. Tech Square parking scandal; Six stuck with stolen stickers ldft lu M O 0 0 tui ion rise or 66?0 After the meeting of the Executive Committee of the Corporation held last Friday, Malcolm G. Kispert, Secretary to the Committee, issued the following statement: Rv Rill .Judnick "There will be no change in the basic tuition rate of $1,700 for 1964--65. At the stu. Continuing or 1965-66 rate f the basic Two Technology Square parking attendants, employees of Meredith and Grew, present time will be no chans for changing were confronted Friday by the Campus Patrol with incontrovertible evidence exposing dies will be made between now and October, 1964, the outcome of which we hope will to ehango the basic tuition rate for 1965-66. But we must ema profitable sideline-a parking sticker racket that had been in operation at least rnake it benneemsarv three weeks. phasize that we cannot at the moment comfirm this with complete certainty." Summarily, they were fired. The full Executive Committee Lieutenant Olivieri, the Campus Patrolman who led the invesconsists of: Vannevar Bush, Hontigation, revealed his files on the case: orary Chairman; James Rhyne Long memory Killian Jr., Chairman; Julius Reports from bewildered MIT drivers who have lost either their Adams Stratton, President; Joparking stickers or cards (depending upon their status) come in seph Julien Snyder, Vice Presiregularly to the Campus Patrol. These pieces of information comdent and Treasurer; James McVice President; Walter headquarters. at file" or missing "stolen the prise what is known as the Rhodes Scholarship has done Cormack, By Allan Green Humphreys, Honarary Secretary; Where do they look for the vanished emblems? A parking lotto strengthen the ties between our and Malcolm G. Kispert, SecreStudents from the United Kingthe one at Tech Square for this case. One appeared Friday morntwo countries, we can appreciate tary. MIT, be attending soon will dom ing, and a license plate registered at MIT led the sleuths to a the true value of this memorial. of part as Radcliffe and Harvard, plush office complete with a newly-hired secretary. MIT is proud to be a part of this The young lady was most cooperative in naming her source- a British Government proposal project." the parking lot attendant-and the fee she paid for her sticker, $20. to honor John F. Kennedy. Prime Minister Sir Alec DougShort Trail An acre of land at Runnymede r; meadow, symbolic of Angelo-AmAt the height of the investigation, early Friday, the Patrol had las-Home announced this memora speech before Dr. Charles H. Townes, Profound and traced to both the Portland and Main Street attendants ial tribute in erican friendship, was also inA comCommons. of House the cluded for a memorial to the late vost of MIT, was awarded an the following curiosities attached to windowpanes: 2 stickers in- mittee headed by Lord Oliver t President. A simple plinth, or honorary degree in electronics en1 card, stolen from a student's car; Franks, former English ambassai: cluded in-"missing ororstolen"; of stones with steps, will gineering by the Polytechnic Incourse forged s'ickers. and 3 "duplication" dor to the United States had been on this land where the stitute of Milan, Italy. It was built be their on eye close a Meanwhile, the two attendants, keeping studying various ways to honor was signed in 1215. cilferred during ceremonies comCharta Magna E: vested interest, noticed the unusual Campus Patrol activity and Kennedy. The British Prime Minister did memorating the 100th anniversary In a visit to MIT's President hurriedly scribbled notes to their patrons. They advised removal of not specify how much money of the city's founding. A. Stratton last month, Julius in substithe stickers and suggested an oral parking arrangement The ceremonies were held in would be sought for the two proLord Franks indicated that a jects, but indicated that a fund the LaScala Opera House at MiD tute. But they evidently did not notice the second search that day- monument of bronze and stone drive would begin immediately. lan. Italian President Antonio did not really represent the vitalThe final plans will be drawn up Segni participated in the program the search which gathered up the notes they had just written! This ity and sense of action that was by a committee under the chair- which also honored Polytechnic's was the clinching evidence, and the Patrol showed its hand that typical of the dead President. In manship of Sir Roger Makins, own Professor Guilo Natta, winafternoon. consideration of this, he suggested former British ambassador to the ner of this year's Nobel Prize The attendants' women customers paid $20 per sticker, $8 a the establishment of a "reverse United States. in Chemistry. card. The men, sole recipients of the forgeries, paid an unknown Rhodes Scholarship" to send men and women from the United amount. The Patrol is not certain they have discovered all similar cases Kingdom to study in America. Stratton pointed out that: "If involving these two attendants, and will welcome inquiries by those we look back to see how much seeking the return of their cash. Call X 2997. Britain honors Kennedy: Scholars to study here I. i· Townes awarded honorary degree ii a Snubbing Cal Tech, Berkeley Haard: MIT first ineyes of NSF trainees ·* Lincoln Lab prepares it r manufacturing details on new digital computer By Elaine Cravitz The first section of a manufacturing description of the Laboratory Instrument Computer (LINC) will soon be available to those :sFinterested in biomedical research. According to Wesley A. Ciark Jr., one of the designers of the LINC, the machine is a small stored-program digital computer I which was developed as a tool for storing laboratory data in electrical form. The initial design work on the LINC was done at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory and completed at MIT's Center Development Office for Computer Technology in the Biomedical Sciences, in cooperation with the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratory. The LINC's development program has UP been sponsored by the National Institutes of Health and the NASA. As a result of a summer training program conducted here last summer, twelve machines were awarded to scientists selected from about 70 applicants. The LINC is now being used in ,.A various fields of research, such as pharmacology, psychology a n d neurophysiology, and is expected to have further applications in I'.' the scientific and commercial world. For example, Dr. John C. Lilly at the Communications Research Institute, Miami, is using the LINC in the analysis of utterances of dolphins. Each order for the first section ··· of the LINC manufacturing de'~1 '! .r'e id he (Please taur.n to Page 3) BE.., '3 g~ ;: ma lSi 5c Luebbers on WIT: Image must be clarified By Esther Glotzhober Jerry Luebbers, retiring UAP, emphasized the need to clarify the MIT image in his report on 1963-64 Institute Committee activities. Luebbers feels that MIT must first define its major interests. He favors emphasis of the broad scope required of MIT students, citing a 'Business Week' story on the high number of business and government leaders among MI? alumni. Next, a greater effort must be made to impress the public with this image. Luebbers is concerned with the number of prospective Joint Center for Urban Studies receives Olivetti Foundation grant A two year grant of $100,000 has been made by the Olivetti Foundation of Boston to the Joint Mi Center for Urban Studies of MIT a and Harvard for basic research ·: on problems of urban and regional development. The Olivetti Foundation was established by Dino Olivetti '40, Vice President Ing. C. Olivetti and C., SPA. The grant was announced by ., Vol. 84, No. 8 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, April 8, 1964 James Q. Wilsan and Lloyd Rodwin, Professor in the Department of City and Regional Planning and Chairman of the Joint Center Faculty Committee. According to Professor Wilson, "Selection of scholars to be supported will begin immediately, the Olivetti Foundation has generously given considerable discretion in choosing both research subjects and personnel." students who are frightened away by the aura of total devotion to science, strengthened by such publicity as the 'Holiday' article, which he feels was accurate but incomplete. He recommends further contact with high school guidance counselors, revising 'This Is MIT,' and teaming up recent graduates with the present alumni counselors, to the benefit of both counselors and incoming students. He adds further that graduates should be more careful not to exaggerate the- difficulty of the academic program to the exclusion of extracurricular activities. Foreign Opportunities In outlining the proceedings of Inscomm, Luebbers cited the progress of the Foreign Opportunities Committee, with Professor John Norton as advisor. The committee is working with AIE'SEC and IAESTE, national organizations providing European summer jobs in business and technical fields. In addition, a proposal for the investigation of a Junior Year Abroad program has attracted the interest of the Administration. The Technology Student Enter(Please Itir' to Page 3) By Bill Judnick Seventy nine winners of the newly - instituted National Science Foundation Traineeship for the coming academic year indicated the;r preference for graduate study at MIT. Leading the list of all colleges, universities, and technical institutions by at least 23 such specifications, the MIT figure was: more than double the number fcr Columbia, more than triple these specifying Case Tech, and quadruple that for Princeton... And more than five times what Harvard could muster to her rolls. Fellowships, too When the recipients of all forms of NSF student aid - including ncw "regular" -fellowships, cocperative fellowships with the traineeships-had expressed their preferences, MIT still reigned number one. Accc.ding to figures released by the office of Harold L. Hazen, Dean of the Graduate School, scme of the top competing technical schools stacked up as follows: MIT, 351; Berkeley, 321; Harvard, 305 ;and Stanford, 253. Dean Hazen, commenting on MIT's special success in drawing recipients of the new traineeships, poihnted out: "This is not manna from Heaven," but rather, the Gover - all result of effective planning and proposals for research. the three He distinguished forms of NSF student aid on the philosophical intent of the Congress: given two imperceptibly equal candidates, the "regular" fellowship award would be influenced by geographic area of origin; under the same circumstances, a cooperative fellowship decision would give more weight to areas of use; and, comparably, trainee selection would more likely emphasize demand on the capacities of the particular department of the school in question. Junior Science and Humanities Symposium to be held here for second onsecutive year students who have done outstarnding science or mathematics projects. Later addresses will be presented by: Irwin Sizer, Head of the Department of Biology; Philip M. Morse, Director of the Computation Center and Director of the Operations Research Center; and H. Guyford Stever, Head of the Departmelnt of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. A career panel will be conducted on Friday when Thomas W. Harrington Jr. of the Placement Office and Professors Alan J. Lazarus, Lawrence J. Heidt, Bernard S. Gould and W. Gilbert Strang will participate. No registration fee will be charged and the meals for participants will be free. Symposium expenses will be covered by the sponsors. Sponsoring organizatimcs are: 6 The International Business Ma4 chine Corporation, the United 6-7 Materials Research .. 44... States Army Agency (Watertown), the UJnited 4 States Army Research Agency . ..4 Massachusetts the (Durham), 8-12 State Department of Education, and, of course, MIT. By Harvey Schultz The second Junior Science and Humanities Symposium at MIT will be held tomorrow and Friday. The program is designed to popularize and promote mathematics and science at the high school level and to encourage interested and able students in these fields. Participation in the program is limited; to high school juniors and high school teachers who are selected by their schools. A total of 150 students and a smaller number of teachers will participate. Vannevar Bush, Honorary Chairman of the Corporation, will give the welcoming address. Papers will be presented by high school INDEX Critic's Choice Editorials Entertainment Footnotes Inside Inscornm . Peanuts .... Sports .. ... ....... . for Club Mediteranee; 'Volleyball 1 titleclot'I1%A2 Fnn thouae ( DrC... UA lluu-'u -'ULUIIUI Jly Lp-b 1111W LA- ul-au enc ,;n By Hlerb Tradhtenberg A three man team from MIT advanced easily as expected from placed twenty-second in a field of the quarter-final rounds held last teams from thirty-eight schools in the NCAA Fencing ChampionThursday. Harvard last FriThe top 32 teams are listed be- ships held at The Engineers Saturday. and day low: were able to win forty-five of Final standings: their 102 bouts, while first place 1. Club Mediterranee Prfnceton won eighty- one bouts. 2. Graduate House A 3. Sigma Phi Epsilon A New York University, Columbia, 4. Chinese Student Club 5. (tie) Baker Alpha and Navy placed second, third, Sigma Alpha ]Epsilon and fourth with seventy-nine vicAlpha Epsilon Pi A Burton A tor:es, seventy-six victories, and 9. (tie) Civil Engineering seventy-five victories respectively. Theta Chi B Alpha Tau Omega A Princeton placed only seventh in Senior House A the Easterns (where MIT placed A Delta Theta Phi Baker Comiand All-Stars twelfth) so that their triumph in Zeta Beta Tau Be'a Theta Pi the Nationals came as a great 17. (tie) Me'teorology surprise to all. Tau Epsilon Phi Burton 5th A Zimmerman takes 19th Grafluate House B Fo'lman Ralph Zimmerman '64 Senior House AJB Burton 4th won sixteen of his bouts to place Delta Kappa Epsilon A him in nineteenth in that weapon. Bur'on 2nd Baker Dukes NYU's Garavoy, who had been Graisua'e Hcuse C Club Mediteranee took its sev. enth straight intra mural volley.o ball title by beating Graduate House A in two out of three ,: games last Sunday afternoon. SigN ma Phi Epsilon A won over Chi-r nese Student Club for third place U honors. Grad House started out strong 6 < by taking the first game by a 15-9 score but fell in the next two >- games. Club Mediterranee came < from behind to win the second m one by a very close 15-13 count. The rubber game was almost as L F- close with Club Mediterranee finally coming out on top 15 - 12. Sigma Phi Epsilon had a little easier time in the consolation for third place in winning over ChiI U nese Student Club. SPE took the first game 15-9 and then won the uj second by a 15-11 score. In the semi-final battles, Club I Club Latino Lanmbda Ohi Alpha A Mediterranee had a little trouble Tieta Delta Ohi A Burton '15th B with SPE before winning 15-13, Burton Conner 2nd and they then took the second easSigma Alpha Mu ily by 15-7. Graduate House had little trouble in disposing of Chinese Stude.en. Club by 15-6 and 15-9 tallies. Sigma Phi Epsilon was the only surprise team in the final four, as the other three teams Pole vaulter Ken Morash '65, had been seeded into the top spots MIT's new record holder in his in the tournament. specialty was recently elected captain of the 1964-65 indoor track team. Morash, who hurdles and vaults, snapped his own mark of 12' 10" with a leap of 13 feet 1%2inch in a dual meet against Bowdoin on February 29. Junior Thomas Guillermo, a Tech riflemen shot a 1418 Satof Drexel Hill, Pennsylresident urday morning to take second was