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TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat Sets March 13 Section Date The Elections Division of the Secretariat - has announced Tuesday, March 13, as the date for Undergraduate Association President and class officer elec- tions. Nomination petitions will be available beginnring today in Lithfield Lounge, Walker Me- monial. Petitions must be returned, fully executed, by 5 p. m. Fri- day, March 2, to be valid. Can- didates for class officers must secure the signatures of at least ten per cent of their re- Woody Bowman Seventh Of Series i I I Jk_ II iiI spective classes, UAP carnd- dates must secure the signa- tures of at least ten per cent of the undergraduate student body. Two candidates, Woody Bow- mian and Steve Kaufman (both '63), have declared for the UAP race, .from which Frank Levy has withdrawn (see letter page 4). Of the three class elections to be decided on the same day, each has the Presidential can- didate thus far: Class of '63, Eliot Bird; Class of '64, Duncan Steve Kaufman Miller; Class of '65, Marshall Fisher. Statements and pictu/es of these and new entrants will appear in next week's The Tech. All unusual formns of election- eering must be cleared through the Secretariat. Questions in- vodving the elections should be directed to James Champy, Chairman of the Elections and Constitutions Division of the Secretariat, in Litchfield Lounge. Freshman Council elections next week will be conducted at each section's first 21.02 class meeting. All members of the freshman class are eligible for election, and interested candi- dates should be prepared to present their views on the council. Ballots will be counted using the preferential system. Nominations for the chair- manships of the subcommittees of the Institute Committee will be received at the Inscomm meeting tomorrow, February 15. Interested parties should contact members of Insconmm, and questions concernting the chairmanship elections should be directed to Jerry Katell, chairman of the Secretariat. New Garage To Be Built Three Construction Projects To Be Complefecl By Fall Three of the six major construction projects around the Institute should be completed by the time school opens next semester. No starling date has yet been set for the Student Union. Construction should start on the new four level parking structure July, 1962. This building will be completed near July, 1963 at a cost of about $1. million. This facility will hold about five hundred cars and will be located by the Metropoli- tan Storage Warehouse. The Cenco Building, adjacent to the Institute's main aca- demic campus, will be equipped with graduate and undergrad- uate laboratories, seminar rooms, observation, testing, and office facilities. Renovation of this center used in the study of behavioral sciences should be completed by late 1962 at a cost of $600,000. MIT has begun converting the 140,000 square feet of floor space in the former Ward Baking Company Building for use as the National Magnet Laiboratory. This $6 million prc ,ct will involve the development of power facilities to serve the magnet laboratory, magnet re- search areas, preparation labor- atories, assembly areas, and ad- ministrative and faculty office space. Work should be com- pleted in September, 1962. Expansion of the Radiochem- istry facilities, relocation of the Physical Plant, and additions to the Institute cyclotron are all expected to be completed by October, 1962. Construction has already be- gun on the $5 million Center of Earth Science. This structure, MIT's first tower building, wdll provide about 120,000 square feet of floor space for use by geologists, gecphysidists, me- teorologists, and oceanograph- ers. The building is expected to be completed by September, 1963. Expanded faciiities for mar- ried and women students should be completed in September, 1963. D; - . .J. _-_!i rox3jects under planning are Dr. Towri~ ~a Life Science Center, Mater- Dr. Towne Speaks ials Center, boathouse, Nuclear .Engineerinz facfilities, Plaqn_ Provost Townes Details Early Maser Development By Victor B. Schneider '62 Dr. Charles H. Townes spoke about thie development of the maser and about its fu- ture role in our technology, before a capacity audience in Kresge Auditorium last Tuesday evening. The seventh guest speaker in the series of eight Lincoln Decemnnial Lectures produced by MIT's Lincoln Laboratories, Dr. Townes demonstrated how the maser (acronym for "microwave amplification by stimulated emis- sion of radiation") can be used to amplify and produce oscillations over portions of the spectrum ranging from milliwave radio sid- nals to monochromatic, coherent light sig- nals. Because of the unusual stability of its oscillations, the maser can serve as an as- tronomer's time standard. Dr. Tovn e einphlasized the extent to Four Serve At Mock UN In Montreal; Represent Four students from MIT served as repre model United Nations convention in Montreal Wednesday, February 7, to Saturday, Febru Osha '62, the UAP, Vijay Shah '62, chairman tional Program Committee, Adi Godrej '63, th sentative on the IPC, and Steven Baiams '62, political science department, formed the MIT de represented India. The conference, cosponsored by the Univ treal, Sir George Williams University, McGill Loyola College, is an annual event begun four enty colleges and universities from Mexico, the and Canada sent delegations representing 102 c I N D E X The next issue of The Tech will be published on Tuesday, February 20. News deadline Sunday, 7 p.m. Judgment at Nuremberg opens ........... II Peace March ....... 2 Coop . ........... 3 Calendar of Events ... 16 College World ........ 7 Editorial Page ....... 4-5 Entertainment ......... 9-12 Kibitzer .............. 4 Placement .. ......... 13 orfs .... ,.... 17-20 ISummer Jobs ,.....,.. 14 ed Nations men The confere: much like the a sessions of the ( bly, Security Co teeship Council were conducted French with translation for 1 not speak one oI Problems wh tronted the rea the financial sl UN, the seating Peiping govermnr mir problem, a were investiga and voted upon. which "scientific knlmowledge is so fruitfully accumulative." is maser, for example, is a creature of the present scientific age, some- thing which could not have been discovered by an inventor using the facilities of a home workshop. The maser would not have been possible without the great work done in spec- troscopy during the 1920's, nor without the present liquid helium technology, the manu- facture of synthetic ruby, the discovery of ferrite materials, and a great number of other such accumulative steps. Calculations On Envelope The second world war stimulated reseaerch into mlcrowaves and microwave communica- tions because of the importance of radar to the war effort. Dr. Towrnes, working at Bell Telephone Laboratories, became interested in the new field of microwave spectroscopy and in the use of such research as a tool for the study of atoms and mole- Se6n oules. The auidiemnce at Kaesge e w@ 0 Auditomrium heard part of the text of a memorandum daiting India from 1944 in which an engineer- img researcher spoke of the pos- 'sentatives at a sdibilty of using moleoulles and , Quebec, from atoms as ciretA. elements in ary 10. Frank bhd eh fqueency conmmunications of the Interna- equapment. e Indian repre- Such were the beginnings of a senior in the an i-dea which camne to fruition Mlegation, which early one m,oning in the spring of 1951 while Dr. Towles was rersity of Mon- attending a oonferemce on mnili- University, and wave radiation in Washinigbon, Se D.C. The habits acquired frown years ago life with a vigorous famiay United States, awoke hdm early, and he went >f the 104 Unit- out to watch the azaleas in nbers. bloom in Franklin Park while nee was run waiting for the restaurants to actual UN, with open, Musing on the problem General Asseni- of obtaining contrrolded r ieo- ,uncil, and Trus- wave energy from molecules, 1. The sessions while the azalea s sat befcre in English and him, he calculated "on the simultaneous usual back of an envelope" the theose who could power necessary to inmtroduce f the languages. and suistain oscillations of mole ich have on- cules in a resonant box. His ich have onconsiderarttdos were tlhat. under i UN, such as equilibriuin condiiions, more tanding of the molecules in the box would be of the Chinese in a lower (unexcited) state, nent, and Kash- and hence would not be prone nd . to give off energy in any pre- md colioniaism, dctable or con;trolled fa. hin. ted, discussed, With the adi&tion of high fre- (Please lutarn to Page 3) sion, communications center, and graduate center. Prelimin- ary planning will begin on an Astronautics center in a few months. IDC's 'Twisteroo' To Have Atmosphere Of Peppermint Lounge A 'Twistelroo," with the at- morphere of the "Peppermint Lounge," is planned for this Friday by the Informnal Dance Committee. It will begin at 8 p.m., in Walker. Mel Scott's Orchestra will provide a varied program of casual dance music, as well as tunes for twisting. Admission is $1.25 for men and $.75 for girls. Advance tickets are on sale at. the Twisteroo booth in Building 10. Freshmen May Obtain Quiz Books Until Friday Friday is deadline for Fresh- men to obtain the second term quiz book. It is available to all those who purchased the first term quiz book. Copies may be obtained in 50-256 between 12:30 and 1:30 p.m. CORE Founder To Speak Tomorrow In Second Half Of Debate Series James Farmer, National Director of the Congress of Ra- cial Equality, will speak tomorrow night, February 15, at 8 p.m., in Compton Lecture Hall (26-100). The speech, which will be followed by a question and answer period, is sponsored by the MIT Civil Rights Committee. Mr. Farrmer has been a -'for solving race reclation prob- lems. He was one of the found- ers of CORE, and served as the }~ ... -first National Chairman.. Mr. Farmer led the original .- .. i. : '-CORE Freedom Ride to Jack- son, Mississippi, where he spent 'i¥"~' '?...".' ~ forty days in various prisons. Erle Johnston, Public Rela- tions Director of the Mississippi i, ~*-~| ~ firsttate Sovereignty Commission, '""1*; ' | .' 31 1gave a talk in Kresge least Wed; snesday, supporting Missiwssippi's Eric Johnston, director of public racial policy. A complete sum- t. . - ~ ~ ~ esta, supp rti Miss-ssi)Pi' mary of this part of the debate may be found on page five. Urban Studies Stipends Joint Center Awards Four Grants The Joint Center for Urban Studies of MIT and Harvard will award two Doctoral Research Fellowships for the year 1962-63. The grants have been named in honor of the late Samuel Stouffer, Harvard sociologist. They are open to all graduate students at Harvard and MIT writing a dissertation on urban life. The recipients of these fellowships will receive a stipend of $5,500 for the year, during which time they will be asso- ciated with the Joint Center. The Joint Center will also award two Venezuelan Doctoral Research Fellowships for the academic year 1962-63, open to all graduate students at Harvard and MIT, writing a disserta- tion on the Orinoco-Caroni region of Southeastern Venezuela the spring of 1961. The purpose of these Fellowships is to further research in urban and regional studies, whose results will be published by the Harvard and MIT Press. For more information, contact the Joint Center for Urban Studies, 65 Church Street, Cambridge 38, or call Mr. John R. Sevier, UN 4-8060. THE Levy Withdraws I relations, 5 t a t e of Mississippi. (Photo by Conrad Grundlehner '64) A - - I 1 - I =4 I - S- -- ------ m m Ps i i L-r---w - I, I ... ;5 J. CL" "-- L.Lc-.,, U.&Peul- ---- I I -INL- taAa in -- M MM Not

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Page 1: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

TE;CHEstablished At MIT In 1881

Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents

Bowman, Kaufman In Race

Secretariat Sets March 13 Section DateThe Elections Division of the

Secretariat - has announcedTuesday, March 13, as the datefor Undergraduate AssociationPresident and class officer elec-tions. Nomination petitions willbe available beginnring today inLithfield Lounge, Walker Me-monial.

Petitions must be returned,fully executed, by 5 p. m. Fri-day, March 2, to be valid. Can-didates for class officers mustsecure the signatures of atleast ten per cent of their re-

Woody Bowman

Seventh Of Seriesi I I Jk_ II iiI

spective classes, UAP carnd-dates must secure the signa-tures of at least ten per centof the undergraduate studentbody.

Two candidates, Woody Bow-mian and Steve Kaufman (both'63), have declared for the UAPrace, .from which Frank Levyhas withdrawn (see letter page4). Of the three class electionsto be decided on the same day,each has the Presidential can-didate thus far: Class of '63,Eliot Bird; Class of '64, Duncan

Steve Kaufman

Miller; Class of '65, MarshallFisher. Statements and pictu/esof these and new entrants willappear in next week's The Tech.

All unusual formns of election-eering must be cleared throughthe Secretariat. Questions in-vodving the elections should bedirected to James Champy,Chairman of the Elections andConstitutions Division of theSecretariat, in LitchfieldLounge.

Freshman Council electionsnext week will be conducted ateach section's first 21.02 classmeeting. All members of thefreshman class are eligible forelection, and interested candi-dates should be prepared topresent their views on thecouncil. Ballots will be countedusing the preferential system.

Nominations for the chair-manships of the subcommitteesof the Institute Committee willbe received at the Inscommmeeting tomorrow, February15. Interested parties shouldcontact members of Insconmm,and questions concernting thechairmanship elections shouldbe directed to Jerry Katell,chairman of the Secretariat.

New Garage To Be Built

Three Construction ProjectsTo Be Complefecl By Fall

Three of the six major construction projects around theInstitute should be completed by the time school opens nextsemester. No starling date has yet been set for the StudentUnion.

Construction should start on the new four level parkingstructure July, 1962. This building will be completed nearJuly, 1963 at a cost of about $1. million. This facility will holdabout five hundred cars and will be located by the Metropoli-tan Storage Warehouse.

The Cenco Building, adjacent to the Institute's main aca-demic campus, will be equipped with graduate and undergrad-uate laboratories, seminar rooms, observation, testing, andoffice facilities. Renovation of this center used in the studyof behavioral sciences should be completed by late 1962 at acost of $600,000.

MIT has begun converting the 140,000 square feet of floorspace in the former Ward Baking Company Building for useas the National Magnet Laiboratory. This $6 million prc ,ctwill involve the development of power facilities to serve themagnet laboratory, magnet re-search areas, preparation labor-atories, assembly areas, and ad-ministrative and faculty officespace. Work should be com-pleted in September, 1962.

Expansion of the Radiochem-istry facilities, relocation of thePhysical Plant, and additionsto the Institute cyclotron areall expected to be completed byOctober, 1962.

Construction has already be-gun on the $5 million Center ofEarth Science. This structure,MIT's first tower building, wdllprovide about 120,000 squarefeet of floor space for use bygeologists, gecphysidists, me-teorologists, and oceanograph-ers. The building is expectedto be completed by September,1963.

Expanded faciiities for mar-ried and women students shouldbe completed in September,1963.

D; - ..J. _-_!i rox3jects under planning are

Dr. Towri~ ~a Life Science Center, Mater-Dr. Towne Speaks ials Center, boathouse, Nuclear.Engineerinz facfilities, Plaqn_

Provost Townes Details Early Maser DevelopmentBy Victor B. Schneider '62

Dr. Charles H. Townes spoke about thiedevelopment of the maser and about its fu-ture role in our technology, before a capacityaudience in Kresge Auditorium last Tuesdayevening.

The seventh guest speaker in the series ofeight Lincoln Decemnnial Lectures producedby MIT's Lincoln Laboratories, Dr. Townesdemonstrated how the maser (acronym for"microwave amplification by stimulated emis-sion of radiation") can be used to amplifyand produce oscillations over portions of thespectrum ranging from milliwave radio sid-nals to monochromatic, coherent light sig-nals. Because of the unusual stability of itsoscillations, the maser can serve as an as-tronomer's time standard.

Dr. Tovn e einphlasized the extent to

Four Serve At Mock UNIn Montreal; RepresentFour students from MIT served as repre

model United Nations convention in MontrealWednesday, February 7, to Saturday, FebruOsha '62, the UAP, Vijay Shah '62, chairmantional Program Committee, Adi Godrej '63, thsentative on the IPC, and Steven Baiams '62,political science department, formed the MIT derepresented India.

The conference, cosponsored by the Univtreal, Sir George Williams University, McGillLoyola College, is an annual event begun fourenty colleges and universities from Mexico, theand Canada sent delegations representing 102 c

I N D E XThe next issue of The Tech

will be published on Tuesday,February 20. News deadlineSunday, 7 p.m.

Judgment at Nurembergopens ........... II

Peace March ....... 2Coop . ........... 3

Calendar of Events ... 16College World ........ 7Editorial Page ....... 4-5Entertainment ......... 9-12Kibitzer .............. 4Placement .. ......... 13

orfs .... ,.... 17-20ISummer Jobs ,.....,.. 14

ed Nations menThe confere:

much like the asessions of the (bly, Security Coteeship Councilwere conductedFrench withtranslation for 1not speak one oI

Problems whtronted the reathe financial slUN, the seatingPeiping govermnrmir problem, awere investigaand voted upon.

which "scientific knlmowledge is so fruitfullyaccumulative." is maser, for example, is acreature of the present scientific age, some-thing which could not have been discoveredby an inventor using the facilities of a homeworkshop. The maser would not have beenpossible without the great work done in spec-troscopy during the 1920's, nor without thepresent liquid helium technology, the manu-facture of synthetic ruby, the discovery offerrite materials, and a great number of othersuch accumulative steps.

Calculations On EnvelopeThe second world war stimulated reseaerch

into mlcrowaves and microwave communica-tions because of the importance of radar tothe war effort. Dr. Towrnes, working at BellTelephone Laboratories, became interested inthe new field of microwave spectroscopy andin the use of such research as a tool for

the study of atoms and mole-Se6n oules. The auidiemnce at Kaesgee w@ 0 Auditomrium heard part of thetext of a memorandum daitingIndia from 1944 in which an engineer-img researcher spoke of the pos-

'sentatives at a sdibilty of using moleoulles and, Quebec, from atoms as ciretA. elements inary 10. Frank bhd eh fqueency conmmunicationsof the Interna- equapment.e Indian repre- Such were the beginnings ofa senior in the an i-dea which camne to fruitionMlegation, which early one m,oning in the spring

of 1951 while Dr. Towles wasrersity of Mon- attending a oonferemce on mnili-University, and wave radiation in Washinigbon,

Se D.C. The habits acquired frownyears ago life with a vigorous famiay

United States, awoke hdm early, and he went>f the 104 Unit- out to watch the azaleas innbers. bloom in Franklin Park whilenee was run waiting for the restaurants toactual UN, with open, Musing on the problemGeneral Asseni- of obtaining contrrolded r ieo-,uncil, and Trus- wave energy from molecules,1. The sessions while the azaleas sat befcrein English and him, he calculated "on the

simultaneous usual back of an envelope" thetheose who could power necessary to inmtroducef the languages. and suistain oscillations of mole

ich have on- cules in a resonant box. Hisich have onconsiderarttdos were tlhat. underi UN, such as equilibriuin condiiions, moretanding of the molecules in the box would beof the Chinese in a lower (unexcited) state,

nent, and Kash- and hence would not be pronend . to give off energy in any pre-

md colioniaism, dctable or con;trolled fa. hin.ted, discussed, With the adi&tion of high fre-

(Please lutarn to Page 3)

sion, communications center,and graduate center. Prelimin-ary planning will begin on anAstronautics center in a fewmonths.

IDC's 'Twisteroo'To Have Atmosphere

Of Peppermint LoungeA 'Twistelroo," with the at-

morphere of the "PeppermintLounge," is planned for thisFriday by the Informnal DanceCommittee. It will begin at 8p.m., in Walker.

Mel Scott's Orchestra willprovide a varied program ofcasual dance music, as well astunes for twisting.

Admission is $1.25 for menand $.75 for girls. Advancetickets are on sale at. theTwisteroo booth in Building 10.

Freshmen May ObtainQuiz Books Until FridayFriday is deadline for Fresh-

men to obtain the second termquiz book. It is available to allthose who purchased the firstterm quiz book.

Copies may be obtained in50-256 between 12:30 and1:30 p.m.

CORE Founder To Speak TomorrowIn Second Half Of Debate Series

James Farmer, National Director of the Congress of Ra-cial Equality, will speak tomorrow night, February 15, at 8p.m., in Compton Lecture Hall (26-100). The speech, whichwill be followed by a question and answer period, is sponsoredby the MIT Civil Rights Committee.

Mr. Farrmer has been a

-'for solving race reclation prob-lems. He was one of the found-ers of CORE, and served as the

}~ ... -first National Chairman.. Mr. Farmer led the original

.- .. i. : '-CORE Freedom Ride to Jack-son, Mississippi, where he spent

'i¥"~' '?...".' ~ forty days in various prisons.

Erle Johnston, Public Rela-tions Director of the Mississippi

i, ~*-~| ~ firsttate Sovereignty Commission,'""1*; ' | .' 31 1gave a talk in Kresge least Wed;

snesday, supporting Missiwssippi'sEric Johnston, director of public racial policy. A complete sum-t. . -~ ~ ~ esta, supp rti Miss-ssi)Pi'

mary of this part of the debatemay be found on page five.

Urban Studies Stipends

Joint Center Awards Four GrantsThe Joint Center for Urban Studies of MIT and Harvard

will award two Doctoral Research Fellowships for the year1962-63.

The grants have been named in honor of the late SamuelStouffer, Harvard sociologist. They are open to all graduatestudents at Harvard and MIT writing a dissertation on urbanlife. The recipients of these fellowships will receive a stipendof $5,500 for the year, during which time they will be asso-ciated with the Joint Center.

The Joint Center will also award two Venezuelan DoctoralResearch Fellowships for the academic year 1962-63, open toall graduate students at Harvard and MIT, writing a disserta-tion on the Orinoco-Caroni region of Southeastern Venezuelathe spring of 1961.

The purpose of these Fellowships is to further researchin urban and regional studies, whose results will be publishedby the Harvard and MIT Press.

For more information, contact the Joint Center for UrbanStudies, 65 Church Street, Cambridge 38, or call Mr. John R.Sevier, UN 4-8060.

THE

Levy Withdraws

I

relations, 5 t a t e of Mississippi.(Photo by Conrad Grundlehner'64)

A� -- I 1 - I =4 I -S- - - - - - - - -m m

Ps

ii

L-r---w - I,I

... ;5 J. CL" "-- L.Lc-.,, U.&Peul-

---- II -INL- taAa in -- MMM Not

Page 2: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

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By .D"Q Gaedsl.j 'FThe Walk in Washington. to occur this.

