;

DANCE COMBO: Guitar, sex,piano, bass, and drums. Ideal

for parties - everything fromrock and roll and jazz to moodmusic. Call Roddy McLeod atext. 3203.

FOR SALE: 12 V. car radio,Monarch 8 transistor with

built in speaker. Best offer over$30. Worth $45 new, neverbeen installed. Bernie Yagad,x3782.

WANTED: Two drawer, legalsize filing cabinet. Must be

sturdy and have full suspension.Jason Fane, Runkle 306, 4 AmesSt. X2892.

FOR SALE: 12 V. Motorola FMtuner for car radio. Worth

$74 new, never been installed.Best offer over $50. BernieYaged, x3782.

JAZZ PIANIST wanted to re-organize small combo for

duration of school year. CallBernie Yaged, ext. 3782 or KE6-1139.

WANTED: Fiat Shop Manualfor 1957 1100 Model Sedan.

Call Bernie Yaged, x3782.

Five weeks remain in what is probably the most significant political campaign in 1%92.Stuart Hughes, (Prof. of history at Harvard) running as an Independent candidate forthe U. S. Senate against Ted Kennedy and George Lodge, has said:

>

IN THE COLLEGEBRAND ROUND-UP

PRIZES: ist prize'-Decca HiFi Slerero2nd prize-Tape Recorder3ro prize Polaroid Land Camera

RULES: Contest runs from October through November 9.Any Institute recognized living group may enter. Bal-lots will be bottffom flaps of Marlboro, Parliamenl,tPhilip Morris and Apine.

WHO WINS: The living goup collectingwin the Cofntest.

the, most ballots will

If you are not already working for Hughes, cortact:

Joel Gladstoneor

Richard Trilling

Three Hurt In Horning Fire Fake 18.01 Quiz Appears A Day Early

"i HAVE ENTERED THE RACE FOR THE U. S. SENATEBECAUSE I BELIEVE THAT SOMEONE SHOULD BETALKING ABOUT THE MAJOR PROBLEM FACINGMAN: HIS VERY SURVIVAL."

if you believe that ending the arms race is the most crucial issue of our time, thenvolunteer your time during the next 5 weeks for:

!) Weekly distribution of 300,000 topical leaflets at factory gates anddowntown Boston. (This week's topic: civil rights.) Mainly Thursdays3:30-5:30; other times, too.

2) Intensive house-to-house campaigning in selected precincts, done insmall teams.Get on the BRANDWAGON ... its lots of funl

Ma IV

Orot 1s

UN 8-6874

UN 4-6629

Page 3: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

I ~· I~ s ~ 9-llb l~l

IF .. . . . . . . l

Cor. Mass. Ave. and Beacon Sf. at Harvard BridgeOPEN EVERY NIGHT, INCLUDING SUNDAY. TILL I I

i

it

i

iIi

I

I

l

i

iiii

I

wo-

-4iIm-4

a:

mOZmo,

0Oco

m70

a,

o-

(i

w

By Dave TrevwettAt present this column is undel

bombardment from various sourees, so my first act will be to present a few explanations:

Last week I said that the Wellesley mixers were "by invita-tion only." This in itself is cor-rect, as invitations are sent outto various individuals and kroups,and only those invited are expect-ed to show up. I was wrong, how-ever, in implying that one ha4to have an invitation with him toget in; while there is a tokerregulation to this effect, it's notreally enforced. The problem isthat while the girls want a lolof guys to show up, they don'lwant to be mobbed.

: This 'Saturday the other half olf, the Wellesley dorms (Bates, Free-

man, MVlcAfee, Munger, Davis,etc.) will be having their mix-ers; better luck this time.

Now I'm forced to enter anapology and a desperate plea forleniency: it seems that the mix.er I listed for Wheelock last Sat-urday didn't exist. This resulted

n from a misunderstanding of ther. date between myself and the so

cial chairman of Peabody Hall; Ia can promise you that it won'ta happen again (I hope).n Actually that Wheelock mixerh does exist: this week. But their

dean was very distressed withIt the mob scene at the last fresh.)f man mixer, so this one is ,by in-

vitation only. I'm not at iibertye to say more, so you're on your9 wn.

And now, to atone -for my sins,n a gem of information: a bus0 service is being initiated between

the Wellesley campus and do'n-n town Boston. Buses depart frome Wellesley parking lots at 7 P.M.

and unload at Park and Tre-mont streets. Fare is one dollar

l each way, and must .be signedt up for in advance. Departure for

the return trip to Wellesley is atmidnight. Unused tickets will be

' forfeited.This waill prove a useful way

for Techmen without cars to getWellesley dates -to and from carn-pus; but the service only oper-a:tes on Friday nights. ContactWellesley for further information.

As mentioned before, the Cath-s erine Laboure School of Nursing

-is having its Harvest Mixer nextFriday, October 5, at 2100 DCor-chester st. The same night will

s see MIT -freshmen enjoying theirs annual mixer in Walker.s Katherine Gibbs School is also

having a ,mixer tha:t night atZero Marlboro Street, 8 P.M.

The student nurses at Mass-achusetts General Hospital willpresent their version of the Har-vest Mixer in Bartlett House, 34Blossom Street: October 5, 8-12P.M., $.75 admission, free re-freshments. School ..D. might berequired, so take your 'bursar'scard.

Friday being a popular night,Bouve' Boston School (Tufts) isjoining the crowd with an Au-tumn Mixer in Ruth Page SweetHall, 387 Boston Avenue, Med-ford: 8-12 P.'M., $.50 admission,refreshments. Music ;will be pro-vided by the Rhythm King'sBand.

Fisher Junior College will putin its bid for.Friday night's mix-er mob with an affair at theYWCA on Clarendon St. in Bos-ton: 8-12 P.M., one dollar admis-sion.

Various houses at Smith Col-lege including Hubbard Housewill -be having an open house, al-so on the 5th, 7:30-11:30, withThe Furies playing. And there'sa rumor of a mixer at Lasell Jun-ior College in Auburndale thesame nigrht.

Back cn the Tech campus,Grad House will be holding itsfall acquaintance dance with mu-sic by Richard Martin: October5, 8-12 P.M., in the CampusRoom. Women are admitted freebut men have to pay $1.25; re-freshments wiil be served.Last but certainly not least

for Friday night, there'll be an

EFast House Mixer (Cabot, Whit-r man, and Eliot) in Cabot Hall,

Radcliffe: 8-12 p.m. Music will besupplied by a small combo anda rock 'n' roll band. The girlsthemselves are preparing cookiesand other goodies for refresh-

t ments. Although it's technically'by invitation only, it usuallydoesn't work out that way.

One of -the few mixers being/ held Saturday night is the Baker

House Blast: guys one dollar,girls free. It'.ll start at 8 P.M.

t and end at some unbelievables hour.t There's also going to be ant Outing Club square dance at Wel-

lesley Saturday night: Alumnaef Hall, 8 P.M., $.75 admission. The- Wellesley Weekly Bulletin states

that "all members of the collegecommunity and their friends areinvited." If you feel friendly

1 enough, go ahead.r In weeks to come, I'll be .bring-

ing you -more detafl on theWheaton College all-campus mix-er, October 12; the Senior HouseBeatnik mixer (.featuring Welles-ley girls), October 13; the OpenHouse at Harriet E. Richards

t Hose (BU), October 27; andmany others. See you again next

r week.

Prefab SchoolhouseStill Draws interestr On Memorial DriveTwvo members of the Depart-

ment of Architecture have de-- signed a new prefabrioated school-I housd that can be adapted to any

community need, quickly assem-- bled, expanded and converted to

new needs.I The new concept in school con-

struction was based on a four-t year study, headed by Profesesor

Marvin E. Goody, in the Depart-ment of Architecture, of prefab-r ficated. building panels for con-struction purposes.

A demonstration model of theclassroom has, for a year, beenon exhibit just west of BurtonHouse, on Memorial Drive. Ituses eight of the structural treesto form a room 32 feet square,with an eight-foot overhang on allsides for sun protection.

"The room is manufactured,packed, shipped to the site, anderected for the same cost as thesolid, inflexible classroom that isbuilt today," Professor Goodysaid. "It can be erected in aboutone-tenth the time of a standardclassroom the same size and, withair-conditioning, is designed to beused 12 months a year."

Five WJere ElectedTo Activities CouncilThe Chinese Students Club, De-

Mclay, the Baton Society, theStudent Metallurgical Society, andthe Christian Science Organizationwere elected rotating members ofthe Activities Council for oneyear at its last meeting in May.

Rotating members may not beelected for two terms in succes-sion. The Chairman of the Fi-nance Bcard was made a pertoo-nent member of the ActivitiesCouncil, but ineligible for officeon the Council. The current Fi-nance Board chairman is PeterVan Aken '63.

In other action Club Latino hasbeen made a permanent mem-ber, bringing the total number ofpermanent members to 15.

Charfmr FRightsAny persons who desire to

organize charter flights or groupflights at MIT f. - the comingyear should file application ofintent with the Office of the Deanof Student Affairs prior -to Wednes-day, October !0. Forms may besecured at Room 7-133 tomorrow.

-- Photos by Curtiss WileKresge Auditorium last Saturday nightThree moods of Josh White after his concert at

presented by the Baton Society.

Over 100 titles on the following subIects:

ON 1 D3ISPLAY ATP YOUR IBOOKGTORZI

Three Faces Of Josh While Cherchez la Femme:'Invifations' Clarified

Harvard Bridge Latin American ProblemsIs Faling Down; Engineers PlanMDC To Repai'r Six studentts and three professors will

Harvard Bridge, the most di- America. The people will be selected onrect span between MIT and the Some wil lbe going down next summer fofraternities is crumbling and is The projects in Latin Americal will in need of immediate major re- year studying background information arpairs. year performing xesearch. The work will

At a June meeting of the Metro- of six men, consisting of one professor apolitan District Commnssio, MIT and the Latin American universityChairman Robert F. Murphy de- The teams are on a personal level,clared that the repairs scheduled between the professors. The projects willfor this fall would force at least a technical report.partial dlosing of Harvard Bridge. · Plans for three projects in the InteHowever, sinee that June meet- coming to a close; the application of eom]ing, Benjamin Fink, Chief Engi- problems in Colombia, the use of naturalrneer of the MDC has reposted plications, and the study of human conseqthat te plans have been changed. of modern technology to underdeveloped

Consulting engineers are still discussion on designs against earthquakes.studying plans for major repairs The central theme of the program iof the bridge leaving only minor students and educalors for new solutionssidewalks repairs for this fall latest technical advances.

MDC Chairman Murphy report- Thtoabugtwlbebu ne jed that he found the roadway andsteel expansion plates so depress- years, much of which the Civil .- gineerined that they were knocking huge igto get. The department has aiready rchunks of concrete from the un- of $250,000 from the Carnegie Corporationdersides of the roadway. Cement Spanish claspes, given by the departm,encasing the underpinnings is also started September 29 6to .facilitate easy cornermbling. As a result, scaffold- bets, of the teams.ing will be placed under two spansto prote~t boaters from falling ce-ment, and all water traffic under Y uToCnD fc othe bridge will be restricted to Y .ToCnDfc othese two spans. No major repairs. You may, in some cases, legal- A Boshave been made to the bridge ly tear down annoying Paolitical howeversince 194. posters. citizens

The law says that persons who from p,Boston Li~ary Hours put any advertising or notices not apply toBo$~ofiLibrar~["~our$ required by law and without con- fire hy~

Mond.-Fri.: 9 a.m.-9 p.m.; sent from the property owner,Sat.: 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; mays be fined. Moreover, anyone along thSun.: 2 p.m.-6 p.m.; offended by the notice may re- becauseClosed on holidays. move or deface it. have nol

Research1 study problems -in Latirt the basis of availabilityor several months.last for two vears with and field coditions and abe carried out by a team

nd two students from bothinvolved.having just an agreementI end with the finishing a

er-American Program areputers to Civil Engineeringmaterials in structural aptuences of the introduction

countries. There is also

s participation by foreignto problems based on the

fillion dollars over severang Department is still tryeceived a three-year grann of New York.nent of modern languages,nmunication between mere

sters - Legallyston Herald editorial said,~r, this does not authorize;to remove political signswrivate property. It does.o public property such as,drants, pavements, treeshe road, and utility poles; the utility companiesot authorized posters.