recently elected capvania place in the Northern Division at the New England Collegiate Ri- tain of the 1964-65 MIT squash fle League finals held at Hanscom -team. Guillermo was the number University two man on the 1963-64 Tech Northeastern AFB. squad. turned in a 1432 for first place. Backcourt-man Bob Grady '65, The high five men for Tech were Joe Boling '64, 288; Karl MIT's fifth highest all-time single Frederick '65, 285; George Olah season scorer with 356 points in '64, 283; Dave Hamada '65, 282; the 1963-64 season, was recently elected captain of the 1964-65 and Jim Bridgeman '65, 280. SPE had to overcome seeded basketball team. Grady has averBaker Alpha in order to reach the aged 12.8 points per game in his semi-final round. The other three two varsity seasons. Morash, Guillermo, Grady new captains Riflemen shoot 1418 to take second place in NECRL finals Winning spring ors our a - MIT's Ralph Zimmerman '64 (left) scores a._quick touch in twenty-nine bouts to place him recond behind Princeton's William Hicks who had thirty-two victc-ies. Hicks also won the Illinois Memorial Award given to the outhanding fencer of the year. Best.cops 24th pl1eA In sabre competition Art Best '64 tied for twenty-fourth place with twelve victories. First place went to the University of Illinois sabreman who won thirty-one bouts. Zimmerman placed 19th and the team finished 22nd out of 38. In epee, Bob Levis '64 won seventeen bouts to place him in the Winning position. seventeenth thirty-one bouts, Rutgers' Paul Pesthy won the top spot. Pesthy had also taken first place in the Easterns. Engineers finish with 8-8 The Nationals marked the end cf fencing competition for the 63-64 season. To briefly s9mrma- Techmen spark teams This spring season should see some outstanding performances by Tech teams. In particular, several members of each of these teams should be watched, these are the men who supply that very necessary spark. In baseball, Don Alusic '64, first and captain; Dennis 'ateman Hin::ichs '64, catcher; and Dave Dunford '64, third baseman, will 1e leading the squad this year. Dunford was ithe Greater Boston batting champion last year with an average of .345; Tech should see even more from him this year. Miller, Pee and Weber lead heavyweights Out on the Charles, Chris Miller '64, stroke and captain, Marty Poz '64, and Bill Weber '64 will be the top men in heavyweight crew this sprmg. Weber was a member of the four-oared shell that took first at the Nationals m I , ` j I - .1 for top sots rOffHow Th ey Didua Pholto by Steve Teaicher Tennis captain Jack Moter Joe Kirk '64, Ed Burke '65 and Terry Riley '65. The attack on offensive team will be formed by veterans Ron Mandle '65 and Donald Yanaen '63, with newcomers Peter Kirkwood '66 and Louren Wood '66. The squad, suffering from the loss of last year's goalie, has hope in developing Joe Dyro '65 and Bob McDonald '66 into filling star of last year's team, is the this empty position. last Septemrnber. In lightweight crew, Mark Barron '64, captain, Herb Hermann '64, and John Proctor '65 will be the ones to watch. This crew has an excellent chance to go-to Henley, so keep your eye on these men. In lacrosse, Bill Dreiss '64, "+°"' arms Matson '64, team high-scorer and Honorable Mentcn All-American for the last two years will be top performers. Flink, Brown top trackmen Out on the cinders, Jim Flink '64, holder of four varsity rec-ords and top scorer in the indoor season, will be the top man to watch this season. Distance man Sumner Brown '66 ranked second behind Flink in the indoor season and had an outstanding cross-country season last fall and should be scoring quite a few points this spring. This has been perhaps a toofast glance at some of MIT's afithletes, but one fact should be clear: MNIT no longer plays sports for recreation, Tech now has a bunch of dedicated men who are making other schools sit up and take notice. Let's get out to the home meets tis spring and show the teams we're behind them. As the spring trip draws closer, the competition for the top eight spots orn the team is becoming intense. The lineup for the spring trip has been left undetermined until this late date because two players are on the injured list who might be able to make the trip. As always, the Boston weather is doing its best to keep the team off the courts and the only practices held have been in the Fencing Armory on the wood courts. It placed 22nd in Nationals MIT (V) will be quite hard for the team to play its best without sufficient MIT (V) placed 2nd in Northern outdoor practice, but Coach Crocdivision of New Englands ker and his team headed by Captain Jack Moter '64 are expecting some really good tennis while dowrn South. The team looks good with a number of sophomores adding depth and filling in for last year's seniors. Although Coach Crocker has a lot of new material to work aoe with this year, it is definitely not a "building year," and hopes are running very high for an excellent season. Promising lacrosse squad to kick off spring trip '64 hits a hard serve in practice at Maryland March 31 looking for better season for the upcoming spring trip. returning high scorer and is a By NEAL GILMAN Sailing rally to be held Wednesday; The MIT varsity lacrosse team potential All-American candidate. coached by Benjamin Martin be- The defense will consist of Henry team plans spring trip to Florida gins its season March 31 vs Mary- Rack '64, Neil Pappalardo '64, land with high hopes of improving its 2 wins and 11 loss record of last year. Losing only a few players from last year's squad, the team promises to have a new. but strong abtack and an experienced midfield. The midfield has four returning veterans, Captain Bill Dreiss '64. Wayne Matson '64, Richard Lipes '64, and Mike Monsler '64. Matson. rize the season, the Enginees won eight meets and lost eight during regular competiton. They took first place in the New England Championships, with Zimmerman and Karl Kunz '66 taing first place medals in foil and epee, and with Captain Best taking the second place medal in sabre. Topathletes featured seen for Engineers should make itself felt later on in the spring when the team engages in local matches. At present, the team has a record cf two wins and four losses from a series of Fall matches and hopes to improve on this reccrd after the vacation. Although there is not much chance of matching last year's record of fourteen wins and eight losses, the team would like to end the season with at least an even record. Returning lettermen on this year's squad are senior cocaptains Bill Lakin and Emilio Sardi and junior Peter Lubitz. Others with past experience who are expected to add materially to the team are John Eck ('64), D'Ick Shoemaker ('65), Dave Andrews ('66), Harry Barnes ('66), Bill Griggs ('66), and Paul Rudovsky ('66). IN favored to take first place, won the Nationals held at Harvard last Friday and Saturday. Foilman Golf squad to make spring trip south Tennis prospects good to gain week's head start on season Comptition ot While most schools in the area wait impatiently for Mother Nature to release her icy grip on the local golf courses, M.I.T.'s linksmen will escape to the more favorable climes of Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina during Spring vacation. The purpose of this trip, as explained by Coach John Merriman, is to provide the squad with a chance to practice that they would not have locally. During the trip, the team will meet stiff competition from East Carolina College, University of North Carolina, Join Hopkins, University of Virginia, Princeton, and the University of Maryland. The high calibre of the competiton makes it unlikely that the team will cover itself with glory on the scoreboard while on the trip, but the needed practice in The MIT sailing team, one of New England's best, will soon be on the Charles again, as it faces a heavy spring racing schedule after a successful fall season. To get things rolling again, there will be a meeting for all members of the varsity and freshman teams, as well as for any interested newcomers, next Wednesday, March 25, at 5:15 pm at the MIT Sailing Pavilion. Since there are going to be a lot of meets this spring, including one in Florida over spring vacation, a lot of good sailors are needed so that the regulars will rnot be overtaxed. Additional information can be obtained by calling captain Terry Cromnburg '66, at PA 9-6690, or manager Ken Browning '66, at x3782 or KE 6-11. So e,*KO mm ,'V5 2= g"Snt a Fz~ 1!11 Tech Square parking scandal; Six stuck with stolen stickers By Bill Judniek * As 0 a or ui ion rise 0 It AMr qM I 0 After the meeting of the Executive Committee of the Corporation held last Friday, Malcolm G. Kispert, Secretary to the Committee, issued the following statement: "There will be no change in the basic tuition rate of $1,700 for 1964-65. At the attendants, Two Technology Square time we have no plans for changing the basic rate for 1965-66. Continuing stuSquare employees empresent of Meredith and Grew, Technology parking attendants, Two parking changing the basic rate for 196566 Continuing stu e no plans forhave incontrovertible evidence exposing dies will te Campus Patrol with were confronted Friday by the 1 of which we hopet em comer 1964, rte between now ad Ohtober, tin had been in operation at least dies willsitd e made a profitable sideline-a parking sticker racket that rate for 196.5-66. B ust we must amnsticker hadbeeninoper racketthatathenlastic titin eine--aparking profitable three weeks. phasize that we cannot at the moment comfirm this with complete certainty." Summarily, they were fired. The full Executive Committee Lieutenant Olivieri, the Campus Patrolman who led the invesconsists of: Vannevar Bush, Hontigation, revealed his files on the case: orary Chairman; James Rhyne Long memory Julius Killian Jr., Chairman; Reports from bewildered MIT drivers who have lost either their Adams Stratton, President; Joparking stickers or cards (depending upon their status) come in seph Julien Snyder, Vice Presiregularly to the Campus Patrol. These pieces of information comdent and Treasurer; James McVice President; Walter prise what is known as the "stolen or missing file" at headquarters. the Rhodes Scholarship has done Cormack, By Allan Green Humphreys, Honarary Secretary; Where do they look for the vanished emblems? A parking lotto strengthen the ties between our and Malcolm G. Kispert, SecreStudents from the United Kingthe one at Tech Square for this case. One appeared Friday morntwo countries, we can appreciate tary. ing, and a license plate registered at MIT led the sleuths to a dom will soon be attending MIT, the true value of this memorial. of as part Radcliffe and Harvard, plush office complete with a newly-hired secretary. MIT is proud to be a part of this proposal Government British a her sourcein naming cooperative The young lady was most project." Kennedy. the parking lot attendant-and the fee she paid for her sticker, $20. to honor John F. Prime Minister Sir Alec DougShort Trail An acre of land at Runnymede las-Home announced this memorhad Patrol the Friday, early investigation, of the height At the meadow, symbolic of Angelo-AmDr. Charles H. Townes, Profound and traced to both the Portland and Main Street attendants ial tribute in a speech before erican friendship, was also inthe House of Commons. A comcluded for a memorial to the late vost of MIT, was awarded an the following curiosities attached to windowpanes: 2 stickers inmittee headed by Lord Oliver President. A simple plinth, or honorary degree in electronics encluded in -"missing or stolen"; 1 card, stolen from a studett's car; Franks, former English ambassacourse of stones with steps, will gineering by the Polytechnic Inand 3 "duplication" or forged s'ickers. dor to the United States had been be built on this land where the stitute of Milan, Italy. It was Meanwhile, the two attendants, keeping a close eye on their studying various ways to honor Charta was signed in 1215. cmnferred during ceremonies comMagna vested interest, noticed the unusual Campus Patrol activity and Kennedy. The British Prime Minister did memorating the 100th anniversary In a visit to MIT's President hurriedly scribbled notes to their patrons. They advised removal of not specify how much money of the city's founding. the stickers and suggested an oral parking arrangement in substi- Julius A. Stratton last month, The ceremonies were held in would be sought for the two proLord Franks indicated that a tute. jects, but indicated that a fund the LaScala Opera House at MiBut they evidently did not notice the second search that day- monument of bronze and stone drive would begin immediately. lan. Italian President Antonio did not really represent the vitalThe final plans will be drawn up Segni participated in the program the search which gathered up the notes they had just written! This ity and sense of action that was by a committee under the chair- which also honored Polytechnic's was the clinching evidence, and the Patrol showed its hand that typical of the dead President. In manship of Sir Roger Makins, own Professor Guilo Natta, winafternoon. consideration of this, he suggested British ambassador to the ner of this year's Nobel Prize former The attendants' women customers paid $20 per sticker, $8 a the establishment of a "reverse United States. in Chemistry. card. The men, sole recipients of the forgeries, paid an unknown Rhodes ScholarshiD" to send amount. men and women from the United The Patrol is not certain they have discovered all similar cases Kingdom to study in America. Stratton pointed out that: "If involving these two attendants. and will welcome inquiries by those we look back to see how much seeking the return of their cash. Call X2997. Britain honors Kennedy: Scholars to study here t :i i t 2 i r z i ;i ·· ;r ;r ii i" 3 s :I 2 I :t r. r '·· a' .·-';i i': Townes awarded honorary degree Lincoln Lab prepares manufacturing details on new digital computer By Elaine Cravitz The first section of a manufacturing description of the Laboratory Instrument Computer (LINC) will soon be available to those interested in biomedical research. According to Wesley A. Clark Jr., one of the designers of the LINC, the machine is a small stored-program digital computer which was developed as a tool for storing laboratory data in electrical form. The initial design work on the LINC was done at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory and completed at MIT's Center Development Office for Computer Technology in the Biomedical Sciences, in cooperation with the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratory. The LINC's development program has been sponsored by the National Institutes of Health and the NASA. As a result of a summer training program conducted here last summer, twelve machines were awarded to scientists selected frorn about 70 applicants. The LINC is now being used in various fields of research, such as pharmacology, psychology a n d neurophysiology, and is expected to have further applications in the scientific and commercial world. For example, Dr. John C. Lilly at the Communications Research Institute, Miami, is using the LINC in the analysis of utterances of dolphins. Each order for the first section of the LINC manufacturing de- ' .