Friday and Saturday, is unprecedented inmany ways, only one of them being the pol-icy proposal discussed last week in The. Tech.Fron sheer numbers of participants-atleast 2500 or 3000 students are now expected-the demonstration will undoubtedly gain.both in influence and in headaches. But themyriad problemns--transportation, money, ap-pointments, and many others--though theymay not be fully resolved until Friday morn-inrg, have been and are being capably attackedby the Boston Co-ordinating. Committee inthis area, -and by similar groups in other ar-eas that are sending demonstrators to thenatian's capital.

The most crucial problem of all, that ofpersuading concerned students to act by com-ing to Washington, breaks down into aboutthree sub-problems, all calling for effectiveand widespread publicity. First, there wasthe task of contacting leaders of existing na-tional, regional, and campus organizationsalready active and committed to the struggle

Candidates for Bachelor's or Master's De-grees are invited to discuss opportunities in:

Engineering and SalesThis is a unique opportunityto find out aboutthe many career opportunities at IBM. TheIBM representative can discuss with you typ-ical jobs, various training programs, chancesfor advanced education, financial rewards,and company benefits-all important factorsthat affect your future.

SOME FACTS ABOUT iBMAn Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had oneof the exceptional gro*th rates in industry. Ithas been a planned growth, based ora ideasand products having an almost infinite appli-cation in our modern economy.Diverse and Important Products: IBM devel-ops, manufactures and markets a wide rangeof products in the data processing field. IBMcomputers and allied products play a vitalrole in the operations of business, industry,science, and government.Across-the-Country Operations: Laboratoryand manufacturing facilities are located in

Endicott, Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie,Vestal, Yorktown, N..Y.; Burlington, Vermont;Lexington; Ky.; San Jose, Calif.; Bethesda,Md.; and Rochester, Minn. Headquarters islocated in New York City with sales and serv-

,ice offices in 180 major cities throughout theUnited States,

The Accent is on the Individual: No matterwhat type of work a person does at IBM, heis given all the responsibility he is able tohandle, and all the support he needs to dohis job. Advancement is by merit

The areas in which IBM is engaged have anunlimited future. This Is your opportunity tofind out what that future, has to offer you. Allqualified applicants will be considered foremployment without regard to race, creed,color or national origin.

Your placement officer can help you to learnmore about IBM. He can give you literaturedescribing the many career fields at IBM. Hewill arrange an appointment for you with the-IBM representative. 'If you cannot attend aninterview, write or call the manager of thenearest IBM office:

P. H. Bradley, Branch ManagerIBM Corporation, Dept. 8821730.Cambridge StreetCambridge 38, Mass,Phone: UN 4-6990

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eaningful peace with, nuclear or totalament. Such groups, including Studentthe Student Peaoe Union, and the Fel-

). of Reconciliation, cover the ,entireo the peace movement (certinly notin its beliefs or major.efforts) froms to those who wish only a limitationarms race in which the US would re-s deterrent capability. An appeal for; action made to all of theta would,re, have to be fairly general in policy,he emphasis 'laid upon the concernsall the groups have in common.}reliminary flier sent to these, groups'ember went a long way toward theament of such an appeal. It begmn, "Itto stop .merely talking about the stu.

eace movement, it is time to do 'somebout it. President Kennedy has told usnot 'what our country can do for us,ther what we can do for our country.st we must ask what our country is-and it certainly seems that we are onid to war, that a continued arms raceaintain neither peace nor freedom."

Rallies Publicize WalkThe second problem, certain-

ly at least as important as thenotification of peace groups,was the publicization of theWalk on the campus and locallevel among individuals, bothmembers and non-members ofthe peace groups.

,T1his essential job was acoom-plished by means of rallies,meetings, lectures-really, any-thing that would,attract peopleinterested in possible action forpeace and disarmament. Har.Vard's Tocsin held. a huge rallyduwring December, MIT's .RADP1had one featuring speaker Prof.Charles Coryell January 17, andsimilar meetings were staged at' .. other colleges. ,

. The full publici~ty apparatusof Turn Toward Peace, SANE,and the many other nationalgroups have been employed inpublicizing these meetings and,of course, the Walk itself.

2The third sub-problem is acontinuing one: that of keepingm'nformed any and all people whoindicate an interest in comingon the Walk. If' contact is notre-established and' maintainedwith students who show inter-est, they are likely t "forgetlabout the Walk, lose enthusi.asm, make other plans, or insome other way drop out of thepicture.

California Sends PlaneloadAt tihis stage the nuxnbers of

students expected from" eacharea is still indefinite. The larg-est single contribution will befrom New England, 8 or .9 hun-dred, with about 500 comingfrom the Boston area alonie. An.other 7 or 8 hundred will comefronn the midwest, particularlythe Chicago area, Ohio schools,Wi's'sin and Mich-igan.

The University of Chicago,which has been very active inthe project, will send 'aboutthree busloads of students. Anunfortunate conflict with an-other demonstration scheduledat the same time will cut downattendance from the, New Yorkarea, but at least 150 or so areexpected.

The Berkeley campus of theUniversity of California,, aleader in the peace movement,will send a planeload of stu-dents, according to presentplans! An integrated busload ofpeace marchers from Atlanta,Georgia, plan to combine theirWalk effort with a "freedomride" on US Route 40, wherethey will test restaurants forsegregated seatinrg po]icies.

Student interest, in short,seemns to be high, and turnoutof more than 3000 would besignificant,. but in no way sur-prising to the Walk's leadersThe interest would do littlepositive good, however, if ade-quate transportation to Wash-ington were not available, or ifthe cost were prothi4itive formany students.

This problem, involving main-ly footwork anrd phonecaills, hasbeen left to the local coordin-ating committees Most of themincluding the Boston ConumMit-

(Please turn to Page 8)

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Page 3: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

,Coop Management Fe-res Two Parts: One IncorporaBy Tom Maugh '65

(Part II of Three Parts)Although lost year there

were' over 43,000 members inthe Harvard Co-operative Soci-

ety, few ct theam have any ideaof the actual a in whidl it'~ operated. Simce MIT has of-ficia1ly decided to offer thecop Ite pimary mier-handds-

wig area in the new StudcetUuion building, It would be in4he best imterests of the stu-dents to learn more a/bout Rfminacial structure.

Two SocietiesActuagly, there are two dif-

ferenit organizations beamting thesame name, ome incorporatedand tlhe other unaoinpora'ted.'Uhe pco narated body datesfrom 1882 and consists of "aillpersons connected with Har-vard University and RadelaiflfeCollege, who shall sign this(Damstitatim, and shall pay anamnaul fee of one dollair."

This branch of the society isgovmened by a board of direc-tohrs consisting of a president,a seretmary and eight directwrschosen as follows: one ftoi theFaculty of Arpts and Sciences(of Harvaird, as are sill the di-rectors), (re from the Gradu-

te Schoo', one from the LawSchool, one fomn the MeddcalScbhoo, one from the universitysit large, and one fr-om the sen-uior, junir amd sophomoreclasses of the college or scien-tdific schooe.

Members Do LittleAlthouglh it is omceivab1y

possible for then members of thesociety to elect the officers andother diheetors in their ammualOcobeir meeting, it is prma-t4ciMly impossible, for it wouldtake a tnevnerdouly large Mm-

ber of rnembers and few peopleever come to the meetings. Ir-stead, 'the diaectors acre electedby a board of 10 copeative]yclmsen stockholders.

Besi.caflay, tbds portion of thes9ctety has ltt'le function. Hiw-ever, in case tlhe corporatioan isever dissolved, at legail and fi-namidola responslibilaty wiUl reston its sthoullders.

Corporation Most ImportantB3y far the most impportanrt

part of the society is tihe car-poration, wii.,ich conducts thebusiness. Members of the cor-poraiotn f.i-clde "each officeror student or alumnus of Har-vairnd Uiniv:er'silty, the Massa~hu-setts Institute of Teoh-nolog3,.Radtdiiffe College, the Ep-scopalTheological Sohiool, anid su,other personis or conporatanas the dinavectors shall vote."

The corporate body is alsorun by a board of diirectors,· hidh includes: the presidemt,the two vice presidents, clerk,treasurer, amd general counsel,at least one of whidth s;hall bean alumnus of MIT; six d~irec-tors from the officers of alumniof Harvard and two f'rom MIT;one from the senrji class, onefrorm the jun-ior class and oanefrom the sophomore class atHarvawd; and one from the sen-ior class and ome fomn Ute jun-ior class it MIT.

Tmis board manages anli thebusiness of the copoatom, al-though it may delegate theroutime management of thebusiness to am executive com-mittee of the president wnd sixdirector s.

Stockholders Control BoardMhe members of the board

are chosen by the stockholders.These are 10 men who ,'hod the

30 Techmen To Attend Washington Peace WalkAbout 30 MIT students, members and non-members of

the Student Organization for a Rational Approach to Disarm-ament arid Peace, will participate in the Walk in Washingtondemonstrations this Friday and Saturday. According to ArnoldChalfant, recently elected President of RADP, about 18 of the30 will be leaving Thursday night by car or bus to take partin Friday's activities. Fifteen are now plannng to see Con-gressmren personally.

One of the members of the Boston Coordinating Commit-tee, originators of the Walk and principal authors of its pol-icy, is Tech grad student Michael Appleby. -Others, includingChalfant, have been involved in the activities of Turn TowardPeace, whose organization in the Boston area precipitated theBoston Committee.

eapitafl stock of the society, sub-ject to trust provisicins amd tothe termin of the by.-4laws. TestockToPlderi serve five yearterms, arid are dhosen by theremainxmg stocekholders. Thestockho]de'r s also have the pow-er to ap&(Ly to the courts at anyti'ame for the dissolution of thesociety, or to maike anmy changesin the by-..qaws, "except that no

manner whticoh sahll after therelatiomis between this corpoira-tJio,- the Harvard Co-opera-tiveSociety, and the undieorporatedsoiety . .

The president, who i~s ohargedwith the general oversigh-t ofthe cxrpor~atio4, is ailso thepresident of the unincorporatedbody. The board of directorsame respmlsiible for the actuaa

chamige may be made in this operati-o of the business, but

Teveth To Speak On Israel

Shabfal Teveth

"Parliamentary Democracy inIsrael" is the topic to be dis-cussed by Shabtai Teveth, anoted Israel5 journalist and lec-turer, tomorrow evening, Thurs-day, February 15, at 7:30 inthe Library Lounge, 14E-310.

Mr. Teveth, an astute ob-server of the Israeli scene, haswritten many research articlesand several books in the social-political field. HIe has traveledwidely as a reporter in Africaand Europe.

As a native Israeli, however,he is primarily interested in hiscountry's development in thesocial, political, and economicspheres, and in how her exper-ience can be applied to thegrowth of the emerging coun-tries of Asia and Africa.

,ted. One, Not m

this task is gene'raly left tothe gene-al manager, lho is '1hired by the board.

Students On BoardAlthough there awe five stu-

demnts on the board, iin praticethey hav.e ]little power. abey ma, re, In essence, liaisons to the C0board froan heir respective sty-dent bodies. Thus, if any S'tu-dent of MIT has any oomd~ladnrtcr suggestion in rega'd to the <

Coop, he should sce one of ourrepresentatives, G. M. Wymam m'62 or E. A. Wormack '63. -

ThePe is no one, true deffini-tion of what a coopeirative is,so it is hard to say dcf.initelyw'helthe-r or not the socoely is a c'-co-operative in the strictest "o

sense. Hovevewr, it i~s clearly aco-operative in that it f.eely al- -

lows person 5 in certaln groUfps .to belong on the payment of asmall fee, and it permits them eto buy goods at market prices, con which patronage refund 5 ordividends are regularly peaddonce a yearr. On the other hand,flhe society is not so st:rictly aco-operative in tihlalt its salesare not for caislh only, tIhat Mhedemnocratic votin-g feature isheld in reserve and is not usedin practice, and in that i't sellsto non-members as well as 1omemihbers. Thus. it is hard topla-ce the Coop in any one par-tiuullar class.

Maser Demonsfrated At Lincoln Lecture(Continued from Page 1)

quency electic energy, it woualdbe possible to maintain a ma-jority of the orbital eleetonsin aim .exRted stacte, so as topermit negarive absoorption, oramplification, of energy at asngle frequency.

When Dr. Tcwnes set ouatwd,th hs students -to producethis unusuaa molecular amplifierhe was advised by his friendsanid colleagues that, his ideawas unworkable and inmractii-cail. But Dr. Townes persistedwith (has characteris¢ic single-mess of purpose and succeededin prolucfng an ammona-gasoperrated device in 1954 whichcould .arngify sgnamls a-t onefrequeney .amd could operate asan extmaordinarily stable osdfl-ulator at dtha frequency.

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Dr. Townes recounted thestory of his sabba.tcajl leave inParis -in 1955. Having decidedthat he needed a fresh appr'oachto make further advances inmaser techonology, he wats look-ing about for some new en-

deavors to interesit him, whensome French assooiates toldhim of work tfhat t'hey were do-inig with pararnagnetic german-iumn materials. Dr. Townes sawthat the germanium would per-mit him to -build masers thatwould be tanable, a consider-able imProvement over thefixed frequency ammonia pro-totype.

Following Dr. Townes' sug-gestion on t1his subject, B'lum-bergen at Harvard got the ideafor a three ene~gy, level, soliddtate, paramagnetic maser andproduoed one in 1956. The nextstep in the development of themaser occurred in 1958 whenDr. Tomnes and hds colleague,Dr. A. L. ShawJow, showed the-oretieally that mnaisers can bemade to operate in the opticaland inrared region, and indii-cated how to build such devices.The optical nmaser was made

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praceticable by the use of a syi-thebtic ruby stand'ing wavechamber (suggested by Kikuchi

of the U-niversity of Michigan)with specially sive/ed mirrosat eitther end, excited by amercury-vapor lamp mounitedconcen tirically to the ruby rod.MI.sor Demonstrated On Stage

Dr. Townes demonvs:tTrated apul,sed, light operated maser onthe stage, and produced ten-watt-second flashes of mono-chroma.tic green ligiht on asoreen before the aud;.ence. Hieused tinds demonstration as astarr-ting point for a diseussionof th future of "lasers" incommunications network and inthe bran;simisson of poweracross great disftances. Becausethe monodhiomattic light, signalsare built up by selective reflec-tions in one direction, froamparallel mniarrors, t'.e -re:sulItimgoutput signal is almost a l~,anewave. In addition to iuts proper.ties of coherence, lo'ng teaamstability and ready controlla-billity, its light beam has amangular divergence, given bythe ratio of the 1,ight wave-length to, tlhe laseTr aperture,that is in the neeighborhood of10exp-40 ra dians. Net only thatbut, by u's.],ng optical system-slike those in te-escopes, thebeam can be ccllimated to pfro-duce even sm'aller divergences.Thus, when such a beam is fo-culsed onto a sipot by a magndify-ing glass, tha.t spot is n.ot muchlarger across lhan a waveilengthof ligtht, a-nd has a great dealof energy ccmnppe:ssed in it.

Measures Speed Of LightThe origined maser was so

stable that it was used tocheck the Miohelson-Morley ex-peniment, on the speed of Eight,and the new lasers are beingused for even more in-terestingpurposes. For example, laserscan be used to produce harmon-ics of their beam frequenciesby turning them onto non-linear di-electrics like quamtz,so as to produce blue light froma beam of red light. Dr. Townesspole of the pos~sibifliy of di-rect measurement of the fre-quercy of a light source byusimg the non-linear propertiesof photocells adid heterodyuemeasuring m e t h o d s wirth astandatrd frequency laser. "Thenext problem," he said casually,"is to find an absolute measumeof time."

As Dr. Tow.nes advised theelecbric-l enrgineers and physi-Oists awed by the huge field otresearcii opene4 to them, "Whyworry if this be eleotrN.ics;just makex the most of it!"

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Page 4: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

h. - T

The 'Tech$' n

Vol. LXXXII No. 2 Feb. 14, 1962Chaitrman ................ Thomas Brydges '62Manraging Editor ................ o....... Joseph Hanlon '63Busilness Mlanager ................ ;. Joseph Kirk '64Y;ditor ............... men 'om..ck '63Feaftures Editor ....... ; Toby Zidle '63

Office Hours: Monday. 11-12; Tuesday. 11-12, 2-4; Wed-nesday. lt-12. 2-4; Thursday. 10-11, 2-4; Friday, 11-12, 1-3.

Unsigned editorials arpearing in TIlEF TECH constitutethe opinion of the newspraper's Board of Directors, and notthtf of MIT. The newspaper 'welcomes letters from itsreaders. Space -permitting, such letters will be printed inwhole or in part, if deermed by the editor to be of sufficientInterest or benefit to the cormnunity. Brevity increases the0hance of publicatio0. Anonymous.letters will not be printedNam's will be withheld uponfi request.

Student Gov.- and the UAP

IW - e quote to purpose when we say:

- "It would be funny were it not so tragic."At the time of 'this writing only three

- :plple have announced their candidacy:; theJ Undergraduat Association Presi-

dency and already one of them has with-drawn.' It 'is tragic because the student gov-

enment at MIT deserves a better fate.In a year marked by the decline or fallof student governing bodies on the cam-.puses of several major colleges, Columbia-and Brown the most notable, our Insti-tuite Committee and as'ciated bodieshave managed their affairs reasonablywell and have significantly expanded thearea of student-administration relations.While we, as always, believe that thereis a great deal of room for improvement,we certainly feel they have proved theyhave definite reasons for existence.

Given such a viable situation, it fol-lows that any person who assumes the

-office of UAP can hope to accomplishsomething far more meaningful thanthat offered by the usual interpretationof student council president. If only be-cause he has a significant amount ofpower, he can make the job more thana time consuming filler for a graduateschool record, if he chooses. That onlytwo people should want the job, is, then,a dangerous reflection on not only a lackof interest but a lack of understanding

'of what is really being offered.This is not to say that we encourage

every office seeker to run. Clear'y wecannot, for the job is far too difficultfor many. The UAP's duties are not welldefined, the office is completely dominat-ed by its holder. If he wishes to be effec-tive, he must bring to the office not onlyleadership ability, but new ideas and ini-tiative and a determination to carrytiaough his ideas. He must be ready toutilize to the fullest the abilities of thepeople who serve under him on the In-stitute Cmmittee, but to realize thattheir interests are by nature somewhatparocmehial, and to include this in his pol-icy making. In the end it is he who mustact as the visionary for student govern-ment for he is the only person with theoverall view. He must be able to attachrelative importance to the activities bothof himself and his committee, and not toencumber himself wifth extraneous jobswhile important work goes undone. Lastof all he must be available; his lines ofcommunication must be set up with care

-so that the views he- represents are theviews of his constituents, and not merelyof his immediate friends. The person wholooks carefully at tis list of requisitescan see the failures of past UAP's. Heshould profit by them. We encouragecareful consideration of the office by theentire undergraduate population in thehope that it will produce a field of candi-dates, each of whom is capable of. exntding the quality of leadership necessary ifthe position of the student is to advancein the obming year.

Student EnterpriseThe Institute Committee has been

spending a great deal of time recentlyworryng about the problem of studententrepreneurs and entrepreneurs in general operating within the MIT community. This discussion'was.an outgrowth the tangle of problems. created by .theTechnology Student Calendar, a privately distributed weekly. The Institute mCornmittee, at least in part, seems to exhibita very hostile' attitude toward operationswhose purpose is to turn a profit. ]t i.not clear why this attitude exists, but itis a dangerous stand to take and the corn-inittee should be very careful to see thatit does not prejudice their future discui;sions. The problem -is not straightfor-ward, it involves not only the regulatiLvhof those commercial organizations. whi'ihexist to sell to MIT, but the problems ofpaid officers in activities and' the 'settingof prices for MIT subsidized events.While iri some areas MIT has been a com-mercial void, there have always beenthose areas like the distribution of newsmedia in which the competition waskeen. Affecting the Institute Commnitteemost directly, though, are those groupswhose operations overlap with sevicesperformed by student-run activities. Ithas always been policy to exert 'whatevercontrol it could whenever it was felt ne-cessary. But now an attempt has, beenmade to find out exactly what the pre-rogatives of Student Government are inthis field and how they can be made moreeffective.

Before Inscomm can establish thecontrol it wants and needs over these or-ganizations, it must assume a less biasedattitude toward the problemn. In conflictsof interest between student aotivities andstudent enterprise for instance, the Ac-tivities Council is valueless, because itinvaiably represents the o pions of themajor student activities, and has enoughtrouble solving disputes within its ownframew k. Are we forced, then, to goto the Institute Committee each timesomething irregular occurs in this line?Harvard's rather drastic solution to theproblem probably would not work here.But something needs to be done. Thereseems to be a need for a committee ofstudents, some of whom represent bothsides of the question, to make a studyand proposal on tis matter. The com-mittee should be relatively separatedfrom present stadent government struc-tures, so that the' merits of bofh sidescould be viewed in perspective. If thecomrmittee feels that it cold fuhction asthe controlling organizatio, then itshould do so with relative freedom. Oth-erwise we fear an endless hassle, which,if not damaging, would at least be. p-ductive.

LSC, proTo set the reoord straight, we feel

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that the much maligned Lectue SeriesCommittee should receive some words ofpraise for the recently published fim ser-ies schedules. It seems to us that thequality of both the Entertainment andthe Classic Series, especially the former,has improved considerably since the lastterm. Because this organization is at-tempting to represent the world of lec-tures and entertainment to MIT, things

of very public domain, it has come underfire several times diring the past. Westill believe that, there is room for im-

tprovement, a d t the LSC shouldcar flly for serious suggestions

without de.eloping a. pesuion com-plex, but steps are being taken in theright direction, and this is progres to bevalued.