THE BOOKwORRM

Page 4: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

OKINI

I

a

Ii

a

N

7 �

Ps to Th e Te c his no challenge to Ow Own seeQrity. But the saine People q, Nchortle in glee at the melWrdz..

a of Exodus of a film actok's imitation of w.,r the obser- ling dead with a knife supposdystic shame- in his back would display less qnan beings: their wit were they to find thDmnipreserrt own children murdered byiughat skill- prowler.,,at unskilled Can a truly sensitive persm)arrassment laugh at cruelty?4odrama. or R is certainly a mark oflittlei at flicker- dignity to laugh at suffering, eML; at imny; when portrayed amateurishly ,.ratched fin- an unskilled actor on a pidilmiees, and screen. The fact that a flin, 4ehould blush Exodus - and Exodus is orily orle -iot to weep, instance - can evoke as much Ilaugh there crude laughter as it did from an 13

there is audience comprised of individualscowardice. -of supposedly conscientious sej�a

win, " said sibilities is degrading to MIT. h! Ife for us to for no better reason than the I

preservation of self respect, suchI laugh atbeastliness shameful behavior should be re.1

.strained if we wish to rernainat'ss issuing all proud of our school.xhile there Robert DiGrazia

'N 0 MDAtourerBy MCHAEL LINAHense is the NORTH'Me novice # A K Qdefense of 1* KJ2� lead may * Q J 10lose badly 4 Q 8 7 4rise is corn- WEST EASTmystifying, * 10 6 4 # 9 3)iysis. 'Mis IV Q fRA1087543ts aside or A873 K 6 5 4g for the J10 952asive playsdcal, and SOUTHplays that J 8 7 5 2or missed, 9 6 - avestige of 9 2J6AK63

e average East-West Vulnerable.e today's The Bidding:Emching a North East South Westfter a two I -no trump 2 F# 2 4 Pass;t. Looldng 3 4 pass 4 4 all passm be seen Opening Lead: Queen of Hear�e set three

the Ace,club niffs not found once when the hand

�imple, but was played seven -times at theways that MIT club. Remember, when you�shed, and and your partner are trying tooL available obtain ru-ffs to set a contract, be "Sopens the careful what cards you leadl,t wins. it Highcards, promise higher out-E�tums the side suit values, low cards, lowerruff . That outside suit values. Also, be sumfor it is to lead a middle card if you hu

'-o re-enter no values to show. Defense lh�;ts him to easy is too good to pass up.two suits Puzzler: Answer to last N�reeksi

s and the hand:and. leads As South you hold,ruffs, and 4 Q J 10 8, J94,5Carer now 46 A KJ107Ls a choice The bidding:d another SOUTHWEST NORTH EASTer has the 1 46 pass 1 4& pass

can lead 4 pass 4 notrump pass 5find -the What do you bid now? Six dia- A-

nd for an- monds. The correct procedure 01& again - show a void with the Bladmooderould have Slam Convention is to bid 4e=-'

-cu fhe swI showing the number of acefls~ades and you have but on the six level. Bid~

The low six in the trump sui~t if that utne-thing in is higher fl=n the trmup suit.I

andereads This weeks hand:

ecieves a IV Q J 10 9 6 5 2 * Aing of dia- *AKQP(

t.Simple, What is your opening bid? 'fense was Answer next week.

E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

have to be buftt, but the addition of awingto thepmsentE;ast Campus houses,Would Provide immecliafte relief from thesqueeze and mlgfht allow the Institutetime tobecome better aNe to- afford con-struction of a new building. It is a sadcomment on Philanthrqpdsts, but at seemsthatthe organizations capable of supply-ing the money necessary to firtance sucha new Aructure, while Willing to donatef -,r Tesearr-ch centers land scholarships, arevery hesitant about donating money forthe student bWldings which -make themoffective.

The cost of building a comple�ly newdormitory now Would seriously ov"taxthe present dormitory system, and we areafraAd that Unless some positive measuresare takennowitoward constructing addi-tional space in the present system, theprohibitive cost may forceindefimte post-ponement and bnng on a avW housing

Guinea P sOf the many ways to Obtain a few

quick doiUmars, Probably few 0-Te bettei-advertised than the opportunities to be-come a subjedt for oneof ithe many ex-poriments which aire lt;ted on Instituteor dormitory bulletin boards.. In manycases, the subject has no idea of the.mature of the expe =Jent or -of the po-tential hazards Involved prior to theactual testing. ConsideTing the sizeableinvestment which both the -student aindthe Institute have in ea.,Oh individual atDAIT, we are happy to -notice that theMedical Department has taken the re-sponsibility of Teviewdng, all experimentsbefore Students or others from the MITcommunity become subjects.

Since all Tequestsfor subjects shouldbe refereed to the Student Personnel Of -fice, this Office, wiU have a Current list-ing of the approved projects, in PrOgreSs.Undoubtedly, theme are studentswho areInterested in experiments for reasonsother than the monetary remunerationusuallyoffered. These student's as well asthtse desiring to take part -in long tennprojects as a source of 'income are en-couraged to use -the files of the StudentPersonnel Office for those projects whichleave been approved by the Medicall De-partment. For personail peace of mind,studentsshouldconsult the,,R'tudent Per-,onnel Office or theTvledical Department,before taking parent in any experiment.With a listing of currently approved proj- tects readily!available, both the -interests Eof the students involved and the require- imentsof the experiment can be satisfied. c

Pharmacy CSince the buTning of the Hennessy

Block MIT has been without a phaTmacy,near its -campus. The difficulty in obtain-ing medical supplies near the campus,e3pecially on the weekends, has caased a cgreat de&I �of concern in the NTr admin-:slratio~tn, but hhas brought t Little Posiitive action. The H~ H~lTarvrd Coosperative e Socdetyinquired intlo -the possibbiilaty oof settingbuP a Pharmacy cy under Cooolop auspices andNvas told lby the (MassachuusetDts licensingbcoard Mthat such a phwmarrs~acy Woul~ld haveto Ibe ovmedd by th~e Pharniacist and wouldhave to be staffed boy two reiste~redpharm~acists at all timnes, makingn thre oop-erartion im~poissible for thait lorglanization.rl1

Iit seeemsn a bit, unreasonable th~e~ ~ at MITT~~Audenrts -livinig smac~k in t~he chearrt of oneof (the naardon's Citties should be-~b fac~ed with

LetterAudimm R]EeacdtonsTo 7ble Editor:

The LSC presenrtationgave an ospportunity fo:vation of a characteri:fully present in all hurrour fri aeinlability to laugh. WMe laifal humor; we lauagh a

100-

cr;

LLJccl

0

LLIv,

-I-

Chairman .. -.. .. .... .. .. Thoin3as Bryrdges '62Managing Editor .... .--.. ... . .-.... .. Josepn Hanlon '63Business Manager ............. , ...... Joseph Kirk '64Editor .- .. .. ... .... ------.. - -.. -... Allen Womack -63News Wdtor .. ....... .... .. -. Jason Fane '63Sports Editor ................... ........ ]Toward FIlis '65Features Editor ..... .. ....... Toby Zidle '63Photography Editor ............. .6onnrad Grund~ehner 164

Associate Xews Editor .............. I>on Goldstein 165Awlsitant Managing Eiditor .... U..,,tnda Rollin '64Adver~tssing Managerr ......... Bri Yag~ed 640ontroller ............. Hovard Brauer '65Ifreasurer C................ arl IOong '65Circurlation Xanagerp ...................... Fred Souk '65

Sports Board .... Mi~ke Oliver '66, Dave Schlosdsberg '65Cliff Weinstein '65

Sports Candifttes: .. Ed Steinberg '66, Joihn Roeintjes 166Dave Enfield '68, Jim Manos 1,6

Features Staff lthoainas F. Ar~nold 164

Unsigned editorials appearing in THE TECH constitutethe opinion of th-e newspaper's Board of DiTectors. and nolthat of 1UT. The newspaper welcomes letters from itsreaders. Space permitting, sueb letters will be printed Inwhole or in part, if deemed by the editor tAD be of sufficientInterest or benefit to the community. Brevity increases thochance of publication. Anonymous letters will not be printedNames will be withheld upon request.

NDEAL 11

The fow year old flight toTemove theso-called 'tTisclaimer clause" from theNational Defense Education Act receiveda sudden and unexpected impetus leastT-hursdaywhen the Senate vo*dwithoutdissent to remove it. The clause, whichhas been protested by the Presidents ofFlarvaTd, Yale and -Princeton, reqwiresthat students applying for aid under thebill s�vear that they do not believe in andare not members of the Commumist P-ar-ty. University administrators object tothe existing clause on the grounds thatit is unreasonable and unenforceable. - In1959, Piresident Sbmtton was quoted assa�4ng that the oath was "discrimina-tory an "dnvasion of private beliefs,"and "not a good way to develop patfrdot-isin."

TheSenate revisionwould make it il-legal for members of the CommunistParty to apply for loans and retains, asimple -loyalty oath, placing the onus ofresponsibility on the studepA, where itproperlybelongs.

Unfortunately, the Senate revision isnot expected to pass the House of Rep--resentatives, so that the curtailment ofbenefits by many top universities M11 becontinued for an indefinite -time. If itdoes not passthe house, it wall representan exampole of Colossal shortsightednesson the paA of t1he Representafives. TheTech feels stay thlat the continueddenial of this aid dn the form of scholar-ships -and loans to many highly qualffiedStudents isab-suTd. We feel that the Sen-ate rMsion is Teasonable and sufficientand we hope that many of our readei-,'with an h, Aerest in thesefunds, will make1heir voices heard in Washimigton.

HousingN= has a student housing problem.

If You don'tbeheve it just ask a Fresh-mmi who has to sleep on a cot and study,on a card table. The problem. is alreadycritical now, but a solution may be twoyears in the future. What should A= doslid Where L,4hoiild we try to do it? Weagree ,Ath the adnAnistration. in ques-(d . 9ionmig Cie Ryersons reports and

(recommendation that all undergraduate-housing be centered in. the West Campusarea. When the 'Studemt Urdon is com-plete Wailker Mernorm'l becomes ahkelycandidate for remodeling as a dining andTecreation facMty fow the East Campus'houses, and inervased. dormitory space-in this area woWd probably be less. ex-pensively and more qudekly built than anew dommitory in West Campus.

It is �haxdly necessary to say that un-less drastic changes in the present dor-mitarles are made, a new dorn-dtocry will

Without a doubt, defehardest par~t of bridge.is usually lost in thethe hand, for the samewin on one hand andon tthe next. Some defenplet~ely abstruse and rrequiring top-notch ara.magic the beginner putpasses over as beingexpert. But: some defenare simple, mechaniexact. These are the

?.P

Vol. LXXXII No. 17 Oct. 3, 1962

Page 5: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

,, I pDIBP �

- L - L - | Z

SUMHER JOBS in EUROPE3000 OPENINGS - RESORT, FARM, OFFICE, FACTORY, HOSPI-TAL, CONSTRUCTION, CHILD CARE, CAMP COUNISELING, ANDMORE THROUGHOUT EUROPE, WAGES FROM ROOM & BOARDTO $175 A MONTH. COMPLETE PACKAGES WITH TOURS FROM6 TO 24 DAYS - COSTING FROM $150 (no includiing Tnans,Atlarkic tran:slporhafhilon) fo $799 (including rou:nd 'ip iet flight).

TRAVEL GRANTS AWARDED FIRST 1000 APPLICANTSSeie your PllacemetnM Officer or Studen. Unilonm Dinectrn on send

20 canfts tor cornplerhe 20-page Prospectus. ani Job Appl!iclation %o:DEPT. N. AMERICAN STUDENT INFORMATION SERVICE

22 Avenue de lla Libele,Luxam.bo0urg City, Gmand Duchy, ef Luxembourg

m-- =p--l-=, _ _ c-I, _ . i

. - _ m-.