· Snubbing Cal Tech, Berkeley Harvard: MIT first ineyes of NSF trainees (Please turn to Page 3) By Bill Judnick Seventy nine winners of the newly - instituted National Science Foundation Traineeship for the coming academic year indicated their preference for graduate study at MIT. Leading the list of all colleges, universities, and technical institutions by at least 23 such specifications, the MIT figure was: more than double the number fcr Columbia, more than triple thcise specifying Case Tech, and quadruple that for Princeton... And more than five times what Harvard could muster to her rolls. Fellowships, too When the recipients of all forms of NSF student aid - including now "regular" Vol. 84, No. 8 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, April 8, 1964 Luebbers on MIT: image must be clarified By Esther Glotzhober Jerry Luebbers, retiring UAP, emphasized the need to clarify the MIT image in his report on 1963-64 Institute Committee activities. Luebbers feels that MIT must first define its major interests. He favors emphasis of the broad scope required of MIT students, citing a 'Business Week' story on the high number of business and government leaders among MIT alumni. Next, a greater effort must be made to impress the public with this image. Luebbers is concerned with the number of prospective -·1 :: '-* s i -r ::C: ;t :r; :-iir-, "" i· C: S :b; i; ii3 ;-.i :;i Joint Center for Urban Studies receives livetti Foundation grant A two year grant of $100,000 has been made by the Olivetti Foundation of Boston to the Joint Center for Urban Studies of MIT and Harvard for basic research on problems of urban and regional development. The Olivetti Foundation was established by Dino Olivetti '40, Vice President Ing. C. Olivetti and C., SpA. The grant was announced by 5c - James Q. Wilson and Lloyd Rodwin, Professor in the Department of City and Regional Planning and Chairman of the Joint Center Faculty Committee, According to Professor Wilson, "Selection of scholars to be supported will begin immediately, the Olivetti Foundation has generously given considerable discretion in choosing both research subjects and personnel." students who are frightened away by the aura of total devotion to science, strengthened by such publicity as the 'Holiday' article, which he feels was accurate but incomplete. He recommends further contact with high school guidance counselors, revising 'This Is MIT,' and teaming up recent graduates with the present alumni counselors, to the benefit of both counselors and incoming students. He adds further that graduates should be more careful not to exaggerate the- difficulty of the academic program to the exclusion of extracurricular activities. Foreign Opportunities In outlining the proceedings of Inscomm, Luebbers cited the progress of the Foreign Opportunities Committee, with Professor John Norton as advisor. The committee is working with AIE'SEC and IAESTE, national organizations providing European summer jobs in business and technical fields. In addition, a proposal for the investigation of a Junior Year Abroad program has attracted the interest of the Administration. The Technology Student Enter(Please lurn to Page 3) fellowships, co- operative fellowships with the traineeships-had expressed their preferences, MIT still reigned number one. Accc-rding to figures released by the office of Harold L. Hazen, Dean of the Graduate School, scme cf the top competing technical schools stacked up as follows: MIT, 351; Berkeley, 321; Harvard, 305 ;and Stanford, 253. Dean Hazen, commenting on MIT's special success in drawing recipients of the new traineeships, pointed out: "This is not manna from Heaven," but rather, the c:.er- all result of effective planning and proposals for research. three He distinguished the forms of NSF student aid on the philosophical intent of the Congress: given two imperceptibly equal candidates, the "regular" fellowship award would be influenced by geographic area of origin; under the same circumstances, a cooperative fellowship decision would give more weight to areas of use; and, comparably, trainee selection would- more likely emphasize demand on the capacities of the particular department of the school in question. Junior Science and Humanities Symposium to be held here for second consecutive year By Harvey Schultz The second Junior Science and Humanities Symposium at MIT will be held tomorrow and Friday. The program is designed to popularize and promote mathematics and science at the high school level and to encourage interested and able students in these fields. Participation in the program is limited; to high school juniors and high school teachers who are selected by their schools. A total of 150 students and a smaller number of teachers will participate. Vannevar Bush, Honorary Chairman of the Corporation, will give the welcoming address. Papers will be presented by high school INDEX Critic's Choice Editorials ........... Entertainment ........ ............ Footnotes Inside Inscomm . .......... Peanuts ...... Sports ... .6 6-7 .4 4 4 8-12 students who have done outstanrding science or mathematics projects. Later addresses will be presented by: Irwin Sizer, Head of the Department of Biology; Philip M. Morse, Director of the Computation Center and Director of the Operations Research Center; and H. Guyford Stever, Head of the Departmennt of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. A career panel will be conducted on Friday when Thomas W. Harrington Jr. of the Placement Office and Professors Alan J. Lazarus, Lawrence J. Heidt, Bernard S. Gould and W. Gilbert Strang will participate. No registration fee will be charged and the meals for participants will be free. Symposium expenses will be covered by the sponsors. Sponsoring organizations are: The International Business Machine Corporation, the United States Army Materials Research Agency (Watertown), the United States Army Research Agency Massachusetts the (Durham), State Department of Education, and, of course, MIT. C,4 Four individual awards 0 a) Chess team places first t0 0- 0- -J 0- 0ot, (-, LU z Dr. S. Baron to be Burg lecturer; will speak on anti-Jewish folklore Dr. Salo W. Baron, Professor BU, BC, MIT, Brandeis, Lowell of Jewish History, Literature, and Tech, and American International Institutions at Columbia University, will deliver the ivlo-xis Burg Team members are, in order, Milan Vukcevich, Carl Wagner, Memorial Lecture this year. The Carl Dover, George Hadley, and admission-free lecture will be Harry Cohen. Substitutes who presented by the B'nai B'rith Hilplayed at the tournament are club lel Foundation at MIT on Sunpresident Bob Wolf and business day, April 12, at 8:00 p.m. in manager Bob Gwirtzman. The team's overall record was Kresge Auditorium. Dr. Baron will speak on "The 5-0 in matches and 231/2-1% in individual games. Persistent Heritage of Anti-JewThe Chess Club meets from one ish Folklore." His topic has grown to five on Saturday afternoons. Besides informal sessions, the out of his work as historical conclub has various special activi- sultant at the Eichman trial and ties. This Saturday, for example, his extensive research on Jews in Vukcevich will give a simultan- the Middle Ages. eous exhibition for as many peoDr. Baron is an author of ple as attend. books and articles on all phases The MITrr chess Team took first place and won four of the five in-i;vi, ,- .. .-- ,t *he r--ent Back Bay Intercollegiate Chess Tournament held at BU. It was the first competition for the team, organized by the MIT Chess Club. The participating schools were Hims will read poetry tomorrow in14E-310 w John F. Nims, Professor of English at the University of Illinois and Visiting Professor of English at Harvard University, will present a poetry reading in _ the MIT Hayden Library Lounge Lw tomorrow, 5 p.m. Mr. Nims is an editor of "Pow etry" magazine, and author of the _ books of poems, "The Iron Pastoral," "A Fountain in Kentucky," and "Poems of St. John of the Cross." He translated Euripides' "Andromache," and edits "The Poem Itself," a translation and explication of Spanish and Italian poems. The MIT poetry reading is open to the public free of charge. 3 r,i.- ---- a-.-IIO · I .I P-- Dutch Cleaners EARN $200.00 12 I 34 West 10th St., NYC 11, NY i I i Ii 34 35 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ For the Finest is Dining Pleasure. I~~~~~B E~~~~~~~~~~a S I I p~~~~~p~~~~p Er Men or Women. Suede Rock Climbing and Hiking Boor. Leather lined, Padded Quarter and a PROVEN IN 2500 MILE HIKE STYLE @436.a $14.95 plus postage M-5 to 11 in these Fashion Colors: #436.4 - Cocoa FABIANO SHOE CO., INC. Dept. A, South Station Boston 10, Mess. - .Il~PM -------- sae1s1eaa~aar~8 Dr. Kurylowicz is the second such joint appointment; he will P. Sikes, R. Dunlap join Institute Professor Roman H. Deitel, A. Landers Jakobson, also a leading authorNo result resorted ity on general linguistic theory. George Jones, Roy Gamse Due dates approaching? Time is E. Ancona, J. Ryder getting shorter. Thesis, Resumes, J. Davidow, D. Howell Manuscripts, etc. typed. Prices vary with length of paper and K. Henry, J. Shwimer time allotted to do typing. Pick B. Dix, J. Rudy .up and delivery can be arranged. J. Wieser, P. Bruckmann Call Mrs. Trottier 335-5785 S. Sherman, P. Amstutz L. Mammen, J. Gruhl E. Kirsch, G. Starkschall L. Taggert, J. Moorer M. Marlow, J. Sussman N. Gilman, T. Roddick 21 HARRISON AVE. B. Flor, No alternate HA 6-42 10 B. Glock, L. Burgess (Between Essex & Beech J. Siegel, M. Rosenblum Streets, Boston) No results reported ISLAND & CANTONESE L. Often, W. Ioup T. Hinrichs, S. Stuntz FOOD · EXOTIC DRINKS B. Bosler, B. Howard Authentic Hawaiian Luaus D. McCraith, L. Silverman Moderate Prices D. Sanders, J. Gowdy II a.m.-3 a.m. N. Steinmetz, None Daily & Sunday P. Denton, D. Kress C. MacDonald, B. Baker S. Marcus, E. Geltman B. Vail, None M. Kruger, S. Leff D. Glendening, No alternate D. Lapin, D. Hamilton J. Triant, T. Gamble L. Hoffman, J. Fittz 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 I I II FLOWER GIFT SERVICE For Brown, #4361 - Green, #4362-Red, #4365 Gray. Write for free brochure 13 14 15 16 17 18 LbI 19 IV 20 21 22 Agent wanted to solicit orders 23 for unique new low priced 24 Champagne Tone Orchid Corsage 25 for May 10th Mother's Day de26 livery. No investment required. Free sales kit. Free samples. I 27 Proven method now used at Nofre 28 Dame and Lehigh. Free delivery 29 to recipient mother. 30 31 Write Immediately To: I 32 l Handmade Imported Boots for the Outdoor Man and Woman... A world-famous authority on linguistics will become a Visiting Professor for 1964-66 at MIT and Harvard, it was announced Monday. Dr. Jerry Kurylowicz, the appointee, of the University of Kra- kow; he received his Ph.D. from the University of Lwow in 1923 and the diploma of the Ecole des autes Etudes in 1925. He has 'Hautes Eudes in 1925. He has taught at Breslau and Lwow as well as at Krakow, and has received honorary degrees from Paris and Dublin. As of Monday night there were thirty - five Spring Weekend tick. ets available, according to Ron Gillman '64, Spring Weekend Chairman. The tickets can be obtained in the lobby of Building 10, where vcting is going on to choose the finalists of the Spring Weekend Queen. made inItaly by FABIANO Kurylowicz, linguistics authority, fo be Visitiing Professor next year 233 Massachuseffs Ave. Opposite Necco TRowbridge 6-5662 Quality Service THE ALPS... Tongue, Vibram lug soles. Men's N and L-6 to 12 (Cocoa Brown only). Ladies :9ioe B~as~e~i '67 elects sec T:ion leaders Freshman section leaders and alternates have been elected by the 35 sections of the Class of 1967. Results have been reported for all but Sections 4 and 20. The president of the class is Giorgio Piccagli. The section leaders and alternates are: Section Leader and Alternate 1 D. Coulter, J. Oehrle of Jewish historical development. He is presently compiling a work, "Social and Religious History of the Jews," uI. 'WJUI6 Zl5ght 'aid umes have recently been published. Dean John S. Burchard of the School of Humanities will introduce the speaker. A coffee hour, to which all persons are cordially invited, will be held after the lecture. Spiing Weekend tickets: 35 available Monday, some might be left today IT'S HOT! IT'S AHIONDA! $27.... HONDA SUPER SPORT "S50"MARK t 11, This 50 cc Honda is a giant for performance: develops 5 HP at 9,000 RPM ... gets up to 225 mpg. Racing type high-compression head, ram injection carburetion, O great features. See it now! New England Cycle Center 78 BROOKLINE AVENUE, BOSTON AT FENWAY PARK KE 6-3223 --- erdShi "ON THE CALMES9" 540 MEMORIAL DRYE Oe Campus. Plenty of free parking. The very best in charcoal broiled Steaks, Chops and Chicken. pecial Features: SP Nightly: The organ bar from dinner to dosing. i I ii I Special song styles and requcs~ to add to your enjoyment Warm, intimate surroundings Choice wines and liquors - domestic and imported Reser'ations for your party if you desire Unique gift suggestions at the Red Carpet Gift Corner in the lobby The one lotion that's cool, exciting I- brisk as, an ocean breeze I The New Chart Room for business lunch or large function Sunday' Ai i Thursday I1.0 am. to 12M3O e.m Friday and Savurday I I.- a.m. fo l3o a.m TIoepho EL 41e17 Baaeaseraas8 iI I The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-be. alive feeling... refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... and wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion, IH II U SH c- the shave l/otion II I s _- f tOt NO# U LTON men recommend to other men ! Biomedicai study aid LINC' sets ready soon (Continued from Page 1) scription should be submitted, together with a check for $63 (payable to W. A. Hokanson, Bursar), to the MIT Center Development Office for Computer Technology in the Biomedical Sciences, 292 MOSCOW NEWS t- Weekly from the Soviet Union. In English or in Spanish. All aspects of Soviet life. Full statements of the Soviet government. I yr. subscription $2 air-mail. IMPORTED PUBLICATIONS & PROD. L I Union Square, N.Y.C. 3 (H) I Main St., Cambridge, Mass. 02142, which is publishing the description and making it available at cost to manufacturers and researchers. 