-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t Letters To The Teeh ....Boiwmnan Announees C.ou.I.l hairman, APO presi-

IUAP Candidacy dent, and presint of my fa-To the Editor: .e in tlse ptsdiins I

I vsh 'to aaoue myself as hame had i, op-ortuity to testa oandidiate for the office of VaTo-u thnqmes of orgaiza-UAP and pleoge mi f % to'fW ti6n and leadeip and an op1fila thle fol"i'"g objetivej- in pcntUnIty to have a great dealthe best pos manner: of oontact with the ak]inistia.

1. Active tadersip of the ttio I would Hlie to bring to.stitute Commitntee;. The UAP the job of UAP my expeec

should be a soure' of ideas. en- to Serve the stuent body.couagement, orgarfizational It - is,-my thope that. Instituteknow-how, and drvig force to Oomnmnitee will become a mor?the institute Oomni..iee. 'ficient urt, V ith. the sub

2. Liaison wi..h .ffie MrIT conmmitees being held moretacaity. a"d- admi' tr't-ion: As 'responsilble to tibe' maiin - odyspokesmai for i;e tiitbte and the Seorebairiat giyen m.re:ommttee, the A.1p,8 . t pre- dutis to 'serve as a means tosent the new ideas if insoomm buid more-inteest in partiopaL.and negotiate in tfie event of tion in s!tdt government ao-wwhich the students feel are not 1Aviti6si i under0cla1eni.,' -to their benefit. When 'he pre- Henry Bowman '63sents new ideas he must be en-tusliastic; when he negotiates, Levy Withdravwshe must p '.sent .as' maxiy as From A Raepossble altermatives as possible To tile Editor: to neek compromise. In all cas- In reference to your axiclees, he must be realistic, pre- of February 7 on the ampaignciese, lucid. dplomnatic and well- for Undeifgraduabe Asociation{inlomed. - - Psident, I.wish to oorreot one

3. The student boty- must be point: I 'am not now and wil'kept wel inforned a't alq times': nOt be a oanrdiale for the office.The Tech has vowed a more I appreciate both your efforts

ppwe .sanwu aLp0 oq; oqa clBm. to dheok the story and the rea-aggressfive policy in ths ara; sans for the mnistake. ere wasI ha cooperate in every way a long period of time enom-vith it, and to supplement ths pasaing the second haff of lasteffort, I shaill. thave 'mai tted 't termn during wvih I tked,everyr mac aiminm-and ftAe- ddre d, and in every other waynity presidevt oopes of the Ins- acted as an amounced oandi-oomma' nxinutes and agendas. date for the position, of UAP. It

I have served as Aetviities (Please tunm to Page 8)

-------- -- ----- - -- -. -ftibitzer- "'1

The featre of 'Wds deal is tlihe NORTH niporbanoe of usimg the bid- 4 A 6 4

dbtrg in sieeotinmg an opening . ' Alead. Before West oaeIesly- * K 8 5 3

II,'" down the "imife" kinxg of Q J 8 7 5heats, he sOuid aonskler.wtaiviaus his paatnei must Ihave WEST (D) EASTfor the double and what tihe J 2 410- 9 8 3key point of the and whi be. I KQJ109 52 V 4

In vuew of I oue bid by 10 2 . AQJ976 North it would seem unlikely 4lhat Eat ouodbeoomtingon 4l 6 4 10any heart tiCks in hs cdoWe.East must then have a sting SOUTholding in at least mone of the 4 K Q 7 5rrftom-Ohewie he woldn't 8 7 6 3have a dbae. Tin add. o t othis partner must hold either A K 9 3 2bop -itclts or some length in

tamnps. Neither North or South Bikiing:haivame bid Spades at *hlr first West North East Southchace; they have at most 2V P P 34eightt tmrmps between t-en. P 3V P 34Furtiew the biddiing tedls dt P 44 D Adl passSouthl has at least ninme oads. -in clubs and spades' a tat if West opens he ten of da-North has some kind of oontbral mdLs, the defense gaisa tem,in erats. What do you lead P in the attack of declarer'snow? .. trumps and eventuay set the

it seems t me hat Wrest ha " hand. A more nteresing playwo lines of attack. He oan try oeours wen tie eiglht ad nine

to get a ruff in one of the minor cf m s re exchaged.suits and ount on East's safe South eover .the ten with cdum-tricks r he cam t to start mns king and rffs in his ad.an attack oan Sout's trump Then he drws two rounds ofhohiing a8d fhs esta b i pafrt- t'ip, plays a heart to the

get's n 'rius. Tte dali board and mretuans a club. Telead'tlflfdS tO 'te b~tsP~)1. IStis vWith South hav-lead .tms out to be tfe best, posMi' is ~is ts ou tm.r-

ad is actuatly farly Safe. For ing the fit five t.ils.if Partner h1as no tOp trichkhee he must hbve them in ~b4SoUh's clubs and ie wfil, always r

hae tie to get m Obseve 9 5 3the difference in resruits bJe- 8 7ween e king of heoart operag (ti-s attacks declae's trmp WEST

toling, but m the shirt sa/t) WEST EAST4 10 9'and the ten of diamonds dhoioe. f K Q J1O9x t

WIth the "safe" heart open- x * Q J x x xxing declarer balkes th aoe, e- 4 x 4 turns to hs hand with a club.and ts a low heamt (if part- SOUDer overruffs, he shrtem hds 4 Qt -umps to three allowing de- V 8 7 6clarer to draw trmp and caL_ ten tricks inneieately). Now 4 A 9 3 2he takes the ace of trumps andleads a kw one to .is hand, South leads a low heart anddrawing a third round of trump trurnps it hin dunmmby. Est haswith the queen. Now South can no dhcoice but t ovetrumnp andplay on is clubs. foring East lead a high dimod. Southto set up his last trump oc give trumpgs, and leads diS; astdeclarer a/ the, club .tricks. So ean trmp :n when he likes andSo4th 'takes the' ae and a ruff' cash a -high dIamond0:ibut duLm-in hearts, foux tramps and four my's nine of diar.onds is -nowclubs or thbee trumps and five a bopper arnd thfe' hndi. over.clubs making f)our spades The. defense takes only twodoubled. ruffs and a high diamond.

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Page 5: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

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From the placards on the tables in thedining halls to the write-up in Preview, fromthe propaganda sheets and "Young Social-ist's" (a left-wing newspaper) being handedout at the door ta the carefully constructedquestions and lists of facts, last Wednesday'sspeech by Eric Johnston had the taint of acircus atmosphere in which a large numberof the audience had undoubtedly turned outwith the hopes of seeing Mr. Johnston thrownto the lions of the Civil Rights Committee.

However, any who bore such hopes wereleft with their desires unfulfilled as Mr.Johnston, public relations director for thestate of Mississippi, became blandly non-committal on most of the major issues athand, thus leaving the CRC, which sponsoredthe speech, little opportunity to embarrassor corner him. By his own admission, Mr.Johnston, was in a tight spot to begin with,defending segregation before a Northernaudience, but the consensus of opinion wasthat he handled himself remarkably well.

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When a new telephone building goes up in his area, DonMcCahan will be found right in the center of activity. It'sDon's responsibility to work closely with the architects indeveloping blueprints, also to follow up to be sure con-struction meets specifications. A lot of responsibility fora young engineer just two years out of college, but a lot of

satisfaction, too. Because Don knows that his contrlead to better telephone service for his communil

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Southerner To Kresge

"We have our problems in Mississippi,and we have been wrong in the past, butcan't every state say the same?" This wasessentially the method Mr. Johnston used tomollify and control the audience, along withseveral totally unrelated'anecdotes and pleasof "Please eat more chicken!" (relating tohis home town's poultry industry, which can"produce 850,000 chickens per week").

From an objective viewpoint, neither sidemade many significaant points during thediscussion. Two of Mr. Johnston's main pointsappeared to be: after the Civil War Missis-sippi was governed mostly by the Negropopulation, and, since they didn't integratethe schools and universities then, but ratherestablished separate schools for the colored,they obviously didn't desire integration; and,regarding the Supreme Court's recent inter-pretation of the 14th amendment with regardto integration, Mr. Johnston pointed out that

tVhe same congress, which hadpassed the amendmenot had also

'6, e~estrabldsahed the system of sege-*C. gated school s in Wasfhington. D.

IISHING C., thlus showing that they musthave had a different interpae-E STREET tation of the law.

tion of whether he didn't thiinkthat tlhe SUpreme Corut judgeswere more capable of }udgijngthe matter thhaln tlhe admit.tedlyless literate Southerners, Mr.JOhnston poinoted out tMhat theCOouwt had five t'imes issued averdict enabling the states to

'ibutions oont.rol their own sehools beforetheir reversal of the decision inty. 1954. AMorecor, 'he found i¢t ne-of Penn- oesa,ry to repeatedly mesntdonl in Bell , the fact tJhat slavle-trad'ing hbdIp make 'been begun and carried out byLd. New Enmglarnders. (Actually, al-

'tlhough they did begin it, theyBonn gave up slaves far moreN I ES profitable cargo, aand the slavetraffic was calried on la rgelyby the Solujtherners anlw theEng;lish).

Th:::e CRC's main points ien tlheq'ues.t'ioins they profer'red iianvolv-

::::. : : iing the voting rights of thesouthelrn negroes, Mr. Johns-ton's idean on equality of race,and what will happen when(and if) total ilntegmationl iseventually forced in MississippLiMr. Johnston, however, ski1-fully managed to evade thepoints, evidently not caring totread oan dangerous grounds.T'hus, the Committee actuallywon their point, although theywere not able to press it.

The lectlure brouglht variedreaetions around the camnpus.One senior pointed out tlhe factthlat slince Mlr. Jolhnston hlald nophitlosophicajl doctrine to base'his argu'men.ts ona, he shad to sutp-port his beliefs by the customsof hls state. Since his aud!iencehad a different set of custoanshis argumnenlts were ianeffeetivein con'vincindg them.

Otlhers in the audien-ce (whichfilledd nearly two-thilrds of

............. Kresge) seemed to considereverything the sipealkear s-aidcompletely wrong and voifer-ously objected 'to moany of hisstatements, thus showing notonly lack of opensmindledness,buvt also of good manlners.

To. morrow nlight, James Lar-mer, tlhe national dilrector ofthe Congress of Raciall EquMaltyis schedduled to give a rebutt;al,spea.king on a non-violent; ap-.... ach to t.he problems of racerelatioins. Since thelre its littleMardi Gras atmosphere atten-dea-rt to hlis speech, we dou.bt ifit wi.l1 have a very lairge altten,-daince. However. you may lookfor a review of it i!n next week'spaper, irn add'ition to a sumnma-tion of the two antiethiicja view-

w | R11 points.

Samuel Bluestein Co.School-Engineering SuppliesAsk About Student Discount

1080 Boylston St., BostonCO 7-1 102

345 Main St., MaldenDA 2-2?I15e-UILC*-CIICIII ~- LIIULLU i

Segregationisf Evades CRC QueriesBy Tom Maugh '65

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Page 6: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

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Page 7: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

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Two Tech GraduatesIn Peace Corp; Now InColumbia, Tanganyika-Peter Franklin, '57 and Ron-

aid Atwater, '60, two studentswho. did their undergraduatework at MIT, are participatingin Peace Corps projects.

Franklin, of New Yo2-k City,was an assistant engineer inmissile development with theSperry GyrosOpe Co. He is nowon a project in Tanganayika.

Atwater, of Los Angeles,worked as construction engin-eer in liis, He seas Stpan-ish fluently, has traveled inLatin America, and is now witha project in Clolrbia.

i'-~ ~ . :.~ ~' -::; ; 3.:;¢' By Toby Zidle '63 :. '

Cdotlee Caltech Modifies Take-Home Labs; ·tvpld In Competition With Burtonites.. o .;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!

Try as we might, we seem unable to getaway from taking articles from The Califor-nia Tech (Caltech). Our one consolation isthat they periodically reprint editorials fromThe Tedi. A particulawr column, "Brewvrins",written by "Beak", seems to come up witha majority of reprintable stories. Beak hasreported on the Caltech version of the .MITtake-home labs.

"Pass the Bit.ter""Reports trickle to Beak on escapade of

unnamed House over disgraceful outside-classexperimentation. Latest indications shoxw thatapproximately 500 slices of good (?) bread.fresh from Saga staler, were coated with the

high-priced spread and released fromn aheight, subject only to laws of gravity. Pur-pose of experiment ·was to determine thetruth of old adage (invented by Beak in 1933)that bread subjected to treatment describedabove will tend to contact surface over whichit is released with coated face. No quantita-tiv- lesults are ava,ilable.'

The following story from "Brewins" isreprinted without editorial coV1mment. exceptthat the title is Beak's.

"Never Trust a Cop""Tech Ossifer Fig has learned to his dtis-

may that one should remain alert when incompany of

From pre-history to the present and on into tile future, man las sought betterand nore precise methods of measurement. Each advance in metrology-

the science of measurement-has brought corresponding gains in othertechmiologies--chemisty, metallurgy, electronics, physics, space/aeronautics,

XToday the bold technologicadreanis'of yesterday are becoming realities.The Keuffel and Esser Company has made and will continue to makeimportant contributions to these achievements by meeting thegrowing metrological needs of our scientific age., :a

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS NOW EXIST FOR:. ;,2 , _7r

OPTICAL ENGINEERSShould possess a BS. or M.S. in Physics or

I Engineering. A backgrournd itn electronicswill be mos helpful. ,,.

MECHANICAL ENGINEER (8S, MS. Ph.O) 'For design of specialized engineeringequipment and application of theoreticalprindples and fundamental physical andchemical properties of material to equip.anent fabrication. Will require' amiliarity'with properties of materials, metal treat-ments, die casting technique.

PHYSICIST 'RB.S or graduate degree witl a major iInoptics, WTork involves research and devel-opment on optical systems,' instruments,¢omponents, optical films, reticles andelectronic-optical instruments.

ELECTRONICS ENGINEER (BSEE)'Will assist with drcuit design and relatedwork on newly developed instruments.

MATHEMATICIAN (BS or MS in Math)Frogramning experience desirable.

' 'w, -

ORGANIC, PHYSICAL ORPHOTOGRAPHIC CHEMIST (BS, MS or Ph.D)with interest in physical, chemical and or-ganic chemical reactions in' photographicsystems to study relationship of intcrmnedi-ates such as base support, coa ting materials,and gelatin subbing systems to final photo-graphic quality. ,

ANALYTICAL CHEMIST (Ph.D or equivalent)writh strong background in Analytical orPhysical Chemistry to develop and applyAnalytical Miethods of analysis for complexorganic resin systems.

Also Additional Openings For:

AQUEOUS COATINGS CHEMIST(Ph.D or equivalent)

PHYSICISTS (MS or Ph.D)For £lctro Photograpic Applications

Pasadena Protectors. Our braveBrooklyn lieutenant was idelyI convers-ing with boys in blue,who were guarding money inCuthbertson on registrationday, when he suddenly foundthat his ow-n handcuffs were

ifirmly fastened one end to hisleft wrist, the other to his belt.His outcries were silenced whenit was pointed out that he wasout of u11forll. Coser inspec-tion re-veals that the badge ofFig has disappeared. Beak leftbefore alreadyl blue-iinged airbccame larker."

Examinatiion of a "Brewins"colhunn inl another (';liforniaTech discloses an item rathelpertinent to MIT. Here againtitle and parenlthetical con-mI ents are IBeak's. The form let-ter is but. a -well-modified ver-sion of "MIIT Form RTU-4-t39-2"vhich appeared in '"The 3mu tonHouse Reflnctor."

"Wfe ;Get Letters ... "'Through Drubney Ilsuse's

sources. Beak Iinds thal oneAMiss Chccyl Smlith, of 2f(;4 S.W\. 42nd St.. Oklah oma Cily,Oklahoma, .sent a letlerl t1((ugh! ) AMIT asking for a pencilpal. She said '...all the 1)oor0boys at -MIT are so desperatefor a girl lo \write to ... I wouldcertainly like to v olunteer 1mx'services ... for nmutlual g;tin aswell as personal profit...

'A"MIT (ugh') reaction wassoon followed by reactions atH'arvahd, Columbia. Yale, Dart-mouth, Princeton. Brandeis.Cornell, Stanford. . . Proposedform letter is to be sent toabovementioned Nwench. in man-ner of other colleges. Sourcesreveal that forni letteris miay beavailable in Houses shortly.Beak advises that: it would bebest not to try and wait, how-ever. Note thllat Cheryl's hair isbrown. Letter folm is at right."Dearest -,

"Ah, what a lovely name. Iknew wrhen I first heard it thalyou must truly be an angel. Buthow can you sacrifice yourselfto the heartless automatons ofMIT when at the California In-stitute of Te&hnology there arelost souls like myself--wander-ing, wandering, w\ancierin,,

Oh, my dear --- , my verybeing aches for you: to see you,to hear you. to ripple my long-ing fingers through your soft

hair, to kiss your lovely,tender, wine-red lips. I cannoteat; I cannot sleep; I cannot domath problems; I lie awake andCr'y your nanme into the unsym-pathetic night.

"O'h, m, my far-away love,if otly you were here xwith me,to hold my hand and perhaps

ye., ves, perhaps to say youlove me as I love you, I know

'I could stop drinking. Oh,please, please, my perfect love,send me your picture, I will

t cherish it, guard it, treasure it,even paste it; in my Handbookof Chemistry and Physics.

I "Oh, if only yo 5s would, lThen-t-hen I know I could find somesmnall bit of true happiness.

'Your infinite lover,House

California IrLstituteof Technology

Pasadena. California"

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Wrell, Burton men and( otlherswho wrote to Cllheryl. it looksas if you'll have some competi-tion.

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February 28

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Page 8: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

NEW ENGIIAND ELECTRIC SYSTEM IIS TRAINING TODAY-

THE LEADERS OF TOMORROW

A representative will be oncampus to discuss how youmight fit into the age of atomicpower.

MAKE A DATE NOW!Why not see your placementdirector for career guidanceand more information aboutNew England Electric System?

INTERVIEWER: Robert 0. Bigelow

DATE: Wednesday, February 14

NEW ENGLAND ELECTRIC SYSTEM441 STUART ST. BOSTON, MASS.

BY LLP 1 I a

NORTHROP IS COMING

Representatives fromNORAIR-NORTRONICS

will visit the campusFEBRUARY 26 & 27

to discuss career opportunities in theLos Angeles area. Visit the EngineeringPlacement Office immediately and sign an

appointment sheet.

WONfHROP CORPORATION, BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA

OIVISIONSt NORAIR, NORTRONICS, RAOIOPLA4N

Walkers Hold Rally

FBI Investigate(Confinued from Page 2)

tee, will rely mainly on char-tered buses whose cost is with-in the means of most (e.g., theround trip from Boston will cost$15), and can be subsidizedfrom general funds in the casesof students without the money.

Officials To Be VisitedGetting students to and from

Washingt6n is important, butwhat they do while there is,naturally, the whole point ofthe Walk in Washington. Onlya fraction of the participantswill be coming for the activitieson Friday, February 16, whichinclude 'visits. to Congressmen,picketing of the White House-and Russian embassy, and asmall rally in the afternoon atwhich student leaders willspeak.

Other prominenet Washiingtongroups which will be contactedeither Friday or Saturday arethe offices of the National As-sociation of Manufacturers andnational civic groups, many for-eign embassies, top officials inthe State Department and theUS Arms Control and Disarm-ament Agency, and, hopefully,President Kennedy -himself orhis top advisers..

Appointments with Congress-men and other officials havebeen made by the Boston Co-ordinating Committee, whichwrote to all Senators and Rep-resentatives during last Decem-ber, and by the Washingtoncommittee.

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If you are under age 39 you are eligi-ble to apply for $25,000 of SavingsBank Life Insurance protection forless than $100 a year, average netpayment for 5 years. (The youngeryou are the less it costs.) You canget any smaller amount of protec-tion at the same low cost per thou-sand! Ages 15 to 60 - in amountsfrom $1,000 up. Ask for the folder.

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Kenneidy-Visit Likely

,s, Gives Walk Clean Bill of HealthAlthough few Congressmen

gave definite appointments onthe first try, most expressedwililngness to see Walk repre-sentatives providing they hadtiirme available and were con-ta;cted a few days beforehand,Several of them refused out-right to see anyone from theWalk, a symptom of the atti-tude which the Walk will at-tempt to combat.

Saturday Features MarchMost of the Walk in Wash-

ington participants will departFriday evening in time to ar-rive for the mass demonstra-tions during the day Saturday.These will include large-scalepicketing at the White House,the "walk" itself through thestreets of Washington (whichhas been approved by the citypolice provided there is no riot-ing), and a large rally to followthe walk in the afternoon.

Norman Thomas and EmilMazey will be the principalspeakers, augmented perhaps byMartin Luther King, Leo Szil-lard, and/or Hans Bethe. Inaddition, the Walk student lead-ers will address the rally andhope to have a prominent Con-gressman present.

Adults have actively partici-pated in the Walk from its be-ginning, largely by obtainingmuch - needed financial andmoral support. Transportation,phone calls,. printing costs, andso forth have added up to pushthe Walk budget toward thefive-figure mark, necessitabingappeals to sympathetic facultymembers and other sponsors ofthe adult peace movement.