- I_�� � _ _

I�- - I- �cD"IP1Ca�g I �IIIC-·lbpr _�cra - �C_

c f --- IC_1 1mB~

A I I I 1 I I I

I , ,

iIiII

II

I

iiIiiiiitI

IIIII

I

II

peted to find a surly and morose populace. After all, goingthrough life with your mittens on all the time is hardly calcu-lated to make you merry as a cricket. Not only can't you write,but you miss out on all kinds of other fun things-like threecard monte, making shadow pictures on the wall, and lint pick-ing. However, to my astonishment, I discovered Alaskans tobe a hale and gregarious 'group, mittens notwithstanding, andI soon found out why: because mittens notwithstanding, theycould still smoke Marlboro Cigarettes, still enjoy that richmellow flavor, that fine, clean Selectrate filter, that truly softsoft pack, that truly flip-top flip-top box-and that, friends,will make anybody happy, mittens notwithstanding. In fact,Alaskans are the happiest people I have ever met in the wholeUnited States-except, of course, for the Alaskan vendors ofMarlboro Cigarettes, who have not been paid in many years-indeed, never-because how can anybody dig out coins to payfor cigarettes when he is wearing mittens?)

But I digress. What are we going to do about this deplorablecondition where college students, having completed FreshmanEnglish, become steadily less proficient in the use of the lan-guage? The answer is simple. We will make them take Fresh-man English all through college. In fact, we won't let them takeanything else! This solution, besides producing a nation ofgraceful writers, will also solve another harrowing problem:where to park on campus. If everybody takes nothing butFreshman English, we can tear down all the schools of law,medicine, engineering, and whaling, and turn them into parkinglots. Can't we? c 192: Max bulmarl

The makers of Martboro, who sponsor this column, pleadgUilty to being among those Americans whose writing skillI not all it might be. However, we like to think that astobacconists we know a thing or two. Won't you try us andsee if you agree?

IL

I

iIiIi

II11

r

s

I

79

I

A

By Toby Zidle '63 --IIm

-- !mIin

mTozrnCZJZ

-I

OO.--IOcom

ocE;D

in-40-N.'

-V

O�I�I�!

not approach working as hard asthe B, rarely hikting his books forhours on end, or with the serious,brow-wrinkled, shoulder-hunchedappearance of the intellectual.For this, and for his extraordin-ary memory and organizing mind,he is envied by the B.

Although the A may often con-ceal his feelings, he often haslittle respect for authority. He is,the type to judge others, includinghis teachers, and may even refuseto work for those he does not ad-mire.

Unlike the B whose grades areall the same, the A can be bril-liant in science or mathematicsand helpless in literature, but un-til he reaches college, this uneven-ness does not show up.

Much like the B, the A will fighthard for an ideal, although hemay never reach the whole-hearted commitment that the Bdoes.

Free Education Not SufficientIn a recent issue of Redbook,

sociologist Margaret Mead saidthat all college students shouldbe paid salaries for performingtheir schoolwork: She said theyshould no longer be financiallypenalized for the time they spendstudying; time during which theirless intelligent, ambitious or cre-ative contemporaries are earningmoney and gaining experience intheir chosen fields. She deplored,the custom of making college stu-dents "suffer now for what theymay be able to do later."

A "free" education is not suf-ficient, stated Dr. Mead, sinceit does not account for the stu-dent's living costs. She cited thefact thait one third of the youngpeople who are clearly collegematerial do not go to college, andmaintained that the reason forthis is their unwillingness toeither go being supported by theirparents, or to scrimp along onthe money they can earn at parttime jobs which actually interferewith their studies.

Quocte Of The Week:From the Checker Views

(Checker Taxi Co., Boston): "Ona Tennessee back road: 'Takenotice when this sign is underwater the road is impassable.' "

The genuine B's are serious-minded, hard-working, and theirgrades rarely go up and down.They seem to get the same gradein any subject and will never be-come an A unless they are mis-taken for one by an easy grader,

The C's on the other hand, arethe masses, "generally docile,law-abiding and respectable be-cause it is the thing to be, easier,safer, or on the whole, the bestpolicy."

The real C's, Cronin added, willnot come up with an original idea,although they may be sure theyhave. They write amazingly alike,happen to love cliches, and finda remarkable similarity betweentheir own paragraphs and those ofNewman, Thomas, Brown, andHemingway.

Further down the scale comethe D's, which Cronin considersa catch-all, rather unstable divi-sion, and quite uninteresting, Thisgroup is comprised mainly of un-usually lazy C types who haveput up just enough struggleagainst their fundamentally work-less ways to barely stay in col-lege.

At the bottom of the scale arethe F's, a somewhat confusedgroup which includes the lifetimemember who is hopelessly inept,a poor reader, inarticulate, defici-ent in memory, un-organizable,incapable of generalizing cor-rectly, and never able to progressto the second semester of his col-lege education.

The top of the scale, the A's,Cronin considers the most inter-esting, but at the same time themost difficult to assess. These in-clude the future leaders, teachers,healers, judges, and occas~ion-ally, destroyers.

Some of the members, usuallythe science-oriented ones, seem asa group to be unstable andstrange, but are, in actuality,steady and stolid.

Comparison Of A And BMore often than not, the A does

Harvardoff the

from in-

on! Oh,for thewhen a

of the Yard for clues.University police closedYard to prevent studentsterfering.

The Great Hurrt wasMay was a bad monthsquirrels! It all begansquirrel last May, jumped infront of a Harvard man and bithim. Less than two hours later,the squirrel sprang from a treeand attacked the wife of an in-structor. She successfully foughtit off with an umbrella.

A University Health 'officialsaid that the unprovoked attackswere so unusual that the possibil-ity of rabies epidemic had to beconsidered. State health officialswere notified and arrived the nextmorning, armed with nets andshotguns, to capture at least fiftysquirrels for blood tests.

A Harvard lecturer on animalimmunology warned that "evenif as few as one per cent of thesquirrels are infected, in all like-lihood the entire squirrel pop, la-tion in the Yard will have to beexterminated with poisoned bait.The moment we can confirm thepresence of rabies, action will betaken."

"And above all," he added, "donot Wtink of our Yard squirrelsas cute little pets; they are paten-tlai murderers."

Character AnalysisDid you know that students'

personalities can be classified onthe basis of their grades? Thisis the contention of James E.Cronin, an English professor atSt. Louis University.

Students with B grades are "thesturdy types, the backbone andconscience of the couetry," hesaid.

"6Ment who do not make advances to woomen are aptto become victims to women who numde adrancesto them."

Walter Bagehot

RESTAURANTS IN BOSTON:'~~ '~ " F For good meals or snacks at low prices -

' 87 Massachusetts Ave. - 2 blocks from Symphony towards Mass. StationS171 Hewbury St. near Exeter Theatre · 19 CharlesStreet, Beacon Hill

Contact Lenses- PrescriptionsFilled - Glasses RepairedUNITY OPTICAL CO.

Abe Wise,, Licensed Opfician31 Mass. Ave. COpley 7-1571Special pnicesi So, MIT cornmunnityNealnrest Optlicval Houate do M.I.T.

nh rm occoasin you like-withUghtne ss Slip on a pair-feSTITCHED front gives you J

new look-a newhow the HAND-

y asel

foot-hugging fit. Newside-stitch g you a moccasin that's easy to shine.Come try a pair. Dark brown or black glow-grainleather.

X{ C.le e UnZ corAV Yar

It just wasn't safe to walkthrough Harvard Yard. Womenwere warned to carry a shortstick or umbrella to ward off un-provoked attacks. State officialswere notified of the menace. Theyarrived, armed with nets andguns, to search every square inch

provoked Attacks At Harvard,· rd Residents Face Extermination

oit .

(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf', "Tlhe ManyLoves of Dobie "llie', etc.)

WRITE? YOU'RE BWONG

In the recent furor over the assassination of President McKinley,it may have escaped your notice that a nationwide study of theAriting ability of American college students has just beenpublished.

The survey reveals an astonishing fact: that when studentshave completed their freshman year and are no longer requiredto take English, their writing skill progressively declines untilwe come to the fantastic situation where graduating seniorsactually are poorer writers of English than incoming freshmen!

Many theories have been offered to account for this incrediblefact. Some say that seniors know less English than freshmenbecause all seniors major in French. This is not true. No morethan 94 percent of seniors major in French. How about theother six percent?

Well sir, of the other six percent, half-or three percent-take physics, and it is not hard to understand how these poorsouls grow rusty in English when 11 they ever say is "E equalsMC squared."

Of the remaining three percent, two-thirds-or two percent-major in whaling, and their English too grows feeble withdisuse. Whalers, as we all know, do not speak at all except toshout, "Thar she blows I" maybe twice a year.

Of the one percent remaining, it cannot be fairly said thatthey are poor writers. The fact is, we don't know what kind ofwriters they are. Why not? Because they never write. And whydon't they ever write? Because this remaining one percent ofAmerican college students are enrolled at the University ofAlaska, and never take their mittens off.

(Incidentally, I received quite a surprise upon first visitingAlaska two years ago when I was invited to Juneau to crownthe Queen of the Annual Date Palm Festival. Frankly I ex-

BOSTONIAN'S NEW SIDE-STITCH

FLEX-O-MOC GIVES YOU

A LIGHT-FOOTED

FEELING .

Page 6: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

"VIREDIANA," lirected by LWasBunuel; written .by Luis Buryuel,et. al.; produced by Gustavo Ala-triste; photographed by Jose Agu-ayo.

CAS'T%Virldlana ......... Silvia PinalDon Jaine ........ Fernando ReyJoge . .......... Francisco Rad.alIn, Spanish, with English subtitles.

cJ:} B Sunday Evefnmim OCTOBE-R 7 at 8 O'c!lock

,>e. l Dr. RALPH J. BUJNCHE"The United Nafions Mew Afnica's Ch,aslleonle"

F ORD HALL FORUMJORDAN HALL7- Gainsboro St. cor. Huntington Ave. BOWM0

L~ - DOORS OPEN 7:45 P.M. EVERYBODY WELCOME

"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!"says Romulus (Alley-Oop) Antonius, agile acrobatic ace of the amphitheater, while enjoying a Tareyton."Tempus sure does fly when you smoke Tareyton," says Alley-Oop. "Marcus my words, one Tareyton's worth alltheJuliusiRome. Bec Tareytonbringsyou gusti- bus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette." ]i

Dual Filter makers the difference

.DI JAJL FILTERo]uZ>FtU A.d gf Uaea..me =mu r m

l!Ii

mW.w

I

!

I

:v-

Arthur L. Kopit, author of "Ohc, Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung

o- You in the Closet and I'm Feel-- ing So Sad," will lead a play-<<, wrights' panel Sunday, OctoberaY 13, in Kresge Auditorium.Xc The occasion will be a conven-

O tion of the New England TheatreConference, which students wayattend for $1.00. Kopit's panelis to discuss the convention's

> -theme, "Theatre of the FreeWorld," beginning at 10:15 a.m.

en At 2:30 p.m., scenes from "TheZ Threepenny Opera," will be pre-Cu sented by the Charles Playhouse

of Boston, and author BertoldBrecht will be discussed.

Avant garde theatre directingi techniques will be demonstrated

through scenes from "The ZooStory" at 3:30 p.m. by SamuelHirsch, co-producer of the Actors'

7 Playhouse of Boston.

Other features of the conventioninclude a luncheon at 12:15 p.m.,where achievement awards willbe presented. Lawrence Langner,founder of New York's TheatreGuild, will receive the Conferen-ce's sixth annual award for out-standing creative achievement.

To stimulalte production ofplays which exemplify he spiritof the free world, plays whichstress the virtues of freedom andhuman dignity and of courage,faith and hope, will be noted es-pecially by -the presentation of thefirst of an annual series of "MossHart Memorial Awards for Playsof the Free World."

The final event of the confer-ence will be the meeting of theNew England High School DramaFestival Council.