180 sets of the LINC will be made available. Orders will be filled in the order of their postmarks' until the supply is exhausted. The deadline for applications is May 15. All applicants should indicate organizational affiliation, since each organization at present will be limited to one set. The initial description will include sufficient information so that individuals may acquire and fabricate all LINC parts and subassemblies. Later directives will contain material dealing with overall system assembly, programmning, and theory of operation. FOR FINE QUALITY DIAMONDS AT MONEY-SAVING PRICES I Davidlson Jewelers of Kenmore Square .1 518 COMMONWEALTH AVE., TELEPHONE CO 7-0017 Complete Guaranteed Repair Service L ANhNOU .. ~~~~~~~~~. ~. -- ~. _ 4 MiT graduates Dean Speer lauded: among winners of Stratton presents award Sloan fellowships Dr. Julius A. Stratton last week The award goes to Dean Speer 45 of Alfred P. Sloan Fellowships have been awarded to "exceptionally able" young executives, it was announced Thursday by Dean Howard W. Johnson of the Alfred P. Sloan School of Industrial Management. The new fellows, who come from England, Germany, Columbia and Venezuela as well as the United- States, will arrive with their families in time to start a year of intensive study of management techniques this June. It is expected that many will complete the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Industrial Management. Sloan Fellows are chosen on the basis of evidence of potential for major executive responsibilities. Once here, they will spend a year in a program of special courses, seminars and field trips, working with senior faculty members. The program is made possible by grants from the Sloan Foundation. Among the 45 new Fellows are four MIT graduates: James 'C. Buck, S.B. 1949; James V. Chahot, S.B. 1946, S.B. 1947; Henry B. Ferguson, S.B. 1950; and Henry F. Goelzer, S.B. 1948. Mel.T;. Y FOOD SHOP * .z Gae West affiliate Mahlowiz Market * New * * Conveniently Located on the M.I.T: Campus Open I I A.M. to 7 P.M. Monday tfiu Saturday gli 748075 UN 4-7777 s -- D I-, ----- Tech Show finishes over $500 in black The Tech Show finished this season over $500 in the black, according to Don Belfer '66. Last year, Tech Show just broke even. Belfer attributed the profit to change in procedures. This year the music for the show was supplied by student musicians, rather than professionals; cost reduction of about $700 from $1,600 to $900 thus resulted. Belfer did not foresee any financial problems for the Tech Show in the future. Research Luebbers evaluates year as UAP: politics, conferences, philosophy 'Complete Line of Foods _ Dr. John C. Slater, Institute Professor of Physics at MIT, will join the faculty of the University of Florida next September, University President J. Wayne Reitz announced today. Prof. Slater has been a visiting participant in Florida's Winter Institute in Quantum Theory for several years. He will spend eight months of the year with Florida's Quantum Theory Group, and four months directing MIT's Solid State and Molecular Theory Group, which he established. Dr. Slater, one of the founders of theoretical chemistry and solid state physics, is internationally respected for his contributions to the theory of atoms and mo!ecules. He was instrumental in the Laboratory of Electronics and the Laboratory for Nuclear Science. He is author of more than 100 papers in theoretical physics and 12 textbooks. ING THE OPENING-OF THE in Wes Dr. Slater joins faculty at University of Florida the a greater voice in future deci- (Continued from Page 1) prises, formally chartered last sions, while acknowledging summer as a profit-makidng corI poration under state laws, has been expanding. Proposed projects include birthday cakes, a linen concession, a student calendar, a printing service, and a super-market service for weekend diners. Student Center i Concerning the new Student Center Luebbers expresses reget that "the committee was unable to address itself to one of the really pressing questions, that of defining both the character .and the role of the new building." He urges that the students be given , I. I· I, I the difficulties involved. Luebbers has some reservations on the workability of certain proposals of the Boston Intercollegiate Council. He feels that the principal value of the council would be in establishing an intercollegiate communications network, including publicity for events sponsored by the participating schools. He considers this "an effort to which MIT should devote a continuing effort." Off-campus involvement Involvement in off-campus issues, Luebbers says, is satisfyingly extensive. He commends the work of the Social Action Committee, with the caution that it should not become involved with civil rights, which should be a matter for discussion but not for officiai action. Participation in political groups is high, even in view of the fact that this is an election year. Further, Dean Fassett has reported that incoming freshman classes display an ever broader cultural foundation, especially in the field of music. II __ L , JOBS ABROAD SUlMMER JOBS II F""' NEW S'64 directory lists 20,000 summer job openings in 50 states. MALE or FEMALE. Unprecedented research for students includes exact pay rates and job details. Names employers and their addresses for hiring in industry, summer camps, national parks, resorts, etc., etc., etc. Hurry!! jobs filled early. Send two dollars. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send to: Summer Jobs Directory-P. 0. Box 13593-Phoenix, Arizona. earap -BWR IL AIBIICAI i Largest NEW directory. Lists hundreds of permranent career opportunities in Europe, South America, Africa and the Pacific, for MALE or FEMALE. Totals 50 countries. Gives specific addresses and names prospective U.S. employers with foreign subsidiaries. Exceptionally high pay, free travel, etc. In addition, enclosed vital gu'de and procedures necessary to foreign employment. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send two dollars to Jobs Abroad Directory-P. O. Box 13593-Phoenix, Arizona. ~ .......... -- ,,, Luebbers predicted success for Spring Weekend, saying that previous mistakes would not be repeated, and that the weekend is in a position to compete favorably with Assemblies Ball. Conference attendance A problem for which no satisfactory solution has yet been reached is that of selecting delegates to the many conferences to which MIT is invited. A budget Iof $800 is available for this, but Luebbers feels that Inscomm cannot justify spending money to send delegates to conferences I which have not proved their value to MIT. Luebbers concludes his report with a summary of his views on 11'the philosophy of student governI ment. He would like to see greater iinvolvement 'of individual Ins4 comm m e m b e r s along with 1 strengthening of the Executive I Committee. He feels that relations with the Ifaculty and administration have Ibeen very satisfactory. Student Irelations, he feels, will be imIproved by amending the "widespread- lack of knowledge." I j STUDENTS & TEACHERS for STUDENTS , I m --i m "in appreciation of his quiet, m thoughtful care for the well-being and the intellectual growth of MIT students over many years." Dean Speer graduated, from Princeton in 1933 and worked as a teacher and academic administrator until he came to MITr in -0 1953. Since that time he has been with the Office of Student Affairs, having primary respansibility for student counseling. zm The award was named in honor CD of Gordon Billard, a member of the Class of 1924. It has been previously presented to Dr. Harold Edgerton for outstanding -o teachi.ng and to Professor Samuel Mason for his dudties as house0i master of Senior Houses. presented the Gordon Billard Award for this year to William Speer, Associate Dean for Student Counseling. The award was established for presentation by the President to a member of the faculty or administration who has contributed significantly to the betterment of student life at MIT. iII establishment .of ......... I LO MIT: The forty - niner- tD Cl 09 a- MIT came in 49th. Forty-eight of the nation's top colleges and universities spent more than 'MT last year in staffing, operating, and buying of new books _I for their libraries. MIT ranked 40th in the total number of volumes in its libraries. Sixty-three American and Canadian a schools were included in the 1962-63 sta< tistics published by Princeton Univer>2 6 - z c: I: ° Lu - ings. The Dewey library addition in the Sloan School's new Hermann building, the Green Center's third-floor library (to be occupied next month), and the Student Center reserve library will ease some of the crowding of people and books. However, no major high-priority plan has appeared for large-scale library additions in the next half-decade. The sity for the Association of Research Li- Institute's ideas for a Great Court braries. Included on this list were all the structure or for a building on the tennis major Ivy League schools and technical courts adjacent to Walker Memorial are schools with which MIT competes for not being examined with sufficient vifreshmen, graduate students, and fac- gor. Indeed, no major statement of longulty. term policy on the issue of central verFifteen universities on the list have sus departmental libraries has appeared. libraries twice the size of MIT's total of Locally, Tufts University is begin885,000 volumes But this is not all. Our ning a 500,000 volume library this acquisitions (57,000 volumes last year) month. Boston University has recently ranked only 32nd-a poor catch-up rate. announced plans for a 5.5 million central In the struggle to preserve academic on the banks of the Charlesexcellence and to continually attract a library downstream from the $10 million John highly talented student body, no facet of F. Kennedy Memorial Library at Harva university's educational facilities or ard. Emmanuel College is now building process can be neglected. At MIT, how- a new library across from Simmon's ever, there are many indications that 1961 Beatley library. The two giants, our library system is being short-chang- Boston Public and Widener, are still exed, both in the annual budget slice and panding rapidly. in long-term planning and financing. statistics assure us that BosOur cross-referencing system com- ton These will remain a major library center pares poorly with others in the local in the years to come. However, MIT area. More effort is needed in the con- must maintain its own national emiversion to the Library of Congress sysnence in technical collections and vasttem, which is now proceeding at a snail's ly improve its library streiength in the pace. More funds for acquisitions are humanities, which is becoming inadeneeded; more efficient binding programs quate for the needs of a university commust be sought. Our starting minimum munity. professional salary is 60th on the listIn last year's statistics, MIT was fourth from the bottom. These acute 42nd out of 42 in the amount spent on current needs indicate that the libraries new books and periodicals. This year we should be improved rapidly in the next were 59th on an expanded list of 63. few years. We must not allow MIT to slip into last The scene is a little brighter for the place again. long-term development of the libraries as opposed to the immediate shortcomDo we want to be 63rd out of 63? IE Otn y Bill Judtnick A triple-header this week! strikingly resembles the crudest The three Footnotes now-come- of compromises resolving true are: this week's headline nothing. story on no tuition rise (Ftnt. I); Viewed in another light, the Tech Show finally in the black "disciplinarians" n o w h ave (Ftnt. 19); and former Dean ground where once they had Rule's comments in the current -none; we may be viewing the Atlantic Monthly (Ftnt. 17). transitional stage toward their Almost four: the prediction ultimate victory. of the 21.01 - .04 changes was But as a static phenomenon in technically. five-sixths correct. time, we have a marked con(The sixth part was an inade- trast: while the scientists and quate description of what engineers are busily tearing would take the place of the down the arbitrary boundaries present 21.02.) It was bound to separate fheir- studies, the hu. happen: the first mistaken prog- manists are busily reconstruct. nostication to appear in Crystal ing theirs. Ball was Footniote 25. FiveThe Crystal Ball sixths correct just will not do. 3 1. The winner of the Spring Weekend Queen contest will A Reconstruction Speaking of those changes in have the letters "a" and "s" in the Humanities curricula, few in her last name. the non-professorial ranks are 32. Professor Murray Gell. aware of the academic politick- mann, now at CalTech, will ing that went on behind the adorn the physics faculty of scenes to produce those Harvard University this coming fall. (The last I heard, MIT and changes. Berkeley were in on the bidding The battle might be viewed, also. But you won't see him at in a necessarily over-simplified MIT: he wants unlimited re. manner, as contention between search, and no teaching duties two extreme factions-the "dis. whatever.) ciplinarians" and the "general 33. Professor Singer, of 18.25 humanists." and 18.26 fame, will try his hand The two names are suggestive at teaching 18.241 and 18.242 of the stand they would, take on next semester. such issues as, appropriately here, the value of "survey courses." The plans proposed by both schools of thought naturally brought about intellectual controversy. student body by producing imaginative One cannot help but feel plans for the new library. We hope they the solution, giving two courses are successful in this enterprise. (21.01 and 21.02) to the "general humanists" and the other two to the "disciplinarians," New Student Center library Our last issue's announcement that t MIT will build the Student Center library-provided the construction cost is 3 reasonable--broke too late for editorial 1 comment in that issue. Upon notification 1 by Institute officers that a major story 7 would break Monday, we reserved frontpage space for the mystery story-andI thus covered it for our readers in the following morning's paper. We are, of course, pleased to see the plans for the new library brought closer I to fruition. In the issue of February 26, t 1964, this page pointed out some of the advantages of the library. At that time, chance to perform a vital service for the it seemed problematical that the library r would ever be built. Now that the library is closer to becoming a reality, much planning must t be done to make it a useful addition to the Student Center. The new Student Center Committee, under Chairman I Dick Schmalensee '65, is now working r with the Administration on the plans for the library. Schmalensee, a former Features Editor of The Tech, and his group have'a 5 .1THE ITECH .III~II~L··U ~ =,_ %,= Vol. LXXXIV No. 8 Apr. 8, BOARD OF DIRECTORS Chairman ............................... Howard M. Brauer '65 Managing Editor .................. John Reinties '66 Editor ........................................ Ronald Frashure '64 Business Manager .................. Kenneth Browning '66 News Editor .............................. William Judnick '65 Features Editor ..................... David Vanderwerf '66 Sports Editor ...................... Dave Kress '67 Photography Editor ................ Stephen Teicher '66 Entertainment Editor .................. John Montanus '66 Advertising Manager ............ Michael Weidner '66 Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts. The Tech is published every Wednesday during the college year, except during college vacations, by The Tech, Room 50-211, 142 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139. Telephones area code 617, 876-5855; 876-5856; 864-6900, Extension 2731. United States mail subscription rates: $2.75 for one year, $4.25 for two years. 