Students at the University ofChicago have raised money fortransportation themselves byselling cookies and applesaround their campus. In manyareas students sympathizingbut unable to come to Wash-ington have generously donatedtheir money and time duringthe past weeks.

Sympathizers See VolpeMoral support for the Walk

is being sought in two mainforms: endorsements and sym-pathy demonstrations. Promin-ent endorsees so far have inm-cluded Eleanor Roosevelt, Sey-

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Ma '. V.D.' pamOt m ust Cme t SSe- or return for immediate reound

CoOP*Reg. U.S. Pat. Off. and forein countries

mur Melmnan, Jules Feiffer,James R. Newman, David Reis-man, Hudson Hoagland, andNorman Cousins. Editorial sup-port has been obtained fromnThe New York Post, and cover-age of the demonstration is ex-pected in Reporter, Nation, andpossibly other magazines.

Sympathy demonstrations, avital part of the Walk project,have been staged for Friday inBoston by Voice of Women andTurn Toward Peace, in Berke-ley by a large group of studentsand adults, and by several largelabor unions. The Boston dem-onstration will involve picket-ing before the State House,visits by leaders with CGov.Volpe, and the wearing of spe-cial blue armbands by partici-pants in support of the students.

Obviously, the Walk in Wash-ington will face strong opposi-tion from many quarters andthe danger of being labelled assubversive. One incident of thisnature has already occurred,but the peace walk emergedfrom it with a clean bill ofhealth.

A University of Maryla.ndDean of Women became alarm-ed when one of her chargesstarted organizing a contingentfor the Walk. She notified theFBI, but the results of a briefinvestigation showed no Com-munist influence in the move-ment; the Walk has laughinglyadvertised itself since then as"the first and only Grade A,Government-approved and FBI-inspected peace march."

Positive FunctionNow, as the last-minute prob-

lems of the Walk in Washing-ton begin to dissolve in the faceof sheer will-power, the all-important question arises: "Justwhat will the Walk accom-plish ?"

The hopes of most partici-pants are high but all realizethe problem to be so large andso complex that any action,however impressive, can only bea small first step. Commentedone of the Boston Committeemembers, 'The direct effects ofthe Walk may be nil, but it stiLlserves a positive function inbringing concerned people to-gethler in action, and by en-larging public awareness of thepresent danger."

The effects of the demonstra-tion, major and minor, will beanalyzed next week in TheTech, and this series will con-clude with a discussion of pos-sible follow-up activities to beplanned by Walk participantsand sympathizers at MIT andother colleges across the nation.

Letters:(Coninzed fromn Page 4)

has onlmy been during the laittwo weeks that I have realizedthat above all else, the UAP isexpected to gi ve bo his officevast anmounts of tnime; far moretime than I feel I can real:Isi-cally offer.

I wish to sincerely apologizefor hoe confusion which my im-decision has caused and thankyou for the unsolicited publlic-iLy. lit felt very nice.

Franrk Levy '63

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TEMPEST- IN A TEA PORT

Feb. 22-23-24March 2-3Tickets on Sale

In Bldg. 10

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Page 9: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

1. 7.

'Last Angry Man' At LSC.. I- 'Tha ,,sl Iaj,,, h8 !e Cn,,k:l..l· i: t PRe.,,,,. o''The Last Angry Man, i' a moving drama of a doctor's

life, will be shown at the Lecture Series Committee's entertain-ment film series this week. The film stars Paul Muni, DavidWayne, Betsy Palmer, Luther Adler, and Joanna Moore, andis possibly the best drama of this terrn's series.

Dr., Samuel Abelman (Paul Muni) has been slaving awayfor fi6rty-fiVe years as a' family doctor to poor families andhoodlums in tenement Brooklyn. A chance newspaper itemabout Muni's late night treatmnent of a badly beaten girlattracts the attention of David Wayne, a harried TV executivelooking for a subject for a series to be sponsored by a big drugcompany.,

-Muni at-first refuses -to be glorified on TV, but is finallyper-aided by his lifelong friend (Luther Adler), and Waynesets up plans for a live. show from the doctor's house. Com-plications arise a short time before the show goes on the air,when the doctor is called to attend a young Negro who is in-volved with the police. .

The film will be shown in room 10-250 Saturday night at5:15, 7:30, and 9:45. ,

TECH SHOW '62-TEMPEST IN A TEAPORT

Tickets on sale in Bldg. 10

"" - ' "- M. A. GREENHILL presents '

WORLD'S GREATEST FLAMENCO GUITARIST

JORDAN HLL SABICAS SAT., FEB. 178:30 P.M.

__ -, -,_ , -___ Tickets $3.50, 2.80, 2.20 - KE 6-2412

* uu.- I II;; IU O UUv 11 JUOII; Il ullyglilgl i VI UWlItl1-'Although the four MIT musi-

cal groups did a re 1iate jobin last Friay nigt's moocert,there seemed to be somethinglaehing in ITeir performance.However, part of this was per-haOs due to their dhoice ofmusic rather than to ther play-:rg.

The high spot of the eveairgwars the Concert Bands. ren&i-tioWN ot Peter Menrin's "Can-zone" and Andew Ha2din's"Suite fxxn The Socia d Bea-ve.'" The latter piece, froma motion picture prodiud atMITrr in 1956. appeared to be theonly one where the students headany degree of imnPieaton intheir playiMg, which could wellbe partitlly due to the lack ofattendance at the concert- (only

'about a third of the auditoriumwas filled).

'The other bright moment oc-curred -with the Staring Ordhes-tra's version of "Eitne KleieneNaetermusiik." The group, whichwas seated in the alcove ofKresge, seemed very wela prac-ticed, and did a good job.

The Concert Band gave a pas-sable pelrform ee of Robert

By Tom Maugh '65

The MIT Symphony Orchestra, theMIT Concert Band, the MIT StringOrchestra, and the MIT Brass Choirperformed last Friday, February 9,1962, at 8:30 in Kresge Auditorium.They were conducted by John Corleyand Andrew Kazdin.

Russetl Bennett's "Rose Varita-tqois," in which Kerneth Rahn'62 gave a oornet solo. AlthoughMr. Rashn is obvioulsy a verygood musiician, the sioo partwould be long and difficult foreven a profesiol musician,aad Nlr. Rahn's i noticeabilyga've out toward the end. How-ever, he is to be c-oennded forhis attempt.

hae Syngmhomny Orchesitta at-tempted to perform Dvorak's"Symphony in G ajor, No. 4."However, their small siMe (ondy'about forty people played) didnot enable them to give a fudllinterpretation to the music andnmch detracted from its origilnadehairn and freshness. However,the fact thrat they had ondyplayed the piece twice beforethe concert sho4ld be taken intoaco t before any fnad judge-

.mewt is made.

will interview on campus

February 13, 14

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The B'asns Ohosir made a vali-ant attempt to transilate for theaudienoe three soags, one ofwhich even the meier~ne of -heChoir admitted they were notfond of. Two of the pieces, thework of Goaabrieli, a 16 CemturyItalian composer, reqtuired theseparatio of the group into twoand thewe separate groups. Mostrenditions of the works useolly Ore ar two tnerments inpart of the sections; the choir'suse of around six in eadch sec-tiyn seemed to overpower thework, taking away fromn itsbeasrty and ritmess.

On the wbole, the groupsshowed great promise, but littlefulfillment. VWe wold Ventureto predct that their SpringConcert, April 7, wili be wellwortch attending, and shouldshow a very good group at itsheight.

mZm

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WTBS Program Schedule

7:30 am8:45 ..S:5 :K-pm-6:o07:06

9:0512:06 am

1:00News: 8,

7:30 amS,1455:06 pmn6:007:008:409:05

12:05 am1:00

Newe: 8,

7:30 am8:45 :5:05 .pm6:008:00 '9.05 -'2:00 am

News: 8,

3:00 pm5:0O7:058:10

10:302:00 am

'Newav. 5

2:00 pm5 :05:7:008:009:06

12:00 a.m1:00

News:. 5

7:30 am8:465'.5:05 -pm6:007:05-8:009:05

1205 am1:00

News: 8,-. .

7:30 sm8:45'5:&1 pm

WednesdayRise an.d S}ineSign OffEvening InterludeSwilgin' EasyCentennial Series:

Conv¢cationMusic of the Modern MastersJazz at MidnlhtSign Off

5, 7, 9, and 12.Thursday

Rise aid StineSign OffEvening InterludeSwingin' EasyFik MusicLUmel.ght ReviewDepures ia MusicJazz at MidtnghtSign Off

5, 7, 9, and 12.Friday

RIe and 65neSign OffEvening InterludeJazz SpecialFolk MusicNight OwlSign Off

5, 9, and 11:30.Saturday

Rock and Roll Memory T lmeJazz SpotlightMusic of the KeyboardBaskettill

MIT vs. MddietburyNight OwlSign Off

7, 9, and 11:30.

SundaySunday TheatreSunday SerenadeFolk MsuicThe Pre-ClassicsClassroom ConcertJ.zz at MidnightSign off

and 9.

MondayRise and ShineSign offEverning In.teiludeSwingin' EasyFiestaInscomm Open LineThe Barue Era

Jazz at MidnightSign Off

5, 7, 9, and 12.Tuesday

Rise and ShineSign OffEvening Interlude

I I

I-.SATURDAY, FEB. 17

AT 8:30I '- in concert .- -." one performance only!

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Page 10: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

,-' Contemporary American SculpfureBy David Smith In Hayden Exhibit

An exhibition of- 25 Oiotemn-porary Americam soulptm'es by

~ David 'Smii;h will be on view atco the Hayden Gallery t-hrough- Feb. 27.,q A pioneer in weIed cirson and- steel conrstructioks as early osc, 1,933, Mr. Smith diffeis frnm

~ most oonteorn-ary soulptors inhis almost exclusive use of hard

lIt has been observed ithat hise oornplete oeuvre propaes itsZ own new sign and symb4 ol laim-a gualge. It is mechanical orderL authored by one artkst, derived

from and often 'humorously re-ferring to our 20tlh oeutry in-dustrial world.

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Smith has elaborated on mamnyplastic tlhemes by creating se-ries of scutlptures which span

his personal perceptions andfeelrkgs. IHe has stated his beliefthat "ar~e is not a planred kgei-oaT occurrence," btt springsfrom indrivicuwal{ iabuition.

;His work has bte fazoiatioitof its faotory materials; criticshave sugtgested that it is liIkefiandng art in a blacksrith.'sshop or a junkya, and dering how such brlunt and ele-mrentally tough materials canin one inrstamnc look so proudanrd refined;

Smtih had .his .firt orne-aunlhow in 1938, and has since ex-

hibited widely 'here and abroaad.'I-e reoeived a Guggenle~im Fel-lowh.qip in 1950-51, renewed in1951-52. A onean exhihban tion.of fis work was shbown in the'XXIX Venice Bienmale in' 198.He is at -present represen bya one-man esx4-ibion at thbeCarnegie Ianternational pcii-tion in PittSburgh.

-Irck TrBrubeck Quartet To Appear At Kresge

By Tom Mamigh '65Dave Brubeck will appear in Kresge Audi-

torium Friday, Mhairh 16, as a guest of theMIT Choral Society. This proniis ' to -be- avery exciting evering,' so you should get'yourtickets now, for thyre 'selling fast. Theymay be reserved by calling the Kresge boxoffice.

, . . ,,* . .. .

·:Don't -forget! .Della 'Reese, fanns gospeland blues singer will'be appearing -this Sat-urday at 8:30 'at the Donnelly MemorialTheater. Tickets for the concert, which. alsofeatures the Meditation Singers :and MercerEllington, are priced from $1.75 up.

Also in, town next Saturday night, butappearing at Jordan Hall, will be Sabicas,considered by many people as the world'sgreatest flamenco gu.itarist. Tickets for theconcert, which begins at 8:30, are $2.20 and up.

Wednesday 'evening, March 7, the Phila-delphiat, Orchestra will appear at SymphonyHall. Eugene Ormandy will.lead the band in. aconceert ' f the worcs- of Brahms, Beethoven, .Berg,, atd- iaemithrn.

. . , * $ *

The twenty-sixth annual

. I ,,,, , I I,.. .

New low-cost lhxu-ry: in twojustout Chevy II Nova sedans.

just-out Chevy 1I Nova sedans

* Luxury and low cost have never been more that gets more "git" out of a gallon of regular,beautifully blended than in these two newest Body by. Fisher roominess that fits.big familiesadditions to the ChevylI line! Like their running :and small parking places. An easy loading vaca-mates-the Nova 400 Sport Coupe, Convertible tion-sized trunk. New ideas that save on upkeep.and StationWagon-they have the same more-for- .Plus trim, tasteful styling, inside and out. Seeyour-money features that have made Chevy II the smart, sassy, saving Chevy II Novas-the winner of Car Life magazine's- Engineering and the other sensibly sized, sensibly priced'-Excellence Award for 1962. Soft-riding new Mono- Chevy II models-at your Chevrolet dealer's.Plate rear springs, proved in the equivalent of P 2,000,000-plus testmiles.Thrifty 6-cylinder engine S aCbBVM~ J' NfV

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Nova 400 Convertible

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Nova 400 2-Seat Station Wagon

300 3-Seat Station Wagon

100 2-Seat Station Wagon

edition of 'Ship-

stad aid Johnston's Ice Follies are currentlyappearing in the Boston Garden. Friday,Febyuary 23, you- can get a special combina-tion 0'6 a'-performance of the Follies plus aBostofn Celtics game, a combination whichshould include something - for everyone.Tickets for the event are from $2 to $5.

The barren Wasteland, commonl . knownas television, .has hittle in store for us thisweek. However, tomorrow ,nglt ati 9, CBSwill feature "Eisenhower on the Presidency."On the show, former President' Eisenhowerwill talk about global and domestic problems,past, present, and future." It ahotild proveinteresting.'

* * *

Sunday, February 18, Ralph Votapek, re-nowned pianist, will give a concert at theIsabella Stewart Gardner .Museum. Mr.Votapek has been a soloist with several lead-ing orchestras-including,. the,.Chicago Sym-phony, the St. Louis Symphony, ,the BostonPops, amd the Television Orchesttra of Paris.His concert, which is free to the public, willfeature the works of Bach,'Debuss, Franck,and Schumann.

Movie ScheduleASTOR - "E8 OiCd" Matinee Wed.,

Sat., & Sun. at 2 p.m. Evenirngs at8:15, except Sun. at 7:30.

BEAOON HI; - "One-T5wv-Three"1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.

BOSTON - "Cineranma-South SeasAdventure" Eves. at 8:30, exceptSun. at. 7;30. Matinees Wed., 6at.,Sun. & Holidays at. 2:30 p.m.

BATTLE - "L'Awvvenltra." Week day'sait 4:30, 7:00, 9:30; Sat. & Sun. at 2,4:30, 7:00, 9:30.

CAPRI - "M'ajority of One" 2:10,4:34, 7:02, 9:30.

EXETER - "rTa Belle Americaine"2:00, 3:45, 5:40, 7:30, 9:20: News &Cartoon 3:3'5, 5:25, 7:20, 9:10.

FENWAY - "The Mark" 12:55, 3:07,5:17, 7:21, 9:28.

FINE ARTS - "Baltlad of a Soldier"5:30, 8:45; "The Fate of a Man" 7,10.

GARtY - "West Side Story" Everyevening at 8:30 p.m. Matinees Wed.,Sun., & Holidays at 2:30 p.m.

HARVARD SQUARE - "A Day atthe Races" 1:40. 5:30, 9:20; "MeetMe in St. Louis" 3:25, 7:20.

KEITH M;EMORIAL - "Flower DrumnSong" 1:05, 3:50, 6:30, 9:15.

KENMORE - "A View From theBridge" 1:15, 3:25, 5:30, 7:40,9:45; Slort Films 1:05, 3:10, 5:20,7:25, 9:35.

LOEWS ORPHIEUMT - "Sergeants 3"2:45, 6:05, 9:30; "Deadly Duo" 1:25,4:45, 8.

PARAMIOUNT - "Singer, Not theSong" 10:45, 2:15, 5:45, 9:15; "Un-stoppable lMan" 9:30, 1, 4:30, 8.

SAXON - "Judgment at Nuremberg."Every evening at 8:30, except Sundayat 8 p.m. Matinees Wed., Sat., &Sun. at 2:30 p.m. Released througbUnited Artists, directed and producedby Stanley Kramer. It stars: SpencerTracy, Burt Lancaster, Richard Wid-mak, Marine Dictrich, MaximilianSchell, Judy Garland, and Montgom-ery Clift.

STATE - "Bad Girls of Burlesque"9:30, 11:31, 1:44, 4, 6:15, 8:30: "Thisis My Body" 10:15, 12:25, 2:30, 4:50.7:10, 9:25; "The Immoral Mr. Teas"10:30, 12:40, 3, 5:10, 7:30, 9:40.

Theatre ScheduleCHARLES - "The Fantastics" Tues.-

Fri. 8:30; Sat. 5:30, 9; Sun. 3, 7:30.COLONIAL - "La Plume de ma

Tante" Matinees Wed., Sat. at 2:30;Eves. at 8:30; No show Sunday.

SHUBERT - "The Music Man" Eve-nin$gs at 8:30; Matinees Wed. & Sat.at 2:30.

This week's LSC, classic filbnseri'es movae wil be "He WhoMufst Die," the story of a shty.stubteriag shepderd wuho ischosen to play Cbrist in tlhelocal Passion play of a Turlaish-dominated Greek r.il-sge. Thefilm, which witll be tle oul~y onein the classic' seies to be shownin Kresge Auditorimun, starsPierre Vaneck and Meilina Mer-couri. General Admissrion will be75 cents.

Jack Manrning, director of theHelen H-ayes Eqwuity Group inNew York Ci'ty, will direotShakespeare's "Twellth Niighht"$at t/he Boston Universilty Thea-ter, February 22-24. This will bethis season's third productionfor the group, which regularlybrings establisihed directors tothe university to aid studentcasts and crews faro;m the]School of Fine and AppliedAr'ts. lt shoulld, if past perform-ances are any indicatilon, be avery good show.

Erroll Garner, famed jazzpianist, wvll appear at Sym-phony Hall in a conrcet per-formance- this Friday right. Hewill be accompanied by EdwardCalhoun on the bass fiddle, andby Kelly Msartin on drs.Tickets for the concert, whichbegins at 8:30, are priced -frwn$2.50 up.

The Gallery Mount Aubumn47 is currently showinig an ex-hibition of painting by the NewEnTgluand artist, RIobent CGen-della. In addition, the, g>alery,whibh is located at 47 Mt. Au-burn Street in Cambridge, bhasa vanied program of foilk music,ohanber music, ant filmsthrowughout the week. It wouldbe sin interesting place to iin-vest4iate if you are at ati in- I

terested.

New filkns comiag to Boston ?ti week include: "The PThree [Stooges Meet Hercule," wiuh tfVicki Trickebt; ",LosS yf Inno-oence;" "The Joker," a Frenchcomedy; and "Tlhe Singer, Nottie Song," a dramna dealingwith the oonflict betveen faithaand rdliitmnt disbelief.

CRC Slates Fund DriveThe MIT Civil Rights Comn-

mittee will have a fuid driveto raise money for the StudentNon-Violent Coo.liinating-Conm-mittee, next Monday, Tuesday,and Wednesday, February 19, 20, and 21.

There w'il be 'a booth inBuildiung 10 sell'inrg $1 buttons,showing an 'integrated" hand-shake.

CALIFORNIARound Trip Air Fare plus taxfrom $160 to $206 * * * whypay more?

Ralph Gordon, student'rep.LA 3-6100

Other flights: Chicago, Florida.BERMUDA SPECIAL, Detroit.

One of fhe Year's 50 es! '

"The Mark"FENWAY

NOW!ICE 6-0610

.Y B . ., . - .r . _

New Chevy II Nova 2. and 4-Doors--plus a wonderful choice of other Chevy H models TECHSHOW '62

TEMPESTIN A TEA PORT

Feb. 22-23-24March 2-3

Tickets On SaleIn Bldg. 10See the new Chevy Ii at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's

_ 1111 1 I- I -- -illa

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Page 11: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

i i es '- I - - * ' -ImoviShell, Trcy Str n 'Judgment'

Schell, Tracy Star In 'Judgmenf'The. triaa of Emrt Joamig · By Toni 'Maugh '65

and Lis feMow Nami jtuges, per-baps. one of- the most significant tOrney ty3ng bo m vv, nt O

.triads of, the 2Cth oentury, is the the Life of the German jiu.subjeot- 6, 'J"Jg efnt at Nur-r but ee reputation and, ,embrbe" wahic opened last of pst-asr Gmenmay. He vDihtf at the Saxon Theater. It Meserved the awand he got fiia a moving and Dranatic story ithe NTew York film critics,whioh featb,,reas some of the is a su e bet for an Oscarsbest aocrtig I harve seen in a Ahhough there wee too mntmug ·wihe. great or good pemrorrances

Si pe Tracy . ges f ah i.s appraise tern alt, I -feel-probably ihis grett perform- shoul mertion tat of M(

'aroe as Jqudge Dan Haywood, a gomery Cli;ft in te reIatWsrmadll town Maine jutxist haosen smal-l bust very difficult rol1to preide 'over thte war trI of an itinerant baker's helper four Nazi jurists. JUdge' Hay- 'had been sterilized at the omwood was forced to cope 'vtfh of $alning. His pathetic pi: not only his own oonsenc in during te trial led one neo;dhoosing what was right in te to team, and were so ctecase, but also ~psydologioa that I am afraid that, beapressnes which were aplded -forth,, I Shall alwagys consto -hm b ehanse of tue sitbu uitn nhin as a mental case.in .Gelrnany at t timn (Beriin O· Othe who were includedhad been'blockaded). the east were 3urt Lancas

"owever, ,akrxihia n Sdehie Richarrd Wid'mark, Miarlenestole lte show in the role of trich and Judy Garland. Ethe young Geruan defense at- filled is, nrole well and gav

3 Pre-Broadway Tryouts

7 Plays To Open In Area"You :Never 'Can Teell," the

farce by George Bernard Shamw,is oilne of 'several plars siched-uled to reacdh the Boston areawithin the next few weeks. Itwill open at 'the Charles Play-house Thursday, Feb. 22. Theplay, the fourtih production ofthe season, will star RichardNilholls, George aurner, ManyHamrngboi ando Noman. Bow-ler'.