By Tomas R. Guillermo andGilberto T. Perez-Guillermo

"Thank God I am still an athe-ist," once said director Luis Bu-nuel, and the spirit of this phraseis .the spirit of "Viridiana." Madeand .1aned in Spain, banned inFrance, "Viridiana" ,is an attackon, but mostly a mockery of re-ligion.

The film portrays the evolutionof a girl about to become a nunwho finally gives up her faith. Thefilm is divided into three sections,corresponding to the three stagesin the girl's character.

First, tere is the meeting ofthe pious girl and her lecherousuncle. Here Bunuel's talent forcontrast is manifest, particularlyin -two scenes. When 'Me girl walksin her sleep, a mixture of reig'iolsritual with Freudian symbolismand the uncle's desire achievesgreat effect. Bach's B Minor Massis in the 'background. When heruncle dresses her up in her lateaunt's wedding gown and takes herto bed, her frigidty and his lustmake a sha-rp contrast. HereBunuel uses a contrapuntal scenewith a little girl most effectively:it alleviates the tension while in-creasing the expectadon.

In the second section, the girlhas given up the convent abut no;her faith. 'She ,is faced with realRfe and her worldly cousin. She

Bunuel orxce more proves amaster. Not a minute is wasteM,everyt/ing has its PurPse, an -the action moves fast. As Usml(e.g. "L'Age d'Or", "Nazarin")

he makes extensive use of symbol.ism - phallic symbols, animals-and r e I i g i o u s objects appear,throughout. 'Me photographyexcellent, and an imaginative use,is made of montage and slomcamera movements. Bunuel's styleis somewhat old-fashioned (the a1.ways takes care of linking scens-,by some .common object - womenwalking, water dropping), but thisomehow fits his material per.fectly. "Viridiana" is a master.piece.

Movie Schedule,(.Unless otherwise stated, the Sunday

schedule Is the samne as the weekda,schedule except no raovies are show -,befoe I .p. nm)AS 1 '"M$usic Man," Mon.-Sat. at

9:00, 11:30, 2:00, 4:35, 7:0 9:35.Sun. wit 1:10, 3:46, 6:22, 59:0.

BEACON H41' "A VerY Private Af.fai," 10:00, ;12:00, 2:00, 4:00, 6:00,g:00, 10:00.

BOSTON-OINERAMA- "The Wonder.fual Worlxd of the B'others Grimm,- Mon., Tues. at 8:30; Wed., Thuls.at 2:30, 8:30; M, 8:30; ]a~t., 1:305:00, 8:30; Sun., 1:30, 5:00, 8:15. '

BRATTLIE:- ",Last Year at Marien.,bad," 5:-3, 7:30, 9:30; matinee Sat. -at 3:30. 'tartimg -Sund&,y, "Tlhe Hus.

tler," 2:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:50; weekdays,5:10, 7:30, 9:50.CAPRI- "Pressure Point," today at

1,0:00, 12:00, 2:00, 4:00, 6:(00, 8:00,1g0:00; Thurs., 10:00, 12:00, 2:00;"Anna Karenina," starting Thurs.,6:00, 8 :00, 10:00.

C4)OIJDGE CORNER - "Carry anTeacher," 1:30, 7:45, 9:45; Sat.-Sim., 1:45, 3:40, 5:45, 7:45, 9:50.

DO JELT.Y MMEORIAT- "Der R06-enkaaaller," Oct. 3-6, 8:00.

EXETER- "Waltz of the Tareadors,"2:05, 3:50, 5:iO, 7:25, 9:1,5.

FENWAY -- "Viidlana," 1:37, 3:36,5:35, 7:34, 9:33.

FIE AR~T- "White Nights," start-irng Thurs., 15:3, 7:45, 10:00 Sat.-.,Sun., 1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45, 10:00.-Also, "The MI-chief Makers," timesunavailable.

GAlY- "West Side Story," B:30; mat.Wed., Sat., Sim. at 2:30.

HARVARD SQUARE - " The SkyAbove, the Mud Below," 3:15, 6:20,9:2~; Peter 'Sellers in "I Ldke Mon- _ey," 1:,55, 5:00, 8:00 (through Sat-urday).

JCHN HANCOCK HALI,_ "Richard _III," Oct. 4-6, 7:00, 9:30; Sat., 2:30.KEITH MEMORIAL- "Hards of A-

St.nge:," 9:3~5, 1:00, 4:30. 8:00;Sun., 1:05, 1:30, 8:00: "No 31an Isan Island," 11:00, 2:30, 6:00, 9:30.

IA)EW'S ORPHEUM -- "I Thank A.Fool," 1,1:30, 2:50, 6:10, 9:30; _"'Watc~h Your Stern," 9:~5. 1:15,-4:35, 7:55; Thurs.-Wed., ".Sword otfthe Conqueror," "Explosive Genera-

tion"; no times available.MAYFTLOWEER- "The Notorious Land-

laady," 9:30, 1:15, 5:1,). 9:00: Sun.,1:05, 5:00, 8:50; "Only Two Can Play," 11:30, 3:20, 7:10; -Sun., 3:10,7:00.

.MIIT- Friday, "Citizen Kane," Kresge_Aud., 6:30, 9'00; "Sons and Lovers." e

Saturday, R:)om 10-250, 5:15, 7:30,9:45.

PARAM.OUNT-- "The Pigeon ThatTook r.I,me," 9:35, 12:35, 3:30. 6:25:Sun.. 1:09, 3:55, 16:45, 9:40; "'CrY "Doublecre,.s,'" 11:20, 2:15, 6:10,8:10; Sun., 2:40, 5:35, S:25.

PA RK SQUARE CINEMA- "DivorceItalian S3tyle," 1:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.

PILGRIM-- "Last of the Vikings,"1:30, 1:46;, 5:0f2, 8:15,; Suin.,............. 1:00. --4:201 7:40, "Son of Sa~mpson," 9:00.12:15, 3:30, 6:45, 10:&0; Sun., 2:45,6:05, 9:30.

SAX40N- "Damn The Defian-," 9:45,11:25, 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:4. 9:5-0.I'PTOWN- "Birdman of Alcatraz,"

12:45, 4:55. 9:15; -Sun., 1:00. 5:05.9::O0; "Two Weeks In AnotherTown," 1'1:00. 3:10, 7:20; Sun.. 3:15,7:25.

Theatre Schedule iAC~TORS PLAYHOUSE -- "The Fa-

ther," TIues.-Fri., Sn., 8:40; Sat.,7:30, 9:30.

CHARLES PLAYHOUSE--"Th-c e Pen-ny Otpera," Tues.-FrL., 8:30; Slt.,5:3/), 9'00' Sun., 3:00, 7:30.

OOLONIAL - "Seldman and Son.'T'hu.-Sat., $:30: m.at. Thurs.. 2:15: _Sat., 2:30; "Beyoni, the Fringe,"startin~z Monday. 9:00.

LOEB !DRAMA CENTER-- CaptainBrambound's Conversion"; through,it., 8: 3,0.

WILBUR -- "Tchin-Tchin"' OpeningSat. eve., 8:30; mat. Wed., Sat.,2:30.

is practicing charity on her ownby helping a group of beggars,and ,Bunuel wants to make it clearthat this will be of no ,help. Hercousin objects, but Bunuel showshis weakness by making him freea dog, prehaps implying that itis a basic human weakness. Bun-uel's point throughout is that par-ticular acts of charity won't alle-viate the great tragedy of man-kind.

There are great scenes. Whenthe girl and her beggars pray, themechanistic nature of prayer isshown by interming shots ofconstruction work. And the climaxof the film is a parody of thelast supper in the beggars' orgy.The last supper picture, with Jesusas a blind man, is a most im-pressive spectacle. Handel's Mes-siah" is in the background.

Then there is -te brief inrale.Twice shocked by the outcomes ofher Christian acts, the girl joinsher cousin in his worldly life. Thislast, ironical scene is very amus-ing. A rock'n'roll is in the back-ground.

Good until Oct. 17

- Playwright Kopit To Lead movies...:f Drama Discussion in Kresge Bunuel's 'Viridiana' Mocks Religion

N EW BURY'SSTEAK HOUSE

94 Mass. Ave., Boston

You may now avail yourselfof a $12.00 food check bookof $10.00 (offer limited).

This Coupon Is Worth

50cTowards Any Dinner

Over $1.76

Page 7: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

FUNlB~i~s UN 4-4580 onumD

o .

"THE SKY ABOVE,THE MUD BELOW"'

, _ 3:15 6:20 9:25Petfew Selliens mn

"I LIKE MONEY" [ i 1:5S'; 5:00 8:00

a, (through Saiwnday) -

TR 6-4226 u; C

"Last Year at Marienad aS:30 7:30 9:30

;Matinee Sat. at 3:30 L,· Starting Sundayc "The Hustler"c 2:10 5:20 ,7:30 9:50

Weekdays 5:10 7:30 9.-50 B2um··s · BS~ uW[]m-O UDI,,O m]--u·~i

rIML·meJ ENEII

Opp. Statler Hilt onTel. 542-220

PNever has a funnier film comeout of Italyl A delight!"

Alta Maloney, Traveler

JOSM1 E. LEVINE-

Mastroianni

Italian-dv· WNPIER CAISty e dFESMA AWARD

'BEST COMEDY'An Embassy Pictures Release

L-·IIBB� I -r --

2J HARRISON AVE.HA 6-4210

(Between Essex & BeechStreets, Boston)

ISLAND & CANTONESEFOOD I EXOTIC DRINKSAuthentic Hawaiian Luaus

J Modera+e PricesI I a.m.-3 a.rn.

Daily & Sunday'-------

I __ - II

. -

- -- i i ,I1 , i-

washing your sweaters sending your sweatersin the nearest washing home to Mother for

machine (youl can, if fussy hand washing orthey're "Orlon"* or whatever"Orlon Sayelle" **)

-- , ,,l,-

IC- -~

saving on cleaning bills digging deep into funwith great sweaters of funds for seasonal-

"Orlon" and "Orlon andemergency-sweaterSayelle". They come cleaning.clean-but quickly

-in the wash.

all-season sweaters- mishaps with mothsfreed from rituals of and sweaters that

mothballing and hibernate in a box.summer storage.-- I .. ~iJIlI__,_

balky, good-looking burdensome sweatersknlits that warm with- -too heav in over-

out weight--wash heated classrooms,without worry. too dependent on

demanding care.

classics pure and the old saggy-baggyssimple-plus new. like Daddy used tofangled knits that wear-and Mommy hasknowhow w to keep to fuss overl

teir shape wit noassist from you.r

~__ , , -a5 .;' ., _

the newsy textures alimst fytig else,and tweedy tones of almrot agiting else!

"Orlon"' acrylic, e Cst collsecting"Orion Sayelle" I p s1 "O'rion"'

bi-component aeqrlr ad 'Orlon Sayellegt mowp!)

_ hi. co

a | | , , II�-U bl

PERSHING RIFLES presents. .

THE FOLK MUSICSAMPLER

PLAYERS & SINGERSStarring

JACKIE WASHINGTONKEITH and ROONEY

ERICH Von SCHMIDTThe CHARLES RIVER VALLEY BOYS

-'~~ And OThers

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 8:30 P.M.KRESGE AUIDITORIUM - MIlT

Tickets $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00

Call UN 4-6900 Ext. 2910 for Reservations-- L 'I- - -- 'Y ·

Open from 12 rmon to 12, pimPhone 536-2845 Air Condlitioned

CHUNG SAICh;inHsel aind American Food

Firre CanomoLse OoloingOndens Put Up T;o Go Out

CocktaltIs- Liquom25 Mass, Ave., cor. Beacon St.

I -- -- IL - L -- ~~~- · -------- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 -1 -'

i

I

I

I

I

II

I

II

are $2.00. Seriesobtained at TCA.

r

v

i.

I

I

i

ISeries ticlets $22.50, $1 8.00,-$13.50 by me.il from

Hlarvalrd Square Con:ert SeriesBox 98, Carrbridge 38

m

I I

I

I

I

ii

i

i

,

I

I

II

I

--4Im

mnr

mc)ZzmV)g

c/cmC7i-<OOO3m7o

7

-o

tOp(l)

-D

Unite~d Nations Meets Africa's Cial'lenge, on the Ford I-ll Forum, Sun-daY, S pm, Jardan Hall.