'Footnotes' Today's issue contains the seventh installment of the column 'Footnotes.' Written by our News Editor, the column was initiated to give our readers some unique insights into what has happened and to supply them with educated guesses as to what is in the offing. As the reader has often been reminded in the column itself, 'Footnotes' contains news analysis, opinion, and predictions. While it is not permissible to inject such material into a news story, journalistic standards allow for its expression on the editorial page or in a signed column. Such is the rationale, then, of not only columns such as 'Footnotes' but al-' so of the editorial page itself. To the reader, of course, remains the ultimate task of judgment as to the validity of this material. Several readers have already informed us of their evaluations of 'Footnotes' -the bulk of which have been favorable. There is another side of the coin, however, and two letters which were critical of the column were printed in our- last issue. It is our feeling that we owe the readers a thorough airing of the issuer by printing such letters. But an important distinction must be made: While we welcome valid criticism, those critical letters we print are not necessarily valid. Here, too, the reader must be the ultimate judge. It will be our policy to reply to those criticisms when they are unjust, reasoned from incorrect information, or biased in their viewpoint. In particular, we cannot be impressed with the supposed validity of letters chastising a writer for neglecting facts which did not exist when he wrote or criticising him for ignoring incorrect information. We must, in the final analysis, rely upon the intelligence of our 'readership once we have done our part in presenting the facts as we understand them. Best Sellers? The late Professor Wiener's 'God and Golem, Inc.' promises to be a best seller-even if only at the Coop-when it is pub. lished. Subject: interaction be. tween cybernetics and religion. As for the already-published Create or Perish' (MIT Press) by Robert H. Rines: you'll have to read it to believe it. Inside Inscomm-- --- mam UAP outlines major problems of student social service _-- 1,1- By Bill Samuels, UAP Social service became a much discussed issue during the recent elections. I would like to use the column today to discuss what -1 actually feel are the problems and goals in this important area. Today there are many autonomous groups involved in various projects or planning something for the future. These include the IFC, APO, TCA, the Social Action Committee, and Baker House. This is good. We want to encourage group projects by any organization that is interested, and we do not want to see all social service work concentrated in one central group. On the other hand, I - I believe that there is a definite need for a coordinating body that offers administrative help to the diverse bodies, especially in lining up feasible projects for an organization like the IFC. This central group, while coordinating various projects, would also provide diverse organizations and living groups with information on projects that they might undertake. Outside of the projects for autonomous groups, I believe there is a need for a single service group that offers a channel for those interested in making so cial service work an activity in (Please turn to page 5) ------- I-aS · r ", ri i; .* Peanuts appears daily and Sunday in the Boston Herald. I Inside, Inscomm Co,, non (Continued from Page 4) many such interested students itself. This group would carry on here at MIT. So, as long as their a broad range of work in the so- work is confined to mental hospitals, tutoring, settlement houses cial service field. The Department of Physics will give its anAs an activity, the social serv- and alike, then they have a right nual open house Friday from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. ice group should have access to to administrative finances for in the Compton Lecture Hall, Room 26-100, for finances from Finance Board. Im- their activity. interested freshmen. plicit in this statement is my feelThere is a need for coordination Course 8 offers a curriculum designed to proing that social service is quite of autonomous groups. There is similar to other financed activi- a need that those interested in vide the background for further special$zation in ties. Social service is not a ques- social service be given an oppor- physics or for work in industry. The department tion of political beliefs, left or tunity to participate in an ac- tries to provide both the knowledge of theory and right. Whether it be Peace Corps, tivity that can be as educational the feeling for experimental physics needed by CARE, or the mass amount of as any other. This week, repre- the physicist. money given to drives like the sentatives from the autonomous Beyond the general Institute requirements, the Community Chest, we Americans groups mentioned above will meet have demonstrated, almost to the to discuss what they feel should department requires an additional chemistry point of it being a tradition, that be the proper approach to the course (5.60, 5.41, or 5.64), 18.05, 6.14, and a serwe are willing to assume more social service problem We hope ies of courses designed to give a broad backthan our share of social and com- to have definite proposals follow- ground in physics. munity responsibility. We have ing this meeting. The sophomore courses, 8.031 and 8.041, are an introduction to the fields of electricity and fiar, magnetism. 8.05 and 8.06 are an introduction to modern physics and quantum theory. 8.09 and 8.10, taken in the junior year, are laboratories in atomic and nuclear physics. The thesis requireOrder your official M.I.T. Class Ring ment and 8.11 provide additional experimental exin Lobby Building #10 perience. The program is rounded out by 8.711, which Wednesday, April 22 or Thursday, April 23 applies mathematical methods to classical mechanics, 8.72. which treats electricity and magne9:30 A.M. to 3:45 P.M. tism from a more sophisticated viewpoint than 8.031 and 8.041, and 8.07, an introduction to ther$5.00 Deposit modynamics, kinetic theory, and statistical meL. G. BALFOUR COMPANY chanics. Naval Architecture C-P IC" Class of 1966 a~~-I- I I Mechanical Engineering The Department of Mechanical Engineering will present its open house for freshmen next Tuesday from 3 to 6 p.m. Research exhibits will be presented and laboratory tours arranged. Also, the /freshmen may attend an open house at the Engineering Projects Laboratory, Room 3-164. The mechanical engineer, according to the department, has as his province all industry and all science as they are applied to man's purposes. Basic science is of prime importance in mechanical engineering. Study includes such basic subjects as the dynamics of solids and fluids, the physics and mechanics of solids, thermodynamics, electrical circuit theory, and electromagnetic theory. The curriculum is divided into two basic programs-one centered around science, and the other around engineering. The work in the first two years is intended to lay a solid foundation in mathematics, physics, and chemistry. II-I 'Civil Engineering I The Department of Civil Engineering will continue its open house program, which consists of individual interviews and informal discussions with the department head, next Monday through Wednesday from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m., in Room 1-153. The department's program will be discussed in detail with interested freshmen, and laboratory tours will be arranged. This is a continuation of the program which was held from March 16-18. PCPl;aserbaRBzrmBi I mm .d6ft I dgft M~s AM MMei. I Alk 09 u WI" iI MM or= mm m I m i I m Aar Affimh A m Am , ,%h., Im - m w MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW AT THE I THE ENGAGEMENT RING WITH THE PERFECT CENTER DIAMOND Agmu M True artistry is expressed in the brilliant fashion styling of every Keepsake diamond 0 AMP-q JILMM mg I AL AIML EL Mrmw ,%ON 0 0% maw T In ft 16 Mak, ELIE low RM d* MAM Im 2 MINUTES FROM MIT 'I FIVE CAMBRIDGE PARKWAY (Memorial Drive) engagement ring. Each setting is a masterpiece of design, reflecting the full brilliance and beauty of the center diamond . . . a TELEPHlONE 491-3600 perfect gem of flawless clarity, fine color ahnd meticulous modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in the ring and on the tag is your assurance of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. Your very personal Keepsake diamond ring is awaiting your selection at your Keepsake Jeweler's store. Find him in the yellow pages. Prices Famous Five Chafeaux Restauranf Tivoli Coffee House Radio And. TV in Every Room Free Parking * Swimming Pool from $100 to $2500. Rings enlarged to show STUDENT RATES beauty of detail ®Trade-mark registered. SINGLE $8.50 I1HOW' TO, Pt A. I Pteose 'd YOUR :ENQA..EM.NT N two).neo 'by"",e 'Hw o,"PI0` v-`M : bothadd 'w1'2""·::': d"-" y5Also ic:f send lffboth.: i.:" toh'a'Md.D.' I 0 -.'' i.f be :.::R '.:-: ' ,~i.:ii.~:~~ ~~il:i~:;. . . . .:j~.~i. +" wpedo 44" X ...... ': ~ .... TRIPLE $15.50 Ca-nbridge f i:ii~:.:: i~ ~~~i TWIN $10.50s I £inY jj B : Ih~1 --4 The Department of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering will hold an open house for interested freshmen on Wednesday, April 15, from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. This year the open house will be held at the Ship Model Towing Tank in Build- Z zm ing 48. Presently there is much work underway in the C, 00 Department of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. Much of the research being done combines physical experiments at the Ship Model -a Towing Tank with new methods of analyses which are being developed. During the Freshmen Open House, several examples of this research will be 0demonstrated. Demonstrations will include the motion of a ship in waves, the simulation of a variety of waves in the model basin and a demonstration of resistance testing of a sailing yacht. - I- I m m Physics Sophomores - c ivanrp 'to aaeruses --I ECHA RTERU BY SCIENCE MUSEUM HBOUISE AT 5 CAMBRIDGE PARKWAY I ), unI ------------------------ --------------------------------- J".e v* f N* Ara 9b Making the Sc4 P-Imdib MIANINEIMIRAMROM d"L leh if0 Irmf4lb O MUSIC CP 1 2 ] eand. 8:30 p1nm., tickets at the go Choral Concert - The Knoxville Col- s lege Concert Choir, singirg Motets b1y 11 ILSC Entertalinment Series "Mhe Bach and Mozart, selections by 18 Mouse on the Mom,' April 1tl, 5:15, Gounod, and spirituals and semi- 12 15 16 17 13 14 7:30, 9:45, -Ro 10-250, 35c. classics; at the New England Life C Contemporary .. Series - 'Ana.tromy Q_ 19 20 21 Hall, April ,14, 8:00 p.m. Gardiner Museum Saturday, 3:00 of a Room :Murder,' Apri1 admissian 10, 6:4) SDc. and d~p9:00, 10-250, p.m., songs by Britten and Schubert Flute Recital - Ildefonso Torres, LC Classies Series - 'Nantook of the 1loma recital, Neow England Con for soprano and piano; Sunday, Nboth,' Alpril r12, 8:00 p.m., rBy (Mberto vatory: Jordan HaR, April 13, 8 30) songs by Purcell, Poulenc, Faure, 10-250, no singlle admissios. I-p.m., adminssion free. arad others for bass and piano, 3:00 opening mon., Shubert Theatre p.m.; Tuesoday, 3:00 p.m., Brahsns' New England Conservatory Chorus urs, April '13, 'L.Ather,"!by John Osborne, works of Vittoria, Vaughan Willia Sonata for cello and piano, Op. 99; ,Heffernan; tiokets John stalwin Barber, Jorda Hal, April 12, 33:OD all concerts fxee. e n2.t0. Everything in" 'Paris when It $5.4s to p.rm., admission free. c0 Be Seat'America, Theatre Wilbur irch Bach B minor Mass - three ehl rd, ed,,' Mike Tod~l Jr.'s mldern iMinstrel Sizzles' (at the Musik Hall) is so choirs at the FirSt Baptist ChlU -mmmm - -mm bubfShow, opens ,April 14, tickets $4.J5 to Newton Center, April 12, 8:00 p..ran., * 7th Week 82z.20. obviously meantto y, admission free. Ensemble Program - music for Walter Slezak - 'Show ,Business Is No I INGMR BERGMAN's I PIano Business,' Tonight, Kresge, 8:00 bly, and clever, that the film's two and three pianos ,by Debu MY, p.M., admission free. ._J ioem Rachmaninoff, and J. S. Bach, J earthy drama! >2 i only made more e dan IH, April 9, 8:30 p.m., ad- J. K. Gaibraith - lecture on-econom- bness ics, Tuesday, Atprll 14, Kresge, 8:100 mission free. p.m., admsArolfree. barrassing. The screenplay (by BU Symphony Elgar's Cello C w 0 certO, Beethoven's incidental rnm Ford HaJl Foramn -University, Prof. Joan P- George Axelrod) concerns the 'ProsRoc~he, Brandeis to Egnont, Vivaldi's Concerto in iD pects for the Presidemcy,' Jordan writing of a screenplay by a farominor, BU Concert Hall, 855 C4OMHall, April, 12, 8:00, aditssion free. monvrealth Ave., April 9, 8:30 p. .M., Poetry Reading - John F. Nims, oirig- Our m ~mm-m.m international wit (William mmmmm a admission free. Natalie Woo in "Love _ Handel and Haydn Society - Mend lelsinal works, In the proj n r' 9, Holden), who is helped by a fall, basement of building 14, April sohn's 'Elijah,' Symphony H April 12, 8:16 p.m., tickets at the (Audrey Hepcharming typist 5:00 p-mt., adAmission free. I with the Proper Stranger" 4 Hayden Exhibit - painting of Enrico box office, $1.50 to $4.00. I also - James Cagney in. 3 West Point Glee Club - Donnm Donati, surrealist and abstractionist, burn) in his elegant Paris fiat. elly Memorial, April 10, 8:30 p.mn., bien'Hayden Gallery, now- through M~ay 3 Mr. AxeIrod plays with the film efit concert, tickets available fzram Museum of Fne Airts - new- exhibits, I '"One, Two, Three" m from April 7, inclludee 'Watercoloc's within the film in a random; disthe box office. Arlington Street Opera Group LU 'H. Su- from the Arts,' 0ollection the -Museum that wacamw ofFn,Fine of rs' and n of Bso Sceyognie organized manner anrthtwscl'Boston Smi~ety U~j j ei%1 M. S. Pinafore,' by Gilbert and .a~e Sm Ilivan, at the Arlington Street ChuTrob., Field's movies. in W. C. Continumon Painters.' of Water Oolor ing, Surrealist Art, sculpture by April 10, 8:30 p.m., and April Lij Nathan Neujean, and recent acquisi- ('Never Give a Sucker an Even tions of Eturopean Masters. B Museum of Selenee- Floral waterB which is shown at HarII-I colors, 'e thewnde Sith; 'Twins yard this Sunday, also concerns in Orb~it,' new slaow at the Planoetarium; a9dmission $1.00. the writing of a screenplay.) But Institute of Contemrry AtKi r. Axerod's constan tem . etic Sculptures by George Rickey;best Axer 100 Newbury Street, admission free. to prove himself clever are no M T W T 8 F Audrey Hepburn wasted A d e e b r a t THEATRE 9 10 in 'Paris when It Sizzles' a, * "The Silence" i J~. p At Last! The Court Has Ruled 'THE CONNECTION' IsNot Obscene! One of the most controversial and successful off-Broadway plays, "THE CONNECTION" has now been made into a frank and daring motion picture. rough St., Sunday at 3:30 p.m.) was Friedrich Murnau's irt t intoo Amerman file film (127), and intr duced the German style into Hollywood. Murnau is not only r ne ft (he ofa- the pioneers of the cinema introduced tracking shots in 'The Last Laugh'), but one of tlhe great masters of the scrteen. His style is the antithesis of Eisen. tein's, with scarce use of mntage and the close-u.p, a tror L mastery of lighting, camera move- ment, and the static long-shot, resulting in an unusual fluidity, and I enabling'him to achieve a depth II of character Portrayal Which was 0 beyond the range of the Russian 1 silent films. 'Sunrise' is perhaps his best film, voted by 'Cahiers du Cinema' as one of the twelve best ever made. made NFXTWEEK ~~~~~~~'BringingUp Baby' (at the substitute for W. C. Fields, and Harvard Visual Arts Center, SunMusica-Medieval, Re- most of the film's effects fall flat. day at 7:15, in a double bill XMUWIC New York Pro naissance, and Baroque music, April 18, Jordan Hall, 8:30 p.m.; tick- Some ets available at the box office. scenes wee so bad I with 'Never Give a Sucker an thought Mr. Axelrod was kidding E ven Break) is the most per. the audience (the flm within the fect example of the Thirties comBrahms, Librah, film was bad, too), 'but I wasn't edy, a fast-moving, superbly hal- Gregory Hayden lAbrary Concert Tucker, qiiano, and Eric Rosenublith, violnn. music of Stravinsky,uHayden o Bach, usic April 1', 5:00 p.m., admission free. sure. anced seres of situatols which MIT Organ Concert - Donald Willing playrs Bach, Dqwcasse, Reger, and Since 'Dr. Strangelove, or How alternate physical comedy with others; Wed., April 15, 8:30 p.m., Kresge Ajuditorluam., tickets $1.50 at I earned to Stop Worrying and verbal wit. while Katharine Hel~ the toor or Kresge box office, UN Love the Bomb' (at the Astor) burn, a society girl, leads Cary 4-6900. Pension Fund Concert - Boston Syim- was reviewed in the latest issue Grant, an archeologist, into all Phony Orchestra, Erich Le f 'to rt, conductor; Artiur Rubinstein, guest of 'The Tech,' I was asked to be sots of trouble, including a tame This graphic and shocking depiction of dope addicts, 'THE CONNECTION" has earned the praise of critics across the country, such as soloist; Beethoven's Piano Concerto brief. So, I will only say that it leopard called Baby. is an exceptional film which I will comment briefly on the at the box office. makes no co mlsos and 'has better films of the Brattle TeaGardner Museum - -April a1, Brahms the courage to probe its point all tre April Film Orgy. Orson Clarinet Trio, Op. ,l1t, 3:00 p.m,.; April recital, Sie- the way, where all the heeal h laughs, Welles' 'C)~it~izenKae' is an exo, Op. at114 Jeffrey ~sic ~ lrie, 19,ot, Tinpiano geB, Chopin's Sonata No. 3, :usic the grotesque characters, the t fim, although perbothBoncerts . :0,ee newsreel-like as well as the overt- haps a trifle heavy on striking No. 4, Rachmaninoff's lDhapso1dy on a theme of Paginint, short orchestral works; April 19, 8:30 p.m., tickets Dwight Mac Donald, Esquire Mag. "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST" Newsweek Magazine "MORE POWERFUL THAN THE ORIGINAL STAGE PLAY!" Saturday Review "A BOLD STEP INTO NEW AND UN.FAMILIAR TERRITORY FOR AMERICAN MOVIES! ly 1964 A OINS. Shirley Clarke's Now Showing! Park SQ. Cinema 542-2220 b, merely effects. Luis Bunuel's 'Virklana' is his freest film since 'L'Age laughs at the d'Or' (1930), an intriguing attack 'L'Awentura' is a caricature, but by a 'Candide'-like great film. 