'"Isle of Children," a newplay by Robert L. Joseph, willopen at the Wilfbur TheaterMonday, Feqb. 26. The pre-Broadway product.ion will starPatty Duke and Noel Will-man.

"I Can Get It for You Whole-sale," based on the book byJerome Weidmxam, will open atthe Cbolonial Theater Tuesday,Feb. 27 for two and one-halfweeks before going on Broald-way. The musicasl comedy willstar Lillialn Rot/h, Harold Langand Bamnib;i Linn.

"A Thousand Clowns," a newcomedy by Herb Gardner, cre-aitor of thAe cartoon Nebbishes,

HELP

irstlsXity

immonand

lan-Y3to1 I0ft-.elye ofwhorderIdeasarly

oe-mier

d'in'ster.Di--3aleh

wifil open Thursday, Mardh 15at the Wilbur Theatber. 'heshow, whvicdh is directed by lMi-chael Howard, will star JasonRichaa'rds Jr. in the pre-Broad-way trial.

"Carmival1," the musical basedon the film "Liii," will begin atthe Coloniral Theater Monday,March 19 as the last Show intheir Tlhelater Guild Series, Themusicad, whilah stars SusanWatson, Jo Anne Worley andJonathon Lucas, will be directedby Gower Champion.

The first production in Eng-lisbh of Max Frisch's "The Chi-nese Wael:d," an ironic farce setin ancient China, will be givenby Tufts University at theTufts Arena Theater March 16-17 and 22-24.

"Peace Decorum," a playabout American aid to a SouthSeas island inhabited sollely bywomen, will be the 114th pro-duction of "America's oldesttheatrical organization" at theHasty Pudding Institute, Cam-bridge, from March 21-31.

YOUR

excellent perfoimane.,The vusic for the picture was

writben by Drmbest Gold whowo1n an Academy Award for.the soTrairack of "Eod.".A&lft:gh most of the song-s fea-t'uaed German lyrics, they werestillt very excellent and verymoving. Also of parrtliar sig-nificance was the cameraworkwhich was used by DirectorStanley Kraner. The unusualeffects he created, s'uch as re-vwovinig the camerm around thesufulject so that all the audiencewould be shown, tended -to cre-ate a feeling of vertigo whidhadded gnreatay to the fiihm.

An interesting sieliglht tothe film is the fact that whlenit made its world premiere inWest Berlin, an arranrgementsuch as that used-at the UiitedNaetions enabled the audience tofollow the dialogue in French,Geunn, Spanish and Italian.

Althogh "JudgImentt. at Nun-eaberg" will probably be beatout of an Oscar by some spec-taouswlar, it -is, in my book, byfar the best pldbure of the year.If you have' any iivterest at allin history, dcrama, philsophy,:or just people in general, andyou miss this pictbure, you will,be missing a onoe-in--a4ifetimeopportunity to see true great-

Brattle TheatreHarvard Square

"L'Adventura"thru Feb. 24

5:30 7:30 9:30

TECH SHOW '62

TEMPESTIN A TEA PORT

Feb. 22-23-24March 2.3Tickers on Sale

in Bldg. 10

BUDGET

Income of$60.00 per month

$250.00 per termfor

10 hours of work per week

Interested candidates please

apply in person af

Student Personnel Office1-380

I ;

I' llpm.lqM- ... u-t(Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The Mlany

Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)_~~~~

"TIE MANY LOVES OF, THORWALD DOCKSTADER

'When Thorwald Dockstader-sophomore, epicure, and sports-man--first took up smoking, he did not simply choose the firstbrand of cigarettes that came to hand. He did what anysophomore, epicure, and sportsman would do: he sampled sev-eral brands until he found the very best-a mild, rich, flavorfulsmoke-an endless source of comfort and satisfaction-a smokethat never palled, never failed to please-a smoke that agecould not wither nor custom stale-a filter cigarette with anunfiltered taste-Marlboro, of course!

Similarly, when Thorwald took up girls, he did not simplyselect the first one who came along. He sampled. First hedated an English literature major named Elizabeth BarrettSchwartz, a wisp of a girl with large, luminous eyes and a soulthat shimmered with a pale, unearthly beauty. Trippingly,trippingly, she walked with Thorwald upon the beach and satwith him behind a windward dune and listened to a conch shelland sighed sweetly and took out a little gold pencil and a littlemorocco notebook and wrote a little poem:

I will lie upon the shore,I will be a dreamer,I will feel the sea once more,Pounding on my femur.

Thorwald's second date was with a physical education major

named Peaches Glendower, a broth of a girl with a ready smileand a size 18 neck. She took Thorwald down to the cinder trackwhere they did 100 laps to open the pores. Then they playedfour games of squash, six sets of tennis, 36 holes of golf, nineinnings of one o'cat, six chukkers of lacrosse, and a mile and aquarter of leapfrog. Then they went ten rounds with eightounce gloves and had heaping bowls of whey and exchanged afirm handshake and went home to their respective whirlpoolbaths.

Thorwald's final date was with a golden-haired, creamy-browed, green-eyed, red-lipped, full-calved girl named TotsiSigafoos. Totsi was not majoring in anything. As she often said,"Gee whillikers, what's college for anyhow-to fill your headfull of icky old facts, or to discover the shining essence that isYOU?"

Totsi started the evening with Thorwald at a luxuriousrestaurant where she consumed her own weight in Cornish rockhen. From there they went to a deluxe movie palace whereTotsi had popcorn with butter. Then she had a bag of chocolatecovered raisins-also with butter. Then they went to a costlyballroom and did the Twist till dawn, tipping the band everyeight bars. Thenthey went to a Chinese restaurant whereTotsi, -unable to translate the menu, solved her problem byordering one of everything. Then Thorwald took her to thewomen's dorm, boosted her in the window, and went downtownto wait for the employment office to open.

While waiting, Thorwald thought over all of his girls andcame to a sensible decision. "I think," he said to himself, "thatI will'stick with Marlboros. I am not rich enough for girls."

© 1962 Max Shulman

Marlboro, however, is rich enough for anybody. ft takesmighty good makin's to give you unfiltered taste in a filtercigarette. That's the flavor you get in the famous Marlbororecipe from Richmond, Virginia. You get a lot to like.

One of the Year's Best!

"BALLAD OFA SOLDIER"

Plus! "STARS OF THERUSSIAN BALLET",- Color

fine arts80 NORWAY CI 7-8140

Harvard SquareTheatre

UN 4-4580February 14-20

The Marx Brothers in"A Day AtThe Races"

plusJudy Garland in"Meet Me

In St. Louis"Exclusive Boston Engagement

ONE WEEK 'ONLYI- _ _ I I·iii

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FIRST YEEAR MENQ

Page 12: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTSAT DOUGLAS

have created outstandingcareer opportunities for

SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERSwith or working on advanced degrees

Assignments include the following areas:Heat Transfer- relating to missileand space vehicle structuresServo-Mechanisms-relating to alltypes of control problemsElectronic Systems--relating to alltypes of guidance, detection, con-trol and communicationsPropulsion - relating to fluid-mechanics, thermodynamics,dynamics, internal aerodynamics.Environmental--relating to airconditioning, pressurization andoxygen systems

Structures -relating to. cyclicloads, temperature effects, and.theinvestigation of new materials,methods, products, etc.Aerodynamics - relating to windtunnel, research, stability andcontrolSolid State Physics -relating tometal surfaces and fatigueSpace vehicle and weapon sys-tem studies - of all types, involv-ing a vast range of scientific andengineering skills

Get full information atPERSONAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

February 19, 20, 21

We urge you to make an appointment to meet our representative throughyour placement office. If you cannot do so, please write to

C. C.. LaVeneStaif Assistant to VP Engineering

DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC.3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California

ATTENTION ... ALL GRAND PRIX CONTESTANTS

CHESTERFIELD or L&M WINDPROOF LIGHTERSfor Grand Prix entrants in New England Colleges only

'Those license plates you get with Grand Prix Limerick entry envelopes arevaluable. Redeem each one now for a handsome cigarette lighter that works.Choose the design with your favorite brand. This offer good unt'i Febriuary 28

: GET YOURS 'rODAYAT .-..

Technology Store

COFebrrMING!Febrluear 14

i 4SPRITE WINVNERSIN THE FALL

iGrand ]L ContestWatch for the announcement on YOUR campus

: REMEMBER!4 MORE SPRITES IN THE SPRING! The Spring Contest isunderway right now... so if you- miss out first time around, try again.

r- ENTER NOW...ENTER -OFTEN!. .. .b

,R .

i Bostan Tea Drefy. .. .-

Tech Show To Debuf 22nd'"Tempt I n-A Teaport," the

1962 Tech Show, wil make itsdebut Tblmsday, Feb. 22 inKresge Auidtorum. Producedby Michael Platt '63 and dikect-ed by Ridmar HouIby '62, thetwo act muiail xelates 'diestory of the Boston Tea Partyin a vemriom in wehih "istoryhas been drasticaI'y m 'tilated."

The play, based om, an ideaby Jean Pierre Frankeni-iis,was writ-ten by Hiro]by andStan M1i'ailiak '63. The musicwas Alplied by Ton Shackmanand Brad Barnes, white Shack-

man and' :haIfk wrote the

he s~hw, wAd ha s been inrehears sinoe nrtesioa ,features three peYope from lastyear's show--J<ng Ryad,. 'Maxr-shall Famn, '63 and Pete Ader-son '62.

Also -featured in the show wjibe Mimi Shoe fron Leslie andGail Greene. The rest of -the 25member oast wil be cmuposedof MIT men and gins fro Les-lie, BU, Snrmlos anid Emerson

The sow wilk be given Feb.22-24 and March 2-3.

Drama Shop To Offer Shinberg's 'Miss Juie';Chekov's Marriage Prps Friday Naght

"Miss Julie" .by August.Strindberg, and "'The MarriageProposal", by Ant>on Chekhov:will be presented by DrgaeashopFriday as this term's first eveiiing of one act plays.'

"Miss Julie", which will be directed by Jean Pierre Frank-enhuis, will. star Ruth Brand, of the Charles Playhouse, in thetitle role. Miss Brand is a veteran performer with the Drama-shop, having afppeared in several of their productions. '"TheMarriage Proposal" will be directed by Steven Lorch.

The plays will begin at 8:30 in the Kresge Little Theater,and are'operi to the public. There Will be a coffee-hour 'andcritique after the wplays.

f :IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT TO :CANDIDATES FOR BACCALAUREATE

AND ADVANCED DEGREESg ' -.

ELECTRICALi t^ENGINEERS

PH YSI CISTS

/I 1EMATHEMATICIANS. Technical representatives: Aofthe MITRE Corporation

will be conducting interviewson campus

February 16, 1962/ MITRE now has openings for talented men who want to

work in the challenging new field of system engineering ... aset of skills defined in only the most recent reference books.With MITRE, system engineering embraces such electroniccommand and control systems as the NORAD Intelligence

' Function and the manned bomber defense, SAGE. 4.V_ The work is vital. Time for decision in aerospace opera-

tions has been compressed intolerably. Today's militaryi leaders must have help in commanding forces of awesomestrength.' They need great quantities of information elec-

5 tronically transmitted, processed and displayed. This is the% challenge of command and control .. the work of the men at- MITRE.

I'Formed under the sponsorship of the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology, MITRE is a growing engineering% research corporation with 1,600 employees, over 600 of whichcomprise the technical staff. It serves as technical advisor tothe U. S. Air Force and other government agencies and en-gages in system design, conceptual planning, evaluation ofelectronic systems and research development.

Appointments will be made principally in the Suburban_ Boston area. Openings are also available at facilities in

Washington, D. C. and Colorado Springs, Colo. Brochuresdescribing the activities of The MITRE Corporation areavailable on request at the placement office.

ARRANGE FOR AN INTERVIEWTHROUGH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE.

I ~ THE--. -

I MITRE4't P.O. Box #208- Bedford, Massachusetts- r·s~r~r~~raL··~~II·~

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Page 13: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

n _...eis.,FEBRUARY 14

DuPont (2, 3, 5, 6, 8,. 10, 15-B,M); Sinclair Research (10-B,M);Space Technology Laboratories (6,8; 2, 10, 16-M, D); General Dy-namics/Electronics (2, 6-B); Proc-ter and Gamble, Plant Manage-ment (I, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10, 14. 15,18, 20, 21-B.M); Procter and Gam-ble, Overseas (all engineering, 5,15, 20-B,M); Shell Chemical (2, 5,6, 10-B,M); Shell Oil, Manufac-turing (2, 5, 10-B,M); AlleghenyLudlum Steel (2, 3, 6, 15-B); DowChemical (2, 3, 5, 10-B,M); East-man Kodak (2, 5, 6, 8, 10, IS, 18-B.M); Ebasco Services (2,6-B);General Precision (6); New Eng-land Electric (I; 2, 6, 15, 22-B,M);Pfaudler Permutit (5. 10-B,M; 3, 5,8-M,D); Pittsburgh Plate Glass (6-B,M; 2, 5, 8. 10); Pratt and Whit-ney Aircralf (2, 3, 6, 8. 10, 16,

22); Texas Instruments, ApparatusDivision (2, 7, 8, 15); Texas In-struments, Metals and Controls (2,3. 6, 8); Tex:aco, Refining Depart-ment (U, 2, !O-B,M); Texaco, Re-search and Technical Department(2, 6, 10; 5, 8, 12, 18-M,D); RadioCorporation of America (2. 6. 8.!6-B,M); RCA Laboratories (6, 8-B,M).

FEBRUARY 15DuPont (2, 3. 5, 6, 8, 10. 15-

B;M); Procter and Gamble, Indus-trial Engineering Division (I, 2. 6.10, 14, 15,. 18, 21-B,M); Procterand Gamble, Advertising (14, 15.21-B,M); Dow Chemical (2. 3, 5.I0 O-B,M); Eastman Kodak (2, 5., 6.8, 10, 15, 18-B,M); Praft and Whit-ney (2, 3, 6, 8, 10, 16, 22); TexasInstruments, Apparatus (2, 6, 8,15); Texas Instruments, Metals andControls (2, 3, 6, 8); Texas Instru-

ments, Central Research and En-gineering (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 18-M,D);Texas Instruments, Geosciences Di-vision (6, 8, 12; 18-M,D); Conso-lidated Edison of New York ( I, 2,6, 10-B); Equitable Life Assurance(18-B); General Radio (6, 8); M.W. Kellogg (I, 2, 10); Esso Re-search and Humble Oil (2, 6, 10-B); Lockheed-California (I. 2, 6,8. 16, 18); Pennsalt Chemical (2,5, 10, 15); Raybestos (2, 5, 10,15-B); Thompson Ramo Wool-dridge. Tapco Group (2, 3, 5, 6, 8,10, 16, 18); Standard Oil of Cal-ifornia (2, 6. 10-B,M; 18); UnionCarbide Plastics (I, 2, 5, 6, 8, 10,1 5-B,M), Whirlpool. (2, 6, 15-B,M); Whirlpool, Research (5, 6, 7,8. 10, 20-M,D).

FEBRUARY 16DuPont (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10, 1S-

B,M); Eastman Kodak (2, 5, 6, 8,

10. IS. 18-B,M); M. W. Kellogg(I, 2, 10); Lockheed-California (I,2, 6, 8, 16, 18); Standard Oil ofCalifornia (2, 6, 10-B,M; 18); Am-erican Can (2, 5. 10-B); AnacondaWire and Cable (2, 6, 10, IS-B,M); Bell Helicopter (2, 6, 8. 16);Beloit Iron Works (15-M; 2, 6, 8);Burroughs (2, 6, 8, 18; 5-D); Con-tinental Oil- 2. 10-B,M); Deweyand Almy Chern"cal (2, 15-B,M;5, 10); Diamond Alkali (2, 15-B.M; 5. 10); Gibbs and Cox (I, 2,6, 13, 22-B,M); Mitre Corporation(6-B.M; 8, 18-M,D); Pillsbury (10,15-B); 5, 20-M,D); NationalStarch and Chemical (101-B,M; 5);Polaroid (2, 6, 10-B,M; 5); Stew-art-Warner (2, 6, 10, 15-B,M);Wymann-Gordon (2, 3, 15-B,M);United States Steel, Production andStaff (all engineering); U. S. Steel,Comptroller (15, 18-B,M); U.S.

DIRECT EN' EF-L.e- Corh'ERSION- ... . .. -. .- -.

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iUC:LEAR

ITHERE'S

CHALLENGETODAY

FORVIRTUALLY

EVERY

AT PRATT &.WHITNEYAIRCRAFT

Almost every scientifically trained man can find stimulating and rewarding careeropportunities within the broad spectrum of Pratt & Whitney Aircraft activities.

From the solid foundation of 36 years as a world leader in flight propulsion systems,P&WA development activities and research investigations today are far ranging. Inaddition to continuing and concentrated development effort on air breathing and rocketengines, new and exciting avenues are being explored in every field of advanced aero-space, marine, and industrial power applications.

The reach of the future ahead is indicated by current programs. Presently, Pratt &Whitney Aircraft is exploring the fringe areas of technical knowledge in magnetohydro.dynamics... thermionics and thermo-electric conversions... hypersonic propulsion. .fuel cells and nuclear power.To help move tomorrow closer to today, we continually seek ambitious young engineersand scientists. Your degree? It can be in: MECHANICAL U AERONAUTICALI ELECTRICAL U CHEMICAL and NUCLEAR ENGINEERING R PHYSICS* CHEMISTRY U METALLURGY U CERAMICS U MATHEMATICS U ENGI-NEERING SCIENCE or APPLIED MECHANICS.

The field still broadens. The challenge grows greater. And a future of recognitionand advancement may be here for you.

For further information regarding an engineering career at Pratt & WhitneyAircraft, consult your college placement officer or write to Mr. R. P. Azinger,Engineering Department, Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford 8, Conn.'

PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFTDivision of United Aircraft CorporationCONNECTICUT OPERATIONS East Hartford, Connecticut

FLORIDA RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER Palm Beach County, Florida

All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, creed,,color or national origin.

Steel, Commercial Research ( 15and all engineering, B,M); U.S.Army Ordnance Missile Command(2. 6, 16; 5, 8. 18-M,D); Coastand Geodetic Survey (I, 2, 6, 18-B); U.S Army Ordnance Corps (1,2, 3. 5. 6. 8, 10, 15. 16, 18, 19).

FEBRUARY 19Boeing Company (I1, 2, 6, 8,

15, 18); Chemstrand (2, 10); Col-gate-Palmolive (2, 10, 15); Doug-, las Aircraft (2, 6, 16; 8, 10. 18-M,D); Dow Corning (5, 8; 1, 2, 6,10-B,M); Fairchild Stratos (6, 8-B,M); General Foods (6-8; 2, 15-B,M; 5, 10, 20); General Motors(2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 18); Goodyear Tireand Rubber (2-B; I 5-B,M; 5, 10);Goodyear Aircraft (16-B,M; 2-M;8, 18-MD; 6); Goody'ear Atomic(2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10, 18); HamiltonStandard (2, 6, 8, 15, 18-B,M);Hughes Aircraft (2, 6, 8, 1 6; 18-D); Kimberly-Clark (2-B; 15-B,M;5, 10); Lever Brothers (10); LindeCompany (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10-B,M);Lockheed Missiles and Space (1, 2,5. 6, 8. 15, 16, 18); Universal-Cyclops Steel (3-B).

FEBRUARY 20Boeing (I, 2, 6, 8, 15, 16, 18);

Chemstrand (2, 10); Douglas Air-craft (2, 6, 16; 8, 10, 18-M,D);General Motors (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 18);Goodyear Tire and Rubber (2-B:15-B,M; 5,10); Goodyear Aircraft(16-B,M; 2-M; 8, 18-M,D; 6);Goodyear Atomic (2, 3, 5, 6, 8,10, 18); Hamilton Standard (2, 6,8, 15, 18-B,M); Hughes Aircraft(2, 6, 8, 16; 18-D); Linde (2, 3,5, 6, 8, 10-B,M); Lockheed Missilesand Space (1, 2, 5,' 6, 8, 15, 16,18); Barnes Engineering (6, 8-B,M); Eli Lilly (2, 10-B; 15-M);Mead Corporation (2, 15-B; 10-BM); Microwave Associates (5, 6,8); Sun Oil (5, 8, 10; 14, 15-M);Electro-Mechanical Research (2,6); Sun Chemical (5, 8, 14, 15,21-B,M); Inland Steel (all engi-neering, 15-B; D-3).