, MUJSICJIrgan Reettad, Sunday, John Hancck

Wellesley ConAert Serles, Ruth Pos-selt, vloinist, and David Barnett, pian-ist, both members of the Wellesleyfaculty, ll play a concert incluydrngsome of ithe early works of Beethovenanid Cadabodel Fa;re. Sunday. 3 prm,Tewett Arts Center, oellesley College;free.

Charles Lichter. Violinist. and Ralphoxman cellist, will play a program ofcompositions by Beethovern, Maxtiruu,Rivier and Hodaly; 'Sunlday, 3 pxnGardner Museum; free -

Trhe W~eavexs, Folklore Concert Se-ries, Friday, Oct. 12, Syrnphomy Hall,

F.ri.. Sat. only, 7 axd 9:30 pm. Price:;1.50. Sat. mat., 2:30, price ;1.00.

"Hamlet," stax'ing Lawrence Olivier.John Hancock Hall, Oct. 10-14, 7 and9:30 pm ($1.50). Mat. Sat., Sn.. 2:30pm ($1.00).

'"Der Rosenkavaller," movie versionof the Strauss opera; Thurs., Fri.,Sat., 8 pm, Donnelly Memorial The-atre.

LSC Claslc Series, "Citizen Kane,"Orson Welles' groundbreaking filn onthe itherne of power and its abuse. Thisis the story of a controvers;al publicfigure as seen through the eyes of thepeople in his life. (USA, 1941). In arecent movie-oritic poll made by thefilm magazine -Sight and Sounrl, thisfilm was voted the best movie evermade. Friday, 6:30. D pnn, foomn 10-Z50.

L.SC Entertalmnent Series, "Sons andLovers." From D. H. Lawrence's novelavbout a young, talented, amnateur art-ist tied to his mother's a~pron stringswho tries to understand life throughtwo love affairs. both disappointing.Trevor Howard, Dean Stoclkwell, WendyHiller, Mary Ure: Satur-day, 5:15, 7:30,9:45 prn, room -10-250.

The pre-Broadway opening of"Tchin Tdin," a new play bySidney Michaels, starring AntionyQuinn and Margaret Leighton, willbe Saturday October 6, at the Wil-bur Theatre in Boston.

Under the direction of WarnerLeroy, this adaptation of a Frenchplay by Francois Billedtme, whichnow bears a Chinese title mean-ing both hello and goodbye, por-trays the unusual and romantic re-actions of a man and womanwhose respective marriage part-ners are engaged in a love affair.

The play will -be shown eachevening, with umatinees Wednesdayand Saturday. Prices range from$2.20 to $5.50.

Open Rehoarsals SodBy BSO, Leinsdorf

The Boston Symphony Orches-tra will hold its traditional OpenRehearsals at Symphony Hall thisyear. Director 'Erich Leinsdorfwill conduct the rehearsals oneight Thursday evenings from Oc-tober 11 to April 4.

Subscription for the entire ser-ies is $12.00, while single tickets

By Charles FogPeter Sellers is k

an excellent Englishthus refreshing toWALTZ OF THE TOthe Exeter, not ontalents, abut thoseserious actor, are gplay.

Sellers' General fat and fiftyish, cutfigure. His shamelethe scullery-maids,gallops over the Enside, his often drawready saber, are theclown. But the genalso to chilling fits (tion, glaring honest:which add a new dircharacter.

The general's wifefrom desertion byturning invalid. Feyears Ghislaine, theloves, has waited foxhim annually durintary-affairs meetingBut, on the eveningment from active (G-hsaine, at the genhouse, demanding taway together.

Dany Robin's Ghislchanting, still youthdeterained to wait nbewilderment and exthe general's hesiterunderstandable. Shefew men would tinkclaiming.

Emily (Margaret Iwife, is a bitter, sjpenetrating the houpiercing whistle of htube, lashing her humournmful whine of ha

tickets may

HARVARD SQUARECONCERT SERIES

Greaf Singers of O)ur Timeat Harvard Sq. Theatre

this season

15TeresaBERGANZA Nov.

Firsf Boston appearance;scored in N.Y. debut inApril in "CeneerevoJa"

RegineCRESPIN Nov.

,First Bosfon appefreirnce;Met de!bu t ihs fa I, as *eMarschalhinl in, Lehmanm-directivd " Rosen kavaliean"

The number is nearly twice aslarge as any previous year. Nine-teen members of the 1961 classentered medical schools aftergraduating from the Institute, 20from '60, 10 from '59, and 14from '58.

Only two of the 35 selected fromthe '62 class for admission tomedical school had decided onmedical careers at the time theyentered MIT as freshmen. Theothers made the decision duringtheir college careers.

Twenty of the 35 majored inbiology. Eight majored in humani-ties and science, or humanitiesand engineering. The group alsoincludes three who majored inmathematics, two in chemistry,one in electrical engineering andone in physics.

McCurdy Gets, LifeHorace W. McCurdy, a West

Coast industrial executive, hasbeen elected a Life Member ofthe MIT 'Corporation, according toa summer announcement.

A record 35 members of MIT's1962 graduating class planned topursue studies in medicine.

29

T o I+he ReadmieMs endN Ir- Adminrens, of'The Fountairbece"

"Atlas Shrugged" and"For the New Interlectual"Emrollment is now opoeni forNathaniel Branden's

lectures on

OBJEJCTIVISMthe philosophy of

AYN RANDanrid its applica.-ion to humna.n

psychologyBegins Monday. Oct. 15, 7:30 pmNathaniel Brandwen Intsifute~ Inc.Please write or telephone NBI's 'LocalRepresentative for descriptive brochure

Mary Efron. M.D.292 Hammond Street

Newton 67, Mass.Phone BE 2-1076

Now at your Bookstore- IWHO !S AYN RAND?by Naiheamiel Braindee.

an analysis of the novels ofAyn Rand, with a biographical

essay by Barbara Branden.Random House, $3.95

VictoriaDE LOS ANGELES

Jan. 23Sha.r of Me+, La Scala,Covenrt Garden4 Bayreuth,of necihal and recor l

GeorgeLONDON Feb.

Greaf Boris, Scarpia,Woman, Mandryka, Dcon;also famed in Ge,rman,Fren,ch sonig

FerruccioTAGLIAVINI April

First Bos+on appearanicefollowi4ng triurmphal reumto Met after absence ofseveral years

24

1 3

I _MI

DS . 0 .

Sellers Als-o Actorster Ford one of the least sympathetic rolesmown best as in all literature, and Miss Leigh-

comic. It is ton makes it bleak and unforget-find that in table.

TREADORPS, at The family doctor, Dr. Grogan,ily his comic provides a kind of sympatheticof a moving chorus of this tangle of love,given full dis- hate, and desire. Cyri Cusack

plays him as an understandingLeo Fitzjohn, old friend, aware of the general'ss a ridiculous emptiness and age, r e a 1 i s t i c-ss pursuit of enough -to be brutal in pointinghis headlong out the truth.

glish country- Suddenly, the general finds anvn ,but rarely unexpected rival in his orderly,qualities of a Robert (John Fraser). The lieu-

reral is given tenant is as young, and as eager,of self-realiza- as the general must have beeny and insight seventeen years before, and hasmension to his the advantage of coming to his

affair while still iumnarried.has kept him WALTZ OF THE TOREADORS

deliberately has many fine scenes. It is a,or seventeen good film, alternately funny andgirl he really moving. Its imperfections are

or him, seeing slight, but all the more unfortu-rg ,brief mili- nate for the excellence they spoil.gs in Paris. There are too many chases overof his retire- the English countryside. The first

duty, here is three are much fun but later theyleral's manor- only delay the story. Also, thehat they run general's losing Ghislaine to Rob-

ert takes a disproportionatelylaine is an en- long time to complete itself, andiful creature, therefore stands as a false climax.io longer. Her The general's final confrontationcasperation at with his wife, the ultimate self-ace are quite realization, is therefore made to! is a prize seem an afterthought, which it isk twice about not.

Still, to say that a good movieLeighton), the showing several tine performances;piteful ghost, might have 'been improved upon,ise with the is to quibble unnecessarily withher speaking- excellence. Sellers is not just asband with a comedian, but a great actor, andatred. This is this film proves it.

.... Makin....g the. Miches 'Tchn Td' movLEXBJ RES tickets S2.20 to $4.00. W

Willy Brsndt, ma0or of Berlin. BSO Open Rehearsal, rbu-sday, ot. . m t spealing on "Thle Ordeal of 0o-Ex!it- 11, 7:30 pmr, Srmphony Hall.ence'- today, 8 pmr. Sanders Theatre, MVI.lES ..;n rv _t s a ss s n L c/ -larval'-. 'snCi3a!l 1s." St larring Lr' xaurenceDr Ralph Bunehe, &Peaking on "Tge- Olivier: _TJhn T-anc",kl, .-Tiil ,hure

THE INS AND OUTS OFCOLLECTING SWEATERS

(OR)

WHY SWEATERS THAT AREVERY IN ARE VERY"ORLON

acrylic fiber35 '62 Grads Studying Medicine

VERY IN VERY OUT

UET THNGS FOR BETTER UVI ... THROCLH CHEMISTRY

Oriden" is Du Ponts registered trademark forits acrylic fiber.f"'Orlon Slyal" is Du Pont's registered trademark for its hi-component acrylic fiber.

Page 8: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

Twow One-ActPayes

Dramashop Opens

u r

-- -- ----------

~~mm I

$ CALF'FORNIIA $ROUND TRIP AIR FARE plus fax

from $160 tro $206 - MealsWhy pay mo~re?

RAALPH GORDONStudent Rep., CO 6 0122Other Flights: Chicago & Florida

- _ - i ,1 , , . ,

Cleaning - PressingRepairing _ Laundry

Quick ServiceCharlie The Tech Tailor

71 Amberst St., CambridgeEL 4-2088

.1--~

m . I .-

IbC~ c~' '·ruR_ I -p~ - -Lkll a- I---

___-II-----11 -- .I - I III�

I

IIir

i

I

IsII

IIIIC

aCrI

EII

r

- a a a I I

---I 'I --- -III�I - r I ;- 111 ,g-

I

II

I

d

Iw I �I

I

w

1

I

iLIrII

wm

mmmm

mIiE

r�

I

IIi

III

i6

George B. Shaw's"Captain Brassbolndi"

At Loeb Tonight"C a p t a i n Brassbonnd's com

version" by G. B. Shaw openstonight at Harvard's Loeb DramaCenter, and Will run through Sat.urday.

A return engagement of a pmduction of the 1962 Harvard Sum.-mer School Players, it featuresJoanne Hamlin, Peter HaskellPaul Bartow, and Terrence Cur.rier.

Joseph D. Everingham, directorof Drama at NIT, is responsiblefor the staging of the Shaw com.edy. He directed it as one of thefour offerings by the HarvardSummer School Players at theL~oeb Theatre durn the pastsummer. He also staged Ben.Jonson's "Volpone" for the sam egroup.

Tickets for the peffornmenescost $1.50.

Finboard Acts On BudgetsThe Finance Board announces

that it is considering final budgetrequests. Activities I-vhich havenot yet met with the FianceBoxard on budgetary considera.tions are urged to contact FinBoard in Litchfield Lounge, im-mediately.

Cafe fYana51 Brookline Ave. (off Kenmore sq.)

Wed.- Bruce Fa~rwel1,Thurs.- smllY Scahoenfelld,Fri.- Don Mac~oeleyr and Bill Lyons.Sat.- Bob Neumdrth.Suns- Jef-f Gee~ber.Mon.-Oe Hoot.Tues.-Jef Gerber.

Club Mt. Auburn 47.47 Mt. Auburn St. Harvard Square

DUES--.I PER VISIT(All Events 9 pm-1 am, unless noted,)

Wed.- Tom Ruh.Thurs.- Eric Von Schmnidt.FrI.- Charles River Valley Boys

with Geoff Wuldamx.Sat.- Keith and Roone-y (8 p. m. to

Sun.- Jaekie Washington and lPitchGreenhill.