'Miss Julie' is Alf creation of a mad world which Sjoberg's interesting adaptation of has no qualms in deviating from the Strindberg play. 'The Informreality in making a point about er' is a trifle dated, but remains reality. The audience is given, no a good film. 'Nights of Cabiris' . leeway, no means to avoid the film's ideological content (exceptbetter films. CeeenhIIV hillpresents:..' Spec"ai Fiizabetbam program bonoring ihe 400tb birthday oft Wiliam Sbakespeare. * flk Stangelove' hind it not by means of literal masterpiece. ~ A. ';.', sequences, Bomb and at the organization be- on Catholicism which ranks as a PLATE _______________________- -'-.....' A.G contrived serve the film's central intention, 'Dr. A STONE'S THROW FROM MIT At 428 Mass. Ave., Cambridge 49 1-3330, 491-3331 CiNNECT 5ON2 ToHE-g Perez-Guollermo leaving the theatre). In 'Seven musical groups :Four ~~~ poltia Points wee obcue by the gripping suspense (which is SA.:: APIL1--8-:30, P..:...::...levn of 'D. In Strne-vthe .I..... a Goldatere. good hthing considering mS,u~ria tr a ttop e ro ~ ~ odidensebe c m : d oth.Bas ~~~4t47~Dasin~~~ May,' o ristanleay Lo${{garyoupsn h *-1 naivete of theKurckbsmaeCoirh ideas), and the ~~SAT. A~~~~pRI 0PM ueta olschthingcappn Tphoiants willre prescuted iyn film was liked even by followers A combine cncer by the MIT NTTEN WomLWO QXA~~~~~~.Ai4.. : £ ~ M - 3xA* TICKETS: $4.00, JORDAN HALL *, 2..80, 2 Kresge this Saturday, April 11, the Trimount at 8:30 p.m. House Movie Club, .{ 22 MarlboFelix Viscugla will lead the at any point. 'Sunrise' (at ~~~~~winds in works by Mozart; Wilis -- If Music Is Your Hobby or Avocation and Your Interest Is:- * * Jazz Improvimfaton Traphagan will direct the Brass * Arranqing and Composition C-an CR71SRiveBuxtehude, MR. WaLIAM M. Choir's Instrumenets or Voico _~,a .... /~ each preenst twenty-minute ~iprogramlsloby ~ ~ ~ ~ }~~ BERKLEE SCHOO0PL O%1F~ MUSIC Tianath ~S nie(tte 4DSn:S,~~ ~1~~~~~~~i;!g atS~upm Tictheslabby 64i; Ame-> , ....... . 0, selections by Gabrielli, and Holborne. The Techtonians and the Logarythns Scial Student .CiSt ,CO:jt7445 {{ec~I StuISAT u 'ivin, ur twill 00__l.~ 72 TN pH a A W..,e,. NIM-1~~~~~~.. Internaflonally ::::...:,~.,.,..:-::.::.::.~.,.,, recognized...educationat center for the study of American Music ':.....;......'O-'' point aiday Brsguil hedofe ping 1, 1a 3ZlES of Building t 10. , < Peter Sellers George C. Scoff Stanley Kubrick's * *As Dr. StranGelove I· As Much As 155 Or. How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb *wString Hdfen.KemnanWynn.Srim Pikens StanleyKu Little As$IQ0 Down * FROM $269 Tra w StaneyKubk Pete George & Ter , ~~ :~':.~, Miles Per Gallon Miles~~~~~~~~~~~ .... alo *oCOST LOCW PAY ASYOU RIDE WITH THE FARES YOU SAVE" i~..'J. WINSURANCEO INSURANCE ACoiMbPictms Rea ASTOR THEATRE TREMONT SIGHTSEEING? RENT A VESPA! Low daily & weekly rates . OPEN DAILY '1il 9 P.M., SAT. 'til 5:30 P.M. IkKow M AT BOYLSTON PLAYING NEW ENGLAND'S SHOWPLACE FOR 2 WHEEL TRANSPORTATION ,J~ N>MOYORSCOOTERS SALES MOTORCYCLES SERVICE / VESPA RENTALS N.S.U. YAMAMA AL 4-1150 l _ ' t~~~~ Walter Slezak will lecture tonight; J. K. Gaibraith to speak Tuesday nmovies... 'Captaini Newman' no comedy Im -- The Lecture Series Committee without tickets will begin at 7:40 0m p.m. The balance between comedy is presenting two speakers this as loonies, but as troubled men. By Mona Dickson Mr. Slezak has starred in mov"4Captain Newman, M.D."s now Bobby Darn under truth serum and horror is dizzyingly effective. week, both originally scheduled on ies, musicals, and with the Metother dates. showing at the Keith Memorial, is advertised as a comedy. If it is possible to laugh at a psychiatric ward, then this movie is a comedy. The scene is an army hospital during World War II, Captain Newman runs Ward 7, the psychiatric ward, with too few orderlies and too many patients. In the background there are the patients. Their condialways MP tion is handled not delicately, but maturely. They are not clowns; ht the horror of their situation is toned down, although not so much that the imagination cannot extrapolate. Many types of cases are shown, so many that their depiction must be brief and a bit too shallow. Obviously this is a condensation of a book done with a valiant attempt at leaving nothing out. With a plot like this the movie could slip from "stark drama" to nausea at the slightest mistake in emphasis. That the plot stays on a bearable, even entertaining level is a tribute to script and actors. The emphasis is toward the patients' effect on the doctors rather than their own recovery. Even so the main patients are strongly characterized, not t: 'iII t M · ·..:::.. :0::(::~i::l::~ Wednesday. April 8, through Tuesday, April 14 (unless otherwise stated. the Sunday schedule is the same as the weekday schedule except that no movies are shown before 1:00 p.m. ASTOR - 'Dr. Strangelove,' Mon-Sat. 5:55, 3:55, 1:55, 11:55, 9:55, 7:55, 9:55; Sun. 1:25, 3:25, 5:25, minutes 25 start shorts 9:25; 7:25, before tie feature. BEACON' HILL - 'Tom Jones,' 10:15, 12:30, 2:46, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30; Sun., 1:00, 3:10, 5:20,. 7:30, 9:40. BOSTON CINERAMIA - 'It's a Mad. %Mad, Mad. Mad World,' evenings. BRATTLE - Film Orgy: Today, 'Cleo from 5 to 7:' Thursday. 'Nights of Cabiria;' Friday, 'The Lovers:' Sat'The Sunday 'Viridiana;' urday, 'Inspector MaiMonday, Bridge;' Informer.' 'The Tuesday. gret,' Shows daily 5:30, 7:30, 9:30, matinees Sat. and Sun. 3:30. 'The Servant.' Mon.-Sat. ('APRI 10:30. 12:40, 2:50. 5:00, 7:10. 9:20; Sun. 1:00, 3:10, 5:20. 7:30, 9:40. EXETER - 'Tiara Ta'hiti,' 2:00. 3:50. 5:35. 7:25, 9:10. Editor's poll rates Voodoo above Lampoon in top ten college humor magazines iI i Sc ~ ''·s::~~~~,' · .S11. .,~;;:~:i:~::~:::: i One moment the movie is gay and lighthearted, the next depressing. This antithesis forms the backbone of the story's reality. For their attempt at reality hits the mark squarely. As Captain shelter "We Newman says, and love them and make them well so that they can be sent to be killed." Why is this show a double feature? A mute question. "The Dream Maker," starring tthat idol of the British younger set Tommy Steel, could never, ever, ever stand- alone in the U.S. Although the singing is good, the stars are completely unknown in this country (the Beatles are not in it). For anyone who likes a review reminiscent of the Kay Kaiser "let's entertain the boys overseas" era, this movie is a pleasure. Otherwise . . . is almost too convincing. Eddie Albert as a colonel sick of ordering men to die plays a vacillating schizophrenic with remarkable ability. There are many funny scenes, due mostly to the actions of Corp. Lebowitz. Cap Newman seduces this orderly from Ward 4 with pleas of "But the boys in this ward are just depressed." to which Lebowitz replies "So am I." A prime case for therapy himself Lebowitz's antics include cutting off the top of the commandant's Christmas tree for a tree for patients, and teaching a group of Italian PW's put in Ward 7 because that is the only place on base with locks and bars, to sing that old American Indian song "Hava Nagilah" at the Christmas pageant. Gaegory Peck adds a Cary Grantish sort of humor to the plot. His methods for luring another nurse into his ward are as subtile as a fishing hook. The inevitable romance begins, but with a few twists. Believing the captain to be showing a few nervous symptoms, Lt. Corum gets him drunk and lets him talk his "fears" away. 6.b. CAPTAIN NEWMAN, M.D.: produced by Robert Arthur; directed by David Miller; written by Richard L. Breen; starring Gregory Peck as Captain Newman, Tony Curtis as Corp. Jackson Lebowitz, Angie Dickinson as Lt. Corum, Eddie Albert as Coi. Bliss, Bobby Darin as Corp. Jim Tompkins. THE DREAM MAKER: produced by Norman Williams: directed by Toanmmy Donald Sharp; starring Steel. :::'::: 'N w':.:::::::: .3 C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~: ~;:~~:Si ~~~S:i ::;:. VWR . 1.-·----~ I, -' X a r: a i. c *kaltJO~fU tutu-uouonon-°C . I _ III ~- and Sullivan Sciety ItI II .w LI Series-I BNDAR CALE'WE 'The Mouse on the Moon' Nanook F ° c Anatomy 6Ac WW. vv I. of the NAorth" SUNDAY, April 12 10-250 8:00 SATURDAY, April 11 5:15, 7:30 & 9:45 35c 10-250 Admission by membership card only A Lecture Walfer Slezak John (ennehI i 8:00 P.M&r Tuesday, April 14 KRESGE ADMISSION FREE FREE Admission Without Tickets Begins At 7:40 I -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Galbraith "ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL PRIORITY' noight r I * r m Tickets on sale in Building 10 and at the door 'SHOW BUSINESS IS NO BUSINESS' I', s FILM ORGY: Today, "Cleo from 5 to 7;" Thursday, "Nights of Cabiria;" Friday, "The Lovers;" Saturday "Viridiana;" Sunday, 'The Bridge;" Monday, "Inspector Maigret;" Tuesday, "The Informer." ~Shows daily S:30, 7:30, 9:36, matinees Sat. and Sun. 3:30 Classic Series I' 5 r v :} e e Robert Goldstein '65, conducting Narrated by Dean Frederick G. Fasse~t, Jr. Kresge Auditorium Friday, April 10, 8:30 p.m. Tickets $1.00 A Lect+ure i c a Entertainment Series -- uwum r is 'The Sorcerer' and lol"Danfthe" E14m JAMES MASONb FRIDAY, April 10 6:00 & 9:00 j- TR 6-42 _YW Contemporary Series 1i-,250 - C U-2 'a R0 | o Presents Concert Performances of of a Murder' i a' No movies today (Wednesday) Starting Thursday, "SEVEN DAYS IN MAY,"` feature at 2:25, 4:S, 7:25, 9:40 Classic I :i U * o THE UNICORN COFFEE HOUSE 825 Boylston Street, Boston For Information Call 262-9711 LECTURE SERIES I2 I: o ---a t----- 1; I -o CrN 4-45O uu um0 JOSE I{The MIT Gilbert 6:706 w The MIT Gilbert and Sullivan Society will have its debut Friday, April 10, at 8:30 p.m. in Kresge Auditorium. The program will include highlights from 'The Sorcerer' and 'Iolanthe.' Dean of Residence Frederick G. Fassett will be narrator. The society was organized by a group of Gilbert and Sullivan fans in Burton House, and members were recruited from the MIT community and nearby women's colleges. Bob Goldstein, a junior physics major, is musical director. The society hopes to continue next year with a complete production of 'Iolanthe.' Tickets are $1.00, on sale at the door and in the lobby of Building 10. I bir.~~",q~~M MEL 's WI . Gilbert and Sullivan group to debut with 'lolanthe,' 'The Sorcerer' this Friday ropolitan Opera in 'The Gypsy Baron.' Besides appearing on rad- CI io and television, he has published his early memoirs, 'What Time's m the Next Swan?' Next Tuesday, April 14, John Kenneth Galbraith, economist and to India, former U.S. Ambassador will speak on 'Economis and Social Priority.' The lecture will be- -o gin at 8:00 p.m. in Kresge. ~~~i: · ;' THEATRE PirandelCHARLES PLAYHIOUSE lo's 'Six Characaers in Search of an Author,' Tues,-Fri. 9:30, Sat. 5:30 and 9, Sun. 3:30 and 7:30, tickets 2:40 to S3.95. HOTEL BOSTONIAN PLAYHOUSE Chekhov's 'A. Country iScandal,' eves. except Sat. and Mon. at R:30, Sat. at 6:00 and 9:30, mat. Thurs. at 3:00. 'Stop the World, I SfiUBERT Want to Get Off,' by Anthony Newley: eves. IMIAGE - 'Yerma,' by Federico Lorca, eves. except Sat. 8:30, Sat. at 7:00 and 9:30, at S:30; mats. Wed. and Sat. at 2:30. WILBUR - opening April 14, 'America, Be Seated,' minstral show; eves. · M:30,Mats. Wed. at 2:1'5, Sat. at 2:30. GARY - 'The Pink Panther,' 10:00, 12:00, 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; ,Suin. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00. HARVARD SQUARE - No movies today (Wednesday); starting Thursday. "Seven Days in May,' feature at 2:25, 4:55, 7:2p, 9:40. KEITH 3IMEMORIAL - 'Captain Newman. M.D., Mon.-Sat. 9:45., 1:35, 5:30, 9:20; Sun. 2:30, 6:05, 9:40. LOEW'S ORPHEUMII - 'The L-Shaped Room,' weekdays 9:30, 1:30, 5:35, 9:45; Sun. 1:00, 5:00, 9:10; 'Sundays and Cybele,' weekdays 11:35, 3:40. 7:45; Sun. 3:05, 7:15. M3USIC HALL - 'Paris when It Sizzles,' 9:30, 1.1:30, .1:30, 3:30. 5:30, 7:30, 9:30; Sun. 1:25, 3:25, 5:25, 7:25, 9:25. PARAM1OUNT -- 'Night Must Fall,' weekdcays 10:09, 12:24. 2:39, 4:54, 7:09. 9:25; Sun. 1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:15, 9:20. PARK SQUARE CINEMA - 'Point of Order,' 1:00, 2:40, 4:20. 6:00, 7:45, 9:25. 'The Cardinal,' evenings SAXON 8:30, matinees Mon-Fri., 2:00, Sat.Sun., 2:00, 5:00. UPTOWN - 'Sun-day in New York,' 'Any Number Can Win,' no times a vailable. 'Hallelujah WEST END CINEMA the Hills,' weekdays 12:05, 2:05, 4:00, 5:50, 7:50, 9:50: Sun. 1::40, 3:40, 5:30, 7:30, 9:20. 'VooDoo,' MIT's humor magazine, is one of the top ten college humor magazines in the country, according to a poll of over 80 college humor magazine editors. 'VooDoo,' for the first time, outranked the Harvard 'Lampoon," which slipped into the second ten. The poll is conducted about once a year by the 'Charlatan,' an off- campus publication in Tallahassee, Florida. The Universty of Texas' 'Ranger' ranked first for the fifth straight year. ::: Mr. Walter Slezak, scheduled to speak April 23, will deliver his lecture, 'Show Business Is No Business, tonight at 8:00 p.m. in Kresge Auditorium. Admission 8:00 P.M. a KRESGE j I 00 4D C~ Table tennis season begins; FoClass of 1965 officers Forty teams vie for league Class of 1965 officers 0- Dick Jesse Lipcon Tsien 0 leads to make IMplayoffs Cd Jesse President of the class of 1965 PL is Dick Tsien, a member of Beta Theta Pi, from z Livingston, New Jersey. He has _ previously served the class as LU secretary-treasurer and JP Cornmittee member, and competes on the lightweight crew and wrestling teams. Dick has been a member 2 of Q-Club, Beaver Key, and Eta O Kappa Nu, and was Tau Beta Pi LU "honor junior." He has also been Rush Chairman and Pledge I Trainer of his fraternity. Dick plans to serve seniors looking toward graduation, g r a d school, and beyond by working on an updated commencement program, a revised graduate school information pamphlet, and a seniors-only last-blast before graduation. secretary - treasurer, is not lacking in experience in that post, as he also serves as secretary of Zeta Beta Tau fraternity and corresponding secretary of Eta Kappa Nu, the electrical engineering honorary. He feels that the secretary-treasurer of any organization should act. as an idea man, and in this vein, is currently exploring a senior seminar program, which he hopes can contribute some practical research experience to MIT's substantially theoretical engineering education. Lipcon was a member of Freshman Council for two terms, and served the council as social chairman. He won his letter last year ag coxswain of the varsity heavyweight crew, and was in the varsity "eight" which won the American Henley championship and placed third in the IRA National Championship regatta at Syracuse. A dean's list student, Lipcon hails from Staten Island, New York. Perry Seal IN THE APRIL ATIAI FIC ? "Must the Colleges Police Sex?": John T. Rule, former Dean at M.I.T., in a provocative artic'e, says "To deny a student the right to have a girl in his room is to punish hiim for what he might do with her". "U.S.A. Revisited' ': John Dos Passos takes a new, kaleidoscopic view of our country-its turnpikes, motels, huge publicity parties, and some of the men who have formed the sinews of our society. Phoebe-Lou Adams: "A Rough Map of Greece": The first of a new series on traveling in Greeze alone by car. Real caviar. Gerard Piel: "Abunidance and the Future of Man": Arrmerican surpluses can be converted into dynamic benefits for India, for other developing nations in the fre .world, and for the American economy. Samuel Bluestein Co. 1080 Boylston St. Boston COpley 7-1100 345 Main Street Malden DAvenport 2-2315 Standings LEAGUE I Bur'on A Bexley A Baker D Senior Hcuse B Phi Del:a Theta LEAGUE II Burton B Chinese S'uden's A Baker Ball Bus'ers Bex'ey B Sigma Phi Epsilon LEAG;IE III Burton C Baker B S-nior House A East Campus A Sigma Ap'lia Mu LEAGUE IV' Alpha Epsilcn Pi A Grad House Baker A East Campus B Phi Kappa Theta LEAGUE V Alr.ha Epsilon Pi B Tau Epsilon Phi A Burton D Off Campus Growp Del:a Kappa Epsilon 2-0 1-1 1-1 0-2 0-0 The third week of IM squash action saw the -32 teams making the four league races even tighter as the playoffs- approach. The league winners are beginning to emerge, but playoff spots are still up for grabs. In League I matches, Grad Eco. nomics Assn. beat defending champion Lambda Cli Alpha A by a 2-1 score, while Phi Gamma Delta beat the Course VI Profs. 