FEBRUARY 21Boeing (I, 2, 6, 8, IS, 16, 18):

Douglas Aircraft (2, 6, 16; 8, 10418-MD); General Motors (2, 3,5, 6, 8, 18); Goodyear Tire andRubber (2-B; 15-B,M; 5, 10);Goodyear International (14, 15-B,M); Hughes Aircraft (2, 6, 8,16; 18-D); Air Products and Chem-icals- (2, 10; 5-D); General Motors,Allison Division (2, 6, 8, 10, 22-M,D); American Electric PowerService (2, 6-B); Cummin.s Engine(6, 16-B; 2, 15-B,M); Daystrom(6, 8-B,M); Digital EquipmentCorporation (6-B); Inland Steel(all engineering, 15-B; 3-D); Kop-pers (5, 6, 10-B; 2-B,M); Stand-ard Oil of Ohio (2, 5, 6, 0, 18-B,M; IS5-M); State Mutual LifeAssurance (14, 15, 18-B,M); To-ledo Scale (2, 6-B); Battelle Mem-orial Institute (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10).

FEBRUARY 23Boeing (I, 2, 6, 8, 15, 16, 18);

Standard Oil of Ohio (2, 5, 6, 10.18-B,M; I5-M); Amperex Electro-nic (2, 3, 6, 8, 1 O-B); B-I-F In-dustries (2, 6, 10-B.M); C. F.Braun (10): Brooklyn Union Gas(I, 2, 6, 10, 14, 15, 18-B); Con-solidafltion Coal (2-B,M; 5, 10)Great Lakes Steel (6, .10, 15-B;2, 3,-B,M); Hazeltine Corporation(6); Mutual Benefit Life Insurance(I 8-B.M); Owens-Corning Fiber.-glas (3, 4, 6, 17- B; 2, 5, 10, 15-B,M); Pearsall Chemical (10-B);Scovill Manufacturing (2, 3, 10-B); Timken Roller Bearing (2, 3,15-B),

'V..^ yt

New College Rates aat

THEBILTMORE

in New York$,( per person'$50 (3to a room)

F'~ 1575 per person(2 to a room)

$8oo00 single

All Rooms Have TV For information or reservations address Mr. Ralph Schaffner.

: The Biltmore, New York 17. N.Y. Madison Avenue at 43rd Street

MUrray Hill 7-7000': , WHERE EVERYONE MEETS

S. UNDER TIE CLOCK"eJ

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Page 14: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

ArmstrongOFFERSCHALLENGINGCAREERS* 'ARCHITECTURE

* PROJECT ENGINEERING

0 RESEARCH &'DEVELOPMENT

Repre'sentafives will be on campus Feb. 27. To arrange aninterview, see your Placement Director.

ArmstrongLANCASTER, PA.

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GENERAL DYNAMIICS'ASTRONAUTICS

STARTS BUSINESSGRADUATES

ON THEIR WAYUP!

Interviews on March 8

GENEERAL DYNAM IC: S

ummerThe f{ollow;ng companies have as Ins]

specifically indicated they will in- sion (6fterview summer job candidates on gree cthe dates given. in most cases the Life in:courses eligible are not limited moresstrictly to those listed; rather, the (1, 2,listings are to be taken as a gen- gineeriroral indication of those areas in 10); iwhich the company is interested. 10, 15Juniors and above are eligible un- driclge,less otherwise noted. Many com- 8, 10,panies not in this list will inter- Plasticsview sumnmer candidates if their Whirlpcschedules are not completely filled (6,with permanent work candidates. canctiFor further information, check atthe Student Placement Bureau, -f 73, on the day before the com-pany is interviewing. DP

FEBRUARY 14 is5, I8E. i. duPont de Nemrnours (2, 3 0;

5. 6, 8, t0, 15); Dow Chemical e (2, 3, 5, 10); Texaco (I, 2, 103; ot IrlRadio Corporation of America (2, mon

i6, 8, 16); RCA Laboratories (6, & Co8; advanced degree candidates C2randonly). c .

FEBRUARY 15 Starch I Du Pont (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10, 15); man-Gd

Dow Chemical (2, 3, 5, 10); Tex- O/dnrn

Job -- nterv iewtruments, Geosciences DivT-6, 8, 12, 18; advanced de-:andidates only); Equitablesurance Society (18; sopho.and above); M. W. Kellogg190); Esso Research and En-

ng and Humble Oil (2, 6,Pennsalt. Chemicals (2, 5,); Thompson Ramo Wool-Tapco Group (2, 3, 5, 6,16, 18); Union Carbide(I, 2, 5, 6, 8, 10, 15);

ool Research Laboratories8, 10, 20; advanced degreeates only).

FEBRUARY 16'ont (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, I0, 15);n Kodak (2, 5, 6, 8, I0,;1; M. W. Kellogg ( 1, 2,mnerican Can (2, 5, 10);elicopter (2, 6, 8, 16); Be|-n Works (2,'6, S; 15); Dia-klkali (2, 5, 10, 15); Gibbs

(sophomore and above in6 for draftsmen); Mitfre

ation (6; advanced degreeates in 8, 18);, Nationaland Chemical (5, 10); Wy-trdon (2, 3, 15); U.S. ArmyRce Missile Command (2,

If you are a business graduate with a record of personal and academicachievement, check the career opportunities at General Dynamics Astronautics. We offer opportunities in management systems, engi-neering administration, finance, product support, contracts, materials,quality control, industrial relations, and communications. (If you're inthe top half of your. undergraduate class, or an advanced degree candi-

.date, so much the better). , .

General Dynamics jAstronautics is engaged in high-priority missile andspace vehicle programs, including Atlas, Centaur. Mercury, Midas,

· Arents, Rover, Ranger, and Mariner. These and many other majorprojects offer the young businessman a whole new world of importantwork. And all within.the perfect, year 'round climate of San Diego.California. . -.-

Be sure to see the General DyiamicsI Astronautics representative whenhe visits your campus. Contact your placement office to arrange aninterview, or write to Mr. R. M. Smith, Manager of Industrial Rela-tioWs Admilnistration-Engineering, Dept. 130-90, General Dynamics IA-stronautics, 5200 Kearny Villa Road. San Diego 12, California.

ASTRON^UTICS Gll lllIDA'. E(L*. CP.T.' N'' Y '."e:..'EP.

5, 6, 8, 16, 18; advanced degreecandidates only),

FEBRUARY 19Boeing (1, 2, , 8, , 16, , 16, 8):

Chemstrand (2, 10); Dow Corning(1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 10); General Foods(2, 5, 6, 10, 15, 20); General Me-tors (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 18); HamiltonStandard (2, 6, 8, 15, 18).

FEBRUARY 20Boeing (1, 2, 6, 8, 15, 16, 18);

Chemstrand (2, 10); General WMi-tors (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 18); HamiltonStandard (2, 6. 8, ,1, 18); EliLilly (2, 10); Sun Oil (5', O8, 114, 15); Electro-Mecha.ical Re-search (2, 6).

FEBRUARY 21Boeing (I, 2, 6, 8, 15, 16, I'$);

General Mofors (2, 3, 5, 6, 8,18); General Motors, Allison Divi-.sion (2, 6, 8, 10O, 22; seniors andabove); Digital Equipmient Cor-poration (6); Standard Oil ofOhio (2, 5, 6, , 10 , IS 18); StateMutual Life insurance (14, 15, 18;sophomores and- above); ToledoScale (2, 6).

FEBRUARY 23.Boeing (1, 2, 6, 8, 15, 16, 18);

Standard'Oil of Ohio (2, 5, 6, 10,15, .18); Amperex Electronic (2,3, 5, 6, $, 10, 18); B-I-F Indus-tries (2, 6, 10); Consolidation Coal(2, 5, 10); Mutual Benefit LifeInsurance (18; sophomores andabove); Timken Roller Bearing (2,3, 15; Ohio residents).

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MORE SUN

MORE SNOW

. SKI ,CAPITALOF THE EAST

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

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ISRAELONLY 295..FROM EUROPE THIS SUMMER

14 TO 30 DAYS

If you are going to Europe thissummer, here is a rare oppor-tunity to combine a trip acrossEurope, a Mediterranean seavoyage, and an exciting visit tothe dynamic land of Israel.Your $295 will provide:* Railroad ticket from most

major European cities tomain Mediferranean ports,according to your plans.

* Round T ri p MediterraneanCruise to Israel, stopping atAthens, Rhodes, and Cyprus.

* Stay on a KIBBUTZ for 14-30days, at your choice.

* Meet and work with youngIsraelis ;n the same spirit ofmutual cooperation and un-derstanding that marks theefforts of the PEACE CORPS.

Limited participation.Also Student Trips from the U.S.to Europe and/or Israel.

CALL OR WRITE NOW:

ISRAEL EXPRESS, Inc.550 5th Ave.;-N.Y. 36, N.Y.

Cl 7-3783I ..-378.

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Page 15: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

~ermite'ectio~n~, Cake And ke Cream Highligh Institute TourThermife, Reachdon., Cake' And Icce Cream Highlight Institfute Tour

-, ~5ice ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~-..' .'- 7. . ... -".- :hot byCu.:,*le'6

Affer a long day of walk ng through Inshfiu"fe corridors and viewingseveral demonstrafions, the boys of the Boys' Club return to home base(fifth floor of East Campus, east parallel) for their afternoon trear -ice cream and cake.

- Photo by Curtiss Wiler '63

Earth Science Colnsactionn Proceehds SlowlyConstruaction of the Green Center of Earth Scienc Is pao-

ceeding slowly, arid temporarily quietly. To date, the construtc-tion site has been excavated to a depth of about ten feet. TheEast Campus steam tunnel r es been removed, atih East Cn-pus now getting its steam via Walker; but an electric powerline to East Campus exposed .by the excavation Is now heldfirm by ternporary wooden piles, so that electric seice willnot be Intenupted.

Four test 1i7!es were drivenresults of tests on two of them-

during ftiakls perod, and tiheare still being awaited, The testconsists of a static loading ofone hundred tons, applied for'aweek, I'he two piles ,vhieh al-ready lave been tested havehad acceptable settlements.

With just a few thousandt_of an inch settlement undertwice the design load, the build-ing Is expected to stand firmly.

'Sirnce the piles went under test.construction has been conifiedto Installng utilities and un-loading piles,

A well point system has alsobeen installed to lower thewater table of the excavationsite for the foundation work.

By Tihonias F. Arnold '64At the invitation of some of

the residents of the fifth floorin the east parallel oi EastCampus. 30 10-vear-old boy-sfron Boston toured MIT lastSaturday. The 1boys. al'l mem-hers Of the Boys' Clubs5 of Bos-ton Inc.. were ghen a first-h.and look at the In,'titute '1ho East Cam.pusites and thenreturned to the "dormitory forthe hi-gh po:.nt of the day--anic'e cream party.

After sperning some t:me onone of t'he parai!ei roofs th vrow-ing snow o the ground.i. the'Iboys went to room 10-250 w hereth1y' saw Professor EdwI:.n LeeGamhble perform the demon-stl'at on of the thcreiite rea.c-(,:.on. Thie demon-sl.ration. car:tied out in p;tch dairkness,

bctrought a loud. spon aneou.,rc-und of tapplause ftonm the boyswho tlhcn gathered ar'ound himto ask questions in a manner'i-Ceniiniseent- of 5.01 lectures.

(lopler and Iron Bars NeckFrom 10-250) t:he bays went

to see tihe s'cale ship models inBuilding 5, but the trip wai toolong to take wi-thbout some en-lezrtainlanenat. so Elroy M.iiHer'65, one of the Ekst Carnpusitessponsoring the tcur, r'ode the¢d:staan-ce (except for tile stc'ivs)on. his nti'c:ycle, After seein-gthe ships ibthe gr aoup wvent to thetemslile stvrength testGi ng lboeaa-tory in raom 1-103 where El'oyMAller lnd anoth·er Eas-t Camnlpusrtes lent demo.nstratted r- ma-ohiine thlat could pull a4part basrsand ecrusah1 steel blocks. First.copper andl ironn bars weresretrehed until broken, and theLPheit'olhefon of "necking," aonstwrketion in the bam, just be-fore It. breaks, was show n. ThI-ena steel bhxck was placed in themadi2line and bhe mna:chi .ne's ful:loawaety of 20,000 pounds \wasexerteod on the block in an at-temipt tto crtrsh it, The boysCarrTied off tlhe block, now aboaut,haIrt lts original heieght andIbging at tHe oanter.

,3eca'tse tho ba, ill."ng u-p oftdhese fores takes s mme rmin-utes in which there bs nothingexciting to see, and because n-.10-year-old can be kept stl4 formore th-an 30 secon&s, a few oftMe boys decided to operatesorne of the machdm's -them-selves. The only tihing thalooull oarnvniently be pusihed,ptfiiled or turned, howeve', were

The visitors gather around to watch their East Campus host typout their names on paper tape with the TX-O Flexo-writer.

- Photo by Curtiss Wiler '63

some chails han-ging from theceil:ng: so. before anyone knewiit. s]idin-g over-headcl beams5 werenovming across the room.

[ixers IDraw AttentlionAs much atte'nt-ion as t-he

pIanned items on tUhe tour w1eregetting, the The Tech vendin.gmachines awlmos~t outd;id tbhem.WVhile walking through thehal Is, many of the - visitorsstopped to gaze at the machinesand ask what they were alboul.The bullet'in board:s also seemedto a ttract a lot of attent-ion. fo'some were reading about re.ix-

-elr. hil, lx e othelrs w;re ehecqki't,trhe For Sale sigms.

Next on thIle itinerary was av:sit to the TX-O and PDP-1conaputers. The name, of thebo3S wvere ptmched out on spapertape aind the techn-ique of draw-img ricl, tres on tihe machhine's

scope was sbown. On the TX-O.tic- tac- toe w as playved an c,

whern the machine won, it pri.ntl-ed on tlhe scope, "better luaknext time. Want more?" W.henthe mach-'ne's opponent man-agcd to d.rav, thte mach.ineprinted 'We are stuck. Wantmore?" Un-fo'r.tuvately, a mouse-arnd-m-alze game didn't workqutte so w.ell'l. The oper.ator wa-sto draw a mae on the scope.wi-th a piece of cheese i'n t'hemiddcle. Thhe TX-O then had totFry to find a way for a rnouseto get to the cheese. The ftirsttime i-t was tried, the machiinesakl tgeare Was no way out of

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the maze andi thai the operatuesil c-uld fix thlis. -lowecver, t herewvas a way out 1hat tile machilne:hissed. The operatfor then de-c:-dccd to use the miaze on whicih

-the TX-O llhd pevieusly beenres:ced. Aftc-r :.o.ie t.inle. t;hmouse mnc[aged to get to t;heoheese, circled it racd ate it.The operi'tocr then explainli~dthat once the TX-O had foundthe path it wNou!d rcrenecmber- itanrli g'e to the cheese \rrvquick ly- tihe next t :Ane. Themouse did get to the cheese alndarc i't ve-r, qui, ekly this tine,but it, did so by goin-g t11,roughhreec of t'he wa,!s of the mare

clraw'n on the maehnne'.s scoe.p.At TBS. 5 Equals L15

'ih-e Boys' Club v.oybng.-:terstthen wenrrt to tihe stip In-odeitowlng trank i',thec t'hev sayt'wthe production of water wavesantd some resca-rch on why tqieTexas Towers collapsed. Afterthis came a visit to the TVBSstu''"l ,o where the boyv- were tote achni'itted 'inlto the colltrtol

-ortn s about foutr or five at abtime, because WTBS was ontite air then. Naturawliy. thteywent ivn in two grourps of a-boultf1,5 each.

After the tiours were over.everybocdy went up to thie fifthfloor in East Ca.nm;ptus for someic cream atnd cake. Thcre thieyihwvaded the rocnms of Johi RePked'G4 an,~d a few othear nible-hearted E.ast Cain-pus men.

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, Im belowThe Lawrence Radiation Lab-oratory is working in the areasof Nuclear Propulsion, Con-trolled Thermonuclear Reac-

An artist's conception of 'Project Gnome, a step toward providing power and isotopes from under-ground thermonuclear detonations. This area of endeavor is part of Project Plowshare, initiated atthe LaWrence Radiation Laboratory of the University of California. Other Plowshare projects rnderaStudly include the excavation of an experimental htrbor in Alaska, production of oil from tar sands,control of groundwaters, mining applications, and other novel ideas using the energy of nuclearexplosives.

tions, Nuclear Explosives forIndustry and Defense, SpacePhysics, and other advancedproblems in Nuclear Physicsand Engineering,

ON FEBRUARY 26 & '27

Laboratory staff members willbe on Campus to interview out-standing students ifi the Phys-ical Sciences and Engineering.

Call your placement officefor an appointment

LAWRENCE RADIATIONLABORATORY

of the University of California

Berkeley and Livetrmore, California

DIANA& SONS

BARBER SHOPwifh .

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faireOpen Saturday332 Mass. Ave.

I block from Seymour

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Page 16: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

*Open to the publicWednesday, Februar

OPERATIONS RESEARCH CENTESeminar: "The Construction ofComputers from Unreliablenents." Professor Dean Arden,ment of Electrical Engineering, MRoom 8-205. 2:00 p.m.INDOOR TRACK.*AAU Meet.Rockwell Cage, 7:00 p.m.TECHNOLOGY CATHOLIC CLUIAltar Boy Classes. Learningserve Mays.MIT Chapel, 7:30 p.m.MIT HILLEL SOCIETY.'Israeli Dancing. Admission 50c.Walker Memorial, Room 201, 8:30ORGAN RECITAL.'Donald McDonald. First CongreChurch, Montclair, N.J. Tickets:Kresge Auditorium. 8:30 p.m.

Thursday, FebruaryMIT HILLEL SOCIETY.Study group: "Basic Conceptsa3iene.317 Memorial Drive, 4:00) p.m.

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS.*Colloquium: "' - Capture in Hydrogen."

A Dr. Roger H. Hildebrandt. University ofy 4 Chicago. Tea in the John Picker Kolker

R. Room (26-414) at 3:30 p.m.Reliable Room 26-100, 4:00 p.m.Compo- DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS,Depart- BRANDEIlS.HARVARD-MITIT. r MATHEMATICS COLLOQUIUM.'

*'Integral Currents in Kahler Mani-folds." Professor Herbert Federer, BrownUniversity. Tea in Foyer of Golding Au-ditorium at 4:00 p.m.Golding Auditorium,

B. Brandeis University, 4:30 p.m.how to MIT-HARVARD

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR.*"Synthetic Polynucleotides and the Gen-etic Code." Dr. Severo Ochoa. De-

.. partment of Biochemistry. New YorkUniversity School of Medicine, NewYork.

egational Mallinckrodt Laboratory. MB-9,$2.00. Harvard University, 5:00 p.m.

DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY.NAVAL, AND AIR SCIENCE.*5 World War 1 film series: "The FamousThi.d Army." Sponsored by the JayZeamer Squadron and the Pershing Ri-

of Jud- fles. Admission free.Vannevar Bush Room, 5:00 p.m.PROTESTANT

- - m m mmn m - m - -i-mm-n- - m- m mm iI I WA~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I II See our representative II 1snaII !"a a oewiarlaan

I II| mMARCH 7 ,I

CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION.Discussion group: "Contemporary Fic-tion." Mr. Bloy. Call extension 2326 foetime.317 Memorial DriveTECHNOLOGY CATHOLIC CLUB.*"Theology of the Sacraments." FatherFrancis Sweeney. CSP.Room 7-108. 5:00 p.m.UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALISTMINISTRY.Open seminar in existential thought."The Relevance of God."317 Memorial Drive, 6:30 p.rnm.WATER POLO CLUB.*

Meefting.Alumni Pool. 6:30 p.m.TECHNOLOGY CATHOLIC CLUB.Altar Boy Classes. Learning how to serveMassMIT Chapel, 7:30 p.m.GRADUATE CHRISTIANDISCUSSION GROUP.*"Faith: Personal-lntellectual." Dr. Wal-ter R. Thorson, Assistant Professor ofChemistry, MIT.Macomber Room. Graduate House,7:00 p.m.DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRYHARVARD-MIT PHYSICALCHEMISTRY COLLOQUIUM.*

"Corresponding State Treatment of Kin-

,s F MA-m

etic Data: Solvent Effects." Dr. HarryFrisch, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Mur-ray Hall, New Jersey. -Room 6-120. 8:00 pn.M.MIT CIVIL-RIGHTS COMMITTEE.'Debate or Racial Equality-Part II:Lecture, 'The Case for Integration."Mr. Jamnes Farmer. National Director ofCORE (Congress of Racial Equality). Aquestion period will follow.Compton Lecture Hall, 26-100, O:00 pnm.

Friday, February 16RESEARCH LABORATORY OFELECTRONICS.*Colloquiumrn: "Cerrillo's Perceptual FieldHypothesis." Walter H. Pils. Lecture.Department of Electrical Enginsering,MIT and Jerome Y. Letivin. AssociateProfessor of Biology. MIT.Room 26-1e0,. 3:00 p.m.DEPARTMENT OFMECHANICAL ENGINEERING.Seminar: "An Experimental Study of theRotatior of a Flexible Disk Next to aParallel Plane-A Problem in Elasticityand Fluid Dynamics." Mr. Ivan Pelech,Laboratory for Electronics, Inc., Bos-ton. Coffee in the Miller Room 43-070)at 3:00 p.m.Room 3-270, 3:30 p.m.