Mon.- Films:"~T-he Hunchback ofNotre Dame, " wit Chsarles Laxghton;i

"Captain -Marvel Me-ets the Scorpion,'8:30. 10:30.

Tues.-RaMblin' Jack Elliott.Wed.- Ramblin' Jack Elliott.

CO

0CLtu

Cal

CN-00-

C})MeI

1O1LU

T-LLJF-

SeasonThe MIT Dramashop will open its fall season with an evening

of one-act plays at the Little Theatre in Kresge, Friday, October 12,at 8:30 p.m.

The two plays are W. B. Yeats' "The Cat and the Moon" to bedirected by Dick Nalbandlan and "The Tinker's Wedding" by J. M.Synge, to be directed by the President of Drarnashop, Bob Lancaster.

The evening of workshop plays is open to the public and admis-sion is free. Following the performances, there will be a short cri-tique of the plays with the audience invited to join with the actorsand technicians in a discussion of the production from all points ofview. A coffee hour will follow.

Dramasho>p's fall program offers another evening of student-produced one-act performances November 2 and the major prm-duction to be performed December 12 through December 15. Theplays to be produced will be announced at a later date.

WGBH' Notes New Studio Plans,Bu Finds Itself Needing $100.000>e :':.3:.:.:~:e. M. A. GREENHILL presents .......

America's Most Beloved Folksingers

A_ _~~~~

_ | | CONCE MA'Folk SongsAiround

The World'T. 12 8:30 P.M. SYMPPONJY HALL

TICKETS: $4, 3.60 2.80, 2.20

W{;BH has obtained land anddrawn up plans for a new rbuild-ing.

Since its old studios, acrossfrom Building 7, were destroyedby fire last Octdber, it has hadto rely on facilities mnade avail-able by the Catholic TelevisionCenter.

Though the land for the newsite is worth over $250,000, Har-vard is making it available foran annual token fee of one dol-lar. Construction work has al-ready started near the HarvardBusiness School and is due to becompleted by next autumn.

After the fire a campaign was

launched to raise $1.7 million.With the -Ford Foundation match-ing every current gift, only $10,-000 remains tobe raised from thepublic.

WG13H is an educational broad-casting organization . affiliatedwith the National EducationalTelevson network. It transmitsits "The 21-inch Classroom" program to a quarter of a millionschool children daily.

Chorus Pro MusicaAt Syrmphony Hall

Concerts October 12 and 13 inSymphony Hall will be the firstpublic appearance of the BostonChorus pro Musica in the 1962-63season. Erich Leinsdorf will di-rect the chorus as it singsvinsky's "Symphony ofPsalms and the choraleBach's Cantata 18.

Stra-- thefrom

;F

DINE HERAND WIN HER

She'll appreciate your goodtaste in the distinctive atmos-phere of the NEW Smith House.Conveniently located, superiorcuisine, attentive service. Open7 days a week 'til midnight.

* COCKTAIL LOUNGE4 9DINNER0 LATE EVEN-NG MENU< 'LUNCHEO'NO COFFEE-SHOP4 BANQUET ROOMS

Conenient ParkingIF

011 1t.... -..Ili &

QlW

IGJ AlSk and for

Old Spice Pro-Electric

skin areas from razor i,,

COOP GAS STATION

'11QIRIAM MIAIL ORDERS NOW:

STAK M EB~a FNlklore Productions,

at John Hancock Hall 0BostonStuart and Berkeley St8. Tickets: $4, 3.50,

SAT., 'OCT. 20, 8:30 P.?a. 2.80, 2.20

_;

Eisensteins's"51 Days That

Shook The'Wordcl"plus

Twos Ch'aplinFilmsDonation $1.00

8: 1; FP.M.Feiday, 0ctf 5;:OMMUNITY

CHUIRCH565 BOYLSTON STREET

In Copley SquareAuspices:

Young Socialist Alliance

THE NEW

500 Memorial Drive.Cambridge

"For Dining Delight, Etf Out Tonight" RACQUETS RESTRUJNGPrompt Service

Tennis & Squash Shop67A Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

(Opp. Lowell House)TR 6.5417

BUYI and SAVEIEW VPROMeze

VsnRQ A¢ IMrU uuw u ._GM V IE

No dripping,,'l nospillawn0�40 ON

YOUR I 'Al D

AUTHORIZED

NELSON"S MOBIL GAS STATION

218 Main Streetbear Klendall Square Rotary

Patronage Refundalso paid on greasing charges and on

purchase of fires and batferies

Tech Coop

Page 9: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

_ ,, - I - · · · Ibll -d CL� --

-Mm M.-Wl M-

L- · I -- u-7

- -d I I I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.

The MIT Railroaders Assn.will meet at 5 p. m. this after-noon in Room 1-236. Entertain-ment will include two films, NewYork Central's "Better ServiceThrough Science," and AAR's"Science Rides the High Iron."

The Chemical EngineeringDepartment will sponsor twograduate seminars on Friday.The first will be at 3:00 in Room12-182 on "Soot Formation inLaminar Flames" and will beconducted by W. Dalzell. Thesecond, "The Transpired Turbu-lent Boundry Layer" will be inRoom 12-142 at 4:00 conduct-ed by M. Frazer.

The Department of Metal-lurgy will sponsor a talk on"Anfiferromagnetism in Metals