3-0. In League II, Grad House swamped Phi Beta Epsilon 3-0, and Cmi Phi beat Lambda Cmni B 2-1. Also in League II, Theta Chi won over East Campus 2-1, and Burton A took Baker 06 3-0. League III action saw Electri- plaraases~~a~l~o~plIrrrsr-la" Enjoy the Finest Italian-American Food and Delicious Pizza 1-0 1-0 1-1 0-2 0-0 Xneonle j 2-0 1-0 0-1 0-2 0-0 1-0 1-0 1-1 0-2 0-0 2-0 1-0 0-1 0-2 0-0 cal Engineers beat Burton B 30 and Alpha Tau Omega win over Sigma Phi Epsilon by a 3-0 cotmt. The matches in League IV in. cluded a 3-0 win by Lambda Chi C over Baker B and a 2-1 win for Sigma Alpha Mu agaist NRSA. Burton C beat Zeta Beta Tau B 2-1. This year IM squash is set up with four 8-team leagues with each team playing seven regular season games. The playoffs are approaching fast with - only two weeks of the regular season left. When the regular season is over, the top four teams in each league will compete in a double-elimina. tion playoff for final standings to determine intramural points. ITALIAN-AMERICAN RESTAURANT Choice Liquors and Imported Beers E STREET, CAMBRIDGE - Tel. EL 4-9569 (at Central Square) Open Every Night 'til Midnight - Free Parking Ask About Student Discount Books I ILI-,~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Sparkling... Vice - president Perry Seal, an SAE from Brookville, Indiana, is also chairman of the Institute Committee Subcommittee on Summer Job Opportunities, which works closely with the Foreign Opportunities Committee and the Placement Office. As chairman of this committee, Perry will be doing a lot of work concerning "exchange" jobs. He plans to spend this summer in Europe on a job obtained through the committee. A course VI man, Perry started in politics as a member of Freshman Council and as a secondterm freshman became a member of the Student Committee on Educational Policy. Perry is a three-sport man, competing on the varsity soccer, basketball. and sailing teams, and is a member of T-Club (the varsity letterman's club). He has also served SAE as Eminent Warden. "Complete School Supplies" TYPEWRITERS SALES- SERVICE - RENTAL Lipcon, The Intramural Table Tennis season got underway the week before spring vacation. The interest in this sport is continuing at a high level, with forty teams competing this year. There are two divisions, each with four five-team leagues. Each team will play four matches during the regular season. The top four teams in each of the Major Division Leagues and the top two teams in each of the Minor Division Leagues during season play will be eligible for the post-season final playoffs. IM squash playoffs approaching; League races becoming very fight I flavorful... distinctive! The pursuit of excellence is the everyday job of The Atlantic's editors be it in fiction or fact, poetry or prose. In everincreasing numbers, those in pursuit of academic excellence find in The Atlantic a challenging, entertaining and enlightening companion. Get your copy today. ,High Life Pleasure for everyone! A bright, clear taste... flavor with a deep-down goodness, sparkling with a special lightness.., distinctive ! THE SAFE WAYto stay alert without harmful stimulants NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming. :.i Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying, do as Brewed only in Milwaukee millions do ... perk up with safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. - Buy At thCe COC)P Now s ---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, ~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Aw t2S ' X oW SX0 ] II Looks for good season -- I m Tennis squad goes 3-2 on trip --4 m I The tennis squad's spring trip this year was very successful. The team posted a winning record of 3-2, with an additi-,,na,l ., after w.nning the first 6-1. The next two sets were 8-6, 6-3. Franzi took a close match from Ray St'lens 6-3, 2-6, °-6 and Marty rT1 however, to a tennis club in Char- Ormond won in three, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2. m lotte. Bill Petrick topped Lee Phillips I Against a very strong team from 6-4, &62and Bob Blumberg fell the University of North Carolina to Ron Hignite 7-5, 8-6. Dick Thurthe squad took a 9-0 drubbing, ber beat Gil Davis handily 6-1, with most of the matches going 6-3. With the match at 3-2 after in straight sets. Jack Moter '64, the singles, the team buckled team captain, lost to George So- down and swept all of the doubles kol 6-2, 6-2 and Giovanni Franzi to clinch the match. At the Olde Providence Club on '64 lost 6-3, 6-1 to O. H. Parrish. After an extremely poor start, Wednesday the Tech team showed Marty Ormond '64 gave his man, strength in the singles but were c~ Ted Hone, a battle in the second beaten by a more practiced Ln set but lost 6-0, 8-6. At number doubles teams. Moter. Ormond, 4, Bill Petrick '65 lost in three and Blumberg lost in singles while 0-< sets 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. Bob Blumberg Fraynzi, Petrick and Thurber CD '64 lost to Sam Applegate 6-2, 3-6, evened the match with wins. -0 The team played Ohio Univer6-1 and Dick Thurber '66 lost 6-3, sity on Thursday at the courts on 6-2 to Carl Evans. In doubles, Moter and Franzi the N. C. State campus. Moter -O ohbeat Ted Martin 6-1, 4-6, 6-1 and ISD.-;nn T-nna tn henuti 4 a very close match 7-5, 7-9, 6-4. Gic Franzi made a comeback to Blumberg and Petrick lost to So- win in three sets 0-6, 6-3, 6-0. kol and Meyers, and Ormond and From that point on tuhe niat'ch I Thurber lost to Oettinger and Hen- was no contest and Tech took the match 9-0. derson. 11 At Hampden-Sydney Friday, the At East Carolina on the second squad overpowered their oppoIday the tables turned and Tech nents 9-0. Only one match was 1took a 7-2 victory. Jack Moter 14dropped his match in three sets even close, Fra.nzi beating Bing Gentry 8-6, 5-7, 12-10. i Against Georgetown, Ormond and Blumberg won their singles in straight sets but Moter was defeated in three, 4-6, 6-1, 6-0 by a very strong Ron Goldmanr. The "', W-1 rest of the squad lost in straight sets. Thus going into the doubles MIT was down 4-2. The second doubles team of Petrick and Blumberg were defeated 6-3, 6-3 by VanDerCarr-Hodgeman to end the match. The first doubles team lost a close one 10-8, 8-6 and the IEverybody enjoys farm work in Europe third doubles wan 3-6. 8-6, 6-2. I e WORK II Resort, sales, lifeguard and office work are examples of thousands of summer jobs available in Europe to every registered student. No experience or foreign language is required and travel grants are given to all students. Wages range to $400 a month. For a complete prospectus with photos, job and travel grant applications, a $2 cash book coupon, handling and airmail charges send $2 to Dept. R, American Student Information Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. I z IF,'I I I Am& Aff -W GP "VA% l% AM Aft ci CPR58BE.S'8MN2 * A (64L- e'-A ------- --- - Call 666-5600 - Technical I Books On Sale /3 to 1/2 Off There are many of the finest writers represented in this group of titles. Phgress / OvurMo.s /mTormyt Phodud GENERAL feB'P FANUTAT/8zw j'Arr Don't Miss! ELECTRIC ?DI I I --- -~~~~~~ Auto Insurance a that speeds commuters in a hydrofoil ship over the waves... and another jet engine to lift travelers over traffic via turbocopter at 150 mph. Traffic is only one of many problems General Electric people are working on. Their numerous projects, in this country and around the world, demand a variety of talents: engineering, finance, marketing, law, physics and many others. If you'd like to join the "Progress Corps" after graduation, talk to your placement director. He can help qualified young people begin their careers at General Electric. -- * All Risks * Easy Payments * Open 9 to 9 & Saturday JAMES F. BRENNAN Ins. Agency I 11 Union Sq., Somerville, Mass. Selected do~i It won't be easy. By 1980 most Americans will live in 40 large metropolitan areas-each with more than a million population. To keep your community from becoming a "Jamsville" will take people with ideas - ideas that can help cities move more traffic swiftly, safely and economically. Some of the ideas come from the men and women of General Electric who, in effect, form a "Progress Corps." In major cities, they're helping to develop balanced transportation built around rapid rail-transit systems . . . and they're providing advanced equipment to power and control the trains. They're also developing a TV monitoring system that enables a single engineer to control miles of auto traffic ... a jet engine kVSlTSFNF/MIFIFCJ The MIT Nautical Association will again present Shore School for all persons, students, faculty, or employees, who wish to learn to sail. The first meeting will be held Monday, April 13, at 5:15 p.m. in Room 4-370. The rest of the week will be spent at the sailing pavilion and on the Charles. Anyone who has at least a rating of Helmsman and is interested in helping out as an instructor is welcome. I I IEl. Sailing school holds firstclass Monday Take a Look! _jBI-Im -1 6, a 0 o a) Golf team I-5 after southern trip; Top Johns Hopkins for lone win The MIT golf team returned from its annual spring trip with a record of one win and five losses. The lone victory was achieved over Johns Hopkins while . setbacks were suffered at- the c6 hands of East Carolina College, North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Princeton. c lThe trip started with a pleasant X < weekend of practice at North Carolina's golf course under sunny > < skies. Monday was spent at Duke University's famed course but unQ LU fortunately the weather was exo tremely cold and windy and a 'u practice round was a bitter experience for those who left the cozy confines of the clubhouse. On Tuesday, the squad played its first match against East Caroli.na College and came out on I U the short end of a 25-2 score. rDve Lu Andrews '66 won Tech's only two , points to stave off total humiliaI tion. The team moved back to Chapel Hill Wednesday only to be beaten more soundly by the University ---I -Cav I - of North Carolina by a score of 20/2-1A. Tech's meager fraction' was salvaged by the .number one man, Peter Lubitz '65. The team traveled north to Baltimore to sample the sweet taste of victory at the expense of Johns Hopkins. Dick Shoemaker '65, Tom Hedburg '65 and Harry Barnes '66 won their matches by 3-0 scores, John Eck '64 and Peter Lubitz split their matches 11/2-1,/2, and Dave Andrews lost his match 0-3 to account for a final score of 12-6. This victory was particularly sweet as the team had to travel a long way the night before and then had to play in a continuous drizzle that didn't help anyone's score. The squad headed back south Friday only to run into stiff competition from the University of Virginia and lose by a 151/2-51/2 score. John Eck and Bill Grigg '66 won their matches 2-1, Barnes lost his 1-2, Lubitz lost his 1/2-21/2 and Hedburg, Shoemaker and Andrews lost theirs 0-3. wll %F m m%%a ,bvB v U..& wa % m**a performances by several MIT men and the addition of several new squad members, gives Tech a good chance for an unblemished record. Farnham coaches U.S. squad All of the indoor men are returning, and they will be helped by Bill Eagleson '64, in the javelin and shot, and Kim Sloat '64, in the shot, who were out for basketball and wrestling respectively during the winter. However, there is a cloud on the scene. The team will lose the services of the driving force responsible for track's ascendancy at MIT, coach Arthur Farnham. He has been selected to coach a group of U.S. trackmen who will tour Africa, hoping to encourage greater interest in track on that continent. Peter Close, director of sports information at MIT and former track star, will coach the runners and hurdlers in Farnham's ab- Sporting a record of six victories and two defeats during the indoor season, the varsity track squad looks optimistically forward to the outdoor schedule, which begins with a home meet against Brandeis, Tuesday, April 14. Other home meets are scheduled on April 25 against Williams and May 13 against Northeastern. Also during the season the cindermen travel away to compete with Bowdoin, New Hampshire, and sence. ue as such throw, wV la& eUUp yi Gordon Kelly will conti. coach of the field events, as pole vault, hammer and broad jump. Much depth in all races Special Colleetor's Series Remsen '64, plus wrestler Sloat leave the weight events a Tech strongpoint. C· ·1181 · Both the coaches and team believe MIT has the ability and depth to defeat each and all of these opponents. Four fell to Tech during the indoor season and Williams, which was not scheduled indoors and which upset MIT last year outdoors, is considered a likely victim. The only remaining hurdle, Northeastern, defeated Tech indoors. enroute to an undefeated season. Ilq C·· late season I------C- However, -·_ -- --------- ----*P -- -- -lrT ------ -P---- ----- L Al mK | U CLASSICAL RECORDS " Tufts. SAkLE! AM w-% Jim Flink '64, Dennis Sivers '66, and Rex Ross '66 promise a w i n n in g combination in the dashes. Flink will also team up with Al Tervalon '65, Ken Morash '65, holder of the varsity indoor pole vault record, and outdoor .captain Terry Dorschner '65 to give Tech an almost unbeatable combination in the hurdles. Jim MacMillan '65, Joel Rogers '65, and Larry Schwoeri '66 give the team considerable strength in the 440-yard run. Sumner Brown '66, undefeated in dual meets in the 1000-yard run during the winter, will con. ,centrate on the 880-yard and one mile runs. Mike Oliver '65, Rob Wesson '66, Dick McMillin '65, and Bill Purves '65, back Brown in these events and form a tough two-mile combination. Field events strong For the first time in years the field events show Tech with strength and depth in each event. Morash, indoor record holder in the pole vault, will be provided stiff competition by teammates Gary Lukis '64, Mike Keehner '65, and John Shaner '64. Rex Ross, in addition to his sprint duties, is Tech's best broad jumper and may also compete in the javelin throw. Dave Carrier '65 will back Ross in the broad jump and will team with Tom Jones '66 in the high jump. Jerry Dassel -- - Cindermen eye unbeaten outdoor seasons Rr ;.nv P _ml l nn cff^4r m cmr.I ani Nibb, G-M WERE $4.