A.SX2-et

TECHNOLOGY CATHOLIC CLUB.*Philosophy Lecture Series: '"Being, Es-sence, and Existence." Father WilliaminWallace, OP.Room 3-133. 5:00 p.m.LECTURE SERIES COMMITTEE.Classic film series: "He Who MustDie." Admission by subscription ticketonlyKresge Auditorium, 6:30 and 9:00 p.m.MIT DRAMASHOP.*An evening of one-act plays. "MissJulie" by August Strindberg and '"TheMarriage- Proposal" by Anton Chekhov.Critique and coffee hour following theperformances. Admission free.Little Theatre, Kresge Auditorium,8:30 p.m.

Saturday, February 17 MIT-.HILLEL SOCIETY.Discussion group: "The Torah Portionof the Week."317 Memorial Drive. 2:30 p.nm.LECTURE SERIES COMMITTEE.*Entertainment film series: "The LastAngry Man." Admission 30c.Room 10-20, 5:15, 7:30 and 9:45 p.m.

Sunday, February 18PROTESTANTCHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION.Breakfast for Protestant Students. -'West Dining Room. Graduate House,10:00 a.m.

Monday, February 19APPLIED MATHEMATICS ANDMECHANICS COLLOQUIUM.*"Dislocation: A New Concept in Con-tinuum Mechanics." Professor EkkehadtKroner, Stuttgart institute of Technolo-gy and Visiting Professor, MathematicsDept., MIT. Tea in Room 2-290 at3:30 p.m.Room 2-390, 4:00 p.m.TECHNOLOGY DAMES.Talk. Dr. M. Bulin, "Methods of Child-birth."Hayden Library Lounge, 8:00 p.m.DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING.Hydromechanics seminar: "Multiple Pur-pose Water Resources Development." Mr.Arthur Mitchell, Assistant Chief. ProjectInvestigations Division, Bureau of Rec-lamation, Denver, Colorado.Room 48-208, 4:00 p.m.M IT OUTING CL.UB.*Meeting.Walker. Memorial, Room 306, 5:15 p.m.CHORAL SOCIETY.Rehearsal.Kresge Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.SEMINAR SPONSORED BY THEPROTESTANT MINISTRY.Graduate Seminar. "Live, Live. Live."Mr. Russell.317 Memorial Drive, 10:00 p.m.

Tuesday, February 20DEPARTMENT OFMECHANICAL ENGINEERING.ENGINEERING PROJECTSLABORATORY COLLOQUIUM.*"Forced Convection Boiling Heat Trans-fer." Mr. Arthur Bergles.Room 3-351, 12:00 noonTECHNOLOGY CATHOLIC CLUB.*Seminar for Unbelievers. Father WilliamSullivan. C.S.P.Room 7-108, 12:00 noonDEPARTMENT OF NUTRITION. FOODSCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY.*.Graduate seminar: "Vitamin A Acid."Professor John E. Dowling, Harvard Uni-versity.Room 16-310, 3:00 p.m.COMPUTATION CENTER.*Tour of the Computation Center withdemonstration of the IBM 7090 Com-puter.Room 26-168, 4:00 p.m.DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGYAND GEOPHYSICS.*Earth Sciences Colloquium: "Problems ofCaribbean Geology." Professor Ely Men-cher, Associate Professor of Geology,MIT.Room 4-231. 4:00 p.m.DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY.NAVAL. AND AIR SCIENCE.*World War i11 film series: "True Glory."Sponsored by the Jay Zeamer Squadronand the Pershing Rifles. Admission free.Vannevar Bush Room. 4:00 p.m.DEPARTMENT OF NAVALARCHITECTURE ANDMARINE ENGINEERING.*Serminar. "Engineering Aspects of theMohole Project." Mr. Willard Bascom,Director, Mohole Project. National Aca-demy of Sciences, Washington, D.C.Coffee in Room 5-311 at 3:30 p.m.Room 3-370. 4:00O p.m.HUMANITIES DEPARTMENT.*New Art Bassoon Quartet with DonnaKlimoski, mezzo-soprano in a program ofBaroque, Renaissance, and Contemporarymusic. Admission free.Hayden Memorial Music Library, 5:00p.m.SEMINAR SPONSORED BY THEPROTESTANT MINISTRY.Study group: "Protestantisrr. in America."Mr. Roelofs. Open to students of all na-tions.317 Memorial Drive, 5`00 p.m.TECHNOLOGY CATHOLIC CLUB.*Meeting: "The Church and Civil Rights."Father John J. O'Brien, St. John's Sem-inary.Vannevar Bush Room, S:00 p.m.PROTESTANT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION.Study Groups.317 Memorial Drive, 5:00 & 7:00 p.m.Dinner.West Dining Room Graduate House, 6:00p.m.DEPARTMENT OF AERONAUTICSAND ASTRONAUTICS.D;nner-meeting for Juniors.Endicott House, 6:%0 p.m.SEMINAR SPONSORED BY THEPROTESTANT MINISTRY.Graduate Seminar. Dinner-meeting. "Spir-

it of Protestantism." Mr. Holtzapple.Room 5, Faculty Club, 6:15 p.m.WATER POLO CLUB.*Meeting.Alumni Pool, 6:30 p.m.

Wednesday, February 21OPERATIONS RESEARCH CENTER.*Seminar: "The Project Mercury Real-TimeDecision Making System." Dr. Saul I.Gass, Manager, Project Mercury, IBMFederal Systems Division, Bethesda, Mary-land.Room 8-20S, 2:00 p.m.PROTESTANT MINISTRY AT MIT.

Coffee hour for Faculty."That They May Be One: SignificantEvents in the World Council of ChurchesAssembly." The Venerable John Burgess,formerly Episcopalian Chaplain of How-ard University and Canon of the Wash-

ington Cathedral.Emma Rogers Room, 10-340, 3:00 p.m.

NUCLEAR ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT.Seminar lecture: "The Comparative An-atomy of Gas-Cooled Reactors." Dr. R.A.- Charpie, Manager. Advanced Develop-ments, Union Carbide Corporation. Allinterested persons are invited.Room 222. 138 Albany St., 4:00 p.m.

(Please turn to Page 19)

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Page 17: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

ai-iaa r vvwS-i~w a -- vu- .;- ^tYIi 3quasn-- i eamIM Hockey Playoffs Tight Blasts TrmnlySqd8-1

. - . l~~~~~~~~~~~Te MTr squas tteam toppdThe intramural hockey- playoffs are well on theJX way, Trty MI Saturday aftrnopnpdtheirwayTrim,"ty 8-1 Saturday afternoonwith Graduate House favored:to win the title again this year. for its fi[t major -win in twoOther major contenders are Theta Delta Chi, Sigma Alpha esons. Lat year IThinity beatEpsilon, and Phi Gamma Delta. MIT 7-2.

.Grad House' front line of Silver, Butman, anml Parker isan onroe l ecertainly the best scoring. unit in the history of intramural 62 playg top n de.fedh.ckey here at MIT; they' are backed up by a second line of Trlaty g Pope -15-2an, e-13, 15featedbetter-than-average intramural players and a very sound de- 12. MTis , Proies r1gu52 rr3, 15-fense. In their first two playoff ganes, Grad House drubbed bar one man, hcad gone'to tne'East Camnpus 8-0 and Delta Psi 6-1l Nation. a e une

Theta Delta Chi, led by seniors Dick Conant and Mike N 4tf .OApen fTournaietert inRobb, had trouble finding. its scoring range in their first game uf! A of te othof the playoffs; they squeaked by Lambda Chi 'Alpha, -0, victor es were aso in tree

;' ~~~stiraig~lrt gamne. Joe Sbmrftt '62a suddemA-death overtime, last Sunday. Last night Theta Delta straige t games. Joe Sbrntt '62Chi took on Grad House in a major encounter in the double- ge U h fewst ins Wi-elimination playoffs. ' .. at sevenh 1"1· ''-8, 15-7.., 'Tom Hastings '61 and Norm Dorf '62 provide the punch -for Phi'Gamma Delta who' nipped Sigma Phi Epsilon. 2-1 .in Bill Miatilte '62, usually thetheii second game, after polishing off. Baker House a w.eek most con'sient MIT 'player 'nago. The Fijis concentrate' on a strong defense .hoping for intercolleglaibe compediition, hadoccasional breakaways, but have had trouble hitting the net a bad day anid lost to Stein-lately. · muer '62 in five erratic ganes.

Mickey Haney '62, perennial superstar of Sigma Alpha Flnlday nigh/t MIT }l0t 8-1 toEps'lon, has been aided this year by -the brliant--goal-tendinga. PBrrinetoon, Whih is ranked inof Joe Kirk '64; and improved play all- around. :Attr opening, the top three or four teams in.with a 7-0 romp over Chi Phi, SAE .barely downed 'Theta Chi the country. Zug, Princeton's2-1 last 'Sunday. SAE played the Fijis last 'hight; the winner top man and Pevhaps second inofl this contest meets the winner of tihe Grad-TDC' battle next iatercolleglate ran/ki,; hadd asSunday at 7:30. sio gone to tde . Nabionals,

The first-round-losers', consolation bracket saw Tau Epsi- Thomara Guillermnox !64, playianglon. Phi forfeit its second straight playoff game to Senior six, had the only officiza vic-Huse, and Dast Campus forfeit to ,NRSA. Thursday night toqy agaiinsit Princeton. BobSigma Chi faces Baker House, arid Burton House plays Chi, Iltmberg '64 won an unofficialPhi. matbdh in benith poeinao ,

i, I NC.

IS THE MARK OF OPPORTUNITY FOR BS, MS, PhD

INEERS.§ CHEMISTS.M SCIEIITIN ADVANCED

CRYOGENICS AND CHEMICAL PROCESS TECHNOLOFor interview appointment

> ON CAMPUS-FEBRUARY 21Please contact Mr. S. R. Cessna

at Your Placement Office

4

AN INCREAStHING CHALLENGE IS OFFERED IN-.RESEARCH ANDDEVELOPMENT* Chemical Process

Development* Physical Chemistry,

Physics* Thermodynamics* Applied Metallurgical &

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Career Development Program consisting of 2 to 4 planned six-month project assignments. A stimulating and informative op-portunity to contribute heavily while selecting the activitywhere your best potential exists.Immediate openings for direct placement are also available.Graduates with non-technical degrees may qualify for theCareer Development Program directed toward Sales andFinance.Company location near New York and Philadelphia. Graduatestudy tuition refund plan at excellent -nearby universities.Advanced personnel policies.

For additional information write Mr. Cessna,.-Air Products & Chemnicals, Inc., Allentown, Penna.

An equal opportunity employer

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McFarland Wins Match· IJ ' I

~I [ I II

Pistol Second in NEGPCSix members of the Varsity Pistol Team and Coach Rob-

ert Durland compated January 27 with an estimated 125 othershooters in the New England Gallery Pistol Championships,at the Mystic Valley Gun Club in' Malden. Bill McFarland '62won four- trophies in the Expert Class with a score of 843,placing first in the Aggregate, fourth in Timed Fire, first inRapid Fire, and third in the Gallery Course. Manager Tomsaeacs '62 also fired in the Expert Class, taking third place in

Rapid Fire and fourth in the Gallei-y Course. The MIT teamentry consisting of the three lettermen McFarland, Isaacs, andJohn 'Gibbons '62 and Coach Durland, took first place in theExpert Ctlass, with a score of 1101, placing second only to tlieCoast Guard Master Team in the entire field of competition.

On the following Tuesday the Pistol Team joined theRifle and Swimming Teams' in the annual Southern Trip, andon the same. afternoon soundly defeated Rutgers, 1326 to 1276.Sophomore Bob Brooks came through with a 269 in this match,his highest score to date. Also counting among the MIT highfive were Tom Isaacs, Bill McFarland, John Gibb'ons, and RossWelton '64.

Despite this encouraging sart, however, the team lost thetext two- matches of the trip. Wednesday MIT turned in aKore of 1297 against Navy's 1402, and the following day)owed to Villanova, 1324 to 1313.

After a night in Philadelphia,- the team. continued theeturn north and Friday afternoon faced the Merchant Marinekcademy at King's Point, New York. MIT won the match by[ narrow nr.argin of five points, 1319 to 1314. The last day ofhe 'trip MIT faced the undefeated Army Team at West Point,

.. ,~ . ~losing 1412 to' 1301.The team arrived home at 1

a. m. Sunday morning, and dur-ing the following week firedpostal matches against Arling-ton State, Ohio State, and Ogle-thorpe University. And in theGBPL match Tuesday night,MIT defeated the top rankingHansoom Field team, 1099 to1077.

Friday afternoon, February 9,the full squad of eight men leftCambridge for the Coast Guarxd

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~lSTAcademy in New London, Con-.. . neoticut, to compete with six

sowMY~~~ ~other teams in the Intercollegi-IGYU~~~~ sate Pistol Sectionals. The com-

petition included two teamseach from MIT, West Point,and Coast Guard, and one teameach from the Merchant MarineAcademy and the University ofMassadh'usetts.

The results of this match, incombination with the other sec-tionall matches fired throughout

ADVANCED the country, determine to aPRODUCTS large extent the members of

the 1962 First and Second All* CAdvaPropellantscheAmerican Pistol Teams. Last* Advanced Machinery year MlT had two men, BillDesign and

Development McFarland and John Gibbons,* Miniature on the Second Team. Last year

Cryo-Refrigeraters alsb, Bill McFarland ranked* Miniature sixth in the nation in the indi-

Heat Exchangers vidual comnpetition, and the MIT* Cryo-Magnet& teamn entry ranked fifth in the

Cryo-Electronic nation.Super Coolers This season, the competiio

was considerably stronger thanlast year, and the pressure onthe individual shooters was in-tense. Under such heavy pres-sure few of the top shootersperformed as well as theymight have, and the expectedrecord breaking scores fromWest Point and Coast Guardnever materialized. It was adark day for MIT, as Bill Mc-Farland turned in the only re-spectable scores on the team.

The first Anny ;eam won thematch with a score of 1112,followed by Coast Guard #1,1107; Coast Guard #2, 1079;West Point #2, 1065; Universityof Massachusetts, 1045; MIT #1,1033; Merchant Marine Acad-emy, 1014; MIT #2, 916.-

SUBJECTS WANTED for an Ex-periment on Perception. Male

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Page 18: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

Ieers Tromp Wesleyan;, 173; Holy Cross Here 'On 'FridayBril;.idant playlmaing by Capt.

John Rupe'qt '62, cowzbimed w~iththe sharp-shooting of Mike Den-ny '63, gave the Tech icementheir fifth straight wmin overWesleyan. 7-3, last Saturd'aynight. Tonight the team travelsto Amnherst. Mass., to meet theUniversity of - Massachusetts.Friday, Holy CrAss comes toMIT and, Saturday, WorcesteTrPolyltechnic Institute will behere. Both games are at 7:00.

In last Satuwday's game, Rup-ert set up five goals and scoreda sixth; Denny haimmered in

four goals on pasmes fAom Ru-ert. Steve Levy '62 scored twoand assisted on tWo iOmre du,-ing the game.

Denny opened the .scoing af-ter two mnmutes of the fixstperiod after sone fast passwokin f:rolt of the Wesgeya. net.Wesleyan got it back iour minrutes la~ter as Rin4k Adams il oka pass from John Fewnr andbWlasted a hard sthot into tih( uplper left coer of the MIT net.

Wesleyan moved wed aminrute later as Brack Oaartipped in a rebound fncan in

Smith Fires 2nd 290

Sharpshooters Take TwoMIT's rifle team was victorious this past week in a pair

! of triangular matches against local colleges.,m An afternoon match was held Friday with Boston College

and Boston University at Boston College. Captain Steve Smith'62 led the team with his second 290 of the season. Smith's290 was backed up by Dick Ludeman '63, 287; Terry Foster '63,286; Al Gleim '62, 282; and Bruce Peterson '63, 282. The teamscore was 1427, two points below this season's high score.Boston University placed sec-oand with a 1401, while BostonCollege shot a 1392.

On Satur:day, MIT shotagainst Northeastern and Prov-idence College at Northeastern.mMIT again fired a 1427 to de-feat Northeastern with a 1412,

and Providence with a 1402.Nal'ter Draper of Northeasternshot a 294, but the team lackedthe depth to come up with awinning score. Mrls high fivewere Gleim, 287; Smidth, 286;Peterson, 285; Ludeman, 285;and Joe Wyatt, '62, 284.

"NAVIGATION ISOUR BUSINESS"

at

The Electronics Divisionof General Motors

Our current projects include development and production of InertialGuidance Systems for the TITAN 11, THOR and MACE missiles. We arealso the Systems Integration Manager for the modified 1-52C&D Bomb-ing Navigation System. In the commercial field, AC has developed andis now producing a new mobile radiotelephone. Research and develop-ment - programs include navigation systems for mobile ICBMs, spacevehicles, supersonic aircraft and ocean-going vessels.AC is seeking qualified engineers and physicists to fill permanent posi.lions in Milwaukee, Boston and Los Angeles. You may qualify for employ-ment if you have a BS or MS degree in Electrical Engineering, Mechani-cal Engineering or Physics. Advanced positions are also available formen who are completing their doctorates with specialization in naviga-tion and related fields.To provide a transition from academic learning to practical careerdevelopment AC offers the following training programs:

MILWAUKEECareer Acceleration Program - A twelve-month program with formalizedclassroom instruction given in conjunction with rotating job assignmentsin Manufacturing, Keliability and Engineering. Courses include:Ballistic and Cruise Missile Basic Principles of Inertial

Laboratory Sessions GuidanceAdvanced Servomechanisms Semi-conductor TechnologyPrinciples of Airborne Digital Probability and Statistics

Computers Philosophy of ReliabilityField Service Program -Two- to four-month classroom and laboratorytraining on inertial guidance systems or bombing navigation systems.Domestic and foreign assignments follow completion of program.

. - ·. ~BOSTON

Advanced Concepts Research and Development On-the-Job TrainingProgram - AC's Boston Laboratory is engaged in developing advancedinertial guidance equipment primarily for application in earth-boundvehicles.

LOS ANGELESAdvanced Concepts Research and Development On-the-Job TrainingProgram- AC's Los Angeles Laboratory is occupied with advancedguidance research for space vehicles and ballistic missiles, plus ad-vanced research in special purpose digital computers.

See your College Placement Office r-gerding an oppoiimet for a perseainterview with the General Mloters and AC Representative.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

Wednesday. February 21if unable to apply in person send resume to Mr. C. F. Raosch,Director of Scientific and Professional Employment, Dept. 5753,7929 South Howell, Milwaukeo 1, Wisconsin.

An Equal Opportunity EmployerAsA your Placemeot Oftker for AC's new Employment Brobhure.

The Electronics Division of General MotorsMILWAUKEE * LOS ANGELES * BOSTON

AChiever Inertial Guidance Systems for Titan II, Thor and Mace. BombingNavigation Systems for the B-52CD) and 8-47. AChieverfone MobileRadiotelephone Systems.

By Tom Sheahen .62

frof of the net. But Tech cameback strong and regaied thelead on tw-o RpeAnt to Dennycombinations, within 47 seoindsof each other,. before the half-way mark. The first pea-iod pro-groesed quietly until the finalminulte of play whea Wesleyda'sChuok Dauchy tied the soore3-3 with a quick blast fman theleft of the MIT net.

After tlhds inaitiail scare (MITusatlly beats Wesleyan), Techretturned to the ice for the sec-ond period and took a corn-nmaindng lead. After five score-less min'utes, Retpeat and Dennyagain broke away, sweeping inon an unprotected goaltender;Denny tipped in a pass fromRFupert. Two minutes later Levysore0d on a smnila breakaway,Rupert again assisting.

The third period opened withdefenseman Fran Berlandi '62passiing the puck to Levy, whoscored after only 33 seconds.Seven m!nautes later a slap shotby Ted Cohn '63 rebounded toLevy, who faNked out the goalieand passed to Rtpent for thetailly, bringing.the score to 7-3.After Vhis the teanns playedevenly and soorellessly for therest of the game.MIT 3 2 2- 7Weslean 3 0 0- 3

First period goals: MIT, Den-ay (Rupert, Levy), 2:06; Den-

yt (Rupe, Bermlandi), 8:31;Denay (lupert), 9:18. WES-IIEYAN, Adams (Farr). 6:17;Camr (Sbhick), 7:25; Darucy(Ciougherty, Shizck), 19:29. Pen-ailties: MIT, Cohn (ehamging),0:43; MAo~l;ilan (rtrippiag), 8:54;Levy off(emasive zone Checking),

Tcke 6 of I 1 Events

11:12; Slmon (tripPing), 12:19.WESLNEYAN, Adams (tring),11:01.

Second peaiod goals: IT,Denny (Rupert), 5:46; Levy(Rupert), 7:17. Penalrtes: MBIT,t-oiroft (sitasing), 8:08; WES-LEYAN, Dhougihty (0okainmg),11:12.

Mrd peattd goals: MlT, Le-viy (,Beiandi), 0:33; Ruewt('evy, Caoh), 7:43. Penralte:WESLEYAN, omery (rripiping), 6:00; Ewart (.dhagi2l),10:36.

Getenders' saves:Mclamy (W) 4 5 - 5-14SDhanfield (MIT) _8 4 4-16

The MIT Wrestling Teamlast S¢turday, played host tothe University of Massachus-etts. The Engine~er; showedstreneth and experience in all

'By Ronald Davies '63

MIT's swimming team downed Trinity lastSaturday for another victory. The Techmentook six of eleven events, winning by themargin of 58-37. Outstanding performanceswere turned in by Tim Sloat '63, winning the200-yard backstroke event in 2:22.0, and byLauren Sompayrac '63, who came from be-hind to win the 200-yard breaststroke in2:34.0.