Capitol Formal ShopTUXEDOS rFOR RENTAL

WHITE SUMMER FORMALSSpecial Group Rate

1357 Commonwealth Ave.Allston, Mass.

Phone: Algonquin 4-2770

GOREGOOD

- I-�01-

4-w

~~~~mERSM MaERSPI LWrI R S . rh t -bacc CI

11_O__ a sMlveOR: O CO.

I

I

I

I

I;

I

I

iiiiI

ii

--I

ITm-4

mOT

m

C7

0cl

oZ

cc~m

~o

>

C/)0m;;

..o

o)

-,D0)

..o

and Alloys" on Tuesday, Oct. 9at 4:00 p. m. in Room 6-120.The speaker will be A. W.Overhauser of the Ford Scien-tific Laboratory.

Mr. Steiner, Chief ProjectEngineer for the Boeing 727,will give a seminar on the air-craft in Room 35-225 at 4:00p. m. Thursday. The Boeing 727is the first U. S. jet airliner tohave tfe power plant in the tail.Course XVI, who is sponsoringthe seminar, will have otherspeakers later in the year.

Prof. Allis Absent;Now eirving 'NATO

Physics Professor William P.Allis has taken a two-year leaveof absence to serve as assistantsecretary general of the NorthAtlantic Treaty Organization. Heleft for Paris after commence-;nent week in June.

His NATO duties will include ad-vising the Atlantic alliance on sc-entific matters, directing advanceds:udy institutes and overseeing re-,earch grants in i4 countries.

(Continued from page I)

port for thie pnding presidentialorder forbidding housing discrimi-nation in :federally subsidizedprojects. He added that he is cer-tain the order will be signed bythe end od the year.

Idct Against Poll TaxLodge advocated the elimina-

tion of poll taxes and literacytests requisite to voting. He

drew applause -by commentingthat the executive order on hous-ing had been pending for 616days and tatf he was "glad tolearn from good authority" (TedKennedy) that it would soon besigned.

Peabody stated that as govern-or he would appoint an advisorycommittee on civil rights andwould support expansion of theCommission Against 'Discrimina-tion.

Brooke proposed the strength-erring of present laws againsthousing discrimination in Mass-achusetts.

In support of Kelly, his envoycited several instances of anti-discrimination actions taken byKelly in the past.

% _

Ant@* 2 - 1

.EWS / ,dnes I f

Now you can get $25,000 of SavingsBank Life Insurance's famous termprotection for as little as $100 ayear, net payment, if you are age 39or younger. In fact the younger you

:~':?_:_. -- -..w3e.. .-.zD.y.a~,

IlU

It's the rch-flav.or leaf that does it Amnong L&M's choice tobaccos there's moreof this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. Andwith L&M's modern filter-- the Miracle Tip - only pure white touches your lips.Get lots more from L&M -- thefilter cigaretteforpeople who really like to smoke.

LET VITALIS KEEP YOUIR HAIR NEAT ALL DAY WITHOUT GREASE!Keep the oil in the can. In your hair, use Vitalis with V-7®, thegreaseless grooming discovery. Fights embarrassing dandruff,prevents dryness-keeps your hair neat all day without grease.

Panel Questions Rival Politicians ;Moties MIT Awards Its 2ndPhD In Oceanography

Bruce A. Warren of Arlingtonhas received his PH.D. in physi-cal oceanography - the secondPh.D. in this subject awarded byMIT. Warren, who has beenworking on research through MITat the Woods Hole OceanographicInstitute on Cape Cod, came toMIT in 1958.

Dr. Warren's thesis, "Topo-graphic Influence on the Path ofthe Gulf Stream," presents thetheory Ehat irregularities in theocean floor have a direct effecton the path of the Gulf Stream.

He studied data collected byoceanographic vessels in previousyears, crossed the Atlantic to takeocean samples at regular inter-vals, and correlated depth andtemperature data. Dr. Warrenwill continue to work at WoodsHole as a research aceanogra-pher.

SQUASH RACQUETSAl MaeakeI- Large Va riei+y

Temis & Squash Shop67A Mr. Auburn St., Cambridge

(Opp. Lowell House)TR 6-5417

are the less it costs. It's designedto give the man who needs moreprotection NOW what he needs at acost he can afford NOW. You canbuy smaller amounts ($3,000 mini-mum) at the same low cost perthousand. Look into it. Ask for thefree folder: $25,000 for $1Q00.

CAMBRIDGEPORT SAVINGS BANKRight in Central Square, Cambridge - Telephone UN 4-5271

get Lots More from LMmore body

> in the blend: more flavor

in the smokemore taste

�LV

through the filter

Vita

Page 10: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

OPEN UNDER NEW MANNAGEMENTLook Your Best With An Expert Haircut

LAFAY 6TE BARBER SHOP8 BROOKLINE ST., CENTRAL SO.. CAMBRIDGE

Specializing in a unique varvety of children's and menm's hair stylesan-d featuring fla+-topst AIR CONDITIONED

Research IntensifiesIn Busiress Week

I -ar � -- I I I- ·r--i

---- - _ __

Of 1956, Bell Labs and LincolnLaboratories built the first solid-state maser to amplify micro-waves. In 1960, three Bell Labsscientists led by Dr. Ali Javananow at MIT - produced a helium-neon laser that operates continu-ously in the infra-red area.

Possible Uses IncreaseLasers may find their greatest

use in communications. Besidesthis, they can be used in ranginginstruments, liUe radar. Since thesignals from masers and.lasersare extremely constant, they canbe used as measuring instru-ments. A hydrogen maser clock,operating at microwave frequen-cy, is being tested at HarvardUniversity. It is expeced to beaccurate to within one second in3 - million years.

Right now, the only lasers onsale are laboratory instruments.This year about $30-million will bespent on research and development.

HMesses Uight WavesThe name "laser," is an acro

nym of the job it does; light am-plification by stimulated emissionof radiation. Light from a laserdoesn't diverge like an ordinary

I searchlight beam, dissipating its--- -- - '- ''-

------ a 8·41 'P ID - -

.L

I

r-

I

I

I

I

e

F.

Naam

2

":

.

E

a

e

s

a

I

_

e

0

CDI(o

to0-

C14a-(noc,LUCO0

0

U)LU

za

72

UILLJ3:

power in the distance. Its wavesare almost identical in length andfrequency; they are coherent;they travel in the same direction.It can be focused, Bthus concen.trating its power.

Most important, for cornmuni.cations use at least, a beam ofcoherent light provides the steadysignal that can be modulated toconvey a message, as a radiocarrier wave is changed to carrya voice.

Competifon ies AheadAlmost every radical new de

vice seems to stimulate rival research and development, and thisis happening to the laser. Its rv-al is a method, only partly under-stood, of generating light with asemiconductor diode.' In July,Lincoln Laboratories demon~strat.ed a device that, initial findingshint, may be nearly 100%61 effi-cient in changing electric currentto infraxed radiation, though thisis not the coherent ligbt like thatfrom a laser.

MIT Press ChartsIndependent Course

A new step was Iake in aunique twenty-five-year-old coope eratve Publodm Fprogram with-!e announcement August 10 byJrohn Wiley & Sons, Puxblshers,c: New York and the MIT Press

athat as of January 1, 1963, the-MIT (Press will become a com-pletely independent universitypress.

The pattern of cooperative pub-|hming between the Institute and

WViley was established in 1937 andbrought into being when the Department of IE~lectrical Engineer-:n3 at, MrIT launched four newtextbooks-The Principles of Elec-tdlca Engineering Series.

By Anthony Pappas

In an August issue of "BusinessWeek," Dr. Charles H. Townes,provost of MIT, was pictured withone of his lasers. Laser develop-ment has intensified in the lastfew months, with a great deal ofwork done here at MIT. For ex-ample, Dr. Townes has developeda gas laser which operates con-tinuously at room temperature.

Idea Not NewThe idea for lasers, and its

counterpart the maser, camefrom classical physics and quan-tum theory which, according toTownes, was lying around readyto be put to use for 30 years.

In the early 1950s, there wastalk of using molecular and atom-ic mechanisms to amplify radiowaves. Townes led a group work-ing on this at Colurnbia Univer-sity. Townes' aim at the time wasto develop radiation sources forfar-inh-ared spectroscopy. In 1953,Townes' group built the first Mas-er that amplified microwaves.While in Paris in lM55, Townesgenthe idea of using a speciallydoped germanium material for asolid state master, while at MITM. Woodrow P. Stmandburg devel.oped a similar idea. In the end

i~

Confueus saT, one day in fun,

To a friend and Number One Son,

'"Wi my Swingline I'll fuse

Your most honorable queues

Because two heads are better than oner

Now when you buy your Sheaffer Cartridge Pen forschool, you get 98M worth of Skrip cartridges FREE...a$3.93 value for just $2.95. Look for Sheaffer's backstopschool special now at stores everywhere. On the back ofthe package, there's a bonus for you. . .a coupon goodfor a $3.98 value Columbia limited-edition record. It's"Swingin' Sound", twelve top artists playing top hits forthe first time on a 121 L.P. This doubte-value backstopschool offer good only while they last! So hurry, chooseyour Sheaffer Cartnrdge Pen from five smart colors... andaWlI our "Swingin' Sound" record coupon today.

SHEAFFER'S BACK TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL!New cartridge pen with 984 worth of cartridges FREE.

$3.93 VALUE FOR $2.95

SHEA.PF PFPW01"2. A. *. *HUlFrr r tACOMRr, roar ~As. r

Townes And Lasers Are Cited Again

SPEED WAJ~BSHA 29 Columbic St., near Centrarl Square

CLOSEST COIN^<OP TO M.l.T.

20 Ibs. of Laundry Freeplus

Free Gifts to StudentsOPEN 24 HOURS

WVASH - 20eINTRODUCTORY OFFER

GOOD UNTIL OCT, 7

SWITAGLINESITAPLER do

Great new record offer ($3.98 value). a.just $1.00when you buy Sheaffer's back-to school special |

Page 11: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

_ __ Ab��l"------PIL _ Cld�i�sl·I�·qp�BI

Inside Inscomm -n-Frosh Council ImprovementsExpected During Fall Term

By Woody Bowman

-- ------

- - 1 -- - -r ---� u _I 1 111 - 1

- Is . slp ___L ve II 0_ _· e___ ,Oe ,- _-- _ .s ON _

The answer is:

50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERFS HOW:First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up witha nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a"Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students tomake loot. Study the examples below, then do your own.Send them, with your name, address, college and class,to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winningentries wil-l be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub-mitted -o-the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now!

I

r

LI i

I

I

IIII

I

Ii

I

I

IlI

OIIIIII

IIIII

iIIIII

III

I

I

I

IIIII

IIIII

I

I

III

I

II

IIII

m---mnX1

S(Conthlmted fromt page 1)

to their course material and its presentation and convey these sug-gestions to the faculty;

(3) the council, in its present political form, provides a trainingground for student leaders.

The final consensus was that plans for a reorganization beshelved until the new responsibilities and orientation of tee Fresh-man Council are morc clearly delineated.

SCEP Plans Expanded ActivitiesAl Koestler, head of the Student Committee on Educational Pol-

icy, will try to put the "freshman feedback" program, tried experi-mentally last semester, into full-time operation. The committee willassist the faculty, in evaluating and discussing the "feedback."

New projects may include a study of the advantages and disad-vantages of the 'cum' rating, and exploration of educational pro-cesses in other stcools around the country.

m

0zmV)

0

0

0

0a7

.;aiIs,to

Ol-0to

CD

sure that the subconmittee chair-ganization of the Council whichwould have changed -the conceptof the Council radically.

I cannot say that I am entirelydisappointed with this move. Ihave never before seen the Insti-tute Committee so interested inan issue or debate so lively. Ithink this is a good sign. I feelmen will add a new dimension totheir htinking in terms of workingwith the Council.

Freshman Coordinating Comnmit-tee Chairman Bill Pinkerson,while he does not intend to "pushor pull" the Council, will be ableto provide some effective guidanceby suggesting to the Council lead-ers Inscomm programs in whichthe Council can become active.

The issue of reorganization isonly on the table; it will be con-siderPd again in January. If theCouncil does no belter this termunder an enlightened InstituteCommnilttee, then it will indeed betime to take a hard look at theintrinsic deficiencies of the com-position of Council.

Concerning the Student Union,we are beginning to outline meth-ods for operation and program-ming of events once the structureis completed. Some members ofthe Institute Committee and the

; Dean's Office will be attending aregional conference of studentunion managers in Maine thisweekend.

The plan for turning SpringWeekend into Winter Weekend israpidly becoming popular. I hopethat it becomes a reality. Thoughs oome more research is necessarybefore! a decision can be reached,I expect it very shortly. The com-:nittee under Bart Weitz is doing

I a fine job and swill very likely'seep Us from sustaining a lossthis year.

T h e Fresh-man Councilhas not been avery meaning-ful organizationin tHe past. TheInstitute Co m-mittee recentlydenied a reor-

reservations. call extensionFor

2910.

RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis ofhumor (up to V), clarity and freshness (up to %) and appropriateness (upto %), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awardedin the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants andmust be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awardsevery mornth, October through April. Entries received during each monthwill be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The AmericanTobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em-ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies andReuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will benotified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations.

r-7.7 z__ ___ I___ D - __9_ _, -6i_ -- _lI _ .. · · · l _1· I . ^ ^......r · _..r . .r...... w..." .A.._...lr

Zwojl spusuJl OMl inoA a-eAuewJa9 us aOa4M :hOIJ.S3i1b 3H.L

__ - _ _ _ _ 10p· _ |r r I II

THE ANSWER:

foullrbagger Campus ... 5.95Standard .. 6.95Whrite Bdar . . 695Wholte Corl .. 6.95Super Gain . 7.95Reef Grabm e 895Carntorr.. 8.95Silhouette ..10.0Flame Grain . 12.50Coaivseur. . 17.50

a

IIam lo dno Suoils Allew

e Ileo noX pnom te4M :NOIlS3nlb 3HItofu S,Jal!s

SleeM aged S! leYM :NOI.S3nb 39H1

111

Pmdud of X.4wADoan c aegkeo-6v- - 4 iu our middle name

Fork Music Sampler Inscomm OKW 'Weekend'To Come To Kresge"Folk Music Sampler" will be

at the Kresge Aflditoriurn October

13, at 8:3G p.m.