% NOW in SCHWANN CATALOG sl 9 I----- II '64, Jim Kotanchik '64, and Bill (5 FOR $9.00) E1A. FAMOUS ARTISTS AND COMPOSERS Ii * Kogan * Kurt Weill * Richard Elsasser * Beethoven * MacDowell * Sibelius * Bloch Beaux Arts Trio * Greig * Mozart * Cowell * Mahler * * Royal Opera House Orch. * Schoenberg * Guilef Quartet * Hamburg Orch. * William Strickland * * * * * * * Carl Weinrich Stravinsky Andres Segovia Bartok George Copeland Anatole Fistoulari London Symphony Orch. * Oistrakh * Rostropovich * Haydn Many works available only on this label... Each record Factory sealed I I S~~~kEm ON s _s % _% andA_ w w N w I @ Write for application and I i- -- I I - ---- I --- ---- ,---- further information to Engineering Unit E New York City Personnel Department 299 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. ----------- --- --- --·----------·--------------------------- I`-"I-- 'L-t -- ._._~~8 ~ Chinese' Students badminton kings; Baker House second in tournament T h e Intramural Badminton Championship was taken home by the Chinese Students Club on the Monday night before vacation. The Chinese students won all three of their playoff games by 5-0 scores. Baker A took second place by beating Senior A and Grad House A. Tied for third and fourth were Senior A and Grad B. Looking at the playoffs as a E whole, the winners took eight out r, , ____ 1. Chinese Students Cluib 2. Baker tHoue A 3-4 (tie) Gratd,House B Semior House A 5-8 (tie) Burton House A Baker House C Grad House A I _, I COUNSELORS: Maine Boys Camp requires Graduates and Students (over 20) for Camping Skills; Astronomy; Jazz Piano; Band; Photo; Radio; Crew; Sailing; Fencing; Land Sports. Also, Men or Women for food service; laundry; porter; watchman. Write director, 393 Clinton Road, Brookline, Mass. (Phone: LO 6-6200). SHORT WAVE RADIO EQUIP. Hallicraft. SX-100, $175, Heath DX-40 with VFO Homebrew 6 M. trans. with VOX, also Ritty equip. Tel. 536-8454, Ins. X3617. Complete Servicing 88 1^ For Only o, I '63 VOLVO P544. White, excellent condition. Will be sold for balance due bank. Call Mr. Fogarty, 4911400, for appointment 9:30 a.m.4 p.m. FOR LEASE until Sept. 1964, tworoom, unfurnished apartment on Beacon St. near Mass. Ave. $125 less $30 for light work on premises means only $95 per month. Call Dick Sidell or Fred Souk, KE 6I 1139 or X3782. _go * .p i C NEW RIBBON INSTALLED TYPE CLEANED PARTS LUBRICATED It 'sc' ·r 1 0 52 25 00 4 00 2 00 x-6 52 2 00 400 0--4 73 4 000 0 5 0 4 1 1 00 x-11 16 1 10 Pd I' "··abssa8a -- SAVINGS~BANK LIFE INSURANCE CLINoIC SPECIAL mobugmum'$al~ug~ The Smith-Corona 1, 0 0 .1 2 0 00000-3 1 0 0 1 0 0000 -- Baseball MIT (V) 7-Salisbury State 3 Johns Hopkins 6-MIT (V) I Adelphi I I-MIT (V) 4 Golf East Carolina 25-MIT (V) 2 North Carolina 20½/2-MIT IV) 1/2 M!T (V) !2--Johns Hopkins 6 Virginia 15 /2-MIT (V) 51/2 Maryland 7-MIT (V) 0 Princeton 7-MIT (V) 0 Lacrosse MIT (V) 9-Adelphi 5 Maryland 19-MIT (V) 3 Loyola 7--MIT (V) 2 Hofstra 7-MIT (V) 0 Sailing MIT (V)-I st in Geiger Trophy MIT (V)-6th in Flying Junior Trophy in Florida MIT (V)-Sth in Raven Minor at Coast Guard Tennis North Carolina 9-MIT (V) 0 Olde Providence Club 6-MIT (V) 3 MIT (V) 7-East Carolina 2 MIT (V) 9-Ohio Univ. 0 MIT (V) 9-Hampden-Sydney 0 Georgetown 6-MIT (V) 3 Low Cost Ea i i678 9 r h e rbl 0-7 10 1 6 1 .022 12345 00002 ResHow They Didr '-IN =ALE TRAD Your old typewriter is worth money toward the purchase of any new machine. I,.! out 15, and walked three to lead MIT to a 7-3 victory over Salisbury State on Tuesday, March 31 in the season's opening game for MIT. Captain Don Alusic '64 slammed a two run homer to right field in the seventh inning breaking a 3-3 tie. Sophomore leftfielder David Vahey had three hits and two RBI's in five trips to the plate to lead the MIT hitters. Errors Plague Tech in Hopkins Game Pitchers Arnold Michelson and Richard Bower of Johns Hopkins teamed up to hold MIT to only two hits and one run while Hopkins beat MIT 6-1 on Wednesday, April 1. MIT was plagued by five fielding errors which gave Hopkins five unearned runs. The losing pitcher was left-hander Rick Gander '65 who turned in a good performance for MIT by striking out 9 and walkidng three. Adelphi Routs MIT 11-4 Two big scoring innings carried Adelphi College to an 11-4 victory over MIT on Thursday April 2. The losing pitcher was Ralph Cicerone '65 who went 4 innings, and the winning pitcher was Walt Schulz who went 8 innings for Adelphi. Stevens game Rained Out The scheduled game with Stevens Tech in Hoboken, N.J. on Friday. April 3 was rained out after one inning. Line scores: MIT Salisbury State MIT Johns Hopkins MIT Adelphi VANDON UNCHALLENGED PRICE .? 3 ·; d4 ~tax inc. TIII I :,< A bold new breakthrough in typewriters-- space-age portable with a back-to-earth price. P.i .T.T ·,i I I O OFFICE SIZE KEYBOARD · HALF SPACE Or PRE-SET TAB 1 TOUCH CONTROL In ir CAMBRID GEI PORT lech mere Sales 88 FIRST ST., CAMBRIDGE,TEL. New Hfigher Dividends as of 3/1/1964 I I 491-2000 689 Mass. Ave. - I 11 .. m Telephone UN 4-5271 RIGHT IN CENTRAL SQUARE, CAMBRIDGE J __~. · i ar z PLUS ;ij --4 last day of the trip, the team finally gained one victory, after losing to three overpowering teams. In a four day span beginning Tuesday, April 1, the la- m crosse team lost to Maryland, CLoyola 'and Hofstra by scores of m V) 19-3, 7-2 and 7-0, respectively, until finally defeating Adelphi 9-5. 0, In the first game of the season the team was completely overwhelmed by Maryland, one of the top lacrosse schools in the 0 nation. Captain Bill Dreiss '64, -o -o two score to however, managed goals while Wayne Matson '64 scored one. Ron Mandle '65 was credited with an assist. When MIT faced Loyola the following day, -D the team performed much better, GO but they were playing against an all-America goalie. Mandle and Matson each scored one unas- 41 sisted goal. After the game, Matson discovered he had an infected ankle and was prevented from playing the remaining two games. His loss was felt the next day when the team suffered its first shutout to Hofstra, 7-0. WvHILE IN MASSACUHU SETTS find out all the facts about urday all day to service your machine. Estimates will be given where further repairs are found necessary. .r course, hitting the books, the Tech lacrosse team suffered through their vacation down South on a dusty, hot, 110 yard field. On the - Have your typewriter oiled, type cleaned and new ribbon installed . . All at one low price. Typewriter Factory trained experts will be here Friday from 6 p.m. and Sat- ,'h team finishes trip at 1-3 I FIREWORKS!!! Call J. Belknap, Burton 134A. Bring in your Portable Typewriter, any make, to Lechmere's Clinic gi i FOR SALE: 1961 Falcon Station Wagon four door, radio and heater, 26,000 miles, fine condition. Call owner after 6, 782-8895. FRIDAY NIGHT APRIL 10 and ALL DAY SATURDAY APRIL I I r,- a %0 by Don Siefkes The MIT baseball team, on its w southern trip last week, beat Salisbury State, Salisbury, Maryland 7-3 and lost to Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland Garden and Adelphi College, City, Long Island by scores of 6-1 and 11-4 respectively. Calof Wins Season Opener Sophomore fire - baller Larry Calof scattered five hits, struck STUDENTS' TYPEWRITER CLINIC I 40 m Baseball team stands 1-2 after spring trip; Calof, Vahey lead squad to win over Salisbury You pocket in ij %0 I of the twelve games by shutouts. Badminton managers D i c k By Neal ilman While many MIT students were Minnick and Joe LaBreche would like to thank all of the players basking in the warm sun, swimfor their support and their sug- ming in the cool water and, of gestions. The final standings are as follows: 1 ,,. l IBM LacrosseW % %100 -4 9-5 Beat Adelphl i ,_ - I I I 0 ~~~~~~~N traight-'s a_ ,0 a_ >: < 0 z uX _ ) u. The sixth annual T-Club Banquet, held Tuesday evening, March 24, at the Faculty Club, was a tremendous success; with over two hundred lettermnen, coaches, and members of the faculty and administration, it was the best turnout in many years. This was directly attributable to the fact that this year the banquet was free to invited guests; holding it earlier in the year also helped attendance. Mr. Peter M. Close, Director of Sports Publicity, served as toastmaster for the ceremonies. The program began with remarks by Dean Kenneth R. Wadleigh and Sports Director Ross H. Smith concerning the continually improved standing of Tech athletics. The program was then turned over to T-Club President Dave Carrier '65 for the presentation of the Straight-T Awards. Carrier first explained that the Straight-T is the highest athletic award given by the Institute and is given only to very outstanding athletes. Along with the presentations, Carrier also gave a brief resume of the highlights of each recipient's career. The winners: Sumner Brown '66, cross-country, placed third in the Easterns, second in the IC4A (college section), and nineteenth in the smallcollege nationals. Dave Dunford '64, baseball, Greater Boston batting champion with a .354 average, was a member of the AllGreater Boston and All-New England teams. Dunford was also on the All-New England soccer team. In basketball, Bill Eagleson '64 has the highest career scoring record in Tech's history with 1058 points and was a member of the All-Greater Boston team and leading rebounder in the Greater Boston area. In track, Jim Flink '64 holds school records in the 50-yd. dash. low hurdles, 100-yd. dash, and 220-yd. dash and has been highscorer on the team for the last three years. Bob Mehrabian '64, soccer, was an All-American as a sophomore, has been high i °D N&Im_ en tudo top athletes A ~Bf;'~·~~CT~3~:~iZ~Bf~9a~;~zwI~ Photo by Stephen Teicher These MIT athletes were presented Straight-T awards; Left to right: Bob Mehrabian '64, Jack Moter '64, Chris Miller '64, Sumner Brown '66, Dave Dunford '64, Henrik Wessel '64, Bill Weber '64, and Jim Flink '64. Not present for the picture were Mike Williams '64 and Bill Eagleson '64. ps first places Jin colle:ate uao coI qe3 En glands - Two Judo Championships were simultaneously held at the Tohoku Judo Club in Somerville, Mass., Sunday, March 22. They were the Northeast Collegiate and NonCollegiate Five-Man Team Judo Championships. In the first two rounds of the collegiate division, the MIT Judo Club opened up a wide lead which its opponents were never able to overcome. The Techmen with 50 points took the title for the third time in a row. Harvard placed a close second with 41 points, and Northeastern third with 35 points. Tech second overall After the completion of both the c- 1 e g i a t e and non-collegiate tournaments, the winners of each division were pitted against each other to determine an overall New England Five-Man Team Champion. In this match, Tech was faced with a strong teans from The Judo Institute of NeA. England. The difference in sizel and experience proved to be tooj much and the Engineers suffered= their only defeat of the day.' The representatives from Techi were: Donald Morrison '66, firsti degree black belt; Dana Lasher` '65, third kyu brown belt; PeterE James '67, third kyu brown belt;* Ted Rhyne '66, fourth kyu whitebelt; and Richard Smith '67, fifthe kyu white belt. Even stronger team next year It is expected that next year's= team will be even stronger since, no one will be lost to graduation,! and all members will have aim extra year experience. The Judo Club meets on Satlurdays at 1:00 pm, and always. welcomes new members. Sailing squad tak4 s Geiaer trophvy. Cops sixth in Flori ida on spring trip E scorer in New England for the England as a junior and seeded last two years and was a member first this season though losing because of a sprained anklde. of the All-New England team. This meant an extraordinary In heavyweight crew, Chris The Tech sailing team, led by only Tech skipper to finish first Miller '64 and Bill Weber '64 were number of awards, but the athcaptain Terry Cronburg, repeated in a race, and was running sec.letes had made some extraordiStraight-T winners. Miller was as winners of the Geiger Trophy ond in. his last race until his rud-. stroke of the frosh crew which nary achievements. in a regatta held on the Charles der broke. finished 2nd at the IRA and stroke last Sunday. MIT lost only one In other action during vacation, of two varsity shells which were ~ race, to University of Rhode. Is- Ed Shaw and Jack Turner, '66, third at two successive IRA Today. Wednesday, April 8 land, beating U.R.I., Harvard, co-skippered Tech to fifth place i meets. Weber was also in the Heavyweight crew (F)--Andover, and Boston College twice each. out of eight in the Raven minor. winning Tech boats with Miller; Away Following MIT, with victories division at the Coast Guard Acad.in addition, he was a member of Lacrosse (V)-Adelphi, Away, over three schools, was U.R.I. emy, a meet which was taken by; the four-oared shell which placed 2:00 pm first in the Nationals in Philadel- Lacrosse (F)-Cambridge School, who beat two schools, Harvard Coast Guard. with one victory, and Boston ColAway phia last September. Jack Moter M" lege who took the collar. Besides '64, basketball, was second only Tennis (V)-Harvard, Home, 3:00 pm Cronberg, the other Tech skippers to Dave Koch for the most points Tennis (F) Browne & Nichols, participating were Dave Schlosscored in a single season and was Home, 3:00 pm berg, '64, Ed Shaw, '65 and Joe a member of the All-Star Halifax Noted for the best Sandwiches Friday, April 10 Smullen, '66. tourney team. He is also a top Tennis (V&F)-Brown, Away, to eat in or take out. The same four skippers ventennis man and captain of both 3:00 pm FAMOUS ROAST BEEF SPECIAL tured to St. Petersburg, Florida, teams. In skiing, Henrik Wessel Saturday, April 11 SANDWICH-KNACKWURSTthe weekend of March 28-29 and '64 placed 14th in the slalom Baseball (V)-Wesleyan, Away, 2:30 pm came back with little but a sunBRATWURST with SAUERKRAUT against the best in the country, tan. Rusty from a long winter of including Billy Kidd and Buddy Baseball (F)-Middlesex School, or POTATO SALAD Home Werner, and was one of the top no sailing, Tech took sixth in the "und die feinen Wurstwaren" Heavyweight crew (V, JV, F)Flying Junior division. Brown, skiers in New England for the 71 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge Boston U., Home who won this division, finished last three years. Mike Williams Lacrosse (V)-Harvard, Away, 491-2842 second behind Harvard in the en'64, wrestling, has a career rec3:00 pm tire regatta, which was ruled by ELSIE & HENRY BAUMANN ord of 28-4-1, and went undefeated Lacrosse (F)-Governor Dummer, this season. He was third in New the Ivy League. Cronburg was the Away - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -~ ~ 0 ~ D II II·I·Il ------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~L----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~L~~~---·-- · C~~~~~~~~~~~~YI ----_- L~~~~~~~~~~~~--_-----~~~~~~~~~~~srmrl_-_ C---· -CI---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·CC----I~~~~~~~~~~~-·--~~~~~~ -- -y~~~~~~~~L ~~~~P·-~~~~~P·-PP I --~~~~~~~~~1 1 ;~On Deck ELSIE'S ,. I DOVEST SIENCTION IN TOWNOK _ --I muemanities ,, W - ----- - --- ---- ui itne aeries _Y I _ __ _ _ II, developing and printingti ... 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