In the opening event MIT stepped off toa quick lead by capturing the 400-yard med-ley relay. The teaan of Sloat Sompayrac, RonMatlin '63, and Wayne Matson '64 breezedhome in the time of 4:08.7 to win this eventbV fi"- ..-

I

The Engineers again showed their super-iority in the 220-yard freestyle. Captain JedEngler took an early lead and remained infront over the entire distance.

Tech's natators dropped the 50-yard free-style but came back with a pair of victoriesin the 200-yard individual medley and divingevents. Tom Isng '62, holder of the MIT var-sity record in this event, swam to an easyvictory in the 200; while Bill Bails '64 tookfirst place in diving.

Trinity was victorious in the 100 yardfreestyle butterfly and the 10 yard freestyledespite the strong performances of Ron Mat-1;- G"u . .o Matson.

The Engineers' last two vic-Aies came in the 200-yardac ks t r o k e and 200-yard· :eaststroke. Tech swimmers'aced first and second in eachf,these events.Previous to the victory

gainst Trinity, the swimmingearn broke even at 1-1-1 on aoad trip during intercession.Me victory came against Ford-am College in New York City.'he tie, the first in the lasthree years for the Techmen,.as with New York University.\nd the loss came at the hands'f the University of Pennsyl-ania in Philadelphia.The ,highlight of the trip was

CE he record-breaking effort oforn Ising in the individual

BOND rneilley. Ising lowered the;chool record to 2:18.0.

hand tied The Tech swimming teamact papers rnee 4s Amherst this evening atit a trace. the Alumni Pool. Saturday

he fick of afternoon, the squad plays hoistto Adegphi College. Race time

ie erasure s 2 p. m.Freshmen natators enter

thear sixth meet of the current.k..:. . am paign Saturday, February

17, against the cadets of WestPoint.

HEAR BRUCE CAMERONof New York

'"The False Face ofWorking Class Prosperity'NEW BRUNSWICK HOTEL

ELD, MASS. Cor. of Norway & Mass. Ave..Boston

SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 18, 3 P.M.

weight classes, as they crushedthe opposition by a score of 25-5. MIT's sole loss came in the130-pound class, when Don Top-kis, '64, failed to make the re-quWed maximum weight in hisclass.

Jim Evans, '63, extended hiswinning streak to eight in arow by pinning his oppornentin the fifth minute of thematch. Evans is in the 147-pound weight class.

KiMm Sloat, '64, Tech heay-weilght star, continued hisstreak to four in a row by de-feating Ted Rice on a decisioe

Terry Ohatwin, '63, pimned hisman in six minutes in the 134-pound class, while ArmnandGabrielan, '63, team captainGreg Brown, '62, Tom Garrity,'63, and Paul Olmstead, '62, wonby decisions in the 127, 167,and 177-pound classes respec-tively.

The Engineers face Wesleyantonight at the opponent's homegym. Satsurday, the grapplerswill play host to Dartmouth at3:30 p.m. in Rockwell Cage. TheFreshmen will also meet theseschools at this time.

Ising Smashes Record

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Grapplers Crush U. of Mass. 25-5;Evans, Sloat Continue Streaks

Tech Swimmers Swamp Trinity, 58-37

We all make

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Page 19: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

"MJ .1T. MEN:"WEEK-END

IN NEWYORK-. I k _-f.

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BREAKFA$T, TAXES INCLUDED.BY RESERVATION ONLY.

See your travel agent, or write:

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Sw sen Fall 22-5To Unbeaten Columbia;Meet Havad Tonht

Mr 's sw na t met Colun-bi'a ast Friday at Dupont andwere topped by the New Yor-ksdhool,' 22-5. Oohmwbia, hbaving

'oenttly beaten NYU, is ou-,re.tGly ooiskered by' oact1es tobe the top coaesgiaite feoingrtean in the United St'tes. TheTeben were hane in the.f-tch, by the reoent loss oftwo of their tp 'siwo osmen,Bob Levis and Robert Mason.

In saber oompebi tion, SteveReznrek '63 showed excel-lentoomrol of hs point and strailghtattack, and Art Best '64 cdis-played munh imkprovemernnt inh:s attacks.

Dave Jacker '63 fenced wel,in epee as did Steve Miller '64.

Tin the foil,. Batry Rosof£ened a stvong niatcd butRalph Zminerman '64, a con-siant winner, hadam off day.

The team meet Harvard to-nigbt at Dupon

You are cordially invited to attend a privateinterview with a Special Representative ofLockheed Missiles & Space Company.ObjeCtive: Pursue mutual interests byexamining the almost limitless fields ofendeavor being investigated at Loc'kheed.

Lockheed Missiles & Space Company inSunnyvale and Palo Alto, California, on thevery beautiful San Francisco Peninsula, isconstantly probing all the sciences relatedto missiles and space projects. These coverthe complete spectrum-from humanengineering through celestial mechanics-'providing a fascinating challenge to thosewhose interests lay beyond the ordinaryday-to-day job.

Lockheed, Systems Manager fc.r suchprojects as the Navy POLARIS FBM andthe Air Force DISCOVERER and MIDASSatellites, is also an important.contributorto various NASA programs involving some

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organizations of its kind, the Company pro-vides the finest technical equipment ayail-able; for example, the Sunnyvale facilityhouses one of the most modern computiingcenters in the world. Every opportunity isgiven members of the technical staff to

9.1lntroducion To Sports

ITennis is an important part of the M.I.T.

athletic program. This basic outline will helpanyone who is not acquainted with it, butwishes to learn about it.

Three forms of tennis *are most oftenplayed, singles, doubles, and mixed doubles.Singles requires one player on each side;doubles, two players; and mixed doubles, aman and woman on each side.

The large number of tennis courts oncampus makes a detailed description of themfruitless, but I will mention the names of afew of the most important parts. The twosquares adjacent to the net are called theservice boxes, the lines parallel to the netare called the endlines, and the lines perpen-dicular to the net are called the sidelines.There are two pair of sidelines, the inner pairare the boundaries for singles play, and theouter pair are the boundaries for doublesplay.

To begin play in a tennis match, one per-son must be designated as the server. Hetakes a position behind one endline, to the

participate 'in the. initiation of advancedtechnological developments.

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right of the court's center, and attempts toplace the ball into the left service box on hisopponent's side of the court. The ball mustland in the box without hitting any otherpart of the court. The service is also good ifit lands on the lines of the service box. Theserver is allowed two attempts to place hisservice into his opponent's box. If he fails,he loses the point, and moves to the left sideof the endline where he must place the ballin his opponent's right service box. . Theserver continues to alternate service box-esafter each point throughout a game.

If the server succeeds in making a goodservice, his opponent must return the ball af-ter only one bounce to the server's side. Here-after the ball may be hit on the fly or afterone bounce, and it must be returned to Ame,opposite court.

A point is gained in tennis when the serverfails to return the ball so that it bounces onlyon the opposite side of the court. Other lesscommon means for a point to be gained are:an opponent hits the net when he attempts to

hit the ball; an opponent hitsthe ball before it has 'crossedthe net; an opponent hits theball twice; and an opponentcatches the ball or is hit by theball in or out of bounds.

To the beginner and the spec-tator the most trying part oftennis is the scoring system. Itis much more complicated thanmost other sports, but it lendsto the excitement and value ofthe tennis match.

One game is won when aplayer wins four points. Thefirst gives a score of five orfifteen; the second, thirty; thethird, forty; and the fourth,fifty. The complications arisebecause a player must win byat least two points. When thescore .of forty-forty is reached,numbers are discarded, and thesoore is said to be deuce.

From this point to the game'send, deuce and add are theterms used to score. "Deuce"means an even score and theterm "add," short for advan-tage, indicates that one playerhas won one more point thanhis opponent and needs only onepoint to win the game. If heloses the next point, the scorebecomes deuce again.

After a game is ..won theservice is changed, .and aftereach odd game the playerschange their sides 'of the court.

A player Who wins six games,wins set. Again, a player mustwin a set by at least two games.Thus, if 'the score is tied at fivegames, the set may be won byscores of 7-5, 8-6, 9-7, 10-8, etc.

Most tennis matches co~nsistof winrning at least two of threeor three of five sets. It is notdifficult to see how this com-plicated scoring system leads tovery long, strongly contestedtennis matches.

Calendar of Events

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cDCD,:)

(Continued from Page 16)DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY.*Seminar: "Methods For Looking at a Ner-vous System." Dr. Jerome Y.' Lettvin, MIT.Tea in Room 16-711 at 4:00.p.m.Room 16-310, 4:30 p.m.MIT HILLEL SOCIETY.Lecture on Jewish History. "The Signifi-cance of the Spanish Period." Rabbi Pol-lack.317 Memorial Drive, 7:30 p.m.MIT HILLEL'SOCIETY.*Israeli Dancing. Admissibn 50c.Walker Memorial, Roorn. 201Q 8:30 p.m.

Thursday, February 22Holiday, Washington's birthday.

MIT ON WGBH-TV,CHANNEL 2

MIT SCIENCE REPORTER"Hardware 'for the Blind." Host: JohnFitch. with guests, John Dupress, Direc-tor of Technical Research, AmericanFoundation for the Blind, New York,Dr. 'Robert W...Mann, and Dr. ThomasB. Sheridan of the Department of Me-chanical Engineering, MIT.Wednesday, February 14, 9:30 p.m. andSunday, February 18, 6:30 p.m.

EXHIBITS*HAYDEN GALLERY.David Smith Sculptures and reliefs. Dis-played from February 10 through Feb-ruary 27. Gallery hours: Monday throughFriday, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturdayand Sunday, 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.GRAP-IlC ARTS GALLERY(211 Masscrchusetts Avenue).Photographic salon prints by Nelson L.Murphy,' APSA, Washington, Pa. The ex-hibit includes snow scenes, marines,landscapes, and stilt 'life. Displayedthrough February 28;.'FACULTY CLUB.Prints by Patricia de Gogorza.Japanese prints on loan from MITStaff Members.

Tennisary Salsberg '65

ENGINEERS ...SCIENTISTS

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Page 20: THE TE;CHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N2.pdf · TE;CH Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 2 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, February 14, 1962 5 Cents Bowman, Kaufman In Race Secretariat

C� 0 0 I0 I 0 N AU#ID SAY 0U)to I I III V"a- F

In the' foui event EISA B - second; Peter Goldstern, '62, County meet for MrrIT, had aChampionship, sponsored by fourth; Giorgio Emo, '62, fifth; dramatic expeence right afterColby College Friday and Sat- and Bent Aasnaes, '64, seventh. his start. In passing a bumpy

-O irday, Feblruary 9 and 10, MIT MIT had all its five skiers part of the course, suddently bisskiers scored impressive vic- within the first seven places, left ski broke off right hehirn

i tories, and managed to win the and held a solid lead over the the boot. There was no time tocombined meet far ahead of sec- other teams from the first event turn aroud and get a new ski

co ond-place Colby on. so he cortinued, on one and a_ The Alpine events were held The slalom was held Friday half skis three miles to thl

Friday at Sugarloaf Mountain, afte:eo<on on a 45-gate course half-way station where Roberto< Kicgfield, Maine. Henrik Wes- set by the former Austrian Peccei was waiting with reservec sel, '64, continued his perform- National Champion ('58 and equipment.,In spite of this uMn-L ance from last weekend by '59) Uli Peterskovsky. In spite fortunate expenderce, he placed

winning t/he 52 gate, one mile of the high quality course and third, followed by team mates' downhill course followed by difficult snow conditiors, the Bjorn Qvale, '62, and Giorgio

team mates Robe/ito Peooei, '62. Tech skiers managed to place Emo in the fifth and sixth pos-all their five men in the six itions.

How They Did top spots. The event was won The Juniping wa held in theby Poberto Peccei after two aftemoo on a 90-foot jump

Basketball: excellent runs, where he proved at Franingham Ski Area. Eachq MIT 80, Lowell Tech 60 his -abilities as an outstanding competitor had three jumps,_ Fencing: skier on soft powder snow, as with he two best counting.

Columbia 22, MIT 5 well as on pure ice. Henrik Asnaes again turned in aI Hockey: Wessel followed in second place,

MIT 7, Wesleyan 3 Giorgio Emrno placed thilrd, Peten phenomenal performnance, soar-Pistol: Goldstern fourth, and Bent Aas- -ing an anzaing 90 feet to cap-

MIT 1326, Rutgers 1276 naes sixth. The Tech skiers in-Navy 1402, MIT 1297 creased their lead and got 99.8 Koch Hits For 33Villanova 1324, MIT 1313 ut of 100 posible.MIT 1319, Merchant Marine In the Nordic events, Satur- e

1314 day at Farmington, Maine, MIT Tecn ve maArmy 1412, MIT 1301 again showed its supremacy by

Rifle: winning a dramatic Cross By J. M. BlewMIT 1427, BU 1401, BC 1392 Country race by more than six Saturday night MIT's var

Skiing: minutes. Bent Aasnaes won t&> team won its eighth straight, cFirst in EISA-B champion- seven mile race by a mangin of Tech 80-60. The win placed

ships more than four mirnutes over 10-4 with 6 games remaining.First in NEC giant slalom second place Rogers from Col0by. next game at Bowdoin We

Squash: A victory such as this is ex- would tie the MIT school re,MIT 8, Trinity 1 tremely rare, and is even more consecutive games won (9Y ar

Swimming: unbelievable when we connsider wins (11, last year).MIT 58, Trinity 37 that Aasnaes reported to the Saturday's game, played on

Wrestling: Start with a severe cold, Wes- smnil court, was a rough and MIT 25. UMass 5 sel, who won- the last Cross affair. This being Lowell Tech's

John Thomas Breaks Cage Record Af4By Howard Ellis '65 Track Meet. Highfthts of the the dtuia' vetcries of Olympian

MIT was h<st last Frday and record-wreckLng evert were the J chn Thomas in the high jump%Saturday to six locall sschoods at umexpected wide mawgn of vic- mad high hurdles. Th only MTthe Geatew Bostbon Colege tory of Iavaimrd's Crimson and victory came troullgh the ef-

forts of Gary Iukas '64 in thepole vault. ukis jumped 12feet and tied for first placealong with tre other cinder-

Harvaod dispay-ed great.deth and ability in both ,trackand fied events. The rmsonpoint ,total of 58 was well abovethe marks of Boston Colege,

/ S 39; Boston University, 36;Nartheasterm, 35; Tufts, 20½;

........ !!5~~~MT, 3'2; and Brandes, 3.Bostomn UTniversdty's John

Thomas feIll well short of his*1~ ~past perTfonmances, but stil

mamnaged to place first andbre:k the Rockwel Cage rec-ord with a jump of 6' 8 ".Thomas also was fist in thehigh hurdles (5.8).

A number of other Tech cin-demnen did well imn theix heatsbut failed to Place in the finals.Henry Dewey '63 was first inhis heat in tahe 600 yad runand cfinished sxth in the fias.Len Parsen '64 was ,also in the600 burt faied to qualify. SteveBanks '62 placed Sixth out of a

field of 12 in the finals of theone mile rn, whle teammateChuck Sigwart 64 was eighthO.t of 12 in the two mile finals.

Te fro*h one mile meileyrelay team of Roy Witbenbach,KX M .ash, Texry Dorschnerand Md!ke Oliver defeated Tufits

Olympian John Thmas gets off to fast start in igh hurdles in which in an unofficial raee.he took a first place. Coipetdng in eld events,

Photo by Curt Wiler '63 Jery Dassel '64 and Bill HIar-

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rst place anJ meet cage record.- Photo by Allen Rcsanborg '63

ture another first place forTedh. Wessl, Emo, and Stieg-litz, '64, placed fifth, seventbh,and eighth respectively.

Nodic Cornbinedl was wonby Bent Apsraes on first, fol-lowed by Wessel on fourth, andEmo fith. The Alpime Caombinedwas completely domimated byTech, whaich took the fst fourplaces with Pecei, Wessel, Emoand Goldsteim' in tihat order.Best in 1 four events wasHenrik Wessel, closely followedby Bent Aasnaes. Rogers, fromOoiby, placed thirL

MIT wil, frno now on, jointhe EIS A - League and com-pete agamt Dartmouth, Mad-dlebury, and other top collegesin the East.- After a great victory inMaine, our skiers traveled toMt. Sunapee, N. H., where theycopeted in the N.E.C. giant.

slalom race, Sunday. TIe skiersproved' that their conquest inMaine was no accident by tak-ing all of the five top positionsand placing all their men wthithe ten first places.

Bent Aasnaes, '64, led theMIT squad to victory, closelyfollowed by Henrik Wessel, '64,in a 42 gate course set by MATcoach' Wiffiam Hayes. Followingwere Giorgio Emo, '62 at third,Robeto Pecoei, '62 fourth,Peter GoJldstern fifth, and Mar-tin Steaglitz, tenth

Sunday's competition waswon by MIT with a full nn-ute's lead on second-placingAaniherst. All together, morethan eighty competitors fromeightt different colleges tookpart in the competition. Diffi-cult snow conditions taxed theingennity of the course setterwho, neverthedess, did an ex-cellent job.

agers Near Mark

ish Lowell. in 8th Straight Victorysity basketball,rushing Lowellthe Cagers atA win in the

.dnesday nightcords for -bothnd total season

Lowell Tech'shotly-contesteds. biggest.game,

GBC M4

the team wasjumped out toas Jeff Paarzbig men beecfor a time asMIT. Their tahowever, haviMIT held a sli

Lowell sao0briefly held thin the game. .went on a wilR

Detper '64 failed to quaify -in the35 pound weight evert. BillRemsen '64 also failed to placein the 16 pound shot.

This two day meet saw thetoppling of seven oaag recoidsad the equaling of two others.The fast Tech cinders providedan oPitulvty fm a n.mtber ofgood raies. Lary. Flreeman, asbudent at Boston Colege, ce-menrted his claim as the area's,premier coAllegiaite mniieTr with atorrid 4:17.6 effort that clsippedplenty off his own cage eodof 4:30.8.

Boston Univeeity's JohnTho,0mas broke the high jumpreoord, wuhle his teammate ArtFreevan, reigning BAA 1,000yard kuing, uno0rked a bldstteringkick to break the cage recordWith a tme of 2:20.4.

On Deck WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14Basketball IV & F) - Bowdo;n,

AwayVarsity Femnclng (V) - Harvard,

Dupont, 7:00 p.m.-Varsity Hockey (V) - Massachu-

setts, AwayFreshman H o c k e y - Lawrence

Academy, home rink, 4:00 p.m.Wrestling (V & F) - Wesleyan,

AwaySquash iF) - Middlesex School,

AwaySwimming (¥) - Amherst, Home,

8:00 p.m.Track - A.A.U. Meel, Home

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15Hockey (F) - Middlesex School,

Away, 3:30 p.m.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17Swimming (F) - Army, AwaySwimming (V) - Adeiphi, Home,

2:00 p.m.Basketball I1V) - Middlebury, Du-

pont, 8:15 p.m.Basketball (F) - New Prep, Du-

pont, 6:30 p.m.Fencing (V) - Holy Cross, Du-

pont, 3:30 p.m.Fencing '(F) Harvard, Dupont,

2:00 p.m.Hockey ()VI - W.P.l., home rink,

7:00 p.m.Pistol - Coast Guard Invitational

Match, AwayWrestling IV & F) - Dartmouth,

Rockwell Cage, 3:30Track (V & F) - Bates, Away

TUESDAY; FEBRUARY 20Swimming (V & F) -Tufts, AwayBasketball (V & F) -W.P.I., Du-

pont, 8:1 5 & 6:30 p.m.

high and the crowd noisy. Techa 17-10 margin in the first half'63 led the scorers.. Lowell's

mne effective under the boardss the,. home team closed in on

actics got them in foul trouble,rng three each in the first hall.lim 30-29 lead at halftime.red first in the second half andle -lead 31-30 for the only timeJeff Paarz and Dave Koch thend scoring spree that netted theEngineers 50 points in the SecIond half, despite subs playingthe final 5 mimues. Lowell'spivot men were helpless againstKook's devastating drives andfound theita shots blocked manytimes by Koch and Bill Eagle-son, '64. Technology's backcourtfeatured Paarz. with 21 fromlong range, Chuck Gamble, '62,with 8, and Kent Groninger, '63,with 6. Lowell wras led byPete Byra, 5'10" guard, whohad 24 counters, 18 n the sec-ond half.

The Engineers vAwil next ap-pear at Rockwell Cage thisSaturday night against Middle-.bury. Gamrne time is 8:15 witha Freshman game preceding.

MIT vs. Lowell TechMIT I LOWELLfg ft pf ptl fg ft pf Pt

Paarz 9 3 321 Lepore 4 2 310Smith 1 0 0 2 Koch 1 0 5 2Wyman 0 1 1 lIBeresford 0 0 3 ,'Koc-h 12 93 33 Uzdavins 4 1 4 9Fa'leson 3 0 3 6 Longevin 0 0 1 0Gamble 3 2 4 S Rabeni 5 1 31a.Bray 0 1 0 llPappedpoulosGroniager3 0 2 6 1 0 1 2Dreiss 0 20 2 Byra 8 8 3 2

,~~~ib 1 O 1 2-Kndbles 0 12Totals 31 18 1 3180 Totas 24 12 2- 6e

AAU Judo Sectionals MeetAt Cage Sunday, Feb. 18th

Beginndng at 9 a. m. this Sun-day, Rockwell Cage wila be theste of the AAU Judo Section-

ails sponsored by tho MIT JudoCQub and the Somerville YMCA.

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