Presented by the PershingRifles, it will feature folk musicplayers and singers, includingJackeY Washington, Keith andRooney, Erich Von Schmidt, andthe Charles River Valley Boys.

Attention, all witty,-urbane college students:

or would youlike to try for

$50?

ENTER LUCKY STRIKES' ZANLY NEWV

"erazy Questions' ContestI{~ Based on the hilarious book "The Question Mon.")

Yom KippurHigh Holy Day Services of the

MIT Hillel Society will be heldas follows:

Traditional ReformKresge

Auditcrium-MIT Chapel-'unday6:2 9 p.m.-7:30 p.m.donday-8:30 a.mi.-10:00 a.m.

THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER:

(20$NbdONw-imrIHA3aov sap!seq sranabaa9j4 owaeu noA ue3 :NOIlS3nb 3H1L

THE ANSWER:

Ah*~t xht&#4 4 ec

he iidied b~pe&etct

pood osYS!S3Xsa s,GqVs to 'LM :NOlS3Gb 3HI

One Hamburger,One FrankfurterA MONKEY WRENCH

| escray~ow 3sooI e uazys!w ofIasn nd plnom ze4M :Nogls3nb 3a 1I r N WERI# 6~~W

It's timeyou tried

KAYWOODIE

8lma datEr

8he taste to start with ... en e t stay wth'The question is: WH BAT CIGARETTE SLOGAN SHAS THE INITIALS GL tttsw . . .tttsw? No question about it, the taste of a Lucky spoils you for other cigarettes.This taste is the best reason to start with Luckies... the big reason Lucky smokersstay Lucky smokers. This taste makes Luckies the favorite regular cigarette ofcollege students. Try a pack today. Get Lucky.

Page 12: Candidates Speak on Rights Inscomm Gives Approval By To …tech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N17.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · iSix candidates for major Ma la,_usetts political offices prese Ied

Tech Soccermen Edge Coast Guard 1-0(oss ontry SqadFalls To Boston CollegeC.L ~~~ - - - - ---- ~ By Roy HaMlin

MT's- soccer team opened itsseason last Saturday by edging

c the U.S. Coast Guard Academy,c- 1-0 .

In the first half the MIT for-M ward line completely dominateda play, giving the Engineers their" margin of victory. Only spectacu-

O lar play by the Coast Guard goal-- ie prevented the game from turn-O ing into a rout. The second half

was marked by sloppy play in the>- part of both teams.

Gander Scoresmn The only goal of the game wasz scored in the 36th minute by out-o side right Fred Gander, '65, onU a corner lick by outside left Mo-

hammed Chikhaoui, '65. This wasplaced high and inches from thecross-bar. Co-captain James Tang'63 moved to play the lball and col-

I lided with the Coast Guard goalie.() The kick sailed over both and was-- chested into the goal Iby Gander.uJ In the second half the Engi-

I neer's offense ran out of steam.The game became merely a ques-tion of whether or not Coast Guardcould manage to score against a

defense weakened by the injuryof its only letterman, co-captainSylvester Okereke '63. Excellentplay by sophomore center halfMac Littlefield helped hold the op-position until the final gun.

Lack SpiritThe Engineers have yet to show

the spirit which nearly carriedthem to a New England champion-ship a year ago. The 'ball controlin the first half against CoastGuard was often brilliant ,but theline could not build up a substan-tial lead. In the second half whenthe Tech line did not control theplay the defense had difficultyclearing the ball from their pen-alty area.

Next Saturday Trinity will pro-vide the first big test of the seasonfor the Beaver eleven. Last fallthis team outplayed an unusuallystrong Tech team in every con-ceivable way except the score andlost 2-0. The Tech booters must beconsidered a definite underdog toa vengeful Trinity squad.

Yesterday, the Beaver's playedW.P.I. at the opponents homefield in Worcester.

Fred Gander '65 (dark jersey) is stymied by Coast Guard de-fenders in an attempt to score in Saturday's soccer contest at BriggsField. Gander later went on to find the mark and provide Tech withits 1-0 victory. (Photo by John Torode).

Despite Strong EffortDespite a definite improvement

over last year's squad, the Techharriers fell to mighty Boston Col-lege on Monday, 15 to 50. LarryRawson, BC's first man and thebest miler in New England, wonhandily. The first six runners forMIT, however, finished consecu-tively; showing that the team isvery well balanced.

MeMciin Leads BeaversDick McM.illin, the sophomore

speedster, finished first for theBeavers. He was followed closely'by co-captain Tom Goddard. Closeon Goddard's heels were ChuckSigwart, '64, Dean Hubbard, '65,Mike Oliver, '65, and co-captainRoger Hinrichs, '63, in that order.

Several runners including TomGoddard and Chuck Sigwart reg-istered lifetime low times on theFranklin Park course.

Frosh Edged By BCOn the freshman level, the lit-

tle Beavers lost a tough one 34-37, to Boston College. SumnerBrown '65, was the individual win-ner over the 2.6 mile freshmancourse. Rob Wesson, '65, finishedfourth overall and second forMIT. Other freshmen in the topfive were John Rible, Ken Ca-reva, and Monty Graham.

This Saturday the varsity runsWorcester Poly at Franklin Parkat 2:30. Today the freshman raceat Andover.

Klare Sails For US,Tops British Dinghies

Two weeks before the start ofthe America's Cup races, a groupof New England collegiate sail-ors twice defeated a British teamin dinghies on the Charles River.

Sailing for the New EnglandIntercollegiate Sailing Associationwas Ken Klare, '63, MIT, andmembers of a number of North-eastern colleges, William S. Cox,Jr., and Edward A. Greenburg,Princeton; Neil Thomas, Cornell;Gary Powers, R P I; DennisConnors, San Diego State, andSteve Martin, Coast Guard.

Representing England were J.N. Prosser, captain, and D. E.Prior- Palmer, Oxford; J. C.Thompson, J. Ware, and P. R.Bainbridge, Cambridge; and C. R.Keith, London.

The Americans won the British-American Trophy for the firsttime, racing five team races andwinning them all - (23Y4-16,20%4-18, 18Y4.-18, 22: 4-17, and204 - 19).

How They DidSoccer

MIT 1-- Coast Guard, 0

Cross CountryBoston College 50 - MIT 15(F) Boston College 37-MIT 34

~5 -0.0

p4 OD-CLCA CA X, =

'c O00'

Ss0 r

·aa

Omy o6zaP -o

p4,1 C

!'o4K ID rstX m

*a;1-3aN~M VA9oC C c* FJ * coo

oto,

Intramural football continued atits usual heated pace this week-end with play being marked bya number of crucial games be-tween league powers. 0Five of theten leagues have two way tiesfor first place. Thus, team spiritsare generally high as next week'scontests will decide leaguecrowns.

Strong Defense Highlights PlayLow marginal victories were

the order of the day when BetaTheta Pi, now League I leader,sneaked by Graduate House 7-6.While both teams sported formid-able defenses, an extra point byKent Groninger, '63, for the Be-ta's made the difference. Alsowinning in League I was Phi Del-ta Theta, scoring an impressivevictory over Baker House 45-0.Top scorers for the iPhi Delt'swere Dick Lipes, '64, and RolandCannon, '65, Who shared twelve-point honors.

Delta Upsilon,Sigma Chi Tussle

Action in League II was high-lighted by a close 'battle betweenDelta Upsilon and Sigma Chi. Allscoring took place late in thefirst half. Jim Allen '64 talliedon an around end run for theDU's shortly after a fiery SigmaChi defense had produced a safe-ty. Both teams then put up stoutdefensive armours for the re-mainder of the game which DUwon 6-2. In another game, TD'sby Bill Eagleson, '64, and NormWeeks, '62, carried East Campuspast Phi Kappa Theta 15-7.

Tie For LeadPlay in League III produced a

tie for league leadership betweenLambda 'hi Alpha and Delta TauDelta. The Lamrbda Chi's, led byDave Sikes', '63, passing stamn-peded Sigma Phi Epsilon 40-6. Atthe same time, Delta Tau Deltaoverpowered Theta Delta Chi 20-

0. The Delts and the LambdaChi's will meet next week in adecisive battle.

Another tie situation arose inLeague IV when Sigma Alpha Ep-silon and Phi Gamma Delta bothwon. The SAE's confused the Bur-ton House defense with 28 pointsto the Burton 0. Roy Wittenback,'65, a Fiji, paced his team to an18-6 victory over Theta Chi as hereturned a kickoff for a touch-down.

Maskrey Leads ScoringBob Maskrey, '62, scored 18 of

19 points for Alpha Tau Omegain their Division B class. Other'"3" winners were Phi SigmaRappa, Zeta ,Beta Tau, StudentHouse, Kappa Sigma, and SigmaAlpha Mu. Alpha Epsilon Pi andPi Lambda Phi clashed Tuesdayafternoon.

DIVISION ALeague I

Beta Theta Pi 7 Grad House 6Branson 6 Bornbak 6Gronager 1

Harriers Face Andover

Frosh Set For Action In 3 Fall SportsBy Ed Steinberg

Having survived two weeks ofMIT life and one 18.01 quiz, manymembers of the class of 1966 arenow looking forward to partici-pating in intercollegiate sports.Three frosh teams, cross country,soccer, and sailing, will see heavyaction during the fall.. TodayFrosh harriers meet Andover atthe opponents course.

It is still too early to give anaccurate preview of the freshmancross country season, 'but to date

four runners, Rob Wesson, JohnRible, Sumner Brown, and MontyGraham, have distinguished them-selves in practice. Billy Friedman,Fred Gruhl, Joe Shaffery, KenCaneva, Rusty Epps, Paul Lind-say, and Ed Fiala have alsoearned spots on the team.

As in the past, the distance menwill be competing against stiffcompetition. Such perennial pow-ers as Boston College, Northeast-ern, and Wesleyan appear on thefall schedule.

IM Tennis Tourney In 2nd RoundDespite interruptions by occa-

sional rainstorms, the intramuraltennis tournament has gotten wellunder way, with two first-roundand one second-round match beingplayed off in the past week.

Play began on Tuesday, Sep-tember 25, as Alpha Epsilon Pinosed out Delta Upsilon, threematches to two. Scores were: JimEvans (DU) over Rich Millman,8-3; Bob Lurie (AEPI) overCharles Tyler, 8-2; Ed Strauss(AEPI) over John Roach, 8-3; AlZobrist and Bill Samuels (DU)over Mike Hirsch and Tom Bry-lawski, 84; Cliff Weinstein andNorm Rubin (AEPI) over GeorgeBorton and Ray Schwitters, 8-1.

Phi Gamma Delta downed Bur-ton AA, Wednesday, September26. PGD scored as Monroe La-bouisse defeated Pete Lehman,8-2; Don Aucamp won over BobKemper, 8-2; John Dlcek downedHarry Marshall, 8-2; and CharlieSmith and Roy Wyttenbach edged

Dusman 'Israel and David Barberby 8-6. For Burton, Ed Rinehartand Mike Sullivan won 'theirmatch by 8-6 over Randy Sebaand Doug Wilson.

Phi Gamma Delta then ad-vanced to the third round, onTuesday, October 1, by winninga tight, 3-2 match over AEPI.PGD took first and third singles,and first doubles: Labouisse 8-2over Lurie, Wilson 84 over Mill-man, and Chuck Ingraham andDlcek 8-3 over Rubin and Wein-stein. AEPI scored as PhilStrause outstroked Randy Seba,8-4, and as Hirsch and Millmantopped Smith and Don Floyd, 8-0.

Play in the tournament will re-sume on Thursday, Ocdtober 3.Because of last week's rain, thedates of all scheduled matcheswill be moved forward a weekunless teams are otherwise noti-fied. The final has been scheduledfor Saturday, October 13.

Martin Eyes Seasoned PlayersSeveral seasoned soccer players

have already caught the attentionof freshman coach Ben Martin.However, the overall talent on theteam is thinner than in previousyears and there ars still quite afew open berths on the squad.Also, the team is still looking fora manager. Savit Bhotiwhok, Car-son Eyoang, Jose Miron, EnricoPoggio, and Tomas Van Tien-hoven appear to' be the team'sbright spots.

Our yearling soccer teams havealways been handicapped 'by lackof experience. In addition, theshortness of the thirty day sea-son does not provide the coach-ing staff with enough time tomold a coordinated unit out ofboys who have never played to-gether. This year's schedule ishighlighted 'by games with An-dover, Exeter, Harvard Frosh,and the Army Plebes.

Sailors Lack ExperienceThe freshman sailing team is

short of both personnel and exper-ience, and does not appear to benearly as strong as last year'schampionship aggregate. At themoment the more knowledgablenavigators seem to be Bob Hatch,Terry Cronburg, and EverestWhited. Hatch has piloted star-lets in the past, while Cron'burgand Whited have had experiencewith penguins. Jeff Kenton, BobPurssell, Roberto Sada, and JoeSmullin have also qualified forthe team.

During the fall the sailors willcompete against such teams asBC, BU, Brown, Coast Guard, andNortheastern.

Phi Delta Theta 45 Baker House 0Lipes L2Yansen 7Cannon 12Kolts 6Morris 6

League IIDelta Upsilon 6 Sigma Chi 2

Jim Allen 6 SafetyEast Camus 15 Plhi Kappa Theta 7

Weeks 6 Charchut 6BDill Eagleson 7 Shinoro 1

LIeagueML'da Chi Alpha 40 Sigmana Plhi Eps'n 6

Beach 18 .FOXc 6Pasquale 14'Sikes 6

Delta Tau D'ta 20 Theta Delta Clhi 0Dreiss 7Downie 6Driscoll 7

League IVS'a Alpha Ep'n 28 Burton House 0

Bails 7Lenoir 12Rein 1Lamberti 1Souk 7

Phi G'ma D'ta 18 Theta Clhi 6Moter 6 Heinricks 6Gastin 6Wittenrback 6

DIVISION BLeague V

Al'a Tau Om'a 19 Phi 'Kappa S'm. 0'League VI

Phi S'a Kappa 46 Walker Din. 11League VII

Zeta Beta Tau 32 Phi Beta. Eps'n 0Student House 23 Phi Mu Delta 6

'League VIIINo Games

League IXKappa Sigma 26 Theta Xi 7

(non-league game)League X

Sigma AlYa Mu 34 N.R.S.A. 0

EI[ FOOTBAIL STANDINGS(October 1, 1962

League IW 0L

Beta Theta P1 .......... 2 0Phi Dela Theta ........ 1 oGraduate House ......... 1Baker House .......... 0

League IIDelta Upsilon ............ 2 0East Carnpus t.. ..... 1Sigma Cli .............. 1 1Phi Kappa Theta .. 0 2

l League IIILambda Chi Alpha ...... 2 0Delta Tau Delta ........ 2 0Sigma Phi E~lpsilon ...... 0 2Theta Delta Chi ........ 0 2

League IVSigma Alpha Epsilon .... 2 0Phi Gamma Delta ...... 2 0Theta Chi ............. 0 2Busrton Holse ......... 0 2

League VAlpha Tau Omega ....... 2 0Phi Kappa Sigma ....... 1 1Nuclear ~Engineering . 0 1Tau EFpsilor Phi ........ 0 1

League VIW L

Alpha Epsilon Pi ........ 1 Pi Lambda Phi ....... 1 0Phi Sigma Kappa ....... 1 1Walker Dining Staff ..... 0 2

League VIIStudent House .......... 2 0Zeta Beta Tan .......... 2 0Phi Mu Delta .......... 0 Phi Beta Epsilon ........ 0 2

League VIII'Sigma .u .......... .... Grad 'House Dining .... 1..: Chl Phi ................. 0 1Burton B ............... 0 1

League IXDelta Kappa Epsilon .... 1 OSenior House .... :........ 0 1Theta Xl ................ 0 1

League XSi/gna Alpha Mu 2 0NRSA 1 1Kappa .........igm0 1

On DeckToday, October 3

T0o112

o0o0o0o

0oo0o0o

o000

o0OO

TOOCa

oC00

0000

000

00

000r0

Cross Country (F) - Andover,Away, 4:00 P.M.

Golf (V) - Rhode Island, Home,1:00 P.M.

Saturday, October 6Cross Country (V) - WPI,

Home, 2:30 P.M.Soccer (V) - Trinity, Home,

2:00 P.M.Soccer (F) - Army, Away

Sunday, October 7Sailing (V) - Sloop Elimina-

tions, Away, at Coast Guard.Sailing (F) - Nonagonal, Home.

Crucial Games In 5 Leagues To Decide Football Tifles

- II---- 1lr11 � I

I